Learning from the Right
Let?s admit it?they?re better right now at political organizing
March / April 2003
Anjula Razdan Utne magazine
Van Jones sees nothing to applaud in the rise of the political
right. But the 34-year-old founder of the Ella Baker Center for
Human Rights in San Francisco, which focuses on reforming the
criminal justice system, thinks that progressives? response to
recent events?gloom and doom interspersed with bouts of anger?is
not helpful in envisioning the next step forward. Instead, Jones
says, we must acknowledge that when it comes to reaching and
organizing people today, the right simply does a better
job?sometimes using methods that actually originated on the
left.
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Here, according to Jones, are a few lessons?historical and
contemporary?that progressives need to embrace:
Think Long-Term
?Starting in 1964, with the collapse of Barry Goldwater?s
[presidential] campaign, a relatively small number of conservatives
got together and took the mailing lists from the Goldwater campaign
and essentially reinvented the right. And, from 1964 to 1994, you
see a 30-year effort to develop the institutions, the think tanks,
the policy ideas, the writers, the political leaders, to seize
power.
?Progressives have a history of this kind of planning and
foresight. If you look at the pre?civil rights movement in the ?40s
and ?50s, you see people concerned about civil rights at the
Highlander Center [an organizing institute in Tennessee] and other
places investing a lot of time really thinking through questions of
strategy and tactics. At Howard University Law School in the ?20s
and ?30s, for example, people planned step by step how to dismantle
segregation and prepared lawyers to do that from the time they were
law students. That kind of long-term patience and strategic
planning is no longer a feature or function of progressive social
change work.?
Be Populist, Not Elitist
?From the early 1960s to the late 1990s, the left went from a
populist movement to an elite movement. The right during the same
period put much more money and attention into building up their
mass-media capabilities, their grassroots organizations, and their
capacity to mobilize people.
?Progressives, on the other hand, put almost all their effort
into litigation, lobbying efforts, highly fragmented
paper-membership organizations that were basically check-gathering
operations, and less and less energy into bottom-up mass
organization building.?
Embrace Institutions