Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Sure We Can Elect The Occasional Democrat Progressive. Then What?
Bruce A. Dixon, BAR managing editor
28 Jun 2018

Yesterday Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez won a NYC Democratic congressional primary in a majority Latino district against the arrogant right wing,out of touch white head of the Queens Democratic party, who hadn’t even seen a primary challenger since 2004. The white guy was so deep in the pocket of corporate contributors that he was one of the few favored to succeed or oust Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. That’s how the two parties choose their leaders in every state legislature and both houses of Congress – they’re the ones who bring in the most donations from wealthy corporations and individuals.

Ocasio-Cortez campaigned on single payer health care and free college tuition. She denounced the latest massacre in Gaza. She says ICE ought to be abolished, and the day before the election she was at a South Texas immigrant detention center. She’s a young working class Puerto Rican woman who reportedly refused corporate cash and was working a real job, waiting tables at the beginning of her campaign. She’s a DSA member and professes to be a socialist. And now she’s the Democratic nominee in a New York City congressional district. What does it all mean?

For a lot of people on the left, it’s an occasion for celebration. I can understand that, I worked my behind off in campaigns against the Daley Machine in my native Chicago for a quarter century. We elected progressives to the city council, county offices, the state legislature, to Congress and 1983 and 87 the mayor’s chair. I helped register hundreds of thousands of people to vote. I and the folks I worked with imagined that we could build a movement that might transform the Democratic party from below. It didn’t work out so well.

It turns out that both elected officialdom and the Democratic party are institutions, and institutions change individuals way more often than the other way around. Some of our folks backed away from their commitments little by little, others frankly flipped, some were isolated and outlasted till they could be outspent. Despite the phrase being on everybody’s lips, we never figured out exactly how to hold anybody’s “feet to the fire,” to enforce any sort of accountability.

We were and still are at the literal whim and mercy of our candidates and officeholders. When Chuy Garcia ran for mayor of Chicago he refused to stand up in front of the Homan Square black site and denounce the thing. He even called for the hiring of a thousand more Chicago cops, and his movement supporters were utterly unable to talk him into the first position or out of the second. Even the Greens are not immune to this phenomenon. When Jill Stein chose to back away from a 2016 ballot access drive in Georgia and North Carolina there was nothing Greens in those states could do. Nothing. So exactly what does holding a candidate or office holder accountable look like? Do any means currently exist which enable us to do that? Maybe not. Maybe this is something we’ve yet to build.

Late last year, in a two day Movement School session in Jackson MS, Kali Akuno, the co-founder of Cooperation Jackson observed that in Jackson the movement forces proved they could elect a Chokwe Lumumba, the father and the son, mayor. But several years and multiple elections into the project, they still didn’t know what degree of support there is in Jackson for their agenda of radical economic transformation.

We figured out years ago how to win elections under the right circumstances. Ocasio-Cortez was a Puerto Rican woman running against a lazy white incumbent in a majority Latino NYC district, and she built a competent organization. It should have been surprising if she’d lost. Her expressed views on most issues are laudable. What we rarely bother to think through is what we actually GET when we win.

When we’re victorious in executive branch offices like mayoral elections, our candidates actually become responsible for administering the austerity and cuts. That’s what’s happening in Jackson MS and Newark NJ, to name just a couple places. We’ve been electing progressives here and there for a long time now. It’s time ask whether our ability to elect progressives has far outstripped our ability to exert real pressure upon them. Are we transforming the Democratic party, or are we merely legitimizing it, and launching yet another glittering career?

I don’t pretend to have the answers. But these are questions which ought to be asked. And we can't be too thirsty to ask them.

Bruce A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report, and a member of the state committee of the GA Green Party. He lives and works near Marietta GA, and can be reached via email at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com.

Find an updated analysis of the Ocasio-Cortez victory here. 

 

Democrats
New York City
Berniecrats

Related Podcasts

Black Voters Are Biden's Polling Balloon. We Need to Bust It.
Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
Black Voters Are Biden's Polling Balloon. We Need to Bust It.
02 May 2019
Joe Biden announced his candidacy for
The Real Peace Candidate for 2020 Isn’t Tulsi Gabbard, It’s Howie Hawkins
Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
Tulsi Gabbard Is A Sheepdog, Greens Howie Hawkins Is 2020's Only Real Peace Candidate
04 April 2019
ADOS Shrinks Reparations Politics to Fit the Narrow Horizon of Tribalism
Bruce A. Dixon , BAR managing editor
ADOS Shrinks Reparationist Politics to Fit the Cramped Horizon of Tribalism
15 March 2019
“ADOS followers throw away the internationalism of their forbears, embracing instead a sometimes polite, but always frank hostility toward

More Stories


  • Reclaiming Our Time for the Planet
    Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    Reclaiming Our Time for the Planet
    03 Nov 2021
                                                                        Reclaiming our time
  • BAR Book Forum: Kyle T. Mays’ “An Afro-BAR Book Forum: Kyle T. Mays’ “An Afro-Indigenous History of the United States” Indigenous History of the United States”
    Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    BAR Book Forum: Kyle T. Mays’ “An Afro-Indigenous History of the United States”
    02 Nov 2021
    In this series, we ask acclaimed authors to answer five questions about their book. This week’s featured author is Kyle T. Mays.
  • Historic Landmark Decision Gives David Win Over Goliath: Maryland Court Halts Sale of Moses African Cemetery by Developer
    Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, BAR editor and columnist
    Historic Decision Gives David Win Over Goliath: Maryland Court Halts Sale of Moses African Cemetery by Developer
    02 Nov 2021
    A judge has ruled in favor of the community fighting to prevent a real estate developer from destroying an African American cemetery in Bethesda, Maryland.
  • Why Black Revolutionaries Must Stand with the People of Nicaragua
    Netfa Freeman
    Why Black Revolutionaries Must Stand with the People of Nicaragua
    02 Nov 2021
    While the US government haggles over the cost of providing basic human rights to its citizens, it is also targeting countries like Nicaragua that struggle to guarantee these rights to all of it
  • Sudanese March Yet Again, Demanding Full-Fledged Civilian Rule
    Pavan Kulkarni
    Sudanese March Yet Again, Demanding Full-Fledged Civilian Rule
    02 Nov 2021
    The people of Sudan are protesting against the US and NATO trained coup leaders. They demand civilian rule and the rights to self-determination guaranteed under international law.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us