The Iraqi Left: A crisis of tools, not a crisis of values
This article comes at a critical moment that the Iraqi Left is experiencing. The results of the recent elections in November 2025 cannot be seen as merely a passing electoral loss or as a direct result of the unfair electoral law and the dominance of political money. While these external factors are valid and influential, they are compounded by even more grueling challenges of systemic restrictions and structural corruption. However, focusing on external influences alone overlooks the essence of the problem.
What happened is a concentrated expression of a deeper crisis affecting the organization, methods, and discourse within the Iraqi Left. It reflects a dysfunctional relationship between valid ideas and ineffective tools, as well as between radical transformative discourse and its presentation in a complex and harsh political environment. Despite this decline, the Iraqi Left remains a genuine hope and the most serious alternative for social change.
Given this dual diagnosis, the critical question arises: Why, despite the dire conditions faced by the masses and the power of corrupt cliques, has social change not emerged as a clear and convincing popular choice? Why has the Left’s project remained fragmented and inconsistent, with similar slogans but differing approaches, preventing the masses from seeing a coherent alternative?
Do we benefit from the Capitalist Methodology?
To understand this defect, it is necessary to examine the issue from an unconventional angle. The logic of capitalism, grounded in science and measurement rather than ideology, offers a strict practical model for addressing decline and weakness. The crisis facing the Iraqi Left can be seen as a failure of a promising transformative “product,” characterized by theoretically sound policies that lack optimal methods for practical implementation and require improved management and marketing. This occurs within a political market that faces significant competition from religious, nationalist, and bourgeois forces. Capitalism treats society as a market and ideas as commodities. When a group of “companies” with similar names enters the market to sell a singular product—social change—without harmony or coordination, the quality itself becomes problematic.
This reflects what happened to the Iraqi Left in the recent elections. Not only was it organizationally scattered, but it was also politically divided between participation and boycott. There was no unified position, clear discourse, or understood collective tactic. The masses did not perceive a single “product” with distinct features, but rather a series of similar products competing against each other instead of confronting real competitors. In such a scenario, the market punishes inconsistent products. Chaotic plurality, conflicting discourse, and confusion erode mass confidence, not because they reject the idea of change, but because it reaches them in a fragmented, elitist manner that is difficult to grasp in relation to societal development and daily needs.
The Left and addressing decline and weakness
Upon facing decline and weakness, a fundamental difference emerges between the logic of capitalism and that of many forces on the Left. Capitalism does not revisit its classical theorists at every crisis to determine if their texts were fully applied. As a practical system, it treats decline as a measurable and addressable technical signal. It quickly alters tools, discourse, facades, and work mechanisms without guilt or reverence for names and history. Capitalism employs scientific research: it collects data, analyzes numbers, studies behavior, and utilizes advanced technologies and artificial intelligence to test hypotheses. It asks simply and directly: Why did the product not succeed? Based on the answers, it rebuilds its policies.
In contrast, some forces on the Left tend to return to their classical theorists for answers during periods of decline, looking back to the celebrated history of their parties. However, the real question should be: Why did our message not resonate today? The issue isn’t the return to leftist heritage as a living critical method, but when this heritage and old organizational mechanisms become rigid standards that overshadow reality.
We reclaim the Scientific Method, which was always the essence of Leftist thought
The lesson here is not to glorify capitalism or adopt its values, but to benefit from its scientific method. The fundamental challenge lies in how to “borrow the tool” (the scientific methodology) while rejecting the “spirit” (individual profit and class dominance).
The Iraqi Left now needs this type of evaluation and scientific rigor. It must conduct real surveys in popular neighborhoods and among female and male workers, not to concede its class horizon, but to understand how its message is received, how it is interpreted, and where it falters. It needs to study and measure the impact of its policies, assess its presence both on the ground and in digital spaces, and evaluate the language of its discourse. It should ask directly: Why do we not reach our audience? And why do we not influence? Only then can bold political and organizational decisions be made based on the results.
The Left in the age of the Digital Revolution
In the context of the digital revolution, this need increases in urgency and in an unprecedented way. We live in a time where ideas are no longer measured by the soundness of their theoretical starting point only, but by their ability to reach, influence, interact, and transform into a tangible collective action, which are criteria that young generations understand and deal with daily in their digital and social lives. The young generation of female and male workers of hand and thought does not receive politics through long speeches nor through heavy theoretical texts, but through digital platforms, short videos, open discussions, fast solidarity campaigns, and forms of flexible horizontal organization that allow direct participation and decision-making from the bottom to the top. Ignoring these transformations does not mean neutrality, but leaving this space entirely to the Left’s opponents who are more organized and capable of investing in digital tools.
From here, dealing with the digital space as a real arena of class struggle becomes a political and organizational necessity, not a secondary technical or media matter. For organization, mobilization, building trust, formulating discourse, and measuring impact, have all come today to pass through this space as much as they pass through the street and workplaces. And without the Left possessing the tools of organization, mobilization, and scientific evaluation in this field, it is unable to transform wide social anger into an organized force capable of continuity and influence. The contemporary Left is that which is capable of linking the justice of its social project with a conscious and systematic use of the tools of the age, allowing it to reclaim its role as a real force of change in a society that is changing rapidly.
Why do we need a broad and unified Leftist framework?
The Iraqi Left has played an important historical role in the struggle for the rights of female and male workers. However, this honorable history brings with it a greater responsibility: not to content ourselves with celebrating the past, but to confront reality as it is. The Iraqi Left is currently facing a challenging situation characterized by continuous decline, increasing popular isolation, and a notable distance from younger generations. The average age of current leadership mostly ranges between sixty and seventy, which, while acknowledging their significant contributions and sacrifices, highlights the need to create space for the energies of younger generations who navigate a different reality.
In light of this reality, it is no longer sufficient to merely diagnose the crisis. If our class opponents continually rebuild themselves through analysis, experimentation, and correction, then our scattered nature and adherence to old forms diminish our chances of influence. Thus, discussing a broad and unified leftist framework becomes both a practical response to this crisis and a historical necessity.
Lessons of unity and frontal work: How did global Leftist forces reclaim their effectiveness?
In many experiences worldwide, leftist forces have shown that overcoming marginalization and decline is not achieved by clinging to old organizational forms, but rather through unity, collaboration, and building flexible frameworks capable of embracing plurality. In Portugal, the Left Bloc serves as a leading model, merging several leftist currents within a framework that respects pluralism. This approach enabled it to become a significant player in forming governments and possessing negotiating power that individual parties lacked. In Chile, the “Approve Dignity” alliance formed between the Communist Party and youth organizations led wide protests and brought Gabriel Boric to the presidency as the youngest leader in 2021. Despite setbacks in the 2025 elections, the alliance remained steadfast as an organized opposition bloc, preventing the fragmentation of the forces for change.
In Denmark, the merger of three small Marxist parties into the multi-platform Red-Green Alliance transitioned the Left from the margins to a political force that garnered 7.1% of the votes in the 2025 elections, emerging as a major municipal presence in the capital. In Colombia, the Historic Pact succeeded as a coalition that included Marxists, environmentalists, and feminists, breaking the traditional monopoly on power and bringing Gustavo Petro to the presidency in 2022 through a radical pragmatic discourse that resonated with people’s daily lives. In Germany, the unification of leftist currents from the East and West in the Die Linke party created a strong framework that represented the social and electoral Left for years, despite intellectual variations. In Spain, Podemos utilized horizontal organization and digital tools to shift the Left from protest squares to the heart of Parliament in record time, challenging traditional party structures. In Brazil, the “Front of Hope” reclaimed power in 2022 through broad alliances that transcended narrow ideological slogans, employing digital tools effectively to confront the dominance of the far-right.
What unifies these modern experiences, despite differing contexts, is the recognition that the Left can no longer operate effectively as closed individual parties; instead, it must form wide, flexible, multi-platform alliances that manage differences and link politics to immediate social demands. These lessons may not transfer directly to Iraq, but they provide a practical horizon for considering the establishment of a broad and unified Iraqi leftist framework capable of overcoming fragmentation and transforming the justice of the leftist project into an organized and effective social force.
Foundations and mechanisms of the unified Leftist framework
A roadmap can be put forward for establishing a unified Iraqi leftist framework, based on gathering all leftist and progressive forces on points of meeting and an agreed-upon minimum program, through:
- Holding a general conference for all factions and figures of the Iraqi and Kurdish Left, discussing the building of a unified multi-platform organizational framework, including parties, currents, unions, and syndicates, and allowing the joining of individuals from female and male activists.
- Formulating a unified minimum program centered on what is possible to achieve in the near term; a short, clear, and direct program focusing on the interests of female and male workers of hand and thought, and the development of basic services, social justice, and providing job opportunities. The program adopts the issues of full women’s rights, neutralizing religion from the state, and protecting freedoms. This program is formulated in a modern, understood, and practical language, away from ideological complexities.
- Choosing a simple name like “Bread and Freedom Alliance or Union,” away from traditional leftist naming.
- The framework is based on a rotational collective leadership, and on flexible organizational rules, and different and flexible forms of membership. Most importantly, the founding leftist entities must be ready to restructure their frameworks and ease traditional party centralism.
- Focusing on broad decentralization according to provinces and regions, so that each unit becomes capable of leading its work effectively within a unified general political line.
- The active use of modern sciences in leadership, management, organization, media, and digitization, and in evaluating policies periodically, with the adoption of feedback from the masses as a basic mechanism.
- Strengthening the role of youth in leadership through binding organizational rules, such as representation rates for youth and women in leadership bodies with real powers.
- Building an effective digital policy that deals with the digital space as a real arena of class struggle, including multiple media platforms, digital training programs, the use of artificial intelligence, and actual scientific measurement tools.
The decisive condition is that the unified framework be capable of working according to points of meeting and the agreed program and containing the difference positively without turning into an arena of conflicts.
Will we continue to interpret the world while our enemies continue to change It?
The pivotal question today is not about intentions but about action: Does the Left propose alternatives based on what is socially and class-wise possible and achievable within the current balances, adhering to the logic of cumulative gradual change? Or is it content with raising slogans without fostering any actual, tangible change in the lives of the masses?
In conclusion, the crisis of the Iraqi Left is not one of sincerity or history, but rather a crisis of tools and methods. Scientific advancements and digital transformations have reshaped the spaces of influence, and those who ignore them will automatically exit the equation. We need a Left that is not only new in its values but also innovative in its discourse, action, and organizational mechanisms; a Left that translates ideas into tangible changes on the ground without abandoning the essence of its socialist project.
From this perspective, the boldness required today is the courage to dismantle rigid structures and abandon narrow centralism in favor of a broad and flexible framework that accommodates everyone and reconnects organization with living reality. We face two choices and no third option: to pursue renewal and practical unity to reclaim our role as a real force for change, or to remain on our current path and risk being bypassed by the march of history. Global experiences clearly demonstrate that unity is not only possible but also feasible, even under the harshest conditions.
Additional information:
- The Iraqi Left is composed of a group of parties and organizations, the most prominent of which are: the Iraqi Communist Party, the Kurdistan Communist Party, the Worker-communist Party of Iraq, the Worker-communist Party of Kurdistan, the Communist Alternative Organization, the Communist Left Party, in addition to other organizations.
- All leftist and progressive lists in Iraq that participated in the elections did not obtain any seat in the Iraqi Parliament in the November 2025 elections.