The Latino Question – Politics,
Labouring Classes and the Next Left,” by A. Ibarra, A.
Carlos and R. Torres, 2018
This is one
of the most recent analyses of the Latino/a question in the U.S. from a
Marxist point of view. It is marred by a
certain academic style, but makes basic points in contradiction to identity or
‘intersectional’ views as usually put forward by Democrats, African-American or
Latino nationalists, liberals or left-liberals.
It is based
on interviews with migrant workers in California’s
agriculture areas, co-operative workers in San Francisco
and low-wage workers in Milwaukee.
Most Latino/a immigrants in the U.S.
are from Mexico, secondarily
from Puerto Rico, thirdly from the Caribbean, Central and South
America. They remind us
that one of the founding acts of the United
States besides indigenous genocide and African-American
slavery was the conquest of upper Mexico
– Texas, Arizona,
New Mexico and California.
Around 1910,
prior to the Mexican revolution, the U.S.
started building railroads in Mexico
to move produce and raw materials north.
Since that time, though interrupted by the Mexican revolution, U.S.
capitalists have used Mexico
as an economic colony providing cheap labor, minerals and food. This is the material root of the migration
and production patterns that continue today.
The Bracero labor program that operated between 1942 and 1964, the 1947
Taft-Harley law which crippled union power, the 1986 GATT trade agreement, the
1988 NAFTA agreement and now the present 2020 USMCA all create a depopulated
and poverty-stricken rural Mexico while destroying local Mexican businesses in
towns. Even Pemex, the crown jewel of the Mexican Revolution, is now mostly privatized. Some present migrants actually
have parents and co-workers who were in the Bracero program! This is why
immigrants have gone to ‘el norte’ for so long.
The authors
emphasize the labor and economic issues behind the U.S. government’s chauvinism,
illegality and racism towards Latino/as. Their analysis is based on the EMT – the ‘empire
migration theory.’ They also work from
Gramsci’s idea of conquering the ‘cultural’ and ideological side of capitalism,
which they call ‘cultural political economy.’
They
contest pure identity views that are separated from economics, along with ‘critical
race theory’ or with ‘intersectional’ views that either ignore class or ignore
the fact that all identities are embedded in the capitalist system. It is quite
evident that many times the words ‘Latino’ or ‘black’ are merely short-hand
terms for low-paid labor. The terms
actually contain class content.
The authors note that there are classes within the Latinx community and
lumping them together is inaccurate and stupid.
30% of Latino/a voters voted for Trump in 2016 for instance. Like the African-American community, there
are rich entrepreneurs, small businessmen and professionals whose material
interests diverge from the majority of the low-paid proletariat.
Latino/a Warehouse Workers on Strike |
Through interviews the authors reveal the value of cooperatives to
Latino/as as sources of higher material benefits and as actual democratic
spaces. They delineate the difficulties
between minorities in co-ops who need material benefits and mostly
European-Americans who see co-ops as more of a cultural process. The authors’ emphasis on co-operatives is
similar to Richard Wolff, as both see them as gateways to a future non-capitalist
economy. However the authors also make
the claim that co-operatives challenge the state, which is a stretch. Their recommendations for practical action outside ideology are limited to co-ops and community and union organizing.
One chapter
discusses the ‘cultural appropriation’ of Mexican food in Los Angeles by
upscale European-American chefs creating ‘nouvelle cuisine’ while at the same
time nearly every restaurant in LA is powered by low-paid Latino/a labor
hidden in the back of the house. The
2006 “Day Without a Mexican,” when millions of Latinx workers stopped working
in cities across the country to oppose a reactionary immigration bill, provides
a modern inspiration for the authors. It
led to immigrant labor organizations throughout the U.S.
and the real possibility of future large-scale U.S. labor mobilizations led by Latinx
workers. The development of Los Angeles as a “Latino
Metropolis”’ a Chicano/a one, is one example.
It is producing organizations like Warehouse Workers United within the
largest concentration of warehouses in the U.S.
While the sole focus of the “Latino Question” in the U.S. media is on ICE, the Wall, ‘La Migra’ and 11M unauthorized immigrants, most of the 60M Latino/as in the U.S. are legal in one way or another. The government's intention is to terrorize the whole workforce, as workers of various legalities are deeply connected. Yet as the joke might go, “you invade our country, we ‘invade’ yours!” A timely and interesting book, but a bit too oriented towards academics. Nevertheless a good Left addition to the literature and applicable to the present day, not just hazy days past.
While the sole focus of the “Latino Question” in the U.S. media is on ICE, the Wall, ‘La Migra’ and 11M unauthorized immigrants, most of the 60M Latino/as in the U.S. are legal in one way or another. The government's intention is to terrorize the whole workforce, as workers of various legalities are deeply connected. Yet as the joke might go, “you invade our country, we ‘invade’ yours!” A timely and interesting book, but a bit too oriented towards academics. Nevertheless a good Left addition to the literature and applicable to the present day, not just hazy days past.
Other prior
reviews on this topic, us blog search box, upper left: “Drug
War Capitalism,” “NAFTA 2,” “Viva Zapata,” “Frida Kahlo,” “USMCA Fraud,” “The Lacuna,”
“Mayans M.C.,” “Pancho Villa Underground Railroad,” “Open Veins of Latin
America,” “American Made,” “Building the Commune,” “The Diary of Che Guevara,” “Mariategui,”
“Capitalism’s Crisis Deepens” and “Occupy the Economy” (both by Wolff); “No
Local,” “Welcome to the Desert of Post-Socialism,” “The New Jim Crow,” “Living
and Dying on the Factory Floor,” “Super-Size Wages!”
And I
bought it at May Day Books!
Red Frog
February
14, 2020
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