I don't really agree with that: if you don't have at least, a class based approach, (not a class based fetish, btw) then imo, you will prioritise things differently according to your political beliefs. In terms of the Greens and their 'prime directive' as it were to 'save the planet', you may impose green taxes which will hurt the poorest the most, something a socialist party for instance would be very wary of. That doesn't preclude the obvious compassion that Greens have for the underdog, those on low incomes, etc, just the logic of their ideology may push them in a different direction
I also think the GP in Germany supported the Harz laws, cutting benefits, though i may be wrong
I also think the GP in Germany supported the Harz laws, cutting benefits, though i may be wrong
Quite. In the absence of clarification, one can only guess what is meant there.
It's probably not very important except to members of parties who are wedded to that way of thinking though.
On the other hand, if you are sceptical about the whole idea of a 'vanguard' class segment, and see more potential in bringing together all of those class segments whose interest diverges from that of neo-liberal capitalism, perhaps with the idea of reconstructing civil society out of the fragments created by division of labour, then those sorts of arguments against the potential value of political phenomena like the Greens don't really carry much weight.
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