In 1964, as a teenager in the San Francisco Bay Area, I watched Ronald Reagan and the Republicans lead a successful referendum to repeal the recently-adopted Rumford Fair Housing Act. I saw the Democratic convention seat the Mississippi segregationists instead of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. The “lesser evil” Democrat, Lyndon Johnson, won and immediately escalated the war in Vietnam.
With racists and militarists in charge of both major parties, I asked, “Where is my party?” My party emerged in 1968, the Peace and Freedom Party. Even though I was still too young to vote for it, I rooted for it. I concluded then what I still believe today: that we need a major independent working-class party committed to a democratic, socialist, and ecological society.
I am running in the Peace and Freedom Party presidential primary with that same commitment today. I intend to be on the ballot in all 50 states and DC, mostly on Green Party lines because they already have over 20 ballot lines but I am also seeking the ballot lines of other progressive parties where presidential ballot-line fusion is possible in states like California, Oregon, South Carolina, and Vermont.
An important objective of our campaign is to build solidarity across the independent progressive and socialist left for a mass party based in the working-class majority and for all people who love peace, justice, freedom, and the environment.
Unlike my opponent in the Peace and Freedom primary, whose Party for Socialism and Liberation supports a “safe strategy” of supporting Bernie Sanders in the “battleground” states, I believe every state is a battleground for the independent left where we must fight for ballot access and the right to raise our demands in elections. In every state, we are fighting the Democrats as well as the Republicans who are on the opposite side from us on so many issues, from Medicare for All, a ban on fracking, and rent control to dismantling the US global military empire.
Sanders is campaigning for many good reforms such as Medicare for All and a Green New Deal. But Sanders’ “democratic socialism” is really a program of an old-fashioned liberalism. It depends on taxing capitalists to pay for his programs instead of replacing capitalist rule with a socialist economic democracy. Without economic democracy, we can’t have real political democracy. The capitalists will still have the power to resist and roll back progressive social programs.
Nor is Sanders calling for electoral reforms like proportional representation in Congress and presidential elections by a national popular vote with ranked-choice voting. Those reforms would end the problem for progressives of being forced to choose between a positive vote for what they really want and a negative vote for the lesser evil to stop the greater evil.
Nor is Sanders building an independent movement and party for socialism. He is leading socialists and progressives into a capitalist party that has been the graveyard of progressive social movements for generations.
My campaign intends to contest for votes in every state. In many states, securing a ballot line for the left for the next election cycle depends on the presidential vote. We want to use those ballot lines as we go into the 2020s to build a major party of the left from the bottom up. We want to begin electing thousands to municipal and county offices and then state legislative and congressional seats and replace the rule of giant corporations and their representatives in the Democratic and Republican parties.
I am asking for your vote in the presidential primary to support this goal, which has been the tradition of the Peace and Freedom Party since its inception. Inside the Democratic Party, socialists lose their independent identity and voice. Because so much of the progressive left has been relying on the lesser-evil Democrats for generations, the socialist left has disappeared as a major force in American politics. We need to advance our politics in our own name with our own independent movement and party.
We are running out of time on the life-or-death issues of the climate crisis, the new nuclear arms race, and growing inequality, which is an immediate life-or-death issue for so many working-class people as the life-expectancy gap grows between the rich and the rest of us. We need to advance socialist solutions to the these pressing problems. Real solutions can’t wait.
In solidarity,
Howie Hawkins
Go Howie, Go.
This position is based on a conflation of two logically distinct questions: programmatics, and electoral strategy and tactics. It’s perfectly possible to promote an unabashedly socialist program while being selective about which elections or states one contests, while promoting the same program by non-electoral means everywhere.
I would argue a big part of why the socialist left (including the Green Party) is so weak is precisely *because* its organizations haven’t been willing to be clearly selective about which elections they contest — hindering recruitment of many otherwise sympathetic people who are afraid joining will mean helping more reactionary candidates win office.
It’s just that a quick review of history demonstrates that this tactic does not work. See Green Party 2004.
A concise explanation of the one party, two wings system of USA politics — which keeps WE the People grounded in a muddy ditch.
Sanders’ plan for business to give 20% of ownership to workers would be a massive step forward for socialism(https://berniesanders.com/issues/corporate-accountability-and-democracy/). While replaceable something of this scale would be a massive success for the movement. His plans for Medicare(https://berniesanders.com/issues/medicare-for-all/) are life saving and the Green New Deal(https://berniesanders.com/issues/green-new-deal/) and nationalisation of electric grid are things that we desperately need with climate change approaching. These are good policies. Sanders support from the international left from John McDonald to Lula to the labor movement(https://berniesanders.com/issues/workplace-democracy/) in the US shows his appeal to our movement, Should Sanders lose the nomination unlikely as it is I would vote for Howie. But real socialist change from a real socialist in the white house is necessary. Should sanders become viable Howie should drop out and endorse.
I apologize for the grammar mistakes it is late.
Howie will not be dropping out, so we wish you the best of luck on your support for Sanders.
Howie, Thanks for sending me the information about your budget for the Green New Deal. The Federal Reserve just dumped 6.6 trillion dollars into Wall Street. What we could have done with that money, pay off the student debt 4 times, and that really would be a stimulus to the real economy, or pay for your Green New Deal twice, saving the world, getting us energy independence, getting us off of Oil, and 20 million new jobs. Such sadness. Trump dumped this money to make his economy look good, almost as much as we spent in the Middle East in the last 19 years (7 trillion) and what did we get from that investment? 1) millions of indigenous people dead, 2) a bunch of our own people dead or damaged, 3) rivers of refugees, 4) and more terrorists than we started with (amazing when you bomb people’s families, they take offense for some reason).