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Democratic Socialists of America
Contents
- 1 DSA Conferences
- 2 About DSA
- 3 Inspiration from Gramsci
- 4 Locals
- 5 Commissions
- 6 Prominent members
- 7 Leadership/personnel
- 8 1996 endorsements
- 9 Elected Representatives, 1990
- 10 Using the Democratic Party
- 11 Long term goals
- 12 Congressional Progressive Caucus
- 13 Electoral flexibility
- 14 Position on "reparations" for African-Americans
- 15 Support for 'Single Payer' health care
- 16 The Employee Free Choice Act – A DSA Priority
- 17 Backing Barack Obama
- 18 Support for Obama Presidential campaign
- 19 Democratic Left Magazine
- 20 DSA Labor Committee
- 21 Progressive Democrats for 2010
- 22 Support for Conyers Jobs Bill
- 23 Support for the Occupy Movement
- 24 External links
- 25 References
Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) is the largest socialist organization in the US. It is one of two official U.S. affiliates of the Socialist International. It was formed in 1982 from a merger of the Michael Harrington led Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee and the smaller New American Movement.
DSA publishes a quarterly journal, Democratic Left.
DSA Conferences
Go here for Democratic Socialists of America conferences.
About DSA
Circa 2000, Democratic Socialists of America was a national organization of about 7,000 members. There were about 15 local chapters. New locals had just formed in Oregon and Arizona and a long dormant local in San Francisco had a new organizing committee. In California locals existed in San Diego, Sacramento and East Bay, as well as San Francisco. The Los Angeles local had declined to non functioning in the last 6 years.
Over 50% of total DSA members lived in areas without locals.
In addition the national and locals, there were several Commissions. These groups dealt with specific issues and are not geographically organized. For example there is currently functioning Latino, Anti Racism, Feminism, Labor, and Religion and Socialism Commissions. The eco-socialism and African American Commissions are currently not functioning. Sacramento DSA, hosted both the Anti Racism and Latino Commissions[1].
Inspiration from Gramsci
While claiming to be socialist, Democratic Socialists of America is a Marxist organization, that draws heavily from the ideas of the late Italian Communist Party theoretician Antonio Gramsci.
Orange County California DSA acknowledged its debt to Gramsci in its February 1984 newsletter.
- "Antonio Gramsci was a founder of the Italian Communist Party. He developed theories on "open ended Marxism" and independent Euro-Communism. His writings have remained influential among European parties of the left for several decades. They have also formed a vital part of the ideas that brought about the formation of today's DSA."
Locals
Past and present;[2]
- Alaska Democratic Socialists of America
- Albany Democratic Socialists of America
- Arkansas Democratic Socialists of America
- Austin Democratic Socialists of America
- Baltimore Democratic Socialists of America
- Boston Democratic Socialists of America
- Central Indiana Democratic Socialists of America
- Central New Jersey Democratic Socialists of America
- Chapel Hill-Carrboro Democratic Socialists of America
- Chicago Democratic Socialists of America
- Colorado Democratic Socialists of America
- Democratic Socialists of Central Ohio
- DC/MD/Northern VA. Democratic Socialists of America
- East Bay Democratic Socialists of America
- Greater Detroit Democratic Socialists of America
- Greater Philadelphia Democratic Socialists of America
- Houston Democratic Socialists of America
- Idaho Democratic Socialists of America
- Iowa Democratic Socialists of America
- Ithaca Democratic Socialists of America
- Kentucky Democratic Socialists of America
- Los Angeles Democratic Socialists of America
- Madison Democratic Socialists of America
- Maine Democratic Socialists of America
- Metro Atlanta Democratic Socialists of America
- Metropolitan Nashville Democratic Socialists of America
- Montana Democratic Socialists of America
- Nashville Democratic Socialists of America
- Nassau County Democratic Socialists of America
- New Jersey Democratic Socialists of America
- New Hampshire Democratic Socialists of America
- New Mexico Democratic Socialists of America
- New York Democratic Socialists of America
- Orange County Democratic Socialists of America
- Sacramento Valley Democratic Socialists of America
- San Antonio Democratic Socialists of America
- San Diego Democratic Socialists of America
- San Francisco Democratic Socialists of America
- Seattle Democratic Socialists of America
- St. Louis Democratic Socialists of America
- Tennessee Valley Democratic Socialists of America
- Twin Cities Democratic Socialists of America
- Utah Democratic Socialists of America
- Wichita Democratic Socialists of America
Commissions
- Democratic Socialists of America Religion and Socialism Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America Latino Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America African American Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America Anti-Racism Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America Labor Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America International Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America Socialism and the Environment Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America Feminist Commission
- Democratic Socialists of America Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual Commission
Prominent members
Since its formation in 1982, many prominent people have been active in Democratic Socialists of America, including;
- Neil Abercrombie, former Hawaii Governor, Obama friend
- Jean Anyon, academic, activist
- Stanley Aronowitz, academic, marxist activist
- Ron Aronson Michigan academic
- Ed Asner, actor, activist
- John Atlas, academic, housing activist
- David Bacon, journalist, activist, communist
- Harlan Baker, former Maine state legislator, actor
- Joanne Barkan
- David Belkin
- Elaine Bernard, labor academic, activist
- Ron Bloom, former Obama "Car Czar"
- David Bonior, Former Democratic congressman
- Paul Booth, labor union official, former SDS leader
- Harry Boyte, academic, activist
- Janis Breidenbach, academic, activist
- Quinn Brisben, Socialist Party USA leader
- Harry Britt, San Francisco board of Supervisers
- Stephen Eric Bronner, academic
- Paul Buhle, labor historian, marxist
- Linda Burnham, former Maoist, feminist and black activist
- Duane Campbell, academic, activist
- Leo Casey, teachers unionist
- Noam Chomsky, academic, linguist, activist
- Milton Cohen, Chicago activist
- Mitchell Cohen
- John Conyers, US congressman from Michigan
- John Cort, religious activist
- Danny K. Davis, Illinois congressman, Obama associate
- Ron Dellums, Former Democratic congressman, avowed "socialist"
- Bogdan Denitch, academic, activist
- David Dinkins, former New York mayor
- Ben Dobbs, los Angeles lawyer, activist, former communist
- Michael Eric Dyson, academic, religious activist
- Barbara Ehrenreich, academic, activist, marxist
- Norm Faramelli, religious activist
- James Farmer, black activist
- Robert Fitrakis, Ohio activist and writer
- Jerry Flieger, academic, activist
- Frances Fox Piven, academic, activist
- Stanley Gacek, labor unionist, international activist
- David Garrow, historian, writer
- Teresa Ghilarducci, economist
- Matthew Hallinan - former communist
- Jean Hardisty, academic, activist
- Michael Harrington, DSA founder
- Dorothy Healey, former communist leader
- Richard Healey, red diaper baby
- Adam Hochschild, writer, activist
- Gerry Hudson, SEIU Vice president
- Maurice Isserman, historian, former communist
- Mildred Jeffrey, feminist, unionist, Democratic Party leader
- Clinton Jencks,academic, activist, former communist
- Jeremy Karpatkin, Washington DC lawyer
- Christine Kelly, academic, activist
- Nancy Kleniewski, academic
- Robert Lekachman, economist
- Mark Levinson, economist, activist
- Michael Lighty, labor unionist
- Frank Llewellyn, DSA official
- Jose LaLuz, SEIU Vice president, Puerto Rico marxist
- Joanne Landy, peace and health activist
- Daraka Larimore-Hall, California Democratic Party activist
- Peggy Lipschutz, communist, Illinois artist
- Paula Litt, Los Angeles philanthropist
- Roberta Lynch, labor unionist
- Mike Lux, Democratic Party strategist
- Maryann Mahaffey, Detroit City Counciller
- Manning Marable, Marxist academic
- Ben Margolis, former communist, lawyer
- Jim Marzilli, former Massachusetts state legislator
- Hilda Mason, local politician
- Steve Max, community organizer
- David McReynolds, Socialist Party USA leader
- John McTernan - former communist, lawyer
- Eliseo Medina, labor union leader
- Carrie Meek, former Florida conresswoman
- Deborah Meier, education activist
- Saul Mendelson, Chicago labor unionist, activist
- Ruth W. Messinger, New York City Councilor, marxist
- Harold Meyerson, journalist, activist
- Frances Moore Lappe, academic, food activist
- Jo-Ann Mort, writer, labor unionist
- Jerry Nadler, Democrat congressman, New York
- Gus Newport, former Berkeley Mayor, activist. marxist
- Carol O'Cleireacain
- Major Owens, Former Democratic Party, New York Congressman
- Marjorie Phyfe, labor unionist
- Rafael PiRoman, journalist and activist
- Katha Pollitt, writer and journalist
- Joni Rabinowitz, Pennsylvania activist, ex Maoist
- Adolph Reed, academic, activist
- Christine Riddiough, Democratic Party and gay activist
- Richard Rorty, religious activist
- Bob Ross, academic, activist
- Rosemary Ruether, religious activist
- Ed Sadlowski, Illinois labor unionist
- Bernie Sanders, US Senator from Vermont
- Jan Schakowsky, Democrat congresswoman, Chicago
- Penny Schantz, international labor unionist
- Paul Schrade, Los Angeles activist
- Joseph Schwartz, academic, activist
- Stanley Sheinbaum, activist, philanthropist
- Carl Shier, Illinois labor unionist
- Jim Shoch, academic, activist
- Holly Sklar, academic, activist
- Theda Skocpol, academic
- Ruth Spitz, late feminist activist
- Kurt Stand, former communist, convicted East German and Soviet spy
- Gloria Steinem, feminist, activist, writer
- John J. Sweeney, former AFL-CIO president
- Steve Tarzynski, health activist
- Ruy Teixeira, academic, political writer
- Edwin Vargas, Jr., Democratic Party activist
- Corey Walker, academic, activist
- James Weinstein, ex communist, marxist
- Thomas E. Weisskopf, academic
- Saul Wellman, labor activist, ex communist
- Cornel West, academic, activist, Obama friend and adviser, marxist
- William Winpisinger, labor leader
- Frank Wilkinson activist, ex communist
- Rabbi Arnold Jacob Wolf, activist, Obama friend
- Tim Wohlforth, ex Trotskyist, writer
- Komozi Woodard, historian, black activist
- Quentin Young, former communist, health activist, Obama mentor
Leadership/personnel
2013 leadership
National Political Committee
- Jared Abbott, Philadelphia
- Theresa Alt, Ithaca
- David Duhalde, Boston
- Stuart Elliott, Wichita
- Amber A’Lee Frost, New York City
- Paul Garver, Boston
- David Green, Detroit
- José Gutierrez, Washington, D.C.
- Barbara Joye, Atlanta
- Simone Morgen, Columbus
- Maxine Phillips, New York City
- David Roddy, Sacramento
- Joseph Schwartz, Philadelphia
- Peg Strobel, Chicago
- Alexandra Deane and Matthew Porter, as co-chairs of the Young Democratic Socialists share a vote on the NPC. [3]
2011 leadership
Elected to serve on the National Political Committee – the leadership body described as “the engine room of the organization”, in November 2011, were;[4]
- Theresa Alt (Ithaca, NY)
- Stuart Elliott (Wichita, KS)
- Paul Garver (Boston, MA),
- Virginia Franco (San Diego, CA)
- David Green (Detroit, MI)
- Barbara Joye (Atlanta, GA)
- Frank Llewellyn (New York, NY),
- Dan Michniewicz (Pinckney, MI)
- Simone Morgen (Columbus, OH),
- Joseph Schwartz (Philadelphia, PA)
- Peg Strobel (Chicago, IL)
Plus the two YDS co-chairs, Sean Monahan (Philadelphia, PA) and Jackie Sewell (Lawrence, KS).
2009 leadership
The DSA leadership structure in 2009 consisted of[5];
National Political Committee
- Theresa Alt
- Virginia Franco
- David Green
- Michael Hirsch
- Barbara Joye
- David Knuttunen
- Simone Morgen
- Michele Rossi
- Joseph Schwartz
- Timothy Sears
- Herb Shore
- John Strauss
- Corey Walker
Honorary Chairs
- Bogdan Denitch
- Barbara Ehrenreich
- Dolores Huerta
- Eliseo Medina
- Gus Newport
- Frances Fox Piven
- Gloria Steinem
- Cornel West
Vice-Chairs
- Elaine Bernard
- Edward Clark
- Jose LaLuz
- Steve Max
- Harold Meyerson
- Maxine Phillips
- Christine Riddiough
- Rosemary Ruether
- Joseph Schwartz
- Ruth Spitz
- Motl Zelmanowicz
Staff
- Frank Llewellyn, National Director
- Fatou Camara, Financial Coordinator
- Erik Rosenberg, Youth Section Organizer[6]
2001 leadership
Nineteen people ran for the sixteen National Political Committee positions elected at the 2001 Democratic Socialists of America Convention. The winners were:
- Theresa Alt, Ithaca
- Susan Chacin, Berkeley
- Eric Ebel, Ann Arbor
- Virginia Franco, San Diego
- David Green, Detroit
- Gabe Kramer, Columbus
- Selina Musuta, Ithaca
- Gina Neff, New York City
- Angel Picon, Stockton
- Maria Pineda, Davis
- Kathy Quinn, Philadelphia
- Jason Schulman, New York City
- Joseph Schwartz, Ithaca
- Timothy Sears, Oakland
- Jessica Shearer, New York City
- Herb Shore, San Diego
The Young Democratic Socialists representatives to the NPC (sharing the one Youth Section vote) were Joan Axthelm (Chicago) and Fabricio Rodriguez (Arizona).[7]
1997-1999 leadership
National Political Committee elected at the Columbus, Ohio, 1997 National Convention.[8]
- Theresa Alt, Ithaca, NY
- Ron Aronson, Huntington Woods, Mi
- Marsha Borenstein, Brooklyn, NY
- Lynn Chancer, New York, NY
- Rachel Dewey, Princeton, NJ
- Bill Dixon, Chicago, IL
- Barb Ferrill, Denver, CO
- Julia Fitzgerald, Brooklyn, NY
- Virginia Franco, San Diego, CA
- Karen Gibson, Rochester, NY
- Jeff Gold , New York, NY
- Michael Heffron, Chicago, IL
- David Knuttunen, Belmont, MA
- Daraka Larimore-Hall, Chicago, IL
- Michael Lighty, San Francisco, CA
- Frank Llewellyn, Brooklyn, NY
- Bill McIver, Boulder, CO
- Tim Parks, Los Angeles, CA
- Katie Romich, Chicago, IL
- Joseph Schwartz, Ithaca, NY & Philadelphia, PA
- Raybblin Vargas, Chicago, New York, NY
- Eric Vega, Sacramento, CA
- Juanita Webster, New York, NY
Youth Section Representatives:
- Oscar Owens, Brooklyn, NY
- Jessica Shearer, Bryn Mawr, PA
1995 leadership
1995 National Political Committee;[9]
- Theresa Alt/Ithaca, NY
- Shoshana Bricklin/Philadelphia, PA
- Dominic Chan/Brooklyn, NY
- Rachel Dewey/Princeton, NJ
- Tom Ellett/Sparta, WI
- Lynne Mosley Engelskirchen/Santa Monica, CA
- Julia Fitzgerald/Brooklyn, NY
- Karen Marie Gibson/Brooklyn, NY
- David Glenn/Brooklyn, NY
- Jeff Lacher/Dayton, NJ
- Jose LaLuz/San Juan, PR
- Frank Llewellyn/Brooklyn, NY
- Anne McCormick/Washington, DC
- William Mclver, Jr./Lafayette, CO
- Steve Oliver/Brooklyn, NY
- Loretta Schuman/Washington, DC
- Joseph Schwartz/Ithaca, NY
- Patricia Sexton/New York, NY
- Kurt Stand/Washington, DC
- Steve Tarzynski/Santa Monica, CA
- Eric Vega/Sacramento, CA
- Juanita Webster/New York, NY
The reserved Youth Section Seat was shared by Raybblin Vargas and Daraka Larimore-Hall.
1990 leadership
Elected, November 9, 1989 national convention in Maryland.[10]
Honorary chairs
Vice chairs
- Harry Britt
- Ron Dellums
- James Farmer
- Mildred Jeffrey
- Steve Max
- Frances Fox Piven
- Rosemary Ruether
- James Chapin
- Bogdan Denitch
- Dorothy Healey
- Hilda Mason
- Marjorie Phyfe
- Christine Riddiough
- Edwin Vargas, Jr.
National Political Committee
- Laila Atallah, Baltimore
- Amy Bachrach, New York
- Joanne Barkan , New York
- Pat Belcon , New York
- Jack Clark, Dorcester MA
- Suzanne Crowell, Washington DC
- Bogdan Denitch, New York
- Virginia Franco, San Diego
- Nancy Kleniewski, Rochester, NY
- Jose LaLuz, New York
- Mark Levinson, Detroit
- Marshall Mayer, Helena, Montana
- Harold Meyerson, Los Angeles
- Andrea Miller, Brooklyn NY
- Guy Molyneux, Cambridge MA
- Jo-Ann Mort, Brooklyn NY
- Marjorie Phyfe, Portland, Maine
- Mel Pritchard, San Francisco
- Miriam Rabban, New York
- Joseph Schwartz, Philadelphia
- Kurt Stand, Washington DC
- Steve Tarzynski, Santa Monica
- Kimberly Tolle, Lexington Kentucky
- Juanita Webster, New York
- Cornel West, Princeton, NJ
1986 leadership
The 1986 National Executive Committee consisted of;[11]
- Cornel West, Hamden, Connecticut
- Barbara Ehrenreich, Syosset, New York
- Frances Fox Piven, New York
- Laila Atallah, Baltimore
- Joanne Barkan , New York
- Jack Clark, Boston
- Bogdan Denitch, New York
- Abby Haight, Los Angeles
- Michael Harrington, New York
- Gerry Hudson, New York
- Jeremy Karpatkin, New York
- Eileen Luna, Berkeley
- Marshall Mayer, Los Angeles
- Harold Meyerson, Los Angeles
- Paulette Pierce, New York
- Rafael PiRoman, New York
- Skip Roberts, Foster City, California
- Tristine Roberts, Cleveland
- Roger Robinson, Detroit
- Joseph Schwartz, Boston
- Tim Sears, Washington
- Judith Van Allen, Ithaca, New York
- Barbara Scott Winkler, Ann Arbor
1996 endorsements
Elected Representatives, 1990
As of January 1990, D.S.A. members holding elected public office included;[12]
- Ron Dellums, US Rep., California
- Major Owens, US Rep., California
- David Dinkins, NY Mayor
- Jim Scheibel, St Paul, Minnesota Mayor
- Ben Nichols, Ithaca (NY) Mayor
- Larry Agran, Irvine (CA) Mayor
- Jim Conn, Santa Monica Mayor
- Niilo Koponen, Alaska State Legislator, Fairbanks
- Beverly Stein, Oregon State Rep., Portland
- Perry Bullard, Michigan State Rep., Lansing
- Babette Josephs, Pennsylvania State Rep., Philadelphia
- Ruth Messinger, Manhattan Borough President
- Harry Britt, President, San Francisco Board of Supervisors
- Maryann Mahaffey, President, Detroit City Council
- Hilda Mason, Washington DC, City Councilor
- David B. Sullivan, Cambridge (MA) City Councilor
- David Scondras, Boston (MA) City Councilor
- Anne Chandler, Berkeley (CA) City Councilor
- Mildred Jeffrey, Wayne State University (Detroit) Governor
Using the Democratic Party
In 1995, DSA leader Joseph Schwartz wrote of the Democratic Party;.[13]
- DSA is by no means naive about the Democratic Party leadership's general drift to the right. As the Democratic Party in most areas is barely an institution, let alone one that facilitates democratic participation, most DSA locals treat it as simply a line on the ballot.
- Where progressives have the strength to battle corporate interests and use that line for democratic purposes, we support their efforts—witness Paul Wellstone and Carol Moseley Braun's Senate victories. But where that ballot line is captured by centrist and center right forces, DSA locals usually abstain from electoral work.
Taking over the Democratic Party
According to an article written in the Boston DSA magazine Yankee Radical, January, 2001, by Mike Pattberg; [14]
- On the other hand, the Communist Party experienced the height of its numbers, power and influence when it abandoned its previous ultra-left course to become the Stalinist wing of the New Deal in the mid-1930s...
- In any case, by the early 1960s some within the Socialist Party (including future DSA leaders), adopting a variant of the CP’s strategy 25 years earlier, had broken with prevailing labor party orthodoxy. (Or the belief that the SP should continue to run its own candidates without support from labor or anyone else, another version of the same idea.) They instead advanced the concept of “Realignment” in the Democratic Party; forging a coalition of labor, blacks and middle-class liberals and radicals to take over the Party by purging (democratically, of course) Southern racists, big-city bosses and other retrograde elements.
Long term goals
In 1997 DSA goals by 2017 included:[15]
- A U.S. President from the Progressive Caucus, a 50 member socialist caucus in Congress, successful programs of the likes of universal health care, progressive taxation, social provision and campaign finance reform.
Congressional Progressive Caucus
DSA helped form and continues to work closely with the Congressional Progressive Caucus[16];
- Since 1982, DSA has been working for progressive change. As a national organization, DSA joins with its allies in Congress' Progressive Caucus and in many other progressive organizations, fighting for the interests of the average citizen both in legislative struggles and in other campaigns to educate the public on progressive issues and to secure progressive access to the media.
According to the DSA website[17];
- No, we are not a separate party. Like our friends and allies in the feminist, labor, civil rights, religious, and community organizing movements, many of us have been active in the Democratic Party. We work with those movements to strengthen the party’s left wing, represented by the Congressional Progressive Caucus...Maybe sometime in the future, in coalition with our allies, an alternative national party will be viable. For now, we will continue to support progressives who have a real chance at winning elections, which usually means left-wing Democrats
DSA, the Congressional Progressive Caucus and the Institute for Policy Studies formed a triple alliance.
The "Back to Basics Conference"was held Oct. 9-11, 1998, at Chicago's Congress Hotel. Several hundred people attended the conference, which In These Times magazine sponsored and managed. In practice the conference urged the Left to abandon its dead-end, self-destructive course toward cultural politics and return to class politics[18].
- DSA leaders, Chris Riddiough and Joe Schwartz, organized a panel to discuss "Building a Better Left", a call to work for greater Left unity and organizational strength. DSA is working with the Progressive Caucus in Congress and the Institute for Policy Studies. Labor is essential for an effective Left, along with people of color and women. What is envisioned is not a uniting of organizations, but a broad coalition willing to speak with one voice on issues of common concern. No consensus emerged from discussion, but the proposal remains alive.
Electoral flexibility
While sometimes regarded as a leftist pressure group inside the Democratic Party, DSA's electoral tactics are in fact far more subtle and flexible. DSA members may join the Democratic Party and work closely with the Congressional Progressive Caucus, but also may work through the Green Party, the Working Families Party, or support local "progressive" coalitions or independent candidates such as Vermont socialist Bernie Sanders.
From a DSA's Democratic Left[19];
- Electoral Politics As Tactic — Elections Statement 2000
- The National Political Committee consciously chose not to endorse any major party presidential candidates. While understanding that for pragmatic reasons many progressive trade unionists, environmentalists, and African-American and Latino activists have chosen to support Al Gore, DSA’s elected representatives believe that Gore...represents a centrist, neo-liberal politics which does not advocate the radical structural reforms — such as progressive taxation, major defense cuts, and real universal health and child care — necessary to move national politics in a genuinely democratic direction...
- Some DSAers may support Ralph Nader for president, if he appears on the ballot in their state. Others may support our Socialist Party comrade David McReynolds. Nader’s campaign is likely to appear on more state ballots and it has the potential to harness the energy of the protests in Seattle and Washington against the WTO and IMF...
- But in states where the presidential race appears close next November, it is likely that DSA members with ties to mass constituencies will engage in pragmatic lesser-evilism and hold their nose and vote for the Democrat... DSA Vice-Chair Harold Meyerson’s electoral analysis in this issue concludes with a case for “critical support” of Gore. This position is by no means an official DSA “line,” but a perspective held to by many in the organization, but dissented from by numerous others.
- It is inaccurate to describe DSA as primarily working within the “left-wing” of the Democratic Party.” The 1993 DSA convention in fact resolved “that the imperative task for the democratic Left is to build anti-corporate social movements which are capable of winning reforms which empower people...The fundamental question for DSA is not what form that electoral intervention takes...Rather, our electoral work aims at building majoritarian coalitions capable of not only electing public officials, but capable of holding them accountable after they are elected.”
- DSA’s main task is to build grassroots, multi-racial, progressive coalitions...Neither flying the flag of a third party which lacks a mass social base, or placing uncritical faith in isolated progressive Democratic politicians will build a powerful Left...
- DSA is no more loyal to the Democratic Party – which barely exists as a grassroots institution –than are individuals or social movements which upon occasion use its ballot line or vote for its candidates...Veterans of the left will remember that the 1968 Peace and Freedom Party and the 1980 Citizens Party arose at moments of greater left-wing strength and did not significantly alter the national electoral landscape. Nor has, unfortunately, the New Party, which many DSAers work with in states where “fusion” of third party and major party votes is possible (such as the DSA co-sponsored Working Families Party in N.Y. State).
- DSA recognizes that some insurgent politicians representing labor, environmentalists, gays and lesbians, and communities of color may choose to run under Democratic auspices, as in the 1988 Jesse Jackson campaign, or operate as Democrats like Senator Paul Wellstone, and the 59 Democratic members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, one-half of whom are Black and Latino and all of whom possess strong labor backing and operative social democratic politics.
- Electoral tactics are only a means for DSA; the building of a powerful anti-corporate and ultimately socialist movement is the end. Where third party or non-partisan candidates represent significant social movements DSA locals have and will continue to build such organizations and support such candidates. DSA honored independent socialist Congressperson Bernie Sanders of Vermont at our last convention banquet, and we have always raised significant funds nationally for his electoral campaigns. At the same time, we were pleased to have Democratic Congressperson and Progressive Caucus member Bob Filner of San Diego introduce Sanders at the convention, and note that Progressive Caucus member Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) will be honored at our annual Debs-Thomas-Harrington dinner this Spring in Chicago.
- DSA is a modest, sometimes effective organization, whose members have greatest influence in community-level electoral politics. DSA is not an electoral organization, but rather a democratic socialist political organization which aims to bring socialism into the mainstream of American politics. We endeavor to do so through a two-pronged strategy of education and organizing. Much of our work is cultural and ideological: forums, debates, publications. But our voice can only be heard if we simultaneously play a central, activist role within struggles relevant to working people, communities of color, women, gays and lesbians and other oppressed constituencies. We operate within progressive coalitions as an open socialist presence and bring to these movements an analysis and strategy which recognizes the fundamental need to democratize global corporate power.
- DSA strives to be a crucial socialist leaven within a mass movement for social justice. In the 2000 elections, most electorally-active, progressive constituencies will endeavor to elect progressives to Congress and to the state legislatures.
- DSA will continue to be a voice inside — and outside — the electoral process, to argue against panaceas of ‘fixed’ markets, and for a bottom-up democratic, decentralized and environmentally sane economy.
Position on "reparations" for African-Americans
DSA Statement on Reparations[20]
DSA joins in solidarity with the position expressed by the Black Radical Congress (April 17, 1999):
- Reparations is a well-established principle of international law that should be applied in the US...As the descendants of enslaved Africans, we have the legal and moral right to receive just compensation for the oppression, systematic brutality and economic exploitation Black people have suffered historically and continue to experience today.
- Thus, we seek reparations from the U.S. for its illegal assault on African peoples during the slave trade; its exploitation of Black labor during slavery; and its systematic and totalitarian physical, economic and cultural violence against people of African descent over the last four centuries.
- DSA, as a socialist organization, rejects the proposition that corporate wealth and individual property are the same. The wealth that we plan to re-distribute is corporate wealth not personal private property.
- The wealth of the U.S. corporate class was developed from the exploitation of vast numbers of Africans and a great many indigenous peoples by slavery and the theft of indigenous wealth and land by the Spanish, the Portuguese, and the English-speaking peoples. The current wealth of the ruling elite and the poverty in African-American and indigenous communities are direct consequences of this incorporation by force and terrorism of these and other dominated communities into the capitalist system. And we, along with the Latino Commission of DSA, further call for reparations for the assaults and despoliation of the indigenous peoples of the Americas and their descendants, including Mexicans, Puerto Ricans and others, for the loss of their lands and the attempted destruction of their cultures and institutions. This includes supporting the land claims and other treaty-related social justice cases of the Native American tribal nations.
- In pursuit of these reparations, we take the following steps:
- 1. DSA supports H.R. 40, introduced by Representative John Conyers, to study the issues related to slavery and to make recommendations to Congress.
- 2. We further recognize that reparations are fundamentally a social rather than an individual process. It is clear from a number of studies that the underdevelopment of communities of African Americans, indigenous people, and their descendants continues to this date. We recognize that this underdevelopment is a direct result of the crimes of the past, and the forced subjugation of these people and their incorporation into a White Supremacist society based upon the unfair and inequitable extraction of labor and capital from the work, and death, of these people.
- We therefore call for monetary reparations to be in the form of public ownership of utilities and means of production. And we call for the investment of compensatory funds into publicly owned institutions for the development of their communities.
- And public funds shall be used to promote the general welfare, education, health care, public transportation and infrastructure targeted on those communities historically denied lack of access to capital and education by prior governmental and corporate actions.
- 3. DSA will conduct internal and public education around the issueof reparations.
Adopted by the National Political Committee, October 6, 2002.
Support for 'Single Payer' health care
DSA is a driving force behind the campaign for socialized medicine in the US. It works closely[21]with allies such as U.S. Congressman John Conyers and Senator Bernie Sanders to move the debate in the appropriate direction.
- DSA reaffirms its support for single-payer health insurance as the most just, cost-effective and rational method for creating a universal health care system in the United States.
- In the House of Representatives, John Conyers has introduced H.R.676, the Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act. This bill has 77 co-sponsors. In the Senate, Bernie Sanders has introduced S.703, the American Health Security Act of 2009. His bill has not yet attracted co-sponsors.
- These two pieces of legislation take different approaches to universal health insurance, but both take forprofit insurance companies out of the picture.
- DSA asks our locals to contact their senators and representatives, and encourage them to co-sponsor these bills if they have not already done so.
In 1991, when Rep. Marty Russo {D-IL} introduced a bill into the U.S. House of Representatives calling for a single, universal, publicly-administered health care program. The Russo Bill is attracting the support of many progressive organizations - including DSA.[22]
- Supporters are currently pushing for the Russo Bill to reach the floor of the House for a vote.Activists should contact their representatives to encourage their support. Contact your local to find out what other DSA'ers are doing to support the Russo Bill.
Steve Tarzynski, a member of the DSA National Political Committee and chair of the DSA National Health Care Task force, wrote in Democratic Left January/February 1994;[23]
- We've met some of the modest goals that the national leadership set when DSA decided to make support for a single-payer Canadian-style health care system our major issue.
- DSA members have served on the Clinton Health Care Task Force and in the leadership and rank and file of national and state single-payer coalitions. Perhaps most importantly, in 1991 we organized a twenty-two-city national tour of over forty Canadian health experts (from our sibling party, the New Democrats) that helped to galvanize the single-payer movement into action. No other organization was in a position to carry out such a major tour. We have done a good job as the socialist. current within the single-payer movement, but still have significant opportunities to improve DSA locals' level of activism and our recruitment of activists into DSA through this issue. In the coming year, as we close in for the final legislative phase of this fight, the national DSA leadership and the DSA health care task force will focus efforts in these two areas.
- The DSA National Convention in November unanimously adopted a resolution that clearly reaffirmed our support of the McDermott-Conyers-Wellstone single-payer bills (HR1200/S491). It also stipulated DSA's advocacy of a "state option" for single payer in the final legislative package. The resolution also stated that DSA will organize and participate in anti-corporate campaigns targeting private health insurance, pharmaceutical lobbies, and any other corporate or political forces that seek to destroy real reform.
- If a vote is delayed beyond fall 1994, DSA will also work in congressional campaigns that target anti-re form incumbents and that support, single-payer advocates. We will also continue our work in state campaigns to establish single-payer systems.
- The most delicate aspect of our work is how we balance our efforts in improving the Clinton proposal and pushing for single-payer. This is not a new dilemma for the left. The tension between reform and revolution has existed within every socialist movement in Western industrialized democracies. It will always be with us. The solution lies in putting into practice Michael Harrington's notion "visionary gradualism."
- Democratic socialists should project a vision of a moral society based on freedom, equality, and solidarity. We must also understand that reaching such a goal involves a gradual approach over a long period of years, with each reform becoming the foundation for the next. There is no other way, and history alone will judge the pace.
For details of the 1991 Democratic Socialists of America Health Care Speakers Tour.
Circa 2008 National DSA joined the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Health Care, a clearinghouse for groups supporting HR 676, sponsored by Rep. John Conyers.[24]]
The Employee Free Choice Act – A DSA Priority
In an article in DSA's Democratic Left, Spring 2007 DSA National Political Committee member David Green of Detroit wrote in support of the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA)-or "card check".[25]
- What distinguishes socialists from other progressives is the theory of surplus value. According to Marx, the secret of surplus value is that workers are a source of more value than they receive in wages. The capitalist is able to capture surplus value through his ownership of the means of production, his right to purchase labor as a commodity, his control over the production process, and his ownership of the final product. Surplus value is the measure of capital’s exploitation of labor
Green went on to write;
- Our goal as socialists is to abolish private ownership of the means of production. Our immediate task is to limit the capitalist class’s prerogatives in the workplace...
- In the short run we must at least minimize the degree of exploitation of workers by capitalists. We can accomplish this by promoting full employment policies, passing local living wage laws, but most of all by increasing the union movement’s power...
- The Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) provides an excellent organizing tool (i.e., tactic) through which we can pursue our socialist strategy while simultaneously engaging the broader electorate on an issue of economic populism.
Green explained how DSA could play a role in getting the Act passed through the Senate after the 2008 elections.
- The fact that we face an uphill battle in the Senate does not detract from the value of DSA doing organizing work around EFCA. At a minimum, we can force conservative senators to place themselves on record as opposed to EFCA. This would then make these incumbents even more vulnerable in the 2008 elections. If we replace only a few of these anti-labor senators in 2008, we should be able to pass EFCA in the next Congress.
- DSA could play a role in organizing support for EFCA. We have locals and activists across the country capable of organizing successful public events – as demonstrated by our Sanders house parties. We have “notables” capable of attracting non-DSA members to public events. We have academics, writers and speakers capable of elucidating public policy issues in clear and simple language. We have a solid relationship with several major unions-UAW, USW, IAM.
Green went on to explain how DSA's EFCA campaign could work-DSA could organize public meetings in coalition with other groups, including the AFL-CIO’s Voice at Work Department, state AFL-CIOs and central labor councils, American Rights at Work, America Votes, Progressive Democrats of America, Committees of Correspondence, ACORN and state Democratic parties.
He listed individuals who could be invited to speak in support including John Edwards, John Sweeney, Cornel West, Barbara Ehrenreich, Leo Gerard, Ron Gettelfinger, David Bonior and Bernie Sanders.
- We could have literature tables emphasizing DSA’s low-wage justice pieces. We could invite the state’s senators and urge them to sign a pledge to support EFCA when it comes before the Senate.
- Each of the sponsoring organizations could distribute postcards to their members which the members would then mail to their senators urging support for EFCA. We could also circulate an on-line petition in support of EFCA through the website and email list of each participating organization. We could publish op-ed pieces on EFCA in local newspapers prior to each public meeting. Finally, the coalition in each state could organize members to lobby those senators who do not sign the pledge.
The benefits for Democratic Socialists of America?
- How does DSA benefit from this campaign? First, as with the Sanders campaign, a campaign on behalf of EFCA will allow us to activate our locals – giving them a project that is achievable, practical, and will bring our work to a larger audience. Second, DSA should be able to recruit new members from those attending the public meetings in support of EFCA. Third, the campaign will strengthen our ties with organized labor – allowing us to solicit resources for future activities more easily.
- Our challenge is to convince the public that the ability of working people to organize unions has a direct and positive impact on everyone’s wages, job security, pensions and health care. Walter Reuther once observed that powerful social forces are unleashed when altruism and self-interest intersect. EFCA offers such an opportunity
Backing Barack Obama
On March 3rd 2007, Barack Obama was a featured speaker at a meeting of labor unionists in the Hyatt Regency Chicago Loop Grand Ballroom[26].
Speaking in a vernacular and cadence that showed the Harvard Law School and Columbia University trained Barack Obama can connect with working class people, the third year U. S. Senator wowed and energized a mostly labor union crowd of about 1600 supporters this morning...
The event attracted some of Labor’s big hitters to join Obama on the dais and speak, including John Sweeney, President of the AFL-CIO and Gerald McEntee, President of AFSCME. Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky [D-Evanston, 9th CD], an early and big-time supporter of Obama’s in the 2004 Senate Primary and Senator Dick Durbin [D-IL] also spoke...
Eight other individuals spoke at the rally, including local labor leaders and health care workers, as well as a local favorite for liberals, Dr. Quentin Young.
Cong. Jan Schakowsky [D-Evanston, 9th CD]: … Employers can intimidate, fire, threaten to move people from the day shift to the graveyard...it is a new day in our nation’s capital, it’s a new day for Resurrection workers and their friends, it’s a new day for immigrant workers, it’s a new day for all our working Americans who dream of the justice that ONLY the Union Movement can deliver. And, to the doubters I say, you ain’t seen nothing yet. Just wait until we have a Labor Department under President Barack Obama.
Of those speaking with Obama, John Sweeney and Quentin Young are confirmed Democratic Socialists of America members. Gerald McEntee is a reported member and Jan Schakowsky is at least a supporter. Only Dick Durbin has no known DSA ties.
Support for Obama Presidential campaign
Most DSA members actively supported Barack Obama in the November 2008 Presidential election;[27]
- DSA believes that the possible election of Senator Obama to the presidency in November represents a potential opening for social and labor movements to generate the critical political momentum necessary to implement a progressive political agenda...
- An Obama presidency will not on its own force legislation facilitating single-payer health care (at least at the federal level) or truly progressive taxation and major cuts in wasteful and unneeded defense spending. But if DSA and other democratic forces can work in the fall elections to increase the ranks of the Congressional Progressive and Black and La-tino caucuses, progressive legislation (backed by strong social movement mobilization) might well pass the next Congress.
DSA concentrated its forces on where it could serve the Obama cause best;[20]
- For the past year, especially following the nomination of Barack Obama, many DSA members worked energetically on the presidential campaign, especially in swing states
Most DSA locals committed themselves fully to the Obama campaign in 2008.[27]
- Sacramento DSA worked intensely on the Obama campaign through Super Tuesday and continues electoral work with the Sacramento Progressive Alliance.
New York DSA members were especially active;[20]
- Some got up “at the crack of dawn,” says Jeff Gold, to take buses to support Obama in various locations in Pennsylvania, sometimes side by side with experienced trade unionists from Working America and at other times with first-time campaign volunteers...Another member traveled all the way to south Florida to help turn out Jewish voters for Obama...
"Progressive" Democrats such as Mary Jo Kilroy also benefitted; In Columbus, Ohio, DSA members campaigned for both Obama and congressional candidate Mary Jo Kilroy, who, after a suspenseful count of provisional ballots was declared the winner in December, raising the Democrats’ majority in the House to 257.
Democratic Left Magazine
Democratic Left is the regular publication of the DSA that has run from the 1970s to the present. Issues from 2000 - 2010 are publicly available on the Democratic Left website. The Newsletter of the Democratic Left was the forerunner of the Democratic Left, and was published by the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee. DSOC later merged with the New American Movement and in 1982 formed the DSA.
DSA Labor Committee
In February 2009 Boston Democratic Socialists of America sponsored a forum on the Employee Free Choice Act with DSA Vice-Chair Elaine Bernard, MA SEIU Political Director Harris Gruman and Steve Schnapp from United for a Fair Economy before about 40 people. Out of that meeting a DSA Labor Committee emerged, organized by David Duhalde with several non-members, working to build support for EFCA. The group has been joining with Jobs with Justice and tenant groups to publicize other issues related to the economic crisis.[28]
Progressive Democrats for 2010
At DSA's November 2009 national Convention in Evanstown Illinois, the organization resolved to;[29]]
- Finally, DSA will work in 2010 to insure that progressive Democrats who support many of the above items are reelected to Congress or replace right-wing Democratic or Republican incumbents. Only if the Democratic majority in Congress is not just preserved but expanded and moved to the left can any of the above progressive reforms be enacted. DSA PAC will explore hiring an organizer to help our members become more effective in electoral politics, especially inthe primary campaigns where we will promote true progressives.
Support for Conyers Jobs Bill
In May 2010, Rep John Conyers introduced a bill entitled "The 21st Century Full Employment and Training Act." The bill was "little noticed at the time but, today, after another 7 months of dismal jobs reports -- we have actually lost ground during 2010, creating fewer jobs than the growth of the labor force -- there was renewed interest in this legislation by a range of progressive groups". The Democratic Socialists of America National Political Committee made mobilization around the Act a national priority; Progressive Democrats of America "is developing a similar effort, as are both the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and the (DSA controlled) National Jobs for All Coalition".[30]
Support for the Occupy Movement
In a Nov. 2, 2011 email to supporters, DSA National Director Maria Svart wrote of the DSA's strong support for the Occupy Movement which began on Sept. 17, 2011 with the original Occupy Wall Street demonstration in New York City,[31]
- "DSA and YDS members have been participating in the Occupy Wall Street protests in New York City and around the country from their beginning. This grassroots groundswell of activity is an exciting new development in the ongoing struggle for social and economic justice, and we are committed to supporting and building it. This fall is a critical time for members to be politically active, whether at OWS or in the offices of elected officials. Unless members of Congress feel enough pressure from their constituents, the Congressional Super Committee will soon propose cuts to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and other important anti-poverty programs."
The organization further stated,[32]
- "The Occupy Wall Street protests have invigorated the American Left in a way not seen in decades, and DSA has long emphasized the important role social movements play in improving the quality of life of ordinary people. So we have urged our members to take an active, supportive role in their local occupations, something many DSAers had already begun doing as individuals, because they believe that everyday people, the 99%, shouldn’t be made to pay for a crisis set off by an out-of-control financial sector and the ethically compromised politicians who have failed to rein it in."
On Nov. 2, 2011, DSA announced that it had launched an "Occupy Wall Street Page" containing,[32]
- "examples of DSA members and members of our youth section, Young Democratic Socialists, participating in the Occupy Wall Street protests, including news articles, videos, and pictures featuring DSAers and DSA honorary chairs taking part in the protests, and personal accounts and analyses from DSAers themselves."
To view the many incidents of DSA's participation in Occupy demonstrations throughout the U.S., click here. On the page for each demonstration you will see a section covering the DSA's involvement.
External links
References
- ↑ http://www.rawbw.com/~ross/dsa/DSAToday.html
- ↑ DSA website, Locals, accessed Jan. 7, 2011
- ↑ DSA website, accessed November 18, 2013
- ↑ Dem. left. Winter 2012
- ↑ http://www.dsausa.org/about/structure.html
- ↑ http://www.dsausa.org/about/staff.html
- ↑ Democratic Left, Winter 2002, page 5
- ↑ Democratic Left, Issue 7/8, 1997
- ↑ Dem. Left Jan/Feb 1996
- ↑ Democratic Left, Jan./Feb. 1990, page 9
- ↑ Democratic Left, Jan/Feb. 1986, page 11
- ↑ Democratic left, Jan./Feb. 1990, page 7
- ↑ Dem.Left, July/Aug. 1995 page 19
- ↑ http://www.dsaboston.org/yradical/yr2001-01.pdf Yankee Radical, January, 2001]
- ↑ New Ground 51, March - April, 1997
- ↑ http://kincaidsite.com/dsa/
- ↑ http://www.dsausa.org/pdf/widemsoc.pdf
- ↑ http://www.chicagodsa.org/ngarchive/ng61.html
- ↑ Democratic Left magazine, Spring/Summer 2000
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 Democratic Left magazine, Winter 2009
- ↑ Democratic Left magazine, Summer 2009
- ↑ DEMOCRATIC LEFT JULY/AUGUST, page 10
- ↑ Democratic Left, January/February 1994, page 2
- ↑ TYR March 2009
- ↑ Democratic Left magazine, Spring 2007
- ↑ http://jeffberkowitz.blogspot.com/2007/03/barack-obama-watch-todays-labor-rally.html
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 Democratic Left magazine, Summer 2008
- ↑ TYR, June 2009
- ↑ Democratic Left, winter 2009
- ↑ New Ground, 134, Jan./Feb. 2011
- ↑ DSA email to supporters: DSA Launches Occupy Wall Street Page, Nov. 2, 2011
- ↑ 32.0 32.1 DSA: DSA Members Participate in Occupy Wall Street (accessed on Nov. 2, 2011)
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