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The Left and the Elections

Christopher Phelps, Stephanie Luce, and Johanna Brenner

[Christopher Phelps and Stephanie Luce are editors, and
Johanna Brenner an associate editor, of Against the
Current.  All are members of Solidarity. This article
is submitted to Portside by the authors.]


Two electoral paths will be taken by those left of
center this year, and all the spilled ink in the world
won't affect the choices.

Appalled by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the USA
Patriot Act, wholesale destruction of the environment,
contempt for democracy, blurring of lines of church and
state, erosion of reproductive rights, right-wing
stacking of the judiciary, and tax bonanzas for the
rich - appalled, in short, by the most reactionary
administration in U.S. history - many on the left this
year will vote for Kerry and against Bush, simply to
repudiate, if only symbolically, the conservative
juggernaut.

A much smaller part of the left, knowing that a tiny
stratum of wealthy corporate executives, lawyers, and
lobbyists holds the real power in Democratic and
Republican circles alike, aware that both major parties
are committed to a U.S.-dominated global empire,
cognizant of the proximity of neoliberalism to
conservatism, and keenly mindful that the rich-poor gap
widened hugely under Clinton (who signed NAFTA, welfare
reform, and prison-expansive crime legislation), will
uphold independent political action. They will vote for
Nader, or whomever the Greens nominate, if only to
register symbolic resistance to the corporate
corruption of mainstream politics.  Maybe they,ll even
vote for one of the miniscule radical parties that
linger on the ballot.

Our position is that a reasonable case can be made for
either of these left-wing responses to a baleful
political situation that will not be resolved
electorally.

Because the left is experiencing its weakest clout in
memory, the proper stance for socialist organizations
and publications in this election is not to endorse any
candidate at the national level.  Individual
revolutionaries and activists on the left should vote
their conscience.

Social change in American history has never resulted
from electoral politics, but from social and political
movements.  Movements are only effective insofar as
they mobilize widely and push their demands without
compromise, that is, insofar as they stay independent
of the major political parties.

Our common activity, therefore, should not be focused
on the electoral arena, at least not at the national
level, where the left can have almost no effect.  Our
common activity should be bent upon building movements
from below that are not beholden to either of the major
political parties, the kind of movements that can fight
against either a Bush or a Kerry administration to
defend working-class and democratic interests and
advance egalitarian-liberatory aims.

The left should lay claim to the teachable moment
presented by election season.  Since elections focus
people's attention on politics, and since this race
touches upon myriad issues important to us (war, jobs,
health care, immigration, civil liberties, the
environment), let's find ways to engage people
creatively.

Furthermore, elections offer a chance to begin
promoting democratic electoral reform.  Only with
changes to election methods will we resolve the dilemma
of the lesser evil. "Lesser evilism," far from being an
ideological deviation or moral failure of will in
activists duped by the siren song of the Democrats, is
a structural fate.  It is inevitable so long as
elections in the United States are governed by
winner-take-all rules that render all alternatives to
the major parties marginal and impotent.  All the
pamphlets in the world will not displace lesser evilism
so long as a system is in place that presents two
choices in every contest - one slightly less bad than the
other.


We are supporters of independent political action. We
do not believe that the Democratic Party is susceptible
to a social democratic takeover, let alone a socialist
one.  We do not believe it will ever satisfy the needs
of labor, people of color, women, gays, or its other
constituents. We do not believe that conscious
intervention in it can lead to success for the left.
All historical evidence shows that leftists entering
into the Democratic Party to transform it have instead
watered down their aims and been transformed by it.
This is all the more certain in the era of megamillion
corruption.  Only independent campaigns rooted in
programmatic principle, with leaders made accountable
through strong democratic structures to their
constituencies and base, will transform politics.

Such political campaigns independent of the major
parties will for the foreseeable future, only win in
local races for school board, mayor, county
commissioner, perhaps reaching somewhat higher - but not
to the federal level.  Because of that, in races for
Congress and the presidency, most voters believe the
stakes too high and the odds too long to support
third-party challenges at the polls.  (Exceptions, of
course, may occur. In Vermont, where the social
movements of the 1960s transformed political culture,
independent socialist Bernie Sanders took office in the
1980s by usurping a good part of the Democratic base
and function. This merely substantiates our ultimate
point - that electoral politics will follow the social
movements' lead.)

Because of the widespread perception that the stakes
are high at the federal level, we believe that great
care must be taken when entering into dialogue with gay
activists, feminists, or civil libertarians (to take
but a few examples) who are troubled by the
implications of a second Bush term for their lives and
commitments. In such conversations, we believe, it is
utterly sectarian to say that Democrats differ from
Republicans only on "secondary questions" (the worst
phrase in the generally excellent Solidarity pamphlet,
Bush's Wars, the 2004 Elections, and the Movements, p.
14).  Such remarks will not contribute in the slightest
to left-wing influence in the movements or to movement
advancement. Quite the opposite - for they will make the
revolutionary socialist left seem uncomprehending. But
just this kind of slighting comment will crop up, time
and again, if a policy of insisting upon the
superiority of independent politics in every context
and at every level is followed.

We hold a different view. We believe that there are
logical reasons why radicals or activists might vote
Democratic, reasons that in no way entail illusions
about the reliability of Democratic politicians.  Most
simply desire, viscerally, to see Bush and his cronies
suffer a humiliating defeat.  Others believe that
social realities are more clearly laid bare when the
kinder, gentler bourgeois party is in power, noting
that there are fewer illusions about the nature of the
system's workings when Democrats administrate austerity
and war than when Republicans do. (Lenin made parallel
arguments about the British Labour Party.)  Finally,
corporations and the religious right most definitely do
recognize a lesser evil, which ought to tell us
something. Not for nothing have they invested hundreds
of millions of dollars and immense energy in ensuring
the extension of Republican rule over all three
branches of government and most states.  To the ruling
class and our cultural opponents, there most definitely
is a Republican preference.

For these reasons, we understand those who will vote
Democratic defensively, though we take exception to any
utopian rationalization of that choice (such as
repainting the corporate-DLC Kerry in rosy left-liberal
hues).

Independent alternatives, for their part, face a
significant problem: presidential campaigns outside the
major parties simply cannot win.  Even in the Socialist
Party glory days of Debs, the strategy rendered only a
6 percent return at best. Higher water marks were
reached by La Follette, Perot, and other populists, but
all were defeated.  The U.S. presents the quandary of a
winner-take-all system that ensures marginality to any
candidate apart from the major parties.  The 2000
election proved that yet again.  The vast majority of
voters will always vote for the least objectionable
candidate, however unimaginative visionaries of the
left might find their choice.

There may nonetheless be reasons (educational or
otherwise) to run independent campaigns. But the
prospects are especially meager this year.  Unlike the
Nader-Green ticket of 2000, which reflected
post-Seattle global justice momentum and stood a
reasonable chance of garnering federal matching funds
for the Greens, this year's independent electoral
initiatives are fragmented and in disarray, and many
who supported them before no longer do.

Nevertheless, we believe strongly that those on the
left who wish to vote their conscience for a third
party or independent candidate should be free to do so
without facing belittling and browbeating from those
who fear a Republican outcome. We reject the recent
liberal smear campaign to blame Nader for the failure
of Gore.  The Gore campaign was lackluster,
inconsistent, and dimwitted; he lost his home state of
Tennessee by a margin greater than Nader's vote there,
and he stopped advertising in the battleground state of
Ohio four weeks before November.

There are, moreover, practical reasons why votes for
independent candidates may have meaning and are not
wasted.  There is the intrinsic value of registering
dissent from the "duopoly," as Nader aptly calls it,
rather than abstaining entirely.  And some seek to
create a crisis in the two-party system by using the
perception of third-party spoiling as a lever for
electoral reform. They may very well have a point.

To summarize, at the presidential level, we consider
individual voting for Democrats an understandable
action when carried out by activists in the present
environment - yet we also consider voting for independent
political candidates an equally plausible response to
the disastrous shift of mainstream politics to the
right. Both voting strategies have marked strengths and
deficiencies, largely because they remain within the
confines of the limited options presented by
electoralism.

We draw, however, a distinction between what is
rational in individual voters of the left and what is
rational for socialist organizations or social
movements.

Only under the rarest of conditions (where an expressly
fascist outcome would be the result, for example)
should Democrats or other capitalist parties be
endorsed by socialist organizations and periodicals
that stand for a principled politics of the left or by
social movements of working people, environmentalists,
women, gays, people of color, and others striving for
social justice and transformation.

As movements, publications, and organizations
reflective of popular and working-class forces, it is
imperative that social movements and socialist groups
maintain their independence.

The lesson of the abolitionist movement that ended
slavery, the feminist movement that won women the right
to vote, the farmers, alliances of the 1890s, the
sit-down strikes of the 1930s that unionized basic
industry, the black-led civil rights movement, the
student-based movement that ended the Vietnam War, the
women's movement that legalized abortion, and the gay
liberation movement that expanded sexual freedom, among
other mass movements in American history, is that
autonomy from any major party is a prerequisite to the
kind of bold and uncompromising militancy necessary to
effect society-wide reconstruction.

Whenever such movements began to see their purpose in
electoral terms - most commonly as the election of
Democrats, preferably liberal Democrats - their
resources, vision, and activity became redirected away
from the street, community, workplace, and movement,
and they lost force.

This is why, in this election, we would urge groups
that feel they have a great deal to lose from a Bush
victory to use their constituents, rage against the
right-wing agenda to generate new recruits and
resources - to enhance their organizations,
effectiveness, not waste their combined time and energy
on a Kerry sure to disappoint.

Endorsement of independent candidates by social
movements or socialist groups, by contrast, is not
inevitably compromising.  However, it should not be
done ritualistically, for the sake of "upholding a
tradition." A compelling case must be made for the
purpose of the endorsement. Namely, a case must be made
that supporting such a campaign will help build the
movements. In this presidential election, we submit,
there is no such case (as, say, there clearly was for
supporting Nader in 2000 or, more recently, the Green
candidates for governor of California and mayor of San
Francisco).

Rather than fixate on an electoral arena that offers
only the agonized choice of principled irrelevance or
opportunist compromise, the organized left should
instead focus on rebuilding the social movements.  Mass
movements of the left are the vehicle for stopping war,
winning equal rights for gays and lesbians, obtaining
universal health care, saving the environment,
dismantling the prison-industrial complex, stopping
attacks on pensions and Social Security, winning power
and dignity for workers, defeating corporate
globalization, and ending poverty and exploitation.

Breathing vitality into the movements sufficient to
achieve these aims is a Herculean task, but that makes
it all the more true that the movements, far more than
elections, most deserve our finite energies and
attention.

Elections offer incomparable opportunities for
political organizing and education, however, and an
excellent opportunity is presented by the very
sterility of the winner-take-all system.  Public
alienation from the major parties can be the basis for
pushing electoral reform.

One salient demand is instant runoff voting.  Also
known as preferential balloting, instant runoff voting
would allow voters to rank candidates, rather than
simply vote for one. If no candidate wins a majority in
the first round, the candidate with the least number of
votes would have his or her votes reassigned to voters,
designated second choices.  In this way, instant runoff
balloting would eliminate both spoilers and wasted
votes. It would open the political system up to many
different parties and independent candidates.  It would
allow people to vote for the lesser evil and the most
preferable long-shot independent candidate. It would
substantially improve victory prospects for independent
campaigns.

Computerized vote processing, while correctly viewed
with security skepticism at the moment, offers eventual
potentialities for making the counting of such ballots
extremely easy.  Australia, among other countries, has
long used preferential voting of this kind.  But
technology and precedent alone will not prompt change.
A long campaign of advocacy and action is the only way
instant runoff voting will be achieved.  Earlier
electoral reforms that unevenly broadened citizenship
from a restricted number of propertied males to include
almost all Americans - first the propertyless, then
African-American men, then women, and eventually all
people of color - came about only by demand from below.

We are skeptical that instant runoff voting will result
from a Green-Democrat alliance, as some suggest.  We
imagine that it will require forcing the hands of the
Republicans and Democrats, primarily.  Powerful
interests desire access, stability, and profitability
(not democracy) from politics, and they will try to
block instant runoff voting.  However, Republicans have
a motivation in preventing future Perots, Democrats
have a motive in preventing future Naders, and the
Naders and Perots of the world have an interest in a
system that would make votes for independents more than
an existential gesture.

What strategy can win instant runoff voting?
Introducing it first in localities and states?
Demanding systemic overhaul, including public campaign
financing, proportional representation, and elimination
of exclusionary ballot access laws?  We cannot say.
Only the strategies and tactics imagined in the course
of a mass movement will win this reform.

Better to begin thinking about how to jump-start that
movement, however, than to haggle pointlessly with
other activists and progressives over their personal
voting preferences.

Better, more broadly, to use the enhanced attentiveness
that comes at election season to organize and educate
others about the key social, political, and economic
issues we face no matter who occupies the White House.

Better to direct our financial contributions,
letters-to-the-editor, demonstrations, guerrilla
theatre, and talk-show call-ins toward promoting our
political values and objectives, like electoral reform,
than to supporting presidential candidates running for
office in the present futile electoral system.

Better, finally, to remember that elections are merely
elections.  Real political power flows from relations
of social forces. We can break free of the rightward
drift of the political mainstream only if we
reconstruct daring and courageous social movements
willing to push the politics of the left forward no
matter what party or figure occupies the seat of
government.

===




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