Socialist Action (United States)

Socialist Action
Secretary-General Jeff Mackler
Founded 1983 (1983)
Youth wing Youth for Socialist Action
Ideology Marxism
Trotskyism
Communism
Political position Far-left
International affiliation Fourth International
Seats in the Senate
0 / 100
Seats in the House
0 / 435
Governorships
0 / 50
State Upper House Seats
0 / 1,972
State Lower House Seats
0 / 5,411
Other elected offices
0 / 5,411
Website
www.socialistaction.org

Socialist Action is a Trotskyist political party in the United States. It publishes the monthly Socialist Action newspaper,[1] has a youth affiliate called Youth for Socialist Action (YSA),[2] and is associated with the Fourth International.

Origins

Socialist Action was founded in 1983 by a group of veteran socialist activists who state that they were expelled from the Socialist Workers Party for defending the ideas of Permanent Revolution, class independence, and continued support for the Fourth International.[3] Socialist Action was the second group, after the Fourth Internationalist Tendency, expelled during the 1983 purge. The first issue of its newspaper contained no listing of an editorial board. [4] The group split in 1985, with those leaving forming Socialist Unity.[4] In 1986 the split merged with Workers Power and the International Socialists to form Solidarity.[5] Those remaining in Socialist Action went on to act as a new Trotskyist party.[4][6] Socialist Action was soon involved in planning a Central America solidarity conference.[6]

Electoral campaigns

Socialist Action has run candidates for elected office on a number of occasions. It views electoral campaigns as a way to promote socialist politics, as well as to advocate on behalf of issues that the organization is promoting. As a result of legal challenges, Socialist Action does not have to disclose who the financial supporters of its election campaigns are because of demonstrable government harassment of past socialist candidates.[7]

SA member Adam Ritscher was elected to the Douglas County Board of Supervisors in Northern Wisconsin in April 2006.[8] Other examples of Socialist Action election campaigns are Jeff Mackler's 2006 write-in campaign for U.S. Senate in Northern California and Sylvia Weinstein's 1988 campaign for San Francisco Board of Education, in which she won 21,000 votes.[9] In 2010, Socialist Action ran Christopher Hutchinson[10] for the Connecticut's 1st congressional district. Hutchinson gained 955 votes or 0.42%.[11]

Political work

During the Gulf War, Socialist Action was dominant in the San Francisco Bay Area antiwar movement through the National Campaign Against the War in the Middle East, competing with the Workers World Party-led Coalition Against a Vietnam War in the Middle East. Critics charged Socialist Action with dominating the Campaign and packing leadership meetings in San Francisco and New York.[12]

Socialist Action has gone through a variety of splits and fusions over the course of its history. Currently it is actively involved in a wide range of social justice movements in the United States. SA members are in leadership positions in a range of groups that make up these movements, such as the National Assembly to End the U.S. Wars & Occupations, the United National Antiwar Conference, the Climate Crisis Coalition, the Mobilization to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal, Lynne Stewart Defense Committee, Grassroots Immigrant Justice Network, and a number of trade union locals.

Socialist Action has its national office in San Francisco. It also publishes various books and pamphlets through its publishing arm, Socialist Action Books.

References

  1. Socialist Action newspaper
  2. Youth for Socialist Action
  3. SA Open Letter to the Socialist Workers Party
  4. 1 2 3 Alexander, Robert (1991). International Trotskyism, 1929-1985: A Documented Analysis of the Movement. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 891.
  5. Evans, Leslie (2010). Outsider's Reverie: A Memoir. Boryana Books.
  6. 1 2 Klehr, Harvey (1988). Far Left of Center: The American Radical Left Today. Transaction Publishers. pp. 68–69.
  7. Ballot Access News - August 1, 2004
  8. Ballot Access News - June 1, 2006
  9. September 2001: Sylvia Weinstein, 1926-2001
  10. Christopher Hutchinson
  11. http://www.sots.ct.gov/sots/lib/sots/electionservices/statementofvote_pdfs/2010_sov.pdf
  12. Epstein, Barbara (Spring 1992). "The antiwar movement during the Gulf War". Social Justice 19 (47): 115–137.

External links


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