Author: Sam Webb, National Chair
 First published 07/01/2009 00:54

(Remarks to National Committee Meeting June 20, 2009)



I make no attempt to be comprehensive in these remarks. My aim is much
more modest, as you will see.

Let me begin with a simple observation: If the last 30 years were an
era of reaction, then the coming decade could turn into an era of
reform, even radical reform. Six months into the Obama presidency, I
would say without hesitation that the landscape, atmosphere,
conversation, and agenda have strikingly changed compared to the
previous eight years.

In this legislative session, we can envision winning a Medicare-like
public option and then going further in the years ahead.

We can visualize passing tough regulatory reforms on the financial
industry, which brought the economy to ruin.

We can imagine the troops coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan while
U.S. representatives participate in a regional process that brings
peace and stability to the entire region.

In the current political climate, the expansion of union rights
becomes a real possibility.

Much the same can be said about winning a second stimulus bill, and we
sure need one, given the still-rising rate, and likely long term
persistence, of unemployment.

Isn’t it possible in the Obama era to create millions of green jobs in
manufacturing and other sectors of the economy in tandem with an
attack on global warming?

Can’t we envision taking new strides in the long journey for racial
and gender equality in this new era, marked at its beginning by the
election of the first African American to the presidency?

And isn’t the overhaul of the criminal justice and prison system – a
system steeped in racism – no longer pie-in-the sky, but something
that can be done in the foreseeable future?

All these things are within reach now!

I make this observation because in the ebb and flow of the first six
months of the Obama presidency, it is easy to lose sight of the
overall dynamics and promise of this new era.

Obama’s role

The new conditions of struggle are possible only – and I want to
emphasize only – because we elected President Obama and a Congress
with pronounced progressive and center currents.

So far Obama’s presidency has both broken from the right-wing
extremist policies of the Bush administration and taken steps
domestically and internationally that go in a progressive direction.

At the same time, the administration hasn’t gone as far as we would
have liked on a number of issues. On economic matters as well as
matters of war and occupation we, along with others, advocated bolder
actions.

All and all, however, the new President in deeds and words – and words
do matter – has created new democratic space for peace, equality, and
economic justice struggles. Whether this continues and takes on a
consistently progressive, pro-people, radical reform direction depends
in large measure on whether the movement that elected him fills and
expands this space.

The struggle going forward, much like the New Deal, will be the
outcome of a contested and fluid process involving broad class and
social constituencies, taking multiple forms, and working out over
time.

It will pivot on the expansion of social and economic rights, the
reconfiguring of the functions of government to the advantage of
working people, and the embedding of a new economic architecture and
developmental path into the nation’s political economy.

No less importantly, it will also entail the recasting of the role of
the U.S. in the global community along egalitarian and non-imperial
lines.

“What’s all this talk about reform?” you may be asking. “Aren’t we
radicals? Isn’t socialism our objective?”

Yes, socialism is our objective and, according to recent public
opinion polls, it is increasingly attractive to the American people.
But clearly it is not on the immediate political agenda. Neither the
current balance of forces nor the thinking of millions of Americans –
the starting point in any serious discussion of strategy and tactics –
has reached that point.

That socialism isn’t on the people’s action agenda, however, doesn’t
mean that we should zip our lips. Quite the contrary! We should talk
it up and bring our modern, deeply democratic Twenty-First-Century
vision of U.S. socialism into coalitions and mass movements. And with
the use of the Internet we can reach an exponentially bigger audience
than we could in the past.

As for our radicalism, we should be as radical as reality itself. And
reality strongly suggests that our main task is to bring the weight of
the working class and other democratic forces to bear on the reform
process with the aim of deepening its anti-corporate content and
direction.

Current phase of struggle

How do we understand the current phase of struggle? On the one hand,
our strategic policy of defeating right wing extremism doesn’t quite
fit the new correlation of class forces. On the other hand, neither
have we arrived at the anti-monopoly stage of struggle – a stage in
which corporate class power is confronted on every level of struggle.

In short, we are in transitional phase that contains elements of both.

In the course of this struggle, political conditions – consciousness,
organization, unity, and alliances, including temporary and
conditional alliances – will hopefully mature to the point where
corporate power emerges as the main hindrance to radical democracy and
socialism in the minds of tens of millions.

We can conjure up pure forms of struggle and direct and unencumbered
paths to socialism in our impatient minds, but they don’t exist in
real life. The struggle for a socialist future is complex,
contradictory, roundabout, and goes through different phases/stages of
struggle.

Propaganda and agitation by themselves won’t bring people to the
threshold of socialism. They need their own experience in struggle for
their essential (what is essential is variable and expands over time)
needs.

The question

People aren’t sitting on their hands. Anger is out there, hardship is
widespread, and the fight back is taking shape.

And yet, it is fair to ask: does the level of mobilization of the
diverse coalition that elected President Obama match what is necessary
to win his administration’s immediate legislative and political agenda
– let alone far-reaching reforms, such as military conversion to
peacetime and green production, a shorter work week, a “war” on
poverty and inequality, democratic ownership of critical economic
sectors, and a retreat from empire?

I think the answer is no – not yet. A favorable alignment of forces
exists and mass sentiments favor change. But political majorities and
popular sentiments are consequential only to the degree that they are
an active and organized element in the political process.

And herein lays the role of the Left. Its main task, as it has been
throughout our country’s history, is to persistently and patiently
assist in reassembling, activating, uniting, educating, and giving a
voice to common demands that unite this broad majority.

The Left's political analysis, its solutions to today's pressing
crises, and its vision of radical democracy and socialism, rooted in
national realities, will receive a fair and favorable hearing from
millions of Americans to the degree that Left activists are active
participants in the main labor and people’s organizations struggling
for vital reforms today — jobs, health care, retirement security,
quality public education, equality and fairness, immigration reform, a
foreign policy of peace and cooperation, and a livable environment and
sustainable economy.

Those who narrow down the role of the Left to simply being a critic of
every move of the Obama administration or insist on Left demands as
the only ground for broad unity cut down the Left’s capacity to be a
growing part of a much larger coalition that could remake America.

Some on the Left dismiss the new President as simply another centrist
or a right social democrat, or an unabashed spokesperson of Wall
Street. Still others call him the new face of imperialism.

I find it unwise for many reasons to put President Obama into a
tightly sealed political category. We should see the President and his
administration as a work in progress in an exceptionally fluid
situation.

Let’s remember that he is the leader of a diverse multi-class
coalition and a party with different currents. Let’s not forget about
the balance of forces in Congress that has to enter his – and
hopefully our – political calculus.

Let’s not turn any one issue into a litmus test determining our
attitude toward the administration and Congress. Let’s be aware that
he has to keep a coalition together for his long-term as well as
immediate legislative agenda. Let’s give President Obama some space to
change and to respond to pressures from below.

Finally, we should resist pressures from some sections of the Left,
and a few in our Party, to define the current struggle as one that
arrays the people against President Obama. That’s not Marxism; it’s
plain stupid.

The American people and their main mass organizations have good reason
to be angry and frustrated, but few embrace an approach that turns the
Obama administration into the main roadblock to social progress.

That we have spurned such an approach too is to our credit. (Read the
outstanding speech of AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Richard Trumka to
the national convention of CBTU, in which he speaks of labor’s
positive view of the new administration and the new openings for class
and democratic struggles that now exist.)

We can help re-bend the arc of history in the direction of justice,
equality, and peace. But only if we, and millions like us, pursue a
sound strategy that unifies broad sections of the American people and
looks for alliances no matter how temporary and conditional.
Majorities make history, not militant minorities.

President Obama and progressive Congresspeople can’t be the only
change agents and will be change agents only up to a point.

Our responsibility is to support them, prod them, and constructively
take issue with them when we have differing views.

But more importantly – and this is the heart of the matter – we have
to reach, activate, unite, educate, and turn millions of Americans
into “change agents” who can make the political difference in upcoming
struggles.

Our parents and grandparents were such bottom-up change agents in the
Depression years. Unhappy with the pace and substance of change, they
sat down in plants and in the fields, marched for veteran benefits,
petitioned local relief agencies, lobbied for a social safety net,
established unemployed groups, organized industrial workers into the
CIO, opposed discrimination and racism, turned multi-racial unity into
an organizing principle, and, we should note, re-elected Roosevelt and
a New Deal Congress in a landslide in the 1936 elections.

The American people today would do well to follow their example.

Likewise, communists of our generation should draw from the example of
our Depression-era comrades. Because they were guided by a sound
strategy that accented struggles for economic and social reforms and
because they employed flexible tactics, and because they didn’t
conflate their mood with the mass mood, they were a vital part of this
process too.

Struggle for health care reform

The mobilization that the labor movement and others carried out
tirelessly last year in the elections is exactly what is needed now.
How else can health care for all, the Employee Free Choice Act,
economic relief, comprehensive immigration reform, a transfer of funds
from military spending to massive green job creation, and a tax policy
that weighs heavily the wealthiest families and corporations be won?

The Right Wing, the American Medical Association, the pharmaceutical
and insurance companies have drawn a line in the sand on health care.
They hope to defeat any legislation in the near term and in doing so
to fatally weaken the administration’s legislative program in the
longer term, much like they did in the Clinton years.

The core of this struggle, whether we like it or not, turns on the
inclusion of a public option in a health care bill. President Obama
reaffirmed his support for such an option and the Congressional
Progressive Caucus recently expressed its full support for a public
option that is government run, covers everyone, and goes into effect
right away.

Meanwhile, Republicans, with help from some Democrats, are ganging up
against any public option, while at the same time introducing measures
to weaken health care reform and confuse the American people.

True to form, the right-wing media is the megaphone of this effort.

Mass mobilization is needed

Over the summer this fight will be waged like an election campaign by
the labor movement and progressive forces. Across the country
activists will be asked to knock on doors and make phone calls to
build a massive groundswell for health care reform.

This campaign provides a great opening to strengthen our clubs and
build the broader movement. Some of our clubs are in the thick of the
fight; some are looking for ways to become engaged.

Each district and club should discuss how to carry this fight forward
in a way that results in new friends, new readers of the People’s
World, and new members of the Party and Young Communist League. A few
ideas:
• speak to neighbors and friends about their health care stories and
suggest what they can do.
• share coverage of the Peoples World in either its print or
electronic form and ask if they would like the paper every week in one
or another form.
• prepare a special agenda for your club meeting with invited guests.
• help build participation in rallies and events of unions and other
organizations.
• organize speak-outs and town hall meetings with others.
• collect signatures on petitions, make phone calls, employ the
internet, and organize visits to your elected officials.

While we support HR 676 as the most advanced demand in the current
debate, it should not be counterpoised to a Medicare-like public
option. In the single payer movement and the campaign for a public
option, our role isn’t to sharpen differences, but rather to build
maximum unity against the health care industrial complex and its
supporters (Democratic as well as Republican) in Congress and for
meaningful health care reform.

Economic crisis over

Another observation that I want to make is to beware of talk of better
economic times around the corner. We may be over the worst of it; we
may have avoided a 1930s-type depression; but it’s quite another thing
to suggest that we are on the road to recovery.

Yes, there have been some indicators that show improvement in the
economy; but we shouldn’t read too much into them (as the business
press does).

After all, there are more signs that suggest that we haven’t reached
bottom yet, that the recovery is still not in sight; and that more
government intervention is necessary.

Unemployment hasn’t peaked, even though the official rate is nearly
ten per cent. Poverty is growing, and among the long-term poor, the
crisis is dire. Manufacturing is hemorrhaging jobs – none more so than
the auto industry. Banks, as quiet as it is kept, hold mountains of
toxic assets. Debt is nearly off the charts. Credit markets are far
from fluid. Business investment is off. And housing prices fall and
foreclosures rise.

On a global level, signs of renewed economic activity are few. Maybe
the best we can say is that the decline of the economy is slowing
down, thanks to massive government intervention, but hasn’t bottomed
out.

If this is so then three questions follow: first, when will the
economy hit bottom? Second, when will the economy begin a vigorous and
sustained renewal? Third, is the economic crisis reconfiguring the
geography of economic power on a global level?

On these questions there is no consensus.

Some say that the economy will bottom out soon to be followed by a
recovery early next year. Other economists are more pessimistic.
Citing the enormous piling up of debt over the past 20 years,
overcrowded world commodity markets, technological displacement,
capital flight, downward pressures on profitability, and so forth,
they predict little economic bounce for some time to come.

Months ago it was said that the downturn could be “L-shaped” rather
than “V-shaped.” In other words, the crisis begins with a steep
decline in economic activity followed by long period of economic
stagnation.

I suspect that this is what will happen, thus making sustained
government and people’s intervention an imperative. In my view this
should take at least three forms:

First, more economic stimulus: the economy is underperforming and
nearly 30 million workers are unemployed or underemployed and that
number hasn’t peaked yet.

Second, restructuring is imperative. The old economic model that
rested on bubble economics, cheap labor, financial manipulation and
speculation, deregulation, capital outsourcing, environmental
degradation, and so forth, has to be replaced by a new model that
expands and restructures the productive base and is “people and
nature” friendly.

Finally, the economy has to be democratized. The wizards of Wall
Street and inside the Beltway failed miserably, in fact, so miserably
those economic decisions that affect the welfare of millions shouldn’t
rest in their hands.

The resistance to such measures will be massive. It will take a
labor-led coalition far bigger than what exists now to drive the
process.

Furthermore, even in the event that such a coalition materializes and
pushes through such measures, the organically embedded economic
contradictions and crisis tendencies of capitalism will erupt in one
form or another. There is no such thing as a crisis-free capitalist
developmental model. Sooner or later, it exhausts its potential and
gives way to sharp and ultimately irresolvable contradictions located
at every level of the capitalist economy.

In the meantime, the struggle for immediate public sector jobs and
relief should command our attention. We, along with the labor
movement, the nationally and racially oppressed, women, youth and
others, have to help the unemployed find their voice and forms to
express their demands and organize their struggle.

In addition to articulating class wide demands, we have to argue for
special measures that address the catastrophic situation in the
African American, Latino, Asian American, American Indian, immigrant,
and other minority communities. The lack of jobs is at the heart of
this dire situation, but it also includes malnutrition and hunger,
poor health care, shabby housing, high dropout rates, homelessness,
racial profiling, police brutality, criminalization, and so on.

The job crisis requires special discussion and initiatives with our
allies. They should be concrete and realistic.

As for the impact of the current crisis of capitalism on the
geographical distribution of economic power on a global level, it is
enormous and consequential. While the U.S. and European market
economies report negative growth rates, the economies of the emerging
giants – China, India, and Brazil – are expanding this year and this
trend will continue at a faster rate next year. If this trend
continues – and there is no reason to think that it won’t – the
implications and consequences will be profound and long lasting.

An end to violence

Still another observation that I would like to make is this: against
the background of the bloodiest century in human history and this
decade of war, genocide, boycotts, and threats and counter threats,
thanks in large measure to the Bush administration and our own
imperialism, humanity is seeking a new world order in which peace and
justice are its organizing principles.

The vast majority of people desire the easing of tensions, an end to
violence, and the normalization of relations between states. They want
dialogue and negotiation, not war and threats. And they hope that the
U.S. government will choose a constructive role in world affairs.

President Obama has captured this sentiment well in several speeches
before vast audiences. His emphasis on human solidarity, diplomacy,
cooperation, and peaceful settlement of outstanding issues is striking
an emotional chord worldwide. In nearly every region of the world, the
President has expressed a readiness to engage with countries that
during the Bush years were considered mortal enemies – Iran, Cuba,
Venezuela, North Korea, and others. In Latin America, he indicated
that the administration would like to put relations between our
government and others in the region on a different footing. In a
historic speech in Prague, he voiced his desire to reduce and
ultimately abolish nuclear weapons. Earlier this month, in an
unprecedented address in Cairo he indicated his eagerness to reset
relations with the Muslim world, sit down with the Iranian government,
and press for a two state solution to the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict.

And only this week, he has been circumspect with regard to the massive
social explosion in Iran over the rigged election and right-wing
theocratic rule. He has quietly made his allegiances clear, but not in
a way that would play in to the hands of the ruling reactionary
regime.

While the administration has yet to fully match its words with
practical deeds, what it has said and done so far constitutes a
qualitative turn compared to the previous administration.

Nevertheless, more needs doing before we are on a distinctly new course.

In Afghanistan and North Korea, a negotiated solution to both
conflicts that includes increased economic and humanitarian aid is
urgently needed. Military occupation and troop buildup in Afghanistan
and the imposition of sanctions against North Korea are extremely
dangerous and will postpone any resolution of those crises.

To go further, if one or the other (or both) metastasizes into a
bigger conflict, it could be the undoing of this administration. Don’t
get me wrong: terrorist activities and nuclear proliferation are both
enormous dangers, but the solutions to these have to be sought along
other lines and involve regional and international players.

In Iraq, the U.S. withdrawal plan is proceeding, with the first stage
being withdrawal from Iraqi cities by July. President Obama has
reiterated his intention to stick with the pullout deadlines. Even
with the caveats about what U.S. forces might remain, this is a major
victory for the peace movement. The struggle over what forces remain
will depend in large part on the Iraqi people's democratic and
progressive forces, as well as our own peace movement.

In the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, Netanyahu, in an about-face, said
he could live with a two-state solution. And even with all the caveats
and demagogy surrounding the “concession,” I believe that it signifies
recognition, albeit forced, on Likud’s part that public opinion is
shifting against them in Israel, Europe, and the U.S.

In this country the peace movement has to note particularly the
changing dynamics in U.S. opinion, including in the White House and
Congress, including Jewish members of Congress. Netanyahu got a
different reaction than he expected when he met with Congressional
leaders when he was in Washington recently. While he wanted to focus
on Iran, they pressed him on the settlements. And, that pressure will
only grow if the new Israeli government continues in its actions to
pursue its present policy.

As far as Cuba is concerned, we are at a crucial moment in U.S.-Cuba
relations. The Obama administration has indicated its readiness to
reset relations with Cuba and has taken some very modest steps in
words and deeds in that direction. But obviously much more needs to be
done to end all travel restrictions, lift the blockade, resume trade,
and free the Cuban 5, who languish in maximum security prisons. That
said, the good news is that diverse groups have an interest in
normalizing the relations between our two countries, including in the
Congress.

Finally, we are in a moment when our ability to change our foreign
policy will bear directly on our capacity to address economic and
social problems at home. Currently, 53 percent of the discretionary
spending of the federal budget goes to the military.

Thus, ending wars, closing military bases, and cutting military
spending coupled with diplomacy, cooperation, and respect for
international law and national sovereignty is good economic as well as
good foreign policy.

But there is a hitch. Both Republicans and Democrats are upset at the
minimal steps the administration is proposing to cut specific
“unnecessary” or useless weapons systems.

So we have a struggle on our hands. And it will be fought out in “the
court of public opinion,” at the ballot box, and in the economic
trenches.

So far the peace movement has an array of plans to challenge the
military appropriations process, including town hall Congressional
meetings on foreign policy during the August recess. We should
participate and support them.

Bottom line: the country and the Obama administration need a more
vocal peace movement in order to reconfigure our role in world affairs
and address the economic crisis.

Mentality of marginalization

Another observation that I want to make is that because of
McCarthyism, the Cold War, and the long economic expansion following
WW II, the Left has been on the edges of politics for more than a half
century. During this time, our ability to impact on broader political
processes in the country has been narrowly circumscribed – nothing
like the 1930s, nothing like the Left in many other countries.

While we stubbornly fought the good fight and made undeniable
contributions over the past half-century, we were not a major player;
we didn’t set the agenda or frame the debate; we didn’t determine the
political direction of the country; we were not a decider.

But this could change. Because of the new political, economic and
ideological landscape, the Left has an opportunity to step from the
political periphery into the mainstream of U.S. politics. It has a
chance to become a player of consequence; a player whose voice is
seriously considered in the debates bearing on the future of the
country; a player that is able to mobilize and influence the thinking
and actions of millions.

Whether we do depends on many factors, one of which is our ability to
shake off a “mentality of marginalization” that has become embedded in
the Left’s political culture over the last half of the Twentieth
Century.

How does this mentality express itself? In a number of ways – in
spending too much time agitating the choir; in dismissing new
political openings that if taken advantage of could create the
conditions for mass struggle; in thinking that partial reforms are at
loggerheads with radical reforms; in seeing the glass as always half
empty; in conflating our outlook with the outlook of millions; in
turning the danger of cooptation into a rationale to keep a distance
from reform struggles; in enclosing ourselves in narrow Left forms;
and in damning victories with faint praise.

In this peculiar mindset, politics has few complexities. Change is
driven only from the ground up. Winning broad majorities is not
essential. There are no stages of struggle, no social forces that
possess strategic social power, and no divisions worth noting.
Finally, alliances with unstable allies and distinctions between the
Democratic and Republican parties are either of little consequence or
disdainfully dismissed.

Unless the Left – and I include communists – sheds this mentality, it
will miss a unique opportunity to grow and leave a distinct imprint on
our country’s direction.

A final observation before closing is that I wholeheartedly welcome
the proposals to reconfigure our work that you received and that we
are going to discuss later today.

I don’t have any of the reservations about this that some have. The
upside of this new means of communication, education, organization,
and fund raising is that it is nearly limitless.

I think it is going to make a huge difference in our ability to reach,
influence, and interact with a mass audience – something that we
haven’t ever been able to do in a systematic way so far.

Every aspect of our work will experience new potentials, including
grassroots organizing and club building.

I hope we enthusiastically adopt these proposals. Assuming for the
moment that we do, it is fair to say that we will have our work cut
out for us. But as is often said, we have a world to win! Thank you.

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