Spain’s  Ministry of Equality is gone now, its rainbows packed away into the  gray corridors of more earthbound politics. Mark that as a blow to  utopians, but even more as a defeat for European social democracy.            
In eliminating the ministry, and tucking its crusade for equal rights  for women and gays into a subsidiary role in another department two  weeks ago, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero  — the Spanish prime minister who’s easily the most recognizable figure  among a handful of socialists still running countries in the European Union — was conceding a point and not contesting another:        
The concession was that his old social democratic notions of what  sounded progressive and forceful were basically not the stuff on voters’  minds during these days of profound economic insecurity.        
And in juggling his cabinet and choosing hard, stability-oriented  measures to keep Spain’s finances afloat, Mr. Zapatero (after regular  socialism-solves-everything sound bites over six years in power) hardly  seemed to challenge the idea that the European left has failed to come  up with anything resembling a novel strategy to turn the economic switch  back to full speed.        
How do you confront low growth and, according to E.U. figures last week,  a new increase in Europe-wide joblessness? Europe clearly does not say  the middle-ground left has the answer.        
If Mr. Zapatero is a measuring stick, his Socialist Party has only 29  percent support among voters. His own approval ranking is the lowest  among Spain’s party leaders. Dangling sales of military aircraft and  warships to Hugo Chávez’s  Venezuela and urging the E.U. to embrace the Castro brothers’ Cuba, as  it turned out, couldn’t secure Mr. Zapatero’s leftist base.        
If you take Germany as an example of their woe, the Social Democrats,  with 23 percent poll scores, have fallen behind the Greens with 24  percent, a historical ignominy for the party of Willy Brandt and Helmut  Schmidt.        
Policy Network, a center-left research organization that tracks the  fortunes of European social democratic parties on a comparative basis,  has found nothing to be encouraged about in its latest reading. Noting  national election defeats this year in Britain, the Netherlands and  Sweden, it wrote:        
“There’s little sign that the center-left is regaining the confidence of  the electorate, let alone presenting itself as a competent contender  for power. If social democrats step back from their own national focus  and look at the bigger picture, they will realize just how vulnerable  and ideologically staid European social democracy as a political  movement currently is.”        
Even in France, where Socialist Party poll scores are good, Pierre  Moscovici, a National Assembly deputy and former Socialist minister for  European affairs, thinks that this may be in some part a result of  current distaste in public opinion for President Nicolas Sarkozy.        
Rather, Mr. Moscovici finds European social democracy is in “an  unprecedented crisis. It’s stagnant. There is a leadership problem. We  haven’t come up with a Europe-wide relaunch program.”        
Beyond acknowledging the reality of its decline, Europe’s left has dilemmas that it finds harder to discuss.        
Unlike the United States, where endemic concerns about government  overspending make trouble for the left, Europe’s social democrats (and  many, many politically nonaffiliated Europeans) have only faint notions  of givebacks from the work force to compensate for flattened economies.  For the left, in tough times, they are particularly hard to endorse.         
As a result, in seeking office since 2008 without acknowledging the  givebacks’ necessity, the middle-ground left to some voters has looked  blindly irresponsible or traitorous to its welfare state ideology —  which is the case in Spain, where Mr. Zapatero, a seeming world-beater  while astride the country’s now imploded real estate and construction  bubble, is attempting to bring rigor to labor market practices and cuts  to retirement benefits.        
Social democracy has also been particularly quiet about a  re-nationalization of policy among some of its national parties and,  with it, a corresponding loss of legitimacy for the idea that the left  is the dominant source of solidarity among Europeans.        
“Solidarity, the left’s ultimate rallying cry,” wrote Olaf Cramme,  director of Policy Network, “is not in good shape at all.”        
It was a German Social Democrat, Peer Steinbrück, who, as finance  minister in the 2005-09 Christian Democrat-led grand coalition  government, initially said that Germany would not contribute to an E.U.  bailout fund because he couldn’t be sure how other members would spend  the money.
Market Equilibrium
Acum 14 ani

