The Elephant & The Donkey in the Room: The Future of American Political Parties

You can view the highly successful American Public Square forum on the future of America’s political parties and the rise of independent voters here in its entirety.

Organizers received an overwhelming response to this October 16th, 2017 forum, part of an annual series, requiring an overflow room to accommodate the 500+ guests who turned out.

Howard Dean expressed support for open primaries, Independent Voting President Jackie Salit asked if we as Americans could create an “all independents primary” in the 2020 election, and former independent Senate candidate Greg Orman defined partisanship as “the new prejudice” that we must overcome.

NOTE:Ā  Introduction to panel begins 8 minutes 30 seconds into the video.

Gamechangers? Independent Voters May Rewrite the Political Playbook

“Gamechangers” Report Released by ASUā€™s Morrison Institute, USCā€™s Schwarzenegger Institute and Independent Voting Examines theĀ Rise of the Independent Voter

October 04, 2017 ā€“ Politics, elections and governance in the United States are largely viewed through the lens of a two-party power structure of Republicans and Democrats. However, a distinct but ill-defined group of voters is quietly becoming a force that no longer can be ignored.Ā  Independent voters are increasingly determining winners and losers in election contests throughout the country and the number of Americans who call themselves independents is on the rise.Ā  However surprisingly little is known about the Americaā€™s independent voters.

Morrison Institute for Public Policy at Arizona State University and the Schwarzenegger Institute for State and Global Policy have teamed up with one another and Independent Voting to examine the independent voter phenomenon and the impact that it is having on the American political landscape.Ā  Their findings have been outlined in the briefing paper Gamechangers?: Independent Voters May Rewrite the Political Playbook being released today.

ā€œThe rising number of voters in the United States who are registering and identifying as ā€œindependentā€ is a very important phenomenon and is already impacting local, state and national elections,ā€ said former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.Ā ā€œUnderstanding who these voters are and what they care about is essential to a strong democracy, and I am proud to have my Institute involved with this study.ā€

Joseph Garcia, a lead author of the report and Director of Communication & Community Impact and Director of the Latino Public Policy Center at the Morrison Institute added: “This paperĀ provides an important foundation for aĀ better understanding ofĀ independent voters, as well asĀ the underreportedĀ undercurrent of independent sentiment in a traditionally viewedĀ political world that isĀ still very much controlled by the two major parties. That long-heldĀ duo control isĀ becomingĀ moreĀ tenuous, however, as moreĀ voters disassociate themselves with polarizingĀ partisanship andĀ constrictingĀ party linesĀ byĀ joiningĀ theĀ independent movement — either by action, name orĀ both.”

Longstanding independent voter advocate and best-selling author Jacqueline Salit also contributed to the report. “Like Einstein’s theory of relativity or Galileo’s insistence that the earth revolves around the sun, new ways of seeing the dynamics of our world can be gamechanging,” said Salit. “In our work with USCā€™s Schwarzenegger Institute and ASU’s Morrison Institute, we’re showing the world new ways of seeing the independent voter. This will have a dramatic impact on the politics of our country.”

Download PDF of the report here.

# # #

About the ASU Morrison Institute for Public Policy

ASU Morrison Institute for Public Policy, Arizonaā€™s premier think tank, was established in 1982. An Arizona State University resource, Morrison Institute utilizes nonpartisan research, analysis, polling and public dialogue to examine critical state and regional issues. Morrison Institute provides data- and evidence-based review to help improve the state and regionā€™s quality of life. Morrison Institute is part of the ASU College of Public Service and Community Solutions.Ā www. morrisoninstitute.asu.edu

About the USC Schwarzenegger Institute

The USC Schwarzenegger Institute for State and Global Policy is committed to advancing post-partisanship, where leaders put people over political parties and work together to find the best ideas and solutions to benefit the people they serve. The Institute seeks to influence public policy and public debate in finding solutions to the serious challenges we face. While the Institute engages on a variety of critical policy areas, a primary focus is climate change, which reflects Governor Schwarzeneggerā€™s leadership on the issue and it being one of the defining challenges of our generation. www.schwarzeneggerinstitute.com

About Indepentvoting.org

Independent Voting isĀ a national strategy, communications, and organizing center working to connect and empower the 40% of Americans who identify themselves as independents.Ā Ā ā€‹ItsĀ mission is to develop a movement of independent voters, in partnership with Americans of all persuasions, to reform Americaā€™s political process, create unorthodox coalitions and useĀ ā€‹the tools ofĀ democracy to developĀ ā€‹and grow ourĀ nation.Ā www.independentvoting.org

 

Panel on Progressive Options for 2018/2020 at the Convergence Conference

Jackie Salit Ā appeared with Dr. Jill Stein (Green Party presidential candidate ’12, ’16) on Sunday, Sept. 10th at American University’s School of Law along with Brian Jones (Justice Party), Charles Douglas (People’s Party of North Carolina), Peter Joseph (Zeitgeist Institute), Nick Brana (Draft Bernie for a People’s Party), and Araquel Bloss (Progressive Independent Party) to address the topic of “Progressive Prospects in 2018 and 2020.” Ā The Sunday panel was a plenary session of The People’s Convergence Conference organized by Brana.

 

 

“Finding Otherness: A Blueprint for an Independent Conversation about 2020”

June, 2017

Coming off of the raucous 2016 presidential election and its fitful aftermath, the independent movement is faced with opportunities and challenges on a grand scale. Ā The behemoth battles in Washington, and the media circus surrounding them, serve to mask the gulf that continues to widen between the government and the people.Ā  Given that gulf, independents and reformers must be considering (at least!) the following two questions:

1) With rampant public anger about the state of our politics and the mind-numbing dysfunction in governance, how should we be working to fix the system, revitalize American democracy, and give greater power to the American people?

2) Should independents and structural reformers also be considering a strategy for the 2020 presidential elections? Ā If so, what is that strategy, what are the prospects for a unified strategy, and how would we get there?

Read: Finding Otherness: A Blueprint for an Independent Conversation about 2020

 

Bernie Offers Perfect Advice to Democrats, But Will They Listen?

Published by the Independent Voter Network (IVN) – April 5, 2017

Five years ago, outside of the public eye, a conflict flared inside the inner circle of Democratic Party power.

Simply put, it was this: should the Obama re-election campaign find a way to make an explicit appeal to independent voters? Five years ago, the answer was no. I know this because I was part of the discussion, though an outsider to it, whose counsel was firmly rejected. And though Obama won reelectionĀ in 2012 while losing independents to the GOP, the strategic decision to double down with the Democratic base and turn away from independents, the emergent engine for reform of the political system, laid the groundwork for Democratic defeat in 2016.

Last week, Bernie Sanders, the curmudgeonly crusader of the American left, called out his partyā€™s failure to make those links: ā€œLet me just say this, the Democrats will not succeed unless it attracts many, many millions of independents. The number of people who are now moving in the independent direction, as opposed to Republican and Democrat ā€” it is growing. So if the Democrats are going to be successful, in fact that party is going to have to appeal to a whole lot of independents.ā€

Yes! But what does that mean, circa 2017, with the Democrats in opposition party mode trying to find a voice in a chaotic and uncertain Washington with a volatile and unpredictable Trump in the White House?

When I saw Bernie onĀ MSNBCā€™sĀ Morning Joe issuing this challenge, I called Charlotte Scot, an avid Bernie supporter in Connecticut and formerly the director of communications for the Democratic National Committee when Jimmy Carter was president. Charlotte had just appeared on stage with me at the National Conference of Independents, sharing her experience of how the power and energy of the Bernie movement had been dissipated by the party regulars. Charlotte became an independent and the audience cheered her decision.

She had seen Bernie on Morning Joe too and had already been tweeting about it. I asked her how she thought this fit in to the DNCā€™s latest efforts to restyle itself under Tom Perezā€™s leadership. ā€œI donā€™t buy itā€, she said.Ā ā€œThe DNC does not want to change. It is already soliciting contributions from lobbyists, it may have asked all staff to resign but, it also just hired many former members of Clintonā€™s staff.Ā  They are putting on a public show. Keith Ellison is now a deputy Director, but theĀ party regulars appear to be running the show. These are the same people who let Donald Trump become president by favoring fundraising over hog raising farmers. By shunning every day Americans in favor of Hollywood elite. Bernie understood the people who were hurting but, how could the DNC ever support a candidate who doesnā€™t even own a tuxedo? Bernie is an outsider. He needs to run for president as an independent!ā€

We talked for a while and I told her the sad story of the Obama campaign in 2012, how Iā€™d met with David Axelrod and David Simas to offer them the opportunity to rebuild Obamaā€™s 2008 independent coalition, the one that had been squandered once he was elected, and the Pelosi Democrats started to set the agenda. This would require, I told them at the time, giving legitimacy to the fact that 42% of the country were not aligned with a party and demonstrating that the president understood why and respected our choice.

For a time, Axelrod and Simas engaged, asking for help on how to link reforms like including independent appointees on the FEC to social issues, like housing and jobs. But ultimately, they explained, the party stakeholders would not agree to terms, and so this course was abandoned.

Charlotte Scot speaks at “Crossroads for an Independent America.”

Charlotte, a veteran of the Carter campaign and the Carter White House, remarked ā€œJimmy was an outsider and the party didnā€™t like that. One DNC member quipped, ā€˜The Beverly Hillbillies come to Washington.ā€ Had the Democratic Party supported President Carter we would have had clean green energy 40 years ago. After the 2016 Democratic fiasco the independent movement is even more vital.ā€

True that, I told Charlotte. We are the coalition of outsiders. And maybe, just maybe, Bernie is coming to see that he needs to support the outsiders in order to pursue his own goal of remaking the Democratic Party. Whether he can get the Democratic leadership to go along is another question.

Looking toward the 2020 presidential election, independent voters ā€“ now 44% of the country- have three main concerns. Can the players in independent politics find a way to come together to create a unified strategy, including a unified independent presidential candidacy?Ā  Can the independent movement force the Democratic and Republican Parties to guarantee voting rights to the nonaligned in the 2020 primaries and caucuses?

Obama won the nomination in 2008 because enough state primaries allowed independents to vote to power his win over Hillary Clinton. Bernie, likewise, had huge appeal to independents and was forced late in the primary season to speak out for open primaries, though by then it was too late for a path to the nomination.

Third, can the movement propel reforms of the political process sufficient to transfer political power from the parties to the people?

Bernie, great to see you speaking out for a coalition of outsiders! Letā€™s sit down together and talk about how to bring our movements together. The tide is turning toward political independence. We felt the Bern. Now, letā€™s make the turn.

Power, Poverty and Democracy

Remarks by Dr. Lenora Fulani at the Ninth Biennial National Conference of Independents.Ā 

Good afternoon everybody. Maybe today Iā€™ll work on what you have to do to become a ā€œsung hero.ā€ Ā Iā€™m really thrilled to be here and you all look just Ā wonderful.

What I wanted to do was to speak to the issue of democracy, the poor, and power and I want to dedicate the time that I have to share with you to the contributions of poor women (primarily black and Latino) who stepped forward to help shape, give direction to, and create our connections to poor communities of color who have and do serve as the base of our successes. They are: Nita Brooks, Lorraine Stevens, Vera Hill, and Mary Rivera. They are not here today, but they live in our history.Ā I come from them, was surrounded by them growing up. Ā It was these women throughout my childhood – which included my sisters, cousins and Mom ā€“ primarily also because of their suffering and guts, from whom I developed my posture and a sense that I had not only a right, but a well-appreciated obligation to stand up and speak out. Ā 

I remember at 16 in my Baptist Church in Chester, PA in response to my ministerā€™s decision to fire our beloved gay youth pianist, I organized the other young people in church to stand and turn their backs on him in the midst of his sermon and to walk out. (Applause). That wasnā€™t my motherā€™s response! Ā Later that day my mom said to me: Ā Canā€™t you just go to church and pray like everyone else!? Ā And she then gave me a hug! Ā And we won that fight.

In writing this I was also reminded of a conversation that I had with Dr. Fred Newman, who has played such a huge role in everything weā€™ve done over the last 30, 40 years. I had a conversation with him after I stood on a chair in a meeting in Harlem in 1992 where Bill Clinton was speaking. I wanted to get his attention. Both Clinton and I were running for President and he had refused to support my inclusion in a Presidential debate earlier and at that point — when they wouldnā€™t let me in the debate — I had raised the most money of any candidate, at least for the moment. Ā And I told Clinton in New Hampshire, which is where we were, that when he came to Harlem, I was going to tell the black community what he did. Ā And I did! Ā So, Fred just looked at me because this picture was on the front page of newspapers around the country with me standing on this chairā€¦but he never, ever, ever told me not to stand up.

Today in this room are people from around the country who are standing up ā€“ men and women standing up for activism and standing up for democracy. Ā And I am deeply proud to be here with all of you. Ā The fight comes in many forms including helping to develop the voice of the poor who have been abandoned and abused by the traditional parties. Ā And when the country is not doing great, they suffer the most. Ā Amongst us is an activist group who are a part of the All Stars Project — the Committee for Independent Community Action. Ā They are currently involved in a fight to prevent the City of New York from privatizing New York Cityā€™s public housing which would lead to the displacement of 600,000 people to shelters and to the streets. Ā This process has already begun. Ā Our Mayor says there are 60,000 people on the streets. But any number is too many. So, talk about disenfranchisement! Ā 

This destruction of housing developments has happened already to the poor in the cities of Chicago, Atlanta, Philadelphia, creating desperation and chaos. Ā And when the newspapers report on the increasing gun violence in Chicago, they never tie it to the poverty and desperation of these communities, abandoned by our so-called democracy, left to lead lives of hell. Ā The CICA, like Dr. Kingā€™s activists, come from some of the poorest communities in the City, serving as leaders and foot soldiers for this fight for the rights of the poor. Ā They have collected over 14,000 signatures in our effort to organize others to support this fight.

Several months ago, one of our elected officials described the attack on New York City housing projects as a ā€œtragic necessity.ā€ Ā There are many circumstances in our nationā€™s history which could have been described as a ā€œtragic necessity.ā€ Ā If the nation had decided slavery was a ā€œtragic necessityā€ and treated it as such, we would still be enslaved as black folks. Ā What ā€œtragic necessityā€ simply means is that things are what they are and we wonā€™t take a step to change them. Ā And in this case it exposes how much of our political leadership is in the pockets of the developers and they will speak neither for the poor, nor middle class, who is threatened by these extreme changes that are happening in America, on the ground, day in and day out. So not only must the poor stand up and grow and be activists, they must ā€“ as they did in the battles with Dr. King and others ā€“ they have to stand up and lead the way. Ā 

Whatā€™s actually tragic is what passes for political leadership in the nation. Ā And I am not speaking here of Donald Trump. Ā In fact, it might be more useful for his detractors to do the work of assessing how he came to be. Ā And instead of simply protesting his presence, do the hard, challenging and difficult work of figuring out what needs to be done in order to create a political process that works on behalf of, and supports, we the people!

The message that I want to underscore today is the role that poor people — be they white or of color — have to play and have played in the fight for democracy and democratic rights in our nation. Ā Democracy is not only about voting rights: what itā€™s supposed to represent is visibility and power. Ā One of the ways that Americaā€™s poor is disenfranchised is that theyā€™re kept hidden, discussed only in newspaper stories about being on welfare, having too many children, and violence.

In 1968, at the age of 18, I traveled with one of my sisters to Washington D.C. to Dr. Kingā€™s Resurrection City. Dr. King’s plan was to make visible Americaā€™s poor to the nation and to the world. I was poor and I was deeply impacted upon and organized by the potential of the poor in exposing its poverty and exercising its power. Ā There were thousands of people there, black, Latino and white. Ā The scene was both heartbreaking and somewhat hopeful. Ā Dr. King knew the importance of putting Americaā€™s poor on stage ā€“ not just before the country, but before the world. Ā Unfortunately, he was murdered in the midst of this and others failed to build off of it. He died before he was able to invest what he had organized into the ongoing struggle for democracy and the rights for the American people.

I want to end my presentation by bringing into this dialogue the voice of one of the most powerful figures, leaders and spokespersons for the democratic rights of the poor and the disenfranchised. Ā Fannie Lou Hamer knew that the poor had to stand up and fight for its rights while organizing others to stand with them. Ā She also knew about the role and the importance of taking on our democratic rights and taking on the parties that stood in our way. I believe, if Fannie was here with us today, she would be at the forefront of these fights for democracy, and for housing, and always, always, always, against the disenfranchisement of poor people in this country. Fannie was a voting rights activist. She was a civil rights leader and a philanthropist. She was instrumental in organizing the Mississippiā€™s Freedom Summer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Later she became the Vice Chair of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party which she represented at the 1964 Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City, NJ. Ā Letā€™s take a look at this powerful woman.

[VIDEO – includes introduction of Dr. Fulani by Tom Williams and Catana Barnes andĀ clip of Fannie Lou Hamer]

So in ending, I guess itā€™s not too difficult to figure out which of the two I follow! And that the movements that weā€™ve been creating for democracy follow. There has to be in a plan for democratizing America, a plan for growing the poor, and part of the leadership is going to come from the poor, not because theyā€™re going to get elected, but because the poor people in this country have been at the forefront of almost every battle that weā€™ve ever waged. So its an honor to be here with you. Letā€™s fight for democracy and letā€™s strengthen our fight against poverty. Thank you.

* * *

Things Fall Apart: Building a Unifying Independent Movement

Below areĀ remarks delivered by Jacqueline Salit, convener of “Crossroads for An Independent America,” at the Ninth Biennial National Conference of Independents. A downloadable version is availableĀ here.

* * *

Our country is in tremendous turmoil now. Thereā€™s constant conflict going on everywhere you turn, everywhere you look. We have a new President. Heā€™s a very mercurial person. Some think that heā€™s a genius at political disruption of the system. Some think heā€™s unstable. Weā€™ll find all of that out, Iā€™m sure.

Most of the people who voted for him are still in his corner and theyā€™re waiting to see if he can deliver on the economic revitalization that he offered to and promised the American people.Ā Ā  Most of the people who voted against him are still against him. There are lots of protests going on. People are giving expression to their thoughts and feelings, fears and concerns about a whole host of issues. The mood in the country, no matter where you stand, is anxious. Very anxious.

And, even though these are very unusual circumstances now, itā€™s also the case that, believe it or not, politics-as-usual is continuing to go on. The Republican Partyā€”with Trump at the helmā€”is making the transition from being the opposition party to being a governing party. The Democratic Party is making the transition from being a governing party to being an opposition party because it is out of power, at least for the moment. These two transitions are very, very rocky. And the American people, with good reason, are deeply concerned about their capacity to govern.

Thereā€™s a great deal of uncertainty in the country today. Maybe itā€™s even fair to call it chaos. And one of the things thatā€™s going on, as you would expect, is that the political analysts, the media, the major parties, and the power brokers are all trying to make some kind of order out of the chaos.

For the Democrats, restoring order means finding a way to unify its populistā€”letā€™s call it the Bernie Sanders wing of the Democratic Partyā€”with its centrist more globalist wing. They need that kind of unity to put maximum pressure on the Republicans, who the Democrats hope will fail. For the White House and the Republican majority, restoring order means finding some kind of an accommodation among the different wings of the Republican Party on healthcare, on the budget, on foreign policyā€”at least enough of an accommodation to be able to governā€”and then enough successful governing to hold their base and to keep the Democrats from gaining seats in Congress next year and, of course, the White House in 2020.

This is a room full of independents. And Iā€™m assuming that most of you look at all of that and you say, well, thatā€™s the two party game. Itā€™s more extreme, itā€™s more polarized than itā€™s been in the past. But itā€™s still that same dynamic, that same old bipartisan power struggle thatā€™s gone on virtually since the founding of this country. Itā€™s rough, itā€™s nasty, there are tweets, there are Executive Orders and bans and court decisions overturning Executive Orders and bans, and then there are new Executive Orders and bans. But there is a giant tug of war that is taking place between the parties and, to some degree, between different branches of government. The implications of that tug of war are important. Theyā€™re complicated, and, in some cases, perhaps even dangerous. But, if you take a step outside this state-of-play, just for a momentā€”and, by the way, thatā€™s who independents are, weā€™re the people who step out, we choose to be outsidersā€”I think you can see that something else is happening at the same time.

The Center Cannot Hold

Today I want to share with you what I see, what I think that ā€œsomething elseā€ is, because weā€™re not simply living through a transition in government, as perhaps frightening or destabilizing as that is. I think weā€™re living through a much deeper transition in which the tools and the categories of politicsā€”the way we conduct our democracy, the methods of self-governance that we useā€”are becoming obsolete. The old methods and the old categories, the old standard practices are losing ground. Even while they govern the state of affairs, they are becoming obsolete. They are losing the trust of the American people. To quote the poet William Butler Yeats and the novelist Chinua Achebe, ā€œThings fall apart. The center cannot hold.ā€ That is the moment we are living through.

The 2016 presidential election season was horrible. I think weā€™d agree on that, independent of the outcome. But, make no mistake. All of the things that happened in the presidential season were signs that the system of politics that we useā€”a party-based system, a system based on ideology, a primary system that selects certain voters and locks out others, a debate system that keeps independent voices from being heard, media coverage that is hugely partisan, and then the ā€œbipartisan,ā€ if you want to call it that, policymaking process that followsā€”that whole package is not working for the American people. The independent movement, which is another name for Americaā€™s democracy movement, came into existence to respond to that breakdown. Thatā€™s important to see. The independent movement was born not simply to offer other choices within the existing partisan system. It emerged because the existing system is losing its capacity to work for and on behalf of the American people. Our democracy is corrupted. The system is unraveling.Is Unraveling Good or Bad?

In my experience I find that when you start to talk about how the system is unraveling, right away people want to know, is that good or is that bad? Is that a good thing that the system is unraveling or is it a bad thing that itā€™s unraveling? An interesting question. I donā€™t think there is an easy answer to that question because I believe the answer relies largely on what the American people do, and let me be a little more particular hereā€”on what the independent movement does in response to that unraveling. Thatā€™s our question.

When there is turmoil and change and transition, when things are in chaos, it can be confusing. We watch the news and read the newspapers and itā€™s confusing. But the funny thing about transitional times like these is that, even though theyā€™re confusing, itā€™s sometimes the case that you can actually see things that are harder to see when the situation is more stable.

One of the things that more and more Americans are now able to see is that the inability of our political process as currently constituted, the inability to deliver a prosperous and creative and happy and safe life to the American people means that we now, as a movement, and as a country, have to turn our attention to the process itself. This is no longer a side issue, itā€™s no longer an auxiliary concern, itā€™s no longer the thing that you say, ā€œOh, that would be nice, but we really have to focus onā€ whatever. I think that the unraveling and the chaos in American politics is creating a space in which itā€™s possible, in some ways perhaps for the first time, to introduce, to stimulate, and to develop a new kind of democracy for our country.

That is hard to do, for a lot of reasons. Thereā€™s a lot of resistance, of course. The barriers to that are substantially entrenched. But thereā€™s another reason, too, which is that even the protests against the systemā€”as we saw in the last presidential electionā€”are, to a great degree, reabsorbed into the very institutions that people are rising up against. Thatā€™s a complicated and difficult situation for the American people to be in. Itā€™s something that, as independents, we have to give a tremendous amount of energy to, how to lead and how to teach people, what to show people, in the face of that situation.

Trump and Sanders

There were two very explosive campaigns in last yearā€™s presidential electionā€”the candidacy of Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump. One of them, as we know, won the White House. The other, Bernie Sanders, nearly toppled the most powerful political dynasty in the Democratic Partyā€”the Clinton dynasty. Both of those campaigns reached out to the American people with an appeal about how the system itself is rigged. The story that those campaigns told was that America operates under a political, economic and social arrangement in which there are insiders and outsiders, there are elites and thereā€™s everyone else. And judging by the response to both of these campaigns, I think itā€™s fair to say that the American people are feeling very deeply that this is the case. The system is rigged, and it ainā€™t just a slogan. Itā€™s the painful, hurtful, devastating reality of daily life for so many people in this country. The coal miner in West Virginia and the mother of three in Detroit and the student starting out in Arizonaā€”along with millions and millions and millions of fellow Americansā€”live life with the growing recognition that the system is rigged.

The numbers in the election ended up delivering the Electoral College to Donald Trump. Bernie Sanders, many believe, was blocked by the closed primary rules and superdelegate rules of his own party. The young people who wanted to vote for Bernie Sanders in the Democratic Party primary for president but who were registered to vote as independents found themselves turned away from the ballot box in state after state after stateā€”and, by the way, 48% of millennials in the United States of America are independents. Many of them went to the polls in closed primary states and said ā€œIā€™d like to vote today in the presidential primary.ā€ Many were there to vote for Bernie Sanders, and they were told ā€œYou canā€™t vote today.ā€ They said, ā€œOh, well, why? Itā€™s Election Day, isnā€™t it?ā€Ā Ā  They were told by election officials appointed by local Democratic and Republican Party county leaders, ā€œOh, you canā€™t vote because youā€™re an independent.ā€ ā€œOh,ā€ they said, ā€œI thought I was an American.ā€ ā€œOh, yes, but you have to be registered in the Democratic Party in order to be able to vote today.ā€ ā€œOK. Give me a pen and a form and Iā€™ll register into your party today because Iā€™d like to be able to vote for Senator Sanders.ā€ ā€œOh, no, sorry,ā€ they were told. In New York, they were told, ā€œYou had to have done that five months ago.ā€ ā€œOh,ā€ said the voters, ā€œBernie Sanders wasnā€™t even a candidate five months ago!ā€ ā€œSorry, sorry,ā€ they said. ā€œThatā€™s the way the system works.ā€

Itā€™s now four months since the election. And, much of the raw outcry that the system is rigged has been eclipsed or channeled into Republican Party and Democratic Party warfare. Whatever you think of Trumpā€”Iā€™m not a fan, by the way, but Iā€™m also not a hater. I believe in the signs you see at anti-Trump rallies that say, ā€œLove Trumps Hate,ā€ I believe in love. But, whatever you think of Trump and whatever you think of Sanders, I ask you please, please, please donā€™t forget that it was the American people who rose up to push them forward. Whether Trump voters will be happy with what Trump delivers remains to be seen. Will the budget cuts proposed by the President cause greater pain to those who voted for him in an effort to ease the pain? Will that massive jobs and infrastructure program advocated by both Trump and Sanders actually happen? We donā€™t know.

And, will Sanders voters be happy with the new leadership of the Democratic National Committee and its strategies? After all, it was the DNC that conspired to block Sandersā€™ candidacy. And, after that whole uproar about independents being locked out of the presidential primaries, the DNCā€”in spite of massive lobbying by independents and independent-minded Democrats and Republicans from all across the countryā€”decided to abstain on the question of determining whether future presidential primaries should be open. They decided to ā€œleave the matter to the states.ā€ Hereā€™s the thing. If you look at the experience of 2016, you see that Americans from many different walks of life delivered a resounding message. The system is rigged. The political parties do not want to respond to that message. But the independent movement does.

The Fulani Factor

Later today youā€™ll be hearing from my very dear friend and longtime colleague, Dr. Lenora Fulani, who ran for President in these United States in 1988 and 1992 and became the first woman and first African American to achieve ballot status in all 50 states. I had the privilege and honor of being her deputy campaign manager, and I handled communications for her. In that campaign, almost 30 years ago, Dr. Fulaniā€™s message was very simple. Her message was ā€œThe system is rigged.ā€ Itā€™s rigged economically. Itā€™s rigged politically. Itā€™s rigged against African Americans. Black America is taken for granted. Independents are locked out. The system is rigged.

At that time, very few people heard her message. For one thing, she was locked out of the presidential debates. And we began litigation on this issue in 1987, and which continues to this day (and weā€™re going to be hearing about that in some detail later). But when Dr. Fulani joined forces with the Perot movement five years later, a lot of people started to notice. They said, ā€œWow, hereā€™s a new coalitionā€”a Black and Independent Alliance, thatā€™s saying, this system is rigged, and weā€™re going to join forces to do something about that.ā€

The fear of this alliance runs very, very deep within the power structure in the United States of America, and within the Democratic Party in particular, now that President Obama has left office. People are saying, ā€œWhat binds Black America to the Democratic Party now?ā€ Many say itā€™s the fear of Republicans. But even with that fear, in this last election, when the Clintons were so certain they had every African American voter in their pocket, over a million black voters didnā€™t come out to vote in some of those key swing states. People are tired of settling. And we know this from the history of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights movementsā€”if youā€™re tired of settling, you start to look to the systemic changes needed to give the American people the power to chart our own course.

Political Divisions

I want to say a few words about the political divisions in the country today. We all know that poll after poll shows how the country is divided over the issues. People have different opinions. On trade. On the environment. On guns. On abortion. On criminal justice. On immigration. On education. Those differences are real. But, the tragic thingā€”actually, more than tragic, itā€™s criminalā€”is that the parties make it their business to exploit the differences that the American people have. They do it to gain political advantage, no matter the cost to the social fabric of this country.

But thereā€™s even another feature of this manipulation of the political differences in our country that I find very, very disturbing. And that is that if you keep people tangled up in partisan crossfire, it covers over the deeper fact that the whole institutional framework is falling apart. It covers over the fact that the center cannot hold. And it covers over the fact that we are all living through a moment in history where the very tools of self-governance are beginning to fail.

Things are falling apart, even if we have different experiences of that, depending on who we are. The problem is that as things fall apart, as we continue to lose our country, which is what is happening today, in my opinion, the American people are being denied the power that is rightfully ours to put our society back together again on a humanistic and developmental course. We have to have a healthy and vigorous and challenging democratic society to be able to do that. If weā€™re all caught up in the divideā€”and the parties now thrive on thatā€”we canā€™t see that this transition is happening to everyone in our country. And I am saying this, not as a moral appeal, or an idealistic appeal, that says: oh, itā€™s better if weā€™re all together. Thatā€™s not what Iā€™m talking about, although I do happen to believe that is better. No, Iā€™m making a very, very, very practical point here. We have to find a way to go through this transition together and to come out of it expanding and enriching our democracy or we will not come out of it at all. This, I believe, is a basic truth, a truth about what is happening in our country today.

The Independent Movement

So, let me wrap up here by saying some things about independent voters, the independent movement and the fight for nonpartisan structural reform, which are completely, entirely interconnected and intertwined. The commentator David Brooksā€”Iā€™m sure some of you read him, he writes for the New York Times and heā€™s on the PBS NewsHour and other media sources, and I like some of the stuff he says, some of it I donā€™t. He recently has written, and heā€™s been saying on TV, ā€œThe parties are in chaos!ā€ And itā€™s true. Itā€™s true.Ā Ā  And he gives various accountings of this, about whatā€™s happening in the different camps in the Republican Party and how difficult it is to sell globalism to the Sanders populists, how the Democrats donā€™t really have a clear position on globalism, and on and on and on. And itā€™s all true, but, it surprises me a little bit that it doesnā€™t occur to him, nor to the hundreds of other commentators who are out there, who are proffering very similar analyses, it doesnā€™t occur to him that the chaos in the parties might have something to do with the fact that 44% of the American electorate are now independents. It doesnā€™t occur to them that this has anything to do with the chaos. There was a pre-election poll that was done that asked respondents what they think the great divide is in the American public. 67% of the respondents said that they did not believe that the great divide in our country was between Democrats and Republicans but rather it was a divide between those at the bottom and those at the top, those who were trying to lead a regular and happy and decent life in this country and those who control the levers of power in the United States of America. That is the great divide.

Which brings us to the independent movement. The independent movement is growing. The political reform movement is growing. Thatā€™s what brings many of you into the room today. We seek to link independents together, without a party, to provide an identity, a voice, a platform, to give that 44% the capacity to be a force, a new kind of force in American political life. We seek to end all forms of voter suppression. No one should be required to join a political organization as a condition for casting a meaningful vote in an American election. That just shouldnā€™t be. We want open primaries. We want redistricting reform. We want ballot access reform. Ranked choice voting. Initiative and Referendum. Campaign finance reform. Electoral College reform. We gotta reform that goddamn Federal Election Commission. But these are notā€”in and of themselvesā€”the solutions to Americaā€™s crisis. They are the building blocks for expanding and retooling our democracy. They actually set a new stage where voters and activists and communities and interest groups can come together to do different things to make us whole as a nation. We need that growth and expansion because itā€™s actually in that activity that people become more sophisticated, they become more engaged, they become more aware, they become more empowered. We need to make room in our political process for interconnections that canā€™t happen under the partisan system. We need to make room for connections between the overtaxed and the underserved. We need to open a pathway between those focused on income inequality and those who day by day by day live life and fight the hardships of poverty. We need to make room for the Trump voter and the Sanders voter to join forces. That cannot happen in the partisan system. We need a space for the Committee for Independent Community Action and New Yorkers for Political Reform to join forces to make the necessary changes in our city so that through a democratic process everyone can have a decent home, and everyone can live a decent life. We need a revitalized democracy to make those kinds of connections. The activity of working together to rebuild our democracy, thatā€™s the activity that breaks down the walls that divide us.

Party Control

The parties want less democracy. They are demanding greater control over the political process. Thatā€™s their reaction to the 2016 presidential election. They want to control everything. There are probably ten state legislatures right now that are contemplating bills to restrict the rights of independent voters, to make voting more difficult for all kinds of communities. There are four or five court cases that are underway or were just wrapped up that, again, have to do with the rights of independents to fully participate in the political process. The parties are invested in control. They are invested in controlling nominations, controlling outcomes, controlling districts. Controlling the way the districts they want to control are designed. They control the debates, but most of allā€”and I know you know thisā€”the cardinal rule for them is they want to control the voters. They want to keep voters in line, and keep them angry at each other and fearful of the other side. And, for goodness sakes, keep those independents on the sidelines!

Itā€™s so interesting to me where the resistance to this comes from. Most recently, I read an article that ran in The Atlantic Monthly, which is a progressive magazine. It argues that all of you who are involved in political reform and in trying to open up the process should stop. You should stop. Because the situation has become so chaotic that we need to hold onto those institutions which have the capacity to control our societyā€”namely the parties. So whoever is out there doing things to try to reform the political process, and transfer power from the parties to the voter, ā€œStand down! Stand down! Because now we need those parties more than ever.ā€ Itā€™s just amazing to me that this kind of authoritarianism is coming from a progressive news source. By the way, this is not Breitbart News, the mouthpiece of the Alt Right, so-called. This is the Atlantic Monthly, a mouthpiece of liberal and progressive thinking in the United States of America. Let me just inform them today. We will not stand down.

Beyond Issues

I was speaking with a friend last week who is a founder of a major grassroots organization with millions of members that is allied around progressive causes and allied, to some degree, with the Democratic Party. She and I have been friends and colleagues for about five or six years. And, like many people, sheā€™s been very active on a host of issues, from womenā€™s rights to immigration issues to daycare to job creation to healthcare, and so forth. Sheā€™s somebody who has tried to create environments where people who have different positions on these issues can have productive conversations. And she and I have been having talks along these lines for a number of years. But in this conversation we had last week, she said to me, ā€œJackie, you know, I think weā€™re in a different time now.ā€ She said, ā€œWe canā€™t just keep debating the issues and having those arguments. We all know the arguments. We know our sideā€™s arguments and we know the other sideā€™s arguments. We could recite them chapter, book and verse.ā€ She said, ā€œWe canā€™t keep having that conversation, we have to do something other than that. We have to find a way to do something different, to move to a different place and have different kinds of conversations about different things.ā€ And then she said to me, ā€œYou know, this stuff youā€™ve been working on for all these years, political reform and organizing independent voters?ā€ She said, ā€œThis is your time. This is your time.ā€ I was very moved by this, but I have to tell you, it was very sobering, really. I took it very, very seriously because I think with the fact that it is our time comes a great deal of responsibility. We have to really face up to that and deal with that, perhaps in some new ways.

Part of what that means is that we have to deploy some of the capabilities that we independents uniquely have. Thom Reilly from Arizona State Universityā€™s Morrison Institute was talking about this in the focus group he and Cathy Stewart just led. He talked about the ways that independents interact with all kinds of people that is very particular to independents and is a way of breaking down some of these cultural barriers. I do think that independents have some very, very unique and important capacities that we need to bring to bear now. We are more accepting of ā€œotherness.ā€ We donā€™t demand that people be like us to talk to them. I think weā€™re also more accepting of uncertainty, and of chaos, and of the breakdown of the old order. That doesnā€™t mean that ā€œanything goes.ā€ But I think that it does mean that we understand that the old order has to break down to make room for the new. And we canā€™t be afraid of that.

A Unified Movement

The times that weā€™re living in are an environment for growth. But for the independent movement to grow, to become more powerful, including perhaps powerful enough to assemble a competitive independent presidential bid in 2020, we have to help each other to grow. We have to help each other to gain influence. We have to change the rules of the game together. There are many, many different and disparate forces in this room today. And Iā€™m very, very happy about that. But I want to push the envelope on it a little bit. Itā€™s not enough just to be here together for this day at this conference. We have to create ways to work together, to impact together. We need a unified independent movement, and I think the way that we get there, the way we unify our movement, is to work together to create the tools that the American people need to unify our country.

The authoritarian power of the parties is dead set against that. They are determined to prevent that from happening. We have to take responsibility for helping the American people go through this time of change and transition, to resist the pull to fall back on the old ways and the old institutions, the old divides. I think we are doing that. I think that is so beautiful. Something that is so touching to me is that at a time of tremendous ugliness and discord, there are beautiful things that are being created and that are growing in our country. And when I look out at all of you, I feel that so very deeply. So, let me close here and just say that I so deeply appreciate all of what you do. I look forward to all of what weā€™re going to do. Hey, letā€™s build a better world together. Thank you.

* * *

A Voice in the Wilderness: Micah White

MARCH 23, 2017

WHEN I FIRST spoke with Micah White for the Los Angeles Review of Books, it was the fall of 2015. Looking back, it feels like we were speaking to a tremendously different world. I know full well that the problems we have seen since the inauguration were not born out of a single presidential campaign: they are ideas, practices, and beliefs about people that existed far before they were uttered from the podium during a Trump stump speech. That being said, when Micah and I did talk, Barack Obama was president, and the Justice Department, while far from perfect, had reinvigorated the Civil Rights Division. Then, little more than a year ago, when I thought of protest, I was thinking specifically about the Black Lives Matter movement. Now, Donald Trump is president, the attorney general was deemed too racist to be approved as a federal judge in the mid-1980s by both sides of the congressional aisle, and, while protest still needs to be focused on law enforcement, itā€™s now more frequently discussed in terms of resistance to the machinations of the current administration as a whole. Protest, essentially, is our means of responding to the entire federal government.Ā 

But can marching in the street really carry the political load that people are asking it to bear? To explore the effectiveness of protest as resistance, I reached out, once again, to Micah White, PhD, author of Ā The End of Protest: A New Playbook for RevolutionĀ published in 2016 by Knopf Canada. He spoke with me from his home in rural Oregon.

* * *

JUSTIN CAMPBELL: I want to start with a two-part question based on your recent piece in the Guardian entitled ā€œWithout a path from protest to power, the Womenā€™s March will end up like Occupy.ā€ There, you worry that the Womenā€™s March might be ā€œdestined to be an ineffective, feel-good spectacle adorned with pink pussy hats.ā€ Women were marching, you write, based on ā€œa false theory of how the people can assert sovereign power over their elected president.ā€ In your mind, what is sovereign power exactly, and if peaceful protest isnā€™t how we exert this kind of power, how do we exert it effectively?

MICAH WHITE: The issue of sovereignty is the most important question that activists need to be thinking about right now. And to have that conversation, we have to of go back and trace where the idea of sovereignty comes from. When you go back, you find that the notion of sovereignty that American activism is using, which happens to be the same notion that most democracies use as well, actually, are ideas that were inherited from the work of Rousseau, the 18th-century Swiss-born French philosopher. Rousseau argued that the sovereign wasnā€™t the king; rather, the sovereign for Rousseau was this kind of mystical force that emerges when large numbers of a population that are representative of that city or state get together and then decide on things together. When they exert their general will together, thatā€™s how you manifest sovereignty.

His whole theory was that governments are just when the people making the decisions are both numerous and representative of the population. Whatā€™s happened is that, over time, weā€™ve had a collapse of the kind of sovereignty Rousseau wrote about, such that now, sovereignty has become synonymous with the sovereign, with the president, with the king, and sovereignty has been concentrated into the hands of one single, absolute individual, like we saw with 20th-century dictators. Itā€™s happened again now with Donald Trump and Putin and President of the Philippines Rodrigo Duterte, who kills drug users. Thatā€™s the crisis that weā€™re in; the concept of sovereignty that initially activated contemporary activism is dead! Itā€™s gone. It doesnā€™t exist anymore. There are no large-scale assemblies of the people that can exert power over governments.

So essentially youā€™re saying that there is no way to get the government to do what you want them to do?

Yes, thatā€™s correct.

What about the protests at the airports after the immigration executive order? Some would say they did make the government to change its course.

Implicit here is the deeper question of how do we, as activists, know when our protests are effective in creating change. Like the old saying: ā€œEven a broken clock is right twice a dayā€ ā€” it could be possible that our protests are entirely ineffective and that we are ascribing a causal connection between our actions and change when there isnā€™t one.

In this particular case, Iā€™d ask: How do we know that protests at airports influenced the judicial branchā€™s decision on Trumpā€™s immigration executive order? Do activists have any evidence for this claim? Or is it just a story that makes us feel better: we did a rain dance, it drizzled, and we are happy to think we caused the rain. But maybe it was the lawyers and not the protesters who temporarily blocked the immigration order? Or, to be even more specific: Perhaps the form of protest used by lawyers was effective while the form of protest used by the people at airports was not.

There is another layer to this question that I find very interesting. Notice how, from a political theory perspective, activists have been unable to use protest to sway the executive and legislative branches of government ā€” the two branches that are supposed to be influence-able by protest ā€” and so now we find activists claiming that they are influencing the judicial branch ā€” the branch of government that is supposed to be above influence and concerned only with the law. This claim immediately makes me skeptical. Why should I believe that judges are more influenced by protest than the president? Isnā€™t it more likely that they were influenced by constitutional legal arguments and the protesters just happen to be on the right side of the Constitution?

Finally, Iā€™d like to say that there is a pernicious paradigm of protest that says our street protests are simply designed to provide proof of public opinion. Their goal is not to take power and govern; their goal is to influence the decision-makers. One of the benefits of this paradigm is that it transforms repeated failure into victory. From the perspective that protest is supposed to get the people into power and govern, activists are obviously failing. But, from the perspective that protest is just designed to influence the people in power then activists are often able to convince themselves theyā€™re winning.

But if you want to know who is really winning, just ask yourself: Who is the president?

James Baldwin in a television interview in the mid-1960s has the following to say about violence: ā€œWe, [Americans], are produced by a civilization which has always glorified violence, unless the Negro had the gun. This country is only concerned about non-violence if it seems that Iā€™m going to get violent. Itā€™s not worried about non-violence if itā€™s some Alabama sheriff.ā€ In our last interview and you said violence is hard to talk about, but in your Guardian piece, the women storm the armory at the beginning of the French Revolution, and they come out armed, go to the palace, and are able to get in. How much does being armed play in their success, in your opinion? Is this a principle of revolution, or is the fact that they were armed specific to the context of that revolution?

The women during the French Revolution marched on Versailles, brought out the king and the queen and his entourage and his court, and they marched them back to Paris under a threat of violence, and then within a few years the king was killed. Thatā€™s the revolutionary history of the Left. The Left went out, physically captured the sovereign, killed the sovereign, and instituted a new government. That was what a revolution was, literally.

That being said, they were dealing with hereditary political power, where the ultimate sovereign has to be someone in blood lineage. Therefore it makes perfect sense that they would have to kill a specific individual in order to achieve revolution. Today, the person who is given sovereign power is actually just the person whoā€™s gone through some sort of magical ritual that we call ā€œelections.ā€ We know that those elections can be bought, can be hacked by a foreign power, and still, weā€™ll accept them as legitimate. All the leaks coming out basically show that Russia owns Trump, and that the government had this information during the election, but didnā€™t act on it, because they wanted to protect the transfer of power and protect the notion of elections as a powerful, magical ritual.

I guess what Iā€™m saying is that I see violence and elections as two different paths, and I leave it up to activists themselves to choose. I personally think elections are more viable and more realistic; if we look at violence, then weā€™re forced to look at groups like ISIS. ISIS has gained sovereignty in their territories, but at what cost? Ultimately, I think the two paths might collapse into one path, and thatā€™s the danger that we face right now. I think weā€™re in a very dangerous kind of, pre-civil war moment in America, actually.

In our last interview, you were prophetic in identifying the rift in the country between the coasts and the center of the country. Is your view of another civil war in that same kind of prophetic spirit?

Look, itā€™s very clear whatā€™s happening, and I donā€™t like to tell the future, but hereā€™s what Iā€™m going to say. I think that what Americans are about to experience is the Arab Spring.

When we brought Occupy Wall Street to this country, we specifically, at that time, linked it to the spirit of the Arab Spring. That mood came here in 2011, and it led to the first stage, which was a kind of mass, social movement in the streets. We didnā€™t achieve what they achieved in the Egyptian Arab Spring; there, they toppled their dictator, and put a new person into power. We didnā€™t achieve that with Obama, but now it has been achieved, in a way, through Donald Trump, who I would say is our Mohamed Morsi.

Then letā€™s look at the second half of the Arab Spring. I was just in Egypt, meeting with some Egyptian activists, and we talked about what happened in the second half of the Arab Spring there. Basically Morsi got into power because the secular youth didnā€™t put forward a viable candidate to govern the country when they toppled Mubarak. Only the Muslim Brotherhood did that, so the Muslim Brotherhood got into power. And then, all of a sudden, things start going wrong, and the mood shifts against Morsi, and the intelligence community and the military orchestrate a second revolution, and a lot of the secular youth in their country, jump on it. They say, ā€œYeah, we need to get rid of Morsi. Heā€™s killing people in the streets. The economy is terrible. Heā€™s the Muslim Brotherhood. Weā€™re secularists. Get him out of here!ā€

Well, if we go through impeachment in the traditional sense the next leader would be Mike Pence.

But thatā€™s not happening, because the whole administration would be caught up in the scenario that Iā€™m describing.

Fair enough.

So, yes one scenario is that this is just going to be some sort of Watergate, Nixon-type thing. President Trump steps down, and everything goes just fine. I donā€™t think this will happen, though. I think much more deep state machinations are at work. Letā€™s just pray that itā€™s more like a gentle handover of power to Mike Pence, and not the alternative, because ā€” and this is really controversial ā€” but when I look in my heart, right now, and I ask myself, ā€œWould I rather support the Russian puppet, or a military coup?ā€ Iā€™m not so sure that I want to support a military coup. If I were in Eygpt during the Arab Spring, Iā€™m not so sure I would have been against Morsi. I think that Peopleā€™s Democracy might lie on the other side of Donald Trump. I think that the Peopleā€™s Democracy in Egypt could have been on the other side of Morsi. When you go the military coup route, you canā€™t get back to that other side.

You lose that window.Ā 

Totally. You lose that window of opportunity. Right now, in the United States, we have a window of opportunity, which is, we could elect an equally radical, leftist candidate into power in four years. We could do that! Donald Trump showed us that we could!

Some people on the left may hear what you just said as being overly apocalyptic. Theyā€™re the ones who would tell you that, ā€œLook, we had Nixon. Nixon was just as bad and we survived him. Why is everyone getting so worked up?ā€ Then you have the other side of the left, which is currently saying, ā€œNo, the Republicans are burning down the house, while the Democrats are still inside playing Monopoly, hoping to win the board game.ā€ What do you think about this image?

That metaphor is perfect. Look, democracy as we knew it, is over. This is because the United States became very good at creating what I would call ā€œcolor revolutionsā€ abroad. We deployed these very effectively against Communist regimes in multiple countries. I would argue that those color revolutions have come home to roost. Russia has learned the art of the color revolution. Imagine that! Iā€™ve written about how they have been studying these revolutions, that they had a gathering of military leaders a couple years ago, around how to build a color revolution, how to counter color revolutions, and so now theyā€™ve created a color revolution in the United States. They have created a color revolution in our country. Our country has been taken over by a clique of puppets, who, probably all have some sort of really terrible blackmail material on them. Letā€™s be real, I think we all know Donald Trump is some sort of sexual pervert. Thereā€™s something really gross in that file of theirs about him.

I guess what Iā€™m trying to say is that I think people who try to pretend like everythingā€™s going to swing back to the progressive establishment, and that somehow Elizabeth Warrenā€™s going to become the next president, or that Bernie Sanders is somehow going to rise from the ash, arenā€™t serious. Their kind of thinking is the kind of thinking that didnā€™t allow the Egyptian activists to build a credible alternative to Morsi and why Egypt has a military dictatorship right now.

One of the things youā€™ve said in your Guardian article is that ā€œin America, there is no pro-democracy anti-establishment party,ā€ and then you mention that the Pirate Party in Sweden and Italyā€™s Five Star Movement as examples for where the Left could go. Those countries are both multi-party systems, though. Does a third party ever have a chance to break into the mainstream, or does a movement have take over a party, like the Tea Party did back in 2009, 2010.

There are two different options, and I think people have to realize that Trump just did what Iā€™m saying needs to happen for the Left. Whenever someone tries to tell me that a revolutionary government is not possible, Iā€™m like, ā€œWho is our president right now? A white supremacist is our president right now, with Russian ties.ā€ Like, seriously? Itā€™s time to just stop closing our eyes to the fact that we can obviously figure this one out. If we wanted to create an exact analogue to Trump, then one option could be to create some sort of social movement, that is maybe backed by China, for example. China being a counterweight to Russia. China provides the same resources that Russia provided to Donald Trump, to this movement. This movement uses those resources to get into power. Thatā€™s one option. Do I think itā€™s the preferable one? No. I think a more preferable one would be an actually grassroots American social movement Ć  la Occupy Wall Street meets Black Lives Matter and the Womenā€™s March, all rolled into one glorious Peopleā€™s Democracy.

Thus we have two options: we can either do what Donald Trump did, which is enter into the Democratic Party, seize control of it from the top, or we can build a third party that is on the ballot of 50 states. I donā€™t really care which one we choose. Letā€™s split into two groups and do both. I personally think we should start a third party. I think that that is probably the cleanest and most exciting and most viable way to move forward. But, you know, if someone thinks that Iā€™m wrong, like the ā€œOur Revolution, Bernie Sandersā€ people, fine. Please show me that Iā€™m wrong. Regardless, letā€™s be orienting in the direction of action, otherwise we are all totally screwed.

We talked about Simon Critchley a lot during our last talk, and I actually returned to his work again, recently, in light of the election. In his bookĀ Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance, he talks about the fact that the Right has a very strong sense of political motivation, thatā€™s almost like a spiritual energy, that the Left canā€™t seem to generate. Where does the secular Left find this kind of unifying spiritual energy? We talked last time about what you call the collective epiphany, but what are some strategies for generating these collective epiphanies around multiple causes? We saw this kind of collective epiphany energy at those Tea Party rallies in 2009 and 2010 that lead them to back candidates who took seats in the House and the Senate in the midterm elections. How do we generate that?

Well, I think that whatā€™s at the bottom of whatā€™s happened here, is that the Left has given up on the possibility and desirability of revolution. This is because they were so discouraged by the experience of the 20th-century revolutions. Up until the 20th century, the Left was motivated by, basically, a religious idea that many people have been oppressed, forever, but [gasp] lo and behold, capitalism has created a situation where the oppressed have some sort of great power.

Collectively.

Right. If only the proletariat were to grab control of their machines, that only they know how to operate, then they would instantly have greater power than the people who own the machines. What Iā€™m saying is, when they created this story, they even said that it was inevitable, like Christians did. ā€œWeā€™re all going to go to heaven,ā€ says the Christian, ā€œif we do certain behaviors,ā€ and the Communists said, ā€œWeā€™re all going to gain some sort of power on earth, if we do certain behaviors.ā€

The Left gave up on that vision, which means that now, we donā€™t have a story line. Everyone calls themselves ā€œprogressives,ā€ but we donā€™t have any story of what weā€™re progressing toward. We donā€™t have any vision of real revolution that puts The People into power. The Right, on the other hand, does have this story, this vision. They have stories about the decline of civilization, the decline of Western civilization, reviving this Western civilization. Even Hitler would talk about creating a thousand-year Reich. The powerful vision that motivated Nazis was the idea of creating a thousand-year government. Who on the left talks about that kind of stuff?

The hubris embedded in that kind of vision scares the shit out of me. It sounds like Icarus flying straight into the eye of the sun.

I know itā€™s scary, but thatā€™s what Iā€™m saying. While this kind of vision scares the Left, we have to ask ourselves: Why does it scare us? It doesnā€™t scare me! Itā€™s beautiful. That being said, I do think that either we figure this out, or we will enter into a rehash of World War II. We know what happened. Iā€™m not the only person who feels like we are entering into a prewar period, okay? Iā€™ve talked to other activists and they feel the same way. People before World War II felt this same way. They were right. We could also be right. What happened during World War II? Millions of people were sent to death camps. I donā€™t want to take it to that level, but Iā€™m just saying, that itā€™s possible that our fears are real. If thatā€™s true, then we have to have a revolution.

One of the things Critchley also pointed out in 2008, is that ā€œ[t]hereā€™s an increasing sense amongst, especially people on the left,ā€ that ā€œelectoral politics is irrelevant to the lives of citizens,ā€ leading to what he calls ā€œpassive nihilism.ā€ This is essentially the belief, consciously or subconsciously, that Iā€™m just my own island, Iā€™m just going to go to my mindfulness class, go to my meditation, and I can just kind of not do anything and that the arc of the universe bends toward justice. Weā€™ll eventually get there. Is this kind of passivity how we arrived at our currently political moment?

I think that is definitely part of it. I just got a message on Facebook that said, ā€œLook, Micah, Iā€™ve been listening to your stuff. Donā€™t you think electoral politics is always going to pull us into the system, and itā€™ll never really work?ā€ and I said to this person, ā€œWhy are we concerned about Donald Trump, then? If electoral politics always results in lame weakness that doesnā€™t create revolutionary change, why are we so concerned about Donald Trump?ā€ Oh wait, we actually donā€™t believe what this person said about electoral politics in our hearts; we just use that as a justification to keep ourselves from doing what scares us. Obviously, itā€™s terrifying to have Donald Trump be president of the United States, because we realize that comes with immense power. If we, as a social movement, were president of the United States, we would also have immense power. We would have, for example, nuclear weapons. We would have a military. We would have billions and trillions of dollars. Be realistic, people. Look at the resources of the US government, and then ask yourself, what if a social movement had those resources? Seriously, itā€™s time to just stop with this whole infantile rejection of electoral politics. Itā€™s like ā€” itā€™s a joke. Electoral politics comes with challenges. We have to solve those challenges, instead of avoiding them.

How do you make the case for that when those things ā€” nuclear weapons, the military ā€” are what some on the left feel like they are fighting against in the first place? Itā€™s almost as if some are fighting without expecting to ever get into power.

I think thatā€™s absolutely right. I think this ties into what I call the worship of youth. Iā€™ve been active since I was 13, and I get it; but now looking back, at 34 years old, 21 years of activism, I realize that we do this thing which is really self-destructive, which is that we celebrate the people who are protesting for the very first time, the people who are 19, 20 in the streets. We take these beautiful pictures of them, and then we use that as a justification to not to do that deeper thing, which is to ask, ā€œWhoā€™s going to govern?ā€ Most presidents of the United States are 50, 60, 70 years old? Who among us is going to govern? Is it going to be a 19-year-old? No, itā€™s not going to be a 19-year-old, letā€™s just be real. I remember what I was like when I was 19. Did I have any idea of reality? No. I didnā€™t have any idea. They make good people on the streets, itā€™s great. Please, youth, keep protesting. But please, letā€™s be realistic, too.

I think the reality is that the world is messy and dirty, and thereā€™s this Sufi, spiritual reading that talks about how youā€™re not supposed to just shut yourself up in the Cave. Youā€™re not supposed to just flee from the sin of reality; youā€™re supposed to immerse yourself in the sins of reality, and maintain your course. The most powerful and positive political figure is someone who has access to the nuclear codes, and doesnā€™t use them. We need to grab control of the state in order to change how the state functions, and we need to grab control of the resources of the state in order to put them to good use. Thatā€™s the next step. But itā€™s quite possible that we will be stuck here forever. Letā€™s be real, the Germans had a Communist revolution in 1919, and no one even talks about it; it failed, a Spartacus uprising. And then right after that there was Fascism. Destiny is not always on our side.

The activist DeRay McKesson was on Pod Save America, and he said that the protests that he has experienced through Black Lives Matter taught him that, ā€œprotest is about telling the truth in public.ā€ Is ā€œtelling the truth in publicā€ what youth are doing in the street? Is protest then useful as a part of this larger mechanism of revolution?

Look. DeRayā€™s great, but heā€™s not a theorist of activism. Hereā€™s what I would compare what he said to: We had an example of this in ancient Greece; we had Diogenes the Cynic. Diogenes the Cynic was a man who lived in a barrel. He had no property, he had no items, he wore a sack. He was famous though, because he would stand on the streets of Athens and he would scream the truth at people. ā€œOh, you rich people, the way youā€™re living is disturbing. You donā€™t need possessions. Look,ā€ one of his famous examples is he tells people, ā€œI donā€™t need a cup to drink water. I have my two hands.ā€ Itā€™s beautiful, itā€™s lovely, itā€™s wonderful, but Diogenes the Cynic didnā€™t have political power.

I love it. Itā€™s great, and we need that, but thatā€™s not what protest is. Thatā€™s not what activism is; thatā€™s something else. What DeRay is talking about is like living a beautiful spiritual life. Heā€™s talking about performance, doing social marketing, but at the end of the day, what heā€™s talking about is not protest. Protest is literally behaviors designed to create social change, specifically, I would say, through a revolution, which means a change in legal regime. Telling the truth and these kind of things, are great, theyā€™re wonderful, but people who say that that is what protest is, are really just misleading us, and theyā€™re pushing us to forget the fact that, letā€™s be real: Who would have been the DeRay or the Micah White during the French revolutions? Who would have been the people calling for the death of the king? Come on.

I get it though; some of these Black Lives Matter activists got a lot of fellowships, and it got really cushy up there. Itā€™s easy to start thinking about protest like that, but itā€™s not the reality. Itā€™s not the reality.

One of the issues thatā€™s been raised to you, I know, a million times about Black Lives Matter and Occupy Wall Street, is this idea that theyā€™re leaderless movements. This is levied as a critique against their effectiveness. Is there some way, in the internet age, of gaining group consensus in a way that we can move forward without a leader?

Again, the world I think is dividing into basically, two positions. Theyā€™re both populist. One position is a kind of authoritarian populism that says, ā€œWe need a strong, charismatic, single individual to make decisions for us,ā€ and thatā€™s Donald Trump, thatā€™s Putin. But thereā€™s another vision of populism, which is a kind of horizontal, or democratic populism, or maybe you would even call it a leaderless populism, which is that the people themselves are going to make the decisions that benefit them. Thereā€™s a difference.

Right now, though, if you were to ask which one actually works, sadly, authoritarian populism does, and the other doesnā€™t. Thatā€™s just where weā€™re at. Imagine a real social movement we have, like Black Lives Matter or Occupy Wall Street, trying to make a complex decision together about how we should govern the United States, or what kind of health insurance we should have. Literally, itā€™s not going anywhere, because we lack those mechanisms.

I do think that we will see that as long as we understand that thatā€™s a problem, and not run away from it, we could solve it. I think we could solve it. I think the European movements, especially the Five Star Movement in Italy, have taken steps toward solving that, and that the Five Star Movement in Italy does make complex decisions together, about the direction of the movement and the legislation they should be proposing, and this kind of stuff. I remain optimistic, and I also think that this form of organization is superior in the long run, and so itā€™s just a matter of figuring out, ā€œHow do we do it?ā€ That, again, is a challenge for activists to figure out ā€” people like DeRay and others should be figuring that out. Not speaking truth on the streets. They should be asking, ā€œHow do we govern, as a social movement?ā€ Thatā€™s what we should be trying to figure out right now.

So this next question is obviously me baiting you and you donā€™t have to answer it if you donā€™t want to. Who do you see building this kind of movement? Can anybody participate? Or do you need to be educated in certain ways?

Do you mean, who would take part in this kind of movement?

Yes, or even just, if thereā€™s not going to be a charismatic leader, who leads? Who instigates?

We know, going back to Rousseau, that if weā€™re going to revive sovereignty ā€” thatā€™s what weā€™re trying to do, revive sovereignty, bring it back from the dead ā€” if weā€™re going to try to revive sovereignty, the group that ultimately makes decisions about our community and our city has to be both numerous ā€” it has to have lots of people involved ā€” and representatively diverse. You canā€™t just have one group or another in charge. Over the years, Iā€™ve been talking about Five Star Movement, and some people hate it. Why do they hate it? They absolutely hate it because the Five Star Movement has right-wing elements to it, but also has left-wing elements to it, and they hate that. The Left say to me, ā€œNo, you should only talk about Podemos, because Podemos is fully on the left.ā€ Meanwhile, Five Star Movement is doing way better than Podemos.

What Iā€™m saying is, it has to be both numerous, representative, and diverse. Then I think, though, that if you want to talk about specifically who we should be learning from, right now in the United States, Iā€™m going to tell you who I think we should be learning from. Everyone should be talking to Dr. Lenora Fulani. Who is Dr. Lenora Fulani? I just discovered her myself. In 1988, Dr. Lenora Fulani ran for president. Sheā€™s an African-American woman and she ran for president in 1988. She was on every state ballot, 50 state ballots. The Green Party in 2016 did not get on every state ballot. What Iā€™m saying is that she knows itā€™s possible. Why do I have to wait until 2017 to learn about someone who did this in 1988? Everyoneā€™s telling me itā€™s impossible but hereā€™s a black woman in 1988 who did this. We all pretend like Hillary Clinton was the first, but hereā€™s a black woman who did this. Sheā€™s still alive, people. She should be in every single interview right now. I think what Iā€™m saying, is, there are people out there who we can learn from, but again, notice she didnā€™t just stay on the left. She worked with Left and Right, and Lefts hated her for that. Again, thereā€™re these people whoā€™ve been ostracized, but who they hold wisdom, and we need to start tapping into it.

Thatā€™s interesting. Would you call hers a centrist position?

I wouldnā€™t call it centrist, because I think that what you do is, you work with the extreme Left and the extreme Right, and it doesnā€™t pull you toward the center. It ā€” I donā€™t know if we have a word for it ā€” itā€™s like the backside.

Like a line thatā€™s pulled into circle by bending the ends until they meet?

Totally. I would call it an alliance, a strategic alliance. I think that thatā€™s what we need ā€” a new form of populism, to counter Donald Trump, and unless we have that, then the progressive establishment will cheer a military government. Thatā€™s what I think. I think all protest at this point that isnā€™t backed by a political movement that can take power is implicitly an argument in favor of a military coup. Thatā€™s how I feel.

Because a military coup is what will end up happening eventually.

Literally. Trump was elected president. What if he was a radical communist, and we were seeing these articles coming out like this, accusing him of ā€œtreasonā€? What Iā€™m saying is, either the United States continues the tradition that whoever wins the election by any means, is the president, or we start a new tradition thatā€™s like, ā€œWell, maybe you won the election, but weā€™re going to overthrow you afterward.ā€

Doesnā€™t that sound like a dangerous thing for the Left then, as well? Couldnā€™t the Right do the same thing to the leaders of the Left?

Right now, the horrible thing to think about, is that Donald Trump most likely won the presidency with the support of a foreign government. Does that mean that the Left would have to have support of a foreign government in order to win the election? Like I said earlier, that would be China, and I think that once you start going down that path, then it does become very alarming. In essence, I think itā€™s troubling, on all sides.

So thereā€™s been this kind of meme floating around that we should bombard our representatives with letters and notes and calls. Is this just saying that ā€œWe may not be able to have this revolution now, but in the meantime, we can annoy the crap out of the people making decisionsā€? Do you think that is a viable short-term solution? Or is it just cathartic, a way to release some steam?

I love the activist community, for this reason. On the one hand, itā€™s really good. Weā€™re at a period right now with large-scale, creative explosion and innovation; all kinds of new tactics. Whatā€™s really funny, though, about the activist scene, is theyā€™ll get these ideas, and then all of a sudden, everyone has to do it.

A few weeks ago, I got a letter in the mail, and it had no return address. It said: ā€œDonā€™t tell anyone. Donā€™t put this letter online, this is an off-line guerrilla campaign.ā€ The guerrilla campaign was to send letters to Donald Trump saying basically, ā€œYou donā€™t represent us,ā€ and the goal was to just flood him with postcards. Flood him with postcards! And then, lo and behold, a couple weeks later, the Womenā€™s March happens, and what does the Womenā€™s March say? They say, ā€œNow that youā€™ve marched, send postcards!ā€ Itā€™s like, all of a sudden, the activist world gets obsessed with certain tactics, like postcards. And to be honest, Iā€™m like, ā€œPeople, can we please just stop it? No, not postcards.ā€ Itā€™s dangerous, I keep saying this, but people donā€™t listen! It is dangerous for us to keep taking legitimate revolutionary energy, and channeling it into behaviors that people know will not breed social change. Donald Trump is not reading their postcards. Thereā€™s some poor, minimum-wage worker in the White House who takes your postcards, and throws them in the trash. Thatā€™s whatā€™s happening. He throws them in the trash. His life sucks because of your postcards. Thatā€™s it.

You feel maybe better in the moment, but, ultimately, youā€™re not affecting anything.

Totally. And I donā€™t know, I feel like telling people to send postcards is dangerous, because there were a certain percentage of people, like for example in the Womenā€™s March, who went home and heard that the next action was going to be, ā€œsend postcards,ā€ and a certain percentage of those people may turn to themselves and say, ā€œYou know what? Thatā€™s not going to do anything. I better go turn toward violence.ā€ Thatā€™s the danger here, you see what Iā€™m saying? If we alienate people from the possibility that positive protest that can actually achieve regime change in the United States, then weā€™re going to have a much darker scenario. We really need to stop asking people to do things that will not create a change that we want.

What would you like to see the Left do, in say the next six months to a year, and how would you measure progress or success?

We know where we need to go, which is that we need to figure out how to build a social movement that can win elections, and govern, and make complex decisions together. We know thatā€™s where we need to go, so what we need to be doing in the next six to eight months, is, even though, let me see ā€¦ What are we at, February? No one wants to talk about this, but Iā€™m going to tell people the truth: there is an election this year. Thereā€™s an off-year election in multiple communities, and we have an opportunity to test out our ability to build a social movement to win elections in this year. We donā€™t have to wait two years. Itā€™s happening this year, 2017. Again, why donā€™t we start a discussion among activists, and identify those communities? The great thing is that thereā€™s not that many, I think itā€™s a dozen or so, but to identify where those communities are, what positions will be up for grabs, and then figure out how to use social protest to win, by any means necessary. Maybe we need the support of China. Maybe we need to hack their computers. Maybe we need to relocate there, and become voters. Whatever! Letā€™s all experiment on that.

Letā€™s talk about that, letā€™s talk about these elections in 2017, and how weā€™re going to win them. And not just win them, but govern afterward, and then use that as a stepping stone to 2018. I think until weā€™re willing to have that conversation, then Iā€™m sorry, but weā€™re not going to see the change we want. And to be clear Iā€™m not talking about electing progressives; Iā€™m talking about electing a social movement. Thatā€™s a different thing, and thatā€™s really important.

By progressive you mean a Democratic Party progressive, right?

Electing Democratic progressives as a goal still assumes that whatā€™s holding us back is that we donā€™t have good people in positions of power. That is not true. Itā€™s not that we donā€™t have good people in positions of power, itā€™s that we donā€™t have The People, we donā€™t have a social movement in power. We need to get away from thinking about finding singular individuals who are going to make decisions we agree with, and start figuring out, ā€œHow do we get individuals who are going to make decisions that Iā€™ve decided on? That weā€™ve decided on, together?ā€ Thatā€™s the difference.

You said nobody wants to hear this. What did you mean by that?

Because, look. I get it. I know Iā€™m saying all this stuff, and youā€™re like, ā€œWhat does he know?ā€ Well, I started as an activist as a teen. Iā€™ve been arrested for blocking traffic to try to protest the war. Iā€™ve been to Palestine. Iā€™ve done direct action in Palestine, nonviolent direct action, I put my body on the line. Iā€™ve done all forms of activism, every form. I created a social movement. Iā€™ve done all of it. What Iā€™m saying though, is that thereā€™s one area, this one big area that I never experimented with until recently, an area that activists refuse to experiment with, which is, gaining power through elections. Think about this. We act as if itā€™s so difficult to organize something like the Womenā€™s March, and yet weā€™re amazing at it. We can create an event with four million marchers. It only took like three months to organize. We can do that, yet we canā€™t even win an election. It blows my mind. Itā€™s just something that no one wants to talk about. Itā€™s like being a savant in mathematics and not knowing how to eat with a fork.

Right now, what frustrates you the most? Sometimes I see you as a John the Baptist crying out in the wilderness. You even said yourself that it doesnā€™t seem like the Left is listening or ready for what youā€™re saying. What are some of your frustrations currently, with all of this?

Well, John the Baptist, I believe, baptized Jesus Christ.

He did, yes. Eventually, yes.

Well, if I get to be John the Baptist, who is somehow going to bump into some activist down the road, and say something to this activist, and then they go and create the thing that Iā€™ve been dreaming of, then Iā€™m quite happy. That would be the best possible scenario. What I think that Iā€™m trying to get across to people is that we as activists need to always ask ourselves, ā€œWhy are we doing these specific behaviors?ā€ We need to understand that the specific behaviors that weā€™re choosing to do, theyā€™re arbitrary. They are historically defined, and they are arbitrary. If we had been activists during the American Revolution, we would be going and tarring and feathering people. If we had been activists during the Cultural Revolution, we would be painting banners with calligraphy and marching down the streets, or whatever. Every generation protests in their own culturally dependent way, so letā€™s stop being obsessed with the specific, historically defined and culturally defined way that we protest right now, and letā€™s think strategically and say to ourselves, ā€œOkay, we can get large numbers of people to do any behavior that we want. We can get them to march, we can get them to occupy, we can get them to riot, we can get them to jump up and down, we can get them to meditate. We can get them to do anything, so what should we get them to do?ā€

I think what gets me frustrated is basically that weā€™ve allowed our imaginations to atrophy, and weā€™ve allowed ourselves to give up on the hope of revolution. I just think, what if we are in a moment before World War III? If this were 1933, what should people have done? They should have taken it a little more seriously! People could die. There could be a war. Russia just moved their missiles, violating a treaty with the United States, to test Donald Trump. Donald Trump hasnā€™t even said anything. Is Donald Trump walking us into a war that weā€™re going to lose?

On Twitter, no less.

Right. Look. I donā€™t want to be alarmist, but at the same time I do want to say that the good thing about Donald Trump is that heā€™s firmly moved us into world historic time. We should all be grateful to be alive right now. He has made America great again, because the greatest generation in America was the one that fought World War II. Thatā€™s what heā€™s really talking about, is that we are entering into a world historic moment of life and death.

The point here is that we do need to bring a little bit more realization of the historical severity of our situation, and a little bit more urgency, not urgency of like, ā€œLetā€™s rush into the streets,ā€ but urgency that says, ā€œWeā€™ve got to think really carefully right now. Weā€™d better start gathering our resources for a real resistance movement.ā€ Stop using the word ā€œresistanceā€ until youā€™re living in underground cells and eating bats. Come on. Until youā€™re hiding resistance leaders in your attic.

What youā€™re describing feels like Star Wars.

Exactly. Itā€™s ridiculous! All the language of revolution has been taken over by people who use it lightly and Iā€™m like, ā€œIā€™m sorry, itā€™s not a resistance yet, guys.ā€ I donā€™t know. I want to see it, though.

One of the things youā€™re saying, is that youā€™ve tried every form of activism except the mainstream one, electoral politics. Is this like when you get older and realize, okay, maybe I should have a savings account, or things like that?

I think also itā€™s temperament. I ran for mayor in my tiny town, and I lost, and now people are like, ā€œSee? Itā€™s proof. It didnā€™t work.ā€ I think thatā€™s like, okay, itā€™s the first time Iā€™d ever tried something like that, and I still got 20 percent of the vote. But I also think, itā€™s temperament. Most activists arenā€™t politicians. Iā€™m not a politician; so when I ran a campaign for mayor, I didnā€™t act like a politician, which alienated people, who felt like, ā€œI donā€™t understand why youā€™re doing these behaviors. A politician would never do that,ā€ and Iā€™m like, ā€œI know. Iā€™m an activist.ā€ A lot of it, I think is that people who are drawn to activism arenā€™t necessarily the same people who are drawn to politics. That being said, I do think that if activists could kind of swallow that bad taste they get by engaging in politics, we could be quite good at it. I think weā€™re amazing at getting lots of people to do behaviors. We should be celebrating ourselves more often for how good large numbers of people to do behaviors together. At the same time, we can bring that intelligence to a different game, and it could be quite beautiful.

In terms of strategizing, I wonder if keeping the false dichotomy of the Left and the Right makes sense anymore, in terms of peopleā€™s actual lives. The people who voted for Donald Trump who are low income, who want their jobs back, who want their idea of the Dream restored; did their lives change from the eighth of November to the ninth? If youā€™re fed up with the fact that maybe itā€™s not any better, then is that a place we can organize around, almost a kind of neo-Baconian rebellion type thing, across these supposed differences?

Yeah, I think thatā€™s the only solution. The 99 percent is not 100 percent Left or 100 percent Right. As I said, when I say these kind of things, I get so much pushback from the Left. They hate this. They absolutely hate the idea that we should work with people on the right. Letā€™s look at the origin of the terms ā€œLeftā€ and ā€œRight.ā€ Itā€™s just referring to where different parties sat during the French Revolution; it doesnā€™t mean exactly what weā€™re trying to say. I think thatā€™s why I like ā€œpopulistā€ instead, because populism points back to democracy. It points back to the idea that the people, many people, can have power.

I think right now the sad thing is that populismā€™s become like a dirty word. Everyoneā€™s rejecting populism. But I think thatā€™s precisely why Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton lost, is because they didnā€™t embrace populism. Populism is the future; but populismā€™s not going be a leftist or a rightist movement. Itā€™s more complicated than that. It has to do with giving power to the people and benefiting their lives concretely. Things are really dark right now for a lot of Americans. I live in rural Oregon, and I can see that. Iā€™m looking out my window right now at a house whose siding is all blown off; he doesnā€™t even have money to put proper siding on his own house. I saw him up there the other day, fixing his roof by himself. Thatā€™s real stuff.

And thereā€™s a sense in which his issues are not left or right. Theyā€™re human.

I remember right before Trump, I used to go to DC sometimes, and Iā€™d be like, ā€œGood God, look at all the construction thatā€™s happening here.ā€ Itā€™s like DC was a money cow. People in the liberal establishment were living it up under Obama, you know? So when I got home, I could totally get that resentment, because that kind of opulence is not the reality for the rest of Americans. The rest of Americans have rundown buildings, rundown houses, the shops are out of business, people can barely make enough to live. You go to DC and itā€™s like, ā€œWhereā€™s all this money coming from?ā€

Itā€™s like Versailles, in a way.

It is. I do think we need to get over this obsession with just being on the left, you know? I donā€™t appreciate that obsession anymore.

In closing, if people didnā€™t get anything else out of this interview, what would you want them to walk away with, whether they be on the left, or on the right, or in the middle, or in outer space? What would you want them to walk away with? What charge, what challenge?

My core message is this: all activism needs to be oriented around taking power and governing. Thatā€™s it. Itā€™s not enough to say weā€™re going to topple Donald Trump, or influence Donald Trump. If weā€™re not willing to develop an approach toward actually taking power and governing, then everything else that weā€™re doing is meaningless. Thatā€™s the challenge thatā€™s staring us in the face right now, and thatā€™s the challenge that we have to solve. If we donā€™t solve that challenge, if we keep avoiding that challenge, there could be some super dark stuff. Super, super dark stuff. Worse than Donald Trump. Donald Trumpā€™s probably more like Mussolini, and there could be another Hitler coming our way. Letā€™s put it that way.

A figure we donā€™t even know about yet.

Right. Everyone thought Mussolini was bad, and then Hitler showed up. And Mussolini, letā€™s look at how Mussolini ended his life, and last moments of his life and all that stuff. People can look into that. I think itā€™s time to start getting a little more historical, but the core idea is: Activism is oriented around taking power, and then governing.

* * *

Justin Campbell is an English professor and freelance writer living in Los Angeles. His work has been published in The Millions and the African-American Review.

Video: Crossroads for an Independent America

On Saturday, March 18, 2017, Independent Voting held its Ninth Biennial National Conference of Independents. “Crossroads for an Independent America” brought together over 350 independent activists from 36 states to engage the issue of empowerment forĀ independent voters and the creation of a new political culture. Video from past conferences is available here.

 

VIDEO SEGMENTS OF 2017 CONFERENCE

Segment 1Ā – Welcoming remarks and Live Focus Group “Who are Americaā€™s Independent Voters?” Ā moderated by: Ā Thom Reilly, Director, ASU Morrison Institute for Public Policy and Cathy Stewart, VP for National Development, Independent Voting. Also, commentary on the focus group offered by Doug Schoen, Pollster, political strategist and advisor, author. (Running time 54 mins.)

ā€‹Segment 2 – Presidentā€™s Address by Jacqueline Salit, President of Independent Voting. Follow up dialogue moderated by Harry Kresky, Esq and Jackie Salit with: Tiani Coleman, Founder, New Hampshire Independent Voters, Ā Michael Hardy, Executive Vice President and General Counsel to the National Action Network, Daniel Ortega, Jr., Board Member, Cesar Chavez Foundation and Rick Robol, Chair of Independent Ohio. Audience Q & A closes out this segment. (Running time 1:37 mins.)

Segment 3 – Keynote address by Lenora B. Fulani, 1988/1992 Independent presidential candidate and co-founder, Independent Voting, on the topic of Power, Poverty and Democracy. Ā (Running time: 20 mins.)

Segment 4 – Ā Conversations moderated by Jacqueline Salit on the topic of opening up the Presidential Debates, lessons learned from the Sanders campaign and the untold story of South Dakota’s attempt to pass top two open primaries. Participants include Chad Peace, President of IVC Media LLC, Charlotte Scot, Independents United for Progress, Malcolm Burn, Political activist, award winning music producer and John Opdycke, President of Open Primaries. Participants in the Unsung Heroes: The Story of South Dakotaā€™s Amendment V segment include: Nancy Hallenbeck, President of the League of Women Voters of Sioux Falls, SD; Adam Morfeld, State Senator (D-Lincoln), Executive Director and Founder of Nebraskans for Civic Reform; Jason Olson, Director of National Outreach, Open Primaries; Justin Otoski, US Army Veteran, Voter Outreach Coordinator, Yes on V Campaign; Chuck Parkinson, Former Reagan and Bush Appointee, Longtime Senior Staff; Tamara Pier, Former City Attorney of Rapid City, SD. Ā (Running time: 1:22 mins.)

 

Crossroads for an Independent America

Sponsored by

Independent Voting

#riseindependent / @indie_voting / independentvoting

ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€” 10:30 AM ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”

Registration

ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€” 11:30 AM ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”

Welcoming Remarks

Gwen Mandell, Director of National Outreach, Independent Voting

Omar H. Ali, Dean and Professor, Honors College, UNC-Greensboro,

Gwen Ballard, Coalition of Independent Voters in Colorado

Who are Americaā€™s Independent Voters? Live Focus Group

Moderators: Thom Reilly, Director, ASU Morrison Institute for Public Policy

Cathy Stewart, VP for National Development, Independent Voting

Participants: Dee Curlee (SC), Juli Dominguez (IN), Domonique Edwards (NC), Dave Ellis (OR),
Juliana Francisco (NY), Steve Hough (FL), Jeff Leader (KS), Larry Reinsch (IA), Gwen Samuel (CT) , PJ Steiner (UT)

 

Commentator: Dr. Doug Schoen, Pollster, political strategist and advisor, author

Presidentā€™s Address

Jacqueline Salit, President of Independent Voting

Conversations at the Crossroads #1

Moderators: Harry Kresky, General Counsel at Independent Voting

Jacqueline Salit, President, Independent Voting

Participants: Tiani Coleman, Founder, New Hampshire Independent Voters

Michael Hardy, Executive Vice President and General Counsel to the National Action Network

Daniel Ortega, Jr., Board Member, Cesar Chavez Foundation

Rick Robol, Chair of Independent Ohio

Audience Discussion

ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€” LUNCHā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”

2:00 – 2:45 Ā PM
(compliments of NYC Independence Clubs)

Power, Poverty and Democracy

Lenora B. Fulani, 1988/1992 Independent presidential candidate and co-founder, Independent Voting

Independents at the Social Media Crossroads

Jarell Corley, Member, Independent Voting

Kerry Malloy, Assistant to the Vice President, Independent Voting

Gwen Mandell, Director of National Outreach, Independent Voting

Conversations at the Crossroads #2

Moderator: Jacqueline Salit

Participants: Ā Chad Peace, President of IVC Media LLC

Charlotte Scot, Independents United for Progress

Malcolm Burn, Political activist, award winning music producer

John Opdycke, President, Open Primaries

Unsung Heroes: The Story of South Dakotaā€™s Amendment V

Moderator: John Opdycke

Participants: Ā Nancy Hallenbeck, President of the League of Women Voters of Sioux Falls, SD

Adam Morfeld, State Senator (D-Lincoln), Executive Director and Founder of Nebraskans for Civic Reform

Jason Olson, Director of National Outreach, Open Primaries

Justin Otoski, US Army Veteran, Voter Outreach Coordinator, Yes on V Campaign

Chuck Parkinson, Former Reagan and Bush Appointee, Longtime Senior Staff

Tamara Pier, Former City Attorney of Rapid City, SD

Audience Discussion

Wrap-Up

ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€” 5:00 PM ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”ā€”

Adjourn