Leftist leaders gather in Spain to rally against rise of far right

Published April 19, 2026
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva attend the Global Progressive Mobilisation in Barcelona, Spain, April 18. — Reuters
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva attend the Global Progressive Mobilisation in Barcelona, Spain, April 18. — Reuters

BARCELONA: Leftist leaders from around the globe met in Barcelona on Saturday to rally against the threat to democracy from the far right, with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum displaying closer ties.

The gathering comes as democratic institutions and values are under pressure from advancing authoritarian and far-right forces, including in the West, where US President Donald Trump’s influence looms large.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was co-chairing the “Meeting in Defence of Democracy” alongside Sanchez.

Attendees included South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, European Council chief Antonio Costa, Colombian President Gustavo Petro, Irish President Catherine Connolly, Britain’s Justice Secretary David Lammy and German Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil.

PM Sanchez calls for reforming UN, whose role has been sidelined in Middle East and Russia-Ukraine conflicts

Klingbeil said the meeting “is an important signal at a time when the world is becoming increasingly divided and when politics is also being conducted in a very swaggering manner. He said it showed that the attendees “stand together in solidarity and that we are seeking cooperation”.

Sanchez and Sheinbaum warmly greeted each other in another sign of thawing relations. It was the Mexican leader’s first visit to Spain since taking office in October 2024.

Ties have been on the mend between their two countries after strains caused by Mexico in 2019 that Madrid apologise for historical abuses during the Spanish conquest and subsequent colonisation of the Americas.

Spain’s King Felipe VI last month acknowledged “a lot of abuse” had happened in the colonial period in the Americas.

Sheinbaum, on arrival for the meeting, told journalists that there there had never been a “diplomatic crisis” between the two countries.

Call for UN reform

Sanchez, opening the meeting, underlined a need for reform of the United Nations, whose role has been sidelined in recent wars, most notably in the Middle East and in the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

“We think the time has come for the United Nations to be renewed, reformed and — why not of course — headed by a woman. It’s not only a question of justice, but a question of credibility,” he said. “The context is clear: democracy cannot be taken for granted,” he said.

Sanchez, one of the most vociferous critics of the Middle East war, already on Friday called for a reshaped multilateral order to challenge “those who consider it dead or work to undermine its foundations”.

In an interview with Spanish daily newspaper El Pais ahead of the gathering, Lula stressed the Barcelona gathering was “not going to be an anti-Trump meeting”.

Published in Dawn, April 19th, 2026

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