Sanders – A Left View
I supported Harold Washington in the election for Chicago's mayor in 1983.
I was a ‘global class war’ socialist but understood that Washington had no bourgeois backing at the
time when he ran in the Democratic primary. Washington only had a movement, a mostly
black movement. It demonstrated in the
streets of downtown Chicago by the thousands on
election night when the Democratic Daley machine tried to steal Washington’s victory
through a technical move. That election
and a few others show that to influence a movement, it helps to meet it part
way. I still suspect that Washington was
assassinated because of his convenient death by ‘heart attack’ while in office.
Harold Washington, former Mayor Chicago |
That campaign showed that occasionally mass radical
movements start or happen even within bourgeois party processes. This is because there is no other outlet
provided by the system, so mass anger flows into channels already cleverly
laid. Support for Henry Wallace’s
presidential primary campaign in 1944 and his independent run in 1948 in the
name of the Progressive Party played the same role. Wallace himself was not a
socialist but a pro-FDR left-Democrat running against Truman both times. He was against Jim Crow and the Cold War. Wallace was supported by most leftists and
even some U.S. Trotskyists in the SWP. The
successful Farmer-Labor Party, of left-wing song and legend, first ran in the
Republican primaries for several years in Minnesota before becoming an independent
organization in 1924. That is significant too.
Sanders has opened up a political space for a form of socialism in the
U.S.,
on a national scale – something that has not been seen for many years. He has made the struggle against Wall Street
and the 1% his main slogan, taking up where Occupy left off. He has pushed for single-payer – the first well-known
politician who has made that a key issue.
He’s also come out for ending the racist mass incarceration state and
legalizing weed, supporting Black Lives Matter and union rights, ending the
deportation frenzy and coming out against anti-labor laws like Taft-Hartley. The most left-wing unions in the country have
come out for Sanders, as well as locals bucking their bureaucratic
leaderships.
Henry Wallace, former Progressive Party Candidate |
Sander’s foreign policy positions are still those of a
junior imperialist, though he has gone to Clinton’s
left on the present situations in Iran,
Syria and Libya - perhaps under pressure from his base. As Clinton
cleverly pointed out in one debate, he voted to bomb Libya too. He seems to be moving towards a position
that ‘regime change’ is a dangerous strategy.
Sanders had no compunction, nor did liberal (Muslim) hero Keith Ellison,
in supporting Israel’s
invasion and destruction of Gaza
in 2014. The list of other imperial
votes by Sanders is long. As they say in the U.S., 'politics stops at the waters edge.' Which means imperialism is a bi-partisan effort. What is not noted is that an imperial international plan actually impacts the goals of any national movement. So Sanders cannot implement many of his ideas without confronting the imperial project.
What is key though is that Sanders, as yet, has no real bourgeois
backing. The bourgeois media treats him like a pariah instead. He has not bought into enough corporate garbage. Unless you think he is a front for a certain
ice-cream brand, this is significant.
His idea of a ‘political revolution’ echoes Trotsky, who called for a
political revolution against Stalin. A
real ‘political revolution’ changes the leadership of a class state, but does
not undermine its social / economic nature.
In Sanders’ meaning, a ‘political revolution’ in the U.S. means gaining more
or dominant power for the working class in a capitalist economy – similar to
the power of the Social Democratic Party in Sweden and several other
countries. Unfortunately, the leadership and funding of the Democrats is not like the Swedish Social Democracy, but more like moderate Republicans. Pursuing ‘political revolution’ by staying
within the Democratic Party is a strategy bound to fail.
1922 Farmer Labor Party convention in Minneapolis |
Sanders is a bit like a modern Father Gapon. He is telling the Capitalist Czar that the workers
and peasants need more. As Oliver said, "Please sir, can I have some more?" The question is,
as usual, will Sanders’ supporters continue in any sense after this election? I somewhat doubt it, as I also doubt that
Sanders will ultimately win the nomination against the Clinton / Democratic corporate machine. Sanders himself has not made any attempt to
form a political organization yet. And that is also key. But the possibility is there. The Green Party under Jill Stein may end up
getting my vote in the general election.
However the Green Party is a stagnant organization that can only grow if
it unites with other forces on the left.
Merely running candidates year after year on its own is not
sufficient.
Bernie Sanders in Selma, AL Recently |
In this particular primary fight, standing aside is
sectarian and abstentionist. The
position taken by Socialist Alternative – giving active critical support to
Sanders in the primaries – is the closest position to actually moving the U.S. situation
forward. (Socialist Alternative was
birthed in the conditions of European Trotskyism, which is more attuned to mass
organization than the U.S. Trotskyist tradition based on Cannon.) I will be voting for Sanders in the primary,
well aware of his pro-imperialist Jr. foreign policy and his many limitations. I
will not support Clinton
in the general election, nor will many who support Sanders. Sanders is
a sheep-herder, but he is also a pyromaniac – he has a dual role. We’ve seen movements and initiatives within
the Democratic Party before – McCarthy, McGovern, Jackson, Dean, Kucinich, Obama –
that go nowhere over and over again.
This one, because of economic conditions and Sanders’ social-democratic
views, is unique. It has a chance to result in something more, if only in increased disgust with the Democratic Party and U.S. conventional politics.
If Sanders is not nominated, which is likely, real
socialists should have a very definite plan to offer the Bernie movement. That is asking them to work for and form an
independent mass Labor-Populist party and a united left-front as a spark to win
it. If Sanders’ supporters are actually
serious and not just internet warriors, without these two things there will be no
political revolution ... let alone the social revolution desired by socialists. It will leave neo-liberalism
in place again under Clinton II or Trump I, as it did with the election of Obama.
If Sanders is nominated and by some weird chance he wins the
general election, I think the only thing that will wait for him is a
bullet. Knowing Amerika, that is.
Red Frog
January 31, 2016
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