
The presidential candidate of the party for Democracy (PPD), Carolina Tohá, uploaded five points in the spontaneous mentions for the next president of Chile in the last Public Plaza survey of Cadem, reaching 11%. Meanwhile, Chileans are currently considered more from the right than from the left.
The measurement, applied between Wednesday and Friday, consulted the opinion of 701 people —A 10.7% of answers between 6,582 phone calls.
In it, Tohá experienced an important rise in spontaneous mentions, moving from 6% of the week before 11%. Thus, it was in third place, behind the Charter of Chile Vamos, Evelyn Matthei (22%, 2 more points regarding the previous measurement), and José Antonio Kast (13%, one more point), of the Republican Party.
Further behind, the candidate of the National Libertarian Party, Johannes Kaiser (10%, one less point), the front -wing front Gonzalo Winter (6%, two more points), two more points), the communist Jeannette Jara (6%, two more points) and Franco Parisi of the people’s party (4%, two more points).
Similarly, Tohá rose in the number of respondents who believe it will be the next president, reaching up to 15% in that category, only surpassed by Evelyn Matthei, with 32%. Kast (14%), Kaiser (11%), Winter (3%), Jara (2%) and Parisi (2%) appear further back.
Chileans are considered more right than left
Cadem also consulted the Chileans where they were politically. To do this, they asked the respondents to say a number between 1 and 10, where the 1 represented “more to the left and 10 more to the right.” The result was an average of 6, closer to the right than to the left.
With the same methodology, it was consulted if they preferred freedom or security, averaging a 7.8, more on the side of security. Interestingly, Evelyn Matthei averaged a 7.7 in the perception of respondents about their thinking in that item.
Likewise, consulted on whether they preferred to privilege the short or long term, respondents bowed to the short term with an average of 6.2, where their perception of Matthei is also located.
Approval of President Buric and support for punctures
The approval of the current President Gabriel Boric, meanwhile, rose from 29% to 31%. Meanwhile, its disapproval dropped three points, up to 64%.
On the other hand, 78% of the respondents who had heard on the subject were agreed with the telephone interception of Miguel Crispi, exassor of the president. Only 9% disagreed.
88% agreed that the phones of authorities in investigations are incapant, while 68% were in favor of intervening the president’s cell phone as part of a judicial investigation.
The Public Square Survey below: