fbpx
Wikipedia

Social Democrats, USA

Social Democrats, USA (SDUSA) is a social-democratic organization established in 1972 as the successor of the Socialist Party of America (SPA). The SPA had stopped running independent presidential candidates and consequently the term "party" in its name had confused the public. Moreover, replacing the "socialist" label with "social democrats" was meant to disassociate the group from the Soviet Union.[3]

Social Democrats, USA
FoundedDecember 30, 1972 (51 years ago) (1972-12-30)
Preceded bySocialist Party of America
NewspaperNew America (until 1985)
Youth wingYoung Social Democrats
IdeologySocial democracy[1]
Democratic socialism[2]
Political positionCenter-left
International affiliationSocialist International (1973–2005)
Colors  Red
Website
socialistcurrents.org

SDUSA, which was fiercely anti-communist, pursued a strategy of political realignment intended to organize labor unions, civil rights organizations and other constituencies into a coalition that would transform the Democratic Party into a social-democratic party. The realignment strategy emphasized working with unions and especially the AFL–CIO, putting an emphasis on economic issues that would unite working class voters. SDUSA opposed the Senator George McGovern's "New Leftist" approach, pointing to the rout suffered in the 1972 presidential election. As a result, some SDUSA members, like Penn Kemble and Joshua Muravchik, were associated with neoconservatism. SDUSA's activities have included sponsoring discussions and issuing position papers. SDUSA has included civil rights activists and leaders of labor unions such as Bayard Rustin, Norman Hill and Tom Kahn of the AFL–CIO as well as Sandra Feldman and Rachelle Horowitz of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT). Internationally, the group supported the dissident Polish labor organization Solidarity and several anti-communist political movements in global hot spots.

SDUSA's politics were criticized by former SPA chairman Michael Harrington, who in 1972 announced that he favored an immediate pull-out of American forces from Vietnam and coined the term "neoconservative". After losing all votes at the 1972 convention that changed the SPA to SDUSA, Harrington resigned in 1973 to form the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, the forerunner of the Democratic Socialists of America.

Socialist Party of America edit

By the early 1970s, the Socialist Party of America (SPA) was publicly associated with A. Philip Randolph, the civil rights and labor union leader; and with Michael Harrington, the author of The Other America. Even before the 1972 convention, Harrington had resigned as an Honorary Chairperson of the SPA[3] "because he was upset about the group’s failure to enthusiastically support George McGovern and because of its views on the Vietnam War".[4]

In its 1972 Convention, the SPA had two Co-Chairmen, Bayard Rustin and Charles S. Zimmerman of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU);[5] and a First National Vice Chairman, James S. Glaser, who were re-elected by acclamation.[3] In his opening speech to the Convention, Co-Chairman Bayard Rustin called for SDUSA to organize against the "reactionary policies of the Nixon Administration" and Rustin also criticized the "irresponsibility and élitism of the 'New Politics' liberals".[3]

The party changed its name to Social Democrats, USA, by a vote of 73 to 34.[3] Changing the name of the Socialist Party of America to Social Democrats, USA, was intended to be "realistic" as the intention was to respond to the end of the running of actual SPA candidates for office and to respond to the confusions of Americans. The New York Times observed that the Socialist Party had last sponsored Darlington Hoopes as candidate for President in 1956 and who received only 2,121 votes, which were cast in only six states. Because the SPA no longer sponsored party candidates in elections, continued use of the name "party" was "misleading" and hindered the recruiting of activists who participated in the Democratic Party according to the majority report. The name "Socialist" was replaced by "Social Democrats" because many American associated the term "socialism" with Marxism–Leninism.[3] Moreover, the organization sought to distinguish itself from two small Marxist parties, the Socialist Workers Party and the Socialist Labor Party.[6]

During the 1972 Convention, the majority (Unity Caucus) won every vote by a ratio of two to one. The Convention elected a national committee of 33 members, with 22 seats for the majority caucus, eight seats for the Coalition Caucus of Harrington, two for the left-wing Debs Caucus and one for the independent Samuel H. Friedman.[7] Friedman and the minority caucuses had opposed the name change.[3]

The convention voted on and adopted proposals for its program by a two-one vote. On foreign policy, the program called for "firmness toward Communist aggression". However, on the Vietnam War the program opposed "any efforts to bomb Hanoi into submission" and instead it endorsed negotiating a peace agreement, which should protect communist political cadres in South Vietnam from further military or police reprisals. Harrington's proposal for a ceasefire and immediate withdrawal of American forces was defeated.[7] Harrington complained that after its convention the SPA had endorsed George McGovern only with a statement loaded with "constructive criticism" and that it had not mobilized enough support for McGovern. The majority caucus's Arch Puddington replied that the California branch was especially active in supporting McGovern while the New York branch were focusing on a congressional race.[6]

When the SPA changed its name to SDUSA, Bayard Rustin became its public spokesman. According to Rustin, SDUSA aimed to transform the Democratic Party into a social democratic party. A strategy of re-alignment was particularly associated with Max Shachtman.[8]

Some months after the convention, Harrington resigned his membership in SDUSA and he and some of his supporters from the Coalition Caucus soon formed the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (DSOC).[9] Many members of the Debs Caucus resigned from SDUSA and some of them formed the Socialist Party USA.[10] The changing of the name of the SPA to SDUSA and the 1973 formation of DSOC and the SPUSA represented a split in the American socialist movement.

Early years edit

 
Social Democrats, USA, opposed the politics of George McGovern, whose 1972 presidential campaign lost 49 of 50 states to Richard Nixon.
 
In the 1972 Congressional election, the majority of Americans voted for Democratic Congressmen and this map shows the House seats by party holding plurality in state.
  80.1–100% Republican
  80.1–100% Democratic
  60.1–80% Republican
  60.1–80% Democratic
  up to 60% Republican
  up to 60% Democratic

In domestic politics, the SDUSA leadership emphasized the role of the American labor movement in advancing civil rights and economic justice. The domestic program followed the recommendations of Rustin's article "From Protest to Politics" in which Rustin analyzed the changing economy and its implications for African Americans. Rustin wrote that the rise of automation would reduce the demand for low-skill high-paying jobs, which would jeopardize the position of the urban black working class, particularly in the Northern United States. The needs of the black community demanded a shift in political strategy, where blacks would need to strengthen their political alliance with mostly white unions and other organizations (churches, synagogues and the like) to pursue a common economic agenda. It was time to move from protest to politics, wrote Rustin.[11] A particular danger facing the black community was the chimera of identity politics, particularly the rise of Black Power which Rustin dismissed as a fantasy of middle-class African-Americans that repeated the political and moral errors of previous black nationalists while alienating the white allies needed by the black community.[12]

SDUSA documents had similar criticisms of the agendas advanced by middle class activists increasing their role in the Democratic Party. SDUSA members stated concerns about an exaggerated role of middle-class peace activists in the Democratic Party, particularly associated with the "New Politics" of Senator George McGovern, whose presidential candidacy was viewed as an ongoing disaster for the Democratic Party and for the United States.[3][13] In electoral politics, SDUSA aimed to transform the Democratic Party into a social democratic party.[14]

In foreign policy, most of the founding SDUSA leadership called for an immediate cessation of the bombing of North Vietnam. They demanded a negotiated peace treaty to end the Vietnam War, but the majority opposed a unilateral withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam, suggesting that such a withdrawal would lead to an annihilation of the free labor unions and of the political opposition.[3][15][16] After the withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam and the victory of the Communist Party of Vietnam and the Viet Cong, SDUSA supported humanitarian assistance to refugees and condemned Senator McGovern for his failure to support such assistance.[17][18]

Organizational activities edit

 
National Chairman Bayard Rustin, who headed SDUSA

SDUSA was governed by biannual conventions which invited the participation of interested observers. These gatherings featured discussions and debates over proposed resolutions, some of which were adopted as organizational statements. The group frequently made use of outside speakers at these events: non-SDUSA intellectuals ranged from neoconservatives like Jeane Kirkpatrick on the right to democratic socialists like Paul Berman on the left and similarly a range of academic, political and labor-union leaders were invited. These meetings also functioned as reunions for political activists and intellectuals, some of whom worked together for decades.[19] SDUSA also published a newsletter and occasional position papers, issued statements supporting labor unions and workers' interests at home and overseas, the existence of Israel and the Israeli labor movement.[20] From 1979–1989, SDUSA members were organized to support of Solidarity, the independent labor union of Poland.[21]

The organization also attempted to exert influence through endorsements of presidential candidates. The group's 1976 National Convention, held in New York City, formally endorsed the Democratic ticket of Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale and pledged the group to "work enthusiastically" for the election of the pair in November.[22] The organization took a less assertive approach during the divisive 1980 campaign, marked as it was by a heated primary challenge to President Carter by Senator Edward Kennedy and SDUSA chose not to hold its biannual convention until after the termination of the fall campaign. The election of conservative Ronald Reagan was chalked up to the failure of the Democrats to "appeal to their traditional working class constituency".[23]

Early in 1980, long-time National Director Carl Gershman resigned his position to be replaced by Rita Freedman.[24] Freedman previously had served as organizer and chair of SDUSA's key New York local.[24]

SDUSA dues were paid annually in advance, with members receiving a copy of the organization's official organ, the tabloid-sized newspaper New America. The dues rate was $25 per year in 1983.[25]

Hiatus and re-foundation edit

Following the death of the organization's Notesonline editor Penn Kemble of cancer on October 15, 2005,[26] SDUSA lapsed into a state of organizational hiatus, with no further issues of the online newsletter produced or updates to the group's website made.[27]

Following several years of inactivity, an attempt was subsequently made to revive SDUSA. In 2008, a group composed initially mostly of Pennsylvania members of SDUSA emerged, determined to re-launch the organization.[28] A re-founding convention of the SDUSA was held May 3, 2009, at which a National Executive Committee was elected.[29]

Owing to factional disagreements, a group based in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, and the newly elected National Executive Committee parted company, with the former styling itself as the Social Democrats, USA – Socialist Party USA[30] and the latter as Social Democrats, USA.[31]

Two additional conventions took place since the 2009 reformation, an internet teleconference on September 1, 2010, featuring presentations by guest speakers Herb Engstrom of the California Democratic Party Executive Committee and Roger Clayman, Executive Director of the Long Island Labor Federation;[32] and a convention held August 26–27, 2012, in Buffalo, New York, with a keynote address delivered by Richard Lipsitz, executive director of Western New York Labor Federation.[33]

Controversies edit

Anti-communism edit

Michael Harrington charged that its "obsessive anti-communism" rendered SDUSA politically conservative.[34] In contrast, Harrington's DSOC and DSA criticized Marxism–Leninism, but he opposed many defense-and-diplomatic policies against the Soviet Union and its Eastern Bloc. Harrington voiced admiration for German Chancellor Willy Brandt's Ostpolitik which sought to reduce Western distrust of and hostility towards the Eastern Bloc and so entice the Soviet Union reciprocally to reduce its aggressive military posture.[35][36]

Max Shachtman and alleged Trotskyism edit

SDUSA leaders have served in the administrations of Presidents since the 1980 and the service of some members in Republican administrations has been associated with controversy. SDUSA members like Gershman were called "State Department socialists" by Massing (1987), who wrote that the foreign policy of the Reagan administration was being run by Trotskyists, a claim that was called a "myth" by Lipset (1988, p. 34).[37] This "Trotskyist" charge has been repeated and even widened by journalist Michael Lind in 2003 to assert a takeover of the foreign policy of the George W. Bush administration by former Trotskyists.[38] Lind's "amalgamation of the defense intellectuals with the traditions and theories of "the largely Jewish-American Trotskyist movement [in Lind's words]" was criticized in 2003 by University of Michigan professor Alan M. Wald,[39] who had discussed Trotskyism in his history of "the New York intellectuals".[40] SDUSA and allegations that "Trotskyists" subverted Bush's foreign policy have been mentioned by "self-styled" paleoconservatives (conservative opponents of neoconservatism).[41]

Harrington and Tom Kahn had been associated with Max Shachtman, a Marxist theorist who had broken with Leon Trotsky[42] because of his criticism of the Soviet Union as being a totalitarian class-society after having supported Trotsky in the 1930s.[43][44] Although Schachtman died in 1972 before the Socialist Party was renamed as SDUSA, Shachtman's ideas continued to influence the Albert Shanker and The American Federation of Teachers, which was often associated with SDUSA members. Decades later, conflicts in the AFL–CIO were roughly split in 1995 along the lines of the conflict between the "Shachtmanite Social Democrats and the Harringtonite Democratic Socialists of America, with the Social Democrats supporting Kirkland and Donahue and the Democratic Socialists supporting Sweeney".[45][46]

Alleged conservatism or neoconservatism edit

Author Justin Vaisse considers some SDUSA members "right-wing social democrats",[47] a taunt according to Wattenberg.[48]

SDUSA members supported Solidarity, the independent labor-union of Poland. The organizer of the AFL–CIO's support for Solidarity, SDUSA's Tom Kahn, criticized Jeane Kirkpatrick's Dictatorships and Double Standards, arguing that democracy should be promoted even in the countries dominated by Soviet Communism.[49] In 1981, leading Social Democrats and some moderate Republicans wanted to use economic aid to Poland as leverage to expand the freedom of association in 1981, whereas Caspar Weinberger and neoconservative Jeane Kirkpatrick preferred to force the communist government of Poland to default on its international payments so they would lose credibility.[50] Kahn argued for his position in a 1981 debate with neoconservative Norman Podhoretz, who like Kirkpatrick and Weinberger opposed all credits.[51][52] In 1982, Kirkpatrick called similarly for Western assistance to Poland to be used to help Solidarity.[53]

The Washington Post, then owned by Graham Holdings, had called some of SDUSA's former members neoconservatives.[54] Justin Vaisse listed five SDUSA associates as "second-generation neoconservatives" and "so-called Shachtmanites", including "Penn Kemble, Joshua Muravchik, ... and Bayard Rustin".[55] Throughout his life, Penn Kemble called himself a social democrat and objected to being called a neoconservative.[56] Kemble and Joshua Muravchik were never followers of Max Shachtman. On the contrary, Kemble was recruited by a non-Shachtmanite professor, according to Muravchik, who wrote: "Although Shachtman was one of the elder statesmen who occasionally made stirring speeches to us, no YPSL [Young People's Socialist League] of my generation was a Shachtmanite".[57] Besides objecting to being called a "neoconservative", Kemble "sharply criticized the Bush administration's approach on [Iraq]. 'The distinction between liberation and democratization, which requires a strategy and instruments, was an idea never understood by the administration,' he told the New Republic", wrote The Washington Post in Kemble's obituary.[56]

Former member Joshua Muravchik edit

Joshua Muravchik has identified himself as a neoconservative.[58] When Muravhchik appeared at the 2003 SDUSA conference, he was criticized by SDUSA members:[19][59]

Rachelle Horowitz, another Social Democrats, USA, luminary and an event organizer, called Muravchik's comments "profoundly disturbing"—both his use of "us and them" rhetoric and the term "evil." The existence of evil in the world was something Horowitz was happy to concede, she said from the floor. But it was a word incapable of clear political definition and thus a producer of muddle rather than clarity, zeal rather than political action. Then Herf jumped in with similar criticisms. And then Berman. And Ibrahim. And before long, more or less everyone else in the room. There was still something, it seemed, that separated them from the neocons who hovered over the proceedings both as opponents and inspirations. Muravchik wanted to pull them somewhere most of the attendees—and organizers—were unwilling to go.[59]

Among Joshua Muravchick's SDUSA critics was his own father Emanuel Muravchik (a Norman Thomas socialist).[19][60][61] His mother was too upset with Joshua's Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism to attend the discussion.[60] On the other hand, Joshua Muravchik was called a "second-generation neoconservative" by Vaisse.[55]

Conventions edit

Convention Location Date Notes and references
1973 National Conference Hopewell Junction, New York September 21–23, 1973 From registration ad, New America, July 30, 1973, p. 7.
1974 National Convention New York City September 6–8, 1974 125 delegates, keynote speaker Walter Laqueur. Per New America, August 20, 1974, p. 8.
1976 National Convention New York City July 17–18, 1976 500 delegates and observers, keynote speaker Sidney Hook. Per New America, August–September 1976, p. 1.
1978 National Convention New York City September 8–10, 1978 Introductory report by Carl Gershman. Per New America, October 1978, p. 1.
1980 National Convention New York City November 21–23, 1980 Per New America, December 1980, p. 1.
1982 National Convention Washington, D.C. December 3–5, 1982 Keynote speech by Albert Shanker. Dates per New America, October 1982, p. 8.
1985 National Convention Washington, D.C. June 14–16, 1985 Keynote speech by Alfonso Robelo. Per New America, November–December 1985, p. 6.
1987 National Convention
1990 National Convention
1994 National Convention

After reorganization edit

Convention Location Date Notes and references
2009 Reorganization Convention May 3, 2009
2010 Convention Internet teleconference September 1, 2010
2012 National Convention Buffalo, New York August 26–27, 2012 Keynote speech by Richard Lipsitz, Executive Director of Western New York Labor Federation.
2014 Convention Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania October 23–24, 2014
2023 National Convention Buffalo, New York September 1-6, 2023 Speakers included Imre Komjáthi, co-chair of the Hungarian Socialist Party, former Democratic statehouse representative in Topeka, Aaron Coleman, and Godden Zama, representative of the Social Democratic Front (Cameroon)[62]

Prominent members edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Principles". Social Democrats USA. Retrieved February 10, 2020.
  2. ^ Hacker, David (2008–2010). "Heritage". Social Democrats USA. Retrieved February 10, 2020. "While concentrating on developing social democratic programs for the here and now, we have not given up our vision of the new socialist society that incremental change would eventually bring. We are still committed to the vibrant democratic socialist movement of the near future and our socialist vision of the far future beyond our lifetime and our children’s lifetime. ... We view the terms "social democracy" and "democratic socialism" as being interchangeable."
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Socialist Party now the Social Democrats, U.S.A." The New York Times. December 31, 1972. p. 36. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  4. ^ Richard D. Kahlenberg, Tough Liberal: Albert Shanker and the Battles Over Schools, Unions, Race and Democracy (Columbia University Press, August 13, 2013), p. 157–158.
  5. ^ Gerald Sorin, The Prophetic Minority: American Jewish Immigrant Radicals, 1880–1920. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985; p. 155.
  6. ^ a b Anonymous (December 27, 1972). "Young Socialists open parley; to weigh 'New Politics' split". The New York Times. p. 25.
  7. ^ a b Anonymous (January 1, 1973). "'Firmness' urged on Communists: Social Democrats reach end of U.S. Convention here". The New York Times. p. 11.
  8. ^
    • Maurice Isserman, The Other American: The Life Of Michael Harrington (Public Affairs, 2001), p.290-304
    • Martin Duberman, A Saving Remnant: The Radical Lives of Barbara Deming and David McReynolds (The New Press, 2013)
  9. ^ O'Rourke (1993, pp. 195–196): O'Rourke, William (1993). "L: Michael Harrington". Signs of the literary times: Essays, reviews, profiles, 1970–1992'. The Margins of Literature (SUNY Series). SUNY Press. pp. 192–196. ISBN 0-7914-1681-X. Originally: O'Rourke, William (November 13, 1973). Michael Harrington: Beyond Watergate, Sixties, and reform. Vol. 3. pp. 6–7. ISBN 9780791416815. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Busky 2000, pp. 165. Busky, Donald F. (2000). Democratic socialism: A global survey. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-96886-1.
  11. ^ Rustin wrote the following reports:
    • Civil rights: the true frontier New York, N.Y.: Donald Press, 1963
    • From protest to politics: the future of the civil rights movement New York: League for Industrial Democracy, 1965
    • The labor-Negro coalition, a new beginning [Washington? D.C. : American Federationist?, 1968
    • Conflict or coalition?: the civil rights struggle and the trade union movement today New York, A. Philip Randolph Institute, 1969.
  12. ^ Rustin wrote the following reports:
    • The Watts "Manifesto" & the McCone report. New York, League for Industrial Democracy 1966
    • Separatism or integration, which way for America?: a dialogue (with Robert Browne) New York, A. Philip Randolph Educational Fund, 1968
    • Black studies: myths & realities (contributor) New York, A. Philip Randolph Educational Fund, 1969
    • Three essays New York, A. Philip Randolph Institute, 1969
    • A word to black students New York, A. Philip Randolph Institute, 1970
    • The failure of black separatism New York, A. Philip Randolph Institute, 1970
  13. ^ Bloodworth (2013, p. 147)
  14. ^ Fraser, C. Gerald (September 7, 1974). "Socialists seek to transform the Democratic Party" (PDF). The New York Times. p. 11.
  15. ^ These positions had been advanced by organizations like "Negotiations Now!" since the 1960s.
  16. ^ Gershman, Carl (November 3, 1980). "Totalitarian menace (Controversies: Detente and the left after Afghanistan)". Society. 18 (1): 9–15. doi:10.1007/BF02694835. ISSN 0147-2011. S2CID 189883991.
  17. ^ "The View from Washington". Asian Affairs. 6 (2): 134–135. November–December 1978. doi:10.1080/00927678.1978.10553935. JSTOR 30171704.
  18. ^ Gershman, Carl (May 1978). "After the dominoes fell". Commentary. SD papers. 3.
  19. ^ a b c Meyerson, Harold (Fall 2002). . Dissent. 49 (4): 16. Archived from the original on June 20, 2010.
  20. ^ Social Democrats, USA (1973), The American challenge: A social-democratic program for the seventies, New York: SDUSA
  21. ^ Mahler, Jonathan (November 19, 1997), "Labor's crisis—and its opportunity", The Wall Street Journal
  22. ^ "Freedom, Economic Justice Themes of SD Convention," New America [New York], vol. 13, no. 15 (Aug.-Sept. 1976), pg. 1.
  23. ^ "Social Democracy Faces Crucial Era," New America [New York], vol 17, no. 11 (December 1980), pg. 1.
  24. ^ a b "Rita Freedman New SD Director," New America [New York], vol. 17, no. 2 (Feb. 1980), pg. 12.
  25. ^ "Wanted: Dues Cheaters" (ad), New America [New York], vol. 20, no. 5 (September–October 1983), pg. 7.
  26. ^ "Political Activist Penn Kemble Dies at 64," The Washington Post, October 19, 2005, pg. B07.
  27. ^ See: Social Democrats, USA, official website, www.socialdemocratsusa.org/ Retrieved May 26, 2011, currently broken.
  28. ^ David Hacker, "Heritage: Learning from Our Past," www.socialistcurrents.org/ Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  29. ^ "Organization," www.socialistcurrents.org/ Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  30. ^ Social Democrats-Socialist Party USA official website, www.socialdemocratsusa.org/ Retrieved May 26, 2011 (Dead link).
  31. ^ Social Democrats, USA, official website, www.socialdemocrats.org/ Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  32. ^ "2010 National Convention," Socialist Currents, www.socialistcurrents.org/
  33. ^ "2012 Convention Report," Socialist Currents, www.socialistcurrents.org/
  34. ^ Bloodworth (2013, p. 148)
  35. ^ Isserman, The Other American, pp. 351–352.
  36. ^ As co-chairman of DSA, Michael Harrington wrote that Willy Brandt "launched his famous ostpolitik (Eastern policy), and moved toward detente with the Soviets and Eastern Europeans—a strategy that was to win him the Nobel Peace Prize. ... Disaster came in 1974. There was a spy scandal—a member of Brandt's inner circle turned out to be an East German agent—and the chancellor resigned his office.Harrington, Michael (March 31, 1987). "Willy Brandt May Even Yet Manage Resurrection No. 5". Los Angeles Times.
  37. ^ "A 1987 article in The New Republic described these developments as a Trotskyist takeover of the Reagan administration" wrote Lipset (1988, p. 34).
  38. ^ Lind, Michael (April 7, 2003). . New Statesman. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011.
  39. ^ Wald, Alan (June 27, 2003). "Are Trotskyites Running the Pentagon?". History News Network.
  40. ^ Wald, Alan M. (1987). The New York intellectuals: The rise and decline of the anti-Stalinist left from the 1930s to the 1980s'. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4169-3.
  41. ^ King, William (2004). "Neoconservatives and 'Trotskyism'". American Communist History. 3 (2): 247–266. doi:10.1080/1474389042000309817. ISSN 1474-3906. S2CID 162356558.

    King, Bill (March 22, 2004). "Neoconservatives and Trotskyism. The question of 'Shachtmanism'". Enter Stage Right: Politics, Culture, Economics (3): 1–2. ISSN 1488-1756.

  42. ^ Muravchik (2006). Addressing the allegation that SDUSUA was a "Trotskyist" organization, Muravchik wrote that in the early 1960s, two future members of SDUSA, Tom Kahn and Paul Feldman:

    "became devotees of a former Trotskyist named Max Shachtman—a fact that today has taken on a life of its own. Tracing forward in lineage through me and a few other ex-YPSL's [members of the Young Peoples Socialist League] turned neoconservatives, this happenstance has fueled the accusation that neoconservatism itself, and through it the foreign policy of the Bush administration, are somehow rooted in 'Trotskyism.' I am more inclined to laugh than to cry over this, but since the myth has traveled so far, let me briefly try once more, as I have done at greater length in the past, to set the record straight.[See "The Neoconservative Cabal," Commentary, September 2003] The alleged connective chain is broken at every link. The falsity of its more recent elements is readily ascertainable by anyone who cares for the truth—namely, that George Bush was never a neoconservative and that most neoconservatives were never YPSL's. The earlier connections are more obscure but no less false. Although Shachtman was one of the elder statesmen who occasionally made stirring speeches to us, no YPSL of my generation was a Shachtmanite. What is more, our mentors, Paul and Tom, had come under Shachtman’s sway years after he himself had ceased to be a Trotskyite.

  43. ^ "A saving remnant". New Press. January 8, 2011 – via Internet Archive.
  44. ^ Isserman, Maurice (January 8, 2000). "The other American : the life of Michael Harrington". New York : PublicAffairs – via Internet Archive.
  45. ^ Kahlenberg, Richard D. (August 30, 2007). Tough Liberal: Albert Shanker and the Battles Over Schools, Unions, Race, and Democracy. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231509091 – via Google Books.
  46. ^ In 1982 Harrington's Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee reformed as the Democratic Socialists of America.
    • John Haer, "Reviving Socialism," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 1, 1982. Retrieved November 9, 2009.
  47. ^ Vaisse, op cit. p. 91.
  48. ^ Wattenberg, Ben (April 22, 1992). "A man whose ideas helped change the world". Baltimore Sun. Syndicated: (Thursday April 23, 1993). "Remembering a man who mattered". The Indiana Gazette p. 2 (pdf format). Retrieved November 19, 2011.
  49. ^ Kahn, Tom (July 1985), "Beyond the double standard: A social democratic view of the authoritarianism versus totalitarianism debate" (PDF), New America, January 1985 speech to the 'Democratic Solidarity Conference' organized by the Young Social Democrats (YSD) under the auspices of the Foundation for Democratic Education, Social Democrats, USA
    Reprinted: Kahn, Tom (2008) [1985]. "Beyond the double standard: A social democratic view of the authoritarianism versus totalitarianism debate" (PDF). Democratiya (Merged into Dissent in 2009). 12 (Spring): 152–160.
  50. ^ Domber [1], with revision and typeset [2]
  51. ^ (Kahn & Podhoretz 2008)
  52. ^ Gershman, Carl (August 29, 2011). "Remarks by Carl Gershman at a photo exhibition commemorating the 30th anniversary of the founding of Solidarity (The phenomenon of Solidarity: Pictures from the history of Poland, 1980–1981; Woodrow Wilson Center)" (html). Washington D.C.: National Endowment for Democracy. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  53. ^ Jeane J. Kirkpatrick (1988). Political and moral dimensions. Transaction Publishers. p. 164ff. ISBN 9780887380990.
  54. ^ Matthews, Dylan (August 28, 2013). "Meet Bayard Rustin, the gay socialist pacifist who planned the 1963 March on Washington". The Washington Post.
  55. ^ a b Vaïsse, Justin (January 8, 2010). Neoconservatism: The Biography of a Movement. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674050518 – via Google Books.
  56. ^ a b Holley, Joe (October 19, 2005). "Political activist Penn Kemble dies at 64". The Washington Post.
  57. ^ Muravchik (2006)
  58. ^ Muravchik, Joshua (November–December 2006), "Operation comeback" (PDF), Foreign Policy
  59. ^ a b Joshua Micah Marshall, "Debs’s Heirs Reassemble To Seek Renewed Role as Hawks of Left" The Jewish Daily Forward, May 23, 2003.
  60. ^ a b Muravchik, Joshua (May 8, 2002). "Joshua Muravchik revisits communism: Where socialism lives on". National Review Online (May 2, 2003, 10:45 A.M. ed.).
  61. ^ Muravchik, Manny (2002). Socialism in my life and my life in socialism (html). Private (hosted by Social Democrats, USA). A Letter to my children, grandchildren and beyond and to my comrades, ex-comrades and anti-comrades gathering on May Day 2002. Retrieved August 14, 2011.
  62. ^ "OUR NATIONAL CONVENTION SCHEDULE | Socialist Currents". August 25, 2023. Retrieved September 23, 2023.

References edit

  • Bernstein, Carl (February 24, 1992). "The holy alliance: Ronald Reagan and John Paul II; How Reagan and the Pope conspired to assist Poland's Solidarity movement and hasten the demise of Communism (Cover story)". Time (U.S. ed.). pp. 28–35.
  • Bloodworth, Jeffrey (2013). Losing the center: The decline of American liberalism, 1968–1992. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813142296.
  • Domber, Gregory F. (2008). Supporting the revolution: America, democracy, and the end of the Cold War in Poland, 1981–1989 (Ph.D. dissertation (September 12, 2007), George Washington University). pp. 1–506. ISBN 978-0-549-38516-5. Winner of the "2009 Betty M. Unterberger Prize for Best Dissertation on United States Foreign Policy from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations". Revised and incorporated in Domber, Gregory F. (2014). Empowering Revolution: America, Poland, and the End of the Cold War. The New Cold War History. University of North Carolina Press books. ISBN 9781469618517.
  • Gershman, Carl (November 3, 1980). "Totalitarian menace (Controversies: Detente and the left after Afghanistan)". Society. 18 (1): 9–15. doi:10.1007/BF02694835. ISSN 0147-2011. S2CID 189883991.
  • Harrington, Michael (November 3, 1980). "Nuclear threat (Controversies: Detente and the left after Afghanistan)". Society. 18 (1): 16–21. doi:10.1007/BF02694836. ISSN 0147-2011. S2CID 189885851.
  • Horowitz, Rachelle (2007). "Tom Kahn and the Fight for Democracy: A Political Portrait and Personal Recollection" (PDF). Democratiya (Merged with Dissent in 2009). 11 (Winter): 204–251.
  • Kahn, Tom; Podhoretz, Norman (Summer 2008). (PDF). Democratiya (Merged with Dissent in 2009). 13. sponsored by the Committee for the Free World and the League for Industrial Democracy, with introduction by Midge Decter and moderation by Carl Gershman, held at the Polish Institute for Arts and Sciences, New York City in March 1981: 230–261. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 17, 2011.
  • Lipset, Seymour (July 4, 1988). "Neoconservatism: Myth and reality". Society. 25 (5): 29–37. doi:10.1007/BF02695739. ISSN 0147-2011. S2CID 144110677.
  • Massing, Michael (1987). "Trotsky's orphans: From Bolshevism to Reaganism". The New Republic. pp. 18–22.
  • Muravchik, Joshua (January 2006). "Comrades". Commentary Magazine. Retrieved June 15, 2007.
  • Puddington, Arch (2005). "Surviving the underground: How American unions helped solidarity win". American Educator (Summer). Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  • Shevis, James M. (Summer 1981). "The AFL-CIO and Poland's Solidarity". World Affairs. 144 (1): 31–35. JSTOR 20671880.

Publications edit

  • Social Democrats, USA (December 1972) [copyright 1973]. The American challenge: A social-democratic program for the seventies. New York: S.D. U.S. and YPSL. "The following program was adopted at the Social Democrats, U.S.A. and Young People's Socialist League conventions at the end of December, 1972".
  • Hook, Sidney (2005) [July 17–18, 1976], "The social democratic prospect" (PDF), Democratiya, Archived by Dissent, 3 (Winter), originally entitled "The social  democratic prospect: Social democracy and America": 63–76, Alternative source.
  • Hook, Sidney; Rustin, Bayard; Gershman, Carl; Kemble, Penn (1978). Capitalism, socialism, and democracy. SD Papers. Vol. 1. New York: Social Democrats, USA. Reprinted from Commentary (April 1978) pp. 29–71.
  • Bayard Rustin and Carl Gershman, Africa, Soviet imperialism and the retreat of American power. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1978. (SD papers #2).
  • Gershman, Carl (May 1978). "After the dominoes fell". Commentary. SD papers. 3.
  • Carl Gershman The world according to Andrew Young. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1978. (SD papers #4).
  • Leszek Kołakowski and Sidney Hook, The social democratic challenge. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1978. (SD papers #5).
  • Carl Gershman, Selling them the rope: Business and the Soviets. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1979. (SD papers #6).
  • Lane Kirkland and Rita Freedman, Building on the past for the future. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1981.
  • Social Democrats, USA: Standard bearers for freedom, democracy, and economic justice. New York: Social Democrats, USA, n.d. [1980s].
  • A challenge to the Democratic Party. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1983.
  • Alfonso Robelo, The Nicaraguan democratic struggle: Our unfinished revolution. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1983. (SD papers #8).
  • Scabs renamed, permanent replacements. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1990.
  • On foreign policy and defense. Washington, D.C. : Social Democrats, USA, 1990.
  • SD, USA statement on the economy. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1991.
  • Child labor, US style. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1991.
  • Child labor, an international abuse. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1991.
  • John T. Joyce, Expanding economic democracy. New York: Social Democrats, USA, 1991.
  • Rita Freedman, Does America need a social democratic movement? Washington, DC: Social Democrats, USA, 1993.
  • Why America needs a social democratic movement. Washington, DC : Social Democrats, USA, 1993.
  • The future of socialism. San Jose, CA: San Francisco Bay Area Local of Social Democrats, USA, 1994.

Further reading edit

  • Chenoweth, Eric (October 2010), AFL-CIO support for Solidarity: Political, financial, moral, Washington DC: Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe (IDEE).
  • Morris, George (1976). "Social Democrats-USA" in the service of reaction: A record of racism, low wages, bureaucracy and betrayal of socialism. New York: New Outlook Publishers. —"A polemic against the SDUSA published by the Communist Party, USA".
  • Social Democrats, USA (1973), For the record: The report by the Social Democrats, USA on the resignation of Michael Harrington and his attempt to split the American socialist movement, New York: Social Democrats USA, undated pamphlet, certainly no earlier than 1973.

External links edit

  • "Preliminary Inventory of the Social Democrats, USA Records, 1937–1994". Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Duke University. Durham, North Carolina.
  • Dale Reed (1999). (PDF). Hoover Institution Archives. Stanford University. Stanford, California.
  • Dale Reed (2010). "Register of the Albert Glotzer Papers" (PDF). Hoover Institution Archives. Stanford University, Stanford, California.
  • "News and Opinion from Social Democrats USA".

social, democrats, 1898, 1901, party, social, democratic, party, america, political, neutrality, this, article, disputed, this, article, contain, biased, partisan, political, opinions, about, political, party, event, person, government, stated, facts, relevant. For the 1898 1901 party see Social Democratic Party of America The political neutrality of this article is disputed This article may contain biased or partisan political opinions about a political party event person or government stated as facts Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article by adding information on neglected viewpoints or discuss the issue on the talk page November 2021 Social Democrats USA SDUSA is a social democratic organization established in 1972 as the successor of the Socialist Party of America SPA The SPA had stopped running independent presidential candidates and consequently the term party in its name had confused the public Moreover replacing the socialist label with social democrats was meant to disassociate the group from the Soviet Union 3 Social Democrats USAFoundedDecember 30 1972 51 years ago 1972 12 30 Preceded bySocialist Party of AmericaNewspaperNew America until 1985 Youth wingYoung Social DemocratsIdeologySocial democracy 1 Democratic socialism 2 Political positionCenter leftInternational affiliationSocialist International 1973 2005 Colors RedWebsitesocialistcurrents orgPolitics of United StatesPolitical partiesElections SDUSA which was fiercely anti communist pursued a strategy of political realignment intended to organize labor unions civil rights organizations and other constituencies into a coalition that would transform the Democratic Party into a social democratic party The realignment strategy emphasized working with unions and especially the AFL CIO putting an emphasis on economic issues that would unite working class voters SDUSA opposed the Senator George McGovern s New Leftist approach pointing to the rout suffered in the 1972 presidential election As a result some SDUSA members like Penn Kemble and Joshua Muravchik were associated with neoconservatism SDUSA s activities have included sponsoring discussions and issuing position papers SDUSA has included civil rights activists and leaders of labor unions such as Bayard Rustin Norman Hill and Tom Kahn of the AFL CIO as well as Sandra Feldman and Rachelle Horowitz of the American Federation of Teachers AFT Internationally the group supported the dissident Polish labor organization Solidarity and several anti communist political movements in global hot spots SDUSA s politics were criticized by former SPA chairman Michael Harrington who in 1972 announced that he favored an immediate pull out of American forces from Vietnam and coined the term neoconservative After losing all votes at the 1972 convention that changed the SPA to SDUSA Harrington resigned in 1973 to form the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee the forerunner of the Democratic Socialists of America Contents 1 Socialist Party of America 2 Early years 3 Organizational activities 4 Hiatus and re foundation 5 Controversies 5 1 Anti communism 5 2 Max Shachtman and alleged Trotskyism 5 3 Alleged conservatism or neoconservatism 5 3 1 Former member Joshua Muravchik 6 Conventions 6 1 After reorganization 7 Prominent members 8 Notes 9 References 10 Publications 11 Further reading 12 External linksSocialist Party of America editMain article Socialist Party of America See also Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee and Socialist Party USA By the early 1970s the Socialist Party of America SPA was publicly associated with A Philip Randolph the civil rights and labor union leader and with Michael Harrington the author of The Other America Even before the 1972 convention Harrington had resigned as an Honorary Chairperson of the SPA 3 because he was upset about the group s failure to enthusiastically support George McGovern and because of its views on the Vietnam War 4 In its 1972 Convention the SPA had two Co Chairmen Bayard Rustin and Charles S Zimmerman of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union ILGWU 5 and a First National Vice Chairman James S Glaser who were re elected by acclamation 3 In his opening speech to the Convention Co Chairman Bayard Rustin called for SDUSA to organize against the reactionary policies of the Nixon Administration and Rustin also criticized the irresponsibility and elitism of the New Politics liberals 3 The party changed its name to Social Democrats USA by a vote of 73 to 34 3 Changing the name of the Socialist Party of America to Social Democrats USA was intended to be realistic as the intention was to respond to the end of the running of actual SPA candidates for office and to respond to the confusions of Americans The New York Times observed that the Socialist Party had last sponsored Darlington Hoopes as candidate for President in 1956 and who received only 2 121 votes which were cast in only six states Because the SPA no longer sponsored party candidates in elections continued use of the name party was misleading and hindered the recruiting of activists who participated in the Democratic Party according to the majority report The name Socialist was replaced by Social Democrats because many American associated the term socialism with Marxism Leninism 3 Moreover the organization sought to distinguish itself from two small Marxist parties the Socialist Workers Party and the Socialist Labor Party 6 During the 1972 Convention the majority Unity Caucus won every vote by a ratio of two to one The Convention elected a national committee of 33 members with 22 seats for the majority caucus eight seats for the Coalition Caucus of Harrington two for the left wing Debs Caucus and one for the independent Samuel H Friedman 7 Friedman and the minority caucuses had opposed the name change 3 The convention voted on and adopted proposals for its program by a two one vote On foreign policy the program called for firmness toward Communist aggression However on the Vietnam War the program opposed any efforts to bomb Hanoi into submission and instead it endorsed negotiating a peace agreement which should protect communist political cadres in South Vietnam from further military or police reprisals Harrington s proposal for a ceasefire and immediate withdrawal of American forces was defeated 7 Harrington complained that after its convention the SPA had endorsed George McGovern only with a statement loaded with constructive criticism and that it had not mobilized enough support for McGovern The majority caucus s Arch Puddington replied that the California branch was especially active in supporting McGovern while the New York branch were focusing on a congressional race 6 When the SPA changed its name to SDUSA Bayard Rustin became its public spokesman According to Rustin SDUSA aimed to transform the Democratic Party into a social democratic party A strategy of re alignment was particularly associated with Max Shachtman 8 Some months after the convention Harrington resigned his membership in SDUSA and he and some of his supporters from the Coalition Caucus soon formed the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee DSOC 9 Many members of the Debs Caucus resigned from SDUSA and some of them formed the Socialist Party USA 10 The changing of the name of the SPA to SDUSA and the 1973 formation of DSOC and the SPUSA represented a split in the American socialist movement Early years edit nbsp Social Democrats USA opposed the politics of George McGovern whose 1972 presidential campaign lost 49 of 50 states to Richard Nixon nbsp In the 1972 Congressional election the majority of Americans voted for Democratic Congressmen and this map shows the House seats by party holding plurality in state 80 1 100 Republican 80 1 100 Democratic 60 1 80 Republican 60 1 80 Democratic up to 60 Republican up to 60 Democratic In domestic politics the SDUSA leadership emphasized the role of the American labor movement in advancing civil rights and economic justice The domestic program followed the recommendations of Rustin s article From Protest to Politics in which Rustin analyzed the changing economy and its implications for African Americans Rustin wrote that the rise of automation would reduce the demand for low skill high paying jobs which would jeopardize the position of the urban black working class particularly in the Northern United States The needs of the black community demanded a shift in political strategy where blacks would need to strengthen their political alliance with mostly white unions and other organizations churches synagogues and the like to pursue a common economic agenda It was time to move from protest to politics wrote Rustin 11 A particular danger facing the black community was the chimera of identity politics particularly the rise of Black Power which Rustin dismissed as a fantasy of middle class African Americans that repeated the political and moral errors of previous black nationalists while alienating the white allies needed by the black community 12 SDUSA documents had similar criticisms of the agendas advanced by middle class activists increasing their role in the Democratic Party SDUSA members stated concerns about an exaggerated role of middle class peace activists in the Democratic Party particularly associated with the New Politics of Senator George McGovern whose presidential candidacy was viewed as an ongoing disaster for the Democratic Party and for the United States 3 13 In electoral politics SDUSA aimed to transform the Democratic Party into a social democratic party 14 In foreign policy most of the founding SDUSA leadership called for an immediate cessation of the bombing of North Vietnam They demanded a negotiated peace treaty to end the Vietnam War but the majority opposed a unilateral withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam suggesting that such a withdrawal would lead to an annihilation of the free labor unions and of the political opposition 3 15 16 After the withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam and the victory of the Communist Party of Vietnam and the Viet Cong SDUSA supported humanitarian assistance to refugees and condemned Senator McGovern for his failure to support such assistance 17 18 Organizational activities edit nbsp National Chairman Bayard Rustin who headed SDUSA SDUSA was governed by biannual conventions which invited the participation of interested observers These gatherings featured discussions and debates over proposed resolutions some of which were adopted as organizational statements The group frequently made use of outside speakers at these events non SDUSA intellectuals ranged from neoconservatives like Jeane Kirkpatrick on the right to democratic socialists like Paul Berman on the left and similarly a range of academic political and labor union leaders were invited These meetings also functioned as reunions for political activists and intellectuals some of whom worked together for decades 19 SDUSA also published a newsletter and occasional position papers issued statements supporting labor unions and workers interests at home and overseas the existence of Israel and the Israeli labor movement 20 From 1979 1989 SDUSA members were organized to support of Solidarity the independent labor union of Poland 21 The organization also attempted to exert influence through endorsements of presidential candidates The group s 1976 National Convention held in New York City formally endorsed the Democratic ticket of Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale and pledged the group to work enthusiastically for the election of the pair in November 22 The organization took a less assertive approach during the divisive 1980 campaign marked as it was by a heated primary challenge to President Carter by Senator Edward Kennedy and SDUSA chose not to hold its biannual convention until after the termination of the fall campaign The election of conservative Ronald Reagan was chalked up to the failure of the Democrats to appeal to their traditional working class constituency 23 Early in 1980 long time National Director Carl Gershman resigned his position to be replaced by Rita Freedman 24 Freedman previously had served as organizer and chair of SDUSA s key New York local 24 SDUSA dues were paid annually in advance with members receiving a copy of the organization s official organ the tabloid sized newspaper New America The dues rate was 25 per year in 1983 25 Hiatus and re foundation editFollowing the death of the organization s Notesonline editor Penn Kemble of cancer on October 15 2005 26 SDUSA lapsed into a state of organizational hiatus with no further issues of the online newsletter produced or updates to the group s website made 27 Following several years of inactivity an attempt was subsequently made to revive SDUSA In 2008 a group composed initially mostly of Pennsylvania members of SDUSA emerged determined to re launch the organization 28 A re founding convention of the SDUSA was held May 3 2009 at which a National Executive Committee was elected 29 Owing to factional disagreements a group based in Johnstown Pennsylvania and the newly elected National Executive Committee parted company with the former styling itself as the Social Democrats USA Socialist Party USA 30 and the latter as Social Democrats USA 31 Two additional conventions took place since the 2009 reformation an internet teleconference on September 1 2010 featuring presentations by guest speakers Herb Engstrom of the California Democratic Party Executive Committee and Roger Clayman Executive Director of the Long Island Labor Federation 32 and a convention held August 26 27 2012 in Buffalo New York with a keynote address delivered by Richard Lipsitz executive director of Western New York Labor Federation 33 Controversies editAnti communism edit The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Michael Harrington charged that its obsessive anti communism rendered SDUSA politically conservative 34 In contrast Harrington s DSOC and DSA criticized Marxism Leninism but he opposed many defense and diplomatic policies against the Soviet Union and its Eastern Bloc Harrington voiced admiration for German Chancellor Willy Brandt s Ostpolitik which sought to reduce Western distrust of and hostility towards the Eastern Bloc and so entice the Soviet Union reciprocally to reduce its aggressive military posture 35 36 Max Shachtman and alleged Trotskyism edit SDUSA leaders have served in the administrations of Presidents since the 1980 and the service of some members in Republican administrations has been associated with controversy SDUSA members like Gershman were called State Department socialists by Massing 1987 who wrote that the foreign policy of the Reagan administration was being run by Trotskyists a claim that was called a myth by Lipset 1988 p 34 37 This Trotskyist charge has been repeated and even widened by journalist Michael Lind in 2003 to assert a takeover of the foreign policy of the George W Bush administration by former Trotskyists 38 Lind s amalgamation of the defense intellectuals with the traditions and theories of the largely Jewish American Trotskyist movement in Lind s words was criticized in 2003 by University of Michigan professor Alan M Wald 39 who had discussed Trotskyism in his history of the New York intellectuals 40 SDUSA and allegations that Trotskyists subverted Bush s foreign policy have been mentioned by self styled paleoconservatives conservative opponents of neoconservatism 41 Harrington and Tom Kahn had been associated with Max Shachtman a Marxist theorist who had broken with Leon Trotsky 42 because of his criticism of the Soviet Union as being a totalitarian class society after having supported Trotsky in the 1930s 43 44 Although Schachtman died in 1972 before the Socialist Party was renamed as SDUSA Shachtman s ideas continued to influence the Albert Shanker and The American Federation of Teachers which was often associated with SDUSA members Decades later conflicts in the AFL CIO were roughly split in 1995 along the lines of the conflict between the Shachtmanite Social Democrats and the Harringtonite Democratic Socialists of America with the Social Democrats supporting Kirkland and Donahue and the Democratic Socialists supporting Sweeney 45 46 Alleged conservatism or neoconservatism edit The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Author Justin Vaisse considers some SDUSA members right wing social democrats 47 a taunt according to Wattenberg 48 SDUSA members supported Solidarity the independent labor union of Poland The organizer of the AFL CIO s support for Solidarity SDUSA s Tom Kahn criticized Jeane Kirkpatrick s Dictatorships and Double Standards arguing that democracy should be promoted even in the countries dominated by Soviet Communism 49 In 1981 leading Social Democrats and some moderate Republicans wanted to use economic aid to Poland as leverage to expand the freedom of association in 1981 whereas Caspar Weinberger and neoconservative Jeane Kirkpatrick preferred to force the communist government of Poland to default on its international payments so they would lose credibility 50 Kahn argued for his position in a 1981 debate with neoconservative Norman Podhoretz who like Kirkpatrick and Weinberger opposed all credits 51 52 In 1982 Kirkpatrick called similarly for Western assistance to Poland to be used to help Solidarity 53 The Washington Post then owned by Graham Holdings had called some of SDUSA s former members neoconservatives 54 Justin Vaisse listed five SDUSA associates as second generation neoconservatives and so called Shachtmanites including Penn Kemble Joshua Muravchik and Bayard Rustin 55 Throughout his life Penn Kemble called himself a social democrat and objected to being called a neoconservative 56 Kemble and Joshua Muravchik were never followers of Max Shachtman On the contrary Kemble was recruited by a non Shachtmanite professor according to Muravchik who wrote Although Shachtman was one of the elder statesmen who occasionally made stirring speeches to us no YPSL Young People s Socialist League of my generation was a Shachtmanite 57 Besides objecting to being called a neoconservative Kemble sharply criticized the Bush administration s approach on Iraq The distinction between liberation and democratization which requires a strategy and instruments was an idea never understood by the administration he told the New Republic wrote The Washington Post in Kemble s obituary 56 Former member Joshua Muravchik editJoshua Muravchik has identified himself as a neoconservative 58 When Muravhchik appeared at the 2003 SDUSA conference he was criticized by SDUSA members 19 59 Rachelle Horowitz another Social Democrats USA luminary and an event organizer called Muravchik s comments profoundly disturbing both his use of us and them rhetoric and the term evil The existence of evil in the world was something Horowitz was happy to concede she said from the floor But it was a word incapable of clear political definition and thus a producer of muddle rather than clarity zeal rather than political action Then Herf jumped in with similar criticisms And then Berman And Ibrahim And before long more or less everyone else in the room There was still something it seemed that separated them from the neocons who hovered over the proceedings both as opponents and inspirations Muravchik wanted to pull them somewhere most of the attendees and organizers were unwilling to go 59 Among Joshua Muravchick s SDUSA critics was his own father Emanuel Muravchik a Norman Thomas socialist 19 60 61 His mother was too upset with Joshua s Heaven on Earth The Rise and Fall of Socialism to attend the discussion 60 On the other hand Joshua Muravchik was called a second generation neoconservative by Vaisse 55 Conventions editConvention Location Date Notes and references 1973 National Conference Hopewell Junction New York September 21 23 1973 From registration ad New America July 30 1973 p 7 1974 National Convention New York City September 6 8 1974 125 delegates keynote speaker Walter Laqueur Per New America August 20 1974 p 8 1976 National Convention New York City July 17 18 1976 500 delegates and observers keynote speaker Sidney Hook Per New America August September 1976 p 1 1978 National Convention New York City September 8 10 1978 Introductory report by Carl Gershman Per New America October 1978 p 1 1980 National Convention New York City November 21 23 1980 Per New America December 1980 p 1 1982 National Convention Washington D C December 3 5 1982 Keynote speech by Albert Shanker Dates per New America October 1982 p 8 1985 National Convention Washington D C June 14 16 1985 Keynote speech by Alfonso Robelo Per New America November December 1985 p 6 1987 National Convention 1990 National Convention 1994 National Convention After reorganization edit The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Convention Location Date Notes and references 2009 Reorganization Convention May 3 2009 2010 Convention Internet teleconference September 1 2010 2012 National Convention Buffalo New York August 26 27 2012 Keynote speech by Richard Lipsitz Executive Director of Western New York Labor Federation 2014 Convention Pittsburgh Pennsylvania October 23 24 2014 2023 National Convention Buffalo New York September 1 6 2023 Speakers included Imre Komjathi co chair of the Hungarian Socialist Party former Democratic statehouse representative in Topeka Aaron Coleman and Godden Zama representative of the Social Democratic Front Cameroon 62 Prominent members editFurther information Leading members of Social Democrats USA Robert J Alexander Paul Feldman Sandra Feldman Carl Gershman Albert Glotzer Norman Hill Sidney Hook Tom Kahn Penn Kemble A Philip Randolph Bayard Rustin August Tyler Charles S ZimmermanNotes edit Principles Social Democrats USA Retrieved February 10 2020 Hacker David 2008 2010 Heritage Social Democrats USA Retrieved February 10 2020 While concentrating on developing social democratic programs for the here and now we have not given up our vision of the new socialist society that incremental change would eventually bring We are still committed to the vibrant democratic socialist movement of the near future and our socialist vision of the far future beyond our lifetime and our children s lifetime We view the terms social democracy and democratic socialism as being interchangeable a b c d e f g h i Socialist Party now the Social Democrats U S A The New York Times December 31 1972 p 36 Retrieved February 8 2010 Richard D Kahlenberg Tough Liberal Albert Shanker and the Battles Over Schools Unions Race and Democracy Columbia University Press August 13 2013 p 157 158 Gerald Sorin The Prophetic Minority American Jewish Immigrant Radicals 1880 1920 Bloomington Indiana University Press 1985 p 155 a b Anonymous December 27 1972 Young Socialists open parley to weigh New Politics split The New York Times p 25 a b Anonymous January 1 1973 Firmness urged on Communists Social Democrats reach end of U S Convention here The New York Times p 11 Maurice Isserman The Other American The Life Of Michael Harrington Public Affairs 2001 p 290 304 Martin Duberman A Saving Remnant The Radical Lives of Barbara Deming and David McReynolds The New Press 2013 O Rourke 1993 pp 195 196 O Rourke William 1993 L Michael Harrington Signs of the literary times Essays reviews profiles 1970 1992 The Margins of Literature SUNY Series SUNY Press pp 192 196 ISBN 0 7914 1681 X Originally O Rourke William November 13 1973 Michael Harrington Beyond Watergate Sixties and reform Vol 3 pp 6 7 ISBN 9780791416815 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Busky 2000 pp 165 Busky Donald F 2000 Democratic socialism A global survey Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 96886 1 Rustin wrote the following reports Civil rights the true frontier New York N Y Donald Press 1963 From protest to politics the future of the civil rights movement New York League for Industrial Democracy 1965 The labor Negro coalition a new beginning Washington D C American Federationist 1968 Conflict or coalition the civil rights struggle and the trade union movement today New York A Philip Randolph Institute 1969 Rustin wrote the following reports The Watts Manifesto amp the McCone report New York League for Industrial Democracy 1966 Separatism or integration which way for America a dialogue with Robert Browne New York A Philip Randolph Educational Fund 1968 Black studies myths amp realities contributor New York A Philip Randolph Educational Fund 1969 Three essays New York A Philip Randolph Institute 1969 A word to black students New York A Philip Randolph Institute 1970 The failure of black separatism New York A Philip Randolph Institute 1970 Bloodworth 2013 p 147 Fraser C Gerald September 7 1974 Socialists seek to transform the Democratic Party PDF The New York Times p 11 These positions had been advanced by organizations like Negotiations Now since the 1960s Gershman Carl November 3 1980 Totalitarian menace Controversies Detente and the left after Afghanistan Society 18 1 9 15 doi 10 1007 BF02694835 ISSN 0147 2011 S2CID 189883991 The View from Washington Asian Affairs 6 2 134 135 November December 1978 doi 10 1080 00927678 1978 10553935 JSTOR 30171704 Gershman Carl May 1978 After the dominoes fell Commentary SD papers 3 a b c Meyerson Harold Fall 2002 Solidarity Whatever Dissent 49 4 16 Archived from the original on June 20 2010 Social Democrats USA 1973 The American challenge A social democratic program for the seventies New York SDUSA Mahler Jonathan November 19 1997 Labor s crisis and its opportunity The Wall Street Journal Freedom Economic Justice Themes of SD Convention New America New York vol 13 no 15 Aug Sept 1976 pg 1 Social Democracy Faces Crucial Era New America New York vol 17 no 11 December 1980 pg 1 a b Rita Freedman New SD Director New America New York vol 17 no 2 Feb 1980 pg 12 Wanted Dues Cheaters ad New America New York vol 20 no 5 September October 1983 pg 7 Political Activist Penn Kemble Dies at 64 The Washington Post October 19 2005 pg B07 See Social Democrats USA official website www socialdemocratsusa org Retrieved May 26 2011 currently broken David Hacker Heritage Learning from Our Past www socialistcurrents org Retrieved February 27 2014 Organization www socialistcurrents org Retrieved February 27 2014 Social Democrats Socialist Party USA official website www socialdemocratsusa org Retrieved May 26 2011 Dead link Social Democrats USA official website www socialdemocrats org Retrieved February 27 2014 2010 National Convention Socialist Currents www socialistcurrents org 2012 Convention Report Socialist Currents www socialistcurrents org Bloodworth 2013 p 148 Isserman The Other American pp 351 352 As co chairman of DSA Michael Harrington wrote that Willy Brandt launched his famous ostpolitik Eastern policy and moved toward detente with the Soviets and Eastern Europeans a strategy that was to win him the Nobel Peace Prize Disaster came in 1974 There was a spy scandal a member of Brandt s inner circle turned out to be an East German agent and the chancellor resigned his office Harrington Michael March 31 1987 Willy Brandt May Even Yet Manage Resurrection No 5 Los Angeles Times A 1987 article in The New Republic described these developments as a Trotskyist takeover of the Reagan administration wrote Lipset 1988 p 34 Lind Michael April 7 2003 The weird men behind George W Bush s war New Statesman Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Wald Alan June 27 2003 Are Trotskyites Running the Pentagon History News Network Wald Alan M 1987 The New York intellectuals The rise and decline of the anti Stalinist left from the 1930s to the 1980s University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4169 3 King William 2004 Neoconservatives and Trotskyism American Communist History 3 2 247 266 doi 10 1080 1474389042000309817 ISSN 1474 3906 S2CID 162356558 King Bill March 22 2004 Neoconservatives and Trotskyism The question of Shachtmanism Enter Stage Right Politics Culture Economics 3 1 2 ISSN 1488 1756 Muravchik 2006 Addressing the allegation that SDUSUA was a Trotskyist organization Muravchik wrote that in the early 1960s two future members of SDUSA Tom Kahn and Paul Feldman became devotees of a former Trotskyist named Max Shachtman a fact that today has taken on a life of its own Tracing forward in lineage through me and a few other ex YPSL s members of the Young Peoples Socialist League turned neoconservatives this happenstance has fueled the accusation that neoconservatism itself and through it the foreign policy of the Bush administration are somehow rooted in Trotskyism I am more inclined to laugh than to cry over this but since the myth has traveled so far let me briefly try once more as I have done at greater length in the past to set the record straight See The Neoconservative Cabal Commentary September 2003 The alleged connective chain is broken at every link The falsity of its more recent elements is readily ascertainable by anyone who cares for the truth namely that George Bush was never a neoconservative and that most neoconservatives were never YPSL s The earlier connections are more obscure but no less false Although Shachtman was one of the elder statesmen who occasionally made stirring speeches to us no YPSL of my generation was a Shachtmanite What is more our mentors Paul and Tom had come under Shachtman s sway years after he himself had ceased to be a Trotskyite A saving remnant New Press January 8 2011 via Internet Archive Isserman Maurice January 8 2000 The other American the life of Michael Harrington New York PublicAffairs via Internet Archive Kahlenberg Richard D August 30 2007 Tough Liberal Albert Shanker and the Battles Over Schools Unions Race and Democracy Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231509091 via Google Books In 1982 Harrington s Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee reformed as the Democratic Socialists of America John Haer Reviving Socialism Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 1 1982 Retrieved November 9 2009 Vaisse op cit p 91 Wattenberg Ben April 22 1992 A man whose ideas helped change the world Baltimore Sun Syndicated Thursday April 23 1993 Remembering a man who mattered The Indiana Gazette p 2 pdf format Retrieved November 19 2011 Kahn Tom July 1985 Beyond the double standard A social democratic view of the authoritarianism versus totalitarianism debate PDF New America January 1985 speech to the Democratic Solidarity Conference organized by the Young Social Democrats YSD under the auspices of the Foundation for Democratic Education Social Democrats USA Reprinted Kahn Tom 2008 1985 Beyond the double standard A social democratic view of the authoritarianism versus totalitarianism debate PDF Democratiya Merged into Dissent in 2009 12 Spring 152 160 Domber 1 with revision and typeset 2 Kahn amp Podhoretz 2008 Gershman Carl August 29 2011 Remarks by Carl Gershman at a photo exhibition commemorating the 30th anniversary of the founding of Solidarity The phenomenon of Solidarity Pictures from the history of Poland 1980 1981 Woodrow Wilson Center html Washington D C National Endowment for Democracy a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jeane J Kirkpatrick 1988 Political and moral dimensions Transaction Publishers p 164ff ISBN 9780887380990 Matthews Dylan August 28 2013 Meet Bayard Rustin the gay socialist pacifist who planned the 1963 March on Washington The Washington Post a b Vaisse Justin January 8 2010 Neoconservatism The Biography of a Movement Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674050518 via Google Books a b Holley Joe October 19 2005 Political activist Penn Kemble dies at 64 The Washington Post Muravchik 2006 Muravchik Joshua November December 2006 Operation comeback PDF Foreign Policy a b Joshua Micah Marshall Debs s Heirs Reassemble To Seek Renewed Role as Hawks of Left The Jewish Daily Forward May 23 2003 a b Muravchik Joshua May 8 2002 Joshua Muravchik revisits communism Where socialism lives on National Review Online May 2 2003 10 45 A M ed Muravchik Manny 2002 Socialism in my life and my life in socialism html Private hosted by Social Democrats USA A Letter to my children grandchildren and beyond and to my comrades ex comrades and anti comrades gathering on May Day 2002 Retrieved August 14 2011 OUR NATIONAL CONVENTION SCHEDULE Socialist Currents August 25 2023 Retrieved September 23 2023 References editBernstein Carl February 24 1992 The holy alliance Ronald Reagan and John Paul II How Reagan and the Pope conspired to assist Poland s Solidarity movement and hasten the demise of Communism Cover story Time U S ed pp 28 35 Bloodworth Jeffrey 2013 Losing the center The decline of American liberalism 1968 1992 Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813142296 Domber Gregory F 2008 Supporting the revolution America democracy and the end of the Cold War in Poland 1981 1989 Ph D dissertation September 12 2007 George Washington University pp 1 506 ISBN 978 0 549 38516 5 Winner of the 2009 Betty M Unterberger Prize for Best Dissertation on United States Foreign Policy from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Revised and incorporated in Domber Gregory F 2014 Empowering Revolution America Poland and the End of the Cold War The New Cold War History University of North Carolina Press books ISBN 9781469618517 Gershman Carl November 3 1980 Totalitarian menace Controversies Detente and the left after Afghanistan Society 18 1 9 15 doi 10 1007 BF02694835 ISSN 0147 2011 S2CID 189883991 Harrington Michael November 3 1980 Nuclear threat Controversies Detente and the left after Afghanistan Society 18 1 16 21 doi 10 1007 BF02694836 ISSN 0147 2011 S2CID 189885851 Horowitz Rachelle 2007 Tom Kahn and the Fight for Democracy A Political Portrait and Personal Recollection PDF Democratiya Merged with Dissent in 2009 11 Winter 204 251 Kahn Tom Podhoretz Norman Summer 2008 How to support Solidarnosc A debate PDF Democratiya Merged with Dissent in 2009 13 sponsored by the Committee for the Free World and the League for Industrial Democracy with introduction by Midge Decter and moderation by Carl Gershman held at the Polish Institute for Arts and Sciences New York City in March 1981 230 261 Archived from the original PDF on November 17 2011 Lipset Seymour July 4 1988 Neoconservatism Myth and reality Society 25 5 29 37 doi 10 1007 BF02695739 ISSN 0147 2011 S2CID 144110677 Massing Michael 1987 Trotsky s orphans From Bolshevism to Reaganism The New Republic pp 18 22 Muravchik Joshua January 2006 Comrades Commentary Magazine Retrieved June 15 2007 Puddington Arch 2005 Surviving the underground How American unions helped solidarity win American Educator Summer Retrieved June 4 2011 Shevis James M Summer 1981 The AFL CIO and Poland s Solidarity World Affairs 144 1 31 35 JSTOR 20671880 Publications editSocial Democrats USA December 1972 copyright 1973 The American challenge A social democratic program for the seventies New York S D U S and YPSL The following program was adopted at the Social Democrats U S A and Young People s Socialist League conventions at the end of December 1972 Hook Sidney 2005 July 17 18 1976 The social democratic prospect PDF Democratiya Archived by Dissent 3 Winter originally entitled The social democratic prospect Social democracy and America 63 76 Alternative source Hook Sidney Rustin Bayard Gershman Carl Kemble Penn 1978 Capitalism socialism and democracy SD Papers Vol 1 New York Social Democrats USA Reprinted from Commentary April 1978 pp 29 71 Bayard Rustin and Carl Gershman Africa Soviet imperialism and the retreat of American power New York Social Democrats USA 1978 SD papers 2 Gershman Carl May 1978 After the dominoes fell Commentary SD papers 3 Carl Gershman The world according to Andrew Young New York Social Democrats USA 1978 SD papers 4 Leszek Kolakowski and Sidney Hook The social democratic challenge New York Social Democrats USA 1978 SD papers 5 Carl Gershman Selling them the rope Business and the Soviets New York Social Democrats USA 1979 SD papers 6 Lane Kirkland and Rita Freedman Building on the past for the future New York Social Democrats USA 1981 Social Democrats USA Standard bearers for freedom democracy and economic justice New York Social Democrats USA n d 1980s A challenge to the Democratic Party New York Social Democrats USA 1983 Alfonso Robelo The Nicaraguan democratic struggle Our unfinished revolution New York Social Democrats USA 1983 SD papers 8 Scabs renamed permanent replacements New York Social Democrats USA 1990 On foreign policy and defense Washington D C Social Democrats USA 1990 SD USA statement on the economy New York Social Democrats USA 1991 Child labor US style New York Social Democrats USA 1991 Child labor an international abuse New York Social Democrats USA 1991 John T Joyce Expanding economic democracy New York Social Democrats USA 1991 Rita Freedman Does America need a social democratic movement Washington DC Social Democrats USA 1993 Why America needs a social democratic movement Washington DC Social Democrats USA 1993 The future of socialism San Jose CA San Francisco Bay Area Local of Social Democrats USA 1994 Further reading editChenoweth Eric October 2010 AFL CIO support for Solidarity Political financial moral Washington DC Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe IDEE Morris George 1976 Social Democrats USA in the service of reaction A record of racism low wages bureaucracy and betrayal of socialism New York New Outlook Publishers A polemic against the SDUSA published by the Communist Party USA Social Democrats USA 1973 For the record The report by the Social Democrats USA on the resignation of Michael Harrington and his attempt to split the American socialist movement New York Social Democrats USA undated pamphlet certainly no earlier than 1973 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Social Democrats USA nbsp Socialism portal nbsp Organized labor portal nbsp Society portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp United States portal Preliminary Inventory of the Social Democrats USA Records 1937 1994 Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library Duke University Durham North Carolina Dale Reed 1999 Register of the Carl Gershman Papers PDF Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford California Dale Reed 2010 Register of the Albert Glotzer Papers PDF Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford California News and Opinion from Social Democrats USA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social Democrats USA amp oldid 1216494078, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.