They are social-liberals. They believe a competitive market economy is required to have a sustainable healthcare and welfare system. They believe in climate change but they don’t want extreme measures. They prefer slow measures such as banning plastic or encouraging electric cars. They support Ukraine. They sent aid to Palestine and imposed sanctions on Israeli settlers but don’t believe the problems of the Middle East can ever be fixed by outsiders. They support nuclear technology. They support legal abortion. They oppose death penalty.
Leftists see Renaissance as right-wing / extreme-right.
They believe a competitive market economy is required to have a sustainable healthcare and welfare system.
This sentence doesn’t make sense to me, or at least the juxtaposition of ideas is confusing. Because my reading is that it means healthcare and welfare systems should be connected to this competitive market economy. But “a competitive market economy welfare system” is just a meaningless word salad, so that can’t be exactly what they’re talking about.
Or perhaps are they saying that social programs need to be supported by a competitive market economy in other areas? Although I don’t agree with that requirement, I think that interpretation at least makes logical sense.
It kind of makes sense in contrast to other systems IMO. Some people advocate for pure socialized healthcare, others want to maintain a mix of socialized and private similar to Germany, and some advocate for pure privatization of healthcare like the USA. To me “competitive market economy” in terms of healthcare and welfare implies the mixed option, but I’m not vouching for them because idk if that’s actually what they plan to do regardless of it is what they mean. Given their place on the spectrum they likely want to be vague intentionally so as not to upset either side of the aisle among their constituents.
Officially, basically taxes are a neccessary evil that should be minimised as much as possible while maintaining enough income to provide necessary infrastructure. Unofficially they seem to favour the rich over the general masses (it’s one if the big complaints about Macron - “President for the rich”)
They are social-liberals. They believe a competitive market economy is required to have a sustainable healthcare and welfare system. They believe in climate change but they don’t want extreme measures. They prefer slow measures such as banning plastic or encouraging electric cars. They support Ukraine. They sent aid to Palestine and imposed sanctions on Israeli settlers but don’t believe the problems of the Middle East can ever be fixed by outsiders. They support nuclear technology. They support legal abortion. They oppose death penalty.
Leftists see Renaissance as right-wing / extreme-right.
The extreme-right sees them as leftists.
This sentence doesn’t make sense to me, or at least the juxtaposition of ideas is confusing. Because my reading is that it means healthcare and welfare systems should be connected to this competitive market economy. But “a competitive market economy welfare system” is just a meaningless word salad, so that can’t be exactly what they’re talking about.
Or perhaps are they saying that social programs need to be supported by a competitive market economy in other areas? Although I don’t agree with that requirement, I think that interpretation at least makes logical sense.
It kind of makes sense in contrast to other systems IMO. Some people advocate for pure socialized healthcare, others want to maintain a mix of socialized and private similar to Germany, and some advocate for pure privatization of healthcare like the USA. To me “competitive market economy” in terms of healthcare and welfare implies the mixed option, but I’m not vouching for them because idk if that’s actually what they plan to do regardless of it is what they mean. Given their place on the spectrum they likely want to be vague intentionally so as not to upset either side of the aisle among their constituents.
Capitalism is when the elite has captured markets, removed competition and is making huge profits with their monopolies.
Bringing competition back to healthcare would bring down prices and make it affordable.
Thank you! That all sounds great honestly, but where do they stand on taxing the rich?
Officially, basically taxes are a neccessary evil that should be minimised as much as possible while maintaining enough income to provide necessary infrastructure. Unofficially they seem to favour the rich over the general masses (it’s one if the big complaints about Macron - “President for the rich”)