The Global Progressive Mobilization held in Barcelona deserves a deeper analysis than it has received. What seemed like just another meeting of like-minded leaders on a European stage was, in reality, something structurally more significant: an attempt to rebuild a shared ideological architecture for progressive Latin American foreign policy at a time when multilateralism is breaking down. A crisis that has been made evident by the limited participation of the OAS and CELAC in the various crises that affect the region. In this framework, the Barcelona meeting was not a coincidence of agendas. It was a political statement.
The topics discussed were not coincidental either. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum advocated for greater rapprochement with Cuba. Brazilian President Lula offered an open criticism of Washington’s foreign policy under Trump’s second term. And Colombian President Gustavo Petro articulated his mediation efforts in Venezuela, explicitly framing them as a regional alternative to further military escalation. Read in isolation, these are three different political calculations coming from three different national contexts. Together, they form an almost coherent strategic posture: the reaffirmation of progressive multilateralism as a counterweight to the consolidation of conservative alignment with Washington.
The historical resonance is undeniable. The Pink Tide of the 2000s demonstrated that when progressive South American leaders coexisted, their foreign policies converged around a proactive diversification of diplomatic, economic, and political relations across the Global South. It was a strategy aimed at reducing structural dependence on Western hegemonic pressure. The coexistence of Néstor Kirchner, Lula and Hugo Chávez was not a mere ideological coincidence. It was a structural condition for the kind of South-South foreign policy activism that produced the rejection of the Free Trade Area of the Americas at the 2005 Mar del Plata Summit.
The current meeting in Barcelona suggests that the region’s current progressive leaders understand this lesson and are attempting to apply it in qualitatively different and, in several respects, more complex circumstances.
These circumstances are of utmost importance. The multipolar landscape of the 2020s is not the same as that of the 2000s, as Brazil’s top diplomatic advisor, Celso Amorim, acknowledged. The second Trump administration is acting with much more coercive force in Latin America than the first, as demonstrated by the military intervention in Venezuela in January 2026, which violated fundamental principles of international law. While the Pink Tide was able to take advantage of a period of relative US distraction toward the Middle East during the War on Terror, current progressive governments face an administration that has explicitly reaffirmed the Monroe Doctrine as operational foreign policy. The room for autonomous political maneuver has not disappeared, but it has been substantially reduced. The region’s progressive governments no longer face a moment of American distraction; they face one of active reassertion of the United States.
The electoral calendar adds greater urgency to this ideologically selective form of multilateralism, which appears to be the new normal for the right and the spectrum of the left in Latin American politics.
The upcoming elections in Colombia, the polarized 2026 Brazilian presidential race, and the changing landscape in Argentina, with Milei’s popularity plummeting but no Peronist candidate announced, will determine whether Barcelona represents a lasting realignment of progressive forces or a moment of symbolic solidarity without lasting institutional expression. The Global Progressive Mobilization could boost support for progressive candidates throughout Latin America. The presence of Axel Kicillof and Luisa González in Barcelona, representatives of the progressive forces in Argentina and Ecuador, and possible candidates for the presidency of their respective countries, could indicate the existence of this project.
The leaders meeting in Barcelona are attempting to normalize ideologically selective multilateralism—coordination between progressive governments in the face of conservative hemispheric consolidation—as a standard feature of Latin American foreign policy, rather than an exceptional conjunctural response. In doing so, they respond to the Shield of the Americas and the alignment of conservative forces with the Trump administration, which represents a vision of the future of Latin America.
Barcelona represents a different case, in which progressive leaders meet ideologically aligned representatives of the Global South with considerable interest in Latin America, as expressed by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. Furthermore, leaders such as Boric, Lula, Sheinbaum and Orsi have forged ideologically aligned relationships with European partners, mainly with the President of the Spanish Government, Pedro Sánchez, supported by material foreign policy components.
For example, Brazil signed a record number of bilateral agreements with Spain, ranging from essential raw materials to cooperation in the fight against racism. The progressive ideology, with populist connotations, represents a starting point for the construction of diversified foreign relations. This is the best possible outcome for Latin American foreign policies, which still need to affirm their autonomy in a multipolar world. As demonstrated by Milei’s ties to Israel, which have not produced any tangible results, ideology alone does not benefit foreign policy if it is not accompanied by a real agenda of political and economic diversification.
Barcelona demonstrated that progressive ideology can serve as a catalyst for autonomy and diversification of foreign policy, but ideology alone is insufficient. The Pink Tide precedent demonstrates that the South-South push requires institutional consolidation to survive electoral cycles and the turbulent changes typical of Latin American politics.
Current progressive leaders face a more coercive Washington than their predecessors, significantly raising the importance of upcoming elections in Colombia, Brazil and Argentina. The material agreements signed with Spain and the rapprochement with actors from the Global South such as South Africa demonstrate that the Barcelona Conference was not merely rhetorical. Whether this translates into autonomous and lasting foreign policies will depend on whether progressive leaders manage to convert ideological alignment into a solid diplomatic and economic architecture.
*This article was originally published in Latin America 21with the title The Barcelona moment: progressivism in a multipolar world.











