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Report on LA City Council Expansion + DSA-LA Endorsement Process Begins for 2024 Races

Thorn West: Issue No. 172

State Politics

  • Today is the state Legislature’s second of two yearly “suspense days,” when the progress of many proposed bills can be suspended until the next year’s session. At the end of the day, here’s what advanced.

City Politics

  • A long-awaited report from the chief legislative analyst contains proposals on how to expand the number of city council seats, as well as how to move to an independent redistricting commission. The Ad Hoc Committee on City Governance Reform met this week (video here) to begin reviewing the report.
  • Former LA Councilmember Mark Ridley-Thomas was sentenced to 42 months in prison for corruption that took place when he was a member of the LA County Board of Supervisors.
  • With the next primaries in March, the first debate in a Los Angeles City Council race was held in District 2. DSA-LA has also begun its endorsement process, and will be considering the endorsement of several candidates for council. On September 10, members are invited to meet and ask questions of these candidates via Zoom. RSVP here!

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • The LAPD Mission Division gang unit that is being federally investigated is suspected of routinely stealing from people at traffic stops, as well as slipping tracing devices into their cars.

Housing Rights

  • Los Angeles City Council passed a $150-million spending plan for funds raised by Measure ULA on Tuesday. The funds will be directed to six programs, including tenant protections and affordable housing production. City officials said ULA money can be spent only as it comes in, so the city won’t be able to use the full $150 million until the tax generates $150 million.
  • Recent court orders have temporarily prevented the displacement of unhoused people by cities that do not provide viable shelter alternatives, citing the decision in Martin v. Boise that this practice violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. In response, San Francisco Mayor London Breed, speaking at an anti-unhoused rally staged at the courthouse, demanded that judges reverse this decision in order to allow the city to resume displacing encampments regardless of whether or not viable shelter alternatives exist. Governor Gavin Newsom suggested publishing the personal contact information of judges who refused to do so.

Labor

  • The Nation offers praise to Los Angeles as the country’s “leading union town.” Join DSA-LA’s Westside Branch this Saturday in support of workers on the picket line at the Fairmont Miramar, where hotel security have attacked striking workers for demanding more dignified working conditions!

Environmental Justice

  • The California Public Utilities Commission voted 5–0 on Thursday to let Southern California Gas increase the fuel storage at the Aliso Canyon gas storage field, eight years after a methane gas leak forced thousands of San Fernando Valley residents to evacuate their homes for months.

The post Report on LA City Council Expansion + DSA-LA Endorsement Process Begins for 2024 Races appeared first on The Thorn West.

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DSA IC stands in solidarity with people in Niger against US and French imperialism

Translated into French below / Traduit en français ci-dessous

The DSA International Committee condemns France, the United States, and their compradors in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) for interfering in the internal affairs of Niger via the imposition of sanctions, the suspension of humanitarian aid, and the threat of military action. These interventions obstruct the path to independent development for Niger and for the whole of Africa, more broadly.

Although Niger won formal independence from France in 1960 and possesses immense wealth in natural resources, it remains one of the poorest countries in the world. Bound to France through dependence on the export of raw materials to French capitalists, the occupation of its land by French and American troops, and the monetary colonialism of the CFA franc zone, Niger has been unable to develop a self-sufficient national economy and advance the interests of its people. We wholeheartedly support the Nigerien masses in their struggle against imperialism, which is a struggle for true political and economic sovereignty in their country.

On July 26, 2023, the newly-formed National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland placed President Mohamed Bazoum under house arrest and named General Abdourahamane Tchiani the leader of the transitional government. Following several other military coups in West Africa, condemnation from France, the United States, and the European Union was immediate. Superficial characterizations of the coup in Niger as “illiberal” fail to recognize the undemocratic nature of the prevailing social order in West Africa, which is characterized by economic exploitation and political domination designed to benefit foreign capital at the expense of the people.

The relationship between France and its “former” colonies in West Africa has been marked by continual interference and exploitation. Since 1960, France has repeatedly deposed or assassinated leaders who have attempted to upend the colonial relations of production responsible for Africa’s underdevelopment. Today, France continues to utilize a variety of tools to maintain domination over Niger and other West African countries. As a colonial power, France organized the Nigerien economy to be unindustrialized and dependent on the uranium trade. This relationship persists as Nigerien uranium mines are predominantly owned by French capitalists, who import Nigerien uranium to sustain France’s massive nuclear energy industry. A third of the light bulbs in France are powered by Nigerien uranium, while 90% of the people in Niger are robbed of access to electricity.

France has around 1,500 soldiers stationed in Niger, helping to serve as a base for expanding French militarism across West Africa. Though counter-terrorism is the banner under which France and the United States justify their military presence across West Africa, the 2011 NATO-led intervention in Libya sparked a massive insurgency across the continent, providing a pretext for expanded militarization while exacerbating insecurity and instability. A 2019 report published by the Africa Center for Strategic Studies found that terrorist activity on the continent doubled from 2012 to 2018. The number of countries experiencing attacks increased by 960% during that time period. Across the region, the need to resolve the terrorism issue through development, rather than illegal and ineffective foreign military intervention, lies at the heart of the popular struggle to expel French and American forces from African soil.

Additionally, the continuation of the CFA franc as the official currency of Niger ensures that Niger remains subservient to imperialism. The CFA franc is a product of French colonialism, which sets the Nigerien currency at a fixed exchange rate with the Euro (previously the Franc), making it incredibly expensive for Niger to trade with other countries and thus allowing Europe to exploit Niger’s natural resources for next to nothing. Moreover, half of Nigerien currency reserves are held by the French treasury under the CFA franc system, making it impossible for Niger to use monetary policy to develop heavy industry and move away from mineral extraction. The CFA franc serves to guarantee France’s monetary hegemony over Niger and several other West and Central African countries.

This long and ongoing history of French imperialism in Niger is essential for contextualizing the recent coup. Both liberals and conservatives are attempting to mischaracterize the new Nigerien government as a dictatorial military regime imposed on the people of Niger by a Russian conspiracy. Rather, the coup is supported by a mass movement of Nigeriens determined to put an end to the economic exploitation and political domination of their country by France, the United States, and foreign capital, more broadly. The new Nigerien government’s support was particularly evident at the demonstration at Seyni Kountche Stadium on August 8, where 30,000 Nigeriens came out in support of the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland. 

The DSA International Committee stands in solidarity with Niger in its struggle for sovereignty and against capitalist imperialism. As the United States and Europe seek to vilify the new Nigerien Government and expand domination across West Africa, we call for the removal of sanctions against the transitional government and the Nigerien people; the removal of all French, American, and other foreign military forces from the African continent, including NATO and AFRICOM; and the abolition of all tools of colonial domination that inhibit the development of Niger.


DSA IC est solidaire du peuple nigérien contre l’impérialisme Américain et Français

Le Comité international des socialistes démocrates d’Amérique (DSA) condamne la France, les États-Unis, et leurs compradors dans la Communauté économique des États de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (CEDEAO) pour ingérence dans les affaires intérieures du Niger par l’imposition de sanctions, la suspension de l’aide humanitaire, et la menace d’une action militaire. Ces interventions font obstacle au développement indépendant du Niger et de l’ensemble de l’Afrique, plus largement.

Bien que le Niger ait gagné son indépendance formelle de la France en 1960 et possède une immense richesse en ressources naturelles, il reste l’un des pays les plus pauvres du monde. Lié à la France par la dépendance à l’exportation de matières premières aux capitalistes français, l’occupation de ses terres par les troupes françaises et américaines, et le colonialisme monétaire de la zone franc CFA, le Niger a été incapable de développer unune économie nationale suffisante et la promotion des intérêts de sa population. Nous soutenons sans réserve les masses nigériennes dans leur lutte contre l’impérialisme, qui est une lutte pour la vraie souveraineté politique et économique dans leur pays.

Le 26 juillet 2023, le nouveau Conseil national pour la sauvegarde de la patrie a placé le président Mohamed Bazoum en résidence surveillée et a nommé le général Abdourahamane Tchiani chef du gouvernement de transition. Après plusieurs autres coups d’État militaires en Afrique de l’Ouest, la condamnation de la France, des États-Unis, et de l’Union européenne a été immédiate. Les caractérisations superficiels du coup d’État au Niger d’ “illibéral” ne reconnaissent pas la nature antidémocratique de l’ordre social dominant en Afrique de l’Ouest, qui se caractérise par une exploitation économique et une domination politique au profit du capital étranger aux dépens du peuple.

Le relation entre la France et ses “anciennes” colonies en Afrique de l’Ouest ont été marquées par une ingérence et une exploitation continuelles. Depuis 1960, la France a déposé ou assassiné à plusieurs reprises des dirigeants qui ont tenté de bouleverser les relations coloniales de production responsables du sous-développement de l’Afrique. Depuis 1960, la France a déposé ou assassiné à plusieurs reprises des dirigeants qui ont tenté de bouleverser les rapports coloniales de production responsables du sous-développement de l’Afrique. Aujourd’hui, la France continue d’utiliser une variété d’outils pour maintenir sa domination sur le Niger et d’autres pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest. En tant que puissance coloniale, la France a organisé l’économie nigérienne pour être non industrialisée et dépendante du commerce de l’uranium. Cette relation persiste comme les mines d’uranium nigériennes sont majoritairement détenues par des capitalistes français, qui importent de l’uranium nigérien pour soutenir l’énorme industrie nucléaire française. Un tiers des ampoules en France sont alimentées par de l’uranium nigérien, alors que 90% des Nigériens sont privés d’accès à l’électricité.

La France a environ 1,500 soldats stationnés au Niger, aidant à servir de base pour l’expansion du militarisme français en Afrique de l’Ouest. Bien que le contre-terrorisme soit la bannière sous laquelle la France et les États-Unis justifient leur présence militaire en Afrique de l’Ouest, l’intervention menée par l’OTAN en Libye en 2011 a déclenché une insurrection massive sur le continent, fournissant un prétexte pour une militarisation accrue tout en exacerbant l’insécurité et l’instabilité. Un rapport de 2019 publié par le Centre africain d’études stratégiques a révélé que les activités terroristes sur le continent ont doublé de 2012 à 2018. Le nombre de pays victimes d’attaques a augmenté de 960% pendant cette période. Dans toute la région, la nécessité de résoudre le problème du terrorisme par le développement, plutôt que par une intervention militaire étrangère illégale et inefficace, est au coeur de la lutte populaire pour expulser les forces françaises et américaines du sol africain.

En outre, le maintien du franc CFA comme monnaie officielle du Niger garantit que le Niger reste soumis à l’impérialisme. Le franc CFA est un produit du colonialisme français, qui fixe la monnaie nigérienne à un taux de change fixe avec l’euro (auparavant le franc), faisant en sorte qu’il soit incroyablement coûteux pour le Niger de commercer avec d’autres pays et permettant ainsi à l’Europe d’exploiter les ressources naturelles du Niger pour presque rien. De plus, la moitié des réserves de devises nigériennes sont détenues par le trésor français sous le système du franc CFA, ce qui rend impossible pour le Niger d’utiliser la politique monétaire pour développer l’industrie lourde et s’éloigner de l’extraction minière. Le franc CFA sert à garantir l’hégémonie monétaire de la France sur le Niger et plusieurs autres pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest et du Centre.

Cette longue histoire de l’impérialisme français au Niger est essentielle pour contextualiser le récent coup d’État. Les libéraux et les conservateurs tentent de présenter le nouveau gouvernement nigérien comme un régime militaire dictatorial imposé au peuple nigérien par une conspiration russe. Au contraire, le coup d’État est soutenu par un mouvement de masse nigérien déterminé à mettre fin à l’exploitation économique et à la domination politique de leur pays par la France, les États-Unis, et les capitaux étrangers, plus largement. Le soutien du nouveau gouvernement nigérien a été particulièrement évident lors de la manifestation du 8 août au stade Seyni Kountche, où 30,000 Nigériens ont apporté leur soutien au Conseil national pour la sauvegarde de la patrie.

Le Comité international de la DSA est solidaire du Niger dans sa lutte pour la souveraineté et contre l’impérialisme capitaliste. Alors que les États-Unis et l’Europe cherchent à vilipender le nouveau gouvernement nigérien et à étendre leur domination sur l’Afrique de l’Ouest, nous appelons à la suppression des sanctions contre le gouvernement de transition et le peuple nigérien; à la suppression de toutes les forces militaires françaises, des forces militaires américaines, et d’autres forces militaires étrangères du continent africain, y compris l’OTAN et le Commandement des États-Unis pour l’Afrique (AFRICOM); et l’abolition de tous les outils de domination coloniale qui entravent le développement du Niger.

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Justice and Democratic Socialism in George Floyd’s Hometown: Houston DSA Aids Coalition Work

George Floyd may have been murdered in Minneapolis, but he came from Houston, Texas, and his hometown has returned to the streets as Houstonians agitate for justice after another racist police murder. On July 26, 2023, the family of 29-year-old Jalen Randle, joined by Black Lives Matter HTX, Black Lives Matter Grassroots FL, Restaurant Workers United, Texas State Employees Union Local 6186, the Office of Ben Crump, Community Voices for Public Education, the Houston Tenants Union, and the Houston DSA gathered for a press conference demanding justice for their son. The day marked the latest action of the family’s campaign since Randle’s murder by Houston police on April 27, 2022, in the historically Black neighborhood of Pleasantville. Organized by local DSA members, this event may have marked the first time since 1946 that labor unions in Houston have stood with grassroots struggles against racist violence and murder. 

Since Randle’s murder, the fight for justice in Houston has not been led by established activists or organizations but by Randle’s family. His father, Warren Randle, is a full-time physical athletic trainer. Tiffany Bouyette Rachal, his mother, works as a touring singer and artist. Few others carrying these commitments would have maintained the capacity and passion for a regular schedule of monthly protests and actions for well over a year. The family’s tenacious determination inspired the Rice Women’s Basketball Team to feature Jalen’s name on uniforms in February 2023 and directly challenge the leaders of Houston’s political class two months later. The Randle family has united with the family of George Floyd and developed contacts with abolitionist intellectuals such as Ruth Wilson Gilmore and Robin D.G. Kelley

In an interview published on the first anniversary of his son’s murder, Warren Randle told The Real News Network, that Jalen had made him “a better person even in his death.” Rachal, similarly, has made her activism airborne, supporting the movement demanding justice for Andrew Joseph III in Florida, as well as in Atlanta where she sang at Tyre Nichols’s funeral, and as far away as Ohio and Washington D.C. where she traveled to march in solidarity with the family of Jayland Walker.

After a year of organizing, the Randle family in April of this year finally forced Harris County DA Kim Ogg to place the officer who shot Jalen, Shane Privette, before a grand jury. On April 26, the grand jury returned a “no action” decision, leaving the task of ruling up to a second grand jury. The date of its convening is still unknown. Despite the criminal legal system’s cruel maneuvers, the Randle family and their supporters have not backed down. They have instead upped the ante by organizing broader alliances involving teachers and unions and raised public questions about the real agenda of the DA’s office. If the resources of DSA nationally can be marshaled together with local ones, the Randle family could make DA Kim Ogg’s life even more difficult in the coming months.

But the primary challenge facing the Justice for Jalen campaign is one currently shared by every fight waged by our side right now, whether in Houston, Cop City, Ron DeSantis’s Florida, or far beyond. In a strong statement of solidarity to the Randle campaign, the Southern Workers Assembly in South Carolina warns that “there is a rising right wing assault on every aspect of our lives.” Queer and trans communities, communities of color, reproductive rights, librarians and libraries, public schools, unions, and everyone else and thing we hold dear are all in grave danger. There is no path forward for resisting this broad offensive if our struggles are not connected. And there is no reason they shouldn’t be. 

Each struggle puts us on the front lines of fighting for a different kind of society, for those we do not know and in the memory of those no longer here. Socialists today must build a new Left grounded in the same commitments that brought millions to the radical streets of 2020. Their example could not have been more dramatically pre-figurative of the world that could be ours, where “an injury to one is an injury to all.”

A World Where Injuries to One Matter to All

We have seen the legacy of the 2020 uprising play out in industrial action and workplace rebellion this summer. For socialists, the writers’ and actors’ strikes aren’t only about residuals, dystopian technological agendas, or even the status of art as we know it. Yes, they are about these, but they are also about another, much wider world made possible when workers stand together against injustice. Any and every locked arm against scabs and cops calls into question the false common sense of an undemocratic society built on profit over need, where ordinary people take orders from above rather than run society collectively from below. 

Bernie Sanders gestured toward these kinds of prefigurative commitments when he posed the question to his supporters, “Are you willing to fight for someone you don’t know?”

The transformation of ordinary people through struggle into some of the best leaders, organizers and tacticians also takes place on the streets against the cops and the courts. The same radical needs as well as capacities for collectivity and solidarity that emerge during fights with employers also arise independently among the oppressed, including in struggles against systemic racism and state violence. A socialism truly democratic can only thrive where these needs and capacities are developed on a mass scale through the passionate cultivation and care of activists. It is perhaps another way of describing the molecular infrastructures of abolition.

Seth Uzman is Co-Chair of the Houston DSA’s Abolition Working Group. For more information or to become involved with DSA’s abolition work, visit the site of the National DSA Abolition Working Group.

Tiffany Bouyette Rachal, flanked by Warren Randle and Martin Rachal, leads with an opening statement at a solidarity press conference on July 26th, 2023, outside the Harris County Criminal and Civil Courts.

HDSA Banners at the head of the family’s one year anniversary march for justice on April 22nd, 2023 at City Hall

Warren Randle shows solidarity at Houston DSA’s Teamsters BBQ Fundraiser on July 22nd, 2023 at the Texas Gulf Coast Area Labor Federation

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Stenciled banner donated by  Houston DSA to the Randle family and subsequently painted and embellished by community members on display during a Pleasantville town hall on July 28th, 2022.

The post Justice and Democratic Socialism in George Floyd’s Hometown: Houston DSA Aids Coalition Work appeared first on Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).

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200th Episode Celebration: The Future of DSA

Join us as we celebrate our 200th episode! We’ve been broadcasting on WBAI and online for almost five years and in that time, have featured the stories of hundreds of workers, tenants, and organizers fighting for socialism in New York City, in the United States, and around the globe. It’s a true honor and privilege to bring these stories to you, and we’re looking forward to what the future has in store!

 

For this week's show, we’re joined live by Honda Wang of DSA Labor. As a New York City delegate to the recent national DSA convention in Chicago, Honda will be sharing his analysis of the present and future of DSA and what’s next in the struggle for socialism. We also hear from Mac, Smitha, and Adam, three  NYC-DSA members who were inspired by their work in DSA to start organizing for tenants’ rights in their own buildings and neighborhoods.

 

Take the DSA Labor Strike Ready pledge to support workers at the UAW Big 3: dsausa.us/UAWPledge

 

Donate to the DSA Labor Solidarity Fund: donate.laborsolidarity.com.

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NNJ-DSA Condemns Killing of Andrew Jerome Washington by the Jersey City Police Department

NNJ-DSA Condemns Killing of Andrew Jerome Washington by the Jersey City Police Department

 

For Immediate Release: August 29th 2023

North New Jersey Democratic Socialists of America condemns the killing of Andrew Jerome Washington by the Jersey City Police Department. We are horrified that on this Sunday’s occurrence, family members specifically called for mental health professionals to respond and instead were met with an armed, swat-like police response.

Over the past month, the Jersey City Police were called six times to respond to reported mental health crises Andrew experienced, and even more shocking, in 2012 JCPD shot at Mr. Washington in what public safety Director James Shea calls “almost identical circumstances.

This sanctioning of violence by the state is devastating to Jersey City residents, particularly because the city has yet to implement an entirely civilian-led crisis intervention team, despite the City Council allocating funding for one in 2022. It is clear that Jersey City does not prioritize necessary programs like these. Instead, they gladly accept tank-like machines that further empower Jersey City police to have swat-level responses to common mental health emergencies.

Because of the administration’s failure to address a wide swath of issues from police violence and chronic understaffing of 9-1-1 workers to housing issues like wrongful evictions and unlawful rent hikes, residents have had to be an active check on the administration. Residents are forced to navigate a system that refuses to protect their housing rights and does not answer their 9-1-1 calls. When the calls are answered, Jersey City residents now have to fear the police response that will come because of this pattern of violence.

North NJ DSA and other groups are actively fighting these gross miscarriages of justice and basic human decency, including by soon pushing this administration to implement another program that will protect Jersey City residents: a tenants’ right to counsel.

Based on population, a black person is 489% more likely to have force used on them than a white person in Jersey City. Also, people with mental illness are ten times more likely to have police force used against them than people without mental illness. Without further intervention and accountability this will happen again.

We join the calls for a complete and thorough investigation by the New Jersey Attorney General and for the full footage of the encounter with police to be released to the public. Mental health crises should not end in death. We also call on the Jersey City city council to comment on the progress of their crisis intervention initiative and to share how the allocated funding has been used thus far to prevent violent acts like this from occurring again.  Residents of Jersey City deserve better–we deserve a thorough democratic investigation to keep those with the most power–those who wield the power and privilege of state violence–accountable to us. 

Our resolve as a community is tested when one of our own falls to police brutality, but we see a vision for a world without such ruthlessness, and we work every day towards that world. 

About North NJ DSA

North New Jersey DSA is a regional chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America. We believe that working people should run both the economy and society democratically to meet human needs, not to make profits for a few. We use a variety of tactics, from legislative to direct action, to fight for reforms that empower working people.

Press Contact:

Organization: North NJ Democratic Socialists of America

Email: hudson@dsanj.org

Website: north.dsanj.org

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Reflections on 2023 DSA and YDSA Convention

CHICAGO — From August 3 to 6, roughly 1,000 elected delegates and alternates, as well as observers, from across the country gathered in Chicago for the 2023 National Convention of the Democratic Socialists of America. After the virtual one in 2021, this was the first in-person DSA Convention since 2019 in Atlanta.

Based on membership size, chapters and at-large DSA members are apportioned and elect a certain number of delegates to DSA Convention, which meets every two years as the organization’s highest decision-making body. They debate and vote on constitutional and bylaws amendments that change DSA’s structure and internal rules, platform amendments that update our beliefs and goals on key issues, resolutions that inform the work of the national organization and chapters, and our top leadership between conventions on the National Political Committee (NPC), the members of which make sense of and direct the implementation of convention decisions.

The NPC includes 16 members, with one vote each, elected by delegates at DSA Convention, plus the two co-chairs of the Young Democratic Socialists of America (YDSA), who share one vote. The annual YDSA Convention, which elects its co-chairs and YDSA’s National Coordinating Committee (NCC), also met in the city in the days immediately prior to DSA Convention.

DSA is a multi-tendency socialist organization, which means there is a range of different socialist politics across the membership. Caucuses and other similar member formations are the organized expression of these political tendencies and form when like-minded members choose to join together to organize internally for their political vision for the organization and its work. That can consist of running candidates for chapter leadership, convention delegate, and NPC, and also submitting proposals that may be debated at Convention. Candidates may also organize themselves into slates without the backing of a formalized caucus, and any DSA member in good standing can draft and submit proposals for Convention provided they gather signatures from other members and support from delegates.

While most DSA members and delegates are uncaucused — being no member of any formation — DSA has no ban on factions. These organized political tendencies help present politically distinct paths for the future of DSA for us to consider and debate and are a vehicle to advocate for them too.

Below, Working Mass presents 10 statements reflecting on this year’s DSA and YDSA Conventions. Collected from a selection of attendees across most chapters in Massachusetts and the range of tendencies represented in their delegations, they lay out a variety of perspectives and highlights that we hope gives an impression of these conventions and their outcomes.


Michaela and Desmond, Bread & Roses

Bread & Roses had about 90 members at DSA Convention as delegates.

As proud Bread & Roses members, we see the 2023 DSA Convention as a massive step forward. Nearly a thousand delegates recommitted to the rank-and-file strategy in labor, endorsed a more independent, oppositional electoral strategy, and approved paid political leadership. Combined, these decisions could lay the foundation for a more democratic, powerful, party-like DSA in the coming years.

To start, Convention made important interventions on electoral strategy. The base Electoral Consensus Resolution included important structural reforms to the National Electoral Commission (NEC). B&R’s “Act Like an Independent Party” amendment, which calls for DSA to develop organizational, strategic, visible independence from the Democratic Party, passed with almost 80% support. By passing another B&R-authored proposal, “Defend Democracy through Political Independence,” Convention also rejected a strategy of fighting the authoritarian right by tailing the Democrats. Instead, we committed the organization to defending democracy by running independent campaigns to build working-class organization and consciousness. These votes amount to an overwhelming endorsement of political independence for DSA, an important choice as the 2024 elections loom.

On labor, delegates voted down two amendments to the Labor Consensus Resolution. One would have weakened DSA’s commitment to the rank-and-file strategy, hinting that we would privilege working with union leadership over rank-and-file workers and even stripping language about building and collaborating with Labor Notes. The other would have scuttled the base language about paying our two National Labor Commission (NLC) co-chairs as elected full-time organizers, kneecapping our national labor work at a crucial moment of revival in the labor movement. Delegates rejected the former 69-31 and the latter 54-46.

Finally, this Convention made big gains for DSA as a democratic mass organization. In the consent agenda alone, we passed B&R-endorsed resolutions to revive the National Activist Conference (NAC), which can become an important learning hub for our activist layer, and to establish a DSA Editorial Board that can build out Democratic Left and Socialist Forum into a lively, serious party press. We passed a strong YDSA Consensus Resolution that will empower our youth wing with the resources and autonomy to keep growing. The newly approved Democracy Commission will research and plan for a more democratic internal structure for DSA. Most significantly, the Convention rejected austerity arguments and passed B&R’s proposal to elect two full-time paid co-chairs of DSA. Soon, we will have elected national spokespeople whose full-time job is to build DSA!

We didn’t celebrate every convention decision. B&R’s amendment to the International Consensus Resolution, “Class Struggle Internationalism,” was defeated, and we weren’t able to stop the stripping of language around accountability for electeds from the “Defend Democracy” resolution. Still, we’re excited to engage with DSA’s international work going forward, and the bulk of the defend democracy strategy – including the core commitment to political independence – passed overwhelmingly.

We have our work cut out for us, but this Convention was a huge win for all who want DSA to become a real mass socialist organization that can organize the working class to fight for its own liberation.

Michaela B (she/her), a delegate from River Valley DSA, is the chair of the Matching Funds subcommittee of the Growth and Development Committee and is a past co-chair of River Valley DSA. She joined DSA in 2017, and this was her second consecutive DSA Convention as a delegate.

Desmond O (he/him), a delegate from Boston DSA, is the rank-and-file organizing chair in Boston DSA’s Labor Working Group and organizes with the DSA Logistics Committee. He also serves on the Bread & Roses National Coordinating Committee. Desmond joined DSA in 2021, and this was his first DSA Convention as a delegate. He is a member of UNITE HERE Local 26 in Boston.

Russell, Socialist Majority Caucus

Socialist Majority Caucus had about 55 members at DSA Convention as delegates.

This Convention found a DSA energized and mobilized, politically matured, and financially stretched. Where we are by 2025 and by 2033 and beyond will depend on the choices comrades make now and in months to come.

I joined Socialist Majority Caucus when it formed in 2019 because it was made up of comrades I saw do good organizing across DSA in the 2-3 years before united by a belief in a strong, well-funded, politically coherent national organization; running socialists for office using whatever ballot line is easiest for them to win on; campaigns to build the organization; and the centrality of race and racial justice in the fight for socialism.

In 2019 and 2021, delegates consistently voted for SMC’s ideas, passing resolutions for multi-racial organizing, pragmatic electoral strategies, and a version of the rank-and-file strategy in labor that emphasizes organizing the unorganized; defeating resolutions to weaken the national organization by decentralizing or financially undermining it; and electing our candidates to a plurality on the National Political Committee.

At the 2023 Convention, it was gratifying to see many of our ideas have become consensus positions in DSA, underlying many consensus resolutions that passed, especially labor, electoral, multi-racial, growth and development, internationalism, and the Green New Deal. There are no longer debates about decentralizing or defunding national or against organizing through power-building campaigns. Delegates defeated resolutions committing DSA to self-marginalizing electoral strategies. Most excitingly, our top political priority — a national campaign for DSA to fight the right through work to defend abortion and trans rights — passed overwhelmingly!

That said, while our allies on the Groundwork slate won four seats, SMC’s NPC candidates mostly lost and won’t hold a plurality for the first time since 2019. Most tragically, SMC fought hard for a necessary reform to democratize DSA by expanding our structurally dysfunctional elected leadership from 18 members to 31. It won support from 61% of delegates, but not the 67% supermajority needed to pass. However, a “Democracy Commission” to study NPC reform did pass, so hopefully we can win some kind of reform in 2025.

The Convention heard reports from national staff and elected leaders that we spend more than we take in, and we’re depleting savings built up over many years. Convention then created numerous new paid positions and committed to expensive projects and campaigns. The new NPC faces a hard job deciding priorities, and all DSA members need to recruit more comrades and increase dues.

However, after nine years in DSA, I have more hope than ever for our ability to meet this moment of rising worker militancy and the rising fascist right. This Convention showed an organization of tens of thousands of members who are already organizing — investing time, energy, and money in the socialist movement — and ready to do much more. We must!

If you agree with the Socialist Majority vision I’ve laid out, join us: socialistmajority.com!

Whether you do or not, sign up for income-based dues to support DSA’s fight for socialism at dsausa.org/join!

Russell W (he/him), a delegate from Boston DSA, is a solidarity co-chair in Boston DSA’s Labor Working Group, a past co-chair of Central New Jersey DSA, and a past NPC member. He joined DSA in 2014, and this was his fifth consecutive DSA Convention as a delegate. He is a member of the Boston Teachers Union (AFT Local 66).

Connell, Marxist Unity Group

Marxist Unity Group had about 30 members at DSA Convention as delegates.

One of our priorities is electoral work that moves toward independence from the Democratic Party and has standards for DSA electeds decided democratically by membership. For me, this Convention was an extremely positive step for DSA’s direction.

Compared to the results from 2021, there is a definite shift toward political independence. The electoral amendment “Act Like an Independent Party” establishes that we must present a democratic socialist alternative for the working class that is independent of the Democratic Party and that we should develop our own party identity while we work toward our organizational independence. This amendment passed with about 80% of delegates voting in favor, whereas a similar amendment failed last Convention.

There were also failed amendments that nevertheless show growing support for change to the DSA electoral status quo. The amendment “Towards a Party-Like Strategy” that MUG wrote with Reform & Revolution would have established DSA electeds should fight for our platform, and among other things set out a few red lines in advance. These red lines would set an expectation of people we endorse to oppose increases to police budgets, refuse to vote to restrict the right to strike, oppose all forms of oppression and discrimination, and oppose military budgets and aid. It got 40% of delegates voting in favor so it failed, but compare this to a similar resolution from 2021 that got around 30% in the pre-convention delegate survey and did not make the agenda. Because of a procedural motion with the resolution “Defend Democracy through Political Independence,” we also got to take an unexpected poll on one aspect of our political orientation. While the vote on it failed, 49% of delegates supported the idea the National Political Committee should publicly disapprove of DSA candidates and electeds supporting or endorsing centrist Democrats. Between these three votes, we see a trend toward political independence that we can continue building on.

The NPC election was another sign of positive change for DSA. As a relatively small and new caucus, MUG members are very excited to have elected both of the NPC candidates we ran, Rashad and Amy. They are experienced chapter leaders with a commitment to transforming DSA into a mass socialist party. Many DSA members have been dissatisfied with the level of transparency and member input into DSA, and the NPC elected this Convention has good prospects of putting membership in control.

Other positive convention outcomes are the defeat of the Groundwork labor amendments that would have weakened DSA’s commitment to rank-and-file workers, a national campaign for trans rights and bodily autonomy, and paid full-time co-chairs both for the National Labor Commission and the NPC. The opportunities from these new member leadership positions are exciting, but only if we can pay for them. Since Convention closed there has already been a surge in DSA members with renewed commitment signing up for income-based dues. Whether or not you agree with my assessment of Convention, if you’re financially able, sign up for your 1% for the 99%!

Connell Heady (they/them), a delegate from River Valley DSA, is a co-chair of that chapter. They joined DSA in 2020, and this was their second consecutive DSA Convention as a delegate.

Eve, Reform & Revolution

Reform & Revolution had about 25 members at DSA Convention as delegates.

The 2023 DSA Convention was a big step forward for our organization. Delegates amended the agenda to take on some of the key debates for DSA today, like whether and how to run fighting national campaigns, the question of party-like socialist electoral work, and the lessons learned from the conflict between the outgoing NPC and the BDS working group and our approach to anti-Zionism. In the end, despite substantive debate and a sense of seriousness and maturity compared to 2019 and 2021, many important issues were left unresolved or untouched. The Convention was silent on U.S. support for Ukraine and how socialists should relate to the 2024 presidential election and Joe Biden. But with an energized left wing of the organization emboldened by gains on the NPC and a strong plan for a national campaign on trans and reproductive rights, Reform & Revolution delegates came out of Convention excited to build DSA in 2024 and beyond!

Eve Seitchik (they/she), a delegate from Boston DSA, is a past co-chair of that chapter. They joined DSA in 2018, and this was her third consecutive DSA Convention as a delegate.

Shane, Red Line

Red Line had about 15 members at DSA Convention as delegates.

Three DSA members in Congress voting to ban a strike prompted Red Line’s formation, and our delegates were pleased by leftward movement toward more principled electoral work, even when we lost, as we voted as a bloc for:

  • Yes on Amendment I, “Act Like an Independent Party,” which with 79% support amended the electoral consensus resolution, for a DSA “organizationally, strategically, and visibly independent of the Democratic Party.”
  • Yes on Amendment P, “Towards a Party-Like Electoral Strategy,” which failed with 41% support and would’ve formalized expectations that DSA electeds oppose strengthening the police, restricting the right to strike, oppressing vulnerable groups, or funding the military or U.S. client states like Israel.
  • Yes on retaining, within “Defend Democracy through Political Independence,” lines 41-46, which failed with 49% support and would’ve directed the NPC to “publicly communicate disapproval” of DSA electeds “explicitly or tacitly support[ing] centrist leaders of the Democratic Party.”
  • No on the Green New Deal Campaign Commission resolution, which passed with 37% opposed and commits significant funding and staff to their electoral strategy, expands redundancies with the National Electoral Committee and National Labor Commission, and lacks substantive reflection on the Pass the PRO Act and GND for Public Schools campaigns.
  • No on the NPC recommendation moving the BDS Working Group to the International Committee, which passed with 48% opposed and disciplines the BDS WG for strident opposition to unprincipled votes by Congressman Bowman.

While more active under new leadership, the NLC’s relationship with chapter labor committees remains unclear, it lacks a socialist labor publication, and its work often defaults to cheerleading workers from the sidelines while many DSA members’ union work is uncoordinated and individual. On labor, Red Line voted:

  • No on Amendment H, “We are Workers,” to the labor consensus resolution, which failed with 69% opposed, because we reject prioritizing relations with leadership at the expense of standing with the rank and file — whether it’s tying ourselves wholesale to leadership’s bargaining goals and strategy or opportunistically pursuing endorsements for our electoral and legislative work.
  • Mostly Yes on Amendment F, which passed with 97% support, to build out EWOC locally, but believing that it cannot be a way to sidestep confrontation with union leadership or hard choices while “boring from within” existing major unions — as reorienting them to the class struggle is necessary to organize the unorganized on a mass scale.

Competitive elections, a vibrant political culture, and left organization produced a more representative and more left NPC, and we’ll now see how it actually lands on the issues. DSA’s internal democracy is strong, but we hope for staff and structural reforms, a better agenda-setting process, proportional election of all delegations going forward, and that the successful resolution revitalizing DSA’s publications further empowers members.

In sum, Convention affirmed the value of socialist regroupment within DSA and the error of abstention from the center of the socialist movement in this country and from the ideological struggle over its character and future. Join Red Line in the fight for it!

Shane Levett (he/him), a delegate from Worcester DSA, is a member of the board of Working Mass, the National Labor Commission’s Solidarity Fund Committee, and in his third term on his chapter’s steering committee. He is also a past member of the Organizing Committee of the Boston DSA Electoral Working Group. Shane serves on the Red Line provisional steering committee. He joined DSA in 2020, and this was his second consecutive DSA Convention as a delegate. He is on the organizing committee in his workplace with IBEW 2222.

Paul, North Star

North Star had about 10 members at DSA Convention as delegates.

I came home from Convention with a great deal of hope and enthusiasm for the future of the democratic socialist movement in the United States.

DSA is finally metamorphosing into the powerful organization we dreamed of in the early 1980s when we merged the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (DSOC) and the New American Movement (NAM) to form DSA.

Some of the few surviving veterans of that effort attended the 2023 Convention as delegates associated with the North Star Caucus. I think most of them would agree with my positive assessment that this was the most hopeful and inspiring Convention held in the four decades since we helped launch DSA.

I personally feel pride and gratification in the vitality and converging sense of unity and commitment demonstrated in Chicago. This does not mean that I agree with the outcome of every contested vote or voted for every successful NPC candidate. That is not important.

What matters is that DSA LIVES! Ten years ago, we were barely surviving, with an aging membership loyally soldiering on. I served six years on the NPC from 2009 to 2015, when we had four to six functioning chapters and a few campus organizations. Beyond maintaining a modest office and paying a minimal staff through membership dues, we depended on legacy bequests to support any national programming.

We made some seminal decisions that eventually paid off in 2016-17: hiring Maria Svart as National Director in 2011 and David Duhalde as Youth Organizer and later Deputy Director, putting office procedures and financial reporting into good order, and putting most of our scarce resources into campus organizing, which became the core of YDSA. Above all, we helped encourage Bernie Sanders to run for President as a self-identified democratic socialist in the Democratic primary.

I want to share two anecdotes from Convention. During the comradely but heated debate on amendments to the labor consensus resolution, I went outside to refill my water. When I went to reenter, I ran into Sean Orr, National Labor Commission co-chair and a UPS Teamster key to our Strike Ready campaign, and known to me as the resolution’s primary drafter. Sean was not a delegate but a volunteer freed up from his intensive union work by the tentative agreement. We had a great discussion on the spot, agreeing that the outcome of the amendments would not much affect our ongoing work.

One meal time I happened to sit with Jane Slaughter, now a member of Detroit DSA. I first met Jane in the 1980s, when we were in NAM and she and her comrades in the International Socialists respectfully left because they thought we were insufficiently committed to a strategy of concentrating on heavy industry. Now together in DSA, we celebrated our growing convergence with Labor Notes on a pragmatic rank-and-file strategy.

Without multiplying instances, I was inspired by encounters with comrades of all generations from all over the USA. I would do it over again, and not even complain about frivolous points of order.

Paul Garver (he/him), a delegate from Boston DSA, is a steering committee member on the International Committee, its liaison to the National Labor Commission, and a past National Political Committee member. Paul was a member of the New American Movement from its beginning and was a founding member of DSA. This was his tenth DSA Convention as a delegate after 1982, 1984, 1986, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017.

Bryan, uncaucused

Walking into the Convention, I was a mix of excitement and a little uncertainty. It was a bunch of firsts all rolled into one — traveling to a new state (not just another East Coast trip), hopping on the train with fellow delegates from different parts of New England, and hanging out with fellow delegates from chapters all over the place. I’ll admit, I was a bit nervous at first about facing so many new faces, but meeting all these comrades from different walks of life was really cool and informative, and they made me feel right at home. Getting the lowdown on how other chapters are dealing with things was pretty eye-opening, and even on the train ride, as well as before and during, I was talking with fellow delegates and chapter leaders about ways we could work together to make our chapters thrive.

When we got to the voting part, I’ve got to say, I was genuinely impressed. The whole process went smoother than I thought given what I had heard from previous years, and a lot of those votes went the way I was really hoping for. I’m pretty excited that we’re giving reproductive and trans liberation some major attention in DSA. Those issues really need all the support they can get, especially with the challenges they’re facing from almost all fronts. And the decision to start the process of stepping away from the major political parties to have our own? I’m totally on board. It’s about time we carve out our own political path for the working class!

Let’s chat about those breakout sessions and panels — they were awesome. I not only learned a lot, but the people leading them were really spot on. They made sure everyone’s questions got answered, whether they had the answers or they pointed us toward more info. I’m even happy to say I will be working with some members on ways we can grow our local chapter and do more in our community. I’m really excited about the newly elected National Political Committee (NPC). The fact that this group consists of people with diverse backgrounds and a range of ideologies is a great sign in making sure folks are represented as well as ensuring that all comrades’ voices are heard. It’s clear that every member of the NPC is dedicated to helping the organization thrive and grow. This gives me a lot of confidence that our movement is in good hands, ready to move forward with inclusivity and a shared goal of progress.

As the curtain falls on this transformative event, I’m totally amped about the possibilities that lie ahead. Memories of the good times made with comrades and the insights and experiences I’ve got from this Convention will keep driving me to make things happen in my chapter and beyond. The Convention was a reminder that stepping into the unknown with a mix of excitement and those butterflies in your stomach can lead to some seriously awesome growth and empowerment.

Bryan Sylvestre (he/him), the alternate from Cape Cod DSA, is a co-chair of that chapter and a past media coordinator on its executive committee. He joined DSA in 2019, and this was his first DSA Convention as a delegate.


Vivian, Constellation

Constellation had about 20 members at YDSA Convention as delegates.

When I speak to DSA members about YDSA, many are surprised by the extent of the differences between our main political debates. Because YDSA does not conduct its own independent electoral campaigns, formations like Socialist Majority and Groundwork are not represented. Instead, our main debates center labor and internationalism and are generally preoccupied with the following questions:

  1. Should we run a large national campaign? What issue should that campaign center, and what tactics or strategies should we use in that campaign?
  2. What sort of labor work should we do? Should we prioritize salting in strategic industries, such as healthcare, labor, and logistics? Should we prioritize campus labor organizing? Or can we do both?
  3. How much should we integrate into DSA? Should our committees remain relatively independent with a liaison going between them, or should we operate as subcommittees that work on YDSA priorities within larger DSA committees?

The 2023 YDSA Convention was the first where my caucus, Constellation, had an official presence. Last year, several of our founding members formed a slate known as TRAIN, an acronym summing up several of our major priorities, including big tent internationalism, grievance reform, building up YDSA’s national organization, and others. This year, Constellation advanced many of the same priorities as TRAIN, but with a larger focus on diversity. We were the only caucus to run exclusively people of color for the National Coordinating Committee, one being Aron Ali-McClory, one of YDSA’s new co-chairs, and the other myself.

Our status as a caucus allowed us to meet regularly before Convention and plan out a more developed strategy. Four of our nine proposals this year were placed on the consent agenda, and eight were adopted by the Convention. Additionally, Aron came in first in the YDSA co-chair election by a 45-point margin, demonstrating once again that our politics have gained significant popularity. This was a big improvement from TRAIN, which elected none of its NCC candidates and only passed two of its proposals.

We are particularly pleased that the Convention voted down R23, “Class-Struggle Internationalism,” 49–85. Internationalism is one of Constellation’s biggest priorities, and our founding members have served both on the International Committee’s Youth Leadership Committee and on IC Steering. Those of us with extensive experience doing international work felt that R23 would unnecessarily separate YDSA’s international work from DSA’s, greatly decreasing YDSA members’ ability to rely on the DSA IC to help us form and maintain relationships with other youth formations.

We are also pleased with the results of the NCC election this year, particularly the election of Callynn Johnson and Hailey Sowa, two Constellation-recommended candidates, since Aron and I were guaranteed at least at-large seats due to the POC quota. The past year’s NCC had a Bread & Roses majority at the time of its election, though one B&R member resigned in the middle of the term. This year’s NCC has a little more caucus diversity, with B&R, Marxist Unity Group, and Constellation members all being elected. 

Vivian Dai (she/they), a delegate from Boston University YDSA and Boston DSA, is a co-chair of BU YDSA and a past Silicon Valley DSA steering committee member. She joined DSA in 2020, and this was their third consecutive YDSA Convention as a delegate and first DSA Convention as a delegate.

Ruy, Reform & Revolution

Reform & Revolution had about 10 members at YDSA Convention as delegates.

YDSA’s 2023 Convention was a marked shift to a more boldly socialist and fighting organization. Delegates affirmed not only a national campaign for bodily autonomy and trans rights, but also committed the organization to become the youth wing of a socialist party (as opposed to the campus wing), argued that we are against the Constitution and need to build a new one, and generally fixed many organizational issues that we’ve been dealing with. Our delegates from Reform & Revolution YDSA are amped and ready to get to work over the next year!

Ruy M (he/him), a delegate from Harvard College YDSA, is the co-chair of that YDSA chapter and a past co-chair of the Austin DSA Electoral Working Group. He joined DSA in 2016, and this was his third YDSA Convention as a delegate after 2020 and 2021.

Hunter, uncaucused

The UMass Amherst YDSA chapter was represented by William O’Dwyer as a delegate, Benjamin Campanella as an alternate, and me as an observer. All three of us in attendance are uncaucused but on most issues are sympathetic to Bread & Roses’ policy agenda and their candidates for elected positions in the organization.

In terms of resolutions passed, while UMass YDSA is sympathetic to the sentiment of R21, “Winning the Battle for Democracy,” we opposed its passage. We believe that encouraging DSA to advocate for sedition against the Constitution serves only to marginalize our organization and alienate sympathetic working people from our cause without accomplishing anything substantive toward further democratizing the U.S. government.

UMass YDSA was pleased with the passage, unamended, of R12, “Recommitting YDSA to the Rank-and-File Strategy,” and by the election of Winnie Marion of B&R to the National Coordinating Committee.

Overall, UMass YDSA is excited to continue our chapter’s participation in the national organization, and we remain a committed partner in the fight to build socialism in our time in the United States.

Hunter Cohen (he/him), an observer from UMass Amherst YDSA, is a past president of that chapter. He joined DSA in 2021, and this was the first YDSA Convention he has attended. He is a past member of Teamsters Local 170.


Featured image credit: Overlayed on a photo by Claire B of delegates singing “Solidarity Forever” at the close of DSA Convention are headshots of the members of DSA’s new National Political Committee, appearing in circles colored according to their caucus or slate, if any, with the diameter of each circle based on the number of first preferences they received in the NPC election (or total votes received in the case of the two YDSA co-chairs, who were not elected by single transferable vote). Graphic by Shane Levett/Working Mass