The refusal to take concrete steps against Israel has damaged the west’s credibility with the global south, he says, and by displaying double standards weakened the cause of Ukraine.
The perceived moral void being left by the west will be filled, he predicted. The new partnership between India, China and Russia on display this week in Beijing may mask ideological conflicts, but “in politics, as in life, there is always someone who is going to fill the gap you leave, and that is what we are witnessing when it comes to some east Asian countries”.
But making an appeal to the global south on the biggest issues societies are facing, such as the climate crisis, was becoming harder owing to fissures in the west. After a summer of forest fires that in his view confirmed climate change was happening faster in Europe than the scientists predicted, he admits “the problem we are now facing is that there are traditional rightwing parties that perhaps don’t deny scientific reality, but they act and behave as if climate change does not exist”.
The traditional right, he said, by turning the scientific evidence of climate change into a traditional ideological political struggle “are committing their biggest mistake”.
“To combat climate change, you need resources, you need consistency, you need solidarity and you need a long term perspective, and unfortunately in politics nowadays we lack a bit of all that.” It is a depressing admission that in reality he could apply to all the dilemmas facing social democrats in government.