"Socialism is no longer a
dirty word in the U.S."
The thousands
of democratic socialists in the United States who have been organizing
and fighting for justice in political obscurity for years likely never thought
their ideas would be the subject of heated
debates on prominent talk-shows like "The View" or feature
pieces in such establishment mainstays as PBS and NPR.
But—driven in large part by
the persistent popularity of Bernie Sanders' brand of politics and the
recent landslide
victory of self-described democratic socialist Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez in New York's congressional primary—the past several weeks have
seen a torrent of news headlines, television segments, and hot takes on
democratic socialism's rapid emergence into everyday political discourse, an
indication that ideas previously defined as "fringe" by corporate
media outlets, pundits, and politicians are quickly going mainstream.
"Democratic Socialism
Surging in the Age of Trump," reads a
representative headline from the Associated Press. "Is socialism
having its moment in U.S. elections?" asked the
title of a recent PBS "NewsHour" segment.
Even the New York Post, a
right-wing tabloid, grudgingly
admitted, "Like it or not, America is now seriously debating
socialism."
Here are a few other headlines
that have appeared in major publications over the past few weeks:
"Socialism is no longer a
dirty word in the U.S," noted the Guardian's
Arwa Mahdawi in a recent column highlighting the massive surge of interest in
socialism over the past several months, which has translated into a
record-breaking membership spike for the Democratic Socialists of America
(DSA).
Previously hovering below ten
thousand members, DSA's membership exploded past 20,000 in the months following
Donald Trump's victory in the 2016 presidential elections. Now, just over a
month after Ocasio-Cortez trounced corporate Democrat Rep. Joe Crowley, DSA
boasts more than 47,000 dues-paying members.
It should perhaps come as no
surprise that Americans—and millennials
in particular—are seeking a bold and humane alternative to capitalism, a
system that has produced staggering and ever-growing levels of inequality,
rampant poverty, an existential environmental crisis, and, of course, soaring
wealth for the few at the very top.
As New York City DSA member
Neal Meyer explained in
a recent piece for Jacobin, democratic socialists want to build an
alternative future where—in contrast to the current economic landscape defined
by financial
insecurity for most—"everyone has a right to food, healthcare, a good
home, an enriching education, and a union job that pays well."
"We want to guarantee all
of this while stopping climate change and building an economy that's
ecologically sustainable," Meyer added. "We want to build a world
without war, where people in other countries are free from the fear of U.S.
military intervention and economic exploitation. And we want to end mass
incarceration and police brutality, gender violence, intolerance towards queer
people, job and housing discrimination, deportations, and all other forms of
oppression."
If the victory of
Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders' (I-Vt.) status as far-and-away
the most popular politician in the U.S. are any evidence, such an
ambitious vision has widespread appeal. As The Nation's John Nichols noted
in a piece pointing to socialism's "winning
streak," democratic socialists have also won primary victories in
Pennsylvania and Philadelphia, providing further evidence that Americans
aren't scared of the S-word.
"A political revolution
is coming, and establishment politicians can get on board or be swept
away," Tascha Van Auken, co-chair of DSA's national election committee,
told Nichols.
The fact that so much of the
American public finds the ideas pushed by democratic socialists like Sanders
has sent the right's chief propaganda machine, Fox News, into "panic
mode" as they struggle mightily to explain why free healthcare and
education are actually bad.
Most often, the result has
been free
advertising for progressive policies:
Right-wing fury and
fear-mongering seems to have done little to stem the rising socialist tide.
As New York Magazine's
Eric Levitz noted
over the weekend, "one month after voters in the South Bronx put
'democratic socialism' in the headlines, real America has registered its
outrage at the Democrats' hard-left turn—by giving the party a larger lead in
the generic congressional ballot."
From a column last week, The
Ringer's Justin Charity adds that "socialists
have proved more excited, coordinated, and immediately productive than any
other Democratic coalition of the past decade."
"In the short term—which
is to say, the midterms—the great excitement about left-wing politics will
likely prove indispensable to the Democratic Party's efforts to recapture the
House, if not also the Senate, and to mount a more resilient bulwark against
Trumpism in Congress," Charity concludes. "In the long term,
socialism may recalibrate the Democratic Party and the U.S. political
equilibrium altogether. "
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