https://www.cpusa.org/article/a-forthright-stand-communists-in-the-struggle-for-black-lives/

“A forthright stand”: Communists in the struggle for Black lives
By Tony Pecinovsky

“The people who are afraid to raise their voices and take a forthright stand in 
the fight for civil rights are only creating a quicker opportunity to have 
their own heads chopped off.”
—W. Alphaeus Hunton, Daily Worker, October 6, 1949

These words were written 71 years ago by the African American scholar-activist 
W. Alphaeus Hunton. He was protesting the Smith Act indictments of the 
Communist Party, USA’s leadership, connecting this fight to the struggle for 
African American civil rights.

Though his writings are largely ignored today, among his contemporaries and 
friends—including W. E. B. Du Bois and Paul Robeson—Hunton was admired and 
loved, respected as a selfless intellectual and activist.

Hunton’s statement articulates a theme profound in its insight. He captured in 
succinct and precise language the need for unity in the struggle for civil 
rights. But he also alluded to the collective fate inflicted upon us all—Black, 
Native American, Asian, Latino, and white—if we fail to take a forthright stand 
in the struggle for Black lives.

Hunton, who joined the CPUSA in 1936, was a Howard University professor, leader 
of the National Negro Congress, and prolific writer. By 1943, he would—along 
with Robeson and Du Bois, among others—become a key leader of the Council on 
African Affairs, the domestic linchpin of the struggle against apartheid South 
Africa. With one eye on the domestic struggle for African American equality, 
and the other on the international aspects of Black liberation, Hunton’s 
insights are still significant today—for what they tell us about the CPUSA and 
the long struggle for Black lives. Indeed, Communists helped initiate the 
modern struggle for African American equality.

The CPUSA’s formative years

The Communist Party in its early years, like the Socialist Party and the 
Industrial Workers of the World, initially viewed African American equality as 
simply an extension of the class struggle, devoid of special attributes or 
characteristics.

The earliest mention of what was then called the “Negro question” was in the 
Communist Party of America’s (CPA) founding program: “The racial oppression of 
the Negro is simply the expression of his economic bondage and oppression. . . 
. The Communist Party will carry on agitation among the Negro workers to unite 
them with all class-conscious workers.”

By 1921, this perspective had begun to change. The United Communist Party 
(UCP), founded after a merger of the Communist Labor Party (CLP) and the CPA, 
noted in its 1921 program and constitution that African Americans were “the 
most exploited people in America.” Our task, they added, was “to break down the 
barrier of race prejudice that separates and keeps apart the white and the 
Negro workers, and to bind them into a union of revolutionary forces for the 
overthrow of their common enemy.”

Shortly thereafter, this new emphasis, born of Lenin’s influence and approach 
to what is called the “national question,” began to take organizational form. 
Communists worked with numerous African American–led working-class 
organizations, including the African Blood Brotherhood and the American Labor 
Negro Congress, which sought to break down Jim Crow racism within AFL unions. 
Additionally, Black Communists such as Otto Huiswood, Cyril Briggs, and Lovett 
Fort-Whiteman, and those close to Communists such as Claude McKay, sought 
advice from the Communist International regarding the national/colonial 
question.

By 1925, special party schools had been established and literature was produced 
to improve the recruitment of African Americans; an organizer was sent into the 
Southern Black Belt; and a subcommittee of the CPUSA’s Central Executive 
Committee was created to oversee work in the Black community.

Communists also played a leading role in the Harlem Renaissance. Cotton Club 
dancer and CP organizer Howard “Stretch” John once remarked that “75 percent of 
Black cultural figures” during this time were either party members or 
“maintained regular meaningful contact” with the party. While this is a bit of 
an exaggeration, as William J. Maxwell argues in New Negro, Old Left: 
African-American Writing and Communism between the Wars, Johnson wasn’t wrong 
by much.

Langston Hughes, Louis Thompson, Paul Robeson, and Richard Wright were among 
the cohort of African American literary and cultural figures building alliances 
with Communists in the fight for equality. Many were not shy about being party 
members. McKay and Thompson, among others, helped shape the CPUSA’s approach.

The 1930s: Scottsboro and the Sharecroppers Union

Perhaps the most well-known campaign undertaken by the CPUSA and its allied 
organizations was the defense of the Scottsboro Nine.

In 1931, nine African American youth were unjustly accused of raping two white 
women in Scottsboro, Alabama. After an all-white, all-male jury convicted and 
sentenced eight of the nine to death (the last defendant was given life in 
prison), the Communist-led International Labor Defense (ILD) stepped in with 
prominent lawyer William L. Patterson leading the defense.

As historian Tim Johnson notes, the CPUSA “put an international microscope on 
the lynching mentality and blatant racism prevalent in American society.” 
Domestically, Communists organized hundreds of thousands to protest the 
kangaroo-court racist conviction of the Nine. They organized speaking tours 
with the defendants’ mothers. They raised money for legal aid. They also 
reached out to the vast array of international contacts—through the world 
Communist movement—for support in publicizing the case.

Communists merged legal defense with mass political defense. They also merged 
the domestic fight for equality with internationalism, a hallmark of CPUSA 
activism throughout its 100-year history.

Additionally, Communists began organizing mostly Black southern sharecroppers. 
Sharecropping was another way for white landowners to tie the descendants of 
slaves to land. African Americans would plant and sow cotton, among other 
crops, and harvest it. Since they lived on the land they sowed, they were also 
forced to “share” the crop with the landowner in exchange for the use of the 
land. In addition, they were compelled to rent housing and purchase food from 
their landlord, who charged exorbitant prices, placing them in a permanent 
cycle of debt.

Communists challenged this racist pyramid scheme by organizing thousands into 
the Sharecroppers Union (SCU). Despite unprecedented political repression—SCU 
activists were murdered, assaulted, and jailed—by 1935 the group had grown to 
12,000 dues-paying members. Several armed battles took place between the SCU 
and police, who were often also Klan members.

Ultimately, Communists saved the lives of the Scottsboro Nine, while the SCU 
forced a number of concessions from landowners, including the right to market 
and sell their own crops. Beyond the economic gains, the SCU and CPUSA also 
worked to break down Jim Crow segregation practices by organizing multi-racial 
meetings, rallies, and marches.

By 1937 the SCU would merge into the United Cannery Agricultural Packers and 
Allied Workers of America, a CIO union led by CPUSA member Donald Henderson.

The National Negro Congress and the Southern Negro Youth Congress

Born out of a 1935 Howard University meeting between prominent African American 
leaders, including the well-known communist James W. Ford and socialist A. 
Phillip Randolph, the National Negro Congress (NNC) reflected a “growing 
convergence of outlook between Communists and activist Black intellectuals.” At 
its founding convention in 1936, the NNC represented 551 organizations and over 
3 million people.

According to Ford, the NNC “was conceived” as a “rallying center for the Negro 
people to fight off greater oppression.” It was an organizational center—a big 
tent—with the potential to align all “groupings among the Negro people” and 
their allies. According to African American party leader Claude Lightfoot, the 
CPUSA “threw all of its forces at the national and local levels” into building 
the NNC. Every Communist-led organization, from the Unemployed Councils to the 
International Labor Defense, helped build the NNC.

For example, Alphaeus Hunton chaired the Washington, D.C., chapter and the 
Labor Committee; another Black Communist, Doxey Wilkerson, chaired the Civic 
Affairs Committee. Hunton led the fight to “blast Jim Crow out of Washington,” 
by directly challenging police brutality and murder. “Washington sets the 
pattern of discrimination against the Negro people,” he wrote. Its laws 
“establish the nation’s unwritten laws by unofficial endorsement of, or passive 
indifference to practices of discrimination, segregation and brutal oppression.”

Hunton organized thousands to protest police brutality and murder in D.C. 
According to Erik S. Gellman in Death Blow to Jim Crow: The National Negro 
Congress and the Rise of Militant Civil Rights, Hunton “played an essential 
behind-the-scenes role in the police brutality campaign.”

The NNC also helped build the multi-racial unions within the CIO. During this 
period, Black union membership increased from roughly 100,000 to 500,000. The 
NNC also helped found and build the Southern Negro Youth Congress (SNYC), led 
by James E. Jackson, Esther Cooper, Edward Strong, and James Ashford. SNYC 
members went directly from their founding convention in Richmond, Virginia, in 
1937 “to organizing local Black tobacco workers into a new union—the Tobacco 
Stemmers and Laborers Industrial Union,” a CIO affiliate of more than 5,000 
mostly female tobacco stemmers. The union was led by CPUSA member Christopher 
Alston. After a three-day strike, employers conceded to union demands, 
invigorating other activists in the industrial union movement, which led to 
seven other factories signing new union contracts.

In 1947, the NNC would merge with the Civil Rights Congress (CRC), itself a 
merger of the ILD and the National Federation of Constitutional Liberties.

Communists and Black lives during World War II

It has been argued—inaccurately—that Communists put aside the struggle during 
World War II. When asked by Negro Digest if Communists had “quit the fight for 
Negro rights,” James W. Ford was indignant. He noted, not only had Communists 
not “quit the fight,” but “for a long time were pretty much alone in it.” Why 
did Communists take on this fight, he asked? Because “they are opposed to 
oppression of any people; because they have always understood that labor in the 
white skin cannot be free, nor can democracy be secure, as long as the Negro 
people are enthralled; because they know that the disfranchisement of the Negro 
is one of the pillars of reaction in the country, directed against labor and 
against the people and every progressive current. American democracy could not 
be healthy if it rested upon the oppression of a tenth of the population.”

During the war, Communists fought for equality within and outside the armed 
forces. African American party leader Henry Winston, in the 1941 pamphlet Old 
Jim Crow Has Got to Go!, challenged the “ruling circles of this country” on 
military segregation. To him, the ruling class “fear[s] the prospect of 
intermingling ‘colored and white military personnel in the same regimental 
organization.’” They dubiously claimed desegregation would “be ‘destructive to 
morale,’ or ‘detrimental to preparations for national defense.’” Winston took 
this notion to task. Their real fear, he wrote, “is that such intermingling may 
spill the beans,” that is, build comradery between Black and white soldiers. 
The “possibility of such intimate contact may well result in recognition of 
their common destiny,” a destiny directed “against imperialist oppression in 
general.” Winston was not an armchair revolutionary critiquing U.S. military 
policy safely from afar. He, as well as an estimated 15,000 other Communists, 
served in the armed forces during the war.

Another Communist, Thelma Dale, focused her attention on reconversion from 
wartime to peacetime production. In a fall 1945 Political Affairs article, she 
noted, “Whether the 13,000,000 Negroes in America will be able to realize the 
fruits of victory, for which they too fought, is a challenge to all Americans.” 
This challenge, she continued, “summons the Communists especially to the full 
exercise of their duty as vanguard in the struggle for Negro rights.” To her, 
the “victory over fascist racism and aggression” has not yet been “translated 
into terms of freedom and equality for Negro Americans.” Instead, she added, 
“reaction is lighting a fire of race hatred in America against the Negro 
people,” a fire with the potential to “destroy many of the important gains made 
by the entire working class.” She was an early advocate for “seniority 
modification,” now known as affirmative action, designed to break down historic 
disparities in job opportunities and challenge racist membership practices 
within many AFL unions. Additionally, to her and other Communists, the struggle 
for African American jobs during reconversion was central to beating back the 
post-war right-wing shift in national politics toward the Red Scare and Cold 
War.

Communists, such as Hunton and George Meyers, president of the Maryland-D.C. 
CIO, also led the fight against the “flagrant . . . denial of jobs to Negroes 
in certain defense industries.” In particular, they “spearheaded the fight for 
‘all-out defense of democracy’ in the defense industry—right here at home,” at 
the Glenn L. Martin Aircraft plant in Baltimore. Meyers led the campaign to 
unionize and integrate the plant, which employed 37,000 workers. Hunton led the 
fight outside the plant, through the NNC, to break down racist hiring 
practices, ultimately leading to the hiring of 7,000 African American workers.

Of course, Communists grappled with the nuances of fighting for equality while 
doing their utmost to help win the war against fascism. For example, CPUSA 
leader Robert Minor argued that Communists should direct the struggle for 
equality “against those measures of brutality, of the Jim Crow system, that 
prevent their [African Americans’] participation in the war effort.” In 
essence, some Communists constrained their advocacy more narrowly and were 
often at odds with Black labor leaders, such as A. Philip Randolph, who called 
for a march on Washington during the height of the war—something Communists 
then opposed.

As Maurice Isserman argues, the fight for equality never took a back seat in 
CPUSA-led CIO unions during the war, such as the National Maritime Union, 
partly led by Black Communist Ferdinand Smith, as well as the Transit Workers 
Union (TWU), led by the Communist Mike Quill. The party even denounced a white 
wildcat strike in Philadelphia in 1944; the strike was initiated by white 
workers who objected to the hiring of eight Black driver-trainers. The 
Communist-led TWU stuck with the African American workers, and the racist 
wildcat strike was defeated. As the decade neared an end, Communists continued 
to fight for equality while also adding to our understanding of the “triple” 
oppression of African American women.

“Triple” oppression: Black women and the Communists

Just as early discussions of the “Negro question” expanded and enlarged the 
struggle for African American equality, Claudia Jones’ formulation of “triple” 
oppression expanded and enlarged our understanding of the intersection of 
gender, race, and class. According to Jones, Black working-class women were 
triply exploited and oppressed under capitalism—as women, as African Americans, 
and as workers.

In her groundbreaking article “An End to the Neglect of the Problems of the 
Negro Woman!,” Jones lifted up Black women’s contributions to the struggles for 
democracy, peace, civil rights, and economic security. She said that the 
“growth of militancy among Negro women has profound meaning” for both Black 
liberation and for peace. However, to fully appreciate this struggle—and move 
it to another, higher stage—we must “overcome the gross neglect of the special 
problems of Negro women.”

To Jones, this wasn’t simply altruism, it was also tactical. “The capitalists 
know,” she added, “far better than many progressives seem to know, that once 
Negro women undertake action, the militancy of the whole Negro people, and thus 
of the anti-imperialist coalition, is greatly enhanced,” a sentiment soon to 
come to fruition with the birth of the Black women Communist-led Sojourners for 
Truth and Justice.

She continued: “Viewed in this light it is not accidental that the American 
bourgeoisie has intensified its oppression, not only of the Negro people in 
general, but of Negro women in particular. Nothing so exposes the drive to 
fascization [sic] in the nation as the callous attitude which the bourgeoisie 
displays and cultivates toward Negro women.”

Jones’ dialectical understanding of “triple” oppression had a significant 
influence on the struggle for equality during the 1950s, the 1960s, and beyond.

Mid-century civil rights: The CRC, CAA, and STJ

It has been argued—again, inaccurately—that Communists became a marginal 
political force post-1956. Unfortunately, for “orthodox” historians, this 
oft-repeated claim simply does not square with the historical record.

It is accurate to say that the CPUSA was, indeed, weakened during the McCarthy 
era. The impact of the Smith and McCarran Acts, and the Red Scare generally, 
cannot and should not be underestimated. Nor can the party’s own damaging 
internal security measures, factionalism, and sectarianism, along with the 
Khrushchev revelations, be ignored. However, the claim that Communists became a 
marginal political force does not hold up to scrutiny.

It was during the height of—and in defiance of—the Red Scare that Communists 
embarked on one of their most ambitious endeavors to date: the publishing and 
dissemination of the historic Civil Rights Congress document We Charge 
Genocide: The Crime of the Government against the Negro People. The document, 
simultaneously released at UN headquarters in New York and Paris by Paul 
Robeson and William L. Patterson, respectively, not only embarrassed the U.S. 
internationally but also bolstered African American civil rights domestically. 
It invited “the international community to intervene forcefully in what had 
been seen traditionally as an internal U.S. affair,” as historian Gerald Horne 
notes.

Coupled with the CRC’s domestic fight against racist oppression, Jim Crow, and 
lynch law, was the Communist-led Council on African Affairs (CAA). Where the 
CRC fought for civil liberties and equality at home, the CAA fought to 
eliminate apartheid in South Africa. Led by Hunton, Robeson, and Du Bois, among 
others, the CAA was considered “the vanguard organization in the U.S. 
campaigning against colonialism.” It provided the connective tissue between 
African Americans fighting for equality and Africans fighting for liberation. 
According to Hunton, the CAA “stood alone as the one organization . . . 
devoting full-time attention to the problems and struggles of the people of 
Africa.” The CAA published numerous newsletters, such as New Africa and 
Spotlight on Africa, which were banned in South Africa, Kenya, and Belgian 
Congo. Like the CRC, the CAA was eventually placed on the U.S. Attorney 
General’s list of subversive organizations and forced to dissolve. Dr. Du Bois 
himself, at 83 years old, was handcuffed and jailed for refusing to register as 
a foreign principal, partly due to his work in the CAA.

These attacks notwithstanding, the CAA’s impact and legacy were embraced by 
civil rights organizations in the 1960s. As Horne notes, even those 
organizations connected to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., “did not have the 
international ties of the CRC, nor the global reach of the CAA, which amounted 
to a net loss for African Americans and their allies.”

Sojourners for Truth and Justice (STJ) was another Communist-led initiative. 
STJ was a radical Black women’s human rights organization founded and led by 
prominent Communists such as Shirley Graham Du Bois, Esther Cooper Jackson, 
Claudia Jones, Lorraine Hansberry, Louise Thompson Patterson, and Beulah 
Richardson, among others. They advocated for a Black left feminism and 
intersectional politics that challenged post-war American racism, U.S. Cold War 
foreign policy, and anti-communism. Though short lived, STJ highlighted the 
ways in which Black mothers, wives, and sisters experienced violence, racism, 
and oppression within the U.S.

Communists didn’t just initiate and lead these organizations, they were also 
deeply involved in local civil rights battles, boycotts, and equal employment 
fights. For example, CP leader Hershel Walker helped found the St. Louis 
chapter of the National Negro Labor Council and worked with prominent trade 
union leaders such as William Sentner of the United Electrical workers. Other 
Communists, such as Lee Lorch, helped desegregate America’s public schools.

Communists in the 1960s: Fighting for Black lives in mass movements and party 
formations

Throughout the 1960s, Communists continued to champion the Black freedom 
movement—in the streets, workplaces, and campuses. Many Communists worked with 
and within mass civil rights organizations like the Student Nonviolent 
Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Black Panther Party (BPP), while also 
building left-led formations such as the W. E. B. Du Bois Clubs.

For example, young Communist Debbie Bell attended SNCC’s founding convention 
and quickly became a leader in the organization. By 1963 she was working 
full-time for SNCC in Atlanta, where she would regularly dine with the Rev. 
Ralph D. Abernathy. Cassie Davis (Lopez) also worked for SNCC, as did other 
young Communists. Later in the decade, after the founding of the Black Panther 
Party, Communists such as William L. Patterson provided legal and political 
advice to that organization. BPP meetings were often held at CPUSA members’ 
houses. Additionally, Communists Charlene Mitchell, Angela Davis, and Herbert 
Aptheker helped organize the Black Panther Party–sponsored National Conference 
for a United Front Against Fascism, attended by 4,000 people.

Additionally, Communists played an important role in the anti–Vietnam War peace 
movement through broad formations such as the National Mobilization Committee 
to End the War in Vietnam (informally known as New Mobe) and Student Mobe, 
often pointing out the endemic racism in the military draft. Communists also 
helped lead the defense of the Fort Hood Three, the first G.I.s who refused to 
deploy to Vietnam, and sparked the genesis of the G.I. anti-war movement. That 
two of the three were Communists served to illustrate a broad tactical approach 
to ending the war, a war that disproportionately affected people of color.

Communists did not just join with other groups, though. They also took their 
own initiatives—contrary to the dominant narrative. In the late 1950s and early 
1960s, Communists initiated student groups such as Advance and the Progressive 
Youth Organizing Committee, and later the W. E. B. Du Bois Clubs, and 
challenged racism within the predominantly white, middle-class student 
movement. In fact, Communists spoke with at least 100,000 youth and students on 
college and university campuses between 1961 and 1964, urging them to join the 
struggle for Black lives.

During this time, Communists such as Shirley Graham Du Bois and Esther Cooper 
Jackson also initiated, edited, and wrote for Freedomways, a quarterly journal 
of Black liberation that became an essential ideological tool for countless 
Black activists growing up during the 1960s civil rights era. It carried 
forward the Black radical tradition of Robeson’s Freedom newspaper. Other Black 
Communists, such as Richard Durham, became prominent radio personalities.

Additionally, in 1968 Communist Charlene Mitchell became the first African 
American woman to run for president of the United States. Mitchell specifically 
appealed to “my Black brothers and sisters to consider the alternative my party 
offers.” Mitchell and her vice presidential running mate Mike Zagarell went 
“everywhere, even the South . . . as symbols of the problems and the people in 
this country that the two major parties ignore—a Black woman representing the 
struggle against racism and for peace, and a draft-age man [Zagarell] 
representing the struggle of students and draft resisters.” In just a few short 
years Mitchell’s life would take another dramatic turn when her friend and 
comrade Angela Davis was arrested on trumped-up charges of murder, eventuating 
in a worldwide defense campaign, her acquittal, and the birth of the National 
Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression.

Communists, Black power

While Communists have never been advocates of armed revolution—as is often 
claimed by their detractors—they have consistently argued that the working 
class, especially racially and nationally oppressed peoples, have a right and a 
responsibility to defend themselves against racist violence. In light of the 
recent murder of George Floyd and the concomitant backlash against police 
brutality, spearheaded by the Black Lives Matter movement, Communist responses 
to demands for Black Power and self-defense in the late 1960s and early 1970s 
are relevant today.

To Communists unity is key, and the question of self-defense was just one side 
of a many-sided question, all which centers on a mass struggle for equality and 
against oppression and exploitation. In his Strategy for a Black Agenda, Party 
leader Henry Winston argued that while oppression “would first be unleashed 
against Black people, [it] would not end there.” Therefore, individual 
“militancy” wasn’t enough to stop racism and reaction. Winston continued, 
“armed self-defense” creates a “false choice diverting them [activists] from 
mass unity and struggle.” “It is clear that the people want to challenge the 
oppressor on the ground they choose, not on those chosen by their enemy. They 
want to engage the class enemy where he is most vulnerable . . . [in] the arena 
of mass struggle.” To Winston, the taking up of arms was a “defensive 
strategy,” an “idea of an elite few acting for the masses.” This concept 
excludes the people, primarily African Americans, “from their own liberation 
struggle.” Winston juxtaposed the “defensive strategy” of armed self-defense 
with the “offensive strategy” of mass movements offered by Dr. Martin Luther 
King, Jr., and others. The Montgomery bus boycott, the Poor People’s Campaign, 
and support of striking sanitation workers in Memphis are just a few examples. 
Additionally, Winston centered his analysis on the working class. “No 
fundamental change—or even a challenge to the monopolists—can occur without the 
working class,” he wrote. In short, to Winston, organizing and mobilizing a 
broad-based working-class movement, not armed self-defense, was key to Black 
liberation.

Communists and Black lives in the 1970s and 1980s

The frame-up, trial, and worldwide defense of Angela Davis is so well known as 
to not warrant an analysis here. However, less well known is what came 
afterward—the National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression 
(NAARPR). In a December 1972 report to the party’s leadership, Charlene 
Mitchell outlined her experience as executive director of the National United 
Committee to Free Angela Davis, the largest national defense organization in 
U.S. history. Like the ILD and CRC before, she noted, the Committee learned 
that “legal and mass defense of political prisoners is an inseparable entity; 
that you cannot free a political prisoner in the courtroom alone, and you 
cannot, without a good, political legal defense in the courtroom, make a mass 
defense.” She encouraged her comrades to “discuss the role our party can play” 
in forming a national defense organization—the genesis of which would come from 
the roughly 200 local Free Angela Davis Committees.

In May 1973, Mitchell became the founding executive director of the National 
Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression. Like the ILD and CRC, the 
NAARPR defended Black people and others from racist and political repression. 
The defense of JoAnn Little, Frank Chapman, along with Rev. Ben Chavis, and the 
Wilmington Ten, are just a few examples.

Like the CAA before, Communists also continued to campaign against racist 
barbarity in apartheid South Africa. Also founded in 1973, the National 
Anti-Imperialist Movement in Solidarity with African Liberation (NAIMSAL) 
helped spearhead the domestic divestment movement against apartheid. African 
American Communist Henry Winston, who was considered “the moving force” behind 
the organization, noted at NAIMSAL’s founding convention that though “we fight 
on two different fronts,” we fight “against a common enemy . . . U.S. monopoly, 
U.S. imperialism.”

Shortly thereafter, Tony Monteiro, considered the “youthful head of the 
movement” to expel South Africa from the United Nations, was speaking at the 
UN’s Special Commission on Apartheid. Like the NAARPR, NAIMSAL chapters popped 
up across the country and invited leaders of the African National Congress and 
the South African Communist Party to speak out against the barbarity of 
apartheid in South Africa, often in defiance of the State Department.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Communists also fought the wave of steel and 
auto plant closures, which predominantly affected African American workers. The 
Wisconsin Steel Save Our Jobs Committee, led by Black Communist Frank Lumpkin, 
is but one example of this ongoing work. Communists also helped found and lead 
local chapters of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists and fought for more 
Black representation in union leadership bodies.

Communists and Black lives today

The above is just a brief overview of the many ways in which Communists fought 
for Black lives throughout the CPUSA’s 100 year history. Throughout the 1990s 
and 2000s, Communists continued to fight for Black lives, and helped found and 
lead the Black Radical Congress, for example.

Today Communists are active in the Black Lives Matter movement through their 
unions, churches, community, and student groups, and as elected officials. 
After the killing of Trayvon Martin in 2012, Communists organized a week-long 
Marxist summer camp in Florida with activists from across the country. After 
the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014 Communists were 
part of the wave of protesters tear-gassed, shot with rubber bullets and 
percussion grenades, and arrested. Since then—most recently in the wake of the 
George Floyd and Breonna Taylor murders—Communists have been among the hundreds 
of thousands, perhaps millions, who are challenging police brutality and 
murder, and calling for the defunding and democratizing of the police.

Communists will continue to fight for Black lives. From the Harlem Renaissance 
to the defense of the Scottsboro Nine; from the National Negro Congress to the 
Southern Negro Youth Congress; from the Civil Rights Congress and the Council 
on African Affairs, to Sojourners for Truth and Justice; from Freedom to 
Freedomways, and a wide array of other Black newspapers and publications; from 
the W. E. B. Du Bois Clubs and the National Alliance Against Racist and 
Political Repression to the National Anti-Imperialist Movement in Solidarity 
with African Liberation, for 100 years now Communists have taken a “forthright 
stand” for Black lives.

Image: National Negro Congress protest demanding integration of the Glenn L. 
Martin aircraft factory outside Baltimore. Photo: Washington Area Spark, 
Creative Commons (BY-NC 2.0).

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