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.
You and What Army? Two Problems for Centrists
by Jean Allen
In response to the recent near sweep by NYC-DSA, former Maoist sellout Van Jones had this to say:
“Look, I used to be on the left side of Pluto. But to have somebody who, you know, their main qualification for being in our party is they were celebrating after October 8th the murder of innocent Israelis, to have somebody in our party get the nomination whose main qualification is saying that there should be no police, no prisons, Israel shouldn’t exist, is a red flashing light. And I think people who have more reasonable ideas in this party have gotta start working.
Because what’s happening is, the establishment thinks you can just buy ads and that’s somehow gonna let you win. Trump figured out the hard way, you can’t win in Iran with just bombers if you have nothing on the ground. Moderates cannot win in these blue districts if they have nothing on the ground. If all they have are ads and endorsements, and they don’t have the door knocking army of the DSA, you’re gonna see more and more of these candidates. The Democratic Socialists of America, they’ve got ground troops. And passion matters, and a mobilized base matters, and moderates keep thinking they can just say shame on you and sign another check. You’re going to have to put people on these doors otherwise you’re going to have people like this and worse taking over this party.”
I have two notes here that I will not follow up on but that should be at the top of your mind:
- Why was this problem only discovered after DSA started winning and not after two non-consecutive Trump victories, or even earlier when Democrats were losing local and state seats by the hundreds?
- Is Van Jones saying that we should have put boots on the ground in Iran?
That said, I want to lay out the two issues that moderates will increasingly find themselves in going forward.
First, Van Jones is correct. Centrists have deprioritized their ground game and basic between-elections organizing. Since the foundation of the DSCC, the politics of the Democratic party has functioned mostly through money and media. You can see this everywhere, from the Harris and Clinton campaigns’ focus on celebrity endorsements to the elevation of media figures and pundits to semi-leadership roles in the party. This has led to a Democratic base which relates to politics mostly through what they see on news entertainment channels or (if they are younger) online media. Van Jones is absolutely correct that election strategies based mostly around ad buys on established TV channels will not work in a world where more than 50% of people get their news directly from social media.
But more than that, this makes the Democratic base into something more like a watch club than a movement. When I speak to people entrenched into Democratic politics, what I usually hear is “Did you hear what she said? Have you been following the fight between him and her? Isn’t this person awful?” That is, the conversation is about things they see on TV (which makes them not that different from the Republicans I know, who talk about things they see on the computer). When this works, it has made a politics based largely around personal brand: Obama is a funny guy with media tastes like yours, Biden is a goofy uncle who deeply cares about his son’s passing, while socialists are disrespectful and lacking in character or capability. That is, it is not politics being built, not a series of goals people are working for, but personal loyalty to figures who are personally relatable. This may work for particular candidates who are able to develop cults of personality, but it was manifestly unable to build out a party – Obama, the greatest practitioner of representation-as-TV-character, led a Democratic party which lost 816 state and local seats under his presidency.
But what does it mean to focus on canvassing? In 2019, tremendous amounts of money were being spent on the presidential race in every possible place, and a great number of people did end up being hired as canvassers. I remember one fall morning I was walking to work and met a man who was canvassing for Mike Bloomberg in front of the bus terminal. “Don’t you know this guy is awful?” I asked. “Yeah but it’s 20 bucks an hour and I just gotta hand all these pamphlets out, you want one?” was the response.
It is the height of capitalist arrogance to think that any amount of money can buy the inside of a person’s mind. Yes, this moment calls for mass politics, but even if Democratic money started getting spent on canvassers instead of ads, those canvassers will not be “an army”, they will be mercenaries. The second problem that the centrist Democrat has is: even if you can get your canvassers, what are they selling? What are their politics – the goals they are trying to accomplish and change the US to achieve?
Neoliberalism has governed this country for far longer than my lifetime. Among their achievements in, let’s say, 1973-2019, there was a massive growth in productivity, a complete stall in median wages, a twenty six fold increase in the stock market, and a six fold increase in rental prices. These were all achievements for the class neoliberalism represents, but for the average person the last fifty years of life in the United States has been one where wages have been stagnant but everything gets more expensive.
The group of centrist thinkers who came out of the 00s and found their footing in the Obama administration had a phrase for what they were doing: Explaining. To quote Vox: “We live in a world of too much information and too little context. Too much noise and too little insight. That’s where Vox‘s explainers come in.” Smart pundits and wonks jumped in to explain the world to us, to speak past the emotional noise of the moment to give us the Truth. The question is, though, what were they explaining? Well, that we lived under a fundamentally sensible system and that those in power could not really do anything. “Different countries have different safety standards, and that’s ok,” Matt Yglesias said, referring to the deaths of 87 Bangladeshis in a preventable building collapse. “The US President has little formal power to make Congress do anything,” said Ezra Klein in 2014, defending Obama’s scant successes. This is the usual attitude of the Explainer under a democrat – sensibly explain why nothing good can happen, and how things are pretty good when you really think about it. When Trump came in, both times, they pivoted to an argument that now is the time to jettison this or that protected group, this or that ‘left’ policy. As Ezra Klein put it last year:
“I think, from your perspective and from my perspective, we probably don’t believe hugely different things. But a huge amount of the country, a majority of the country, believes things about trans people, about what policy should be toward trans people, about what language is acceptable to trans people, that we would see as fundamentally and morally wrong.
And what politically – not in a column or something, but politically – should our relationship with those people be? Do we win them over? Do we compromise with them?”
This is always the cry – oppressed people need to get serious, need to accept their own trampling, because there is a larger project at stake that we need to defend. The issue is, we now live, long term, under this logic. When you say for one election that trans people or queer people in general, migrants, need to swallow their pride and accept that they need to defend something that will still hurt them, maybe people will go along with you. Long term, it starts to seem like you’d sell out your grandmother for a vote.
Earlier in this interview Ezra Klein said “to twist a line about capitalism – it has become easier to imagine the end of the country than winning a Senate seat in Missouri or Arkansas. And I think that’s a problem.” But the question increasingly is – to what end? This is why personality politics has played such a big role in the Democratic party for the last twenty years – it’s all they have left. We hear these contradictory things whenever a centrist runs – that they’re a progressive who plays by the rules, that they’re pragmatic and bold, that they’re reasonable, always reasonable – and these are certainly the kinds of things someone might say to justify themselves, but taken together it’s not a project. The policy vision coming from the center has been similarly narrow. Take one of Kamala Harris’ policies in her 2019 run: “a student loan debt forgiveness program for Pell Grant recipients who start a business that operates for three years in disadvantaged communities.” This is not a vision for the future or anything approaching transformative. It is a policy that’s been so means tested it could apply to at most a thousand people. But its role is not to be a goal or a vision, it’s to present the intelligence of the presenter.
I wish Van Jones the best of luck in creating an army for reasonable ideas. I suspect it will be made up of the same group who’s made up the centrist partisan class in the years before – well to do kids with a teacher’s pet vibe excited to feel smarter than other people. But honestly I don’t think any of us have a clue what the politics of an actual member-based Democratic party would look like. DSA has changed our politics drastically over the course of a decade, as we slowly united a generation of activists, but we changed because we are a member-driven democracy. I think the moment you get even a start of a grassroots Democratic structure, it would very quickly fall apart over the continued support the center has for Israel and our bloody wars. It is far more likely that the center continues its ‘grassroots’ organizing and intellectual production guided by the desires of the capitalists who are doing fine.
The post You and What Army? Two Problems for Centrists first appeared on Rochester Red Star.
Debunking the workplace power deficit myth
Think your boss holds all the cards? Explore the history and modern reality of collective bargaining and learn how workers build real power together.
The post Debunking the workplace power deficit myth appeared first on EWOC.
For A Democratically Planned Socialism
In two recent episodes of the Jacobin Radio podcast Confronting Capitalism, Vivek Chibber makes arguments about market socialism and central planning that should be familiar to those who remember the debates over what constitutes “feasible socialism” from the late 20th century. Indeed, Chibber’s views are reminiscent of those offered by the entire market-socialist school that appeared in the wake of—at the latest—Alec Nove’s The Economics of Feasible Socialism (1983). Ultimately, the debate was not over whether or not there were gigantic flaws in central planning as practiced in the Soviet Union and other countries of what was termed “actually existing socialism”; virtually all contributors to that debate agreed such flaws existed. Nor was the idea that socialists need to do more than provide vagaries about the mechanisms of a post-capitalist economy seriously challenged. What was, and is, at stake in the debate is whether or not socialism can be a society in which—to quote Marx—capitalism’s “anarchy of production” for profit is replaced by planned production for use by “the associated producers.” Or if that strategy is found infeasible, the question is whether a vision of socialism that retains market coordination of (most) production of goods and services can fulfill the socialist goal of a classless, emancipated society.
Despite saying that “if planning can further our [socialist] goals … we should push it as far as we can,” Chibber substantially agrees with Nove and other market-socialists—including avowed Marxists such as David Schweickart—that planning a modern, complex economy will lead to Soviet-style failure. Any attempt at comprehensive planning, however different it might be from central planning as it was practiced in the official Communist societies, can’t work; only via market pricing, with its sensitivity to supply and demand, can decisions on what and how to produce be rendered “efficient,” and only market competition can provide incentives to motivate worker-managed enterprises to be efficient and innovative. But we needn’t worry too much, Chibber says; as he puts it in “Our Road to Power,” the market “will be constrained so it isn’t the arbiter of people’s basic well-being” and inequalities of wealth “will not be allowed to translate into political inequalities.”
This places entirely too much faith in “politics” being able to override “economics.” Presently, inequalities of wealth do translate into political inequalities, and there’s little reason to think that those who own (or, as in Schweickart’s model, lease from the state) firms in market socialism won’t do all they can to make sure that government policy once again rewards market “winners.” And how much “market constraint” can we really expect in market socialism? If it’s constrained too much, what happens to the much-vaunted advantages of the market over wide-ranging planning? Won’t this interfere with “efficiency” and “innovation”?
Marx vs. the Market
Let’s go back to the Marxist basics. Any “socialism” that deliberately retains generalized value-production—wealth calculated by means of “spontaneous” prices set by the pressure of supply and demand—will be unable, as Peter Hudis puts it in Marx’s Concept of the Alternative to Capitalism (2013), to overcome capitalism’s “inversion of subject and predicate, in which the products as well as the actions of people take on the form of an autonomous power that determine and constrain the will of the subjects that engender them.” Our working lives will remain dominated by abstract labor, “a monotonous, routinized activity” that serves as the substance of value. Businesses—even ones attempting workers’ self-management—whose survival depends on competition with each other to retain their market share will still be required to work at a uniform rate of exchange that workers themselves do not collectively determine. This will erode workers’ self-management and lead to a return to the traditional corporate-capitalist division of labor. Furthermore, the “planning” that exists within models of market socialism is generally indicative planning—where the government attempts to align commercial activities with wider economic objectives; planning by remote control, essentially. There’s little reason to think that such “planning” would be better able to overcome the “anarchy of production” in a “socialist” context than fiscal and monetary policy, foreign trade and exchange rate policy, urban and regional policy, competition and industrial policy, and prices and incomes policy have been able to accomplish within a capitalist context; there, as we know, unemployment, inflation, balance-of-payments problems, regional and personal inequality, etc., remain norms.
In capitalist society, which lacks commanding centers of planned regulation, the distribution of productive forces—both people and means of production—among the different branches of the economy, the distribution of the net product between classes, the allocation of surplus value (Marx: “the value created by the labor of a wage-worker over and above the value of his labor-power and appropriated by the capitalist”) to expanded reproduction, the introduction of technical innovations, etc. are all determined by the law of value (the “invisible hand” of the market). It logically follows that a system of “market socialism,” in which the means of production are administered as the collective property of the immediate producers (in essence, its shareholders) would, in response to market signals, mimic capitalism, even if this property is formally owned by the public and leased to specific groups of workers. Such a system would be fundamentally unstable and most likely lead back to capitalism, which is the more consistent expression of these relations. This, after all, is essentially what happened in Yugoslavia, which is surely as relevant to discussion of market socialism as the failures of Soviet planning are to discussion of any type of planned economy. Market competition in Titoist Yugoslavia led to participation within enterprises which became progressively dominated by professional managers, and inequality between the federal constituent Republics grew as growth rates and living standards deviated. As Pat Devine states, the unresolvable tension in visions of market socialism is “how to maintain an incentive structure based on the competitive performance of autonomous enterprises while at the same time limiting their autonomy in order to promote the society’s social objectives.”
Again, this doesn’t mean that the only alternative to market socialism is central planning. As practiced in the Soviet Union and other official Communist countries, central planning had many well-known deficiencies, which Chibber discusses at length. As Marxist economist Hillel Ticktin explains, “There is something wrong with an economy where the repair sector is bigger than the industry itself, where new technology has to go into new factories, as in two-thirds of cases, rather than updating old factories as in the West. There one-third of new technology goes into new factories. In short, new technology was blocked , and the product was normally technologically backward, defective and unreliable.”
One aspect of Soviet-style planning that Chibber does not stress, however, is the absence of workers’ self-management at the enterprise level (or at the collective farm). The “planning” was neither conceived of nor carried out by the associated producers. Ticktin again: “The Stalinist system was organized or administered from above. The surplus product was extracted under the control of the Soviet ruling group … and the distribution and re-investment of that surplus was performed under their administration and in their favour. The essential problem was that, in spite of their political-economic control, they could not ensure the intended outcome of their ‘planning’. They could neither raise their own standard of living and that of their families to what they aspired, nor could they raise the level of productivity, or growth rate, to that which was necessary to assure the stability of the system.” Furthermore, in the Stalin-era USSR, command planning took place in the context of all needs being subordinated to the needs of the state for arms production; hence the priority rendered to heavy industry.
Planning From Below
We agree with Chibber that socialism can’t immediately dispense with all “market categories” (prices, money). The a priori calculations of democratic planning must be tested against what might be called “market expectations” (is there a demand for this or that use-value, are there people trained and willing to perform this or that type of labor and, if so, in what quantities?). But this doesn’t have to mean the domination of the law of value. Following Pat Devine in Democracy and Economic Planning: The Political Economy of a Self-governing Society ([1988] 2010), social ownership of industry should be used to overcome market forces—where each private owner (including the worker-owned firm) acts in an atomistic fashion, in ignorance of the decisions being made simultaneously by all the other owners—while retaining the use of market exchange: the output of an enterprise, produced with its current capacity, being sold to another enterprise in the case of intermediate goods and services, or to consumers in the case of consumer goods and services. We shouldn’t try to plan consumption in advance, but we must incorporate planning in advance of significant investment. Changes in the structure of productive capacity, involving major investment and disinvestment, should no longer be brought about by the operation of market forces as in capitalism and market socialism, but by what Devine calls “negotiated coordination” among those who would be affected by changes in capacity and the structure of productive resources, analogous to the decisions made by the headquarters of multi-division capitalist firms.
The greatest strength of Devine’s model of democratic planning is the attention it pays to contributions made by the founders of the Austrian school of economics to the socialist calculation debate, initiated in 1920 by Ludwig von Mises and continued by Friedrich Hayek and the current Austrian school. The Austrians first claimed that much, perhaps most, information relevant to economic decision-making is local information, specific to time and place. They argue that such information cannot be formulated, transmitted to a planning center, and then processed because of the sheer enormity of the task. This has been answered by models of electronic socialist planning that make use of modern information technology and computer processing. However, the Austrians also insisted that such knowledge is not just decentralized but also generally “tacit”—meaning that it is knowledge based on knowing how to do something rather than on knowing that something is the case. Such knowledge, von Mises and Hayek maintain, is learned through practical experience and can be drawn upon only by those who have had that experience. It cannot be separated from those whose tacit knowledge it is, and so, by its very nature, it cannot be centralized. As Devine states, “[t]he classic example is learning to ride a bicycle: one can read or be told how to do it, but one only learns how to do it by trying, through experience.”
Devine’s model of participatory planning through negotiated coordination avoids what could be called the Hayekian problems that would surely plague even electronic central planning. Decisions at the level of Devine’s socialized enterprises are taken by the social owners at that level, drawing on their tacit knowledge, as is presently done by capitalist enterprises. The difference is that the social owners include all those with an interest in said decisions and not solely private owners and their representatives as in capitalism, and therefore the range of tacit knowledge drawn upon is much broader, and the decisions made are likely to be more efficient. Investment decisions, in particular, are made by negotiated coordination bodies, encompassing the social owners at that level, incorporating a much greater range of tacit knowledge than in capitalist decision-making.
A central point of socialist economics—Chibber would agree—is to maximize the public good and meet everyone’s needs. But this requires effective society-wide planning and central coordination while creating ample room for local autonomy and initiative. Contra Chibber’s doubts, this is technically feasible. But to provide every minute detail in advance would be futile. Ultimately, no mass audience for socialism will be recruited based on how convincingly Marxists answer von Mises or Hayek on socialist planning. Even with the inevitable usage of market exchange, socialist society can still be built upon an organizing principle that doesn’t capitulate to market forces, that abolishes labor-power as a commodity, and which places human needs at the center of social concern, rather than as a contingent instrumentality of capital accumulation. Socialist production and distribution will rest upon the solidarity of the associated producers. But advocating “market socialism” won’t help us reach that necessary solidarity.
Image: Detail photo of the mural “If Walls Could Talk… About Economics” by Ángel Idígoras. Photo by Daniel Capilla and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
Weekly Roundup: July 14, 2026
Events and Actions
Tuesday July 14 (5:30 PM – 7:30 PM) 
Phonebank for the Affordable Housing Guarantee Act (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Tuesday July 14 (6:30 PM – 8:00 PM) Ecosocialist Bi-Weekly Meeting (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Tuesday July 14 (7:00 PM – 8:30 PM) EWOC Fundamentals of Workplace Organizing (1916 McAllister St)
Wednesday July 15 (6:00 PM – 7:00 PM)
What Is DSA? (1916 McAllister St)
Thursday July 16 (6:00 PM – 7:00 PM)
Education Board Open Meeting
(zoom)
Thursday July 16 (7:00 PM – 8:00 PM) Immigrant Justice Regular Meeting (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister)
Friday July 17 (9:30 AM – 10:30 AM)
District 1 Coffee with Comrades (2 Clement St)
Saturday July 18 (6:00 PM – 8:00 PM)
HWG Food Service (Castro St & Market St)
Sunday July 19 (3:30 PM – 5:00 PM)
Understanding Socialism with DSA SF (1916 McAllister St)
Monday July 20 (6:30 PM – 8:00 PM) Homelessness Working Group Regular Meeting (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Monday July 20 (7:00 PM – 8:00 PM) Labor Board – Flex Meeting (zoom)
Tuesday July 21 (5:30 PM – 7:00 PM) Social Housing Working Group
(zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Wednesday July 22 (7:00 PM – 9:00 PM)
Socialist Shop Talk (in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Sunday July 26 (1:00 PM – 2:30 PM)
What Is DSA? (in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Sunday July 26 (5:00 PM – 6:00 PM)
Tenderloin Healing Circle Working Group (zoom)
Monday July 27 (6:00 PM – 8:00 PM)
Tenderloin Healing Circle (in person at 220 Golden Gate Ave)
Monday July 27 (7:00 PM – 8:00 PM) Labor Board – New Union Organizing (zoom and in person at 1916 McAllister St)
Check out https://dsasf.org/events for more events and updates.

AHGA Phone Bank
Let’s call everyone and let them know about the Affordable Housing Guarantee Act!
Join the campaign at the DSA SF Office or remotely for a phone bank. This is our big citizen-led ballot initiative to dedicate taxes from the sale of ultra-luxury real estate to affordable housing, create social housing, and fund eviction defense. Please bring a laptop if you can.
When: Tuesday July 14, 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM
Where: 1916 McAllister St

Propaganda Committee Meeting
Join the newly chartered Propaganda Committee for our weekly meeting!
Do you love writing, videography, photography, speeches, or other creative mediums? Our working group aims to share socialist messages with San Franciscans, uplift DSA SF’s organizing wins, and support chapter leaders sharing DSA’s message. All members are welcome, no experience required.
Join in person at the DSA SF Office in the back room (right side – storage side) or join on Zoom. Check the internal calendar for more details.
When: Wednesday July 15, 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Where: 1916 McAllister St

Understanding Socialism Group Reading & Discussion
Join DSA SF’s Education Board for a group reading of excerpts from “The Long Transition Towards Socialism”. We’ll be examining what makes capitalism as a system function, its inherent contradictions, and how the transition to socialism can be achieved within those conditions.
No advance reading required! We’ll provide everything at the event
When: Sunday July 19th, 3:30 PM – 5:00 PM
Where: 1916 McAllister St

Socialist Shop Talk
Come chat with comrades about socialism through the lens of current events! In this new series, we will read a short text together, then discuss and analyze it from a socialist point of view.
This is a low-key environment where comrades can develop their skills of applying socialist analysis to current events, while having an outlet to discuss and process everything that’s happening in the world together. This event is open to all, whether you’re socialism-curious, new to DSA, or a longtime member.
In this post-primary election session, we’ll discuss an article written by a DSA SF comrade discussing the role of electoral politics in progressing toward and winning socialism.
When: Wednesday July 22nd, 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Where: 1916 McAllister St
RSVP here

Palestine Solidarity Bake Night
Do you like baked sweets and Palestine? Join the Palestine Working Group for our first bake night social as we learn to bake the traditional Palestinian dessert of knafeh!
Come bake and play board games as we celebrate Palestinian culture and get to know each other a little better
When: Sunday July 25, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
RSVP here
EWOC Fundamentals of Workplace Organizing Course
EWOC holds a regular training course to help you build your union from the ground up alongside workers in your industry. It doesn’t require an organizing background to understand the material, which covers topics including mapping and charting, building an organizing committee, uniting over common concerns, and how to take action. If you’re interested in becoming any level of organizer for EWOC, this course is mandatory.
This course will in person at the DSA office (1916 McAllister). We’ll watch the EWOC lecture together and then go through the discussion activities. If you can’t make all of the sessions, reach out to Caitlin Stanton (SF EWOC local lead coordinator) for accommodations.
SCHEDULE:
Week 1: Developing Leadership
Tuesday July 14, 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Week 2: The Organizing Conversation
Tuesday July 21, 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Week 3: The Arc of the Campaign
Tuesday July 28, 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Week 4: Inoculation and the Boss Campaign
Tuesday August 4, 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
How DSA Organizes Against Data Centers
On the ground from Seattle to D.C. and in state legislatures, DSA is pushing for accountability for data center projects.
The post How DSA Organizes Against Data Centers appeared first on Democratic Left.
DSA Grows in Western Mass Following National Election Upsets
Even Socialism was Bigger in Texas
The lone star radicals in David Griscom’s “The Myth of Red Texas” built power despite state repression. The next chapter of working class politics in Texas is being written today.
The post Even Socialism was Bigger in Texas appeared first on Democratic Left.
Official statement from the Memphis-Midsouth Democratic Socialists of America in response to the continued killing of our neighbors by federal officials
The Memphis-Midsouth Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) mourn every life lost from the federal occupation of our city. Statements feel small in the face of such tragedy, but we will continue to make our opposition clear. Since this occupation began, at least four of our neighbors have been killed by members of this task force, including two this week alone.
These killings make the dangers of militarizing our communities devastatingly clear. Public safety cannot be built through occupation, intimidation, or violence. We reject the continued subjection of Memphis to armed patrols and escalating uses of force while the conditions that create insecurity are ignored. The militarization of Memphis serves a political agenda that treats Black and working-class communities as populations to be controlled, not people to be served.
We stand with the families of Darrin Pigram, Jonah Neal, Tyrin Johnson, and every person harmed by this campaign of militarization. We continue to call upon local and state officials who have failed us: end this military farce, and investigate these killings with full transparency and accountability. We will continue to build power with and for the multiracial working class, alongside the people and organizations fighting for the solidarity, dignity, and true safety that Memphis deserves.
Read more at Memphis-Midsouth