I'm actually surprised that after three decades of neoliberal agenda people don't turn to the real left. Even when they rarely do so, it's some watered-down cosmopolitan version, like with Syriza in Greece. Admittedly, implementing such policies in the Eurozone is a tall order since it requires abandoning the common currency and escaping the grasp of the ECB, but waiting for either Germany or France (i.e. large powers) to do it first feels like waiting for Godot.
I'm actually surprised that after three decades of neoliberal agenda people don't turn to the real left. Even when they rarely do so, it's some watered-down cosmopolitan version, like with Syriza in Greece. Admittedly, implementing such policies in the Eurozone is a tall order since it requires abandoning the common currency and escaping the grasp of the ECB, but waiting for either Germany or France (i.e. large powers) to do it first feels like waiting for Godot.