By Sohale Andrus Mortazavi
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
The 2022
Socialism Conference in Chicago earlier this month felt more like an academic
conference than, as the promotional materials pronounced, “a place where
activists can share lessons from their struggles.” Attendees paid $150 for full-price
passes granting access to four days of panels, talks, and social events for
professional schmoozing at the Hyatt Regency McCormick Place hotel and
convention center in Chicago’s swank South Loop neighborhood. Panels hosted
academics and writers plugging and signing books that could be purchased at the
conference book fair. Keynote speakers gave the kind of rousing and impassioned
prewritten talks to restrained applause that one would expect of a literary
reading. The only real perceivable difference between the Socialism Conference
and, say, the annual Association of Writers and Writing Programs conference was
that of genre, which was social justice instead of more traditional literary
poetry or prose.
One
might assume such a conference is sponsored by universities, as would normally
be the case, but the annual Socialism Conference was originally a production of
the International Socialist Organization (ISO), a Trotskyist group formed in
1976 in order to lay the groundwork for a vanguard socialist party in the
Leninist tradition. Once the largest revolutionary socialist group in the
United States (though that’s obviously not saying much), the ascendance of
leftwing identity politics moved the ISO toward a more generic progressivism
over the decades. This shift was evident in much of the content put out by
its publication, podcast, and nonprofit publishing arm, Haymarket
Books, as well as within the ranks of the organization itself. Internecine
squabbling and online harassment broke out in what had become a far less
ideologically homogeneous organization. Infighting eventually reached a crisis
point, and a new generally younger, generally “woker” dissident majority,
which allegedly wanted to bring the
organization into the greater Democratic Party apparatus by supporting Democratic
campaigns and candidates, ultimately voted to dissolve the organization in
2019. This was mere weeks after much of the ISO’s old guard had been ousted
from leadership in response to fallout from revelations of sexual misconduct
and its coverup within leadership.
The
dissolution of the ISO cast the future of the Socialist Conference in doubt
until Haymarket Books, which has survived as a vestigial remnant of the
ISO, Jacobin magazine, and the Democratic Socialists of
America (of which I am a member) stepped in to sponsor the 2019 conference. Put
on hold during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Socialism Conference has now
returned. If the final days of the ISO were a battle between revolutionary
Marxists and a new generation of social justice progressives, the 2022
Socialism Conference makes clear who was left standing when the smoke cleared.
The vast majority of panels were on topics related to
police/prison abolition, antiracism, reproductive rights, opening borders, and
other progressive movements and causes with precious little to do with
socialism proper. And while there were panels billed under the categories of
“labor movement” or “socialist theory and strategy” (for example, “Class Struggle Unionism,” featuring union negotiator and
labor lawyer Joe Burns, and “The ABCs of Marxism”), these topics received no
more time, and often far less attention, than abolitionism or various kinds of
identity politics. In other words, the Socialist Conference treated the labor
movement—and even socialism itself—as just one of many progressive causes, and
class as just another identity around which to organize.
Some
panels that might seem off topic for a conference on socialism did offer
tenuous or suspect connections to socialism by way of intersectionality, such
as “Transgender Marxism,” while others, such as a panel on
abolishing the family or many of those on antiracism, appear to have barely
even bothered. Indeed, much of the conference was devoted to making the case
that any progressive cause or movement actually is socialism.
Keynote speaker Ruth Wilson Gilmore, professor and a center director at the
City University of New York, claimed that abolition is communism, race
the modality through which class is lived, and mass criminalization class war,
pretty much all in the same breath.
Speaker
Robin D.G. Kelley, professor of history at UCLA, argued that we have all been bequeathed an
impoverished view of socialism, which, apparently, can be about oh-so-much-more
than just class struggle. In a 50-minute talk, he blamed the failure of
previous international socialist movements on white supremacy,
heteropatriarchy, the failure to center antiracism, and an internationalism
that was insufficiently internationalist. The socialist project, in Kelley’s
view, must be about abolition, reparations, antiracism, and
climate justice. Socialism can even, he insisted, require skepticism of
“science as a product of Enlightenment rationality”—it is not just a fight
against capitalism but also patriarchy, racism, ableism, homophobia,
transphobia, settler colonialism, and more.
“The
socialist project isn’t just about changing material conditions,” Kelley
announced. “It is a spiritual and ethical project. It has to be. It is a
psychological, cultural, and dare I say, civilizational project, in the
sense that we need to create a new kind of civil society.” Though so vague as
to be almost functionally meaningless, the only thing we can really take from
all of this is that socialism now encompasses anything and everything, the
whole cosmos, and heaven and hell too, apparently. The title of the 2022
Socialist Conference, “Change Everything,” is a phrase borrowed from Gilmore,
whose keynote address was promoted with a session description stating that
abolition, which we are now to understand is socialism,
“requires that we change one thing: everything.”
This
tendency to make every issue about every other issue is the project of
intersectionality, not socialism proper. Socialism here serves merely as the
now-neutral canvas upon which all progressive projects may be painted. But
socialism is not a neutral blank slate, it is a set of specific political and
intellectual traditions and histories. There is no need here to get bogged down
arguing which traditions and histories merit inclusion. For the purposes of
understanding the Socialist Conference and its political tendency, we need only
consider which traditions are being displaced, discredited, de-emphasized,
redefined, and watered down through endless recombination with others: those of
universalism and class struggle.
***
Identity
politics redirects radical energy away from class struggle and obfuscates the
class position of the professionals, managers, and academic and media elites
who promote it, a point so thoroughly explored elsewhere that it hardly
requires recapitulation here. However, the 2022 Socialism Conference—with its
pageant of writers, professors, and nonprofit/university managers redefining
socialism—illustrates that point with rare clarity. Some speakers, familiar
with such criticisms, came prepared to counter them in advance. When Gilmore
acknowledged selling her books for profit, an apparent attempt to deflect
accusations of hypocrisy, she absolved herself by pointing out that most of her
readers had never paid her a dime in royalties. Of course, Gilmore doesn’t make
a living selling books, at least not directly. Her work isn’t as popular as
that of someone like Ibram X. Kendi, whose How to Be an Antiracist sat
on the New York Times bestseller list for the better part of a
year.
Nevertheless,
her books are helpful in securing elite academic jobs, coveted work in media,
or managerial positions in the professionalized space of leftwing organizing,
scholarship, media, and the nonprofit sector. As a university professor and
director of a university center, Gilmore knows this well. The red herring of
book royalties is meant to distract from the very real material benefits of
being a successful professional and scholar. When at one point she referred to
herself as a “privileged worker”—a sentiment speakers expressed repeatedly
during the conference—the emphasis wasn’t on her privilege so much as her
inclusion within the working class. Never mind that her scholarly work
undermining class politics as a university professor and administrator comes
with a salary three or four times the national average. The phrase “privileged
worker,” in this context, emphasizes her presence within the working class in
order to de-emphasize her specific place within it.
This
same kind of class obfuscation could be found throughout the conference. In
perhaps the most eyebrow-raising panel of the whole conference, “Elite Capture:
How the Powerful Took Over Identity Politics,” speaker Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò
specifically referenced the “class reductionist” or “class first” Left when
making the case for identity politics and what he called the “class plus Left”
(again, getting out ahead of the criticism). He acknowledged that identity
politics are weaponized in pursuit of personal or anti-solidaristic group
interests but blamed the problem not on identity politics itself but its
co-option by political, social, and economic elites. By his account, the real identity
politics is that put forward by the Combahee River Collective’s 1977 statement, often credited with laying the
groundwork for identity politics as a theoretical and organizing concept, and
an identitarian theory of interlocking oppressions that critical race theorist
Kimberlé Crenshaw would later term intersectionality. Conversely, again, by
this account, liberal identity politics is the universalist colorblind politics
of the center-Left and center-Right promoted by elites.
The
problems with this narrative should be immediately apparent. First, mainstream
liberals have supported non-colorblind policies like affirmative action as far
back as the Kennedy and LBJ administrations in the 1960s, and now openly
embrace the extreme racialist identity politics of the Combahee River
Collective. Intersectionality and social justice discourse around “equality
vs equity” became mainstream among liberals and progressive
Democrats years, arguably decades ago. Táíwò ignores both history and the
present when he lumps the “center-Right” and “center-Left” together in a
sleight of hand that collapses the differences between Richard Nixon and Bill
Gates (representative examples of his own choosing) to create a class of
political and economic elites that excludes himself, a professor of philosophy
at prestigious Georgetown University.
Identity
politics was not “captured” by political, economic, and social elites—it was
created by them. Despite the folksy-sounding name, the Combahee River
Collective was a collective of mostly scholars and academics. Their ranks included Audre Lorde, sisters Beverly and Barbara Smith, Gloria
Akasha Hull, Margo Okazawa-Rey, Cheryl Clarke, and Chirlane McCray, among
others. Feel free to google the names you don’t know. Many were educated at
some of the nation’s top universities and some went on to become professors at
them. They entered academia, politics, and nonprofits and headed various
centers and university hospitals and the like. McCray, despite her
participation in the black lesbian socialist collective, later went on to marry
Bill de Blasio.
Political
elites and capitalists cannot be said to have “co-opted” intersectional
identity politics when they deploy it in much the same manner as elite workers
in the professional-managerial class, especially its activist subset.
Intersectional identity politics are perfectly compatible with capitalism
because, as Adolph Reed has pointed out, it tacitly accepts inequality so long
as it is spread evenly across certain identity groups. Capitalists now embrace
identity politics in part to distract from growing economic inequality. They
could not so easily embrace actual socialism or class struggle, except perhaps
aesthetically, whereas corporations and capitalist elites can be antiracist
without compromising their interests or calling attention to their own class
position.
And so
it is with the elite workers of the professional-managerial class and,
especially, its activist subset of radicals and “socialists,” who also deploy
identity politics as a means of obscuring their own economic fortunes as
affluent workers with the means to invest by buying up homes and other assets.
This was true for the affluent, highly educated radicals of the Combahee River
Collective and it is true of the most successful social justice scholars and
nonprofit managers of today. The newest generation of the activist Left is no
different. In my time at the conference, I heard a number of young attendees
thank the speakers for convincing them—for giving them “permission” even—to
finally call themselves socialists.
***
Had the
“class reductionist” Left been represented at the conference at all, perhaps we
could have set the record straight. Socialism, we might have declared, is and
always has been about the politics of class. The message would, of course, not
have been popular among attendees. But suppose for a moment we had somehow won
the debate and the progressive identitarians had either changed their minds or
taken their ball and gone home. The prize would not be a class politics but
merely a triumphant theory of class politics. We would win not a labor movement
but an academic conference, perhaps another “revolutionary” Marxist
organization with a couple of hundred, maybe a thousand, members on paper.
This
particular debate over the soul and purpose of the Left has been dragging on
since at least the ’60s and ’70s, when the New Left explicitly rejected class
struggle and labor politics as primary concerns, favoring an aesthetically
radical, countercultural individualism over class solidarity and replacing the
proletariat as the revolutionary subject with activists and intellectuals
(i.e., themselves). The stalwart “class first” socialists have been arguing
with various shades of progressives claiming the mantle of socialism ever
since.
When I
joined the DSA in early 2020, as the Sanders 2020 campaign was bleeding working
class support and collapsing under the pernicious influence
of these same leftwing identitarian activists, I did so as a member of the
Class Unity (CU) caucus, which describes itself as a Marxist pole of attraction
working inside and outside of the DSA. We advocated for recognition of the problematic middle-class
composition of the DSA’s membership, actual accountability of DSA-endorsed
elected officials and candidates, and, above all, a reorientation toward class
politics within the organization. Our efforts were frustrated when, after Class
Unity outperformed expectations in sending delegates to DSA’s 2021 national
convention, the influential Chicago chapter of the DSA adopted a
non-proportional voting system to undemocratically keep CU members off of
future committees in an attempt to marginalize the bloc.
We
endeavored, for a while, to continue using the DSA as a venue for promoting
class politics. This, too, has proved to be a waste of time and effort. The
problem is with the venue itself. Organizing within the activist Left is a dead
end for class politics. There is nothing to be gained from trying to persuade
an activist Left mostly disconnected from the working class and anathema to
populist movements.
Much of
the “class first” Left, certainly its most prominent spokesmen, have been happy
to do so anyway. After all, many of us are also in the professional-managerial
class. Many are professors and podcasters and magazine editors and journalists
and professional organizers and the like. We are engaged in the same elite
discourse—largely divorced from real-world politics—as the progressive
identitarians we oppose. But if we are truly serious about class politics, we
should be making the case to the broader working class, not other professional
activists and academics. The former don’t show up to DSA meetings or socialist
conferences, mostly only the latter.
These
are exciting times for class politics. Inflation and the “labor shortage” have
given workers leverage unimaginable just a few years ago. Successful labor
strikes and unionization efforts—though still modest when compared to the
steady decline in union membership over the last 40-plus years—give new hope
for a revived labor movement. But these actions have almost nothing to do with
the activist Left or its internal debates. Few of the workers call themselves
socialists. Fewer still care what gets called socialism. Perhaps,
neither should we.
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