Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez sits in the front row of the Global Progressive Mobilisation Summit, smiling and applauding alongside other attendees. Sánchez, dressed in a bright blue suit, is flanked by several colleagues, including a woman in a purple blazer and another in a dark jacket. Above them, a long digital banner illuminates the venue with the slogans "Global Progressive Mobilisation" and "FORWARD TOGETHER NOW." The scene captures an energetic moment of unity and support within a crowded conference hall.

Johannes Düselder

The centre left is not dead. A progressive new counter-Trumpian movement is on the way

If Donald Trump represents the backlash against the liberalrules-based order, then we may now be seeing the backlash to the backlash. In a recent speech, the Spanish prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, spoke of just that. “They scream and shout not because they are winning, but because they know their time is running out,” he said, of those seeking to undermine international law and normalise the use of force. While the Trump administration and its allies seek to remake the world in their view, alternative visions of the international order are finally beginning to take shape.

The Canadian prime minister Mark Carney, in his now famous Davos speech in January, laid bare the vulnerabilities of what he described as a world in “rupture”. Middle powers must act together, he argued, because “if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu”. The way forward is not to abandon globalisation altogether but to remake it: preserving openness while upholding a rules-based order and avoiding over-reliance on a single country.

The article was originally published on 04.05.2026 in The Guardian.

Author

Florian Ranft

Member of the Management Board and Head of Green New Deal
Florian Ranft is a member of the Management Board and is head of Green New Deal & Progressive Governance at Das Progressive Zentrum.

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