It is paradoxical that at the worst moment of the Republican Party – with the added embarrassment of Donald Trump as the spokesperson for its ideals – the other end of the political power spectrum, the liberal one, still cannot consolidate a convincing opposition. The Democrats appear lost, and they are struggling to start their reconstruction, while still nostalgic for an unlikely triumph with Hillary Clinton.
The unexpectedness of the Democrats’ defeat in the 2016 elections made evident the disconnect with many U.S. citizens that forced a change of leadership. Although today some are still asking former Vice President Joe Biden to take the reins of the party or even talk about another attempt by Hillary, the true winds of renewal seem to come from the chairs of Congress.
Right now, the Democrats’ recovery of the House seems to be the first step for the liberal transformation with their sights on the 2020 presidential elections. What’s interesting about the success in the legislative elections is that the main figures are women, and openly progressive women at that. Without ambiguities, they settle at the antipodes of Trump's conservative and racist male chauvinism and speak to a new audience that can snatch the re-election away from the millionaire candidate at the polls.
Perhaps the most notable figure of this new wave is Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 29-year-old young woman of Puerto Rican descent. In recent months, and even more since she was sworn in, she has established herself as a fresh face for the Democratic renewal. It won’t be she that leads the opposition, of course, but it does mark a trend in a country that’s exhausted by the discourse of those that currently hold the reins of the Oval Office and therefore may be attracted by new approaches more aligned with the center or the moderate left.
The course of the current presidency affords a huge possibility for progressivism to take over the Democratic Party. A complete overthrow. Something like what Obama attempted when he was a candidate but could not do as president: a social vindication. What is clear is that young people won’t be able to enact the change alone, and they will need to join with the old leadership. The question is, who today will stand out as the figure of the transition? Whoever this is, he or she has yet to appear.
Es paradójico que en el peor momento del partido republicano estadounidense -a costa de la debacle que significa Donald Trump como vocero de sus ideales- la otra esquina del espectro polÃtico de la potencia, la liberal, aún no pueda consolidar una oposición convincente. Los demócratas lucen perdidos y les ha costado iniciar su reconstrucción, nostálgicos aún de un triunfo con Hillary Clinton que no pudo ser.
Quizá la figura más notable de esta nueva ola sea la representante Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, una joven de 29 años y ascendencia puertorriqueña. En los últimos meses, y más aún desde su posesión hace dos semanas, se ha establecido como una cara fresca para la renovación demócrata.
No será ella, por supuesto, quien lidere la oposición, pero sà marca una tendencia en un paÃs que, agotado por el discurso de los que llevan las riendas del Salón Oval, puede verse atraÃdo por nuevos enfoques más escorados al centro o a la izquierda moderada.
The message is unmistakable: there are no absolute guarantees and state sovereignty is conditional when it clashes with the interests of powerful states.
Venezuela is likely to become another wasted crisis, resembling events that followed when the U.S. forced regime changes in Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq.