Tuesday, November 9, 2010

U.S. legislative elections, Chomsky and Stiglitz

Authors:
José Alberto López Rafaschieri and Luis Alberto López Rafaschieri
www.morochos.net

In the November 2 elections, Americans voted to choose members of Congress, among other authorities. Contrary to what has been happening since 2006, this time the Republicans were favored by the electorate, taking control of the legislature from Democrats and simultaneously marking the relaunching of the neo-conservative politics in this country.

But, why is important the strengthening of the U.S. rightist faction in the last election? Well, among the many interpretations that this vote could have, we would not want to miss that, because of the 2008-2010 financial crisis, social scientists of the likes of Noam Chomsky and Joseph Stiglitz warned the end of the influence of the traditional political-economic ideologies to begin an era where the more progressive doctrines would dominate the electoral environment, including in the United States.

And that's where the Nov. 2 election appears on the scene, refuting the hypothesis of such thinkers, in the sense that when American voters decide to give the majority of the legislature to the Republicans, the last thing that is happening is that the American political system is becoming an archetype of the international left because of the global recession. Ie, after the financial crisis of 2008-2010, the American people chose to transfer the Congress from the moderate right of the Democratic Party to the purist right of the Republican Party. Indeed there was an ideological shift, but toward neoconservatism, very different from that anticipated by Chomsky and Stiglitz.


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