Dump Trump, Defeat Racism and Misogyny, Build the Left: A
call from 47 grassroots organizers (see
signatures below)
Right now it feels like we’re in an “emperor has no clothes”
moment. A lot of us see something really clearly, but few of us – radical and revolutionary
organizers – are willing to say it out loud.
So we’re going to say it. Defeating Trump in the
presidential election is a top priority for the left. And at a minimum, that
means mobilizing voters for Hillary Clinton in swing states even if you vote
for another candidate in a safe state. We’ve got to beat Trump and Trumpism while
building movements that will fight, resist, and disrupt a Clinton
administration that will be militaristic and pro-corporate.
Most of us on the left feel about the Clintons the way we
feel about leftovers that have been sitting in the fridge for too long:
repulsed. NAFTA, mass incarceration, Palestine, the 2003 Iraq invasion,
legitimizing the coup in Honduras, cozying up to Wall Street – take your pick
of crimes that can be laid at the Clintons’ feet. And judging from the DNC, the
Clintons will talk a good game on economic inequality while resorting to
jingoism and nationalism throughout the election. But if the Clintons’
neoliberal politics induces nausea, then Trump's brew of racism and misogyny
makes us projectile vomit.
Many of our friends believe that Democratic and Republican
parties, and their candidates, are both worthless and the left should focus in
this election on breaking the two party system; or they believe that a Clinton
administration will just create more working-class disaffection and strengthen
the extreme right. We disagree. And when we talk to people – whether community
activists or simply our neighbors – about this election, we need to be clear about
the stakes of this election. When we hear people say they don't know who to
vote for because both candidates are equally bad, we get worried.
At every opportunity, Trump has doubled down on racism,
sexism and bigotry, to the delight of David Duke, the American Nazi Party, and
others like them. A Trump victory – do we even need to say this? – would
embolden hard-core racists, Islamophobes, misogynists, and anti-immigrant
groups, while promising an assault on workers' rights and intense, perhaps very
violent repression of the inspiring social movements that have erupted in the
past several years. If you have any doubt about this, listen to his speech at
the Republican National Convention.
As many have
emphasized, we're not voting for the candidate; we're voting for the terrain
our movements operate within. This election will set the stage for our
future struggles. In the past eight years, movements – from Black Lives Matter
to Fight for Fifteen, Occupy Wall Street to Standing Rock and Ni Uno Más – have
surged and changed the way we talk about everything from police accountability
to student debt to deportations to the minimum wage. And more and more
activists have learned that it is not enough to elect “good” politicians, that
social change requires constant struggle. Under a Trump administration, our
movements will be back on the defensive: his Supreme Court appointments alone
could mean rollbacks on voting rights, reproductive rights, labor rights, and
immigrant rights. And we can expect people to revert to blaming social
inequality and systemic injustices mainly on Trump and the Republicans.
What Kind of Left Do
We Want?
Can we leave the business of defeating Trump and electing
Hillary Clinton to others – liberals or progressives – while we concentrate on
the genuinely radical work of stoking protest and opposition from Clinton’s
left? Can we bank on Trump's low poll numbers? It depends on the left we want
to build. The vast majority of union activists and people of color view this
election as a battle against open racism. If we want to build a left that
engages and is part of these sectors – if
we want a left that contends for leadership among the country as a whole – then we can’t afford to leave the basic
task of defending democratic rights to others, even as we continue to
criticize and protest.
Ideally, we would work to defeat Trump without volunteering
or working directly for Clinton’s campaign. We should be able to send people to
kick-ass grassroots organizations in swing states to help with election day
turnout, organize phone banks from safe states to support their efforts, or
maintain a presence at the polls to ensure voters of color are not intimidated.
But whatever we choose to do, sitting out this election is not an option.
As we mentioned at the beginning, defeating Trump is not
enough. We need movements strong enough to fight a Clinton administration on
several fronts – whether Israel/Palestine, free trade agreements, climate
change, a $15 minimum wage, or the prison-industrial complex. And neutralizing
the appeal of the far right means we need to both strengthen our movements for
racial justice and win over white
workers to a progressive class politics as an alternative to Trump’s racist
economic nationalism. Finally, we need to build a left that can help anchor a
visionary alternative to corporate Democrats. It won’t be easy, but we’ve come
this far. Let’s defend what we’ve got in this election, and keep our eye on
collective liberation.
In unity and struggle,
Moumita Ahmed, Millenials for Revolution*
Michael Albert, Z Communications*
Thomas Assefa, Left Roots*
Austin Belali, organizer
Gary Broderick, Durham Association of Educators*
Meghan Brophy, Young Democratic Socialists*
Andres Celin, youth organizer
Reece Chenault, national coordinator, US Labor Against War*
Jung Hee Choi, nonprofit consultant
Christine Cordero, LeftRoots*
Chris Crass, anti-racist author and educator, Kentucky
Sendolo Diaminah, Freedom Road Socialist Organization*
Dan DiMaggio, labor journalist, Democratic Socialists of
America*
Louis Head, Southwest Organizing Project*
Ashkaan Kashani, Young Democratic Socialists
Jason Negrón-Gonzales, labor activist
Abdul-Basit Haqq, Local 1067, Communications Workers of
America*
Gregory Hom, SEIU 1021*
Sarah Hughes, PSC-CUNY, AFT 2334*
Lynn Koh, War Times*
Emily Lee, LeftRoots*
Charles Lenchner, People for Bernie*, act.tv*, Democratic
Socialists of America*
Jack Suria Linares, immigrant rights and labor activist,
Democratic Socialists of America*
David Littman, University of Georgia Young Democratic
Socialists*
Timmy Lu, environmental justice organizer
Meredith Martin-Moats, McElroy House: organization for
Cultural Resources*
Rev. Allyn Maxfield-Steele, faith-based organizer, Virginia
Ariel Morales, housing organizer
Shelby Murphy, Lamar University, Young Democratic
Socialists*
Kayla Pace, Young Democratic Socialists*
Shameka L. Parrish-Wright, It's What We Do Special Project,
LLC*, Carl and Anne Braden Memorial Center Board*
Cynthia Peters, Left Roots*
Jardana Peacock, Liberatory Leadership Project*
Maria Poblet, executive director, Causa Justa/Just Cause*
Manju Rajendran, Anti-Oppression Resource and Training
Alliance*, Ready the Ground Training Team*
Rapheal Randall, youth organizer
Merle Ratner, Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility
Campaign*
Spencer Resnick, Left Roots*
Marc Rodrigues, Student/Farmworker Alliance*, Young Workers:
Tampa Bay*
Ashley Rodriguez, Sanders national delegate, El Paso, Texas;
Democratic Socialists of America el Chuco del Norte chapter*
Joel Solow, Vote Mob*
Alex Tom, community organizer
Carla F Wallace, Showing Up for Racial Justice Action, Inc*
Jayanni Webster, community organizer, Memphis, TN
Zoë Williams, community organizer, Denver, CO
Winnie Wong, People for Bernie*
Chris Zepeda-Millan, scholar activist
(* organization affiliation for identification purposes
only)
This post also appeared on In Theses Times, and Democratic Left (www.dsausa.org)
Material for the Defeat Trump- Defeat Racism campaign can be found on this blog. Also, contact campd22702@gmail.com
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