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A Springtime of Possibility (Speech to the November 15, 2008 National Committee)
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National Meetings
National Committee
National Committee Meeting, November 15, 2008
Edwin Stanton, the
tireless Secretary of War in President Abraham Lincoln’s
cabinet said at the time of Lincoln’s death, “He belongs
to the ages.” Much the same can be said about this election.
The election challenged long-held assumptions, broke voter
turnout records, and shattered seemingly unbreakable barriers –
none more historic than the election of an African-American president
for the first time. And all this happened in the face of negative
appeals to the worst angels of the American people. But to our
credit, we repudiated the old politics of fear, division, racial code
words, red-baiting, immigrant bashing, and nostalgic appeals to a
country and time that never were.
If the election of Barack
Obama was a monumental victory, election night itself was a magical
moment. In Chicago and across the nation, tears of joy and
exhilaration mingled with memories of how far we have come. As the
President-elect greeted the hundreds of thousands of well wishers in
Grant Park, it was hard not to think of the many struggles for
freedom mapping our nation’s history.
For anyone who
believes that democracy is nothing but smoke and mirrors in
capitalist society, the election of Barack Obama should cause them to
reconsider such paralyzing notions. Once again we learned that the
struggle for freedom is a contested idea turning as it always has on
whether one views freedom as inclusive or exclusive, as giving
priority to human rights or property rights, and as accenting the
common good or the individual good.
While the American people
in all their diversity can and should take pride in Obama’s
victory, African Americans have special claims. Obama is a son of the
African American people and their role in his election was felt at
every turn in the year long campaign. This isn’t the first
time, nor will it be the last time, that African Americans and their
leaders have dramatically inserted themselves at critical junctures
in our nation’s history to expand democracy for all.
The
breaking of the color line constitutes a landmark in the struggle for
equality and against racism. To be sure, we haven’t entered a
post-racial era, but the opportunities to further weaken racist
ideology and to tear down the institutional barriers that sustain
racial discrimination and exploitation have grown considerably.
Hasn’t Obama’s election and Obama’s statements as
President-elect demonstrated beyond a doubt that the struggle against
racism in its ideological and institutional forms is as much in the
interests of white workers as it is in the interest of the nationally
and racially oppressed? As Marx wrote, “Labor in the white skin
can never be free, as long as labor in the black skin is branded.”
To say that a sea change occurred on Nov. 4 is no
exaggeration. On one side, the arguably worst president in our
history leaves Washington disgraced. His party’s policies,
ideology and cultural symbols are discredited. The GOP is in disarray
and the blame game has begun. The red/blue state paradigm and the
southern strategy, a strategy conceived exactly forty years ago to
divide the nation along racial lines, are in shambles. And the entire
capitalist class, not only its most reactionary section, is weakened.
On the other side of the changing sea, a sense of joy,
catharsis and renewal is in the air. Expectations are high. A new era
of progressive change is waiting to become a reality. If the past
eight years of the Bush administration seemed like a winter of
discontent, Obama’s ascendancy to the presidency feels like a
springtime of possibility.
Man, moment and movement
The outcome of this election was due to the convergence of
several factors. First of all, the political environment was toxic
for the Republicans. Could it have been any worse? The spontaneous
mass upsurge, beginning in the primaries in January and continuing to
Election Day, was another factor. Then there was the diverse
coalition of people and people’s organizations that mobilized
millions to vote for Obama. Another factor was the Obama campaign,
notable for its sound strategy, near-perfect execution, and
employment of new techniques of communication, networking and
fundraising. Still another reason for the outcome was the wisdom of
the American people, especially the readiness of so many to throw off
ignoble and self-defeating racist ideas. To suggest, as some have,
that many white people momentarily set aside their prejudice to vote
for Obama is an incomplete reading of the election results. Some did;
but what stands out and what we have to take careful note of is that
millions of white working people of all ages and nationalities
responded to and voted for Obama enthusiastically. Finally, the
candidate himself was brilliant campaigner. When all of these factors
are combined, they turned this election into a rout of right-wing
extremism, a reaffirmation of the decency of our country and people,
a leap forward on freedom road, and a people’s mandate for
change.
No one, of course, expects that the securing of a
better future will be easy. There is, after all, eight years of
extreme right-wing misrule to clean up. The economic crisis is
widening and deepening. Right-wing extremism, while badly weakened,
still retains enough influence in Congress and elsewhere to block
progressive measures. And class realities are still embedded in our
society.
Nevertheless, in electing Barack Obama and larger
Democratic Party majorities in Congress, the American people have
taken the first and absolutely necessary step in the direction of
building a more just society. We are not on the threshold of
socialism for sure, but it is easy to see the further congealing of a
growing majority that will realign politics, not incrementally and
momentarily, but decisively and enduringly in the direction of
economic justice, equality and peace.
While we should look at
the outcome of the elections objectively, I would argue that the
biggest danger is to underestimate the political significance of what
has happened. I am suspicious of advice that suggests that we temper
our understandable joy and enthusiasm as if nothing of great
importance has happened.
New lay of the land The
country is in a period of transition. A new potentially
transformative president is entering the White House, along with
increased Democratic majorities in Congress. Class consciousness is
deeper and reaches into every section of the working class. A spirit
of broad unity is palpable. The ideological environment is infused
with progressive, egalitarian, and anti-militarist ideas. Labor and
its allies are retrofitting their priorities, message and initiatives
to the new political landscape. And millions are ready to
energetically back the legislative agenda of the Obama
administration. Meanwhile, the Republicans are on the defensive, its
grassroots constituency dispirited. And the capitalist class as a
whole is adapting to the new terrain of struggle and the collapse of
financial markets.
This favorable correlation of class and
social forces couldn’t happen at a better time. The challenges
facing the new administration are immense. Some are short term;
others longer term; some are national in scope; others global. And
all are begging for solution. But before turning to them, I want to
speak about the economic crisis that impresses its mark on
everything.
Current economic crisis If there were
such a thing as an economic tsunami, I would say we are close to
experiencing it. The housing crisis continues and shows no sign of
ending; credit and money markets are still tight; the stock market
gyrates while trending downward; unemployment climbs upward (sharply
so in the communities of the nationally and racially oppressed) and
will only get worse; wages are down and poverty is up; the level of
indebtedness is astronomical and difficult to reduce in the near
term. Consumer spending, the engine of economic growth in the 1990s,
is tanking. State and local governments are cutting back sharply on
services and jobs; deflation, which simply means falling prices over
significant sectors of the economy, is a creeping and perilous
danger; and financial markets have yet to stabilize as evidenced by
the troubles of CitiGroup. In short, not since the Great Depression
has the economy deteriorated so rapidly and broadly, leading many
economists to predict that the downturn will be L-shaped, that is,
deep and prolonged.
What is more, the world economy is
contracting. At one time the main unit of economic analysis was the
national economy, but recent events and trends point to the fallacy
of this notion. Looking at the economy and its prospects through
strictly a national prism is conceptually mistaken and thus bound to
lead to imperfect analysis and ineffective policy prescriptions.
Financialization – two-edged sword While the
present turbulence was triggered by the collapse of financial
markets, it is located first in the outgrowth of longer-term
processes of capitalism that go back to the mid-1970s and the
systemic imperatives of profit maximization and wage exploitation
that are at its core.
Thirty years ago U.S. capitalism was
beset by seemingly intractable and contradictory problems –
high inflation and unemployment, declining confidence in the dollar
as an international currency, new competitive rivals in Europe and
Asia, a slowing of economic growth, and, above all, a falling profit
rate. And all of these problems occurred in the context of and were
shaped by overproduction in world commodity markets.
Faced
with this unraveling of the economy, a weakening of U.S. imperialism
and a profitability crisis, then-chairman of the Federal Reserve Paul
Volcker stepped into the breech and pushed up interest rates to
record levels. This spike in interest rates sent unemployment rates
to the highest level since the Great Depression, forced the closing
of scores of manufacturing plants and a great number of family farms,
brought incredible hardship to the working class, and especially
African-American, Latino and other racially oppressed workers, and
negatively impacted the global economy, particularly the developing
countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
It also created,
as we know too well, the conditions for a many-sided attack on labor
and its allies, the likes of which hadn’t been seen since the
pre-Depression era.
At the same time (and of prime importance
to Volker), it wrung inflation out of the economy, restored
confidence in the dollar (investors are averse to holding dollars
when inflationary pressures are eroding their value), attracted and
redirected domestic and foreign capital abruptly and massively from
the “real” economy into financial channels where returns
were higher. Volcker, as an experienced banker, knew that the problem
wasn’t too little money capital, but rather too much and too
few opportunities to invest and absorb that capital profitably in the
“real” economy.
Once in financial channels, money
capital stayed there, but not idly. Financial agents of capital
(banks, investment houses, hedge funds, private equity firms and so
on) intent on expanding their profits in a very competitive and
permissive regulatory environment raced at breakneck speed into a
massive buying and selling and borrowing and spending spree for the
next three decades — all of which led to an explosion of the
financial sector in terms of employment, transactions, risky
products, players and profits.
In other words,
financialization, which economist Gerald Epstein defines as a process
in which “financial motives, financial markets, financial
actors and financial institutions come to play an increasing role in
the operation of domestic and international economies”
proceeded at a feverish pace and with a broad sweep. (In
Financialization and the World Economy, Introduction, 2005)
Capital
that produces little, destroys much If the cause of
financialization lies in the stagnation tendencies in the material
goods sector of the U.S. economy and the weakening of the role of
U.S. imperialism internationally, its lubricant is the production and
reproduction, seemingly without end, of staggering amounts of debt —
corporate, consumer and government. Debt is as old as capitalism. But
what is different in this period of financialization is that the
production of debt and accompanying speculative excesses and bubbles
were not simply passing moments at the end of a cyclical upswing, but
essential to ginning up and sustaining investment and especially
consumer demand in every phase of the cycle. Indeed, financialization
grew to the point where it became the main determinant shaping the
contours, structure, interrelations, evolution and dynamism of the
national and world economy.
Without speculative bubbles,
generated by the federal government and Federal Reserve over the past
15 years in internet technology, then in the stock market, and most
recently, in housing – the performance of the U.S. and world
economy would have been far worse. But, as we are painfully learning,
financialization is a two-edged sword. While it stimulated the
domestic and global economy and reflated the power of U.S.
imperialism, it also left our nation with an astronomical pileup of
debt; introduced enormous instability into the arteries of the U.S.
and world economy; drained capital from private and public
investment; contributed to jobless recoveries and heightened
exploitation in the material goods sector of the economy;
successfully engineered the biggest redistribution of wealth in our
nation’s history to the upper crust of U.S. finance capital;
made the U.S. economy dependent on the willingness of foreign
investors to absorb massive amounts of debt in the form of short term
government securities; and, finally, greased the wheels for a hard
economic landing and a much deeper crisis on the down side of the
economic cycle.
In other words, the growth of the financial
sector was a parasitic and temporary fix for a sluggish economy and a
declining imperial power, but as events have shown, it could not
forever mask and compensate for slow growth, deindustrialization,
stagnant wages, jobless recoveries, heightened exploitation, and a
declining role internationally. A Wal-Mart economy of low wages,
meager benefits and mounting debt, even when combined with massive
military spending, is unsustainable and eventually erupts into
crisis.
Of course, it took more than shock therapy in the
form of high interest rates and then financialization to effect
changes of this magnitude and usher in a new era of relentless
attacks on the working class, the racially oppressed, women and other
social groups. If Volcker struck the first blow, it was the Reagan
administration, entering the White House less than a year later, and
then successive administrations that were the main political agents
of this upheaval in ideology, politics and economics.
Reaganites
– main agents of neoliberalism At the ideological
level, the Reaganites said that government is best that governs
least, that markets are self-correcting and efficient, that wealth is
distributed according to work performed, that income inequality is a
good thing, that deregulation and privatization are the best cures
for what ails the private and public sectors, and that tax cuts for
the rich and wealthy trickle down to working people, thereby lifting
all boats.
But the Reaganites didn’t stop here. At the
political-economic level, they dismantled the model of economic
governance at the state and corporate level, a model that had its
origins in the New Deal and was sustained and expanded by successive
administrations in the next three decades. It rested on a measure of
class compromise, societal obligations, union rights, formal equality
and expansive macroeconomic policies that favored broadly shared
prosperity.
In its place, the Reaganites built another model
of governance popularly called neoliberalism. Not only did this model
facilitate a reassertion and consolidation of power by finance
capital at the expense of other groupings of capital, but it also
used its control of the state apparatus to encourage
deindustrialization and off shoring of production, union busting,
deregulation, low-wage labor, low inflation, trade liberalization,
the shrinkage and privatization of the public sector, draconian
control (to the degree possible) over cross-border movements of
labor, the re-embedding of racist and sexist practices into the
country’s political economy, massive wealth redistribution to
the wealthiest families and corporations, a stronger dollar, and the
restructuring of the state’s role and functions.
This
new model, combined with an increased readiness to use military
power, was created for the purpose of strengthening the position of
U.S. imperialism at home and abroad, radically changing the
conditions of exploitation to the advantage of the transnational
corporate class, and resubjugating the developing countries. But, as
is said, the best laid plans of mice and men and often come to
naught, at least in the long run.
Offspring of capitalism
The rise and fall of neoliberalism is organically connected
to the underlying dynamics of capitalism. While each required hit men
in the corridors of government and the suites of corporations and a
set of institutions (the Federal Reserve Bank and the International
Monetary Fund, for example) to grease the skids, it also is the
indisputable offspring of capitalism’s internal laws and
tendencies.
Although an anti-capitalist strategy would be
premature at the present conjuncture, the faith of millions of people
in capitalism has been shaken. People might defend capitalism if
challenged, but not with the same vigor and not without a sympathetic
ear to measures that would curb the power and profits of
transnational corporations. Did we hear any hue and cry coming from
industrial centers when the federal government partially nationalized
some banks? And, I’m sure, if the government insisted on
ownership and control as a condition for assisting the auto
companies, few working people would complain. Most would say, “They
messed up. Why give something and get nothing in return?” In
short, the events of recent months and weeks constitute a profound
defeat of capitalism ideologically, politically, and economically.
From another angle (and I am not going to develop this
point), the implosion of Wall Street has delivered a debilitating
body blow to the hopes of U.S. imperialism for unrivaled dominance in
the 21st century. When combined with the Iraq disaster, the worldwide
anger over structural adjustment policies and unequal trade, the
inattention to global warming and world poverty, and the emergence of
new global powers in nearly every region of the world – China
in the first place – it signals a terminal crisis of U.S.
imperialism’s dominance of the world system of states. Or to
say it differently, a unipolar world is giving way to a multipolar
world, which, I would add, presents both opportunities and dangers to
the new administration and humanity.
In fact, an urgent
question for the American people is the following: Will U.S.
imperialism adapt peacefully to new world realities or will it employ
massive force to maintain its standing in the world? Bush tried
force, but failed, and will leave the White House in January
completely discredited. There is good reason to believe that the new
administration will choose a different option. How far it will go is
another question that can’t be answered yet. Suffice it to say
that the redefinition of the U.S. role in the world community and
demilitarization (including denuclearization) are among the most
compelling issues in the first part of the 21st century, ranking in
importance to combating global warming. Unless attended to, both
could endanger the survival of our species on Mother Earth.
A
new New Deal Given the current situation, it is apparent that
the Obama administration enters the White House with huge challenges.
At the same time, no president in recent memory brings to the job so
much popular good will, a Congress dominated by Democrats, an
election mandate for progressive change, and an energized movement
that supports him.
From what he has said, Obama wants to be a
people’s reformer. In time he hopes to make substantive changes
in health care, housing, education, retirement security, energy,
environment, urban affairs, race and gender relations, foreign
relations, and popular participation in public affairs. If the last
thirty years was an era of people’s retrenchment, Obama sees
the years ahead as an era of substantial people’s reforms. In
his view, the boundaries of politics, democracy, and reform in a
capitalist social formation are elastic and thus can be expanded
considerably.
The Obama administration’s immediate
challenge will be to revive the economy. And the overarching question
that it will have to answer is: Where will economic dynamism come
from in near term? We know it won’t come from strapped U.S.
consumers whose spending sustained the domestic and global economy
over the past decade. We know it won’t come from corporate
investment in plant and equipment; instead of expanding investment,
corporations are contracting it in the face of overproduction in
world commodity markets. We know it won’t come from the Federal
Reserve; the federal fund rate, a rate the governs the Fed’s
lending to banks, which is at a record low and might go a little
lower, but rate cuts so far seem to have little effect on bank
lending and the broader economy. We know it won’t come form
foreign buyers of our exports; they are tightening their belts too.
We know it won’t come from the European economies since they
are slumping. We know it won’t come from the developing
economies whose economic prospects are very gloomy. Finally, we know
it won’t come from speculative excesses and bubbles; that
method of stimulating and sustaining aggregate demand has run its
course, at least for now.
So to return to the question above:
Where will economic dynamism come from in the near term? The answer
is massive fiscal expansion, that is, by large injections of money
from the federal government into the economy. China is leading the
way with its half trillion-dollar stimulus plan. Hopefully, China’s
example will spread to other major economic powers. Given the nature
of this crisis and the integration of the world economy, every one of
them has to pony up billions and billions of dollars to reflate
aggregate demand for goods and services at the national and global
level.
The Bush administration doesn’t understand this,
but the Obama administration does and with Congressional support it
will take quick action. We can expect, and should fully support, an
administration stimulus package that includes, among other things,
extension of unemployment compensation, assistance to distressed
homeowners, aid to states and municipalities, food stamp extension,
infrastructure construction, and so forth. The only unresolved
question is how large a stimulus package. In our view, it should be
the range of a trillion dollars or more.
This, along with
assistance (with real strings) to the auto companies and the
stabilization and regulation of financial and housing markets, are
considered the cornerstones of the administration’s recovery
plan. Whether this is enough is unknowable at this point. By January
or soon thereafter, more radical measures may be necessary. I
would add, however, that even if these policies are pursued, there is
no guarantee that a full-blooded and sustained upswing of the economy
will follow. According to conventional wisdom and mainstream
economists, high growth rates, near full employment, and healthy
profit rates are the normal condition of a capitalist economy.
Departures from this norm, it is said, are only passing moments
during which capitalism removes barriers to future growth and in so
doing creates the conditions for a new expansion that surpasses old
peaks in production, employment and profits.
Perhaps that was
the case at an earlier stage of capitalism’s development, but
there is considerable evidence to question this scenario going
forward. Indeed, one has to wonder what the long-run prospects of
U.S. and world capitalism are. Was the “golden age” of
U.S. capitalism from 1945-1973, during which economic growth rates,
investment levels and living standards steadily increased, the rule
or the exception to the rule? Will the last thirty years of sluggish
and lopsided growth continue, but at a significantly lower level? Is
U.S. capitalism, embedded in an overcrowded and hyper-competitive
world economy and restrained by an internal grouping of class and
social forces (energy, military, health care, pharmaceutical,
financial and other industries) resistant to structural economic
change, capable of going over to a new and robust growth path,
resting on green industry, jobs and technology, on demilitarization,
and on rising living standards for working people?
Given the
uncertainty of the long-term trajectory of capitalism and the
likelihood that the present remedies under consideration will bring
only short-term relief, structural reforms of a far-reaching nature
and from the bottom up will be necessary if U.S. economy is to have
any chance of resuming a developmental growth path that is robust and
favors the interests of the working class (broadly defined) and its
allies – not to mention the planet. Thus, the Obama
administration and the multilayered and multiclass coalition that
supports him will almost inevitably have to confront these questions:
Will the reform and restructuring process only touch the
edges of corporate profits and prerogatives or will it make
substantial inroads? Will government intervention include ownership
of an anti-monopoly character or only temporary measures to stabilize
turbulent markets? Will the counter-crisis spending measures be short
term and modest or long term and of sufficient size to sustain a
recovery – something that the New Deal never accomplished? How
far will the reregulation of financial markets go? Will union rights
be marginally improved or greatly strengthened? Will trade agreements
be renegotiated so that international working class interests are at
their core? Will bold measures be proposed to achieve equality in
conditions of life for racially and nationally oppressed people and
women? Will public takeover of finance and energy be on the table for
discussion? Will the reform of housing, education and healthcare be
radical in nature? What about the direction of foreign policy and
militarism? Will the occupation of Iraq be terminated and the
Afghanistan conflict resolved in a political and peaceful fashion?
Will capital be rerouted from unproductive consumption (military,
parasitic finance and so forth) to productive investment in a green
economy and public infrastructure? And will equitable economic
arrangements between U.S. capitalism and the rest of the world be
high on the administration’s agenda?
New model of
economic governance needed Or to approach the same question
in another way: Will the political-economic reforms be modest, or
will they boldly embrace a new model of political-economic governance
at the state and corporate level – a new New Deal? By that I
mean a reconfiguring of the role and functions of government and
corporations so that they favor working people, the racially and
nationally oppressed, women, youth, seniors, small business people
and other social groupings.
Such a model would draw from the
New Deal experience, but in the end it has to be shaped by today’s
conditions and requirements for political and economic advance for
the broadest sections of the American people as well as people across
the globe. No country or people are an island anymore. We either swim
together or sink together.
The new model of governance
wouldn’t be socialist, but it would challenge corporate power,
profits and prerogatives, insist on peace and equality, extend social
and economic rights, democratize state and quasi-state structures
like the Federal Reserve, give communities, workers, and small
business people a say in corporate decision making, seriously
consider public takeover of the energy and financial complexes,
demilitarize and green our economy, and constructively respond to new
problems and power realities on a global level.
Depression
conditions prompted President Franklin Roosevelt and his advisers —
albeit with a mighty assist from a powerful all-people’s
coalition led by the industrial unions and the multiracial working
class — to reconfigure the role and functions of the state to
the advantage of the ordinary people. This reconfiguration wasn’t
easy or done in a day. Indeed, it was a contested process over time
that combined unity of the Roosevelt-led coalition at every turn,
independent political action in the corridors of power and in the
streets, and a good dose of improvisation and experimentation. The
broad people’s movement would do well to study the New Deal
experience, not in a mechanical way, but with an eye to gaining
insights for today’s struggles and challenges.
Change
in strategy As I said earlier, we are in a transitional
period in which the broad contours and class relationships of U.S.
politics have changed to the point that we have to adjust our
strategic policy. Our policy of singling out the extreme right and
its reactionary corporate backers and building the broadest unity
against them, discussed in these meetings and contained in our Party
program, captured the class realities of the past 30 years. In this
year’s election we applied that policy consistently and
creatively. Admittedly, we adjusted this policy at the tactical level
in January of this year after concluding that Obama had the potential
to bring together and give voice to an all-people’s coalition
and win the election by a landslide.
Looking back, it isn’t
immodest to say that both our overall policy and our tactical
adjustment were on the money. We shouldn’t claim bragging
rights, but we can say that our strategic and tactical approach
captured better than any other organization or movement on the left
the political algebra of the election process, including the
possibility of a landslide.
This isn’t to say that
other left movements and organizations were of no consequence,
because they were, but none of them had as much political coherence
in their strategic and tactical policies as we did. Nor did they do
the day-to-day grassroots work with the same consistency that we did.
That said, the new political landscape in the election’s
wake compels us to make strategic as well as tactical changes. Our
current strategic policy, I’m sure you will agree, no longer
corresponds with the present situation. But, by the same token, I
would also argue that our anti-monopoly strategy doesn’t quite
fit perfectly either.
Now and for the foreseeable future, the
country is in a political transition that interweaves elements of the
past and the future. This argues against attempts to fit the
political dynamics of this moment into a rigid and schematic
strategic framework. Our strategic policy is a conceptual device (or
guide to action) whose purpose is to give us a first approximation of
what is happening on the ground among the main class and social
forces, which of them has the upper hand, and what it will take to
move the political process in a progressive direction. It doesn’t
claim to capture reality in all of its complexity. And this is
especially so in a transitional period such as this one. Therefore,
the strategic notion of stages of struggle has to be employed
judiciously and flexibly, or, as some like to say, dialectically.
New casting of political actors So briefly, how do
the various forces line up? Let’s begin with Obama. During the
election we correctly resisted fitting Obama into a tightly sealed
political category. We should continue that practice. I don’t
think categorizing him as a bourgeois or centrist politician at this
moment is very helpful, even if he begins by governing from the
center.
Obama is an unusual political figure. He has deep
democratic sensibilities, a sense of history and modesty, and an
almost intuitive feel for the national mood. His political and
intellectual depth matches his eloquence. In the wake of the
election, he is the leader of a far-flung multiclass “change”
coalition that constitutes a new political universe to which everyone
has to relate. He embraces a reform agenda in a reform era whose
political character will be decided in the years ahead. Many,
including ourselves, have used the words “transformational”
or “transforming” to describe his candidacy — that
is, a candidacy capable of assembling a broad people’s majority
to reconfigure the terms and terrain of politics in this country in a
fundamental way. The same can be said about the potential of his
presidency.
Obama isn’t finished with Obama. Like other
great leaders, he is a work in progress who has demonstrated the
capacity to grow as things change and new problems arise. He will
undoubtedly feel competing pressures, but he will also leave his own
political imprint on presidential decisions, much like Lincoln and
Roosevelt did. It’s good that Obama has these qualities because
he is inheriting mammoth problems. In consultation with the Democrats
in Congress and the main organizations of the people’s
coalition, he will set the agenda and determine the timing of
legislative initiatives next year.
Then there are the Obama
grassroots networks and committees. These web-generated forms of
organization and action were formidable in the elections and will in
all likelihood continue to be a forceful presence in the coming
years. They contain an array of diverse people, including lots of
young people, all of whom are very loyal to Obama and will throw
their weight behind his program. In some places we are part of “Yes
We Can” networks and should remain so; where we aren’t,
we (along with others) should make connections with them.
The Democratic
Party The Democratic Party, for sure, isn’t an
anti-capitalist people’s party. Yet it contains a variety of
currents. In the recent elections the center and progressive currents
gained in size and influence. While its character isn’t left in
its outlook in the wake of Obama’s landslide victory, liberal
and progressive congress people have the wind at their back.
Right-wing Democrats, meanwhile, are running into headwinds. This is
not 1992 all over again.
While some sections of the ruling
class will oppose Obama at every turn, other sectors will accommodate
and support many of his legislative initiatives. Some of its members
will be part of his administration. U.S. capitalism is in such a
serious crisis on a domestic and global level that sober-minded
sections of ruling class see the necessity of reforming and
restructuring capitalism, but in their view within very prescribed
limits. Even the most forward thinking of them will attempt to slow
down and narrow the scope of the reform and restructuring process.
Finally, there are the broad people’s forces, (working
class, racially and nationally oppressed people, women and youth).
Their politics move along anti-corporate, egalitarian and
anti-militarist lines. They express themselves through a range of
organizational forms. Unity among them is on a higher level. In this
election these forces walked with seven league boots, kicked butt and
took no prisoners. Nothing seemed to knock them off stride.
In
the period ahead, these forces will exercise an enormous, at moments
decisive, influence on the political process. Labor will continue to
play a special organizing and political role.
At the same
time, labor and its allies, while vigorously advancing their own
agenda, must adjust to the new scope of the post-election change
coalition led by Obama that had emerged. Never before has a coalition
with such breadth walked on the political stage of our country. It is
far larger than the coalition that entered the election process a
year ago; it is larger still than the coalition that came out of the
Democratic Party convention in August.
Moreover, its growth
potential is enormous. Significant numbers of white workers and small
businesspeople, for example, didn’t cast their vote for Obama,
but can be won to progressive and anti-racist positions going
forward.
As you can see, this change coalition contains
various political forces with disparate class loyalties and political
orientations. But this should not surprise because there are no pure
struggles at any stage of struggle. Indeed, in such a broad,
multiclass coalition, relations will be contested as well as
cooperative. Each component will promote its views and attempt to
leave its own imprint on the overall struggle. And this is all the
more so as the economic crisis deepens.
As for us, we can
provide leadership only to the degree that we are in the trenches of
the wider labor-led people’s movement, building this people’s
upsurge in all directions. Only if we are making practical,
on-the-ground contributions to the immediate struggles, and
especially in the economic arena, can we help give political
coherence to this broad coalition.
Yes, we should bring
issues and more advanced positions into the process that go beyond
the initiatives of the Obama administration and the broad multiclass,
many-layered coalition that supports it. But we should do this within
the framework of the main task of supporting Obama’s program of
action and building breadth, depth and participation of the core
forces. We have to master the art of combining partial demands with
more advanced ones. The former (partial demands) are the immediate
grounds for building broad unity in action.
Of course, change
won’t be easy. The pressures to weaken, even mothball,
progressive, anti-corporate measures will come from many quarters –
from within the administration, from members of Congress, from the
ruling class – which has its hands in every branch of
government and controls the major media.
Nevertheless, we
shouldn’t assume that the Obama administration will inevitably
track right. It isn’t dialectical because it fails to take into
account the election mandate, the new leverage of labor and its
allies and, perhaps most important, the broader developments in the
economy. Nor should we go bananas when he appoints somebody whose
politics we don’t like. We should not expect that this
administration will be free of representatives of Wall Street or old
line Democrats or even some Republicans. Their presence doesn’t
necessarily define the political inclinations of the Obama
administration, nor does it tell us exactly what its political
priorities will be. Let’s give Obama some space; millions of
others will, including, I suspect, the main leaders of the labor and
people’s movement. Marxism is a guide to action, not a dogma.
We also shouldn’t have any truck with people on the
left who argue that the main protagonists in the coming period are
the Obama administration and Democrats on one side and the people on
the other. Finally, we should take a dim view of some on the left who
will wait for the new administration to stumble and then immediately
call for a break and attempt to turn broader forces into a hostile
opposition. In fact, probably the biggest challenge for the core
forces of this multiclass coalition is to resist attempts by reaction
and some left forces to pit the Obama administration and Congress
against the main sections of the people’s movement on one or
another issue. Where there are (and will be) differences over
appointments, legislation or other actions between the administration
and the broad democratic forces, these differences have to handled in
such a way as not to break the overall unity.
The left can
and should advance its own views and disagree with the Obama
administration without being disagreeable. Its tone should be
respectful. We are speaking to a friend. When the administration and
Congress take positive initiatives, they should be wholeheartedly
welcomed. Nor should anyone think that everything will be done in 100
days. After all, main elements of the New Deal were codified into law
in 1935, 1936 and 1937.
Although we are not in the socialist
stage of the revolutionary process, we are, nevertheless on the road,
and the only road, to socialism – to a society that is
egalitarian in the rough sense, eliminates exploitation of working
people, brings an end to all forms of oppression, and is notable for
the many-layered participation of working people and their allies in
the management of the economy and state.
The room for
socialist ideas is in the public square has grown enormously. Such
ideas can be easily discussed with many people and people’s
leaders. Furthermore, the force of economic events will compel
millions more to consider socialist ideas that in the past were
dismissed out of hand. But our vision of socialism will resonate to
the degree that it addresses contemporary sensibilities and
challenges. It can’t be a redux of 20th century socialism.
Communists’ role Our role, as I have tried
to say, is to be part of the struggles going forward –
beginning with attending the inauguration and encouraging others to
do the same. It’s going to be a grand event and a public
expression of support for Obama and a mass expression for change.
Given the overall situation in the economy, we have to
refocus on economic struggles. While they will take many forms, the
issue of jobs will climb to the top as layoffs mount. Undoubtedly,
this crisis will strike with destructive force the Black, Latin,
Asian and Native American Indian communities. Unemployment currently
is in the double-digit range. Special compensatory measures will have
to be combined with overall economic demands.
Let’s
reengage with others (labor, the nationally and racially oppressed,
women, and youth) in this struggle. As to precisely what we do, we
have to do some brainstorming as well as consult with people and
organizations that we worked with in the election campaign.
A
couple of ideas come to mind. We should consider initiating meetings
to discuss the economic crisis and how to respond to it at the local,
state and national level. Such meetings could be very broad in their
participation and sponsorship. We should also mobilize support for
Obama’s stimulus package, for aid to the auto corporations --
albeit with strings -- and for immediate relief for homeowners. You
probably have a thousand other ideas and we should discuss them.
In
addition to joining economic struggles and projecting programmatic
demands, we should also produce talking point sheets and analytical
articles that explain the roots of the crisis and the political
forces that that have to be assembled and unified to win both
immediate and more far-reaching reforms.
In these and the
other struggles, we have to become better at building the Party,
press and YCL. I don’t want to say the opportunities to build
the Party and press are limitless, but they have grown immensely.
Let me finish by saying that it sure feels good to be on the
winning side. I’m sure everyone feels the same way. At the same
time, because of this historic victory, we – and the broader
movement that we are a part of – have our work cut out for us
in the coming years. It’s a big challenge, but we have met
other challenges. So let’s go out there and do it with a sense
of confidence that the best days for our country lay ahead of us. Yes
we can! Si Se Puede! Thank you.
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