January 4, 2010

Obama, The Democrats & The Months Ahead-By Carl Davidson

I've been hearing from too many left activists who are simply fed up with the Democrats and want to leave the electoral arena -- and just when the battles there are getting really interesting, even if we don't have prospects of major victories. To my way of thinking, our present task is to deepen the divisions there, not walk away from them.

The sooner we stop thinking of the "Democratic Party" as if it were a single entity, the better off we will be. That's why "Democrat control of Congress" is an illusion. The GOP Blue Dog faction in the Democratic Party combined with the regular GOP make it at least a draw. That's why everything positive gets gutted and turned into its opposite.

The progressive majority's forces are pretty much limited to the Progressive Caucus, the Black Caucus and the Latino Caucus, and not even all of them. We are a minority force in those upper spheres, not an emerging majority like we are at the base. We can grow to a larger minority in Congress, but to get a true majority, we'd likely have to split both major parties, and we are not close to having that strength yet.

Otherwise, we are mainly limited to passing things where there is a deep divide in finance capital and other big capital at the top, and where one side of it becomes an indirect ally. That may be shaping up on the Afghan war.

But small and medium-sized capital, as well as some larger sectors of productive capital, have yet to stand up to finance capital on HR 676 even though it's in their interest to do so. We'll just have to continue our "long march through the institutions" to get it. A carbon tax, immigration reform, and EFCA are going to be even more difficult.

At this point, we have two interconnected mass democratic tasks. Building the left-progressive pole inside and outside the Dems with groups like PDA and other independent forums, and dividing the GOP right to smash the Teabaggers and their allies. Neither is easy, but starting with a clear head helps a lot.

Here in Beaver County in western Pennsylvania we have about 200 or so Progressive Democrats of America people and another few dozen Beaver County Peace Links activists. Almost all are blue collar workers or retirees. We, in this sense, are the active antiwar forces here, as well as the active left-progressive side of the spectrum among the unions and a few other groups.

There isn't much else, save for the Tom Merton Center, the religious-liberal-green-anarchist bunch in nearby Pittburgh. Together with the unions, they pulled out 10,000for the G20. We took part in it as best as we could. All told, about 6,000 of the 10,000 were from the wider Pittsburgh region and the nearby campuses. That's our activist core viewed more widely.

Nonetheless a majority of our county, and certainly a majority of Dem voters, are critical of the wars -- but they have yet to take any action other than voting. It's our task to find the activities they will take up, like coming to a vigil or attending an antiwar educational, or even just honking their horns at our weekly vigils.

For the Healthcare not Warfare Afghan war protests here a few weeks ago, we got out about 60 people in the rain and cold. Not bad, considering. At least half those attending were wearing their union jackets. Besides us, the speakers were union folks and local Dem officials, plus Tim Carpenter from PDA. The speeches pushed and warned Obama, but didn't attack him personally. They told him what he had to do in order to succeed.

If we didn't take this approach, working with local Dems, I'd guess we could get out less than 10 people, if anyone bothered at all.

Our next project is to make use of Bob Greenwald's Rethink Afghanistan from Brave New Films. One of our allies showed it last month at a college in the next county. Plus finding ways to work with the Steelworkers on their new collaborative with the Mondragon Coops.

If you think our strategy is reducible to "supporting Obama," you don't understand it. To be precise, our strategy here is to aim the main blow at low-road neoliberal finance capital and its right wing populist allies, allying with high road neoKeynesian initiatives at the top, while developing the left-center coalition among labor, minorities, women and youth at the base.

We do that in the form of expanding our PDA group; it's platform is Out Now, HR 676, Green Jobs, the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), Carbon Tax and Debt Relief. Within that, among the advanced, a few of us do revolutionary socialist education that targets neo-Keynesianism as well. We work with Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism, and that way we grow CCDS in size, too.

That's the political and class substance of it. Where Obama stands, and where we stand in relation to him, depends on the ebb and flow. We oppose him where he's wrong, support him where he's right, and defend him versus the racist onslaughts of the right.

So yes, I'm suggesting that people elsewhere do likewise -- although I'm well aware that conditions vary, and adjustments are required.

If one of the left antiwar coalitions thinks they can pull off a march on DC, we'll probably rent a bus or two, fill them, and go to it. If we do, we'll try to network horizontally with others like ourselves, perhaps even meet after the march for a confab of some sort.

But we are not interested in wasting energy or resources getting into national pissing matches and intrigues over slogans and speakers. We'll simply bring the slogans that make sense to us. But in the end, the antiwar forces need to be reoriented and rebuilt at the base, in alliance with the growth in class struggle activity around the economy.

That's what we're doing, and have been doing for some time. Other approaches may point to the future as well, and I'm wide open to hearing about them.

Go here.

4 comments:

Charles Wynns said...

Good article.

If there is any point of unity within the Democrats, it's the "yeah, where else are they going to go" response in reference to criticisms from the left. Basically, the Dems have taken the left for granted; i.e., where else does a leftist go, really?

So, what is an electoral strategy for the left? How do we use the electoral apparatus to strengthen that which is progressive within the democratic party yet not reward those under the democratic tent whose politics are counter-progressive?

Off the top of my head, such a strategy might put lots of emphasis on the primaries... Beyond this, jeez, I don't know, but the strategy might be worth thinking about.

Personally, and this is purely personal, but I've had it with Obama and his administration. I'm willing to support Obama when his actions are progressive. Only problem is is that I really have to think hard to find anything progressive since Jan 2008.

annski said...

To me an electoral strategy comes from understanding that during elections people are more interested in listening to different ideas or perspectives. It doesn't mean finding someone a little more liberal within the Democratic Party. It means having a Transitional Program and propagating it. Strategies might be different if we were talking about a Labor Party based on the interests of the working class. But as has become even more clear, if there was any doubt..That is not what it is...
I am not saying this is easy but it is one definition of an electoral strategy.

strannik said...

Nevertheless, a position of critical support vis a vis Obama and the Democrats is light years ahead of where the Party is right now. Those of us who called for this position were accused of ultra-leftism by the Party leadership. Now we're in the decidedly odd place of having the CPUSA to the right of the CCDS.
If nothing else, "oppose him where he's wrong, support him where he's right" is an excellent place to start, far better than the peevish centrism of the Party leaders.

Communist Party Discussion said...

The US left must call for a clean break with the Democrats. The 2010 elections will be an important opportunity to run and elect progressive candidates outside of the Democratic Party's orbit (i.e. as independents or members of other parties). Carl Davidson (and the Webbites), on the other hand, just want to keep the left trapped within the capitalist Democratic Party's smothering political machine.