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The Democrats: A Critical History [Paperback]

Lance Selfa
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1, 2008

"Worthy reading for anyone who is interested in social change."--MediaMouse.org

"The Democrats is at its best not just when analyzing Democratic foibles — and there are plenty — but when assessing how the party stifles dissent…. Lance Selfa has crafted a smart, readable history of the Democrats that reminds us of the party’s allegiance to capital."
—Eleanor J. Bader, The Indypendent

"If you've ever wondered where the democracy is in the Democratic Party and why US elections rarely seem to change anything, this book will explain the where and the why. Providing readers with the history of the Democrats from its genesis as the party of the slaveholders to the neoliberal DLC, author Selfa describes the Democrats' role in diverting Americans' desire for change."
—Ron Jacobs

Offering a broad historical perspective, Selfa shows how the Democratic Party has time and again betrayed the aspirations of ordinary people while pursuing an agenda favorable to Wall Street and U.S. imperial ambitions.

He examines the relationship between party leaders and social movements, from the civil rights struggle to the movement to end the Iraq war; reveals the unhappy marriage between U.S. labor and the “party of the people;” and assesses the mixed record of attempts to build a third party alternative.

Further, Selfa argues that the Democrats’ record of backing the rich and breaking promises to its voting base is not a recent departure from an otherwise laudable past, but results from its role as one of two parties serving the interests of the U.S. establishment.



Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for Lance Selfa The Democrats

“Lance Selfa has written one book that should be mandatory reading for everyone concerned with politics in the United States. The Democrats: A Critical History systematically debunks the notion that the Democratic Party is a progressive force, and that it can be pushed to the left by its voting base. Whether one agrees or disagrees with Selfa’s conclusion, he presents a case that cannot be ignored.”
—Robert W. McChesney, co-author, The Death and Life of American Journalism

“The Democratic Party, Lance Selfa demonstrates, is the graveyard of American social movements, its grassy knolls entombing the disappointed carcasses of Populism, Progressivism, Labor, and the Green movement. The Democrats should be required reading for anyone seeking to understand why Barack Obama turned out to be the undertaker of reform.”
—Roger D. Hodge, author, The Mendacity of Hope

“With a new, duly-deserved chapter on the Obama Era, Lance Selfa’s The Democrats reveals the many ways in which the establishment Democratic Party has not just dashed progressive hopes over centuries but served as a distraction from the desperately needed business of making real change in this country. Writing dismal history like this is dirty work, but somebody’s got to do it and Seifa’s straight talk actually lifts ones spirits.”
—Laura Flanders, host of The Laura Flanders Show

“At a time when our political discourse has reached its basest depths, and many are left scratching their heads as to why corporate America is stronger than ever while the rest of us reel in this recession, Lance Selfa’s timely book helps us understand clearly why the Democratic Party is its own worst enemy. With solid and meticulous research to back his claims, Selfa’s analysis is crucial to progressive understanding of the state of American politics.”
—Sonali Kolhatkar, host, Uprising Radio, KPFK

“Worthy reading for anyone who is interested in social change.”?—MediaMouse.org

“The Democrats is at its best not just when analyzing Democratic foibles — and there are plenty — but when assessing how the party stifles dissent…. Lance Selfa has crafted a smart, readable history of the Democrats that reminds us of the party’s allegiance to capital.”?—Eleanor J. Bader, The Indypendent
“If you’ve ever wondered where the democracy is in the Democratic Party and why US elections rarely seem to change anything, this book will explain the where and the why. Providing readers with the history of the Democrats from its genesis as the party of the slaveholders to the neoliberal DLC, author Selfa describes the Democrats’ role in diverting Americans’ desire for change.”?—Ron Jacobs, Counterpunch

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Lance Selfa is an editor of and contributor to International Socialist Review. He edited The Struggle for Palestine (Haymarket, 2002). He lives in Chicago.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 260 pages
  • Publisher: Haymarket Books (April 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1931859558
  • ISBN-13: 978-1931859554
  • Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.6 x 7.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,469,087 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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35 of 38 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Critical Reading October 17, 2008
By P. Binh
Format:Paperback
With less than a month to go before the election and Obama's inauguration a mere three months away, Lance Selfa's "The Democrats: A Critical History" is critical reading for anyone interested in real change we can believe in i.e. not the kind Obama will bring.

For the American working class movement and the organized left, the Democratic Party has been a key stumbling block since the Populist Movement shook the country back in the 1890s. The Democratic Party has managed, contained, controlled, co-opted, rolled back and eventually destroyed every social movement that has arisen since then.

Selfa begins the book by looking at Obama's ascension to the throne of the American Empire in the wake of 9/11, eight years of Bush, and the collapse of the Republican Party after three decades of political dominance. In the second chapter, he analyzes the class nature of the Democratic Party, and points out that the Democrats are unlike most other parties in the world in that individual candidates, rather than the party platform, dictate their policies. He argues convincingly that the Democratic Party is a capitalist party and cites as evidence where its politicians get money from, which think-tanks it takes advice from, who they staff campaigns with, its record on legislation, and its record on foreign policy. He devotes an entire chapter to explaining how and why the Democrats are just as imperialist as their counterparts across the aisle, and points out that all the major wars of the 20th century were launched by Democratic politicians who claimed to want peace while they prepared for war. The fact the party is viewed as being less pro-war than the Republicans is a feat that would impress Karl Rove, given that Democrats jumped into two world wars, used nuclear weapons, designed the Cold War, and started "small" wars in Korea and Vietnam.

Unlike the Republicans, the Democrats incorporate representatives of the oppressed and exploited (women, blacks, gays, unions) within the party as a subordinate component, giving them a meaningless "seat at the table." Doing so helps the Democrats maintain the fiction that they are the "party of the people," or that they're "friends of labor," unlike the big business-backed Republicans. The third chapter is dedicated to looking at the rise of the "New Democrats," i.e. Bill Clinton and the unapologetically pro-business GOP-lite Democratic Leadership Council that has controlled the party since the 1990s.

In the remaining chapters of the book, Selfa turns his attention from the nature of the party and its current trajectory to focusing on the Democratic Party's (abusive) relationship with social movements, unions, and the organized left. He starts with the Populist movement that united black and white sharecroppers in the rural West and South(!) against the growing power of the robber barons but made the fatal mistake of entering into an alliance with the Democrats. Next, he shows how the tremendous working-class rebellion in the 1930s that won Social Security and made the American Dream a reality for generations of workers was blocked from creating a European-style Labor Party, parties that single-payer universal health care systems in Europe and Canada that Michael Moore so envied in Sicko. Lastly, Selfa looks at the rise and fall of the civil rights, anti-war, women's rights, and gay liberation movements of the 60s and 70s.

In each case, the Democrats resisted these movements but eventually granted meaningful reforms because these movements became too powerful to crush. These movements ignored pleas by Democratic politicians to moderate their demands, to shut up and wait, and to stop organizing (Attorney General Robert Kennedy, the darling of liberals to this day, told civil rights organizers: "If you stop all this sitting-in s--- and concentrate on voter registration, I'll get you a tax-exemption.") At the same time, the Democrats worked hard to incorporate and co-opt movement leaders into the machinery of government, to transform community organizers into party/government bureaucrats sitting behind desks.

Sadly, in many cases, the strategy worked. Jesse Jackson, for example, agreed to endorse conservative Democratic loser Michael Dukakis and give him the Rainbow Coalition's delegates in exchange for putting several Jackson staffers (including Jackson's son) on the Democratic National Committee. While big business-friendly candidates kept its hands firmly on the wheel of the Democratic Party, progressives and their issues took their seats at the back of the bus. The book is rife with examples of movement leaders that decide "a seat at the table" is more important than changing the menu, the portions, or who gets served what.

The last few chapters of the book are devoted to whether or not the left can take over or use the party as a vehicle for social change. He uses Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition in the 1980s and today's Progressive Democrats of America as examples of how activists who set out to change and takeover the Democratic party end up changing, getting co-opted and neutered by the very forces they sought to challenge.

The book closes by examining the missed opportunities to create broad-based third parties free of corporate domination, opportunities which the Democratic party sabotaged, more often than not with help from forces within social movements. The most ugly example is the American Communist Party during the 1930s and 40s. No matter how many strikes the Democrats broke, or how many working-class radicals were victimized by McCarthyism (another invention of the Democratic party), the CP toed a pro-FDR line even though there was a groundswell of support rank-and-file workers for an independent Labor Party due to strikebreaking and political betrayals by Democratic governors and FDR at the time. To read more about that, check out Sharon Smith's excellent book on U.S. labor history, "Subterranean Fire."

Two themes run throughout the book and form Selfa's conclusion: 1) the Democratic Party is part of the problem, not part of the solution if you want real, meaningful change and 2) change comes from grassroots movements independent of (and in opposition to) the Republican and Democratic parties. The lesser-evil strategy has been and will always be a complete disaster, allowing both parties the freedom to become more and more "evil" as time goes on, so long as they don't ever become equally "evil."

The only shortcoming of this book is that Selfa neglects to mention the fact that the Democratic Party is itself a misnomer. Forty percent of the votes that a nominee needs to win at the Democratic Convention are controlled by "super-delegates," current and former elected officials, who can vote however they want, regardless of how people in their districts or state vote. This system was instituted after George McGovern lost in 1972 to Nixon for the explicit purpose of blocking candidates that were deemed by party bosses as "too left-wing." This voting bloc exists to put a check on democracy within the party. Furthermore, the road to the nomination begins in rural conservative states (Iowa, New Hampshire) and continues through a gauntlet of the other 48 states, each of which have different and complicated formulas for awarding delegates, a system whose lunacy was on full display in the Clinton-Obama death march to the nomination that lasted twice as long as the general election. The system is rigged to ensure that only conservative nominees with millions of dollars to burn can win. Kuciniches need not apply.

This book is essential reading for any activist who wants to understand how to win change in this country and anyone who thinks we need an alternative to the two party state.
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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Slouching Toward Extinction March 21, 2009
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Anyone expecting change beyond the margins from an Obama administration should read this book first. Unfortunately, generation after generation of voters has opted for Democrats as the lesser of two evils. As a result, here we are today, a nation of hollowed-out economy, rotted-out empire, and max'ed-out consumers, thanks largely to the "lesser-evilism" of a Democratic Party. Worse, contrary to occasional pretentions, the party has never really offered an alternative to any of these pathologies. Author Selfa lays bare the party's dreary record of Wall St. collusion and imperialist expansion, despite fitful posturing from a parade of devious leaders. It's a sorry record that includes even the sainted FDR who is shown backing into New Deal reforms strictly as a defensive measure against deeper change.

Then there's the party's historical function to co-opt popular movements more progressive than itself. Presenting their candidates as the only realistic alternative, the party makes tactical concessions in order to maintain strategic dominance over the political left. But that dominance ironically traces back to the same moneyed interests that sponsor the political party of the right, the Republicans. No wonder the end result shapes up as change but no change, and the most disengaged electorate in the Western world. The Green Party is only the latest of political fall-guys to tumble into the graveyard of lesser-evilism. It's really a sorry record, especially when a lesser-evil like Bill Clinton seeks to undo what he can of a meagre New Deal legacy. How surprising is it, that the last 30-years of Repubocrat rule reads like a social survey of the 19th century in free-fall. The historical lesson is clear. Democrats don't make change, but mobilized social movements do. Readers can learn more about our biggest political party from this book than from a typical course in political science. I know I did.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Transcends the dichotomy April 5, 2010
By J. Kane
Format:Paperback
I enjoyed this book quite a bit. At first, I was expecting a wholesale dismissal of anything the Dems have ever done or will do (i.e, a staunch Socialist perspective). But, as I went on, I sometimes started expecting a conclusion from Selfa that the Dems can indeed be "moved Leftward" (i.e., that there is still hope). Thus, I was very pleased at the end of the book to find that Selfa's conclusion rests somewhere firmly in the middle. The Democratic Party's victories in the past should not be wholly discounted, as they did help working class people. But they should also be measured against what was being called for--indeed, demanded--by the ever-growing social movements on the ground at the time (specifically during the Depression and 1960s, arguably the "heydays" of progressive Democrats). Measuring the "populist" nature of the Dems in this way, rather than simply against what Republicans stand for, is especially useful in that it breaks the dichotomous politics that tends to pervade the American psyche (e.g., liberal vs. conservative, pro-this vs. pro-that, etc.). It shows that, contrary to what the Right might be screaming, the true American Left is often left woefully disappointed by what Dems actually do when push comes to shove--and that's on a good day. On bad days, the Left is absolutely dumbfounded by what Dems do (e.g., escalating the Vietnam and Afghan wars, severely restricting welfare/medicaid services, etc.), often recoiling into fatalistic passivity. The book offers lots of historical examples of the Democratic party's diabolical nature and successfully shows that the strong-principled, pro-labor, pro-environment, pro-civil rights elements of the Democratic party are probably more the exception than the rule. I would recommend this for anyone who considers his or herself "to the left" of George W. Bush.
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