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by dragonwriter
1981 days ago
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> since you seem to be of the position that the "more centrist faction of the Democratic Party" is not Left. It's not. Also, neoliberalism was the economic ideology of the dominant faction of the Republican Party prior to Trump, too, and few would call them “the Left". (There were differences in social ideology, of course, between Republicans and Democrats.) Hence the “neoliberal consensus” of the 1990s and beyond. |
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However it seems who gets to be in "the left" and who doesn't seems to be very up for debate these days.
I'm fairly certain if you asked anyone in the 90's if the clinton administration was on the left they'd answer in the affirmative.
I understand the social democratic part of the left has evolved and differentiated itself since then. This is great, but I think it problematic to retcon the history exclusively this view.
Just because the social democratic faction would like complete ownership on the term "the left" I think does not make it so, or at least can be agreed to be a subjective claim.