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SANTIAGO 鈥 Chileans overwhelmingly voted against a proposed new constitution on Sunday, rejecting what would have been one of the world鈥檚 most progressive charters.聽

While nearly 80% of Chileans voted to draft a new constitution in 2020, nearly 62% of voters rejected the new text with 99.74 percent of ballot boxes counted.聽

Karol Cariola, spokeswoman for the approval campaign, conceded defeat late on Sunday night in downtown Santiago but said the mandate to draft a new text remains in force.聽

鈥淲e are committed to creating conditions to channel that popular will and the path that leads us to a new constitution,鈥 Ms. Cariola said.聽

President Gabriel Boric, whose government is largely tied to the new text, said cabinet changes were coming and the government would work to draft another constitution.聽

鈥淲e have to listen to the voice of the people. Not just today, but the last intense years we鈥檝e lived through,鈥 Mr. Boric said. 鈥淭hat anger is latent, and we can鈥檛 ignore it.鈥澛

The president said he would work with congress and different sectors of society to draft another text with lessons from Sunday鈥檚 rejection.聽

Center-left and right wing parties that promoted the reject campaign, have also agreed to negotiate to prepare a new text.聽

鈥淚 think there are two things that explain what has just happened. One is a rejection of the Boric government,鈥 political analyst Cristobal Bellolio told Reuters, adding that the other was identity politics in regards to indigenous and other issues.聽

The proposed text that voters rejected was a response to widespread violent protests that gripped the nation in late 2019 and focused on social rights, the environment, gender parity and indigenous rights, a sharp shift from its market-friendly constitution dating back to the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship.聽

MASSIVE TURNOUT IN MANDATORY VOTE
Nearly 13 million of 15 million Chileans and residents who were eligible to vote cast ballots across more than 3,000 voting centers. These included the national stadium in Santiago, where Rosemarie Williamson, 54, and her mother, 85, voted to reject the new constitution.聽

Ms. Williamson, who had voted 鈥測es鈥 in 2020, cited worries over several proposals.聽

鈥淭he main one is (indigenous) plurinationality and then pension funds,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檝e worked my whole life and I鈥檓 not willing to share that.鈥澛

Diego Uribe, 35, a father of two who does not normally vote because he has lost faith in political parties, voted 鈥測es鈥 in Puente Alto, a lower-income region in southern Santiago.聽

鈥淭his one is different,鈥 Mr. Uribe said, noting he would have voted even if it was not mandatory. 鈥淎pproval is real change for the future, free education, dignified healthcare and more rights.鈥澛

The latest polls before a two-week blackout showed rejectors ahead at 47%, compared with 38% for 鈥測es鈥 and 17% undecided, but Sunday鈥檚 result beat polls by a wide margin. 鈥斅Reuters