Sawant Campaign Optimistic Of Eventual Victory! Election Victories for 
Socialist Alternative - Huge Opportunities for Working-Class Politics Must be 
Seized 

Two Socialist Alternative candidates sent historic shock waves through the 
United States left last night. Both candidates, Kshama Sawant in Seattle and Ty 
Moore in Minneapolis, mounted the strongest election campaigns by open 
socialists in a major U.S. city in many decades.

Only initial results have been announced, and more ballots are being counted in 
the next couple weeks. At the moment, both races are too close to call. Moore 
is down by only 130 votes. Sawant is down by only 4% in the initial count of an 
estimated 38% of the total ballots expected, with the remaining ballots likely 
to trend strongly in Sawant’s favor.

Regardless of the final count, the votes for these firebrand socialist 
candidates illustrate clearly the vacuum in U.S. politics and the anger at the 
corporate-controlled establishment.

Rooted in the Great Recession and the shallow economic recovery, there is a 
tremendous distrust of the political establishment, which fueled both 
campaigns. The government shutdown also stoked up a popular rage that allowed 
the socialist campaigns to strike a real chord with ordinary people. During the 
government shutdown, the approval rating for Congress slumped to a historic low 
of 5%. In a Gallup poll, a record-high 60% said that a new party was needed in 
the U.S., and a record low of only 26% said the two parties were doing an 
adequate job.

Many people in the U.S. often feel discouraged and demoralized by the rigged 
pro-corporate electoral system. However, these campaigns demonstrated beyond a 
shadow of the doubt that independent candidates and ordinary working-class 
people can challenge the establishment and win without taking a dime of 
corporate money! Ty Moore raised more money than his main corporate-backed 
opponent, and Kshama Sawant raised $110,000 compared to her opponent’s $238,000.

Socialist Alternative’s campaigns showed clearly that it is possible for 
ordinary people and young people to organize together and fight to change the 
world. Socialist Alternative wants to build on this momentum, and is appealing 
to people to donate and get involved with Socialist Alternative to help us 
build future campaigns of the 99% like the “Fight for a $15/hour minimum wage 
and a union” and the struggle to tax the super-rich to pay for a green jobs 
program and mass transit.

As cuts to popular government programs like Social Security are likely coming, 
possibly in the next few months, both corporate parties will probably see their 
support further undermined. Going into the 2014 mid-term elections, these 
socialist campaigns have shown the huge opening for independent working-class 
politics. Coalitions of fighting union leaders, socialists, Greens and civil 
rights groups should be built in every city across the country to organize 
movements and mount independent candidates.

These election results, along with the Arab spring, the Wisconsin labor 
uprising, and the Occupy movement, have made possible what seemed impossible. 
They are ushering in a whole new process. Not only are these electoral 
campaigns leading to the growth of a new vibrant socialist movement in the 
United States, but they will also serve as a model that will contribute to the 
eventual inevitable rise of a new party that will fight the richest 1% – a mass 
party of working people.

Socialist Ideas on the Rise

Many people on the left argue that socialist ideas cannot gain mass support in 
this country; these campaigns show that they’re dead wrong. Pew Research Center 
Polls show over and over that a majority of young people and people of color 
now prefer “socialism” to “capitalism.” Obviously, this consciousness is 
confused, but it illustrates that people are fed up with growing inequality, 
the unbearable rises in the cost of living, and capitalism itself.

Sawant and Moore’s opponents barely bothered to resort to “red-baiting” against 
socialist ideas. Instead, incumbent Richard Conlin in Seattle used 
thinly-veiled anti-immigrant and sexist rhetoric against Sawant while Alondra 
Cano in Minneapolis shied away from negative campaigning, preferring to rely on 
her support in the real estate industry and the political establishment.

Socialist ideas are clearly back on the agenda, and Socialist Alternative is 
uniquely positioned to help build a new socialist movement. This needs to be 
done by socialists being the most effective fighters for the needs of ordinary 
working-class people such as a $15 an hour minimum wage and a tax on the 
super-rich to fund jobs and services. Socialist Alternative has stood out on 
the left for our ability to connect with politicized workers with 
understandable language. At the same time, we honestly explain that reforms in 
our society can only be fully sustained if power is taken out of the hands of 
big business and a new socialist system based on democratic public ownership of 
the top 500 corporations is established.

Building Movements

Ty Moore’s campaign in Ward 9 of Minneapolis was built alongside important 
high-profile housing justice campaigns led by Occupy Homes Minnesota. Moore and 
Socialist Alternative helped co-found this organization which successfully 
defended many homeowners from being evicted by big banks and the police. The 
center of Occupy Homes’s “Foreclosure and Eviction-Free Zone” was in Ward 9, a 
diverse, working-class community, and both Occupy Homes and the Moore campaign 
mutually reinforced each other.

Likewise, in Seattle, Sawant’s campaign helped put the “Fight for 15” - strikes 
and protests of low-wage workers for a $15/hour minimum wage - at the center of 
political debate. When labor organizations placed an initiative on the ballot 
to raise the minimum wage to $15 in the suburb of SeaTac, Socialist Alternative 
energetically built this movement while aiding victimized striking workers and 
countering arguments against raising the minimum wage, contributing to the 
ballot initiative’s historic success.

Eventually, both mayoral candidates, who hadn’t mentioned the minimum wage at 
the beginning of their campaigns, came out vaguely in support of a $15/hour 
minimum wage. Sawant’s success at shifting the political debate prompted the 
Seattle Times, the largest newspaper in Seattle, to say before the election 
that “the winner of Seattle’s election is already the socialist Kshama Sawant.”

The Labor Movement

These independent working-class electoral campaigns have important lessons for 
the labor movement, which is facing a serious crisis. The labor movement is 
under attack from big business, and the Tea Party Republicans are trying to 
destroy union rights altogether. However, Democratic politicians are often the 
ones proposing cuts, privatization and other attacks on unions, too. In this 
situation, the labor movement needs to regain its fighting traditions and run 
more of its own independent working-class candidates.

Instead, labor leaders often back Democrats either out of fear of Republicans, 
habit, or the fact that many labor leaders live lives of luxury that have more 
in common with politicians than their own members. However, the Moore and 
Sawant campaigns demonstrate that workers are increasingly fed up with politics 
as usual, and labor support can be gained by credible independent campaigns 
with concrete demands. Moore obtained the active support of SEIU State Council 
in Minnesota which played an instrumental role in the campaign. Meanwhile, 
Sawant won endorsements from six union locals, and a majority of the King 
County Labor Council voted in favor of endorsing Sawant (narrowly missing the 
super-majority necessary for an endorsement).

In the coming months and years, union members will face continual attacks on 
their rights and living conditions. In the course of these fights, we’ll need 
to use protests, pickets, strikes and direct action to defend ourselves. 
Workers will have to struggle to win democratic control of their unions and 
elect leaders who are actually willing to resist the corporate onslaught. These 
battles will show the need for workers to have their own independent political 
representation, and the Moore and Sawant campaigns show that unions can run 
very successful independent candidates, which should be a step towards forming 
a new party of the 99%.

Next Steps

Many people who supported Moore and Sawant are breaking from the Democratic 
Party, but aren’t ready yet to fully break from the Democratic Party. Socialist 
Alternative will continue to argue within social justice movements and 
coalitions that the Democrats are fundamentally a party of big business, and 
that working-class people shouldn’t give any support to them - even candidates 
on their “left wing.”

We urgently need a party of working people, connected to social movements, 
fighting unions, community organizations, Greens and socialists. As a concrete 
step to get there, we should form coalitions throughout the country with the 
potential to come together on a national level to run 100 independent 
working-class candidates in the 2014 mid-term elections. The unions who 
supported the Moore and Sawant campaigns and many others should run full slates 
of independent working-class candidates in the mid-term, state, and local 
elections.

U.S. capitalism is in a deep economic and social crisis. The political 
establishment is discredited, and their system of government appears broken. 
Deep anger is growing against inequality, racism, sexism and homophobia. 
Environmental destruction is worsening. The situation is crying out for an 
alternative.

If socialists, Greens and union leaders don’t capitalize on this opening, then 
the right wing will. For instance, a Libertarian candidate for Virginia 
governor won over 145,000 votes in this election. Even worse, reports show that 
openly racist far-right groups are growing.

This is an urgent situation. We need to actively build the socialist movement 
along with broader coalitions of the 99% to challenge the agenda of big 
business. The incredible election results of Ty Moore and Kshama Sawant are 
shining examples of the way forward.

Kshama Sawant campaign information: http://www.votesawant.org/

To join Socialist Alternative today: http://socialistalternative.org/join/

To donate to Socialist Alternative: https://votesawant.nationbuilder.com/donate 
We do not accept corporate money; so we need your support!

http://www.votesawant.org/election_victories_for_sa



Alan L. Stewart
Managing Director
Progressive Global Commons
(beta) www.progressiveglobalcommons.org
360-515-7960
Skype: progressive.global.commons
alan-stew...@progressiveglobalcommons.org
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