http://peoplesworld.org/the-left-needs-to-stop-self-marginalizing/

The left needs to stop self-marginalizing

by: Sam Webb
June 10 2013



For too long the left has not been a major player on our political
scene. It hasn't been sitting on its hands, but it can't claim the
same political authority that the left commanded in earlier periods of
the last century, which not coincidentally were marked by major social
advances.

But that could well change in the coming decade. The left has the
opportunity in the coming years to move from the margins into the
mainstream of political life, to leave its distinctive stamp on the
nation's politics.

I say this because the socio-political environment is changing in
left-friendly ways.

The era of relative capitalist stability and broadly shared prosperity
is long behind us. Slow growth, stagnation, growing inequality, and
multiple and interlocking crises - some global in scope - have become
the main markers of capitalist development.

The thinking of substantial sections of the American people is
changing. While these changes go in contradictory directions, one
current runs in a democratic, progressive and even radical direction
on a range of issues from marriage equality to taxing the rich to
cutting the military budget to climate change to socialism.

The labor movement, facing a crisis of survival, is renewing and
renovating itself. While the process is uneven and its outcome
uncertain, labor's new directions are already blowing fresh winds into
the working class and democratic struggles.

New alliances on the people's side of class and democratic struggles
are cropping up in reaction to the increasingly apparent need for
deeper and broader unity.

A rising anger is evident among growing numbers of people. Emblematic
of this trend is the growth of mass, nonviolent civil disobedience
actions by broad sections of the people's movement.

Millions have engaged in the political arena in dramatic fashion in
the past two presidential elections, despite systematic Republican
efforts to block them.

Anti-racism is gaining ground, and is doing so in the face of an
amped-up racist offensive coming from right-wing extremism and its
corporate backers.

Most importantly, a loosely organized, multi-leveled movement - maybe
coalition is a better term - is slowly maturing within the nation's
body politic. It doesn't yet have transformative capacity, that is,
the ability to realign politics, institutions, and mass thinking in a
consistently progressive, anti-corporate direction, but it has the
potential to grow in that direction.

But to take full advantage of this new opportunity the left can't
simply rewind and play the same tape that has guided its thinking and
activity for longer than I care to remember.

To begin with, it requires shedding some modes of thinking - a
mentality and practice of self-marginalization - that have either
outlived their day or never had much value.

I would include:

* The belief that the danger of co-optation is a reason to keep a
distance from reform struggles and electoral politics. As I see it, if
the left doesn't put itself in a position where it stands a chance of
actually being co-opted, it isn't really serious about mass politics.

* The view that politics has few complexities, change is driven only
from the ground up, and stages of struggle are for the faint-hearted
and "reformists."

* A notion that differences within elite circles on foreign and
domestic policies is of no strategic or tactical significance. A
recent example was the sweepingly negative reaction of too many on the
left to President Obama's speech on the "war on terrorism," a speech
which in my view - and that of other sober-minded progressives -
showed some retreat from past policies and provided some openings for
mass struggle that were not formerly there.

* A "logic" that holds that because capitalism as a system can't be
reformed in the sense of eliminating its crisis tendencies and
contradictions, no grounds exist to struggle for reforms within
capitalism's framework.

* A view that the two main parties of capitalism are carbon copies of
one another - this in an era when right-wing extremism has taken over
the GOP and imposition of an authoritarian form of capitalism has
become its overarching political project.

* An attitude that the role of the left is always to double the bet.
So that I'm not misunderstood: left demands have a place in class and
people's struggles, but they are neither the takeoff point for united
action nor the singular thing that the left brings to mass struggles.

* A habit of looking for political purity which might exist in theory,
but has never found a place in broad coalitions - the only reliable
vehicle of social change - where people of varied views and interests
gather, contest their views, but in the end struggle against a common
foe.

* A pronounced predisposition to under-appreciate the role of labor
and its growing layer of progressive leaders.

* A tendency to create false oppositions between electoral forms of
action and direct action, or, to put it differently, between struggles
against the state and struggles within the state. In its crudest form,
it smugly declares, "Politics are of no importance, only struggle
around issues matters."

* A penchant to elaborate tactics - that is demands, forms of
struggle, attitudes toward compromise and alliances, and so on - apart
from a concrete estimate of the balance of class and social forces at
any given moment.

* A new and growing view that the corporate hold on the federal
government is so all-encompassing that struggles over policies and
direction at that level are no longer viable.

* An attitude that the main task is to simply resist unrestrained
corporate power, rather than addressing the harder task of making
strategic and tactical linkages to move, not a handful of people, but
millions forward - incrementally and to the next stage of struggle.

* An underestimation of the importance of the fight for equality in
general and racial equality in particular. The search for common
ground and a common program of action is not in contradiction with the
fight for equality. In fact, the common ground will be wider, deeper
and more durable to the degree the broader movement vigorously fights
for equality in all of its forms.

While in recent decades vast political, economic, social and
demographic transformations have occurred, the fight against racism
retains its overarching importance.

Anyone who devalues this struggle limits the sweep of any victory at
best. At worst, it provides an opening to the most backward sections
of our ruling class to gain ascendancy. And racist filth has ramped up
since Barack Obama's election five years ago.

A firm and broad rebuff to this counteroffensive is imperative. White
people, in particular white workers, in their own interests should be
in the middle of this fight.

* An under-appreciation that the struggle for reforms and democracy is
the ground on which higher and deeper levels of unity and
understanding emerge, which in turn are the necessary scaffolding of
any movement that hopes to be the agent of fundamental progressive and
radical change.

Shedding these old modes of thinking is only a first step for the left
in becoming a major player in U.S. politics. It also has to be
combined with the articulation of and fight for an expansive,
unifying, and forward-looking politics that has an eye to meeting
millions on the ground they occupy and moving with them to higher
ground, where the wellsprings of economic security, political
democracy, substantive equality, durable peace, and human freedom can
fully open up.

It is a challenge, but a challenge the left must meet.

Photo: PW/Flickr (CC)
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to