From: LeoCasey@xxxxxxx
Reply-To: pen-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To: <pen-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [PEN-L:15144] If Open and Frank Discussion Is Red-Baiting...
Date: Sat, 14 Jul 2001 12:15:53 EDT
As tempting as it is to respond in kind to Justin's torrent of personal
abuse in kind, I will not do so. For the personal abuse is just one more
device designed to forestall open and frank discussion of how ideological
left [primarily socialist and communist] organizations and mass democratic
organizations, especially trade unions, have interacted. Every attempt at
frank discussion on any particular point of this relationship is met with
accusations of red-baiting, and if that doesn't halt all discussion, with
personal abuse, such as Justin's accusations that I am a liar and a fool if
I don't accept his account of the relationship among TDU, _Labor Notes_,
and Solidarity, and their common indebtedness and links to the Trotskyist
tradition.
The history of interaction between ideological left organizations and the
trade union movement in the US is long and well-documented. It starts with
DeLeon and IWW, it involves Socialists, Communists and Trotskyists of all
sorts, and it continues to this day. No one could write a history of the
AFL without an account of Gompers split from Marxism and his battles with
AFL Socialists, and then the IWW; no one could provide an account of the
rise of CIO without the pivotal role of Communists, many of whom had been
involved in dual CP unions during the 'third period'; no could write a
history of the "left" CIO unions such as the UE, or explain their purge
from the CIO, without an explanation of the battles over Communism; no one
could write a history of the UAW, the ILGWU, or my own AFT, to mention just
a few examples, without a study of the factional fights between Socialists,
Communists and Trotskyists of every stripe. No one could discuss the twists
and turns of the labor mov!
em!
ent's relationship with the Afri
can-American community, without an analysis of the role of Socialists and
Communists, from A. Phillip Randolph on. No one could explain the AFL-CIO's
international work without reference to the anti-Communists of the
Lovestonites and Shachtmanites. And all of this just touches the surface.
Those connections continue today, and it is disingeneous to suggest
otherwise. To cite the most obvious example: the old AFL-CIO leadership was
clearly linked to Shachtmanites of the SDUSA variety, which explains, as
much as anything, Sweeney's decision to join DSA. When Shanker was elected
AFT President, he filled its national staff with SDUSA types. DSA members
can be found among the elected leadership and national organizing staff of
AFSCME, SEIU, UNITE and the UAW. Solidarity types have been key to
organizing opposition caucuses in the Teamsters, the UAW and the
Transportation Workers.
Now if Bill Fletcher can work at the very top of the AFL-CIO, and be open
and honest about his leadership of the Black Radical Congress and
membership in Freedom Road Socialist Organization [FRSO], than there really
is no reason for anyone to suggest that we can not have a frank discussion
of all of these issues.
My local union, the UFT, has four internal caucuses: [a] the leadership
caucus, which ranges from moderate and liberal Democrats to democratic
socialists and radical democrats, with a few retired SDUSA members and some
DSA members [b] the main opposition caucus, organized by the CP, [c] a much
smaller group, consisting of a handful of Solidarity members who refuse to
have anything to do with the CP caucus, and [d] a new, ill-organized caucus
with a sort of 'third worldist' bent which has attracted members of
Progressive Labor and Freedom Road Socialist Organization. You understand
nothing about UFT internal politics if you do not understand those
political realities. To attempt to squelch public discussion of them as
some sort of 'red baiting' is, to my mind, fundamentally anti-democratic.
Discussion of these realities goes on all the time in private conversation,
but only the 'insiders' are party to these discussions and in the know. I
refuse to allow myself to be constrain!
ed!
by such anti-democratic dictate
s.
If you can't defend your politics in open and pubic forums, there is
something wrong with your politics.
Leo Casey
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