Pelucones

Mariano Egaña, was a notable Pelucón, politically he felt affinity to constitutional monarchy as a form of government

Pelucones (Spanish for bigwigs) was the name used to refer to Chilean aristocratic conservatives in early 19th century. The name Pelucones was originally used by the Pipiolos or liberals in a despective maner by linking the conservatives to oldfashioned wigs that were popular in the 18th century. Following the Chilean Civil War of 1829, where the Pipiolos were defeated, the Pelucones enforce the Chilean Constitution of 1833 with led to creation of a strong unitarian and authoritarian presidentialist system held up by upper-class.

In Ecuador former President Rafael Correa popularized the term during his decade in power (2007–2017). Its use has been associated with the traditional political and economical elites (middle to high classes) that, according to Correa, have dominated the country since its independence, dominating state institutions and policies, giving way to exclusion and poverty amongst the rest of the population.

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