Monday, May 4, 2026

The centre left is not dead. A progressive new counter-Trumpian movement is on the way

The centre left is not dead. A progressive new counter-Trumpian movement is on the way

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/may/04/centre-left-not-dead-new-counter-trumpian-movemen 

 

Pedro Sanchez and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (left) during a welcome ceremony before the Spain-Brazil summit in Barcelona, 17 April 2026.
Pedro Sanchez and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (left) during a welcome ceremony before the first Spain-Brazil summit in Barcelona, 17 April 2026. Photograph: Andreu Dalmau/EPA

The centre left is not dead. A progressive new counter-Trumpian movement is on the way

Florian Ranft

Social democrats are at last facing up to the failures of globalisation to create equality or deliver for workers

If Donald Trump represents the backlash against the liberal rules-based order, then we may now be seeing the backlash to the backlash. In a recent speech, the Spanish prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, spoke of just that. “They scream and shout not because they are winning, but because they know their time is running out,” he said, of those seeking to undermine international law and normalise the use of force. While the Trump administration and its allies seek to remake the world in their view, alternative visions of the international order are finally beginning to take shape.

The Canadian prime minister Mark Carney, in his now famous Davos speech in January, laid bare the vulnerabilities of what he described as a world in “rupture”. Middle powers must act together, he argued, because “if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu”. The way forward is not to abandon globalisation altogether but to remake it: preserving openness while upholding a rules-based order and avoiding over-reliance on a single country.

The French president Emmanuel Macron’s push for EU “strategic sovereignty” can be read as the European expression of the same instinct: openness, but with guardrails. A strategic form of liberalism that is hardened against a contested geopolitical environment.

But another response to Trumpism and the revival of nationalist great-power politics is also emerging. A who’s who of global progressives gathered in Barcelona last month to develop this response. Co-hosted by Sánchez and the Brazilian president, Lula da Silva, an array of centre-left leaders threaded the needle of a progressive internationalism fit for the 21st century.

This project starts with a different reading of the same backlash; recognition that while globalisation has generated growth, it has failed to deliver for large parts of the population, leaving wages stagnant, inequalities entrenched and entire regions feeling left behind. The Barcelona summit sought to fill a void, to provide the raison d’etre the centre-left has been searching for since the 2008 global financial crisis. Because in the years after the bailout of the financial sector, it became clear that championing untrammelled globalisation, third way-style, has not improved the lives of the working classes that are supposed to be the centre-left’s core constituency.

It has taken nearly two decades and a far right surge for the centre left to arrive at a response that matches this diagnosis. First, it seeks to redistribute the gains of globalisation. Calls to tax the billionaires, reform global finance and expand development investment take centre stage. Second, it aims to reshape the conditions under which globalisation operates. Strengthening multilateral institutions by reforming the UN, regulating the power of big tech and ensuring that globalisation operates within democratic and social constraints, are just as important as how its benefits are shared.

Third, it reasserts peace as a central pillar of international cooperation. In a world increasingly defined by conflict, progressive internationalism places renewed emphasis on diplomacy, de-escalation and the primacy of international law, particularly as it relates to the governance of markets, digital platforms and political systems. If democracy and the rule of law erodes anywhere, it threatens stability everywhere.

With more than 40 countries from Europe, Africa and the Americas involved in the new movement, this progressive internationalism revives the logic of dialogue between the global north and south that characterised the cold-war era. But it is turbocharged by Sánchez’s charismatic leadership and a renewed progressive energy spilling over from the US, most notably by a new generation of politicians such as Zohran Mamdani. In this context, Sánchez emerges as a leader to rally around, even if he is backed by a fragile coalition government at home.

Like Willy Brandt and Olof Palme before him, Sánchez seeks to bridge divides between the global north and south and to translate the latter’s demands into terms western governments can act on. Brandt, a former German chancellor, and Palme, who served twice as Swedish premier, were leading figures in European social democracy. In the 1970s and 80s they were standard bearers of the movement for a fairer international order. The landmark Brandt Report in 1980 called for wealth transfers and structural reforms to support developing countries. Respected and admired by the left but seen as divisive by conservatives, Palme was a vocal advocate of a foreign policy that emphasised disarmament, solidarity with anti-colonial movements and dialogue over confrontation. Together, the pair helped legitimise “north-south dialogue” as a central pillar of progressive foreign policy.

The former West German chancellor Willy Brandt (fourth from left) in Dakar, 1987.
The former West German chancellor Willy Brandt (fourth from left) in Dakar, 1987. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

The new progressive internationalism echoes this approach. But unlike their predecessors, Sánchez, Lula and others recognise that a combination of redistribution, peace and dialogue is not sufficient. Today’s task is also to reclaim and reassert democratic control over the economic, digital and geopolitical system that nationalists are challenging.

The renewed momentum behind these new progressive visions of the world is not accidental. It reflects a political landscape in which the transatlantic alignment of national-populist movements is beginning to fracture. Symbolic of this shift is the electoral defeat of Viktor Orbán in Hungary, who was long seen as an intellectual reference point for the Trump administration and other rightwing leaders.

Progressive internationalism and strategic liberalism both offer a path to rebuild the rules-based order; the former focusing on its legitimacy, the latter on managing risk and preserving openness.

Yet the limits of this emerging unity on the centre-left are also visible. Many European leaders continue to run up against realpolitik constraints. Germany’s vice-chancellor, the SPD leader Lars Klingbeil, foregrounds Europe’s security challenges, arguing that a strong Germany is the precondition for a strong continent. Sánchez and others have been vocal on Gaza, quieter on Ukraine, but diverging perspectives shaped by geography, history and domestic politics make unity hard to find. For Keir Starmer, the challenge is no less consequential: to reposition Britain’s role in Europe between sovereignty and cooperation, and to define what a credible international role looks like after Brexit.

Some in this coalition want radical global transformation, others are incrementalists; crises loom larger in some places than others; some bet on America bouncing back, and others concentrate more on decoupling. Sustaining unity despite these differences will be vital as the counter-Trumpian movement gains pace.

  • Florian Ranft is a member of the management board at Das Progressive Zentrum, a thinktank based in Berlin

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War preparations under way in Iran as Hormuz tensions with US escalate

War preparations under way in Iran as Hormuz tensions with US escalate

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/4/war-preparations-under-way-in-iran-as-hormuz-tensions-with-us-escalate 

 

War preparations under way in Iran as Hormuz tensions with US escalate

Amid stalled talks and sparring over key waterway, Iranian media say US warship struck, but Washington denies incident.

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Iran

Iran says it fired missiles at US warship to prevent it entering Hormuz

Tehran, Iran – Iranian media say a United States warship trying to transit the Strait of Hormuz has been hit with two missiles after ignoring warnings.

The unnamed warship had to withdraw from near the Iranian port of Jask on Monday and “flee”, according to the Fars News Agency, which is affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

The US military, in a social media statement, denied that one of its vessels had been struck.

The report by Fars came hours after the head of Iran’s joint military command warned US forces they would be attacked if they entered the Strait of Hormuz.

Major General Ali Abdollahi said in a statement that armed forces under his command will “maintain and manage security of the Strait of Hormuz with all strength” in response to US President Donald Trump’s announcement on Sunday that the US would “guide” vessels stranded by the US-Israeli war on Iran through the key waterway.

A child holds an Iranian flag through the window of a vehicle in northern Tehran, Iran
A child holds an Iranian flag while driving in Tehran [Vahid Salemi/AP Photo]

The latest tensions come as Iranian authorities mobilise supporters to prepare for a potentially lengthy conflict as they continue to exchange proposals with the US amid efforts to end the war that began on February 28 through negotiations.

The Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Monday confirmed that Tehran was reviewing the latest text from Washington relayed through Pakistan but urged a more “realistic” approach from Trump.

Authorities in Tehran will speak about “nothing except for the full end to the war at this stage”, ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei told reporters.

Campaign to ‘sacrifice’

Nearly one month after a ceasefire delivered a suspension in large-scale fighting, Iranian authorities are trying to reconstitute their missile and drone capabilities in case the war restarts, including by digging up bombed entrances to underground bases housing munitions and equipment.

Now in its 10th week, or more than 1,550 hours, a near-total internet shutdown affecting more than 90 million Iranians continues to be imposed by the government due to “security considerations”. Authorities have said the measures will remain in place until the end of the war.

Meanwhile, armed, state-backed motorcades continue to roam the streets of Tehran and other cities at night, and government supporters hold demonstrations in major city squares and intersections where they often play religious chants from loudspeakers and wave flags while guarded by armoured vehicles.

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The Iranian authorities’ main public campaign to keep the war narrative active on the domestic front is called “Jan Fadaa”, which means a person who is prepared to “sacrifice” his or her life for the cause.

Volunteers can register through a state-run website, using only a phone number. No national identification number or personal registration is required at the moment.

A text message attributed to Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei last month called the campaign “one of the key impactful elements in negotiations with the enemy”.

The president, speaker of parliament and a large number of other officials have exalted the initiative, saying they were “proud” to be representing its members. Judiciary chief Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei called it “historic”.

State media have aired numerous interviews with people participating in the campaign, who said they were prepared to give up their lives if necessary.

“I will be in the field with my family as long as required,” one man accompanied by family members told the IRGC-affiliated Mehr News Agency, expressing preparedness “to fight to the death”.

Jan Fadaa says it has more than 31 million active members, which represents just over a third of Iran’s population, or more than half of the over-12 population. The authorities, however, have not released any documentation to support the claim, which comes months after thousands of people were killed in nationwide protests in January.

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The campaign has been subject to criticism from foreign-based Iranians opposed to the government, some of whom have claimed that the real registration numbers are far lower.

Ali Sharifi Zarchi, a former professor-turned-dissident, said last week that design flaws in the campaign’s website left backend lines of code exposed that showed fewer than four million people had registered.

He and others corroborating the data also looked at the progression of registrations in the campaign, using information released from top state-media outlets.

They found that no specific time period or major event, including the start of the ceasefire on April 8, had any meaningful impact on the registration numbers being updated on the website. There were no ebbs and flows as seen in similar public campaigns, which the critics said suggested the numbers were being generated artificially.

In the aftermath of the criticism, the campaign has started reporting far fewer new registrations.

This week, Iranian authorities designated a spokesman for the campaign, Sasan Zare, who held a news conference to reject all allegations and attacked Sharifi Zarchi for “lending his platform to the enemies of the people”.

The spokesman said more than 60 percent of those registered are women and a “majority” are between 20 and 45 years old.

He also said the campaign is to exit its current “symbolic” status and will soon call on people registered to engage in activities designated by the state, which will be announced later.