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.
“Solidarity Forever”: The Need for Protest Activism
by Richard P
Why do we protest? In a recent blog post, comrade Kevin N spoke of how his “romanticized 1960s images of crowds of protestors” transformed eventually into a commitment to “organizing, not just mobilizing,” and on both points, I agree with him. However, his argument that protests are “cathartic, empowering, and publicly visible” but ultimately “will accomplish … little” misses a few key points.
Kevin suggests that protests are simply tools to mobilize people to show up, and that organizing, which has “a deep commitment to developing one another into leaders both inside and outside the organization,” is fundamentally different and unrelated to this mobilization effort. I would instead argue that if we want to “organize people into DSA and build it into a formidable political force that can leverage its power from below,” we must engage with them where they are, and that includes through endorsing and attending protests. Thousands of people showed up for the No Kings rally last October, and the numbers increased in March. These protests are thus an excellent opportunity to meet potential comrades, and show left-leaning Clevelanders that Cleveland DSA cares about the issues that they care about enough to march in the streets about it.
As a chapter that says we are informed by labor organizing strategies (shout-out to No Shortcuts), we recognize that the foundation of that organizing is solidarity. The working class acting together in solidarity has ended authoritarian governments, improved the lives of millions of union workers, and spurred some of America’s most necessary changes such as civil rights legislation, expanded healthcare coverage, and child labor laws. Protesting, too, just like those romanticized 1960s marches in the civil rights and anti-war movements, is an act of solidarity.


But what does solidarity look like in 2026? The socialist theologian and former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, in his upcoming book Solidarity: The Work of Recognition, makes the argument that we need a “solidarity of the shaken,” that is, “a radical human togetherness formed out of an acceptance of our shared vulnerability and reliance on each other in a fallen world.” To protest, then, is not just to have a shared moment of catharsis, but to stand in solidarity with those who are feeling vulnerable. Our current moment, brought on by the failed capitalist state that is the United States of America, has left too many people vulnerable and marginalized. It is an outward and visible sign of our inward emotions, worries, and hopes, being present in physical space and taking on risk to support the marginalized (especially when they may not be able or willing to take on that risk themselves), not just posturing “allyship.”
This solidarity requires urgency and discernment in where that urgency is applied. Not everything is a five-alarm fire, but these emergencies do exist. When the next Tamir Rice or Tanisha Anderson is brutally killed by the police, the next bomb is dropped on a country we do not want to be at war with, the next ICE action crosses yet another line, or some fresh hell that we cannot begin to imagine occurs, our solidarity is important. We can’t just ignore what other organizations and people think about us – they, as our fellow humans and potential comrades in collective struggle, deserve our solidarity and for us to be in solidarity together. When we remember the civil rights movement, we remember the titanic work of Black-led organizations like the NAACP, the SCLC, and the SNCC, but there were white people and groups who showed up in solidarity too, from Dwight Eisenhower’s personal physician Paul Dudley White to the lawyer Jack Greenberg, who argued over 40 civil rights cases in front of the Supreme Court. When we recognize that we are all vulnerable and hurt by the system of capital, we then realize that it is incumbent on each other to be in solidarity and support – including at protests.


In the last verse of that great union anthem, “Solidarity Forever,” we sing that “In our hands is placed a power greater than their hoarded gold, / Greater than the might of armies, multiplied a thousand-fold. / We can bring to birth a new world from the ashes of the old / For the union makes us strong. / Solidarity forever! / Solidarity forever! / Solidarity forever! / For the union makes us strong.”
Our union comrades show us what this means every day – even when their union isn’t on strike, members show up to other protests, teach others about the power of the picket line, and support union organizers that are helping other people get the same protections they have. There is no reason we shouldn’t want to do the same for everyone suffering under the boot of capital and fascism, especially when we are discussing building towards a General Strike in 2028. That takes organizing, from conversations, to strike votes, to picket lines. But it also includes collective action, i.e. a protest on May Day this year.
If you consider the prototypical protester, the “liberal wine mom,” if you will, there are avenues available to us to welcome them into our movement. An avowed democratic socialist with the NYC-DSA endorsement won a plurality of all white women in the 2025 New York Mayoral election. Even amongst older white women, he still got over a third of their support last November. They’re not turned off by democratic socialism and might even be interested in our work – but what have we done to recruit them and get them to join our movement? We need to show up in the places where they gather, including protests. Protesters are already agitated and will know something about our organization or democratic socialism because of figures like Zohran, Bernie, or Rashida – that’s a lot of our organizing conversation already done! Cori Bush, a phenomenal fighter for the working class in Congress, came out of the movement in Ferguson. Our comrade, Cleveland City Councilman Tanmay Shah, as well as many other electeds, have come out of the labor movement.
The more than twenty DSA members who were at the Cleveland No Kings protest at the end of March saw a moment that encapsulated the issues we’re dealing with. State Senator Nickie Antonio, who gets to be considered “progressive” in part because of her sexuality, despite her fundraising with senior Republicans, stopped the speech of a Latina activist speaking in Spanish about the fight for immigration rights. A video of something similar happening to a pro-Palestinian speaker in Pennsylvania has gone decently viral. Antonio, like current Flock employee and former Cleveland City Councilman Kerry McCormack, benefits from a system where, as Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò argues in Elite Capture, identity politics has been twisted to serve the elites and their interests, not those of working class people.
If you are unconvinced by the establishment’s choices, you can either sigh and return to being apathetic, or you can work with an organization that is actually trying to challenge the Democratic status quo that self-aggrandizes itself as “brave” while simultaneously snatching the mic from a Latina discussing immigrant rights. A protest isn’t the end of our anger and frustration – it’s the beginning. Being present and using that presence to invite someone to consider joining DSA and enter our membership pipeline gets them into a structured mass party-like movement that takes them away from the unstructured progressive movement that, in the immortal words of Jo Freeman, isn’t “very good for getting things done,” a take echoed by Vincent Bevins in If We Burn.
Our transformation into a mass party does not need to be slow and incremental – as comrades in New York showed us last year and as our comrades in Wisconsin are showing us right now with Francesca Hong. The voters supporting her and putting her at first place in the polling aren’t just members of Wisconsin DSA chapters. When we present our message, as Oliver Larkin is doing in his primary against Jared Moskowitz in Florida, we see voters joining with us. Mass action, be it electoral work, protests, public comments, community response networks, or encampments, helps people get to know us better by meeting them where they are and on the issues they care about – and that’s the core of solidarity.
The word “solidarity” comes to us from the French solidarité which is rooted in the Latin solidus – Firm. Whole. Undivided. Entire. What transformations might we see in our work and our world if we lived into those four words as a goal for who we are fighting for and the type of movement we have to build? Every time we turn up and show out, a new organizer grows in their skills and learns even more what solidarity means, not just with each other as comrades, but with the marginalized who we continue to fight for. Let us be firm on our beliefs and what we are called to do, but with the understanding that we are seeking an improved life for the working class of the entire country, and indeed the world. Together, the people must be undivided – no matter where or how we meet them.
The post “Solidarity Forever”: The Need for Protest Activism appeared first on Democratic Socialists of America.
Presenting Our Politics
A letter from the new Democratic Left editorial board.
The post Presenting Our Politics appeared first on Democratic Left.
How DSA’s Top-Ranking Chapters are Changing
March Chapter and Verse: Bernie in the Bronx, AOC at endorsement forum, chapters in new offices and more chapter news.
The post How DSA’s Top-Ranking Chapters are Changing appeared first on Democratic Left.
Beyond the Slogans, What’s Convention Really About?

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

Labor and political education are two of the most important spaces for our efforts to build socialism in our lifetimes here in Metro Detroit. In this article, I’m arguing for three amendments that empower every member.
Amendment to R16: A Level Playing Field for an Open, Fair and Democratic Debate Series
As a “big tent” organization with a range of political traditions and tendencies, it’s vital that our members understand the various and often conflicting visions for the future of our chapter and organizing work.
The original resolution, R16, proposes a series of five debates for our general meetings discussing these topics. Holding debates regarding our organization, political theory and how we approach our work is indeed a critical and healthy measure for our chapter’s democracy. I suspect most members, despite tendency or caucus affiliations, would agree that a debate series is beneficial.
However, the resolution bases the series of debates on the book A User’s Guide to DSA. This is a publication that is now a few years old and doesn’t necessarily reflect the current status of debates in DSA today.
Besides, should we really ask our members to buy a specific niche book in order to understand the debate series they’re agreeing to at convention? The topics are not listed anywhere in the resolution, nor readily available online anywhere the book is listed for sale (Labor Power Publications, Amazon).
In short, members are being asked to agree to debates with almost zero context, and it’s not realistic to expect most members to proactively seek out this information in less than two weeks while they are also seeking to understand the ramifications of 15 other resolutions and three amendments.
This amendment allows the full membership to have a say in the topics of the debate to ensure all perspectives are presented fairly and given equal consideration.
In brief, the amendment empowers any member in good standing to submit a topic for consideration, and allows the full membership to vote on which five of the submitted topics should be selected for the debate series. For transparency, members submitting a topic must state any caucus affiliation.
A healthy debate starts with bringing everyone and all perspectives to the table to set the terms and topics. This amendment does just that.
Amendment to R4: Ensuring Democracy in Political Education Leadership and Sessions at General Meetings
As democratic socialists, we believe in member-led democracy and the core tenet that all members should have a say in how our chapter operates. That includes political education, a function and committee of the chapter that exists to support your own political development.
Therefore, you should have a say in the leadership of the committee and what topics and material are covered at the political education sessions at general meetings.
This amendment has two key pieces. First, it allows any member in good standing to propose and vote on the topics for this year’s political education sessions at general meetings.
Secondly, it grants every member in good standing the right to vote for the Chair of the Political Education Committee.
At first blush, you would be forgiven for thinking these are terms that every member of an explicitly democratic organization would find agreeable. The argument I’ve most often heard in opposition to this amendment is that in order to have a say in your own political education and the design of sessions facilitated for your benefit, you must first make time to routinely join the Political Education Committee’s meetings, which these days take place exclusively in person.
While that’s reasonable enough on paper, at present, only 10–20 members of our 1,300 member organization routinely find time in their busy lives and other crucial organizing efforts for the Political Education Committee’s meetings. In short, that means political education sessions for around 200 members at our general meetings are decided by a self-selecting group that represents less than 2% of the full membership. That is not a healthy democratic process, least of all for something that can be as partisan and contentious as political education.
It’s time we empowered the full membership to have a say in their own political development by letting them choose both the Chair of the Political Education Committee and the topics for our general meetings.
Amendment to R13: Creating Industry Specific Subcommittees for More Effective Labor Organizing and Ensuring Labor Chairs Are Also Selected Democratically
As our organization experiences a second wave of historic growth, our efforts to support labor organizing are expanding accordingly.
Like the above political education amendment, this amendment to R13 has two key elements. The first is creating industry-specific subcommittees for labor organizing. The second is empowering every member in good standing to vote for the Chair of the Labor Working Group.
To better allow labor organizers to coordinate and share knowledge on how to navigate the unique challenges and landscape of their industries, this amendment proposes the creation of several subcommittees to support organizers in specific fields: teachers, healthcare workers, service workers, non-profit workers, auto workers, and more.
This amendment takes inspiration from the commendable initiative many teachers in our chapter have already taken to form their own subcommittee to advance organizing among teachers and find solidarity with one another.
The Amendments of R4 and R13 Bring the Political Education and Labor Chairs to the Exact Same Democratic Standards as the Membership Engagement, Electoral, and Socialists in Office Chairs.
It’s important to note that across the chapter, members in good standing already exercise their right to vote for the chairs of the Membership Engagement, Electoral, and Socialists in Office Committees.
These amendments do not impose any new standards but bring the Political Education Committee and Labor Working Group up to the same democratic processes as these other committees. They establish a more level playing field and give you a say in how your own chapter operates in these vital spaces.
Every member in good standing should have a say in who leads organizing efforts within our chapter, even if they cannot make time to join a specific meeting. After all, it may not align with their work schedule, they may be busy with childcare, are chronically ill, are already at capacity with other vital initiatives within the chapter, have transportation difficulties, lack internet access, etc. That shouldn’t preclude their ability to vote on leadership.
What’s the Difference Between a Working Group and a Committee, Anyway?
Great question! The truth is our bylaws do not make a clear distinction between working groups and committees. At present, the two function identically in our chapter, as smaller groups of chapter members working together toward a certain interest, niche, or set of projects of the chapter.
So long as our bylaws do not make a clear distinction between these two types of bodies and how they should operate, they should be governed under similar practices.
Hopefully, with the passage of the Unity in Action resolution (R11), these ambiguities will be clarified with new bylaw language proposals.
Altogether, the amendments to R4 and R13 bring democracy to the full membership for two key organizing efforts in our chapter and offer you the chance to guide your own political education.
It’s Your Chapter — You Should Get a Say in Political Education and Labor was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
The Detroit Socialist’s 2026 Resolution Extravaganza

This year before our annual membership convention, The Detroit Socialist asked for opinion pieces on the resolutions and amendments up for vote. Below, you will find 18 articles written by our fellow comrades.
In the spirit of democratic conversation, there are opposition articles. If you are interested in continuing the conversation before convention, please reach out to one of the co-editors (Taína S. or Casey G.) on Slack.
Our intention as editors of The Detroit Socialist is to provide a space for MD-DSA members to share our voices. We hope to provide a good faith platform for people to explain their resolutions and the reasoning behind them in a public forum.
Thank you so much to our writers, especially for your patience as we navigated these new waters and found them a little choppy.
Please enjoy the 2026 Resolution Extravaganza. We look forward to seeing you all at convention!
Resolution Articles:
All articles have links to the original resolution text.
- R2–26: Why We Need “Continuing Towards Mass Membership Activation” by Joseph Green
- R4–26 (with reference to R16 and A1-R8–26): Political Education at our Monthly General Meetings by Amanda Matyas
- R5–26: Why We Need the 2026 Consensus Resolution of the Socialists in Office Committee by Ian SB.
- R6–26: Building the Tradition: Why Metro Detroit DSA Needs a Mobilization Working Group by Rodney Coopwood
- R7–26: Let the Members Lead by Collin P.
- R8–26: Why We Need A Scalable, Balanced Model for a Growing MD-DSA by Francesca S.
- R9–16: Electoral Campaigns and You: Why the Electoral Consensus Resolution by Aaron B.
- R10–26: For Full Disclosure in Campaigns by Lauren Trendler
- R11–26: MD-DSA: Everybody In, Nobody Out by Phil B.
- Response Piece to R11–26: Against The Unity in Action Commission: Democracy Is a Practice, Not a Brand by Rodney Coopwood
- R13–26: Open Debate Is Necessary For Developing Socialist Politics & Practice by Peter Landon
- R14–26: Building a Pipeline, Not a Fence. Why We Need Term Limits and Real Democracy in Metro Detroit DSA by Jonathan Mukes
- R15–26: Building Admin for The Party by Justin Skytta
- R16–26: Experiencing R16 as a New Member by Fatima H.
- R16–26: A Democratic DSA Is Strong to Act in the World by Jane Slaughter & Amanda Matyas
Amendment Articles:
- A1–R8: Agitation, Deliberation, Education: An Amendment for a Radically Democratic General Meeting by Chris W.
- A1-R14–26: For Leadership Development, Reasonable Term Limits, and Institutional Memory by Phil B.
- A1-R16–26, A1-R24–26, A1-R13–26: It’s Your Chapter, You Should Get A Say in Political Education and Labor by Ian AM
The Detroit Socialist’s 2026 Resolution Extravaganza was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Fighting Bob! La Follette and His Enemies in High Places
A new book offers insight into the repression of antiwar voices during WWI — insight that is especially valuable as the U.S. embarks on another unpopular war.
The post Fighting Bob! La Follette and His Enemies in High Places appeared first on Democratic Left.
Beyond the Slogans, What’s Convention Really About?

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

A slew of political education-related resolutions and amendments this year could get us overwhelmed with details. It would be a shame if members at convention got bogged down in, “Is it 30 minutes for education or 45? Are we picking topics today or in a few months?”
Instead, we’d like to step back and talk about one part of an overall vision for what a thriving DSA chapter could look like.
First, what’s the reason to have a DSA chapter at all? It’s not just to create a community of like-minded people, though that’s part of it. It’s to create an organization that acts in the world with power. We are part of a national organization that’s trying to do the hardest thing ever attempted: to break the back of capitalism at its very core. To do that we will need to convince millions, literally millions, of people to become political actors in ways they never have before.
Socialism won’t be achieved by such millions obediently following orders. It can be achieved only by millions of thinking people who’ve decided to take their lives into their own hands. They will need to know that they are socialists.
The party DSA is trying to build is one school for training up socialists and class fighters. Unions can be another such school, as can social movements like the movement to stop ICE. These organizations, formal or informal, are where people learn to make decisions democratically, to strategize, to understand their opponents’ weaknesses and how to win small victories on the way to larger ones.
We’ve been members of Detroit DSA’s Political Education Committee since its early days. The committee has always been open to any member, and has put on a wide variety of events: education at the monthly general meetings (a new focus of the last two years); stand-alone Socialist Night Schools such as on Detroit politics, lessons from the Chicago Teachers Union, and the Communist Manifesto; Red Squares — one-off forums on a variety of topics, including conversations with socialists in (or near) office from Detroit to Brazil, and the history of the Troubles in northern Ireland; skills training such as public speaking or organizing conversations; new-member education on the basics; reading groups ranging from Capital to queer feminism to fiction. The events have been a mixture of practical, such as Organizing 101, and bigger-picture. Both are needed to help nurture socialists who can think, debate, and act. Acting in the world is the end goal of it all.
HOW SHOULD DSA FUNCTION?
What’s the best way for a DSA chapter that wants to end capitalism to function? This is the ideal, which we can’t say we’ve achieved yet:
· High-trust, high-participation. We need monthly general meetings (GMs) that people come to because they have a stake in the outcome: They learn. They debate. They vote. They make decisions that matter for what we do in the world. A GM where members’ role is to passively listen to announcements and updates… doesn’t make them want to return. Nor does it move us forward in changing the world.
· Active committees that have the experience and confidence to try new things. Many members’ first experience with active participation and democratic decision-making begins at the GM. An active committee is another place where those skills are honed. Ideas, decisions, and projects flow from GM to committee to GM for decisions, developments, and debriefs. Members who are involved and engaged with a committee will necessarily feel more involved in the organization, and confident in themselves. This includes the confidence of their fellow members, in and outside of the committee — they don’t need constant monitoring.
· Long-distance runners. People who understand how capitalism works, how movements work (or have not worked in the past), are more likely to stay in the fight. The chapter welcomes everyone who joins because of a particular issue they’re fired up about, and we help them see how it’s connected to every other issue. Conversations about systemic forms of oppression, revisited over time with new and old members, inform our strategy in our campaigns, projects, and workplaces. It is through conversations about the absolute basics that we can start to recognize the systems we are fighting.
People who don’t really understand the system can get easily discouraged by setbacks or turned off by the inevitable disagreements among socialists. We must be strategic in order to make real systemic change, not just reforms. Members who inflate the potential of a particular goal can find themselves disappointed when it doesn’t meet their expectations; by understanding the system, we know that “tax the rich,” for example, is a necessary reform, but it will not end capitalism. Knowing that this is a long, monumental project gives us perspective. We see campaigns and projects as pieces of a much bigger picture. We have long-term vision and goals, and are not easily deflated by a defeat today or tomorrow. The defeats are a part of a larger experimentation. We learn, like socialists before us learned.
· Our campaigns are aimed at helping working class people to organize on their own behalf, not on looking for a charismatic savior. We know that a reform gifted from above is not half as valuable as a reform wrested by mass action. Our campaigns are designed for bottom-up participation and decision-making, not for marching orders.
· As Kwame Toure explained at our March GM, we are building organizers, not just mobilizers. We want ongoing, thriving organizations that people take responsibility for maintaining, not just one-off demonstrations or events (though those are important too). Toure said, “People instinctively love freedom… But you cannot win freedom on instinct. You can only win freedom on reason.” Capitalism creates a complicated, contradictory world. Socialists must be very intentional about learning and teaching the history and theory of our movement and class. This will not be done by anyone else, and it will not be done incidentally. We must make it ourselves.
HOW DOES DEMOCRACY HELP?
An undemocratic organization is a weaker organization. It doesn’t have the buy-in of its members; it has trouble turning people out for the priorities it has decided on, partly because members didn’t have much role in those decisions (even if they nominally voted for them). Socialists are in favor of democracy in their own organization because democracy leads to more unity in action.
This is why the proposed focus of our political education at the GMs is broad and foundational: what will help us understand the capitalist system around us, and what are the core debates in our organization? While we experiment with different learning styles, our focus is on bringing members together in conversation, to learn from each other. We do not believe that any one tendency or strain of socialist thought has all the answers for every situation. Instead, the power comes from all tendencies working together, debating and aligning on the best tactic or approach for each situation.
We’ve been misled by our civics textbooks and other forms of propaganda to think that democracy equals “you have a vote.” But in fact, democracy is much more than that. Citizens of Russia and Hungary have the right to vote, but those countries are in fact dictatorships. Political scientists call the U.S. a democracy, but as socialists we know who is actually running the country.
Democracy requires much more than receiving an email in the privacy of your home and clicking the box for ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ Democracy means the members run this organization. Some hallmarks:
· DSA is “we,” not “they.”
· Issues are discussed openly. Decisions are made openly. Dissenting views are encouraged. The culture is mutual respect.
· Members can organize themselves, without waiting for assignments.
· Members, including longtime members, are constantly learning.
· It’s easy to be active and to move into leadership positions.
· Leaders help new members to develop and there are multiple avenues for doing so.
· Leaders trust members and members trust leaders.
Metro Detroit DSA is better on some of these markers than others. What we surely don’t need is to move in the direction of more passivity for members, less trust in committees, less tolerance of different views.
DSA since its revitalization of the last ten years has always prided itself on being a “big tent” where different views can co-exist democratically. We have rejected the idea that one set of ideas or one caucus should “win” and stamp out others.
If you agree that democracy means an engaged, confident membership and that a democratic DSA is stronger to act in the world, we urge you to vote:
- YES on R4–26 Political Education Committee Resolution, and NO on its amendment
- YES on R16–26 General Membership Meetings Pol Ed Series on Debates in DSA, and NO on its amendment
- YES on amendment A1-R8–26: Agitation, Deliberation, Education: A Radically Democratic General Meeting, and NO on its base (if unamended)
Jane Slaughter and Amanda Matyas are members of Detroit DSA’s Political Education Committee, the national Bread & Roses caucus, and the local Democracy Coalition, a new self-organized, cross-tendency formation.
A Democratic DSA Is Strong to Act in the World was originally published in The Detroit Socialist on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
