The “New New left” is just as stubborn as “Old New left” (op-ed)
The
1968 presidential contest was between Republican Richard Nixon and Democrat
Hubert Humphrey. “The New Left”, as they
were called at the time, proclaimed the two major parties were merely the right
and left wings of the capitalist system.
On election day members of “The New Left” either refused to vote or
voted for the Peace and Freedom Party.
The Peace and Freedom Party only had ballot status in 14 states and
Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver was a presidential candidate, Cleaver was
technically ineligible to run because he wasn’t 35 years old at the time.
Nixon
won.
In
2016 Hillary Clinton won the Democratic party’s nomination for president. Clinton’s primary challenger, democratic
socialist, Bernie Sanders endorsed her, but Sanders had a difficult time
getting his die-hard supporters to do the same. Die-hard Sanders supporters had a motto,
“Bernie or Bust.” One die-hard Sanders
supporter told a reporter, “I fear Hillary more than I fear Trump. If Trump wins, he’s in for four years. If Hillary wins, she’s in there for
eight. That’s not how we stop the
corporate parties.” In response to this
rebellion Sanders told his supporters the movement has to grow inside the
Democratic party not outside of it.
Sanders also insisted the movement’s credibility will be damaged by
walking out.
Clinton
lost.
Donald
Trump’s campaign managed to win five states that were Democratic strongholds.
(Hillary Clinton didn’t even bother to campaign in those states.) According to the 2016 Cooperative Congressional
Election Survey, fewer than 80 percent of those that voted for Sanders in the
Democratic primary voted for Clinton against Trump. It turned out 12 percent of Sanders supporters
actually voted for Trump, another 8 percent voted for a third party, and the
rest didn’t vote at all. Those votes
were significant losses for Clinton in the five blue states that turned red.
(2016 Pennsylvania vote count. Clinton:
(47.85%) 2,926,441 Trump: (48.58%) 2,970,733)
In
2016 Sanders was unable to hand over his democratic socialist movement to
Hillary Clinton and in 2020 Sanders is struggling to hand it over to Democratic
Presidential nominee Joe Biden. Sanders movement wasn’t discredited in 2016 but
if 12 percent of his supporters vote for Trump again the movement will be. This predicament led the former leaders of
the 1960’s “New Left” movement to write: An Open Letter to the New New Left
from the Old New Left. The “Old New Left”
wrote, “We are gravely concerned that some [Bernie Supporters] including the
leadership of the Democratic Socialists of America refuse to support Biden,
whom they see as a representative of Wall Street… Some of us think “endorsing”
Joe Biden is a step too far; but we who now write this open letter all know we
must work hard to elect him. This is an
all-hands-on-deck moment.”
But
the “New New Left” has no tolerance for the “Old New Left’s” newfound
pragmatism.
The
editor of the Jacobin Magazine (Which offers socialist perspectives on
politics, economics, and culture) declared he was voting for the Green Party
candidate, and took issue with the “Old New Left” haranguing young
socialist. The editor insisted the only
hope for the planet’s future was Democratic Socialism and dismissed the
authoritarianism of President Trump by stating if Trump had both the will and
capacity to crush his opponents in the style of Hitler, Franco, or Mussolini,
he would have done so by now.
After
the editor of the Jacobin’s response the “Old New Left” probably wondered who’s
more dangerous the “New New Left” or the Alt-Right.
First
published in the New Pittsburgh Courier 5/24/2020
Comments
Post a Comment