Welcome to the DSA Feed
This is a feed aggregator that collects news and updates from DSA chapters, national working groups and committees, and our publications all in one convenient place. Updated every day at 8AM, 12PM, 4PM, and 8AM UTC.
Your National Political Committee newsletter — Socialism Beats Fascism
Enjoy your February 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, sign up for know your rights training, help melt ICE, join political education classes, 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 — DSA’s Growth Means Hope in Dark Times
- Help Elect Socialist Candidates! Phonebanks Starting Sunday 2/22
- Melt ICE Off Our Streets — Give Today!
- Sign Up for Sunday 2/22 Know Your Rights Training
- Mutual Aid Working Group Elections — Nominations Until Saturday 2/14
- Our Religious Socialism Work Group is Growing! Events Sunday 2/15, Thursday 2/19, and Thursday 2/26
- En Español: Housing Justice Commission Weekly Language Exchange Tuesday 2/17
- Political Education Trainings Thursday 2/19 and Thursday 3/12 — Sign Up Today!
- AfroSoc is BACK in Action! BIPOC Members, Join Our February Meeting Sunday 2/22
- Help Support DSA — Join Growth and Development Committee Phonebanks Starting Sunday 2/22
- Do You Have Fundraising Experience? Apply for DSA’s National Fundraising Committee!
- DSA is Hiring! Application Deadlines Starting Sunday 2/15
- Help Build Strong Chapters! Apply for the Locals First Implementation Committee
- DSA Fund is Hiring a Program Lead!
From the National Political Committee — DSA’s Growth Means Hope in Dark Times
Dear Comrades,
“The issue is Socialism vs. Capitalism. I am for Socialism because I am for humanity. We have been cursed with the reign of gold long enough. Money constitutes no proper basis of civilization. The time has come to regenerate society — we are on the eve of a universal change.” — Eugene V. Debs, 1897
Great news: DSA is now over 100,000 members strong! This milestone is many years in the making, and was borne out of the tireless work of countless members to bring socialism from the margins to the mainstream since DSA formed in 1982. We encourage you to take a moment and reflect on the ways that your work has helped build us into the largest socialist organization in the USA since Eugene V. Debs’s time over a century ago, when the Socialist Party in the US at its height in 1912 counted 118,000 dues-paying members.
The capitalist class suppressed that era of burgeoning socialism with decades of Red Scare repression and propaganda — but not completely. Even past the worst years of McCarthyism and the Cold War, and then through the supposed “end of history” era of neoliberalism, many brave socialist organizers kept the flame alive throughout the 20th century. Socialists have always been organizing to build the power of labor unions and expand rights for all workers, and helped form the backbone of movements for racial justice, women’s liberation, queer liberation, against war and militarism, and for environmental protection in the United States.
Wherever people were organizing for a better, more democratic, and more just future for all working people, socialists like us were holding fast. And now, generations later, democratic socialism is going mainstream.
So many people are joining DSA today because we are a fully member-led and member-funded mass organization. Over 220 local chapters are growing because we represent a real alternative to the corporate oligarchy of our political system. We’re responding powerfully to the current political situation — channeling rage and fear over the Trump administration’s violent policies which scapegoat immigrants, trans folks, and marginalized people while making everyday life more precarious for the broader working class; and also organizing for democratic socialist victories, like our member Zohran Mamdani’s election to mayor of the wealthiest city in the world.
Zohran’s election in New York City brought a surge of new members to DSA because he represents reasons for active hope through the darkness of our time, showing how far our movement has come through the past decade. He is a product of independent grassroots organizing where strong DSA chapters, alongside labor unions and working class community organizations, work more and more like a party of our own. DSA members are winning life-changing policies for millions of people across the United States, expanding affordability and economic security for all, and showing how socialism is what can beat fascism.
All of this has effects everywhere, not just in NYC. Some of our fastest-growing chapters are in places you might not expect, like Corpus Christi, Birmingham, Southern Idaho, Middle Georgia, and Eastern Kentucky. Folks are fed up across the country and finding ways to organize for socialism and against fascism wherever they live. Whether you were inspired by high-profile campaigns like Zohran’s or were organized at the grassroots level at local actions like union picket lines or Abolish ICE rallies, being part of a democratically run mass movement like DSA means we take back a lot of the power that capitalism has taken from us.
The weight of over a century of struggle is on our shoulders, but we stand on the shoulders of giants. Together, we can and will rise to this task. Take a moment to embrace this history, and then remember what Debs would certainly call us to do: keep going. We can never take popularity for granted. Now is not the time to rest. It’s the time to keep organizing to turn momentum into even bigger growth and more powerful wins against the dictatorship of capital that we’re all living under, and toward true democracy for all of us. Ask yourself what steps you can take today to build the socialist future of tomorrow – and keep asking others to join in! 99,999 of your comrades (and counting!) are right there with you to do the same.
¡La Lucha Sigue, Hasta La Victoria!
Megan Romer and Ashik Siddique
DSA National Co-Chairs
Help Elect Socialist Candidates! Phonebanks Starting Sunday 2/22
Are you ready to help raise money for our socialist candidates across the country? Join DSA’s National Electoral Commission to call other DSA members to help raise money for our socialist campaigns. Phonebanks start Sunday 2/22, and will be on Sundays 5pm ET/4pm CT/3pm MT/2pm PT.
Right now, we have five DSA member candidates with our national endorsement on our slate. Making calls is easy! Talk to members like you to raise money for:
- Adam Bojak, Buffalo DSA, New York’s State Assembly
- Tammy Carpenter, Portland DSA, Oregon’s State House of Representatives
- Bobby Nichols, Phoenix DSA, City Council in Tempe, Arizona
- Andrew Hariston, Austin DSA, Travis County Justice of the Peace
- Robert LeVertis Bell, Louisville DSA, Kentucky State Legislature
Melt ICE Off Our Streets — Give Today!
DSA members are leading the fight against the deportation regime in cities and towns across the country. So far, DSA members have raised over $25,000 to build our chapters’ responses to ICE terror. This money goes where it’s most needed, including multilingual know-your-rights literature, whistles, hand warmers, trainings, and more for the communities we defend. Even $25 dollars can help our chapters meet the moment and lead the movement to victory over fascism. Give today!
Sign Up for Sunday 2/22 Know Your Rights Training
Join the Trump Admin Response Committee on 2/22 at 2pm ET/1pm CT/12pm MT/11am PT for a Know Your Rights Training. Come hear from legal experts from the NYC-DSA Immigrant Justice Working Group about how to keep yourself and your neighbors safe from ICE.
Mutual Aid Working Group Elections — Nominations Until Saturday 2/14
Mutual Aid Working Group (MAWG) Steering Committee 2026 elections are open now, with nominations open until Saturday 2/14. Voting will be open for all MAWG members Sunday 2/15-Sunday 2/21.
The Steering Committee (SC) consists of 7-9 members including two co-chairs. SC members are expected to run trainings and virtual events, host quarterly all-member meetings, and mentor chapters. If you are interested or have questions, reach out to mutualaid@dsacommittees.org.
Our Religious Socialism Work Group is Growing! Events Sunday 2/15, Thursday 2/19, and Thursday 2/26
Our DSA Religion and Socialism Working Group brings together DSA members of all faiths to support each other, bring socialist ideas to our own faith communities, and work to combat white Christian nationalism. Join our monthly meetup Thursday 2/19 at 8:30pm ET/7:30pm CT/6:30pm MT/5:30pm PT to find out more.
Two of our sub-groups are having events this month as well! The Democratic Socialist Episcopal Association is re-launching. People of all faith backgrounds are welcome to join us in our organizing, mutual aid, and common worship. We conduct all of our work and services via our Discord server here. Join us for our weekly virtual Compline prayer services every Sunday. The next one will be Sunday 2/15. Standing regular meetings will begin Wednesday, 2/18 and be held every other week.
And help build the DSA Buddhist Circle! Buddhists of all traditions, Dharma practitioners, and Mindfulness practitioners are invited to our planning and visioning meeting Thursday 2/26 at 7pm ET/6pm CT/5pm MT/4pm PT. Feel free to review these notes before the meeting.
En Español: Housing Justice Commission Weekly Language Exchange Tuesday 2/17
Practica tu español con la Comisión para Justicia de Vivienda (CJV)!
Aprendiste español en el colegio o en el trabajo y quieres mejorar? Unete los martes a las 17:00 PST / 19:00 MEX/CST / 20:00 COL/EST / 22:00 / ARG para practicar con la CJV. Te pondremos en un cuarto de Zoom con otra persona para que practiquen juntos. Si quieres también tenemos guiones si necesitas ayuda!
Political Education Trainings Thursday 2/19 and Thursday 3/12 — Sign Up Today!
DSA’s National Political Education Committee (NPEC) welcomes all DSA members to our upcoming trainings:
- Socialist Archiving 201: Digital Deep Dive. Thursday 2/19 at 8pm ET/7pm CT/6pm MT/5pm PT
- Running a Socialist Night School. Thursday 3/12 at 8pm ET/7pm CT/6pm MT/5pm PT
And did you know? NPEC has a weekly podcast, Class! Subscribe to find out what DSA members all over the country are thinking and doing, and why, every Monday.
AfroSoc is BACK in Action! BIPOC Members, Join Our February General Body Meeting Sunday 2/22
AfroSoc, DSA’s Afrosocialists and Socialists of Color Caucus, is back! Join our February General Meeting Sunday 2/22 at 8pm ET/7pm CT/6pm MT/5pm PT for announcements, a chapter spotlight on ATL AFROSOC, a walkthrough of the Start a Local Chapter Packet, and general discussion on WG/committee proposals. All BIPOC, good-standing DSA members are welcomed!
Working Group (WG) proposals are still being accepted, and bylaw changes are now open for submission for March discussion. You can review our current bylaws and submit resolutions here. Debate, voting, and collective decision-making will close out the February meeting.
Help Support DSA — Join Growth and Development Committee Phonebanks Starting Sunday 2/22
Join one of our upcoming Growth and Development phonebanks!
- Solidarity Dues Phonebank Sunday 2/22 at 5pm ET/4pm CT/3pm MT/2pm PT
- Recommitment Phonebank Wednesday 3/4 at 7pm ET/6pm CT/5pm MT/4pm PT
Trainings will be provided at the beginning of each call.
Do You Have Fundraising Experience? Apply for DSA’s National Fundraising Committee!
DSA’s National Fundraising Committee is seeking members with fundraising experience. The application form is here. The Fundraising Committee supports the coordination of national fundraising efforts and serves as an advisory body for DSA’s fundraising practices and strategy. We’ll also focus on leading chapter fundraising trainings and providing support to members taking on this work locally. Committee members spend at least 4-6 hours a month carrying out committee duties.
With ambitious plans and a long road ahead, we must sustain ourselves, and that means coordinated and strategic fundraising. As a socialist organization engaged in class struggle, we must fund our own work!
DSA is Hiring! Application Deadlines Starting Sunday 2/15
DSA is hiring for the following four positions:
- Chapter Development Coordinator, application deadline Sunday 2/15
- Regional Organizer (Northeast), application deadline Sunday 2/22
- Regional Organizer (South), application deadline Sunday Sunday 2/22
- Data and Technology Director, application deadline March 3/1
You can find details, including job description and application links, on our Careers page here.
And congratulations to Kaitlin, our new Lead Regional Organizer! Her years as DSA’s Regional Organizer for the South will serve her well in her new role.
Help Build Strong Chapters! Apply for the Locals First Implementation Committee
Last month, the NPC voted to allocate $850k in Chapter Development Grants that local chapters can apply for to fund a broad range of activities, including campaign work, equity and administrative activities, and events. As part of the implementation, we are forming a dedicated team under the Growth and Development Committee (GDC) to oversee the distribution of these grants.
If you’re excited about building strong, well-resourced chapters, you can apply to join the GDC through this form. Indicate “Matching Funds/Chapter Grants” as your area of interest!
DSA Fund is Hiring a Program Lead!
The Democratic Socialists of America Fund (DSA Fund) is seeking a full-time program lead to cultivate the How We Win network of 250+ democratic socialist elected officials, staff and DSA chapters across the country.
DSA Fund is the 501(c)3 political education sister organization to the Democratic Socialists of America, investing in projects that help build a democratic socialist future. The Program Lead position can be based anywhere in the US. Please see the job description for more information. Applications are due by Thursday 2/26.
The post Your National Political Committee newsletter — Socialism Beats Fascism appeared first on Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).
Never Again: Revisiting the Tragedy of Mass Detention in Utah

Without reservation, the Salt Lake Democratic Socialists of America (SL DSA) firmly oppose any and all immigration detention within Utah. We reject the Federal Government’s racist, nativist, and exploitative approach to immigration policy, and are appalled at the intentional and cruel humanitarian crisis it has created. Recent leaks uncovering plans for an immigration detention facility in Utah threaten to continue the state’s ugly history of participation in large scale, racially-targeted internment. These past and present attempts to suppress immigrant communities are not only an affront to the fundamental notion of intrinsic human dignity, but also a cudgel wielded against the interests of the working class. They obscure the identities of the true architects of our exploitation, redirecting responsibility for our justified feelings of bitterness and discontentment away from oppressive regimes and economies and onto the precarious and undocumented; those who are, in fact, our allies.
Over the past several months, internal ICE documents have emerged that outline a plan utilizing US military resources to establish “facilities to house as many as 10,000 people each” in several locations across the country, including Salt Lake City. After the failure of Florida’s taxpayer funded “Alligator Alcatraz” which was shuttered after violating detainee rights, disregarding local government and tribal rights, and dismissing environmental concerns, one would think that Utah’s leaders would express more hesitation to ride shotgun on this wild spectacle of waste and abuse. Sadly, it is not so: Utah’s state-level and congressional leadership, in submissive fealty to Trump’s agenda, refused to comment, much less openly oppose the effort. With new leaks indicating a warehouse near Salt Lake City International Airport as the intended location, there has been mixed response from local officials. The only official acknowledgement from Salt Lake City has been a rather passive reminder from Mayor Erin Mendenhall that a detention center at the location would run afoul of local zoning ordinances; on the other hand, Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson admirably condemned the plan and committed the county to fighting it “using every available tool.” In the face of such inconsistent leadership, we salute the people of Utah that showed up in the early hours of January 13th to make their opposition perfectly clear. While the owners of the rumored detention center site ultimately denied their intent to sell or lease to ICE, it is abundantly clear that ICE’s continue working to build the infrastructure necessary to execute their authoritarian directive. Considering today’s fresh atrocities and with historical perspective, SL DSA’s stance is rooted in one critical message: never again.
“Never again:” a much-needed refrain which calls us to remember Utah’s record of hosting racial concentration camps within its borders. In 1942, Franklin Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, directing the Secretary of War to “prescribe military areas […] from which any or all persons may be excluded” and provide for them “other accommodation as may be necessary.” EO 9102 established the War Relocation Authority, and assigned it the task of “[effectuating] a program for the removal…of the persons or classes of persons designated under [EO 9066], and for their relocation.” In the text of these two executive orders, which speciously argued for the need to protect against foreign espionage and sabotage, Roosevelt identifies a single justification: national security.
Two of the sites that provided for that relocation program, which in total detained approximately 120,000 people of Japanese descent, were the Topaz War Relocation Center in the desert west of Delta, Utah, and the Dalton Wells Isolation Center, a disciplinary camp outside Moab. From 1942 to 1945, 11,000 people were incarcerated in the Topaz camp, making it the fifth largest city in Utah over its three years of operation. Prisoners were given “loyalty questionnaires,” with those not deemed sufficiently loyal sent to more restrictive isolation facilities like Dalton Wells. A unique stain on state history, these concentration camps were the result of a government empowering itself to decide whose rights were sacred, and whose were forfeit.
The stage is set for another monumental crime of a scale that promises to shock Utahns to our core; and in this crime, we will be complicit. We cannot say we did not see it coming.
Now, these actions are justified with the same warlike rhetoric and appeal to the maintenance of national security. Equating immigration to a “foreign invasion” and making use of military largesse, ICE and the US military are coordinating on a facility in Utah that could have a capacity nearly the size of Topaz. This facility could have up to 10,000 beds, with detainees potentially housed in weather-vulnerable soft-sided tents. We are now living through a moment that demonstrates that although history doesn’t repeat, it does rhyme: the Trump regime engages in racial profiling, deports citizens and legal residents, targets and sanctions those critical of the regime, and offers excuses and justifications for its most violent excesses. The stage is set for another monumental crime of a scale that promises to shock Utahns to our core; and in this crime, we will be complicit. We cannot say we did not see it coming.
SL DSA’s stance is one that increasingly resonates with the people of Utah as we face a hostile government intent on stripping away our rights. We demand: no detention centers in Utah, no cooperation with ICE, and full solidarity with our immigrant community. We reject any false distinction between “good” and “bad” immigrants, “legal” and “illegal” immigrants, and immigrating the “right way” and the “wrong way.” These distinctions are nothing more than the flimsy judgements of an immoral power structure with no respect for our rights, protections, or human worth. Finally, we reject the increasingly brazen lies of the Trump administration, as it claims “If you are here legally and contributing, you have nothing to fear.” In fact, cases of arrest based on ICE’s refusal to accept documentation, employment records, payment of taxes, or even while following the official immigration process all fall apart under the barest scrutiny. There is no logic, no rule of law, and no respect for human beings in ICE’s “enforcement” activities.
In our ongoing work, our goal is to mobilize, organize, and educate the working class, ultimately engendering and reinforcing solidarity within it. This objective necessarily must include working class immigrants. If a portion of the working class is deemed unworthy of protection, the rights of the working class as a whole cannot be assured.
Words on a page, however, are not enough. As wages are depressed, as landlords are permitted to use immigration status to threaten tenants, as bosses and managers benefit from workers’ stolen labor, the consequences of this authoritarian regime will affect us all. This regime and the capitalist economic structure that gave birth to it requires systemic exploitation in order to sustain themselves. At its best, it must demand silence; at its worst, it requires complicity and total obedience. In order to justify this system and its cruel repercussions, we are invited to despise and ostracize our fellow human beings. As socialists, we refuse. We invite you to join us in that refusal, and struggle with us to build a better world that is inclusive of us all.
ETA: Credit where credit is due to Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall, who in her 2026 State of the City address, elaborated on her firm opposition to ICE operations in the city.
No, there is no terrible thing happening coming for you in some distant future. But know that a terrible thing is happening to you now. You are being asked to kill off a part of you that would otherwise scream in opposition to injustice. You are being asked to dismantle the machinery of a functioning conscience. Who cares if diplomatic expediency prefers you shrug away the sight of dismembered children? Who cares if great distance from the bloodstained middle allows obliviousness? Forget pity. Forget even the dead, if you must. But at least fight against the theft of your soul.”
― Omar El Akkad, One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This
The post Never Again: Revisiting the Tragedy of Mass Detention in Utah first appeared on Salt Lake DSA.
From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor: A Collective History of the International Socialists

By: Steve Early
This was originally published by California DSA on January 26, 2026.
DSA’s “rank-and-file strategy” has 60s roots at UC Berkeley
“The lessons of the International Socialists can help point us in the right direction by sharing what has worked and what has failed in past decades” —Andrew Stone Higgins
Some DSA members are still pondering how they should relate, personally and collectively, to the labor movement. Should they try to become agents of workplace change while serving on the staff of local, regional, or national unions? Or should they organize “on the shop-floor”—in non-union shops or as a unionized teacher, nurse, or social worker? And then, later on, seek elected, rather than appointed, union leadership roles?
A few years ago, the DSA convention debated this latter strategy and then narrowly passed a resolution favoring the rank-and-file route. Some members locally have joined the Rank-and-File Project which supports this approach “to fighting for a better world from the bottom up.”
Fifty years ago, Sixties leftists pondered the same options before launching their own reform efforts, within the labor bureaucracy or as challengers to it. Some had the foresight to transition from campus and community organizing to union activism in healthcare, education, and social work where college degrees were helpful and job security good.
Other former student radicals—under the (not-always-helpful) guidance of multiple left-wing formations—opted to become blue-collar workers in trucking and telecom, mid-west auto plants and steel mills, and West Virginia coal mines in the 1970s. Unfortunately, in the decade that followed, de-regulation, de-industrialization, and global capitalist restructuring produced enormous job losses and industrial contraction.
Radicals who made a “turn toward industry” often lost union footholds they had struggled for years to gain. But thankfully, many ended up back on the academic track, retooling as teachers, lawyers or pro-labor college professors. Others became community organizers, public sector union activists, labor educators or staffers, and, in some cases, even entered the business world.
Socialism from Below
Andrew Stone Higgins’ history of the International Socialists (IS), From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor: A Collective History of the International Socialists, brings together individual oral histories or contributor-written chapters by 26 former members of that organization. The IS was founded in 1969 by veterans of the Free Speech Movement (FSM) at Berkeley and other hotbeds of Sixties’ activism. FSM alums featured in the book include the late Mike Parker, an East Bay DSA member whose chapter on “The Student Movement and Beyond” contains good advice for campus radicals today.
Like organizational rivals on the left less interested in promoting “socialism from below,” the IS made a decade-long attempt to “bridge the gap between a left disproportionately formed on college campuses and the working class, which, of course, remains a central concern for all American socialists.”
In Higgins’ collection, contributors like Candace Cohn, Gay Semel, and Wendy Thompson provide vivid first-person accounts of their experience leaving student life or white-collar jobs to become embedded in industry. Each of them helped fight the discriminatory treatment of women and/or African-American workers widespread in the blue-collar world they entered in the 1970s.
Cohn became politically active as a member of Students for a Democratic Society at the University of Michigan. After graduation, she moved to Pittsburgh and helped create a local advocacy group for Mon Valley workers exposed to hazardous health and safety conditions. She then became “one of the first women hired into basic steel since World War II” at U.S. Steel’s Clairton Coke Works, “the world’s largest coking operation and its filthiest and deadliest.”
In the mill, “sexual harassment was non-stop, both from foremen and from older white co-workers.” Nevertheless, Cohn built relationships with black workers and other female steel workers, started a shop floor paper, Steelworkers Stand Up, and helped rally fellow rank-and-filers on behalf of Ed Sadlowski and his “Fight Back” slate in a 1977 international union election.
Sadlowski was a “left social democrat,” who was heavily red-baited during his exciting but, ultimately unsuccessful, challenge to labor-management partnering in the steel industry. “In the employer’s offensive that followed,” Cohn writes, “tens of thousands of steelworkers were thrown onto the street, mills shuttered, and steel valley voices silenced.” She was able to retrain as a labor and civil rights lawyer.
Like Cohn, Gay Semel went to law school after her tour of duty in the IS, as its national secretary and editor of Workers Power, an “agitational newspaper” featuring a popular column called “Labor Notes.” Before that, she worked as a telephone operator in N.Y.C. In that well-timed intervention, she got herself expelled from the Bell System company union then representing her-co-workers, which the Communications Workers of America was trying to oust. As a lawyer, she spent most of later career working for CWA, the union she also tried to support, back in 1971, when she wouldn’t cross its picket-lines during a nine-month strike by 38,000 N.Y Tel technicians.
Unlike Cohn and Semel, Wendy Thompson actually made it to the finish line of a good union pension in the auto industry after becoming a labor-oriented radical during her junior year abroad (in France, circa May 1968). Thompson worked for General Motors at a Chevy gear and axle plant, with a predominantly black workforce. Surviving lay-offs and repeated management attempts to fire her, Thompson battled sexism on the shop floor, contract concessions, and the long dominant influence of the Administration Caucus in the United Auto Workers (UAW).
During her 33 years in the plant, only one Administration Caucus critic was ever elected to the UAW international executive board. But the 2022 membership vote to ditch convention voting for top officers—and switch to direct election by the rank-and-file—enabled a slate backed by Unite All Workers for Democracy (UAWD) to win what Thompson calls an “unprecedented victory—and a great culmination of my many years of activity” on the shop floor.
A Hard Sell
The recollections of individual IS members definitely support Higgins’s conclusion that their “pre-party formation” of 500 failed to create an organizational culture “more fully welcoming to diverse working-class recruits.” The latter numbered only about one-fifth of the IS’s peak membership, and, according to Higgins, here’s why:
While refreshingly democratic and seriously committed to political education of new members, the IS culture of deep reading, broad discussion, fierce debates, and long, numerous meetings was a hard sell to prospective members, pressing familial obligations, and a limited amount of free time.
And then there was the internal feuding that disrupted the group’s initially well-coordinated labor work. In 1976-77, the IS split three ways. Several hundred loyalists stayed put; seventy five formed a group called Workers Power, and one hundred created the International Socialist Organization (ISO), which grew bigger over the years but then suddenly imploded in 2019. In the mid-1980s, as part of a more constructive “regroupment” process, Workers Power members got back together with remaining ISers to form Solidarity, a looser network of socialists which publishes the journal Against the Current.
According to former Teamsters for a Democratic Union (TDU) supporter Dan LaBotz, now a Brooklyn DSA member and co-editor of New Politics, “one of the principal reasons for the IS split was differences over the labor work,” which some members argued was “making the group more conservative.”
As feminist historian Barbara Winslow recalls, the grounds for her expulsion from the IS, in the late 1970s, was arguing “for a larger engagement in all possible areas of working-class women’s struggles—blue-, white-, and pink-collar movements as well as other women’s liberation activities.” She and her then husband, former IS National Industrial Organizer Cal Winslow, became targets of a subsequent purge, when they were expelled from the ISO, despite being among its founding members.
Contributors to Higgins collection like UC Santa Barbara Professor Nelson Lichtenstein, David Finkel, co-editor of Against the Current, and others cite TDU and Labor Notes as the main legacies of the IS. That uniquely durable labor education, rank-and-file organizing, and alternative media project was launched forty-six years ago, during an era when other socialist or communist formations were still mired in highly competitive self-promotion.
For example, their organizational newspapers usually put a higher priority on new “cadre” recruitment than helping to build broad-based, multi-tendency rank-and-file movement. In contrast, as Thompson recalls, “the IS clearly rejected the model that many socialist groups had of maintaining their front groups rightly under their control. Originally staffed by IS members, Labor Notes became a project where workers would feel they were in a comfortable milieu but also a pond where socialists could swim.”
This may have “violated all the norms of so-called Leninism,” Finkel notes. But, in the end, a more ecumenical approach was critical to developing a multi-generational network of rank-and-file militants that now meets every two years with 5,000 or more in attendance, as opposed to just 600 in the early 1980s, which was good turnout back then. (To attend the June, 2026 Labor Notes conference, register as soon as possible at https://www.labornotes.org/2026.)
This very readable volume has much solid advice for socialists trying to revitalize existing unions or create alternatives to them today. One key lesson is that building a big labor or political tent is better, for the left, than becoming a small one. If you prefer the latter result, then endless meetings, too much organizational “discipline,” and fractious debates over the finer points of Marxist theory—followed by destructive purge—will get you there pretty quick. On the other hand, if you want to be an individual or organizational long-distance runner on the labor left, there are, in this book, some very good role models to follow.
From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor: A Collective History of the International Socialists, edited by Andrew Stone Higgins, Haymarket Books, available March 2026.
Steve Early is a longtime labor activist, journalist, and author. He is an East Bay DSA member who belonged to the New American Movement (NAM) in the 1970s and favored the socialist group merger that led to DSA’s formation in 1982. He has been a contributor to Labor Notes since 1979 and, for many years, served on its editorial advisory board. He can be reached at Lsupport@aol.com.
The post From the Free Speech Movement to the Factory Floor: A Collective History of the International Socialists appeared first on Working Mass.
Weekly Roundup: February 10, 2026
Events & Actions
Tuesday, February 10 (6:30 PM – 7:30 PM): Ecosocialist Bi-Weekly Meeting (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Wednesday, February 11 (6:45 PM – 9:00 PM):
DSA SF General Meeting (zoom and in person at Kelly Cullen Community, 220 Golden Gate Ave)
Thursday, February 12 (6:00 PM – 8:00 PM):
New Member Happy Hour – Richmond District Edition! (in person at Lost Marbles Brewery, 823 Clement St)
Thursday, February 12 (6:00 PM – 7:00 PM):
Education Board Open Meeting
(zoom)
Thursday, February 12 (7:00 PM – 9:00 PM):
Tech Worker Reading Group (in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Friday, February 13 (9:30 AM – 10:30 AM):
District 1 Coffee with Comrades (in person at Breck’s, 2 Clement St)
Friday, February 13 (3:00 PM – 5:00 PM):
KCC Office Clean with TLHC (in person at Kelly Cullen Community, 220 Golden Gate Ave)
Saturday, February 14 (11:00 AM – 2:00 PM):
ETOC Session 2 – Building Campaigns I (in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Sunday, February 15 (11:00 AM – 1:00 PM):
No Appetite for Apartheid Consumer Pledge Canvas (in person at Breck’s, 2 Clement St)
Sunday, February 15 (1:00 PM – 3:00 PM): Get to Know EWOC Flyering Event (location TBD)
Monday, February 16 (6:00 PM – 8:00 PM): Labor Board Meeting – Existing Union Support (in person at 1916 McAllister St and zoom)
Monday, February 16 (6:30 PM – 8:00 PM): Homelessness Working Group Regular Meeting (in person at 1916 McAllister St and zoom)
Monday, February 16 (6:30 PM – 7:30 PM):
DSA Run Club (in person at McClaren Lodge, 501 Stanyan St)
Tuesday, February 17 (5:30 PM – 7:00 PM):
Social Housing Meeting (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Tuesday, February 17 (7:00 PM – 8:00 PM):
Public Transit Meeting (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Wednesday, February 18 (6:00 PM – 7:30 PM):
What Is DSA? (in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Thursday, February 19 (6:00 PM – 7:00 PM):
Social Committee Meeting (zoom)
Thursday, February 19 (6:30 PM – 7:30 PM):
Public Bank Project Meeting (zoom)
Thursday, February 19 (7:00 PM – 8:00 PM): Immigrant Justice Working Group Meeting (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Saturday, February 21 (11:00 AM – 2:00 PM):
ETOC Session 3 – Building Campaigns II (in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Saturday, February 21 (6:00 PM – 8:00 PM):
HWG Food Service (in person at Castro Street & Market Street)
Sunday, February 22 (1:30 PM – 3:00 PM):
Get to Know EWOC!
(in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Sunday, February 22 (5:00 PM – 6:00 PM):
Tenderloin Healing Circle Working Group (zoom)
Monday, February 23 (6:00 PM – 8:00 PM):
Tenderloin Healing Circle (in person at Kelly Cullen Community, 220 Golden Gate Ave)
Monday, February 23 (7:00 PM – 8:00 PM): Labor Board Meeting – Existing Union Support (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Check out https://dsasf.org/events for more events and updates.

New Member Happy Hour – Richmond District Edition!
Join us for our a Happy Hour on Thursday, February 12th, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM, at Lost Marbles Brewery, 823 Clement St. Learn more about DSA SF’s upcoming projects, find out how to plug in, or just socialize with socialists!
Also open to old members, regular folks and the socialism-curious 
.

No Appetite for Apartheid (NA4A) Consumer Pledge Canvas
This Sunday, February 15th, 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM, our next consumer pledge canvass will be at the Clement Street Farmer’s Market (Clement & Arguello). Join the Palestine Solidarity & Anti Imperialist Working Group in building public support for stores that have pledged to go apartheid-free. RSVP here. Training will be held on-site.
Find more info for NA4A here
.

Emergency Tenant Organizing Committee (ETOC) Fundamentals of Tenant Organizing Watch Party
Looking to deepen your understanding of housing work on the ground? Interested in building durable tenant power in SF? Come learn how to organize tenant associations, fight landlords collectively, and build toward radical tenant unionism in San Francisco. These ETOC watch parties happen every Saturday in February at 11:00 AM at our office (1916 McAllister) and focus on turning socialist analysis into mass tenant struggle: investigation, campaigns, and building real tenant organizations that can win. If you’re serious about anti-landlord work, this is where to plug in.

Reportback: EWOC Fundamentals of Workplace Organizing
We have another graduated cohort from the four week long Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee organizing training! The last two weeks covered “The Arc of the Campaign” and “Inoculation and the Boss Campaign”, allowing for even more detailed discussion about the organizing efforts happening within the group.
The “Arc of the Campaign” focused on Lisa, a nurse who met with her co-workers to organize them in an escalating campaign towards a strike. They used different ways to organize people towards this goal, such as media coverage, candlelight vigils, educating about the meaning of the strike, and collectively representing their issues. There are a variety of ways that union leaders can educate the public about their cause, and making them fun and creative can move the campaign forward!
We heard from Diego, a Trader Joe’s worker whose union election ended in a tie, during “Inoculation and the Boss Campaign”. The boss targeted workers that were less informed about their rights or shakier in their commitment to organizing in order to catch people off guard. It was important that organizers had people prepared to combat the anti-union narrative in larger captive meetings and after 1:1s with management. We went through the union busting bingo card to ideate what we could say in response to anti-organizing rhetoric, whether it was from management or fellow coworkers.
The Fundamentals of Workplace Organizing course is run every other month! If you’re interested in an in-person format or generally want to get involved with the SF local chapter of EWOC, reach out to the lead coordinator Caitlin S or email labor@dsasf.org. EWOC is a standing topic at the new organizing meetings of the Labor Board, which are held on the second Monday of every month at 7:00 PM, both in-person at 1916 McAllister and over Zoom. Anyone is welcome to attend, and we’re always looking for people interested In workplace lead canvassing, organizer trainings, and volunteer outreach. If you’re interested in organizing your workplace and would like to be connected with an EWOC organizer, fill out the request form here.

DSA Run Club
Runners of all speeds and experience levels are warmly welcome to join our running club! We meet every Monday evening, 6:30 PM – 7:30 PM in front of McClaren Lodge, the stone building at the eastern end of JFK drive. Wear comfortable running clothes (DSA attire encouraged) and bring your most positive vibes! We stretch and warm up for 15 minutes, then hit the car-free streets for a 3.4-mile loop at a gentle pace.
Behind the Scenes
The Chapter Coordination Committee (CCC) regularly rotates duties among chapter members. This allows us to train new members in key duties that help keep the chapter running like organizing chapter meetings, keeping records updated, office cleanup, updating the DSA SF website and publishing the weekly newsletter. Members can view current CCC rotations.
Interested in helping with the newsletter or other day-to-day tasks that keep the chapter running? Fill out the CCC help form.
State of DSA Part Two: Lessons Learned
Completed report examines what drives membership growth and engagement
The post State of DSA Part Two: Lessons Learned appeared first on Democratic Left.
2025 Board of Supervisors Voting Breakdown
In 2025, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors faced a defining set of choices about who this city is for. Again and again, a moderate supermajority supported increasing mayoral power, corporate interests, and punitive responses to social crises over the needs of working-class residents. From criminalizing vehicular homelessness and gutting voter-mandated affordable housing funds, to expanding police surveillance and overtime giveaways, the Board repeatedly voted to consolidate power upward while narrowing democratic oversight and social investment.
This analysis breaks down key Board of Supervisors votes from 2025, outlines DSA San Francisco’s perspective, and examines how these decisions either served or betrayed the working class. Where socialist leadership prevailed, such as with the Green Bank, sanctuary protections, tenant safeguards, and limits on Big Tech encroachment, it showed what is possible when the city prioritizes people over profit. Taken as a whole, these votes tell a clear story about the political direction of City Hall in 2025 – and the stakes for organizing to change it.
See how each supervisor voted on the following votes here.
Housing & Homelessness
RV Ban
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (9-2)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Chyanne Chen
- No: Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton
In July 2025, the Board of Supervisors voted to institute Mayor Lurie’s RV vehicle ban by a 9-2 vote, with Supervisors Fielder and Walton in opposition. The new policy instituted a 2-hour parking limit on oversized vehicles citywide, making existence nigh-impossible for the over 1,400 poor and working class San Franciscans who live in RVs. This ban, which officially took effect on November 1st, 2025 after a rushed, month-long implementation, has been a brutal failure on a number of fronts. While temporary refuge permits were offered to residents who were included in a May 2025 city count of oversized vehicles, many longtime residents were excluded from this count and struggled to qualify, despite multiple appeals. The funding for rehousing and vehicle buybacks was extraordinarily limited, and simultaneously pitted unhoused communities against one another by promising RV residents that they’d be prioritized over people sleeping on the street.
Since the ban has taken effect, Lurie’s administration has already ramped up tows, while RV residents with permits have reported few housing offers. This all has taken place against a period of skyrocketing rents in San Francisco, where more people are being pushed into both vehicular and street homelessness daily.
Gutting Affordable Housing Funding
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (8-3)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman
- No: Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton, Chyanne Chen
In 2018, voters approved Prop C, the Our City, Our Home program, which placed a gross receipts tax on the largest businesses to invest in proven, housing-first solutions to address homelessness. In July of last year, Mayor Lurie and the “moderate” supermajority on the Board of Supervisors moved to reallocate tens of millions of dollars away from these permanent housing solutions and towards temporary shelters, hotel vouchers, rental subsidies, and other short-sighted solutions. Framed as a response to urgent needs and unspent balances, this move undermines the clear intent of Prop C: to move people out of homelessness permanently, not cycle them through temporary fixes. By repeatedly suspending voter-mandated allocations, San Francisco is backfilling gaps created by broader budget and housing policy failures instead of investing in deeply affordable, permanent housing and prevention—the very strategies proven to reduce homelessness long-term. This approach risks normalizing emergency shelter as a substitute for housing, erodes trust in voter-approved mandates, and diverts resources away from systemic solutions that working-class San Franciscans were promised when they voted for Prop C.
Read our full statement here: https://dsasf.org/ocoh
Eliminate Affordable Housing Fees in Hayes
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (9-2)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Chyanne Chen
- No: Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton
Supervisors voted to forego $81 million in developer impact fees that would have funded affordable housing and infrastructure in Hayes Valley and surrounding areas known as “Market Octavia.”
From 2008 to 2024, such fees provided $40 million for affordable housing and $53 million for transportation and public realm improvements in that area, including Polk Street and Page Street bike lanes, the new Brady Park, Dolores & Market intersection improvements, and partial funding for Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit. No alternative funding sources were identified for planned future projects like these.
Although the rationale was to jump-start stalled market rate developments, the sponsors refused to put a time limit on the waiver, and the Board of Supervisors’ own analyst concluded no projects will start in the next three years anyway. These fees amount to only 7% of typical development costs per unit, and were already priced into land costs because they were paired with a 2008 upzoning.
The real reason market-rate housing is stalled is structural: Interest rates are high, and investors can find greater returns elsewhere (like the AI boom). Or as the director of a real estate industry-funded group said in a candid moment, “One of the challenges we face in San Francisco is we need the rent to go back up to get housing to work”—an obvious non-solution for workers who struggle to afford rent already.
If supervisors are serious about jump-starting housing, they should stop trading away our parks, street safety improvements, and affordable housing funds in a futile attempt to entice developers, and instead invest in building social housing directly. They can start on Hayes Valley’s city-owned Parcel K.
Suspend Empty Homes Tax During Litigation
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (9-2)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Chyanne Chen
- No: Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton
San Francisco faces a daunting affordability crisis, driven by speculative developers and exploitative landlords. In 2022, voters passed Prop M to penalize owners who kept their properties vacant – nearly 40,000 units in pre-COVID San Francisco. Despite clear voter support, Prop M was immediately challenged in court by landlord groups. When the board voted 9-2 to suspend the empty homes tax during these court proceedings, they stood in the way of a potential $61 million per year in net revenue for working-class rental support programs and affordable housing projects.
Eliminate Affordable Housing Fees for Office Conversions
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (9-2)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Chyanne Chen
- No: Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton
This ordinance exempts downtown office-to-housing conversion projects from development impact fees, including the Inclusionary Housing fee, and removing deadlines to apply for the program. While supporters frame this as a way to spur housing production and revive downtown amid high office vacancy rates, this legislation trades away critical, permanent funding for affordable housing, transit, and neighborhood infrastructure with no guarantee that these conversions will actually move forward or deliver homes that ordinary people can afford.
Like past fee waivers, this policy is based on the flawed assumption that developers are only a small incentive away from building, when the real barriers are high interest rates, construction costs, and profit expectations: factors this ordinance does nothing to change. By allowing large, centrally located projects to bypass inclusionary requirements, the city undermines its own affordable housing goals, deepens reliance on luxury market-rate housing, and sets a precedent that public goods are negotiable whenever developers claim hardship. Instead of giving blank check subsidies to real estate interests, San Francisco should be directly investing in social housing, while ensuring that any downtown development meaningfully contributes to affordability, public services, and working-class communities.
Family Zoning Plan (FZP)
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (7-4)
- Yes: Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Alan Wong
- No: Connie Chan, Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton, Chyanne Chen
In December 2025, the Board of Supervisors voted 7-4 to approve the Family Zoning Plan (FZP) which rezoned San Francisco’s western and northern neighborhoods as part of the City’s Housing Element compliance program. The rezoning targeted commercial corridors for significant height increases, eliminated density controls throughout the plan area, established a local density bonus program to encourage market-based production of affordable housing, provided 100% affordable developments with some additional height incentives, and allowed developers the option of replacing their “inclusionary zoning” requirement to set aside 12% of their units for affordable housing by opting into San Francisco’s Rent Stabilization Ordinance.
The FZP’s shortcomings include incentives for the redevelopment of approximately 20K rent controlled units in 2-unit buildings via significant height increases, targeting renter-heavy commercial corridors for redevelopment while freezing heights in wealthy owner-occupied neighborhoods, and lacking an explicit affordable housing program. The BOS separately passed a tenant protection ordinance.
Amending FZP to Protect All Rent Controlled Units
DSA SF Position: Yes
Board of Supervisors Voted: No (4-7)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton, Chyanne Chen
- No: Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Alan Wong
While the FZP was successfully amended to remove rent-controlled buildings with more than 2 units, it left approximately 20K rent-controlled units vulnerable to demolition. This amendment would have removed these duplexes from the crosshairs of redevelopment, but failed 4-7.
Tenant Protections from Demolitions
DSA SF Position: Yes
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (11-0)
This Tenant Protection Ordinance passed unanimously following the passage of the flawed FZP. This ordinance strengthens tenant protections in the context of residential demolitions and major renovations, responding to widespread displacement driven by speculative development, harassment, and abuse of buyouts. The legislation recognizes that “temporary” displacements tied to renovations or redevelopment often become permanent, forcing working-class tenants out of San Francisco entirely, and it shifts responsibility for those harms onto property owners rather than tenants.
Specifically, six of the following eight criteria must be met in order to demolish existing housing that has been occupied by tenants in the past 10 years:
- The new project is a rental project (i.e. not condos for sale).
- The new project has more units than before.
- The new project has more rent-controlled units than before.
- The new project has more two-bedroom units than before.
- The new project does not significantly change a historic landmark.
- In the case of an owner-move-in eviction, the owner has lived there for at least 3 years.
- No affordable housing is demolished.
- There are no violations with the Planning Department or Building Inspection Department.
This legislation confronts the structural drivers of displacement, prioritizes the right of tenants to remain in their communities, and affirms housing as a social good instead of a speculative commodity.
Protect Rent-Controlled Units Resolution (Fix SB 330)
DSA SF Position: Yes
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (11-0)
This resolution urges the California legislature to amend the Housing Crisis Act of 2019 (SB 330) so as to bring it in line with the City’s more thorough and generous protections, specifically with regard to demolition regulations, tenant relocation benefits, and right of return regardless of tenants’ incomes. The resolution zeroes in on several loopholes in the existing Act through which tenants can easily fall and which incentivize keeping protected units empty and displacing tenants. The resolution passed the Board unanimously and became law without the signature of Mayor Lurie.
Immigration
Sanctuary City Recommitment
DSA SF Position: Yes
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (11-0)
In Socialist Supervisor Jackie Fielder’s first piece of legislation, the city reaffirmed its long standing status as a sanctuary city, which prevents local resources from being used to assist federal immigration enforcement, and situates that commitment in the current political moment. This was especially significant as fears spiked within the broader immigrant community, who make up roughly one-third of the city, of what a second Trump term could mean for our friends, neighbors, and family members. Sanctuary policies are proven to strengthen collective safety and solidarity by refusing to pit working-class communities against one another or turn city workers into agents of deportation.
This resolution passed unanimously, emphasizing San Francisco’s unwavering support for our immigrant neighbors.
$3.5M in Immigration Legal Services
DSA SF Position: Yes
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (11-0)
A unanimously approved allocation of $3.5M from the General Fund to the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development to expand existing immigration legal defense and community response services. This funding strengthens access to deportation defense, legal screenings, and community support at a moment of heightened fear and uncertainty for immigrant communities, particularly amid threats of renewed federal enforcement. By investing in legal representation and protection rather than enforcement, the Board affirmed San Francisco’s commitment to collective safety, due process, and standing with immigrant workers and families.
Policing, Surveillance, & Carceral Spending
Mayoral Power Grab (Fentanyl State of Emergency)
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (10-1)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Jackie Fielder, Chyanne Chen
- No: Shamann Walton
One of Daniel Lurie’s signature campaign promises became his first big win at the Board of Supervisors, as the so-called Fentanyl State of Emergency Ordinance passed by a 10-1 margin. The bill is indicative of Lurie’s approach in that it transfers power from the Board of Supervisors to the Mayor’s Office, in this case the approval of contracts and grants related to homelessness, substance use and mental health needs, and public safety hiring. It also authorizes the Mayor to solicit private donations of up to $10 million to advance those causes, an early instance of Lurie’s tendency to allow his ultra-wealthy friends to directly fund the initiatives they hold dearest (mostly cops). The passage of this bill was a feather in the Mayor’s cap and afforded him a reputation for tackling San Francisco’s most deeply entrenched problems, yet augmenting the power of the Mayor’s Office hasn’t yet led to a notable decrease in overdose deaths and Lurie fell significantly short of his promise to bring 1,500 shelter beds online in his first 6 months.
Crypto-funded “Real Time Investigation Center”
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (9-2)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Chyanne Chen
- No: Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton
In 2024, voters approved Proposition E, letting the SFPD “use technology to the maximum extent possible” in the name of public safety—the key issue Mayor Lurie campaigned on, despite crime rates being down across the city. Prop E helped the SFPD spy on the public using drones, license-plate readers, and surveillance cameras via a facility named the “Real Time Investigation Center”. As the original location for the RTIC was unequipped to handle the technology needs, the SPFD looked to move the headquarters to a new location. Chris Larsen—a crypto billionaire who funded Prop E and the recall of progressive District Attorney Chesa Boudin—gave more than $9 million of technology, facilities, and services to a nonprofit dedicated to supporting the SPFD. By law, the city has to solicit bids from multiple companies before accepting any such offers, but last summer, the SFPD asked the BoS to waive this requirement, which they agreed to do by a 9-2 vote. As a result, an unaccountable and untransparent nonprofit, funded by tech billionaires, was able to implement unpopular surveillance measures without civilian oversight or review. The RTIC is now housed in Ripple’s corporate office space, in a building complex partially owned by Donald Trump, and Larsen, et al, can provide it unlimited donations without further Board approval as long as it remains there.
Police and Sheriff Overtime Giveaway
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (9-2)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Chyanne Chen
- No: Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton
For the last seven years, the SF Police and Sheriff’s Departments have submitted budgets for Board approval, only to then ask for tens of millions of dollars in additional overtime. The cops claim they’re too understaffed to work within their budget, but a 2024 City audit found overtime cards with fraudulent signatures and revealed that most officers take 5 weeks of paid sick leave, with many working paid private security jobs on days they called in sick. Some officers even claimed 80-hour workweeks, every single week, for years. Despite this abuse of overtime, last spring cops asked for an additional $90 million from the city—which is currently in a budget deficit of $876 million. To close this deficit, the Mayor and Board are cutting funds to public education, Muni, housing services, legal aid, and many other departments. By stealing essential services from the public just so corrupt cops can take home more money, the Supervisors voted (9-2) to balance the budget on the backs of working San Franciscans.
Allow Sheriff to Purchase Military-Grade Riot Guns
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (8-3)
- Yes: Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Chyanne Chen
- No: Connie Chan, Jackie Fielder, Shamann Walton
It’s hard to talk seriously about public safety when cops are given deadly weapons in the name of “crowd control”. Last year—in addition to its many assault rifles, sniper rifles, submachine guns, and automatic pistols—the SF Sheriff’s Office asked the BoS to approve the purchase of ten AR-15–style rifles that fire pepper balls with greater velocity than the chemical-agent weapons currently in their inventory. The product manual for the proposed rifles indicates an increased risk of death or injury, but no mention of the weapon’s lethality was made in the Sheriff’s report. In 2025, the number of reported crimes in San Francisco fell for the third year in a row, and yet the Board voted 8-3 to approve these excessive and unnecessary weapons, bolstering the cops’ arsenal to the detriment of essential city services.
Economic Justice & Public Investment
Green Bank Resolution
DSA SF Position: Yes
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (10-0)
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a resolution directing the City to move forward with creating the San Francisco Green Bank, a publicly owned finance institution designed to fund affordable housing, small businesses, and climate projects.
The Green Bank will be a non-depository public benefit corporation, meaning it will not act like a normal retail bank. Instead, it will function as a public financing engine that uses city, state, federal, and philanthropic capital to invest in projects that serve the public good rather than Wall Street profit.
Under the resolution, the Green Bank’s mission is explicitly to promote equity, social justice, and ecological sustainability, with lending focused on:
- Affordable rental housing and homeownership
- Local small businesses
- Green investments tied to environmental justice
The Treasurer is now directed to pursue regulatory approvals, hire a Green Bank Coordinator, and work with a public advisory group to design the institution. The Treasurer must also report back to the Board every four months, creating ongoing political accountability. While this vote urges the Treasurer to design and pursue approvals for a Green Bank, the legislation itself says the bank cannot be established without an appropriation for staff/legal work and without securing capitalization.
Supervisor Jackie Fielder sponsored the resolution and secured unanimous support across the Board. Although the Mayor returned it unsigned, it became law automatically under the City Charter.
For socialists, a Green Bank is about democratizing capital. Instead of relying on profit-driven banks that underfund working-class communities and overfund fossil fuels and luxury real estate, San Francisco can begin directing money toward housing, climate resilience, and local businesses on public terms.
Learn more and get involved: https://sfpublicbank.org
Billionaire’s Budget
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (10-1)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Shamann Walton, Chyanne Chen
- No: Jackie Fielder
The budget approved this past summer was shaped by claims of a looming fiscal crisis and prioritized “downtown recovery” and spending on the punishment bureaucracy over meeting the actual needs of the working class, continuing a pattern of neoliberal austerity politics in one of the richest cities in the world. While moderate city leaders framed the budget as fiscally responsible, it protected or expanded funding for policing, jails, and business incentives while cutting or severely underfunding essential services like public health, stable housing, homelessness prevention, transit, and nonprofit workers who deliver critical care across our city. These deliberate choices came amid rising rents, stagnant wages, and deepening inequality, effectively asking working-class San Franciscans to bear the costs of the economic volatility of capitalism, while corporations and wealthy interests were shielded.
This budget reflects political priorities, not fiscal necessity: it doubles down on a punitive, carceral approach to social problems, undermines long-term investments in housing and care, and fails to use the city’s full fiscal and political power to tax the wealthy, defend public services, and build a city that works for tenants, workers, and marginalized communities, not just downtown and big business.
Democratic Accountability & Oversight
Removal of Max Carter-Oberstone
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (9-2)
- Yes: Connie Chan, Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Joel Engardio, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Rafael Mandelman, Shamann Walton, Chyanne Chen
- No: Myrna Melgar, Jackie Fielder
Shortly after taking office, Mayor Lurie decided to remove Max Carter-Oberstone from the Police Commission—a group appointed to oversee the SFPD and conduct hearings on police misconduct. Lurie gave no rationale for his decision, which was subject to an approval vote by the Board of Supervisors. In his four years on the commission, Carter-Oberstone helped to pass reform-minded policies—such as curtailing pretext traffic stops, which disproportionately affect Black and brown drivers—and also exposed former Mayor Breed’s unethical practice of requiring her appointees to sign undated resignation letters. Civilian commissioners provide a crucial means to check the overreach and abuses of city leaders, most of whom are backed by tech billionaires. By removing Carter-Oberstone from office, the mayor and BoS (who voted 9-2 to remove) weakened police accountability and signaled to other commissioners they’d better fall in line behind Lurie in his consolidation of power.
Removal of Our City, Our Home Committee Expert
DSA SF Position: No
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (7-3)
- Yes: Stephen Sherrill, Danny Sauter, Bilal Mahmood, Matt Dorsey, Myrna Melgar, Rafael Mandelman, Shamann Walton
- No: Connie Chan, Jackie Fielder, Chyanne Chen
This legislation replaces Jennifer Friedenbach on the Our City, Our Home (OCOH) Oversight Committee. This body was created by Proposition C, which Friedenbach herself architected and led to passage with overwhelming voter support in 2018. Prop. C created a tax on San Francisco’s largest corporations to fund permanent housing and homelessness services, generating over $1 billion to date, with community oversight as a core safeguard against political interference. Friedenbach’s removal comes in clear political context: she was one of the most vocal opponents of Mayor Lurie’s recent effort to redirect tens of millions of Prop. C dollars away from permanent housing and into temporary shelter, a shift which DSA SF has criticized for failing to address root causes of homelessness. Replacing her with a mayoral and supervisor ally undermines the independence of the oversight committee and sends a chilling message that dissent, especially from those who defend the original, voter-mandated intent of Prop. C, will be punished.
This move undermines democratic accountability and punishes principled dissent: replacing the chief author and guardian of Prop. C with a politically connected appointee weakens independent oversight, opens the door to further dilution of voter intent, and signals that standing up for proven, housing-first policies can cost advocates their seat at the table.
DoorDash Drone Experiment Protections
DSA SF Position: Yes
Board of Supervisors Voted: Yes (11-0)
This resolution responds to long-standing concerns about the erosion of Production, Distribution, and Repair (PDR) space in the Mission by placing temporary, targeted guardrails on a specific emerging land use: outdoor engineering and development laboratories operating in PDR-1-G districts, mostly in northeast Mission and Dogpatch. While laboratory uses have long been permitted in these zones, the growth of “knowledge sector” firms (especially those conducting noisy or polluting hardware testing outdoors, most visibly exemplified by DoorDash’s outdoor delivery drone testing at 1960 Folsom) has created conflicts with nearby homes, schools, and parks, and accelerated displacement of traditional PDR businesses and working-class jobs. This establishes narrow, 18-month zoning controls requiring Conditional Use approval for these outdoor lab activities, pausing further expansion while SF studies permanent protections for PDR land.
This puts democratic oversight and community health ahead of corporate convenience, defends blue-collar and non-degree-required jobs, and prevents Big Tech from bypassing land-use rules written specifically to protect working-class neighborhoods. While our Socialist Supervisor Jackie Fielder received intense online backlash for this legislation from prominent tech executives and investors, the resolution ultimately passed unanimously, underscoring the broad agreement the SF must set limits when new, untested technology threatens workers, residents, and the public good.
Special thanks to the comrades who helped make this scorecard and analysis possible: Alex L., Annie B., Connor N., Dan R., Dave M., Hans E. W., Jill M., Matt P., Rishav R., and Scott F.
Milwaukee DSA ready for statewide governor’s race as Madison DSA joins in endorsing Francesca Hong
The Milwaukee Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) are working to support a statewide race for governor after both that chapter and Madison DSA voted to endorse DSA member Francesca Hong in her bid for that office.
“Working people have seen that the system doesn’t work for them,” Milwaukee DSA Co-Chair Autumn Pickett said. “Time and again, the establishment has failed us so as not to upset their billionaire donors. As ICE threatens to terrorize our communities and kidnap our neighbors, Francesca Hong stands committed to fight back as the only candidate calling for their abolition.”
Hong’s campaign comes at the heels of successful DSA campaigns across the country, from New York City’s Mayor Zohran Mamdani to Milwaukee District 3’s Alder Alex Brower, and U.S. polling has shown an increased interest in socialism, a clear reflection of the crumbling material conditions of the American working class amid ongoing crises at the hands of capitalism and its benefactors.
“Francesca Hong has fought for Wisconsinites’ right to healthcare, paid family leave for all, a vibrant union movement, and public power owned by the people and not for the profit of billionaires—the same billionaires who are now forcing us to pay for their destructive data centers,” Pickett said. “She, thankfully, is not alone in this fight. As a movement of everyday people, DSA members are tired, fed up, and ready to win the better world we know is possible. Mayor Zohran Mamdani proved there is a better alternative to fascism than the same old tired establishment policies that brought Donald Trump into power to begin with. Socialism beats fascism, and now it’s our turn to prove it. Elect Francesca Hong for Governor.”
Those interested in joining DSA’s efforts to elect Hong can fill out a DSA campaign interest form to get plugged into the chapter’s work. More information on Hong’s candidacy is available on her campaign website.Milwaukee DSA is Milwaukee’s largest socialist organization fighting against imperialism for a democratic economy, a just society, and a sustainable environment. Join today at dsausa.org/join.
Secrets of a successful union-buster
Littler Mendelson's latest labor survey report is full of insights straight from bosses about how unprepared they are against union efforts at work.
The post Secrets of a successful union-buster appeared first on EWOC.
General Chapter Meeting – February
Many hands make light work.
Please reference our Slack’s events channel, or general, for the Agenda.
Zoom Meeting link will appear upon RSVP.
Labor Working Group: Session
Join DSA Ventura County’s Labor Working Group on zoom to discuss recent labor struggles in our communities, from Starbucks Workers United’s indefinite strike, to the new contract our County employees won by threatening to strike, to the movement for an arms embargo by Labor for Palestine, and the calls for a general strike by May Day 2028. Please, bring other ideas, campaigns, and your own workplace experiences. An agenda will be posted on slack soon. You will receive the zoom link shortly after completing RSVP.