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Is the Labor Movement Growing or Shrinking? The Incredible Views of the AFL-CIO

Boston Common (Working Mass)

By: Chris Townsend

This article was originally published in Marxism-Leninism Today on February 21, 2026. These positions are the authors’ own and do not represent the official position of Working Mass.

Much of organized labor in the United States seems to go merrily on its way as we enter the second year of Trump’s second term. Many unions are dutifully hiding in the weeds and still hoping to go unnoticed. New union organizing remains at negligible levels, a dire situation by any measure. Organizing continues to trail off in both the number of union elections conducted as well as the number of workers who participate. Fewer and fewer unions run serious organizing programs, with many having been mothballed during the 2020-2022 pandemic years – and have yet to be revived.

Yes, there are sometimes small year-over-year improvements. Yes, there are unions and parts of unions who continue to try to organize the unorganized. But over recent decades the trend has been consistently disastrous. Those diligent union organizers out there in the new organizing trenches deserve our fullest thanks and support. They represent the hope for organized labor.

During the pandemic, new union organizing elections at the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) fell to an astonishing low level of just 862 elections nationwide in 2021, with 663 won by unions. Last year, 2025, matters improved; there were 1,406 elections held, with unions winning 1,152. A total of 75,000 workers were won in these elections. But to appreciate the long trail of employer destruction let’s look back several decades. I joined the labor movement in 1979, and that year alone the NLRB conducted 8043 elections to determine if the workers wanted to be represented by a union. While only 45% of the units voted “yes” for the union, this totaled just more than 212,000 workers in winning contests. So, by any current measure, the labor movement is organizing successfully today via NLRB elections at a rate of about 35% as well as what was being accomplished 47 years ago.

SITUATION EVEN WORSE

We would be remiss if we ignored additional ghastly facts. Of the 75,000 workers who managed last year to run through the employer minefield and win in their union elections, the number who will manage to bargain an all-important first contract with their employer will likely be about 50% of the 1,152 units. The math will be uneven because of the differences in the sizes of units, but this roughly means that of the 75,000 workers, maybe 30,000, or perhaps in an exceptional year 40,000, will end up with a first union contract.

Given that a huge number of these elections were held in open-shop “right-to-work” states, the actual number of eventual union members will be considerably less. Workers in these states can share in the benefits of their first union contract but are not required to pay dues. Now brace yourselves for one more shock; data shows that of those workers in units somehow able to win first union contracts, as many as half will never reach a second contract. Workplace closings, layoffs, decertification, and other causes take a horrible toll.

Are the catastrophic facts of this situation becoming clear? Facts are, as they say, stubborn things. There are of course different union elections that are held in the public sector, but only in the two dozen states which allow it for their state and local workforces. These numbers have also dramatically slowed in many states. And be reminded that all public sector units in the U.S. are open shops, owing that distinction to the disastrous Janus decision of the Supreme Court in 2018. There are also elections in the rail and airline industries, but in recent decades they have tended to at best replace the losses suffered as employers shrink and restructure. Unions do sometimes manage to win recognition from employers voluntarily, such as through “card check” arrangements. But these numbers remain tiny in the overall picture.

A LIFE-OR-DEATH SITUATION FOR THE UNIONS

What is the sum total of all this? We face an enormous crisis. Yes, a crisis. Think about these stark realities the next time some left wing or labor leader, journalist or writer offers their latest “good news only” report on the organizing upsurges and progress somewhere. While they might mean well, these efforts frequently act to justify and cover-up for the persistent refusal of many labor leaders to tackle this critical task. The crisis of new union organizing is most often swept under the rug. Out of sight, out of mind.

This catastrophic crisis cannot be glossed-over or concealed. But that will not stop our AFL-CIO from trying. In a recent editorial carefully crafted by its diligent public relations staff the labor federation representing about 60% of U.S. union membership gave it its best shot to spin this situation as something other than a disaster. Titled, Despite Relentless Attacks, Nearly Half a Million Workers Unionized in 2025, the federation did its best to try to gloss over and avoid the reality of the new organizing crisis. The journalistic gymnastics exhibited in this mysterious release surely exceed the boundaries of the imagination for anyone even remotely familiar with the current new onion organizing environment.

Citing a trove of suspect and unrelated data, and ignoring reality selectively on several levels, the federation credited “years of sustained organizing” in “new industries” and in “the south” as the primary source of this miraculous turnabout. The journalistic sleight-of-hand expands quickly in the first paragraph when the new measuring metric is inserted as writers claim that 11.2% of workers are now “covered” by union contracts. Gone apparently is any measure of actual dues-paying members, with the non-profit forces having apparently won out over the traditional trade union thinkers at the Fed. Any real membership claim has been shelved apparently, as that the AFL-CIO’s own recent reports explain that, of the more than 14.8 million claimed union members belonging in one way or the other to the Federation, an admitted 4.8 million are not members at all. These phantom “associate members” once subtracted would bring federation membership to around 10 million members.

DECEPTION IN PLACE OF GENUINE UNION LEADERSHIP

The lengths to which the AFL-CIO “leadership” will go to ignore facts, invent new metrics to conceal the destruction, and engage in outright deceptive manipulation are nothing new. All is justified in the task of propping-up the failing regime of AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler. In equal disrepute are also the members of the Executive Council of affiliate union leaders, those presumably elected to guide the Federation in some better direction than this. Rounding out the questions posed by the recent fantastic press release are more claims of unverified public sector, southern, and young worker growth, when in fact the available data on these questions are scant or even nonexistent. Few unions maintain anything like systematic statistics on the ages of their members, or the numbers of non-members in their open shops. These sorts of claims permeate the release, leading this author to wonder what it was that triggered the creation of this document in the first place? What purpose is being served here?

Trump’s smashing of the several federal government unions one year ago is offered as some sort of explanation for the growth in federal government union membership. In fact, the largest federal employee union – AFGE — was forced to lay off half of its national staff in 2025 on account of its gigantic membership losses. And the whopper omission of all is the lack of any mention that the entire private sector labor movement may be forced during the Trump regime to grapple with the loss of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) as several employer cases move steadily towards our right-wing Supreme Court. The legal nullification of the NLRA would be an overnight catastrophe, with collective bargaining contracts immediately invalidated and union dues checkoff effectively shut down for millions of union members. Millions more union members may be lost as the Trump attack proceeds, with the oddly celebratory AFL-CIO press release only serving to reveal the irresponsible state of the Federation leadership today.

FOSTER’S ROADMAP FORWARD

Similar crises in labor’s long history have occurred and been dealt with by genuine labor leaders in a manner that has allowed labor to correct course. Legendary U.S. labor leader and communist William Z. Foster was one such leader, and his collected works American Trade Unionism is required for all playing any serious role in today’s labor movement. Many of the defects and corruptions afflicting the labor leaders of today were well known to Foster, and in all cases his remedy was to confront them, oppose them if necessary, and mobilize the membership to push for serious initiatives to move the unions forward. And most of all, to organize the many millions of unorganized workers in the industries, workshops, and offices. If our labor movement cannot be somehow moved to undertake this urgent task, to replace our losses and ultimately grow exponentially, our perpetual marginal status is ensured.

One clear and honest point made in the otherwise surreal, even dishonest AFL-CIO release is the mention of the wide popularity enjoyed by the unions in the minds and opinions of a large majority of the unorganized toilers. This is nothing new and only grows as the condition of the unorganized in the unrestricted grip of the employers worsens. Evidence abounds that many millions of workers would join the unions but for any opportunity to do so. Without unions organizing actively on any significant scale, there exist few avenues for the unorganized to connect with the unions, let alone join them. The assorted labor leadership in the unions for the most part consider new organizing to be too difficult, too expensive, too controversial, or too exhausting to seriously pursue. This justifies their inaction and profiteering from the unions, with lavish lifestyles and pursuits taking the place of the hard slogging work to reach out and mobilize the unorganized masses.

What exactly explains the release of this information at this time from some leaders of this labor movement, will remain a mystery. Stranger things have happened, and regardless of the slicing-and-dicing of the current plight of organized labor the fact remains that no solution is possible unless the existing union leadership is pushed hard to tackle the task of organizing the unorganized. Or perhaps they are removed and replaced by new blood who are up to this daunting task.

Chris Townsend spent two entire careers in the U.S. labor movement, in both Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) and UE. He has organized many thousands in several hundred campaigns.

The post Is the Labor Movement Growing or Shrinking? The Incredible Views of the AFL-CIO appeared first on Working Mass.

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Melt ICE, Stop War, Build Labor — Your National Political Committee Newsletter

Enjoy your March National Political Committee (NPC) newsletter! Our NPC is an elected 27-person body (including both YDSA Co-Chairs) which functions as the board of directors of DSA. This month, find out how chapters are melting ICE and improving their communities, stand against war, get involved with DSA labor work, and more!

And to make sure you get our newsletters in your inbox, sign up here! Each one features action alerts, upcoming events, political education, and more.

From the National Political Committee — Melt ICE, Stop War, Build Labor

“They tell us that we live in a great free republic; that our institutions are democratic; that we are a free and self-governing people. That is too much, even for a joke. Wars throughout history have been waged for conquest and plunder. And that is war in a nutshell. The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.” — Eugene V. Debs, Speech at Canton, OH, 1918

These words, pulled from the speech which famously got Comrade Eugene Debs thrown in jail (where he carried on his 1920 campaign for President on the Socialist Party ticket), are a universal truth. This truth could not be more evident as Trump and the Republicans, with the complicity of far too many Democrats, march us into yet another deadly forever war, this time with Iran, while continuing to starve and saber-rattle in their siege against Cuba. sell weapons to Israel, and use sanctions and violence to destabilize countless other people. Who suffers? The working class, always. Who benefits? The ultra-wealthy. 

But we aren’t backing off from the fight for working class power here or abroad, and we know that all of our fights are connected. For every new union contract we win, every tenant we organize to protect, every wealth tax we pass, every privatized good we make public, every socialist we put in office, we chip away at the power that the ruling class holds over us and consolidate it for the working class. It’s easy to feel hopeless when things seem so bleak, but we draw our strength from these wins, knowing that each one builds toward true working class power and total liberation.

Here are just a few of the blows against the capitalist class that are bringing us strength this month:

This is just a taste of the work that our members are taking on. We are organizing from coast to coast and we’re not stopping! 

Later this month, DSA chapters across the country will be joining the No Kings mobilizations on Saturday 3/28 to say No Kings, No Cuts, No Billionaires! Over the past year, millions of Americans have turned out to these massive rallies against the Trump administration’s authoritarianism and horrific, cruel policies. We’re showing up in solidarity with everyone getting politicized right now, when we must show mass opposition to Trump’s power grabs and the rise of fascism. We need an opposition that isn’t funded by billionaires and special interests, who often stand against meaningful reforms like universal healthcare and working-class institutions of power like unions. Powerful opposition requires organization that keeps building through moments of mass mobilizations — and DSA is ready to keep building powerfully and democratically, as our organization of over 100,000 is funded by member-dues, and accountable to the working-class, not the billionaire class.

On the same timeline, we’re looking ahead to May Day this year, where we’re joining with the May Day Strong coalition and workers across the country to plan for May 1, 2026 as a day of action to rally, march, and plan for a day of no school, no work, and no shopping! When the billionaires break every rule, it’s going to take more than rallies to stop them. An upsurge of working class resistance is happening across the country against the violent repression by the Trump administration, most clearly on display in Minneapolis. We have to keep flexing our collective muscles and show our power to hit them where it hurts economically — it’s workers over billionaires!

If you’re not engaged with your local chapter’s work, we challenge you to connect with them today. Join your comrades for a rally, a canvass, or even just a fun social event, and get involved. Nothing helps combat despair like being an active part of this movement for the better world we know is possible. 

In Solidarity,

Megan Romer and Ashik Siddique
DSA National Co-Chairs

Tonight, Thursday 3/12 — Join Our International Migrant Rights Working Group ICE OUT Training Call

287(g) agreements allow ICE to deputize local law enforcement and embed ICE into jails, police departments, and even university campuses. ICE relies on local collaboration to create the neighborhood-to-prison pipelines for mass deportation, and we can and must organize to stop our local government and resources from being hijacked by Trump’s anti-worker and anti-immigrant agenda.

Join DSA’s International Migrants Rights Working group tonight, Thursday 3/12 at 8pm ET/7pm CT/6pm MT/5pm PT to learn how to map and expose local collaborations with ICE and build coalitions to end them.

Union Members: Organize Against the War on Iran! Here’s How

If you are a union member, DSA’s National Labor Commission calls on you to talk to five of your union siblings about the war and begin organizing your union to take anti-war action!

Stand with the people of Iran and take action today as a proud union member!

RSVP for National Electoral Commission: Standing Up to ICE Call Tonight Thursday 3/12

Tonight, Thursday 3/12 at 8pm ET/7pm CT/6pm MT/5pm PT, hear from DSA Socialists in Office Robin Wonsley (Twin Cities) and Alex Brower (Milwaukee), as well as chapter electoral leaders in New York and Los Angeles as we discuss the role our electoral efforts have played in the response to ICE’s siege of our cities across the country. This is a members-only event!

Save the Date — DSA National Organizing Conference This Summer!

DSA is hosting a National Organizing Conference in Chicago, July 31–August 2. Save the date if you’re interested in attending — application details will be shared in the coming weeks.

Help Support DSA! Sign Up for Development Phonebanks Sunday 3/15 or Sunday 3/29

Join the Growth and Development Committee for an upcoming phonebank!

Training will be provided at the beginning of each call. We’ll see you there!

Learn Fundraising Skills for Your Chapter — Join Our Sunday 3/22 Training

Join the Fundraising Committee for a training on chapter fundraising on Sunday 3/22 at 5pm ET/4pm CT/3pm MT/2pm ET. RSVP today!

Join Our Workers Organizing Workers Salt Training Series this April! Sessions Begin Monday 4/13

Are you looking for a new job? Want to join the labor movement and build power on the shop floor with your co-workers? Join our Workers Organizing Workers (WOW) Salt Training Series! This three-session series will be held Mondays in April beginning 4/13. All sessions will be held at 8pm ET/7pm CT/6pm MT/5pm PT.

Salting, or getting a non-union job and organizing your workplace, is a key tactic that organizers have used for decades to build the labor movement. Join a historic tradition today! We’ll cover organizing basics, share information about our priority industries, and help you get a job you can organize. No organizing experience required.

DSA National Labor Commission May Day Organizing — Get Involved!

This year it’s more important than ever for DSA members to take the lead in bringing socialist politics to May Day by organizing May Day actions with their local unions and labor bodies. Whether your chapter is organizing a march, a solidarity school, a political education event, a movie night, or something else entirely, you can help organize successfully for  May Day 2026, International Workers Day! Contact your chapter for details. If you have any questions, please contact the National Labor Commission at nlc@dsacommittees.org.

Religious Socialism News and Events — Calls Starting Friday 3/20

If you are a person of faith, check out the DSA Religion and Socialism Working Group (RSWG). We are unique on the Left as a multifaith socialist group. This month, we have three calls and a new sub-group starting. Get involved today!

For more about the Religious Socialism Working Group, please sign up for our email list to join our monthly online meetup on Tuesday 3/24 at 8:30pm ET/7:30pm CT/6:30pm MT.

Join Our National Labor Commission Today

Are you:

  • A union member?
  • Trying to organize your workplace?
  • An aspiring labor writer?
  • Active in your chapter’s labor working group?

Join DSA’s National Labor Commission (NLC) and get involved in socialist labor work at the national level! Whether it’s salting your workplace, organizing towards May Day 2028, sharing strike support strategies with solidarity captains in chapters across the country, writing reports about national labor issues, or building up our national listwork, there’s an NLC campaign for you to plug into. Apply to join today!

Welcome New DSA Organizing Committees and YDSA Chapters!

And a warm welcome to our newest DSA Organizing Committees and YDSA chapters!

DSA Organizing Committees

  • DSA Maui, Hawaii
  • Cadillac DSA, Michigan
  • DSA Wooster, Ohio

YDSA Chapters

  • Indiana University Bloomington
  • Santa Monica High School
  • Millersville University
  • University of Missouri Kansas City
  • Western New England University
  • Lehman College
  • University of Wisconsin Eau Claire
  • St. Mary’s College of Maryland

The post Melt ICE, Stop War, Build Labor — Your National Political Committee Newsletter appeared first on Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).

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Mask Off

By Tyler Edlin

Content advisory: murder, white supremacy, fascism, antisemitism, homophobia

On January 7, 2026, a Minneapolis resident named Renée Good was shot and killed by a United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer while attempting to drive away from a frenzied scene of ICE officers and a group of other Minneapolis residents who had gathered on the street after an ICE vehicle had allegedly become stuck in the snow. On January 24, 2026, Alex Pretti, also of Minneapolis, was shot and killed in the middle of a street while filming ICE activity in his area on his cellphone. Their filmed executions have just been the most prominent of numerous casualties of the Trump Administration’s “Operation Metro Surge,” which targeted the Minneapolis-Saint Paul area of Minnesota following a story of alleged fraudulent daycare centers run by Somalian immigrants that took right-wing media by storm in late 2025.

Following the deaths of Good and Pretti, reactionary social media was buzzing, and the overwhelming consensus from the fascistic elements of MAGA was that this was a win for them.

One X (Twitter) user wrote in response to a video of ICE shoving a woman to the ground:

“Omg you voted for old white women to be aggressively shoved to the ground??”

Yes. Yes I did.

Another was in an argument with a MAGA supporter who expressed concern about how bad the shooting of Pretti looked and said:

Just don’t counter signal.  Period.  It’s not that hard.  I don’t care if they clusterbombed 10,000 protesters.  Don’t fucking counter signal our guys.  The other side never does this.  When will you all learn that

There are thousands of similar examples on social media of people cheering for their perceived enemies to be hurt and killed, along with people defending the administration’s brutality with no reservations, but these two are particularly revealing. This behavior is not unique to the current movement; it echoes the tactics of many past fascist and reactionary groups.

In the 1992 Republican Party presidential primaries, incumbent president George H. W. Bush faced down a disgruntled base after he infamously stated “Read my lips: no new taxes” in a 1988 speech before going on to raise taxes in a move that was almost universally loathed. His primary challenger was a man by the name of Pat Buchanan, a man described by the Anti-Defamation League as an “unrepentant bigot” who “repeatedly demonizes Jews and minorities and openly affiliates with white supremacists.” In an article written for The Washington Post in 1992, conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer wrote: “The real problem with Buchanan … is not that his instincts are antisemitic but that they are, in various and distinct ways, fascistic.” Buchanan has also gone on record defending Nazi prison camp guards, questioning Holocaust death numbers, pushing antisemitic hoaxes about Jews controlling the United States, calling gay people “Satanists,” and describing white people as being genetically superior to the other races.

In the aforementioned 1992 Republican primaries, George H. W. Bush ended up winning 72.8% of the vote (only to later go on to lose to Bill Clinton in the general election) while known anti-semite and white supremacist Pat Buchanan ended up with 23% of the vote (2.9M voters). Ultimately it was a far cry from what was needed to actually win anything, and with his later failures in 1996 and 2000, Buchanan proved to be unable to ever attain the Presidency (and thank God for that). That said, Buchanan’s successes point to a hyper-reactionary undercurrent in the old GOP of the post-Reagan years that many people, even Republicans at the time, did not want to acknowledge. I’ve heard this subsection of the pre-Trump GOP described as the “mad woman in the attic” – “we feed her, but we do not talk about her” – before Donald Trump came along and declared this disgruntled group as his base.

Buchanan’s followers, his “true believers” who remained always loyal to him, had a phrase that they liked to use: “lock and load.” An interesting, though often forgotten example of this was in the year 2000, when Buchanan completed a hostile takeover of Ross Perot’s Reform party. His supporters shouted down anti-Buchanan Reform party members with chants of “lock and load” at meetings, expelled a gay party leader simply because he was gay, and rewrote party rules to ensure that Pat Buchanan could run the Reform party as an anti-gay, anti-abortion hate machine (which then plummeted in the polls and finished with 0.43% of the vote in the general election).

In the 1920s, an Italian former schoolteacher and former Socialist named Benito Mussolini laid the groundwork for fascism and founded the world’s first fascist party (the PNF). At his disposal were the Squadrismo (later known as the “blackshirts”), a fascist militia who loved violence, hated socialists, and answered (mostly) to Mussolini himself. They terrorized local socialists, attacked their meetings, killed members, and laughed and reveled in the chaos and terror that they sowed.

Their motto was “me ne frego” – “I don’t give a damn.”

They murdered political opposition – “me ne frego.”

Set fire to socialist meeting places – “me ne frego.”

Tortured working-class union leaders in front of their families – “me ne frego.”

All of this came to a head in 1924. Mussolini had formed fascism from a movement of disaffected war veterans and youths into a political party. He wore a suit and played the political game. But when a socialist leader and prominent voice in the Chamber of Deputies named Giacomo Matteotti rallied people behind him after a fraudulent election which saw the fascist coalition gain so much power that they could no longer be kept in check, Mussolini had him assassinated.

Me ne frego.

Benito Mussolini walked into the next parliamentary session and fully removed the mask. He dared anyone to stop him, threatening fascist blackshirt violence on anyone who stood in his way.

Nobody moved.

Thus, the fascist beast was revealed for all to see. Violence not as a byproduct of fascism, not as a few “bad actors” among a larger whole. Violence as the very essence, the very nature of fascism.

In the 1990s and 2000s, American news companies regularly invited Pat Buchanan onto their shows. People (white people more specifically) who interacted with him claimed that he was a nice guy to them personally, almost as if they couldn’t believe that this same man would utter such hateful vitriol.

In the 1920s, Benito Mussolini turned his group of thugs into suit-wearing “politicians” who “played by the rules” (on paper at least). In the 2010s, the alt-right, led by Richard Spencer, wore suits and ties, cut their hair nicely, and presented themselves as a movement of intellectuals.

Fascists often dress nice, and speak from the sides of their mouth, to legitimize their ideas before hungry media cameras. The uglier truth always hides just beneath the surface. 

There appears to be a notion among some liberals that our current crop of neo-fascists can be “saved.” That we can “appeal to their better nature.” But again, violence is the nature of this ideology; it is what they stand for, it is what they believe in. That the strong may lord over whatever they please, and the weak shall submit to whatever fate is handed to them. It’s the moral compass that guided Nazi Germany, the Confederate States of America, Fascist Italy, and now, the “Make America Great Again” movement. It is a moral compass that always leads to ruin and immense human suffering. This ideology of violence cannot be reasoned with, as it refuses to moderate its quest for domination.

The choice must always be to fight, rather than accommodate. We can win, but we must know our enemy first. At the moment, MAGA grasps the levers of power of the United States government. The only force strong enough to confront this expression of fascism is the organized power of the working class. The strength of resistance that is currently occurring in Minnesota is only possible because of the network of community connections that are linked by a common cause. Rochester must begin using this blueprint to prepare. So that when the time comes, fascism will not be tolerated, but will be defeated.

The post Mask Off first appeared on Rochester Red Star.

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Trans Rights: We Will Not Rest! Sign the Gender Freedom Policy in Cleveland!

by Mackenzie F

Throughout this harsh winter, we have watched the rising tide of fascism surge across our country, with trans communities squarely in its crosshairs. Kansas has revoked gender-affirming IDs with no grace period, clinics nationwide are shuttering their doors, and a myriad of anti-trans executive orders are being challenged in court. In Ohio, Republicans are working to dismantle bodily autonomy despite Issue 1 passing in 2023, and they continue to attack transgender people for simply existing in public life. Undeterred by these threats, Cleveland DSA holds the line on trans rights, maintaining our commitment to protecting the trans community.

Over the last year, we turned commitment into action.

By canvassing the city of Lakewood for weeks, building relationships with Lakewood City Council, and collaborating closely with community allies, we secured the passage of our Gender Freedom Policy. Cleveland DSA dedicated significant time and effort to developing this legislation, ensuring that it provides robust protections from law enforcement overreach for transgender and gender-nonconforming people within Lakewood, all without costing taxpayers a dime. 

Cleveland DSA members celebrate at Lakewood City Council on Oct. 25, 2025, the night the city's Gender Freedom Policy unanimously passed. They are holding a copy of the resolution and an Ohio state flag done in Pride colors.
Cleveland DSA members celebrate at Lakewood City Council on Oct. 25, 2025, the night the Gender Freedom Policy was unanimously passed.

Cleveland Heights and Lakewood have shown what is possible for the rest of Northeast Ohio, and other cities are taking notice. But the rest of this story is yet to be written. To win real safety for our trans neighbors, we must continue to build a strong, organized socialist movement in Cleveland. It is critical that Cleveland adopts our Gender Freedom Policy, not only to protect its own residents, but to send a powerful message: Ohio stands with the trans community.

Learn more about the Cleveland
Gender Freedom Policy here!

Cleveland DSA recognizes the power of collective action, which is why we are calling on all of our local allies to join the fight alongside us. From the AIDS crisis to every subsequent wave of government overreach, history has shown that our community survives only when we act together. This moment is no different. Pillars of our community like the LGBT Center, TransOhio, and Equality Ohio must stand in solidarity now more than ever.

The safety and dignity of our transgender neighbors rests on our shoulders. If you share our commitment to protecting this community, we urge you to take action. The legislation is written, and relationship-building with Cleveland City Council is already underway. But in order to move forward, we must gather at least 5,000 signatures from registered voters in Cleveland. While this may be no small task, we acknowledge that justice does not arrive by chance. It is built, block by block, by those who refuse to stay silent.

The state targets trans people not by mistake, but to divide us, to remind us that some lives matter more than others. We reject that logic. Trans liberation is not secondary to our movement; it is central to it. Because a world worth building is one where no one is left to struggle alone. So as the sun returns, warming both the land and our spirits, we invite you to join us in this crucial fight.

Here’s what you can do:

We will not rest until we have shattered the chains that bind every one of us. Solidarity forever!

The post Trans Rights: We Will Not Rest! Sign the Gender Freedom Policy in Cleveland! appeared first on Democratic Socialists of America.

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History of Cleveland SPA Part Four: Diversity in the SPA

Previous entries — Part One, Introduction; Part Two, Electoral Politics; Part Three, Labor

As we learn from the successful organizing of the SPA, we must also acknowledge the SPA’s greatest failure. At the same time reactionary tendencies dominated the AFL, bigotry also had a far too common place in the socialist movement. Many prominent SPA members held racist and misogynistic viewpoints, and the membership of the organization (predominantly white and male) reflected this. While it is accurate that socialist politicians and the party’s position tended to be more emancipatory than other political organizations of the time, the lack of a strong anti-racist and feminist culture significantly weakened it.

While many women did join the party and played crucial roles as socialist organizers, the organization never reached anywhere near gender parity, with few women in leadership positions. This occurred despite an effort by the party to take a role in the movement for women’s rights. In 1908, the SPA endorsed the women’s suffrage movement and hired a full-time staffer dedicated to the cause.  Ruthenberg himself once argued that there was “no more important cause” than bringing women into the party.  But the demographic imbalance persisted. This situation was described by Cleveland local member Nellie Zell in her article “The Lone Woman in the Local”:

“The first thing that greets her is that same capitalist mind of these Socialist men who have invited her to come. . . . Indeed, it is a very embarrassing position for both men and women. They want her there, yet now that she is there, they don’t know what to do with her. To make the matter worse, they talk about things of which she has no knowledge, and to smoke or not to smoke is the burden on their minds, while she is wondering whether she had better talk or preserve that lady-like silence so much admired by members of the old parties… I wonder if you men fully realize what that word ‘Comrade’ means to us women?”

Put simply, the party was failing to present a comradely attitude towards women who were interested in socialism. Within a broader US social culture that discouraged women from being active and vocal politically, this resulted in a failure to recruit significant numbers of women into the SPA.

The SPA did not embrace anti-racism in the 1910s in the same way it did the suffrage movement. Many locals in the South operated under segregation, and several prominent socialist leaders were open white supremacists. The Ohio Socialist Party adopted a position in 1911 of encouraging the recruitment of Black members, but there was a failure to explicitly condemn racial oppression, rather than just class oppression of Black workers. This changed over time, as discussed in Eric Blanc’s article which focuses primarily on SPA congressman Victor Berger’s shift from holding openly racist views to being praised by the NAACP.  However, this tolerance of racism was an incredibly significant failure of the organization for the duration of the 1910s, when it was most politically relevant.

On the other hand, we can take some positive examples from the SPA’s national and linguistic diversity. Cleveland was a cosmopolitan city,  and the Cleveland local represented this well, including German, Bohemian, Polish, Jewish, Finnish, Hungarian, Lettish, Lithuanian, Slovak and Italian branches.. Nationally, there were similar language-based federations, with both posing an interesting question of internal governance. These groups represented a significant portion of party membership on paper, but in practice operated very autonomously. Some SPA members, like Ruthenberg, advocated for more centralization of the language federations, bringing them closer in line with the organizing of the party as a whole. Others advocated for the autonomous model as an effective way to organize immigrant communities. Ultimately, it is clear that the party’s diversity among European immigrant groups was a strength enabled through providing spaces for socialists of the same identity to coordinate. With the language federation’s tendency to effectively act as internal factions, Ruthenberg’s push towards centralization is understandable, although such practices should be accompanied with a clear understanding that solidarity, not assimilation, is the answer to xenophobic attitudes.

Cleveland Young Peoples Socialist League May Day picnic, Ruthenberg circled

In many regards, DSA has come a long way from the open displays of bigotry and predominantly white male membership of the SPA. However, there is still much to be learned from their failure to stand with the oppressed – which is both a moral disgrace and a political weakness. With a membership and mass reach beyond DSA’s today, one can imagine how much stronger the SPA would have been had it built a membership that represented the broader working class. To avoid replicating this, DSA members should heed comrade Zell’s words. Even with the SPA supporting women’s suffrage, it did not create an environment conducive for women to organize. It is easy for a chapter’s demographics to self-perpetuate, as new members do not feel welcome in a space that does not look like them or their communities. In order to change this, we need consistent and proactive effort throughout all organizing projects, and structured ways for marginalized comrades to coordinate. To do otherwise will only serve to cement Cleveland DSA’s current place – as a predominantly white organization in a multiracial city.

Please return tomorrow for Part Five: Conclusion: The SPA’s Rise and Fall

The post History of Cleveland SPA Part Four: Diversity in the SPA appeared first on Democratic Socialists of America.

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Red Square Recap: An Evening with a PSOL Organizer

By Casey G

If you’re in the mood for pizza, there’s no better place to go than Sicily’s Pizza in Southwest Detroit. This is where MDDSA comrades met on December 8th for a Red Square co-presented with the Political Education and International Solidarity working groups. Peter B. of Brazil’s Partido Socialismo e Liberdade (Socialism and Liberty Party, abbreviated to PSOL) was visiting Detroit and met with us over cheese and pepperoni pizzas to discuss his experiences living and working in Brazil, and answer questions from comrades at MDDSA.

Peter has been an organizer since 2009, starting in Brazil’s student and youth movement. He then moved into electoral, where he was chief of staff for PSOL Congresswoman Sâmia de Souza Bomfim. He is currently living in the United States while reasearching with an American university.

Peter discussed the difference in American and Brazilian party systems. As opposed to our American reality of two parties struggling to hold power on one side of the binary or the other, Brazil has 30 recognized political parties with more than 20 parties holding seats in Congress. New parties are more common in Brazil than in the US, with PSOL forming in 2004 after a split from the Workers Party after President Lula’s proposed pension reform raised the retirement age. PSOL currently holds 12 of the 513 seats in Brazil’s Congress.

Peter gave us a personal anecdote of his experience witnessing the power of the general strike. While he was a student in Sao Paolo in 2017, he witnessed the ripple effects of a general strike through the city. While it affected plenty of sectors, his example was the subway union: the mode of transportation that millions of residents rely on (this year’s strike affected an estimated 3.3 million residents) was unavailable and attention drawn to the needs of those whose undervalued work maintains the system underlying the movement of thousands of citizens daily.

Peter laid out his three guiding principles for a socialist elected. As seen with Lula of the Worker’s Party and then as PSOL gained seats in Congress, the election of a socialist does not miraculously transform the system they operate within. Peter offers foundations to take into these new circumstances.

First, to mobilize society. Success is not achieved in the act of taking office — success is improvements in the material conditions of the working class. These include goals such as Mamdani’s freezing rents, free buses, and universal childcare. [CG1] An elected is not just a representative with a megaphone; true embodiment of the position is organizing and mobilizing constituents to fight for themselves.

Second, to speak the truth of and for the working class. Honesty is its own labyrinth in politics, but as an elected navigates the system, they must be guided by honesty towards their constituents as they face obstacles and compromise.

And last, expanding the horizons. Once we reach goals that have been set, we expand the field and stretch to farther goals. Particularly given DSA’s recent bout of electoral wins (Detroit’s own Denzel McCampbell, and of course, Zohran Mamdami in New York City), it’s time to start thinking about what happens when the North star we’ve been following turns from a spot on the horizon to the ground under our feet. What does socialist governance look like in practice?

We are still operating within a capitalist system and there’s an important balance to strike for American socialists. These electoral wins are indeed achievements to be celebrated; we have not achieved a miraculous change to existing systems and our electeds are going to have rough waters to steer in.

It’s also perpetually invigorating to see people talk about, as material reality, the things we fight for now in the United States. When we’re constantly told how providing medical care to every person is unrealistic, it’s helpful to be reminded that is simply not true. Brazil has a Healthcare for All system. They also removed private money from elections ten years ago. These are not unreasonable pipe dreams; they’re concrete reality elsewhere and worth fighting for here, too. A huge thanks to Peter B. for taking time to discuss with us his experiences in Brazil.


Red Square Recap: An Evening with a PSOL Organizer was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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