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The global South swings left, Europe lurches right
From Modi’s stumble to Sheinbaum’s surge, voters in the majority world are seeking economic justice — here in Britain, Labour must learn to offer real change before Farage devours the Tories, writes DIANE ABBOTT

NATURALLY, the focus for people in this country is the general election on July 4. But ours is far from the only general election this year and some of them will have important consequences and maybe even important lessons for us here.
 
Among the really big countries that have all already held elections are India, Mexico and South Africa. It would probably be a mistake to try to impose a preconceived pattern on the outcomes. But there may be common themes which have had a big impact on the results, and which may crop up elsewhere.
 
I am no expert at all on any of these countries, or their political systems. But there are two striking common features.
 
In these countries of the global South, the outcomes were both a surprise (including in relation to polling trends) and quite seismic. The second factor was that the problems of the economy were well to the fore with them all suffering from what we tend to call the cost-of-living crisis.
 
In India, there was a major upset when Narendra Modi’s BJP party and allies lost their overall majority. It is worth recalling that he remains India’s most popular politician, so the scale of the losses should not be exaggerated. Even so, the big loss of seats and votes means that he has also lost his aura of electoral invincibility.
 
Numerous reports suggest that he lost votes among the poor and the Dalits (the so-called “untouchables”), many of who were treated abysmally during the Covid pandemic and have never properly recovered. This seems to be at least a partial but emphatic rejection of Modi’s politics around economic issues.
 
In a very different context, something similar may have happened in South Africa. For the first time since apartheid was smashed, the ANC has not won an overall majority in a general election. The ANC won barely 40 per cent of the vote, losing 17 per cent and 71 seats. This is a seismic shift.
 
The ANC has maintained a large and deep following in South Africa because it is rightly judged to be the instrument of the destruction of white-minority rule. No-one can ever take away that achievement from Mandela and his comrades. Yet the slump in the polls cannot be attributed to a rejection of this great legacy.
 
The change in votes and seats was very straightforward. All other parties were effectively static. The ANC total loss of 17 per cent went overwhelmingly to uMkhonto weSizwe (MK), who gained 15 per cent.

The MK name, taken from the former armed wing of the liberation movement, is led by former ANC president Jacob Zuma. Zuma is a hugely controversial figure dogged by allegations of serious crimes, including sexual crimes and enormous corruption.
 
But his association with the ANC, the MK name, and its leftist political stance all suggest its vote is not at all a rejection of the legacy of the liberation struggle. Instead, the implication is that some former ANC voters are groping towards more radical economic solutions than the ones that are being offered.
 
If the judgements about the Indian and South African elections are necessarily tentative, the outcome of the Mexican presidential election is unambiguous. The election of Claudia Sheinbaum as President, with 60 per cent of the vote, means that Mexico has passed definitively into the camp of the leading leftist countries of the global South.
 
Surpassing her mentor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (Amlo) in terms of vote, Sheinbaum is the country’s first female president, a Jewish woman in a country with a tiny Jewish minority, and a supporter of Palestinian rights.

She is a committed environmental activist and holds a science PhD to boot. She opposes neoliberal economic policies, as should be expected from a former militant of the M19 movement, and has pledged to expand Amlo’s programme of greater welfare benefits and state pensions.
 
Mexican voters have decisively shifted leftwards and broken the old political duopoly. From these three elections taken together, it seems that there is an uneven but definite trend in many parts of the global South. Voters are seeking economic solutions from the left.
 
This cannot be said at all of the main political trends in the global North. The political trend is to the right, to the benefit of parties and policies of the right and the far right.
 
The European elections are treated far more seriously in many other countries than they ever were here. As a result, they often point to election trends in major domestic elections too.

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