Damage Magazine runs Benjamin Y. Fong's introduction to the new book Rustin's Challenge.
Showing posts with label Bayard Rustin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bayard Rustin. Show all posts
Sunday, March 08, 2026
"We Continue to Live in the Wake of Mid- to Late-60s Developments"
"It's easy to look back at the Johnson administration, with the benefit of hindsight, and see little possibility for the revitalization of the New Deal coalition. But it's important to remember just what a moment of political sea change the mid-1960s was. With the exit of the Dixiecrats, the Democratic Party was in the midst of a profound transformation wherein its base did substantively shift. That [Bayard] Rustin saw an opening for the civil rights and organized labor coalition to take a driving seat within the party was not that fanciful, yet it was treated that way by a curious number of people on the Left then and still on the Left today. It's worth asking why that was and is. His critics on the Left are fine pillorying Rustin for his comments on anti-war protest tactics. But where are the similar condemnations of the New Left for sitting out the fight for the Freedom Budget for All Americans, arguably the last off-ramp from an imminent neoliberalism?"
Damage Magazine runs Benjamin Y. Fong's introduction to the new book Rustin's Challenge.
Labels:
1960s,
1970s,
1980s,
Bayard Rustin,
books,
class,
history,
LBJ,
politics,
race and ethnicity,
Sanders,
twentieth century,
twenty-first century
Monday, October 10, 2022
If "Good Enough for A Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin, for FDR and JFK, It Should Be Good Enough for Today's Democratic Party"
"A Democratic party that adopts these principles has a real shot at political domination given Republicans' serious problems and weaknesses. Conversely, a Democratic party that continues on its present course dooms American politics to continued stalemate and polarization. Like the prospect of an imminent hanging, that should concentrate the mind."
Ruy Teixeira at The Liberal Patriot writes that it is "time for Democrats to try something that really could unite the country: liberal nationalism."
Labels:
A. Philip Randolph,
Bayard Rustin,
Clinton,
FDR,
JFK,
Obama,
political history,
politics,
twentieth century,
twenty-first century
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