Sooooo:
-Jose Miguel Insulza, Chilean minister of something or other and socialist is set to win the OAS (Organization of American States) presidency, against the wishes of the Unites States, probably a historical first. His Mexican rival recently withdrew.
-Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the popular leftist major of Mexico city looks to be the favourite for the 2006 Mexican election, if he can bring an end to the trumped up charges brought against him by the current government (he built an access road to a hospital without authorization)
-There's trouble brewing in Nicaragua, where demostrations are taking place to protest the raising of gas prices, by which the poor will be hardest hit. It could concievably bring down the government and help the main opposition party, the Sandinistas, form a coalition government. Quite conspicously, several attack helicopters have arrived from the US and been stationed at Villa Nueva military base.
-The 2005 elections in Chile seem to favour Michelle Bachelet (though this is argueable), a socialist who's father was tortured and killed when Pinochet came to power.
This is in addition to the leftist, anti-neoliberal (to varying degrees) governments in Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay, which have recently formed Petrosur and Telesur, a trans-national petroleum firm and media outlet, respecitvely. (sur meaning "of the South"). Oil rich Venezuela in particular has been strengthening ties with the likes of India and Russia, even as Condi Rice's South American tour has failed to convince any of the above nations to side with Washington against Chavez.
I can think of nothing else like this. Almost the entire contintent has united (minus Columbia and El Salvador) and rejected the notion that they lie within America's "sphere of influence" and are therefore to accept the century-old belligerance with resignation.
Exciting stuff.