Chile’s presidential election ended with José Antonio Kast, leader of the Republican Party, pulling in 58% of the vote against 41% for ruling-coalition candidate Jeanette Jara. But the ballot count delivered more than a political upset…
At Table 101 of the Presidente Pedro Aguirre Cerda School in San Antonio, poll workers opened an envelope and found something they definitely weren’t expecting: a joint, a handful of seeds, and notes demanding reform of Chile’s drug laws.
Officials were stunned when a small bag of seeds, a hand-rolled cannabis cigarette, and two written messages fell out of the ballot. They read: “no more prisoners for growing” and “cultivate your rights”, according to BioBioChile.
And here’s the kicker: this wasn’t even the first time. It was the third. Similar acts of protest were recorded at the very same polling station in December 2023 and October 2024, each involving cannabis slipped into a ballot as political commentary.
Activism, repetition, and a message that refuses to go away
Although anonymous, the gesture speaks directly to a longstanding national debate: the widening gap in Chile between the real-world use and home cultivation of cannabis and the punitive legal framework that continues to govern it.
The notes found in the envelope echo long-standing demands from the country’s cannabis movement:
- Medical and personal use continue to result in discretionary arrests.
- Home grow remains stuck in a legal gray zone.
- Slogans like “no more prisoners for growing” reflect what advocates call unnecessary criminalization.
This isn’t just a quirky election-day anecdote. It’s a signal, a snapshot of public sentiment from people who, even under the anonymity of a secret ballot, still feel compelled to speak up about what they believe desperately needs reform.
And the fact that the same protest has surfaced three times in the same voting location is not a coincidence; it’s either quiet coordination or the kind of persistence policymakers love to pretend they don’t see.
In a country where drug policy conversations remain trapped between “security-first” rhetoric and years of grassroots demands for modernization, these small but repeated acts are cracks in the façade; they are reminders that a postponed debate doesn’t disappear. It just keeps finding its way back into the room… or, in this case, into the ballot box.
Cover photo created with Gemini AI.
This article was first published on El Planteo.













