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Beyond the Slogans, What’s Convention Really About?

By Ian AM and Jess N
With 16 resolutions and four amendments, the ramifications and nuances of the decisions presented for the 2026 annual convention for Metro Detroit DSA are enough to make your head spin if you’re a new member not thoroughly steeped in internal politics, caucuses and coalitions.
Let’s demystify that.
Beyond all the resolutions, amendments, debates, factional squabbles and general commotion ahead of convention, the broader political divide in our chapter boils down to three big questions:
- Do you want Metro Detroit DSA to center ambitious, external-facing campaigns that deliver meaningful wins for our communities, like Money out of Politics or electing Cadre candidates like Chris Gilmer-Hill or Denzel McCampbell? Or should we focus on internal political education, reading groups and following the lead of smaller left or liberal advocacy groups?
- Do you want Metro Detroit DSA to grow more accessible to every member of the working class so that it may evolve into a true mass movement as part of a National DSA with membership in the millions? Or would you rather Metro Detroit DSA maintain some degree of exclusivity with smaller ranks so that it may center more committed, ideologically pure members who have read “enough” theory?
- Do you trust your comrades that you elect to handle administrative decisions so that we can meet the urgency of this polycrisis with decisive action? Or would you rather we spend valuable organizing time at GMs relitigating every decision of the democratically elected Steering Committee?
As a Metro Detroit DSA member attending our annual convention, most every vote you cast will essentially support one side or the other of these three key decisions.
For example, the Unity in Action resolution (R11) proposes we vote, as a chapter, to elect nine members to a commission to deliberate and propose structural changes. These proposals would take effect only if the membership voted to adopt them.
In other words, it creates a democratic and multitendency body tasked by the membership with developing proposals that address complex organizational challenges. In doing so, it streamlines the process of drafting and proposing effective yet broadly popular structural changes, which is a complex undertaking in and of itself.
For clarity, every member already has the power to make these proposals with or without the passage of this resolution. Creating a commission dedicated to this purpose simply ensures that proposals to organizational issues will indeed be created for members to consider.
The argument against this resolution is that it is anti-democratic to elect any other member to perform a specialized task for the chapter. The claim is that members should lead. It remains unclear why the chapter members we ourselves would elect to this commission would not count as “members leading.”
It’s ultimately a decision between a party-like structure focused on outward facing organizing vs. an absolutely “flat” participationary democracy — one with a high bar for participation in decision making and a focus on internal debates among factions.
DSA has had this debate before. In fact, this was the main debate in DSA nationally in the period leading up to the 2017 and 2019 conventions. Eventually, the side favoring a party-like structure won decisively.
It’s a good thing they did, because that orientation is the one that has allowed DSA to grow to over 100k members nationally and to achieve historic victories like the election of Zohran Mamdani in NYC.
Resolution 8 proposes that general meetings include a balanced mix of 30 minutes for political education, 30 minutes for working group and committee updates, and 60 minutes for our democratically-endorsed campaigns. It also gives the democratically elected Steering Committee the ability to be flexible with setting the agenda based on the needs of the organization and our membership.
Conversely, the amendment to Resolution 8 proposes 60 minutes of virtually every meeting be devoted to political education and reactive discussions of current events, with no requirement that it include any discussion of campaigns or other actionable next steps. Under this amendment, discussion of our campaigns and outward facing organizing would strictly be reduced to 35 minutes.
And so it is essentially a decision between prioritizing external-facing campaigns or internal political education.
At the end of the day, the decisions that we will collectively make at convention are not as complicated as they may seem.
We are deciding whether we wish to focus our efforts inward on those already “in the club,” or focus outward on the working class that we are trying to organize.
And we are deciding whether we trust the comrades we democratically elect — to unpaid and demanding volunteer positions — to act with integrity and handle administrative matters in good faith, or whether we will let factional resentment convince us that no comrade in a leadership position can be trusted with even the most basic tasks.
My co-author and I trust our comrades to elect effective leaders and to hold them accountable by voting them out the very next year if they fail to meet our standards.
We’re here to organize on campaigns that deliver working class wins that matter and involve our community.
And we’re here to build a mass movement that includes as many members of the working class as possible, all fighting to beat fascism and win socialism in our lifetimes.
Are you?
A Democratic DSA Is Strong to Act in the World
By Amanda Matyas and Jane Slaughter

A slew of political education-related resolutions and amendments this year could get us overwhelmed with details. It would be a shame if members at convention got bogged down in, “Is it 30 minutes for education or 45? Are we picking topics today or in a few months?”
Instead, we’d like to step back and talk about one part of an overall vision for what a thriving DSA chapter could look like.
First, what’s the reason to have a DSA chapter at all? It’s not just to create a community of like-minded people, though that’s part of it. It’s to create an organization that acts in the world with power. We are part of a national organization that’s trying to do the hardest thing ever attempted: to break the back of capitalism at its very core. To do that we will need to convince millions, literally millions, of people to become political actors in ways they never have before.
Socialism won’t be achieved by such millions obediently following orders. It can be achieved only by millions of thinking people who’ve decided to take their lives into their own hands. They will need to know that they are socialists.
The party DSA is trying to build is one school for training up socialists and class fighters. Unions can be another such school, as can social movements like the movement to stop ICE. These organizations, formal or informal, are where people learn to make decisions democratically, to strategize, to understand their opponents’ weaknesses and how to win small victories on the way to larger ones.
We’ve been members of Detroit DSA’s Political Education Committee since its early days. The committee has always been open to any member, and has put on a wide variety of events: education at the monthly general meetings (a new focus of the last two years); stand-alone Socialist Night Schools such as on Detroit politics, lessons from the Chicago Teachers Union, and the Communist Manifesto; Red Squares — one-off forums on a variety of topics, including conversations with socialists in (or near) office from Detroit to Brazil, and the history of the Troubles in northern Ireland; skills training such as public speaking or organizing conversations; new-member education on the basics; reading groups ranging from Capital to queer feminism to fiction. The events have been a mixture of practical, such as Organizing 101, and bigger-picture. Both are needed to help nurture socialists who can think, debate, and act. Acting in the world is the end goal of it all.
HOW SHOULD DSA FUNCTION?
What’s the best way for a DSA chapter that wants to end capitalism to function? This is the ideal, which we can’t say we’ve achieved yet:
· High-trust, high-participation. We need monthly general meetings (GMs) that people come to because they have a stake in the outcome: They learn. They debate. They vote. They make decisions that matter for what we do in the world. A GM where members’ role is to passively listen to announcements and updates… doesn’t make them want to return. Nor does it move us forward in changing the world.
· Active committees that have the experience and confidence to try new things. Many members’ first experience with active participation and democratic decision-making begins at the GM. An active committee is another place where those skills are honed. Ideas, decisions, and projects flow from GM to committee to GM for decisions, developments, and debriefs. Members who are involved and engaged with a committee will necessarily feel more involved in the organization, and confident in themselves. This includes the confidence of their fellow members, in and outside of the committee — they don’t need constant monitoring.
· Long-distance runners. People who understand how capitalism works, how movements work (or have not worked in the past), are more likely to stay in the fight. The chapter welcomes everyone who joins because of a particular issue they’re fired up about, and we help them see how it’s connected to every other issue. Conversations about systemic forms of oppression, revisited over time with new and old members, inform our strategy in our campaigns, projects, and workplaces. It is through conversations about the absolute basics that we can start to recognize the systems we are fighting.
People who don’t really understand the system can get easily discouraged by setbacks or turned off by the inevitable disagreements among socialists. We must be strategic in order to make real systemic change, not just reforms. Members who inflate the potential of a particular goal can find themselves disappointed when it doesn’t meet their expectations; by understanding the system, we know that “tax the rich,” for example, is a necessary reform, but it will not end capitalism. Knowing that this is a long, monumental project gives us perspective. We see campaigns and projects as pieces of a much bigger picture. We have long-term vision and goals, and are not easily deflated by a defeat today or tomorrow. The defeats are a part of a larger experimentation. We learn, like socialists before us learned.
· Our campaigns are aimed at helping working class people to organize on their own behalf, not on looking for a charismatic savior. We know that a reform gifted from above is not half as valuable as a reform wrested by mass action. Our campaigns are designed for bottom-up participation and decision-making, not for marching orders.
· As Kwame Toure explained at our March GM, we are building organizers, not just mobilizers. We want ongoing, thriving organizations that people take responsibility for maintaining, not just one-off demonstrations or events (though those are important too). Toure said, “People instinctively love freedom… But you cannot win freedom on instinct. You can only win freedom on reason.” Capitalism creates a complicated, contradictory world. Socialists must be very intentional about learning and teaching the history and theory of our movement and class. This will not be done by anyone else, and it will not be done incidentally. We must make it ourselves.
HOW DOES DEMOCRACY HELP?
An undemocratic organization is a weaker organization. It doesn’t have the buy-in of its members; it has trouble turning people out for the priorities it has decided on, partly because members didn’t have much role in those decisions (even if they nominally voted for them). Socialists are in favor of democracy in their own organization because democracy leads to more unity in action.
This is why the proposed focus of our political education at the GMs is broad and foundational: what will help us understand the capitalist system around us, and what are the core debates in our organization? While we experiment with different learning styles, our focus is on bringing members together in conversation, to learn from each other. We do not believe that any one tendency or strain of socialist thought has all the answers for every situation. Instead, the power comes from all tendencies working together, debating and aligning on the best tactic or approach for each situation.
We’ve been misled by our civics textbooks and other forms of propaganda to think that democracy equals “you have a vote.” But in fact, democracy is much more than that. Citizens of Russia and Hungary have the right to vote, but those countries are in fact dictatorships. Political scientists call the U.S. a democracy, but as socialists we know who is actually running the country.
Democracy requires much more than receiving an email in the privacy of your home and clicking the box for ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ Democracy means the members run this organization. Some hallmarks:
· DSA is “we,” not “they.”
· Issues are discussed openly. Decisions are made openly. Dissenting views are encouraged. The culture is mutual respect.
· Members can organize themselves, without waiting for assignments.
· Members, including longtime members, are constantly learning.
· It’s easy to be active and to move into leadership positions.
· Leaders help new members to develop and there are multiple avenues for doing so.
· Leaders trust members and members trust leaders.
Metro Detroit DSA is better on some of these markers than others. What we surely don’t need is to move in the direction of more passivity for members, less trust in committees, less tolerance of different views.
DSA since its revitalization of the last ten years has always prided itself on being a “big tent” where different views can co-exist democratically. We have rejected the idea that one set of ideas or one caucus should “win” and stamp out others.
If you agree that democracy means an engaged, confident membership and that a democratic DSA is stronger to act in the world, we urge you to vote:
- YES on R4–26 Political Education Committee Resolution, and NO on its amendment
- YES on R16–26 General Membership Meetings Pol Ed Series on Debates in DSA, and NO on its amendment
- YES on amendment A1-R8–26: Agitation, Deliberation, Education: A Radically Democratic General Meeting, and NO on its base (if unamended)
Jane Slaughter and Amanda Matyas are members of Detroit DSA’s Political Education Committee, the national Bread & Roses caucus, and the local Democracy Coalition, a new self-organized, cross-tendency formation.
A Democratic DSA Is Strong to Act in the World was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Building Admin for The Party
By: J.S.
You’ve probably heard before that DSA is a member-funded and driven organization. However, if you’ve never worked “behind the scenes” on administrative projects, it’s easy to take for granted the sheer amount of unpaid labor that our dedicated volunteers put into running the organization.
Every Zoom meeting, sign-up form, resolution, general meeting, social and Dance Against Fascism, convention, membership vote, SC vote, appropriation, contract, and Douglass Debs dinner is planned and run by volunteer members.
None of this would happen without the many members who collectively devote dozens of hours every week to keep the chapter running. It is not an exaggeration to say that these administrative duties often feel like a second job, if not another full time job!
In this article, I’m going to outline why splitting the current secretary role on the steering committee into an administrative secretary and communications secretary role will not only make the workload more manageable, but position our chapter for sustainable growth and more effective day-to-day operations.
The Secretary Role as It Exists is Essentially a Full-Time Job
Per our chapter’s bylaws, the secretary is responsible for creating meeting agendas, keeping meetings during steering and general meetings, distributing these notes, maintaining all chapter records, and overseeing all external communications, including organizing the communications committee, chapter newspaper, graphic design and information technology.
That’s a lot of work for one person to handle for a 1,300 member organization! As a member of the steering committee and an officer myself, I’ve personally witnessed the demanding, time-intensive and wide-ranging duties of the chapter secretary role. It makes it very difficult for the individual to devote time to any other organizing tasks, makes it inaccessible to anyone but members able to devote 30+ hours a week, and risks burning out a chapter leader.
There are many roles within our growing organization that bear similar issues. My own position as Treasurer, for example, routinely requires 20+ hours a week on various duties, projects, and planning. I can’t recall a day I didn’t do DSA work. Those challenges, however, will hopefully see solutions with the further building out of our Finance Committee.
But when life gets busy or a member inevitably burns out or falls ill, agendas are published late, meaning members may come less prepared to discuss vital issues at general meetings, and notes aren’t distributed. This leads to confusion or miscommunication, and external communications like statements on current events may be delayed to the point where they are no longer relevant.
It’s just too much to ask any one given member to do, which is unhealthy for both the individual in the role and the chapter as a whole. Furthermore, it opens the individual up to criticism when realistically their duties have simply grown too broad and time-intensive for a single volunteer. We can do better.
Splitting the Role Creates a Manageable Workload
By splitting the role into two secretarial positions — administrative and communications — both roles become much more approachable and sustainable. Furthermore, it ensures both functions are much more likely to run smoothly as the workload becomes more manageable for the average member with a full-time job and other personal obligations.
The administrative secretary would handle publishing meeting agendas, keeping meeting minutes during steering and general meetings, distribution of minutes and agendas, maintaining all chapter records, and maintaining a register of the contact information and addresses of the steering committee.
On the other hand, the communications secretary would oversee all chapter communications and media — the communications committee, chapter newspaper, graphic design and tech working group. That includes all outward facing media and communications, including social media.
Building MD-DSA Into a Chapter Ready to Fight for the Long Haul
From winning a seat on Detroit City Council to growing the chapter to 1,300 members and counting, from joining striking workers on the picket line to socials to keep our members engaged, nothing in Metro Detroit DSA would operate very smoothly without the hard work of our secretary. But heaping an excessive workload for an entire year on a single volunteer is neither healthy nor sustainable.
By splitting the position into two distinctly segmented roles, we enable members to step up and sustainably run the vital administrative work our chapter requires to function for many years to come. It’s going to be a long fight to Build the Party, beat fascism and dismantle capitalism, so let’s plan accordingly by supporting our comrades and sharing the load for these critical tasks.
Building Admin for The Party was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Political Education at our Monthly General Meetings
By: Amanda Matyas

Committees in DSA allow members to focus their work on specific areas. Their primary goal is supporting the chapter as a whole, and their members and decisions are accountable to decisions made by the membership of the chapter. Our chapter’s Political Education Committee (Pol Ed) is “responsible for coordination of political education events for the chapter.” Education is a top priority of Detroit DSA, and Pol Ed takes that responsibility very seriously. The resolutions the committee brings to the 2026 convention are based on two years of dedication and experimentation on a particular project. Here’s some of that history in brief.
FOCUS & EXPERIMENTATION
Two years ago, members of the Pol Ed committee brought an amendment to their base resolution dedicating 30–45 minutes of every monthly General Membership meeting (GM) to political education. The reasoning was simple: As the most important space for our chapter, the GM deserved our attention. We would bring an array of socialist education topics over the course of the next year.
By presenting this as a separate amendment, Pol Ed hoped to spark an engaging debate to convention on the importance of education. However, the idea was so well received that only one member spoke against it (beginning with the caveat that their remarks were not really “against”). The amendment passed by an overwhelming majority (only 8 nays).
The committee developed and presented ten GM topics in as many months. The work was spread across the committee, with ten different leaders organizing the effort each month. We had a broad range of topics:
- Four on chapter projects or campaigns
- Four on current events or history
- One socialism 101 topic
- One national DSA project
Over the course of 2024 we also organized four Red Squares, multiple monthly reading groups, lectures, trainings, and movie nights. Each of these different venues provided a different context for our work, with varying strengths and weaknesses. We began to think about the best venue for different kinds of topics, and how different methods of presentation affect the way members engage with the information. The committee debriefed following each presentation or event, and through those conversations we also realized we needed more planning time for each topic.
At the 2025 convention, we reaffirmed our focus with a second resolution, which was included in the Consent Agenda. Soon after, the committee adopted a motion to focus half of our GM topics over the next year on Socialism 101, topics of perennial importance to the history and development of socialist organizing and our class politics:
- Why We’re Socialists
- Why the Working Class
- Racial Capitalism
- Socialist Feminism and the Patriarchy
- Why a Socialist Organization
At the time, a huge influx of new members/seekers were joining our monthly meetings with a wide variety of backgrounds and political experience. Our intention was to help all members grow their confidence speaking to what socialism means and why it provides the necessary political framework for addressing the issues that millions face. With a syllabus of five topics, we left the alternate months open for current events or suggestions from members outside of the committee.
In addition to the Socialism 101 topics, we presented a panel of local Palestinian activists, a history of “sewer socialism,” and collaborated with our chapter’s Black & Brown Alliance (BBA) to bring a guest speaker on imperialism (unfortunately the speaker had to cancel due to illness, and a replacement discussion on ICE was cut from the agenda).
The commitment to a syllabus allowed us to spend more time developing each topic (preparations often began two months ahead), and to organize new and experienced members to the planning groups. That additional time also allowed us to work with members outside of the committee, focusing especially on collaborations with BBA leadership and our chapter’s Steering Committee (SC), who all expressed interest in the project.
WHAT COMES NEXT?
For the 2026 convention, the Political Education Committee developed three resolutions that fit together to form a comprehensive syllabus covering the basics of socialism, DSA’s strategy, and an overall vision for our GMs:
- R4–26 Political Education Committee Resolution, which now includes the five socialism 101 topics
- R16–26 General Membership Meetings Pol Ed Series on Debates in DSA, a proposal for a series of debates in the months alternating the 101 topics
- A1-R8–26: Agitation, Deliberation, Education: A Radically Democratic General Meeting, (formerly a resolution — through reasons outside of our control this became an amendment) an overall vision for how we spend our time at each GM, including a process for responding to current events
This suggested syllabus is based on two years of preparation, experimentation, and feedback. MDDSA members are encouraged to volunteer to work collectively on any topic. Our meetings are open to all members, and we meet twice a month, alternating between in person and online to accommodate differing schedules and availabilities.
Committing to a syllabus does not mean Pol Ed can’t also do other things. We have an amendment that allows for flexibility should the horrors of life in the twenty-first century demand our attention (as they so often do these days). We have Red Squares open to a wide variety of topics, and the ability to run as many as membership-power allows. We have an on-going organizing school where members can learn a wide-variety of organizing skills.
And because the basics of socialism form the building blocks for every socialist campaign, they are inherently related to the work that we do in the world and can be continually tailored to meet the moment. We need deep conversations, repeated over time with new and old members, about systematic forms of oppression (racism, patriarchy, and capitalism) because those conversations inform our strategy in our campaigns, projects, and workplaces. Socialists must be strategic in order to make real systemic change. It is through conversations about the basics that we can start to recognize the systems we are fighting.
Amanda Matyas is co-chair of Detroit DSA’s Political Education Committee. She is also a member of the national Bread & Roses caucus and the local Democracy Coalition, a new self-organized, cross-tendency formation.
Political Education at our Monthly General Meetings was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Why We Need A Scalable, Balanced Model for a Growing MD-DSA
By: Francesca S.

The general meeting is the most well attended event that Detroit DSA hosts, and is an opportunity to engage with the broadest swath of our active membership. We only have two hours a month to engage our membership as a whole, and it’s important to use that time wisely.
I’m presenting R8, “General Body Meetings: A Scalable, Balanced Model for a Growing MD-DSA” to establish a formal structure for meetings with time divided into three blocks: political education, working group updates, and campaigns. This plan allows us to agree on a path forward that prioritizes the work of winning socialism.
The past few years have been a time of unprecedented growth for MD-DSA. Our chapter has doubled in size, and greatly expanded our scope of work and our internal structure. Denzel McCampbell’s city council victory has mainstream news outlets talking about democratic socialism. For the first time in years, DSA is a political force to be reckoned with. Our largest meeting should reflect that by dedicating the agenda to the work that we are doing. Our members come to the general meeting because they want to get involved in our projects. We should be giving them that opportunity every month.
Political education at the general meeting should give members context for the work we are doing as a chapter, which is why R8 dedicates 30 minutes to it. A shorter time frame makes the lectures more digestible and avoids overly broad topics. The shorter time also makes it easier to pivot when the national conversation changes due to rapid movement in current events. Long lectures on theoretical topics are best suited to standalone events, not as one agenda item in a meeting about the work of the entire chapter.
R8 also dedicates 30 minutes to updates from committees and working groups, so that members can get a complete picture of the work that our chapter is doing (and that our dues are funding). General meeting presentations are a great way for working groups to recruit new members, or announce upcoming events.
This block could also be a good time to do skills training that relates to different areas of organizing. For example, electoral could talk about how to get a valid petition signature. Labor working group could talk about how to agitate your coworkers into taking action against the boss. Ecosocialists could explain the state of public transit in Detroit. Our work is multifaceted, and our general meeting should be too.
R8 sets aside the largest amount of time, 60 minutes, to discussing endorsed campaigns. This could be updates on existing campaigns, or debate on resolutions proposing new ones. The campaign endorsement process is the most democratic way to do work in DSA. Campaigns are first presented at the general meeting, then there is a deliberative process where members can propose amendments. After debate with equal time given to each side, the endorsement is voted on by the entire membership.
Dedicating the most time to endorsed campaigns ensures that we are giving equal consideration to all areas of chapter work because every group is able to bring an endorsed campaign. It also incentivizes the use of the campaigns process, which prompts organizers to think critically about the scope and feasibility of their project, a plan for action, and how to get buy-in from the membership.
Please come to convention on April 11th, and vote yes on R8. Let’s continue this momentum and turn DSA into the political home for the working class.
Francesca has been a member of Metro Detroit DSA since 2019. She currently serves as chapter secretary.
Why We Need A Scalable, Balanced Model for a Growing MD-DSA was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Building a Pipeline, Not a Fence.
Why We Need Term Limits and Real Democracy in Metro Detroit DSA
By: Jonathan Mukes

The Moment That Changed Everything
When I ran for my second term as co-chair of the Black and Brown Alliance (BBA), I expected there to be several contested seats on our chapter’s Steering Committee. I expected a multi-tendency debate about strategy or maybe some deliberation about political vision, and how we build working-class power in Detroit’s communities of color. Instead, I watched the old steering committee agree with themselves along caucus lines. The same officers switched seats around the room, claiming new positions. It wasn’t about who had the best vision but about who was next in an unspoken line.
That experience showed me something many of us have felt for too long. Our chapter has a leadership stagnation problem. It’s not an accident. It’s the obvious outcome of power concentrating in the hands of a semi-permanent cohort that treats leadership positions as entitlements rather than responsibilities. They are managers rather than activists. Functionaries rather than revolutionaries.
This was the reason why I wrote the term limits resolution–linked here–for the upcoming convention. It’s a simple, commonsense proposal. Every leader in the chapter gets two consecutive terms in any elected or appointed leadership position. Afterwards they are expected to have a one-year return to general membership before returning to leadership. There should be no exceptions. There should be no loopholes. It’s a simple rule that works to preserve leadership pipelines, prevent burnout, and ensure that strategies remain grounded in the needs of the entire membership.
But despite broad support from plenty of independents and major caucuses like MUG and Bread & Roses, Groundwork’s leadership has responded with an amendment that guts the resolution. They’ve done what entrenched power always does when challenged. They are reaching for procedural weapons to protect their position.
The Ghost of R22: A Pattern Emerges
This isn’t news. We’ve seen them do a very similar tactic on a national level, you just need to look back at Resolution 22.
R22 was a resolution at the 2025 DSA national convention that aimed at cementing DSA’s anti-Zionist stance. The Detroit Chapter historically has had an interesting history with Zionism and my experience with convention showed me that the specter hadn’t fully left the building. R22 was introduced to align our organization with principled anti-imperialism and the liberation of the Palestinian people. I was one of the only Metro-Detroit delegates who voted for it unamended. Who, with the Detroit delegates at our table, argued that our organization’s political and moral compass demanded we take a clear stance against occupation and genocide, regardless of the impact it may have on our electoral work.
The Groundwork delegates from Detroit didn’t just disagree with me. They actively worked to kill the anti-Zionist resolution by using the same procedural maneuvering they are using now against term limits. They spread misinformation, they gutted the resolution with an amendment, they did everything in their power to preserve the status quo. The amended text removes the expulsion clause for members who are currently affiliated with Zionist lobby groups, oppose the Palestinian movement, or have knowingly provided material support to Israel.
Why does this matter? What does this have to do with a local bylaws fight about term limits? Well, it reveals a pattern. Groundwork’s leadership treats internal democracy as an obstacle whenever the outcome doesn’t suit them. Whether it’s a national stance on Palestine or a local effort to build new leadership, their instinct is to entrench power, control the narrative, and dilute accountability.
The Case for Fresh Air
Term limits aren’t a new or radical idea. They’re a civic principle. Everyone understands that no one should hold elected office forever because when power concentrates, perspective narrows, and the leadership class becomes pretty far removed from the rank and file.
In Metro Detroit DSA, the concentration of leadership not only creates burnout but also creates high ceilings. New members join with energy and ideas just to find a top-down culture where decisions are made before general meetings behind closed doors. The lack of shared responsibility means that newer members have fewer opportunities to organize, which is detrimental to the project of building working class power within our chapter and the movement as a whole. This culture creates the conditions for the “freshmen retention challenge”. There exists a steep drop-off where almost half of these new members leave after a single year. When new members feel as though they don’t have a say within the organization, or when they sense that real power is held by an unshakeable few, they disengage. They stop coming to meetings. Their dues lapse. And our movement loses that new energy. This is why it is especially important to cycle out leadership within the chapter. We need to remove entrenched leadership to make room for members with different perspectives from independents and smaller caucuses.
Groundwork’s amendment tries to strip the spirit out of my resolution. It seems to me like they want to keep the door open for unelected appointments and consecutive terms. If we limit elected terms, leaders will actually have to train and trust new leaders rather than cycling the same faces through the same seats. Leadership development takes work and some would rather preserve their positions than do that work.
How Democracy Is Circumvented
Appointed positions should not be the norm. The general body or the appropriate working group should vote for positions that directly impact the work that is going on. Leadership should reflect the democratic will of the people. While appointed positions may be needed for highly specialized positions, an election should be tried first.
My resolution is an attempt at fixing that problem. It explicitly states that no member can hold multiple officer or appointed positions simultaneously, and that after two terms, members must return to general membership for a full year. Groundwork’s amendment removes the restriction for appointed positions, albeit in a confusing, contradictory way, saying that term limits will be applied to appointed positions but also that those positions are exempt.
This is about ensuring that leadership is “a responsibility shared by the many, not a privilege held by the few,” as the resolution states.
A Vision for What Comes Next
Imagine a chapter where every leader is actively building more socialist organizers, where Steering Committee meetings include new faces with new ideas. Imagine a chapter where we don’t have to guess who’s really running things and how, because the structure is clear and the rules apply equally to everyone. Imagine a socialist organization in Metro-Detroit that has a leadership body with representation across numerous socialist tendencies, caucuses, with a focus on leadership development and working together as comrades in a project to overthrow liberalism and to dismantle capitalism.
The culture that would emerge from these practices would not only build a stronger, more robust movement, but we would see new leaders that would expand the capacity of the chapter. making way for more projects, more political education, and more impact in our communities. The power we build will bring more people to DSA. I desperately want to build socialism in my lifetime, but if that doesn’t happen, I want to create as many leaders and movement builders so the project can be realized after I’m gone. That can only happen if institutional knowledge within our chapter is openly shared, if strategy and tactics are heavily deliberated and debated, and if responsibilities are shared across caucus lines.
I want to be clear with my framing, these types of pro-democracy reforms are not only good for our chapter, but for the entire socialist movement. Revolutionary ends will always match their revolutionary means. If the organization that is building this revolutionary movement doesn’t take its values of democracy seriously, the new society that emerges from the project will not either.
To the members who are close to Groundwork but believe in democratic norms, I am not asking you to reject your friends. I am just asking you to look at the resolution text. Look at how they amended R22 at the national convention. Compare that to how they are amending this resolution. If our bylaws don’t protect against leadership hoarding, we are leaving the door open for the same anti-democratic practices that we are actively fighting against outside. We are telling new members that their energy is welcome, but their leadership is not. We are telling the experienced ones that burnout is their only exit strategy.
Return to Membership, Return to Democracy
I didn’t write this resolution because I have a personal grievance against any individual. I wrote it because I believe in what this chapter could become. I’ve seen the energy at BBA events. I’ve seen the passion at our general meetings. I’ve talked to newer members who are hungry to contribute but don’t know how to break through.
The term limits resolution is our chance to tell those members there is a path. Your turn is coming. We are building something that will outlast any of us.
We need a leadership pipeline, not a fence. We need a chapter where your second term is about training someone else and building new leaders, not about securing your seat. We need a return to membership, not as a punishment, but as a promise that leadership is a cycle, not a permanent state.
Vote for the original, unamended resolution. Vote to build a chapter where democracy isn’t just something we preach, but something we practice.
Jonathan Mukes is Co-Chair of the Black and Brown Alliance (BBA) and a member of the Democracy Coalition — a cross-caucus group of MUG, Bread & Roses, and independents working for transparency and democratic revival in Metro Detroit DSA.
Building a Pipeline, Not a Fence. was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Open Debate Is Necessary For Developing Socialist Politics & Practice
By: Peter Landon

For nearly ten years, DSA has prided itself on being a “big tent.” What is meant by that shorthand? That the organization we share is filled with comrades who have different views of socialism and more importantly, the practices or paths of how to achieve it. These differences tend to be expressed through a range of caucuses asserting their politics in the day to day life of chapters and the national organization. They are most evident in the run up to, and deliberations of, our national conventions.
This holds true for our Detroit chapter and our annual conventions. But at the chapter level, and even nationally, you don’t need to be in a caucus to have a set of politics that is far different than many of your DSA comrades. Most, even the majority of DSA members, are not in caucuses — and obviously we all have our individual politics to express and organize around. Generally we join DSA because we want to make our politics impactful — and find others to make a collective difference.
Differences have existed in the socialist movement for over 150 years. Over our history, these perspectives have helped refine our paths to socialism but they’ve also created significant divides in our movement that have been consequential. There is much to learn from these outcomes. One lesson is that differences and debate are inevitable. How do we learn from this very much lived fact, and grow our organization and movement by addressing it?
In this spirit, I’ve submitted R 13–26.
AsasIt’s an attempt to openly address the differences that exist in DSA and deepen our shared knowledge of the various perspectives of socialism and the range of views for the steps necessary to get there.
The Reform & Revolution caucus produced the book, “A Users Guide to DSA” prior to the 2025 national DSA convention. It contains articles by over 30 DSA comrades representing a range of views from various caucuses on key differences within DSA. The debates are:
- How to Fight Trump and Defend Working-Class and Oppressed People
- Electoral Strategy and the Democratic Party
- Labor Organizing and the Role of Socialists in the Workers Movement
- How to Change the World?
- What is Socialist Internationalism?
There’s also a very useful Introduction and a set of essays addressing “What is DSA?”
The goal is that these debates would give our Detroit membership a greater sense of the politics — and differences — competing to orient DSA. Ideally it deepens our collective understanding of our “big tent” socialist politics, the differences of emphasis, and puts the membership in a far more informed position to determine the possible directions for our organization — both in Detroit and nationally. The ways we sort through these debates, what conclusions we come to both individually and collectively, matters when it comes to how we engage the world. They can help hone our day to day politics and move the organization forward.
Should the resolution pass, the political education committee would be charged with organizing five debate sessions at the general membership meetings over the course of 2026–27 in the run up to the next national DSA convention in the summer of 2027. Planning these sessions would be based on the “DSA Users Guide” and could be supplemented as necessary. Members of the various caucuses, as well as non-caucused independents, would be encouraged to get involved in the preparations. The political education committee would coordinate the efforts.
Peter is a retired Teamster living in SW Detroit and a member of the Bread & Roses caucus.
Open Debate Is Necessary For Developing Socialist Politics & Practice was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
For Leadership Development, Reasonable Term Limits, and Institutional Memory
By: Phil B., Co-chair of MD-DSA
The base proposal mandates a system where every leader of the chapter would be barred from any other leadership position for a full year every two years. This would be undemocratic and catastrophic for leadership growth.
My amendment to the base proposal seeks to improve the base resolution, R14–26. I urge members to vote yes on the amendment, and to vote no on the base if unamended.
Every single member of our steering committee is elected or re-elected on an annual basis. If members decide a specific member is no longer who they want to serve, they can and should vote that person out.
Further year-to-year leadership continuity is vital for the health of our chapter. Serving on the steering committee is a serious voluntary time commitment which greatly limits the chapter’s pool of viable candidates and it also carries a significant learning curve in a society where most people have never even participated in a truly democratic organization, let alone led one with 1,300+ members. Many current or former Steering Committee members can tell you that you don’t really begin to master the role until after 2 years. This is especially true for highly specialized roles like Treasurer. Do you want the person managing the chapter’s finances and compliance with applicable federal law to turnover and be barred from leadership positions every 2 years?
The original bylaws amendment that this proposal seeks to amend bars any member from serving in any leadership position for more than two consecutive terms, and then bars them from participating in any other leadership position for a full year. For example, our chapter comms steward, tech steward, newspaper editors, etc. would get 2 6-month terms and then under the proposed base resolution would be barred from any other leadership position for a year. This defeats the whole purpose of the steward structure, which is to develop members into other leadership roles.
Overall, the base proposal attempts to solve an organizing and leadership development problem through writing strict rules, which almost never works. Leaders aren’t developed through legislation. If passed unamended, the base proposal would gut the collective capacity of our organization and erase institutional memory every two years. It would rob members of the ability to elect popular and effective leaders. Instead of building stronger structures for leadership development, it would cause constant turnover more akin to a shitty workplace than an effective socialist organization.
The amendment to the original proposal ensures that no single member can serve in a single leadership position for more than three terms — and allows members to continue serving as a leader in a different role after their term is up. The amendment balances the need for term limits with the need for continuity in our organization. It further expands on the base proposals sections on leadership development and creates a structure for connecting and training leaders, together, across silos.
Vote YES on the amendment to the base proposal for reasonable term limits, to preserve our organizational memory, and to expand our commitment to leadership development. Vote NO on the base if unamended.
HOW THIS AFFECTS OUR CHAPTER
- Prevents the organizational whiplash and disruption of completely reshuffling chapter leadership every two years;
- Allows effective, popular leaders with the required experience to continue leading our growing chapter through an urgent and fluid political moment if the membership duly elects them;
- Allows for a mix of experienced and new leaders on steering committee, helping new members learn alongside seasoned leaders vs entirely learning on the fly with an all new group
BOTTOM LINE
If the membership votes to re-elect a leader year after year, who are we to say no? This amendment to another bylaws amendment ensures new leaders have a chance to step up with rotating positions every three terms while ensuring leadership continuity for organizational stability.
For Leadership Development, Reasonable Term Limits, and Institutional Memory was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Electoral Campaigns and You: Why the Electoral Consensus Resolution
By: Aaron B.

In this last year, our electoral program has grown leaps and bounds. I remember joining the chapter and thinking that backing a candidate for Detroit City Council was a pipe dream. I’ve never been so happy to be so wrong.
Metro Detroit DSA has the power to change the region and we should act like it. But to build off our most recent win we have to think bigger and think at scale. This means more leaders and more development. That is why the resolution this year calls out being more involved in presenting training to the chapter. There are also opportunities to teach our chapter about why we have taken the moves we have, and what informs our future decisions. Only through learning what a winning campaign takes, will we be able to collectively decide on the future of our chapter’s electoral program.
Campaigns are Educational
In section 3, I called out the necessity of training within the committee on what it takes to run a successful campaign. As socialists, it’s not enough to be well versed in theory. It is also not enough to be trained only in the running of campaigns. A socialist organizer must be a master of all– knowledgeable in history, theory, and a material understanding of what wins a campaign.
To facilitate this, the electoral committee will train more organizers on how to win. There is no better training than taking the skills you learn and putting them into action. That is why we have specifically called out in our resolution an effort to be more intentional in training members who get involved with our campaigns, giving them the skills they need to succeed and help us in our future deliberative decisions.
Endorsement in the Modern Era
A repeated piece of feedback from candidates who have filled out or looked at our endorsement questionnaire is that the questionnaire is outdated, rigid, and at times repetitive . Electoral proposed an initiative to explore updating our questionnaire, by creating a modular form that can emphasize different issues as they come up.
For example last year, I would have wanted our endorsement questionnaire to place a greater emphasis on Palestine. This year, I would have it focus on ICE (to be clear neither of these are declarations of what Electoral will do, but merely examples of how a more modular questionnaire can tackle more upfront issues and checking whether a candidate is capable of meeting the political moment).
Another part of the endorsement process this past year was the difficulty of parsing what parts are optional and what the exact steps are that must be taken. Electoral will propose an endorsement process to the general membership that makes it clear to all involved what endorsement looks like.
Winning Matters
In the resolution there are two bullet points that should be called out:
- While our chapter and larger organization has limited resources and capacity — capacity is built by running external and publicly facing campaigns. Nonetheless, we still must be strategic in our assessments of what races and offices are worthwhile to run in and hold.
- Losing races has a demobilizing affect on the chapter and limits the radical demands we can make;
Losses can be instructive and can be learned from — no matter whether you win or lose, each campaign should inform future campaigns. But that does not mean we should seek losses out. Every move MDDSA makes should be a swing that is a demonstration of power — moves that show the working class in the region that Metro Detroit DSA is an organization worth joining, that furthers the goal of building a party, and on the opposite end, shows our opponents that we should not be crossed so carelessly.
When we lose, we are not achieving those objectives. Winning can accelerate our other areas of organizing. The ability to win is a threat to the establishment, and losing tells them that we are a group that can easily be ignored and brushed aside.
Losing races makes people think that democracy does not work and demobilizes the working class in our region. After all, most people’s conception of democracy starts in our government. As fundamentally flawed as our system is, the ballot box is still one of the few places people have to voice their grievances collectively. Losing incorrectly reinforces to people that they do not have power in their lives to change their own conditions. It’s hard to pitch democracy to people who are so disillusioned — the very first political act that most people make is voting, these people can potentially be unreachable when they perceive democracy failing them so greatly.
Losing is also incredibly demobilizing in the chapter — I joined the chapter after The Detroit For All campaign in 2021, where we ran Lyra Spencer for Police Board of Commissioners and Denzel McCampbell for City Clerk. We lost both of those races and we did not endorse any new electeds until 2023–2024, where we endorsed Layla Taha for State Representative. The loss of these races had a perceptible negative effect on our chapter’s morale. People lost hope in our political project. I repeatedly heard how disappointed people felt about Detroit For All, and it was no surprise we did not endorse any new candidates until late 2023.
The fear is when we lose, we don’t just keep losing. We stop trying altogether. Winning begets winning.
Vote Yes on R9–26, linked here.
Electoral Campaigns and You: Why the Electoral Consensus Resolution was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Let the Members Lead
By Collin P.

Read my bylaws amendment R7 here. A bylaws amendment that puts the direction of the chapter back in the hands of the rank and file members. Let me tell you why that’s important.
Why did you join DSA? I joined DSA in the summer of 2021, after feeling the crushing weight of capitalism right out of college. The job market sucked, and I had just spent a lot of time looking for work. I had grown up in trailer parks across multiple counties and in multiple townships throughout rural Michigan. But no matter where I went, the story was the same — businesses and landlords taking advantage of working class people . I knew there had to be something different, but didn’t know where to look.
If you’re like me, you joined DSA because we don’t get to experience democratic control anywhere in our lives. We want to feel like our thoughts and ideas are being heard. We want to feel like we have some say in the movement and direction of this organization. But honestly, how many of you are actually involved in the big decisions? How many of you know what things are being voted on in our leadership bodies’ meetings? It’s hard to keep up to date. There are a million meetings; we can’t be everywhere at once. But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t still be involved in democracy.
We say we are a member-led, member-run, member-funded organization. That the ideas and direction of this chapter should come from us. We elect a leadership body, the Steering Committee (SC), which we want to take our concerns, our tactics, our thoughts, and exemplify them to the highest order. An organization like DSA works best when the membership and leadership are working together toward a shared goal. In its worst case, leadership is divorced from the wants and needs of a growing organization, standing in the way of the democratic will of the membership. When an organization devolves to the members simply following the direction of the leadership, we have a stagnant organization that will not build the skills, base, or power to be able to change this country. It becomes a top-down mobilizing organization similar to the Democrats.
In the manual Democracy Is Power, Martha Gruelle and Mike Parker write: “Top-down mobilizing tends to be inflexible, to say, ‘Here are the steps. Follow them.’ … Members are often enthusiastic when first invited to get involved in [mobilizing-type] actions. But they may have their own ideas about effective tactics or timing. If they’re not allowed some say in the new actions, they’ll eventually vote with their feet. If enough members are turned off this way, the actions fail. In the long term, top-down mobilizing does not develop new leaders. Nor is it the best way to get members to volunteer to organize new workplaces; how inspired can you be about your union if you have no say in it yourself?” We could say the same about DSA.
The Current Balance
At present we have a chapter that is heavily top-down mobilized. The SC acts as though they have final say. Their meeting minutes do not accurately reflect what is said or clarify how SC members voted. The SC endorses an action and expects you to participate. They set a new rule and expect you to follow it without question.
We see this no more clearly than at the recent March General Meeting (GM). The war with Iran had just started and some comrades informed leaders that they wanted to move to discuss it at the GM. Our leadership tried to discourage this by saying they would rule the motion out of order because all items for the GM agenda needed to be submitted 10 days in advance. The war had just started 8 days prior.When we did manage to deliberate and vote on adding Iran to the agenda, didn’t it feel great? Keeping our chapter up to date with things that were happening? Educating new and veteran members, getting to know your comrades and their thoughts, building that sense of camaraderie? Our general meetings should be about deliberative discussion, education, and decisive voting of direction. Not a laundry list of announcements and updates.
So how do we return GMs to this deliberative body? One piece of it is returning democratic control to us. We should be discussing and debating the decisions made by our leadership body. We should be deciding whether or not we like the direction they are trying to steer us. We should counter anything we as a body do not like, refine what we do, and ratify anything we agree with.
Because this is our chapter; we should act like it.
An Informed Deliberative Body
Our chapter already has this specified in our bylaws. I wrote my bylaws amendment as a way to return us to the way this organization was supposed to be run. Our bylaws specify in Article V Section 2:
“Section 2 Function, Powers and Duties.
The Steering Committee is the executive body of MDDSA. All actions taken by the Steering Committee are subject to ratification or amendment by the membership at the next membership meeting at which quorum is reached, or at the membership convention if it constitutes the next membership meeting. The Steering Committee administers the affairs of MDDSA and oversees the implementation of the decisions of the membership convention and membership meetings.”
That’s right; all their decisions are subject to our final say. We already have this power, so I ask that we use it. I am asking that at each GM, you and I together decide what we want the future of this chapter to be. This is not unique to DSA. When a union negotiation team accepts a deal at the bargaining table, that’s not where the negotiation ends. The negotiation team and leadership then must go to the members and ask for their approval, because it affects them. Because it is their contract, their union.
But how will we know whether or not we agree with what the SC has decided? It comes from being informed. If you look at past SC meeting minutes, they have not been representative of what has actually happened. They leave out comments from chairs threatening committees or branches autonomy. They leave out how each SC member has voted(They started adding who voted how after I submitted this bylaws amendment). It is quite hard to find SC minutes without looking through the Slack announcements channel, which deletes messages older than 90 days. My bylaws amendment makes sure that those in the room at our biggest meeting of the month are informed on what the leadership body of this chapter is doing, not just those who have time to attend the SC meetings.
We have this power; now let’s use it. My bylaws amendment requires the SC to release a report of every decision made showing how each member voted. This is not currently required and the voting record was only made public after I submitted the bylaws amendment. Let’s make it the standard.
This report will be released 72 hours prior to the General Meeting, to allow members to read it ahead of time. Then, at the GM, any member may make a motion to approve, amend, or overturn any and all decisions. This can be a quick vote to ratify all decisions, barely taking more than a few minutes. But on the issues where we do disagree, the GM can return to its original purpose of being a deliberative body where we discuss the direction of our chapter.
A Better Future Is Possible
I didn’t write my bylaws amendment to create bureaucracy, or slow anything down, or overturn the decisions of anyone. I made this bylaws amendment because I believe in you. I believe in this organization. I want to hear your thoughts, ideas, tactics, and disagreements. I believe we can decide together what is right for us and our chapter. This mechanism will help to allow issues to be voiced andto allow these issues to be discussed openly.
I made a deal with myself that I wasn’t going to bring this bylaws amendment forward unless I could find new members who thought this was a good idea. During these conversations with new members I consistently got one response, “Why isn’t this already a thing? This is why I joined DSA. I want to be involved.” Those members are what led this bylaws amendment to be in front of you. Thank you to those comrades. Just like I put my own opinions aside and wanted to hear from the members what they thought, so too should the leadership of this organization.
For us to actually fight the powers of capital and become the organization that all of us wanted to join, we must practice what we say we want our society to be. We say a better future is possible — then let’s start here in Metro Detroit DSA by listening to our members. An organization where leadership means only being the people at the front of the room will fail to make this change.
Let’s let the members lead.
Vote YES on R7
Collin P. is a member of the Detroit Democracy Coalition, a new self-organized, cross-tendency formation
Let the Members Lead was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.