In the
aftermath of the November 2016 elections, the term “identity
politics” has been thrown around repeatedly with many
progressives suggesting that the Electoral College defeat of Clinton
by Trump was the result of some sort of Democratic Party obsession
with that concept.
I am not
known as a defender of the Democratic Party, but in the post-November
summations the whining about identity politics has become both
misplaced and obnoxious. Various pundits, in suggesting that the
Democratic Party over emphasized so-called identity politics at the
expense of some sort of pure class politics (meaning a politics
focused exclusively on economic injustice) obscures the fact that
there has been an on-going struggle within the Democratic Party—let
alone the USA as a whole—to ensure it is broadly
representative. Does anyone have to be reminded that the Democratic
Party was the party of white supremacy? The party of the so-called
Solid South? A party that had a very uneasy set of alliances that
included those, like President Roosevelt and those like Senator Strom
Thurmond?
The fight to
make the Democratic Party a more representative institution was not a
fight around advertising but was directly connected to the demands of
historically excluded groups to be included, not as window dressing
but as central players. This entire history is being denied in the
name of upholding some sort of supposedly pure fight for economic
justice.
“Identity
politics,” as a term, is being used as a way of describing a
set of politics that challenges specific forms of oppression that
exist within capitalism; forms of oppression that go beyond the
boundaries of the economic. The use of the term “identity”
complicates matters because it is subjective, i.e., it assumes that
certain struggles are driven by people or forces that have a specific
distinctiveness that connects them with that issue. Among other
things this fails to take into account that various so-called
identity struggles inevitably bring in allies who are not from that
specific constituency.
What passes
for identity politics should actually be understood as social justice
struggles that aim for consistent democracy and become, as a result,
component parts of the larger class struggle. These are not battles
around one’s identity. This is not self-indulgent activity by
people who, for whatever reason, do not recognize the importance of
economics.
This is what
has made problematic several statements by Bernie Sanders both prior
to and following the November 8 election.
Shortly after
the election, in response to a woman who asked about becoming a
Latina senator, Sanders offered a complex answer. He acknowledged the
need for more women elected officials and elected officials of color.
But he said he wanted to make sure that they were focused on the
working class. He ended by suggesting the need to move away from
identity politics.
One can agree
with Senator Sanders that it is critical to move beyond any sorts of
politics that is simply about “faces” in high places.
And, when looking at the totality of the senator’s remarks,
there is important value. But because of the lack of a consensus
about the actual nature of so-called identity politics, Sanders'
proposal to move away from it is, at best, confusing. Identity
politics, at least the way that it has been used as a term since the
election, describes a politics that asserts the need for
representation of historically marginalized and oppressed
populations; and the representation of their issues. In that sense,
what we are discussing is social justice and not something that
should even be described as “identity politics.” It is
more a politics of inclusion and for democracy rather than a politics
of distinctiveness or uniqueness.
Capitalism is
founded on classes and class struggle. Class struggle takes place
over the basic question of the control of the means of production,
distribution and exchange and, more generally, the control over the
social surplus But if someone stops there one misses actually
existing capitalism. Capitalist states do not exist as some sort of
economic abstraction but are rooted in specific histories. Those
histories include multiple layers of oppression, some inherited from
previous social formations (and modes of production), and others
developed specifically within the context of emerging capitalism. In
both cases, however, these forms of oppression, e.g., patriarchy;
racism, have become central features of the manner in which actually
existing capitalism operates.
This
understanding is essential since it helps us break with a common
notion within the left and progressive movements to see matters of
racism and sexism/patriarchy/male supremacy, as the equivalent of
add-ons to an otherwise stable capitalist system. Metaphorically,
racism and patriarchy have become for many progressives add-ons to a
preexisting structure that can actually operate in the absence of
these forms of oppression.
Let’s
start with racism. Racism was not an add-on to U.S. capitalism. From
the English occupation of Ireland leading to the development of North
American capitalism in the 13 original colonies, racism emerged as a
form of both oppression and social control essential for the growth
and preservation of capitalism. To suggest that racism is unnecessary
for the operations of U.S. capitalism—a notion that should have
been dispelled on November 8, 2016 at the latest—is to suggest
that a person can survive in the absence of lungs. The absence of an
appendix, yes. The absence of a gall bladder, yes. The absence of
lungs, forget it.
When the
Movement for Black Lives emerged in the context of the struggle
against police brutality, this was not about identity or identity
politics. It was not as if African American youth awoke one morning
and decided that because of their blackness they needed to undertake
this struggle and that this struggle was, for the sake of argument,
more important than a struggle for jobs or around income inequality.
The Black Lives Matter movement undertook a struggle against white
supremacist/racist oppression and in favor of the notion of
consistent democracy. It challenges a basic foundation of the U.S.
capitalist system; a foundation that ensures that through the
preservation of a racist differential in treatment between so-called
whites and so-called people of color, the elite can guarantee that
they have a standing army of people—white people—who
believe that the system operates in their interests. The Movement for
Black Lives also energized other segments of the population that saw
in the battles around police lynchings and abuse, a democratic
struggle with which they must be in solidarity if they are at all
serious about transforming the U.S.
When Puerto
Ricans have risen up to challenge the austerity that is being imposed
on their island nation that is not identity politics. It represents a
set of politics that is against national oppression and colonialism.
It is a set of politics that challenges the relationship of Puerto
Rico to the United States. This is not a subjective judgment by
Puerto Ricans, but is a reflection of a reality that they face that
is resulting in the massive depopulation of the island in the face of
the current crisis. The fight over the future of Planned Parenthood
is not a struggle resting on the identity of women. It is a struggle
over patriarchy/male supremacy and democracy. It is a struggle over
the basic question of who control’s a woman’s body. The
fight around Planned Parenthood is part of a larger struggle that
certainly predates the emergence of capitalism, but it is a battle
around an oppression that has been incorporated into the manner in
which actually existing capitalism functions. This is a fight to
expand the bounds of democracy and the ability of people to govern
their own futures.
One can even
return to the example of the Latina who asked Senator Sanders about
becoming the first Latina senator. In a country that provoked a war
with Mexico in order to seize the northern third to half of the
country; that imposed Jim Crow-like conditions of racial segregation
on the absorbed population of Mexicanos and Native Americans; a
country that continues to present Latinos—unless they are from
Cuba—as an omnipresent threat to the future of the U.S., the
rise of a Latina senator has profound significance. Certainly someone
with right-wing politics would not be helpful. But in the context of
a gathering of Sanders supporters, while it is essential that the
political content of any candidate is emphasized, we do not need
Sanders offering a caveat about the dangers of so-called identity
politics, particularly if he is not going to clarify precisely what
he means in using that term.
There is an
unfortunate belief among many progressives that class politics is
about economics in a narrow sense. Thus, a demand against Wall Street
and its elite is considered class politics. A Chicano demand in the
Southwest for land redistribution or the protection of long-held
Chicano land rights is frequently described as identity politics, or
worse. As a result you have some progressives who seek some sort of
pure, race-neutral alleged class politics that supposedly will unite
the dispossessed against the elite and will not confuse them with
dirty matters such as race and gender. In the late 19th century this
approach was in evidence in the Populist movement. In the early 20th
century this was manifested in the Socialist Party. In more recent
times it has been characteristic of the work of many of those who
hail from the legacy of the iconic Saul Alinsky. And it was certainly
in evidence during much of Sanders' campaign for the presidency.
A progressive
or radical class politics—that is, a politics rooted among
workers—actually has more to do with who is on the side of the
oppressed. The U.S. has a significant history where white workers
have been more than willing to battle employers, but then would turn
against workers of color. An infamous case in point was that of the
International Seamen’s Union (late 1800s-mid1930s), led by
Andrew Furuseth, that was rhetorically radical but vehemently
anti-Asian. The fact that a politician, union or some other
individual or institution raises the clarion call of economic justice
does not, ipso facto, mean that they are embracing progressive class
politics. They may just as easily be engaged with right-wing populist
politics.
Class
politics is about power and an opposition to all forms of oppression.
In that sense genuine progressive class politics is the strongest
advocate for democracy and against inequality, marginalization and
oppression. It does not treat ostensibly non-economic forms of
oppression as somehow secondary. Nor does it dissect those other
forms of oppression in order to identify the pure economic essence in
order to glorify that.
Progressive
and radical class politics, then, is about building the sort of bloc
that can undertake social transformation. To the extent that there is
an "identity" it is an identity as the oppressed; the
people; the dispossessed. The specific oppressions, be they racial,
national, gender, religious, do not evaporate or become absorbed but
rather contribute to the emergence of a broader identity for the bloc
that seeks to change the world.
An analogy I
have often used is that based on the work of Tecumseh, the great
Shawnee leader from the early 19th century. Tecumseh concluded that
there was a moment underway in which the western spread of white
settlers could be stopped, or at least blunted. At the same time he
realized that this could not be done by any individual tribe or, for
that matter, by a loose alliance of tribes. What was necessary was
the construction of, in effect, a Native American nation-state that
could act in concert against the settlers. This did not mean that the
Shawnee or the Cherokee, for instance, would disappear, nor would
their cultures evaporate. But the construction of a bloc to defeat
the settlers would necessitate a different and overarching way for
the Native Americans to look at themselves and to look at the outside
world.
In this
sense, the challenge at the moment is not clarifying or reclaiming
identity politics as a term. The challenge is actually two-fold. The
first is to recognize that the struggles that much of the
mainstream—and many progressives—condescendingly or
innocently put under the banner of “identity politics”
are struggles for social justice. They are interconnected with
battles for economic justice but they are not somehow less important.
In order to understand U.S. capitalism, one must appreciate the
nature of these battles against multiple oppressive actions and the
manner in which they intersect or are interlinked, even with the
acknowledgment that the economy underlies any assessment of the
capitalist system as a whole. To borrow from the late French Marxist
Louis Althusser, the situation is over determined.
The
second challenge is to realize that in the current moment, the attack
on what is termed identity politics arises precisely from those who
wish to diminish the centrality of struggles for social justice It is
those who believe that there is some sort of race-neutral progressive
populism that can unite us all who fail to understand the profound
lessons of U.S. history. The struggle is not linear; it never has
been The struggles against economic injustice frequently overlap with
various struggles for social justice. If we want to win, a strategy
must be constructed that recognizes that the system is
multidimensional and cannot be challenged on one front alone.
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