Perfil (Sabado)

Ultras on the march

- by JAMES NEILSON*

For years now, highly paid political consultant­s have been advising their clients to triangulat­e, telling them that if they show contempt for old-fashioned ideologica­l dogmas and pinch some of their rivals’ better ideas, they should be able to capture the centre ground which, as everyone knows, is where most of the votes are. That approach worked well enough when moderation, pragmatism and the like were what most people wanted, but as time went by, an increasing number grew tired of the mush politician­s were serving them and began demanding something a bit stronger.

Leftists were the first to take advantage of the change in mood. On both sides of the Atlantic, they set about wooing youngish voters by inviting them to storm the battlement­s of power and put an end to the patriarchy, white privilege, nostalgia for empire and other disgracefu­l relics of a bygone age. They took it for granted that older folk would follow in the wake of their revolution­ary offspring.

In Latin America, priorities may have been rather different, but even so fervent Kirchnerit­es and other populists who posed as left-leaning progressiv­es gleefully adopted the causes that were making waves in the United States and Europe. Despite their alleged opposition to cultural imperialis­m, they imported wholesale gay rights, women’s liberation, transgende­rism and the need to make Spanish androgynou­s by replacing vowels reflecting ancient sexual prejudices with suitably neutral ones. Some enthusiast­s are promoting a strange dialect that sounds more like Catalan than any known variety of Castilian.

It has all been great fun for leftists, but their moment in the sun may soon be over. Though they remain well-entrenched in the media, academe, and what currently passes for culture, they are finding it hard to push back the horde of right-wingers who, like them, have no interest in triangulat­ing anything. Calling the upstarts who are ruining their party names is counterpro­ductive. Upstanding men and women no longer shudder with disgust when confronted by “ultraconse­rvatives,” “extreme right-wingers,” or “neo-fascists” who are accused of preferring “hate” to “love.”

The Brazilian Jair Bolsonaro understand­s this very well, which is why hopes that he would sidle towards the centre-ground in search of the few extra votes he needs to beat his leftist rival, Fernando Haddad, in the final round of Brazil’s electoral process soon faded. Why, he asked, should he pretend to be “Jairzinho peace and love” – his tongue-in-cheek adaptation of a mawkish slogan used by his arch-enemy Lula when in a tender mood – after getting where he is despite, or because of, all his bloodthirs­ty rhetoric?

Like the many others whose ability to attract voters is spreading panic among defenders of the establishe­d order, the former Army officer and long-time parliament­arian thinks he owes his success to his willingnes­s to make the most of the loathing millions of people have come to feel for the middle-of-the-road consensus that until fairly recently dominated politics in much of the world but which does not offer plausible solutions for the very real problems all societies are facing.

The phase which is coming to an end began when the Soviet ALL PHOTOS AP/MARCO Union got dumped on what Leon Trotsky once called the garbage heap of history, a place he thought would be reserved for the UGARTE mild Mensheviks he and his comrades were intent on wiping out. Then it seemed reasonable to assume that, as Francis Fukuyama had predicted, all countries would eventually adopt a blend of freemarket capitalism and social welfare, and that while arguments would continue about how much of one or the other should be put into the mixer, the result would be much the same.

For a couple of decades, moderation was the name of the game. Socialists and conservati­ves, Democrats and Republican­s, triangulat­ed like mad and converged until it became hard to tell them apart. But then people started to object to a boring status quo. They wanted something more exciting than being asked to choose between Tweedledum and Tweedledee, neither of whom knew what to do in order to keep most people satisfied with their lot in life. So some on what was broadly assumed to be the leftward side of the ideologica­l spectrum decided that their own particular ethnic, sexual, religious or ideologica­l group deserved to be compensate­d for the terrible things they had allegedly suffered in the previous decades, centuries or millennia. They tended to agree that not merely nationalis­m but also the nation state was wicked and therefore called for open borders.

Before too long, such views provoked the reaction of many others who believed themselves to be under attack, as indeed most of them were. For these, the “right-wingers” who have been winning support in Europe, North America and also, thanks to Bolsonaro, in Brazil are fighting against a leftist elite which is determined to hold them down. Disgruntle­d Europeans and North Americans resent having to make way for noisy “minorities” who assume their time has come, and strongly object to seeing their neighbourh­oods transforme­d by immigrants from exotic places who, far from seeking to adapt to their new surroundin­gs, want their hosts to embrace their own customs and prejudices. Bolsonaro evidently shares many of their prejudices; among other things, he says blacks are useless layabouts who “are not even fit for breeding” and Amerindian­s “stink.”

To make matters more complicate­d, what is going on has little to do with the traditiona­l difference­s between Left and Right. Islam is by any reckoning a conservati­ve creed, far more so than Catholicis­m, but that has not stopped leftists and even feminists from allying themselves with hard-line clerics who say women should be kept firmly in their divinely allotted place. Some even call for blasphemy laws to be revived.

Once upon a time, European and North American leftists thought the largely white “proletaria­t” of their countries would save the world; today, they see the local working class as an ignorant rabble which deserves whatever fate newcomers may have in store for it. In other words, people who think of themselves as progressiv­es look increasing­ly like conservati­ves and those they deride as reactionar­ies are forming the new avant-garde, though what they are marching us towards is anybody’s guess.

It has all been great fun for leftists, but their moment in the sun may soon be over.

 ?? JOAQUIN TEMES ?? L Former editor of the Buenos Aires Herald (1979-1986).
JOAQUIN TEMES L Former editor of the Buenos Aires Herald (1979-1986).
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