interesting sidelight: i volunteered to work with the greens about 12 years ago. the woman i spoke with regarding the party was all excited about a recent visit from the german greens. but chagrined that the german greens said the US greens were a waste of time until they got organized and developed grass roots support. the germans weren't going to get involved with the US greens until they showed some promise.
the US greens have improved somewhat, but still lack organization and support needed to make a difference.
as DRR says, the might of the left wing in europe is built on union activism and support. in the US, almost all unions are busted and ineffectual. so much for the US left until it learns how to mobilize grass roots, working class activism to compliment its currently white middle class dominated, largely inadequate activism.
R
----- Original Message -----
From: dredmond at efn.org
Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2003 1:47 PM
Subject: Re: [lbo-talk] Profiles In Spinelessness
Quoting Doug Henwood <dhenwood at panix.com>:
> I'm coming around to Nathan's argument that "progressives" should run
> in Dem primaries and in general try to hijack the party, just as the
> right did with the Republicans. What's to lose? The Greens seem more
> & more like a doomed fantasy.
The US *does* need a Green Party, or something like it, to push the Dems to the
left and agitate for a 20th century welfare state and a 21st century electoral
system. But no political party is going to change much without an active, feisty
labor movement. The strength of the Euroleft is based on the might of the
Euro-unions.
-- DRR
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