Sentinel & Enterprise

2022 saw the rise of the left

- By Pankaj Mishra

Pundits reviewing 2022 are heaving a palpable sigh of relief. This was the year, or so the consensus goes, when far-right strongmen such as Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro were enfeebled, China stumbled and the “West” made a comeback, at least against Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Such assessment­s, nostalgic for a lost “liberal internatio­nal order,” ignore a more widespread developmen­t: how a general discontent with the old order, exacerbate­d by the pandemic, is fueling a revival of the left in Latin America, Europe and Australasi­a.

The trend can be seen most clearly in Latin American countries that have long been tormented by extremes of poverty and inequality. Returning to power in Brazil in October, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva heads a remarkably long victory parade by leftists throughout the region. In June, Colombia elected its first leftist president in Gustavo Petro. Gabriel Boric became in December 2021 the most left-wing president of Chile since Salvador Allende. Bolivian President Luis Arce came to power in 2020. In 2019 in Argentina, Alberto Fernández defeated an incumbent right- wing president. A year earlier, Mexico’s Andrés Manuel López Obrador won in a landslide. (Pedro Castillo’s ouster in Peru after a failed attempt to dissolve congress stands as the movement’s one notable reverse.)

Australia, New Zealand and many European countries provide additional context for why so many voters are turning to social- democratic, and in some cases avowedly socialist, leaders. In the simplest terms, the benefits of globalizat­ion are shrinking and, as the prices of essentials such as energy and food soar, voters expect more social protection­s from government­s. This is why center-left parties — from Jacinda Ardern’s Labour Party in New Zealand to Pedro Sanchez’s Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) in Spain — share an emphasis on improved wages, better job security and more public goods.

This is a step away from the goals of privatizat­ion and marketizat­ion that since the 1980s have been energetica­lly pursued by not only right-wing but also center-left and even some socialist parties in Britain, France, Germany, Sweden and other countries. Public opinion has shifted; the ideologica­l hegemony of the socalled “Third Way” of Bill Clinton, Tony Blair and for

mer German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder now survivesmo­stly in small bubbles, chief among them journalist­s and commentato­rs over the age of 40.

Another preserve is Britain’s Labour Party, whose Blairite leader Keir Starmer and supporters in the media currently find themselves out of step with overwhelmi­ng public support for striking public-sector workers. Today’s cannier social democrats such as Germanchan­cellor Olaf Scholz and Portugal’s Socialist President Antonio Costa work with the insight that the neglect of the welfare state, the shredding of the social security net and the rise of inequality — in part, consequenc­es of the Third Way that were experience­d with deeper pain during the pandemic — were what pushed many voters to the far-right. To get them back, leaders have to recreate some part of the old compact between the social- democratic left and the weak, the insulted and the injured. Thus, Scholz’s election campaign ran on the theme “respect for you” ( Respekt für Dich).

That said, too much should not be read into the increasing­ly close relations between Germany’s Scholz, Spain’s Sanchez and Portugal’s Costa, or in the Socialist Internatio­nal conference in Madrid in November, which was presided over by Sanchez and attended by several heads of state.

Leftists today are very far fromthe clear and confident consensus that in the 1970s united such European leaders as Willy Brandt, Olof Palme, Bruno Kreisky and François Mitterrand, and extended deep into government­s and political movements in Asia, Africa and Latin America. For one, electorate­s have fractured, probably irrevocabl­y, and most social democrats and socialists today come to power in coalition government­s with narrow margins of victory.

They have little scope for structural transforma­tions and the newallianc­es they create are precarious. While winning back alienated working classes, they cannot afford to lose the progressiv­e and profession­al middle classes inmetropol­itan areas, as well as young activists seeking climate and gender justice.

But this dilemma is not unsolvable. As inflation peaks amid the unending crises of a pandemic and war in Ukraine, fear of the future will make many more people than before look to government­s for social and economic security.

And politician­s who respond to thiswidesp­read longing for reassuranc­e are likely to do better than those still going on about how free markets will unleash entreprene­urial spirits and turbocharg­e growth. For example, after lagging behind for years, Spain’s PSOE has in recent months overtaken the right-wing Partido Popular (PP) in opinion polls with a program of public spending funded by tax hikes on banks, utility companies and large fortunes.

In reaction, a cornered right is likely to become even more intransige­ntly radical, ramping up its culture wars. Those celebratin­g the return of thewest in 2022 ought to turn their focus to what’s likely to be themain event of next year: how, after years of ideologica­l confusion and stalemate, the real battle for hearts andmindswi­llbe ledby a freshly reconstruc­ted left.

 ?? CARLOS COSTA — AFP/GETTY IMAGES/ TNS ?? Brazilian President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva looks on during a meeting with Portuguese counterpar­t at the Belem Palace in Lisbon on Nov. 18, 2022.
CARLOS COSTA — AFP/GETTY IMAGES/ TNS Brazilian President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva looks on during a meeting with Portuguese counterpar­t at the Belem Palace in Lisbon on Nov. 18, 2022.
 ?? LUIS SANTANA — TAMPA BAY TIMES/ TNS ?? Florida Gov. Ron Desantis speaks to a crowd of supporters during his election night party at the Tampa Convention Center on Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022, in Tampa, Florida.
LUIS SANTANA — TAMPA BAY TIMES/ TNS Florida Gov. Ron Desantis speaks to a crowd of supporters during his election night party at the Tampa Convention Center on Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022, in Tampa, Florida.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States