By Bill Fletcher, Jr. Progressive America Rising via billfletcherjr.com
There is a strategic question that faces progressives,
one that is receiving increased attention. Due to the 2010 elections
and the Republican domination of state legislatures, Congressional
Districts have been gerrymandered in order to guarantee a lack of any
significant electoral challenges. In other words, these Districts have
Republican Congresspeople who are not worried about opposition.
As
we saw in the lead up to the ‘fiscal cliff’ negotiations/resolution,
most Republicans felt no internal pressure to compromise. It is quite
likely that they will feel little pressure in their districts for at
least ten years. As a result the sort of pressure that they must feel
must transcend their districts and actually be more at the societal
level. What this means is that while progressives absolutely need an
independent electoral strategy that builds locally-based organizations
capable of successfully running candidates for office–both inside and
outside of the Democratic primary system–that is insufficient.
In
fact, it is the Occupy Movement that pointed us in the direction of the
other leg of such a movement. What the Occupy Movement accomplished,
among other things, was to change the social discourse. Despite every
effort by the mainstream media to dismiss the Occupy Movement it not
only grew but forced the country to start to address the question of
economic inequality.
In the current context the
implications should be clear. If, for instance, we are to fight it out
on the economy and specifically on unemployment, this will not happen on
the basis of fights in the Republican Congressional Districts. It will
be a fight that we will have to take up in cities, including but not
limited to state capitols, around the country. It means social protests
which are disruptive.
In order for this to
happen we must actually re-train many social movement activists and
thinkers in the lessons of the 1930s labor movement, the 1950s-1960s
freedom movements (including but not limited to the Civil Rights
Movement), the movement against the Vietnam War, and the work of the
early environmental movement.
Occupy, in that
sense, was onto something. We must carry out a fight for space as part
of the fight for power. Land occupations, eviction blockades, boycotts,
as well as mass demonstrations are all critical. [Note: in fact, we
need, right now, a series of REALLY mass marches for jobs.] In other
words, the sort of pressure that needs to be brought about must be
something that Republicans AND Democrats feel, and in fact, become a
serious source of concern.
Before we find
ourselves wallowing in self-pity as we worry about the Republican
‘lock’, let’s rethink our strategy and tactics. We may be able to flip
the script, and sooner rather than in the distant future.


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