“Breaking the Impasse – Electoral Politics, Mass Action and the New Socialist Movement in the United States,” by Kim Moody, 2022
This is a detailed look at the strategy of ‘realigning’ or
working for actual change within the Democratic Party – and what Moody thinks
will actually succeed in breaking the impasse of U.S. politics. The former is the method of DSA and
Congressional representatives like AOC and ‘the squad,’ which came about after
the 2016 democratic-socialist campaign of Bernie Sanders. Moody is a leftist labor activist and looks
at how the centrist, corporate, Democratic Party functions. The first part of this book is a polemic against
the politics of various DSA factions inside the Democrats. The second part is a polemic dealing with Jane McAlevey and unionism. Given the wealth of information, I’m going to
highlight his key insights.
1. First Past the Post / Single Member Districts
are not a bar to third parties or a multi-party democracy, as both the UK and
Canada attest.
2. The
‘coattail effect’ has declined in value, and is sometimes the opposite.
3. Limiting
the franchise has been bourgeois policy since the “Progressive” movement of the
early 1900s. This goes far beyond Jim
Crow.
4. Primaries
are a way to undermine popular, democratic and left activism.
5. The
‘spoiler effect’ disappears in heavily Democratic urban districts where
Republicans don’t run.
6. Moody
looks at the multiple ways Democratic Party (DP) cooptation works to push
dissidents like AOC or Sanders to the center - “upward and rightward.”
7. Between
1% and 4% of donations to the Democrats - DCCC, DNC and DSCC - come from labor. The rest is corporations, lobbyists, lawyers
and wealthy individuals.
8. Moody
takes aim at the Justice Democrats, Our Revolution, the Working Families Party and various AFL-CIO
PACs, along with advocates of a ‘party-surrogate’ or a ‘dirty break.’
9. No one
has looked at prior failed efforts to move the Democrats to the left. History never happened and a
spotless mind is best, even though the modern Democratic Party is more
centrally controlled, more professionalized and far wealthier than in the past. It has no members, no voting by members, no way for a majority to actually change the party.
10. “Using
the DP ballot line” is not just a technical tactic for ‘dirty breakers.’ Advocates of a ‘dirty break’ from the
Democrats have no idea when it will happen or towards what, thus leaving it as
more of a phrase.
CAMPAIGNS
Moody goes into a detailed
analysis of the 2016 & 2020 Democratic Party electoral campaigns, showing
how working-class votes in rural and urban districts, Latino votes and even
African-American votes dropped in the Democratic Party column, while increasing
in the monied, light-skinned suburbs. He shows how ‘education’ is not a good
guide to class, as 60% of small business types, who generally vote Republican,
don’t have a college degree. The
Democrats ignore rural areas, even though factory workers make up 10% of the
‘rural’ population, not to mention farm, warehouse and retail workers in small
towns. They also ignore the 77 million mostly
proletarian non-voters. Moody calls the
Democrats the leading party of U.S. capital at this point, based on their alt-finance
/ tech funders and their increasing middle and upper-class voting base, in
contrast to the unstable Republicans. ‘Grownups’
Nancy “Silicon Valley” Pelosi and Chuck “Wall Street” Schumer typify this.
CONFUSION
Moody cites socialist A.
Philip Randolph’s work in the labor and civil rights movements. Randolph was not afraid to organize
African-American workers independently due to continuing discrimination within
the trade unions from the 1920s into the 1960s. The Detroit Revolutionary Union Movement and
the Panthers also organized factories in this way. Moody hesitantly and
sarcastically calls independent organization like this ‘identitarian’ or
‘identity’ politics, when it is nothing of the kind. This in a polemic against social-democrat
nostalgists (his word) who adopted Bayard Rustin’s 1965 position advocating
cross-class unity, a realignment within the Democratic Party and supposedly
‘universal’ policies that ignore racism.
This coincided with a similar tack by Michael Harrington, founder of
DSOC, then DSA.
Moody celebrates Black Lives Matter
(BLM), which is led by black activists. However in spite of the massive and
widespread attendance of millions in BLM protests, no solid, national, radical
BLM organization formed. Across the U.S.
there are a number of BLMs whose politics range from black capitalism, unity
with centrist European-American Democrats to radical politics against the
police state, like defunding and prison abolition. BLM has no penetration into
unions or workplaces. Moody’s position
of ‘mass social movements’ as the answer to the stagnant ‘impasse’ that is U.S.
politics did not work in this instance.
Something is missing.
BLM in D.C. |
The
SOLUTION to the IMPASSE?
Instead of an orientation to
the Democrats Moody first suggests a grab-bag of movementism – rank and file
caucuses, independent unionism, civil rights organizing and mass upsurges such
as against police violence and climate change. Lastly is a focus on union organizing and creating a
strike wave. All well and good. Yet not a word yet about socialist hegemony, the
building of a Left Front or revolutionary organizations, or even independent mass
Labor, Black, Brown, Women’s or Left-Populist parties. Movements come and go – what needs to happen
is the building of a permanent socialist oppositional Front that reaches into
every sector.
Engaging in nostalgia himself,
Moody writes a retrospective introduced by a quote from Bob Dylan about how to
win. He looks at how a present social-democratic
demand like the Green New Deal (GND) can be passed – using the examples of the
New Deal in the 1930s and Civil Rights legislation of the 1960s, both sparked
by mass social movements. This is very
familiar stuff. The GND is opposed by
all Republicans, the majority of Democratic politicians, the DNC,
the AFL-CIO and every corporation in the U.S.
It’s a popular front of reaction against a proposal that does not
threaten capital except in its jobs’ section and its direct aim at the carbon industry.
That was enough.
UNION
STRATEGIES
Focusing on his main area of
expertise, union matters, Moody looks at the ideas of Jane McAlevey and her
books, among them No Shortcuts. Moody
tracks her tried and true methods for organizing: finding organic leaders within the
workplace; mapping the forces within that workplace; escalating collective
actions; inoculating members from the barrage of company lies and involving the union organizing crew and members in contract negotiations. Moody points out that the key person is always
the ‘professional staff organizer’ in McAlevey’s narrative. He knows a true mass movement will have to go
far beyond that. However he does not mention any mass organization(s) that could also provide organic leaders.
McAlevey blames Taft-Hartley
and subsequent labor laws; professional union-busting and capitalist globalization
as the culprits for the state of the union movement. What she ignores is the failures of union
leaderships according to Moody. As dialectics would
indicate, it is not just ‘external’ things that are relevant – it is ‘internal’
contradictions within unions and the labor movement. Moody instead
advocates ‘direct union democracy’ to counter this, not just the ‘representative,’
‘organizing,’ 'professional' or ‘service’ models of business unionism.
Moody makes a case again, as he did in his excellent book “On New Terrain,” that outsourcing, off-shoring and importing are not the main cause of job losses. His statistics show that the major source is automation, lean production, surveillance, labor-management cooperation, increasing labor tempos and resulting productivity increases. Digitization especially has increased labor intensification. This is why burnout, exhaustion and quits are so prevalent among workers, which is not just the effect of the pandemic. U.S. productivity is also plunging since May 2021. Exhaustion like this can be gasoline for a labor upsurge by younger workers - and it seems to already be happening.
The
FUTURE
The turbulent labor upsurges of the 1930s and 1940s were far from predictable models, in spite of what McAlevey claims. To Moody, the rolling, bottom-up teacher strikes of 2018-2020 somewhat resembled those methods. He sees and predicts rising social turbulence throughout the world – economic dislocation, ruling elites losing their legitimacy and extreme political instability. Strikes, including mass and general strikes, have increased world-wide. He finally addresses the issue of having a mass working class-based party, which he supports, running especially in urban areas where no Republican exists. He mentions the electoral efforts of the Richmond Progressive Alliance, but not the success of Socialist Alternative in Seattle. This idea of a 'labor party' is part of the Transitional Program. It challenges capitalist hegemony in the electoral arena, as well as others.
A useful book, especially in its detail on the Democrats.
Prior blog reviews on this
subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 15 year archive,
using these terms: “On New Terrain – How Capital is Reshaping the Battlefield of Class War”
(Moody); “Reviving the Strike” (Burns); “Embedded With Organized Labor” and “Save
Our Unions” (both by Early); “Tell the Bosses We’re Coming – A New Action Plan
for Workers in the 21st Century,” “The Democrats – A Critical
History” (Selfa); “Up From Liberalism,” “Bernie Sanders and Ilhan Omar,” “The
Populists Guide to 2020,” “The Unwelcome Guest,” "On the Clock."
And I bought it at May
Day Books!
Red Frog
June 8, 2022
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