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Progressive International
International progressive political network From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Progressive International (PI) is an international political organisation that unites and mobilises progressive left-wing activists and groups.[1] The organisation works with over 70 member groups.[2] This comprises trade unions, political parties, peasant organisations, and social movements including Honduras's governing Liberty and Refoundation, and organizations such as the Democratic Socialists of America, CodePink, Debt Collective,[3] the Sunrise Movement,[4] and the Peace & Justice Project.[5] PI has been called "a worldwide anti-capitalist organisation."[6]
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Origins
Progressive International was formally founded and launched on 11 May 2020, responding to a 2018 open call by the Democracy in Europe Movement (DiEM25) and The Sanders Institute for progressive forces to form a unified front.[7][8][9]
The founding was supported by a council of over 40 advisors including Ece Temelkuran,[10] Katrín Jakobsdóttir, Yanis Varoufakis,[11] Carola Rackete, Nick Estes, Vanessa Nakate, Noam Chomsky,[12] Arundhati Roy, Naomi Klein,[13] Niki Ashton,[12] Rafael Correa, Fernando Haddad, Celso Amorim, and Alvaro Garcia Linera.[14]
The International claims to counter what it calls the resurgence of authoritarian nationalism worldwide as well as the rise of disaster capitalism.[15] As its mission, the Progressive International aims to "unite, organize and mobilize the world's progressive forces".[16]
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Governance
The Progressive International is guided by an advisory Council that sets the organisation’s political and strategic direction.[17] The Secretariat, which includes translators, web developers, graphic designers, policy analysts, and community organisers[18] oversees the day-to-day organisational operations, separated into several thematic areas: Movement, Blueprint, Wire, and Observatory.
The Cabinet serves as the main executive organ responsible for development, planning, and staffing decisions.[19] The Cabinet draws its membership from the other two bodies, consisting of eight Council members: Srećko Horvat, Aruna Roy, Pierre Sané, Fatima Diallo, Rachmi Hertanti, Julian Aguon,[20] Renata Ávila and Scott Ludlum, as well as general coordinators David Adler and Varsha Gandikota-Nellutla.[21][17]
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Observatory
In October 2020, Progressive International said that it was "particularly concerned about the integrity of the presidential elections in Bolivia" and sent an observer group made up of Members of Parliament from around Europe to observe the election.[22]
On 15 November 2021, the Progressive International launched their global observatory "as attacks on democracy escalate across the world" and "authoritarian leaders are getting organised to capture the courts, criminalise opposition, and rig the rules to hold onto power," said General Coordinator David Adler in a statement.[23]
The founding was endorsed by Noam Chomsky, Rafael Correa, Ertuğrul Kürkçü, Guillaume Long, Celso Amorim, Fernando Haddad, Jeremy Corbyn, Aruna Roy, Aída García-Naranjo and Andrés Arauz according to the Brazilian daily paper Folha de S.Paulo. The same article included a statement from Adler which singled out Narendra Modi in India and Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil as being part of a wider network of authoritarian threats.[24]
The Belmarsh Tribunal
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On 2 October 2020, Progressive International launched the Belmarsh Tribunal to convene groups of legal experts and Julian Assange supporters.[25] In the first year guests included Lula da Silva, Srećko Horvat, M.I.A. and Slavoj Žižek.[26] The hearings claimed that the charges against Assange were an "ongoing attack on press freedom".[27] The tribunal was modeled after the 1966 Russell–Sartre Tribunal, which investigated American involvement in the Vietnam War. In 2022, the third tribunal, which took place at the People’s Forum in New York City, coincided with the 20th anniversary of the establishment of the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.[28] Jeremy Corbyn and the Peace & Justice Project participated in the 4th Belmarsh Tribunal in Washington D.C. in 2023.[29]
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Positions
Shortly after the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022,[33] Polish members Lewica Razem left Progressive International due what Razem claimed in a statement on 1 March, was "the absence of declaration recognising Ukraine’s sovereignty and an absolute condemnation of Russian imperialism".[34]
On 9 March 2022, Progressive International organised their first Forum for Peace, in response to the "brutal invasion of Ukraine" and its escalation "toward intercontinental war."[35] On 21 April, Ukrainian Commons journal quit Progressive International in a statement on Twitter.[36][37] On 13 May 2022 a joint press conference hosted by Jeremy Corbyn, Ece Temelkuran and Yanis Varoufakis on behalf of the Progressive International, DiEM25 and MeRA25, presented the Athens Declaration, which stated: “The war on Ukraine calls for support for victims of war and a new non-aligned movement”.[38]
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Members
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Progressive International is made up of member organizations that are political parties or movements.[39] Member media organizations participate in the wire service.
Political parties
Movements
Publications
Source:[40]
Former members
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References
External links
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