The Minister Secretary General of the Presidency (Segpres), Giorgio Jackson, referred to the exit plebiscite of the new constitution on September 4, after the end of the constitutional debate.
“I believe that as long as the last vote is not counted, trying to guess what the result is going to be is risking it very quickly for a projection. I believe that the stage is open, but hopefully it will be decided based on information and not from misinformation, and that is our task as a government,” he said in an interview with The Mercury of Valparaiso.
The head of the Segpres added that “people will have to choose between approving the new text, with the good things that seem to them and those that they may not like so much, and therefore they will have to make an analysis between the good and the bad. bad and make the weighting within your preference, and how it is possible or not to change those things that you do not like about this new Constitution and its feasibility; or reject, with the good or bad things that people consider the one that was initiated in 1980 with the dictatorship, and analyze how feasible it is to change those things under its own rules, which are much stricter”.
In that sense, Giorgio Jackson ruled that “the stage is going to be between these two paths, both legitimate.”
It is worth mentioning that the last plenary session of the Constitutional Convention has already been held and the draft of the New Constitution has been approved. There are 499 articles that must now go through a refinement and harmonization process.