OUR ONLY PATH TO SAVING OURSELVES: It's Up To Labor Unions & Workers Now
There is no other lever for the times we face and two truly despotic parties working as the smelly jockstrap holding up corporate fascism.
By Mark Taylor
DeMOCKracy.ink (9/2/24)
With the United States actively engaged in one of the most obscene genocides of the modern era while actively pushing for war with Russia and China, as American cities crumble and families struggle to put food in the fridge, the scale of needed reform is mind boggling. With both political parties fully corporatized and pulling on red or blue fascist armbands of genocide, censorship, suppression of dissent and corporate funding, the American political system is dead and done.
Historically, it has been the labor movement that has nudged our corrupt system toward some small gestures of humane support for the people. It is time for organized labor to step up again. With recent “Stand Up Strike” contract victories, United Auto Workers president Sean Fein has given hope that labor may be back, though his lack of challenging the Biden White House on their active suppression of the rail workers strike was a grotesque act of betrayal.
The only way labor finds strength is through unity across all trades, professionas and working groups.
Workers need to lead the leaders
The interest in unions is growing across the nation from assembly line workers to academia. In recent years union members have been ahead of the too-often sanguine union leadership. Let us hope this is a rising wave of labor organizing and activism. If we are to have any hope of rolling back the avalanche of speech suppression, war build-up and security state abuses of citizen rights, it will only come through labor organizing. We need labor activism to not only challenge the Red n’ Blue fascists in both parties but the national security and police state.
That will only happen through labor organizing and actions like strikes, work slowdowns, targeted boycotts and picketing, community-based labor-sponsored mutual aid and — eventually — a system-stopping challenge of the 1947 Taft–Hartley Act, which stripped workers of most effective tools of labor reform and instituted corporate control of congress.
A true American hero is socialist Eugene V. Debs, whose bold stands 108 years ago for working people and against militarism and the fraud of World War I led to his imprisonment. Talk about an echo of history! While in prison, Debs ran for president against his jailer, Democrat President Woodrow Wilson, winning almost a million votes. And this was before social media and in the face of fascistic government suppression.
Is labor up to the challenge of the modern version of the corrupted nation Debs stood against? Maybe. Let’s hope so. There is no other lever for the times we face and two truly despotic parties working as the smelly jockstrap holding up the shrunken gonads of corporate fascism.
We need to begin by learning our real history. The current August/September issue of In These Times magazine has excellent coverage of the labor movement. In These Times is a very pro-labor publication deserving of your support. You can link to the website here.
So, on this Labor Day, learn from Debs and work for solidarity among all workers.
Unite
Resist
Or succumb
HEARTLAND SOCIALISM: Eugene V. Debs Speaking Truth In A Time Of War & Suppression
Scene of the ‘Crime’: Socialist Party leader Eugene V. Debs delivers his famous antiwar speech in Canton, Ohio, on June 16, 1918. This photograph was used as Exhibit No. 17 by the prosecution in Debs’ sedition trial.
In the end, Debs was right and the government was — per usual on the issue of war — dead, dead wrong.
By Miles Kampf-Lassin
In These Times (August/September, 2024)
On a midsummer afternoon in June 1918, Eugene Debs stepped into a gazebo nestled under the trees of Nimisilla Park in Canton, Ohio, to deliver the speech that would land him in prison. The Socialist Party leader looked out on a crowd of 1,200 gathered among tamaracks and sugar maples as he castigated imperial war and the capitalist class, calling socialism “the mightiest movement in the history of mankind.”
Socialism “has made it possible for me to take my place side by side with you in the great struggle for the better day,” Debs proclaimed. “I am kin to all that throbs; to be class-conscious, and to realize that, regardless of nationality, race, creed, color or sex … every member of the working class, without an exception, is my comrade, my brother and sister.”
Before speaking to the crowd, Debs went to the local courthouse to visit a group of socialists imprisoned for voicing their political beliefs. Two weeks later, Debs would join them, jailed under the Espionage Act for speaking out against the horrors of World War I in his Canton speech. He remained incarcerated for more than two years and ran for president from his cell on the Socialist Party ticket, garnering nearly a million votes.
Success of Midwest socialism
Debs was a child of the Midwest, where his commitment to a multiracial working-class movement was forged. He was born in Terre Haute, Ind., and served as city clerk and later a representative in the state assembly. He became a railroad worker and founded the American Railway Union, then helped lead Chicago’s 1894 Pullman strike, known as “the Debs Rebellion.” It was violently broken up by federal forces and resulted in Debs’ first stretch in prison.
While jailed in Woodstock, Ill., Debs was visited by Milwaukee’s socialist newspaper editor Victor L. Berger, who brought a copy of Marx’s Capital. The exchange helped spark a political transformation for Debs, who would spend the rest of his days evangelizing the socialist cause.
This history reflects a reality too often overlooked by contemporary political observers: the spirit of socialism has coursed through the Midwest ever since the movement emerged in the 19th century, and it continues to animate the region’s political landscape.
Far from being the bastion of “coastal elites,” as claimed by some pundits, today an upsurge of organizing efforts are keeping alive a socialist flame that has burned for generations throughout America’s heartland.
As unimpeded industrialization spread across the United States in the latter half of the 1800s, wide swaths of the population faced food shortages, toxic drinking water, run-down housing and a lack of proper sanitation, all while laboring around the clock in factories and worksites that lacked meaningful regulation and safety standards. In the face of these conditions, working people organized under the banner of socialism to call for remedies, including labor rights and less time on the job.
The power of general strikes
That last demand took center stage May 1, 1886, when 300,000 people nationwide walked off in a general strike to advocate for the eight-hour workday. Three days later in Chicago — a hotbed of the movement — the Haymarket riot led to a number of socialist agitators being hanged. It was soon commemorated as International Workers’ Day.
In Milwaukee, thousands joined the 1886 general strike, shutting down nearly every major factory in the city. Clashes with state militia that followed helped motivate socialist journalist Paul Grottkau to run for mayor while still locked up for his participation. He didn’t win, but his entry inspired others.
In 1910, Socialist Party member Emil Seidel ran for mayor and did win. That same year, Berger became the first socialist elected to Congress where he promoted the nationalization of major industries. In a 1918 article for the Milwaukee Leader, Berger wrote, “Socialism is defined as the collective ownership of the social means of production and distribution. It is the name given to the next stage of civilization, if civilization is to survive.”
In the 1916 election, another socialist, Daniel Hoan, took over stewardship of Milwaukee, serving as mayor for more than two decades. Socialists were elected up and down the ballot, and their efforts to invest in public works, sanitation and housing spawned the idea of “sewer socialism.” In 1948, Milwaukee voted in its third socialist mayor, Frank Zeidler.
Attendees of the 2024 Republican National Convention were reminded of this civic inheritance when at least one homemade sign was posted on a downtown building this July reading, “Welcome G.O.P. to Milwaukee, a Socialist city!”
As sewer socialism was carried out over the first half of the 20th century, hundreds of socialists were elected to public office across the Midwest — including in Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio — under the common cause of redistributing wealth and power. The largest-circulation socialist publication in U.S. history, Appeal to Reason, was printed in the prairies of Girard, Kan., and reached 760,000 paying subscribers at its peak.
Following World War II, a vicious Red Scare targeted thousands of socialists across the country and dismantled many of their organizing efforts. But socialists didn’t disappear; many joined other progressive groups and became involved in movements for labor rights, civil rights, gender equality and an end to war and poverty.
In the 1970s, socialists in the Midwest helped launch projects such as Teamsters for a Democratic Union, a labor reform caucus started in Cleveland, and Labor Notes, a Detroit-based organization and magazine advancing rank-and-file unionism.
Workers press
In These Times was founded in Chicago by socialist historian James Weinstein. In the editorial of the first issue in 1976, Weinstein laid out the publication’s mission: “to speak to corporate capitalism as the great issue of our time, and to socialism as the popular movement that will meet it.” He modeled the newspaper after the Appeal to Reason, and he insisted, as former editor of The Progressive Matthew Rothschild remembered after Weinstein’s death in 2005, that it “not be located in New York or Boston or D.C. or San Francisco but in Chicago, that big Midwestern city with no bullshit.”
The 1980s saw the emergence of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), growing out of the New American Movement and the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee. DSA threw its support behind the 1988 presidential campaign of Jesse Jackson — founder of the Rainbow/PUSH coalition, based in Chicago — whose left-wing challenge to the Democratic establishment included a surprise victory in the Michigan caucus.
Many socialists also actively supported Harold Washington’s successful mayoral campaign in 1983, which helped usher in an era of progressive governance for Chicago.
More recently, socialists played a key (though by no means singular) role in the formation of the Caucus of Rank-and-File Educators (CORE), which was elected to leadership of the powerful Chicago Teachers Union in 2010. Under CORE, the union engaged in a historic citywide strike in 2012 that captured the attention of the country and inspired other large-scale walkouts in subsequent years.
The 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns of democratic socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) were instrumental in popularizing socialism among a new generation. Sanders, a lifelong admirer of Eugene Debs, inspired a wave of young people to join DSA, which is now the largest socialist organization in the country — with Midwestern chapters from the Twin Cities to Louisville, St. Louis to Detroit.
While each chapter organizes around its own local issues, those in the Midwest have largely prioritized running candidates for office; supporting labor organizing; and working to protect tenants and win affordable housing. These chapters, along with the rest of DSA, have also been active in mass protest movements, including the racial justice uprisings after the 2020 murder of George Floyd and the ongoing demonstrations demanding an end to the U.S.-backed genocide in Gaza.
The impact of this organizing is visible in the current electoral landscape. Chicago boasts a democratic socialist caucus of six members on city council, and the Wisconsin legislature has its own caucus of two Milwaukee socialists. Minneapolis has four socialists on city council, Indianapolis has one and Louisville will soon welcome its first. The Michigan state house, which already has one socialist in office, could see another elected this year. These officials have put forward a vision of municipal socialism in line with their forebears, calling for improved public services, collective ownership, higher wages and economies of care.
At the national level, two of the most leftwing members of Congress are Midwesterners — DSA-endorsed socialist Reps. Cori Bush of Missouri and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan.
In fall 2023, DSA chapters across the Midwest engaged in a Strike Ready campaign to support the United Auto Workers’ successful “stand up” strike against the Big Three automakers. Socialists have similarly supported the groundswell of union campaigns at Starbucks stores while growing the Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee—a project pioneered during the Covid pandemic in collaboration with the United Electrical Workers — to train workers how to unionize.
In places like Kansas City, Mo., the Twin Cities, Detroit and Chicago, DSA chapters have backed campaigns to institute rent control and provide rights for tenants facing eviction or mistreatment. Efforts like these showcase a strategy of seeking reforms at the local level with the broader goal of ultimately upending capitalist power relations to democratize the economy.
Throughout modern U.S. history, there have been tireless efforts by those in power to stamp out this movement. But as Debs declared in his storied speech in Canton more than 100 years ago:
“Every time they strike a blow, they add a thousand new voices to the hosts proclaiming that socialism is the hope of humanity and has come to emancipate the people from their final form of servitude.”
Legendary Labor Organizer Jane McAlevey: One of Her Last Interviews On Strategies For Workers To Win
“We’re going to have to be running a lot of illegal strikes. They’re coming. So, if we’ve got risk-averse national union leaders who are scared to do strikes right now, I just want to say, ‘Time to get over it.’”
[Editor Note: OMG! This woman was amazing. Let workers you know know about her books. - Mark Taylor]
Democracy Now! (9/2/24)
As part of our Labor Day special, we remember the longtime labor organizer and scholar Jane McAlevey, who died in July at the age of 59. She dedicated her life to empowering rank-and-file workers, training tens of thousands around the world to effectively strengthen their unions. She gave one of her last interviews to Democracy Now! in April after she announced she was entering hospice.
“We like to win,” says McAlevey, “and we like to teach workers how to win. What are the methods? What is it we can do?”
Chris Hedges On True Resistance To Corporate Tyranny
“Our only hope is to organize the overthrow of the corporate state that vomited up Trump. Our democratic institutions, including the legislative bodies, the courts and the media, are hostage to corporate power. They are no longer democratic. We must, like resistance movements of the past, engage in acts of sustained mass civil disobedience, especially strikes, and non-cooperation. By turning our ire on the corporate state, rather than Trump, we name the true sources of power and abuse.
“We expose the absurdity of blaming our demise on demonized groups such as undocumented workers, Muslims, African-Americans, Latinos, liberals, feminists, gays and others. We give people an alternative to a bankrupt Democratic Party — whose presidential candidate is in clear cognitive decline — that is a full partner in corporate oppression and cannot be rehabilitated. We make possible the restoration of an open society. If we fail to embrace this resistance, which alone has the ability to destroy cult leaders, we will continue the march toward tyranny.”
— Chris Hedges, My Thoughts On the Attempted Trump Assassination (7/14/24)
Information like this not only informs people like me but keeps alive those courageous Americans. Americans who thought they had free speech. Americans who went to prison… and while in prison gathered a million votes!!! Imagine a SubStack with a million followers!! That is the implication… his voice was heard and people supported him. A million people who, without free speech, would never have known another ‘way’ of living. Because of social media I NOW know about Zionism and the truth about the concentration camps and the truth about Ukraine and Gaza… Without free speech we are led down one shute like sheeples being herded by sheep dogs.
The DSA? Cori Bush? There's no help there. The DSA leadership is controlled by the Democrats, and Cori Bush brazenly betrayed her own voters, which is why she lost and good riddance. Most unions, for that matter, are completely corrupt. I know my own, AIPAC, certainly is. They endorsed first Biden and now Harris!
I hate to agree with the Trotskyists in Ann Arbor, but we need unions under democratic worker control. There have been moves in that direction by the Teamsters and the UAW, but until they unequivocally denounce the Democrats I cannot trust them.