![Yolanda Díaz seated at desk with U.S. Secretary of Labor Marty J. Walsh.](https://europeanconservative.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/U.S._Secretary_of_Labor_Marty_J._Walsh_hosts_MOU_Signing_ceremony_with_Labor_Minister_Yolanda_Diaz_Perez_of_Spain_30-e1677594167893.jpg)
Left Unity or Opportunity? All Eyes on Yolanda Díaz
Some say the political project of Spain’s labour minister is uniting the Left, yet she may actually be establishing her own movement.
Some say the political project of Spain’s labour minister is uniting the Left, yet she may actually be establishing her own movement.
There must be a golden path between politics hijacking the freedom of information and rogue programs running amok on the internet. The outcome of this watershed moment in humanity’s history depends on our ability to find it.
Virtue-signalling is not new. But it has enjoyed a special burgeoning in recent decades, not least because modern culture sooner rewards noisy displays of passion than less visible acts of virtue.
Globalism requires that societies accept their place in a global division of labour, and the principal political agent facilitating this is the anti-worker, pro-woke Left, with a complicit centre-Right as rearguard.
The Left-coalition government in Spain is, quite straightforwardly, abolishing democracy. We explore recent events to unpack this country’s dangerous trajectory.
The most important distinction now runs between globalists and protectionists. The continuing reference to the old Left to Right coordinate system hinders us in our search for a middle ground between the local and the global.
Soumahoro’s election had become a symbol of integration and meritocracy—a strong message to put on display at the time of Meloni’s victory. Today, his position is shaken by a scandal involving his wife and his mother-in-law.
Individual citizens cannot be trusted to understand ideologies. They must be guided, Ebeling explains, by “collective epistemic agents.” But what knowledge are these agents supposed to help citizens gain?
The exchange between the two leaders occurs in the context of Russia’s strong support for the Latin American Left.
The connivance of the establishment Left (and, though less explicitly, the Right as well) with the long-term strengthening of separatism has been a feature, not a bug, of Spanish democracy.
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