The
recent controversy around the Sanders campaign reminded me of some remarks that
Erwin Marquit made about his experiences in the Communist Party in the 1970’s.
Erwin mentioned that he got into a big fight with the national leadership over
the party’s position on LGBT rights at that point. He was frustrated that ‘the Democrats
are ahead of us on that question.’ In effect, the Communist Party was looking
bad because local Democrats were beginning to recognize the struggle for GLBT
rights at that point framed under the rubric of gay liberation and the party had
not yet shifted its positions on the same questions. The ability of the party
to claim a radical or even progressive position within the political terrain of
the day was being lost. In effect, the Sanders campaign is in a similar
situation with the question of reparations for slavery. The question is not a
new one for Sanders. He took a similar
position in 2016 to the position his campaign is taking today and was similarly
criticized. However, there were limits to that criticism. After all, his
position was no different than any of the major candidates and in some ways his
position was closer to supporting reparations than many of those candidates.
This story has changed four years later. Sanders’ position is no longer universally
adopted by the Democratic Party. As a few more mainstream Democratic presidential
candidates, ranging from Kamala Harris to Julian Castro and Elizabeth Warren
have embraced the call for reparations for slavery, Sanders’ refusal to follow
their lead is making the candidate look less and less like the most progressive
candidate running for the office and potentially sabotaging his ability to win
the nomination.
To
understand the significance of the problem we both need to examine how the
Sanders Campaign has framed his attempts to win the nomination and to think
about the question of reparations within the larger contemporary political field.
To begin, as several critics have pointed out, the Sanders Campaign has
attempted to frame his candidacy far differently than other candidates. As
supporter Corey Robin has frequently noted, “Bato, Harris, Klobachar, Biden,
Gillibrand, Booker: The basis of their candidacies is them, their person. That’s
what they have in common. Sanders and Warren are the only 2 candidates whose
basis is a set of ideas, well worked over the years, about the economy and the
state.” One can go even farther by distinguishing Sanders as a candidate that
has not only run on a set of consistent principles, but as a candidate that has
been trying to use his candidacy to create a kind of mass movement and to frame
his candidacy as a response to a variety of mass movements, drawing from the
legacy of the Rainbow Coalition and bringing in select issues from both the
Occupy protests and the Black Lives Matter protests. This aspect of Sanders’
candidacy has created a very strong base for his candidacy and has created a
strong coalition of supporters who have been both rhetorically and economically
very supportive of the candidate, to the point where Sanders is and was a
strong candidate despite a lot of official Democratic Party opposition.
At
the same time, it has made his position on reparations even more damaging. To
explain why, we need to contextualize the demand for reparations. The demand for reparations is by no means a novel demand. One can go
back to the Reconstruction era to find demands for recompense for stolen labor
on the part of former slaves and demands that the federal government should
live up to its unfulfilled promise of forty acres and a mule on the part of
General William Sherman. More recently, Michigan Representative John Conyers
had introduced a bill every year into congress starting in the late ‘80’s calling
for a committee to investigate "impact of slavery on the social, political
and economic life of our nation” as the beginning of a process of reparations. However,
it has been two essays that in many ways frame our current focus on the issue
and successfully transformed the demand into a popular slogan that shape activist
and academic debate. The first was Randall Robinson’s polemic, The Debt: What America Owes to Blacks, which brought the slogan to mainstream
attention in 2001 and more recently, Ta-Nehisi Coates essay, “The Case for
Reparations,” which renewed Robinson’s call and returned the topic to public attention.
Both efforts contextualized the demand for reparations in the long history of anti-Black
racism, starting with the effects of slavery and moving into the effects of Jim
Crow and the later affects of redlining and other practices. Both made the
arguments that the only way some sort of genuine equal opportunity could be
created would be through the act of reparations, making up for the millions of
dollars of damage done by the systemic racism of the dominant institutions of
the country. That framework not only produces an immense amount of discussion,
but it helped shape the popular activism that followed it, ranging from the
Black Lives Matter movement to the demands of the NAACP and more local
campaigns such as the efforts on the part of the University of California,
Irvine Black Student Union to base financial aid on wealth, rather than income.
This
creates a profound incongruity on the part of the Sanders Campaign, who attempts
to frame their campaign as a collective effort to move popular demands forward,
while refusing to recognize the force and legitimacy of this extremely popular
demand. That disjuncture means that the refusal also in a
sense translates into a refusal to incorporate the demands of a wide swath of African American activists
and at times other activists of color into the campaign and winds up standing in for the
distinct limitations in the campaign’s anti-racist imaginary. Sanders in
particular has been quite direct in his criticism of the demand, arguing that reparations
are both impractical and not the best way to approach social problems, despite
proposing programs that are not entirely dissimilar to the proposals for wealth
redistribution that look like the NAACP proposal. At one level, its hard not to
notice that Sanders’ critique of the demand is not entirely dissimilar to the
critiques of mainstream Democrats of Sanders proposals of free college
education for all and Medicare for all. Sanders is asking us to abandon a certain neoliberal notion of realism with his demands, why start demanding that form of realism here? Even if we accept the notion that the
proposal isn’t feasible in the short term, framing the demand within the
context of the campaign would acknowledge the profound transformations that
need to be undertaken to overturn the long history of white supremacy that are
foundational to the country.
At
this point, if they are still reading, there are probably many supporters of
the campaign who are probably thinking of any number of moments that the
Sanders Campaign has been mistreated, placing me into that category of criticism.
They would point to a series of commitments that the campaign has taken, around
reforms of the criminal justice program and other no less important issues. They
could also point to the efforts on the part of the campaign to reframe its campaign
slogans and demands, along with the campaign’s efforts to create conversations
with indigenous communities for instance. These responses shouldn’t be
discounted, but they are often undercut by the profound mistakes and
limitations of the campaigns attempt to create a substantial anti-racist
politics, which is most often undercut by Sanders himself. One can point at the
many cynical comments by supporters of the institutional Democratic Party to deflect
these concerns, but it would be a mistake to ignore why those cynical comments have
influence.To be clear, the mainstream media hasn’t been terribly fair to the
campaign, which shouldn’t be terribly surprising. After all, despite all its
problems the campaign is making a genuine effort to challenge the neoliberal consensus
that defines contemporary mainstream politics, despite rhetorical framings of a
resistance to Trump. That isn’t going to change with any changes in the
campaign, but the campaign can avoid giving the cynics of the Democratic Party more
ammunition to criticize it. It can reorient itself to develop a more meaningful
coalition to pose a radical reimagination of politics in the current moment.
To
return to the example of the Communist Party that opened this essay, we might
use Asad Haider’s analysis of the Party’s embrace of Harry Haywood’s theory of
the Black Belt nation. In response to the popularity of Marcus Garvey’s black
nationalism, Haywood proposed that the historic Black Belt in the south constituted
a distinct African-American nation. The Communist Party within that context
embraced the concept of self-determination for that entity acknowledging the desire
for self-determination. Haider argues that the accuracy of Haywood’s theory is
less important than the strategic reorientation that the party took in relationship
to the aspirations of Black workers and sharecroppers. The demand for socialism
was aligned with the aspiration for self-determination and the party broke away
from a long history of radical institutions minimizing the forms of racialized
violence that shape every aspect of daily life. Whatever one thought of the specific
framework, the embrace of a specifically African-American nation both
recognized the value of the struggles taken on by black communities and the dramatic
transformations that would need to occur to create the kind of equality that
would translate into a genuine project. It embraced decolonization not as a
metaphor, but a concrete project of governance. Perhaps, the embrace of a
project that placed reparations as a center demand to an admittedly more modest
social democratic imaginary could play a similar role, standing in as a promise
for a more substantial program of social transformation and as a sort of promise
to create a significantly different set of social relations within the organization
itself.
In
this sense, my concern is less about the Sanders Campaign itself, and more with
the broader organization that coalesces around the campaign, in formal organizations
like the DSA, but also in the informal structure of feeling that has been
created by the campaign. The latter, in particular, has contributed a lot to
the suspicions held by activists of color for this new formation. As long as
the new social democratic imaginary is perceived by so many within the
framework of whiteness, it will necessarily fail at its program of
transformation. At the same time, its an imaginary that could potentially play
a real role in social transformation and we are at a point where we need to see
dramatic change and that change needs to come soon.
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