[lbo-talk] the neo-rainbow

Doug Henwood dhenwood at panix.com
Wed Feb 2 13:50:03 PST 2005


[This bounced for excessive length. I'm forwarding the URLs and opening grafs to save some bandwidth.]

From: "John Lacny" <jlacny at earthlink.net> To: <lbo-talk at lbo-talk.org> Subject: Visualizing a Neo-Rainbow Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2005 14:01:26 -0500

Visualizing a Neo-Rainbow by Danny Glover and Bill Fletcher, Jr.

To be published in the next issue of The Nation (Feb. 14, 2005). Distributed by CommonDreams - Feb. 1, 2005

http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0127-24.htm http://www.thenation.com/issue.mhtml?i=20050214

In 2004 the winner-take-all system of US electoral politics again proved an obstacle to genuine democracy. While progressives found little to get excited about in the John Kerry campaign, there were no viable third- party candidates, leaving them without a fully satisfying choice at the ballot box, even if most of us ended up voting for Kerry as a statement against Bush. More important, there was no candidate whose campaign offered progressives the opportunity to develop a real political/electoral base that could move us closer to building power and influence.

The most recent campaign that held that kind of promise was the Rainbow insurgency of the 1980s, including the 1984 and '88 presidential campaigns of the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, and the building of the National Rainbow Coalition.

The Rainbow movement and candidacies have much to teach us today. While the Rev. Jesse Jackson was a charismatic leader, the Rainbow Coalition movement and the Jackson presidential campaigns were about far more than Jesse Jackson. The approach that Jackson advanced - building an organization and campaign both inside and outside the Democratic Party - points progressives in the direction we should be moving now. The political emergence of Jackson took place within the context of a larger, black-led electoral upsurge that witnessed campaigns such as the successful Harold Washington run for mayor of Chicago and the unsuccessful but no less inspiring Mel King campaign for mayor of Boston. Those campaigns were not only a reaction to the early years of the Reagan/Bush Administration and its economic attacks on working people and veiled attacks on people of color but an outgrowth of the movement for black political power that emerged in response to the unfulfilled promise of the civil rights victories two decades earlier. Jackson seized the moment to speak nationally on behalf of these movements, but he did something even more important than that. He articulated a political vision that, while based on the African- American experience, did not represent solely a "black candidacy" or "black politics." Jackson tapped into a growing anger and frustration arising on the US political scene among both historically and newly disenfranchised populations. He spoke to issues of economic injustice without abandoning the question of race, thus avoiding the classic error of white populists who attempt to build unity by addressing economic issues only. Jackson linked these issues. His appearances before white farmers and workers brought forth a response that previously had been unimaginable.

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