Perhaps it is premature for us to talk about the crisis
the left is in and what our path should be. Most of us are shocked by the
results of the election---perhaps not the outcome of the vote, but by the
dimensions of the vote and the speed at which the right wing is able to pivot
and the depth of the divisions among ourselves. Time is not being kind to us as
we are torn between the understandable desire to mourn and reflect and the
pressing need to take action and demonstrate that Trump and his forces do not
have a mandate.
There are reports of fascist-inspired violence and the
police are not being gentle at the demonstrations, a right-wing hate machine is
turning out racist and homophobic rants and Trump’s followers take these
reports for news, there is a real and public push to bring back the House
Un-American Activities Committee and to convert Medicare to a voucher program,
and the line-up for administration posts and the bureaucracy which makes every
government function is so bad that reasonable people are saying that the
administration won’t be able to function and will fall before four years is up.
The KKK and Nazis are on the march. We are seeing racism and xenophobia in
motion: it is hard to understate how serious this is. Freedom Road is correct
when they say “We see the New Confederacy as both the main enemy and the
dominant force shaping the US political terrain in this moment…” Many activists
are attending conferences and doing national phone conferences which are
putting together alliances and planning demos. Given this, I feel that anything
that I write may be irrelevant tomorrow.
Were this the whole picture, matters would be bad enough.
But we also have a left which is more divided than usual, or a left which is
deeply divided in a moment when a real left is needed, and a center which
struggles now to keep its head above the water. There is the spontaneous
movement of people filling the streets in some cities and the on-going
resistance at Standing Rock and the resistance carried out by people of color
organizations, all of which show the capacity of the people to take action on
their own, but there is not yet a mass organized resistance or a united front
organized from below or the needed level of solidarity, or even the ideological
and practical capacity present on the left, to organize resistance and a united
front from below. I have the sense that the center is floundering and that the
right-wing is seemingly triumphant in some part because we lack clarity and
capacity. And I think that the right-wing is waiting out the protests, waiting
for the spontaneity to do damage and then fade, before coming after us.
I trace the main features of this crisis to seven
problems:
1.
Clinton was a terrible candidate and her campaign
was badly mishandled.
2.
The socialistic impulse which moved the Sanders
campaign was not consolidated into an organization.
3.
The right advances as a reaction to the Obama
presidency, as a racist reaction to Black progress and immigration more than a
response to failed policies. Certain monopolies, like mining and the beef
industry, and the armed forces of the state and the security-industrial complex
have coincidental interests in making sure that this right-wing advance
continues and does so at the expense of people of color.
4.
We on the left have allowed the language of
struggle---the idea of revolution and the words “socialist” and “progressive”
and the living heat behind the possibility of socialist revolution---to be
taken from us.
5.
We do not yet understand the divisions or
contradictions existing between the various branches of the capitalist system
and the state, and we do not know how to make use of these divisions.
6.
Green ideology and left sectarianism do great
damage, but these yield in many instances to self-destructive forms of nihilism
and ultraleftism.
7.
The working-class, and particularly people of
color and women in the working-class, have shared only incrementally, or not at
all, in the post-2007 recovery, with much production and distribution work being
taken over by automation.
I have not listed these in a particular order. I want to
amplify my point that Clinton was a terrible candidate and ran a poor campaign
with two observations. First, the Trump vote was not some kind of uprising or
protest vote; it was driven by misogyny and racism and the very mistaken idea
that Trump will make things better for people. Regardless of how bad Clinton was
as a candidate and how badly her campaign was run, we needed to find a way to
speak to people in the U.S. about the particular hatred motivating the Trump
vote, and we failed. Why don’t we know how to speak to our people? And how can
we advance if we can’t talk to people and win their trust? Second, we needed an
electoral victory which united the left with the oppressed and exploited people
at the very core of class society in order to win space and time to organize.
We let the election be about candidates and not about a strategy and tactics
which united women, people of color, workers, LGBTQI people, young people and
others. We saw it as a contest between candidates and not as a means of naming
and calling out what is sociopathic in this country. We let single-issueism get
in our way and let the Democratic party leadership and the Republicans divide
us along predictable lines. These were particular failures and they are costing
us.
There are at least three tendencies which need to be
confronted now. One is the willingness to give Trump a chance, to talk about
uniting as a nation and to talk about respecting the outcome of the vote. This
demobilizes people and gives Trump and his forces the opportunity to speed up
their clock. Polarization will work for us, but only to the extent that it
creates real options. Another problem is the tendency for us to blame one
another and to avoid focusing on blocking Trump and building an effective
united front from below and under the leadership of people of color and women.
The “I told you sos” of the Greens and ultraleftists do nothing to build this
left unity, and even undermines it. The moralism of Jill Stein and the
ultralefts blocks strategic and tactical unity. The appropriation of liberal
and progressive political campaigns by certain unions also blocks unity. A third
tendency or problem which needs to be confronted is the unwillingness or
inability to organize patiently with the people in the workplaces and in our
communities. Patient and long-term organizing is needed of the kind which
forces us to put aside the no-longer-relevant aspects of our thinking and pick
up the daily tasks of loving and serving the people to revolutionary ends.
A united front could push for a new leadership and
restructuring of the Democratic party and build a program for change and have
it in place for the next elections. Our friends who focus on building a true
left within the Democratic party are not wrong or misguided in their efforts if
they do this in principled ways. They will be needed in a united front and can
bring to that effort credibility and experience. A united front could take the
best of the Sanders program and give it life in a broad front of truly
progressive forces. A united front could join wide democratic demands to the
advanced and necessary program put forward by the Movement For Black Lives and do
the absolutely necessary work of bringing people into the streets in support of
these demands after it builds trust and credibility on the ground. If we are not in the streets then we are nowhere. A united front
could support a struggle in the labor movement around stopping the pipeline,
supporting the strikes which will likely occur later this year and in 2017 and
replacing union officials who want to compromise with Trump. A united front
could carry out the defense work which will be needed as deportations happen
and as the inevitable political trials take place.
The election did not mark a defeat for neo-liberalism, as
some on the left would have it. Neo-liberalism may be reaching a new stage, and
will do so with or without Trump, or it may be changing course, but it has not
been defeated. Proponents of the view that Trump’s election marks a defeat for
neo-liberalism are logically stuck advocating that we remain on the sidelines
and hoping that the system crashes and that a humane alternative then emerges,
a nihilistic and opportunistic view if ever there was one and a view which only
adds to the crisis. In a social collision under current conditions we will be
among the first victims.
At another time we could say that we will pass through a
period of protests and adventurism and eventually find our way. We do not have
that luxury today. Somewhere between the Moral Mondays movement, the bold
interventions of Black Lives Matter, the historic discipline shown by
industrial workers when we struck en masse and the creative energies of the
Chicano and Native American movements is the example of what we should be
doing. Moving from here to there requires constant contact with the masses and
accountability, and we won’t find that contact and develop that accountability
if we define ourselves by what we are against and do not organize for what we
are for. It also requires the humility of going to these movements with a
desire to learn before leading. The positive approach is to build broad unity.
The psychology of being the critics and the opposition, and not the builders
and co-creators alongside of the working-class, has taken hold in much of the
left and needs to be discarded.
Democracy is important because it brings us into a
consciousness of our true selves, into an understanding of ourselves as human
beings with great potential, and it trains us and disciplines us in methods of
organizing and taking and holding power. This is why the right-wing so hates
democracy, and so it is also why every struggle in this country starts with a
struggle for full democratic rights and why our separate struggles have the
expansive power that they do. What concerns me here is that some of the loudest
voices on the left say that there is nothing to lose, that there has been no
change, that we hit a wall long ago. Countering that is the optimistic spirit
of the people and the desire among the people for peace, justice and security.
Whatever we build on the left needs to be built by people who invest in radical
change because they know that they have something to lose if things don’t
change.
The question I am struggling the most with as a white
working-class male living in a small town is where our immediate organizing
responsibilities lie. Do we organize among the most politically engaged people
and draw them in to taking leadership, or do we organize among the most
disaffected people, the people who feel no real stake in the system, and work
among them to build radical engagement? These are two very different strategies
and require different tactics and structures.
The analogy or metaphor that I’m most comfortable with in
the present moment is an old one taken from the mining unions: we were
effectively “on strike” against racism, misogyny, the wealth divide, college
debt, poor healthcare options and police brutality, our “picket line” was our
vote, and scabs broke our “strike.” We are returning to our jobs defeated, but
now our task is to win over some of the scabs and “strike” again and use all of
our smarts when we do. Ultraleftists criticize my reasoning, but I can’t see
that I’m completely wrong here.
We are struggling with defeat and setbacks, but defeat is not inevitable. Never give up!
We are struggling with defeat and setbacks, but defeat is not inevitable. Never give up!
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