March 28, 2024

Democratic Party Factional Struggles on Hold for Midterms?


At Netroots Nation, there is an effort put forth the image of a unified Democratic Party, but the social democratic insurgency of the left continues its advance. Pictured here are up-and-coming candidates affiliated with the DSA, from left: Summer Lee, Julia Salazar, Sara Innamorato, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Lee Carter, and Elizabeth Fiedler. | DSA


There are concerted efforts to reach left-center unity.


By C.J. Atkins / 08.03.2018


Stories of Democratic civil war and intra-party factional intrigue are all the rage these days, with commentators parsing the latest Democratic Socialists of America candidate’s primary win or centrist Third Way conference for a signal as to which side is winning the battle of ideas.

At the Netroots Nation conference meeting in New Orleans this week, there is certainly plenty of evidence of ongoing tension between progressive grassroots activists and the Democratic Party “establishment,” but there are also concerted efforts to showcase attempts at left-center unity.

Local activist group leaders appeared on stage with DNC and state party officials at one opening panel of the annual Netroots meeting—the 13th and largest ever—in an attempt to demonstrate that the Bernie-Hillary battles of 2016 are, at least partially, on hold so as to ensure Republicans are turned out of office up and down the ballot. And across the country, state legislative races are where much of that action is taking place.

The states are where it’s at

Lala Wu, co-founder of the volunteer coordination group Sister District, is a self-described “state legislature evangelist.” That’s where progressives can get the biggest bang for their buck, she says. Her organization draws on the old “sister city” cultural exchange concept to pair activists living in safe Democratic areas with volunteer-starved campaigns in toss-up districts.

In 37 states, electoral districts are drawn by the state legislature, so “if you want to do anything about gerrymandering,” she argues, “this is the only place to do it.” Longer term, though, state legislatures are also “incubators” for deepening the Democratic bench nationally; young elected officials learn and grow at this level, readying themselves to make a difference in higher offices later on. And as right-wing groups like the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) have shown, the states are also laboratories for public policy—an example the left needs to study closely, according to Wu.

From left: State Rep. Graig Meyer, Jamie Perrapato, Lala Wu, Allison Zelman, and moderator Irene Shin. | C.J. Atkins / PW

The state legislature focus is one endorsed by Jamie Perrapato, head of the Pennsylvania district-flipping group Turn PA Blue. Like Wu, she argues “blue areas are where people are excited, but we need to put them to work in the red ones.”

Though officially a non-party outfit, Turn PA Blue works very closely with the Democratic Party in the state, but that doesn’t mean it sticks too tightly to any kind of “party line” sent down from Washington. Rather than talking Roe v. Wade the first time they knock on someone’s door on behalf of one of their 183 endorsed candidates, they talk about the failing infrastructure that leaves people with hour-long commutes to and from work. “On the state side, the focus has to be local.”

The influx of first-time activists moved to action by Trump’s victory two years ago has left organizations like Sister District and Turn PA Blue having to integrate political novices into the ecosystem of the Democratic Party.

According to Perrapato, the biggest misunderstanding on the part of highly-energized left-wing activists is that the official party apparatus is big and moves slowly. She says people have to be engaged at whatever level they are comfortable with. If new volunteers don’t fit into the party structure, find something—anything—for them to do. “Just keep them from going home.”

That’s not the only challenge for the new activist collectives popping up in the wake of 2016. North Carolina State Rep. Graig Meyer runs Our Shot, a candidate-recruitment effort aimed at taking back seats at all levels in his state. One of the biggest roadblocks disrupting relations between grassroots groups and the party structure is, perhaps surprisingly, misunderstandings of complex campaign finance laws.

“New groups often don’t know if they should be a PAC, a 501c3, or a 527, or what political activities are allowed under those various channels,” Meyer says. “New candidates, meanwhile, are having to learn which groups they can legally work with and to what level they can coordinate with them.”

That’s the kind of training—along with “talent banks” and effective data-driven resource deployment—which the Democratic National Committee is trying to deliver to its state party chapters. DNC Director for States Allison Zelman says it is the states, not Washington, where the best grassroots/party partnerships are being forged. She highlighted Missouri’s right-to-work referendum and a recent African-American leadership summit in Atlanta as examples.

Factional struggles remain

But after the official presentations ended, comments and questions from the audience showed that the struggle for ideological control over the Democratic Party’s messaging and platform is not even close to being over.

Susan Smith is on the board of Progress South Carolina, the Working Families Party, Planned Parenthood, and Our Revolution. When it comes to progressive politics in the South, she’s involved in just about every group of consequence. But she also knows the state Democratic Party inside and out, having been a member of its executive committee and a leader of the Democratic Women’s Council.

South Carolina activist and grassroots political leader Susan Smith. | C.J. Atkins / PW

Smith challenged the happy family message coming from the speakers on the platform, asking what progressives are supposed to do when their local Democratic Party committees refuse any kind of cooperation. “It’s very frustrating when you want partnerships with the Democratic Party, but they don’t want you,” she complained. “When you have a small party in a small state controlled by a small number of people, how do you work with them?”

In a conversation with People’s World after the panel, Smith said that the party in her state has still not gotten over the contentious 2016 presidential primary. A Hillary Clinton supporter herself, she complained that other Clinton backers still refuse to work with activists who were for Bernie Sanders. “I was a Hillary person,” she said, “but we don’t have to let those differences keep us from working together.”

Meyer, the North Carolina state representative, asked for patience from activists like Smith. “I’m a progressive,” he responded, “but my state is not.” While he often agrees with grassroots activists “on the beliefs,” he’s not always on the same page when it comes to strategy. “I know what my colleagues’ districts are like, the progressives don’t. Keep up the pressure on us, but be more forgiving when we have to say things in a different way than you would.”

For Sean Frame, a school board member from El Dorado, California, the problem with the party in his area is one of hopeless defeatism. There are ten Democratic Central Committees in his district that haven’t won a race in decades. “They have a mindset of ‘we will just run someone, but we won’t win’,” he says. The party just goes through the motions of putting up a candidate but doesn’t invest any significant efforts to building up organizational capacity. The party, according to Frame, has resigned itself to permanent failure in the face of Republican dominance.

Trying something new

The divergent narratives coming from the speakers on the one hand and audience members on the other served as an unintentional metaphor of the theme of the panel itself: navigating the still-raw ideological rifts of 2016.

Make no mistake though, everyone at Netroots Nation is operating within the Democratic Party tent. There’s little if any talk of a real third party or of actually bolting from the electoral infrastructure that the Democratic ballot line provides for activists to advance their policies. But the factional battle for control of the party’s program and direction cannot be papered over.

When one speaker at a later keynote session asked delegates whether they felt Democratic Party leaders in Congress were listening to the grassroots and representing them, only four hands went up in a hall of over a thousand people.

A surging social democratic grassroots trend is increasingly challenging the party’s long-dominant mainstream liberal faction for leadership. In one Netroots panel after another, there is a recurring argument on the part of the insurgents that the centrist, establishment way has been tried and failed. The overwhelming feeling among attendees seems to be that it’s time to try something new.


Originally published by People’s World under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States license.