Joe Simps for the D : CPUSA co-chair Sims: Fighting fascist threat a top priority Peoples world Article
Excerpts:
CHICAGO – “The battle lines are clear. We’re fighting a fascist danger at home and a genocidal war abroad. And to defeat the danger at home, we’ve got to defeat the war abroad.” CPUSA co-chair Joe Sims gave this warning on June 7, as he keynoted the 32nd National Convention of the Communist Party USA.
Sims also spoke of the “raw racism at the very heart of MAGA,” and added, “Immigrants are a special target.
“First, they tried the wall,” Sims said of Trump’s scheme to keep migrants from entering the U.S. across the Mexican border. “Then the Muslim ban, now they’re planning concentration camps. That’s right, we said it. And if they come for immigrants in the morning, they’re damn sure coming for us at noon.
But we’re not at fascism yet, of course, Sims said. And that moment of respite – for however long it lasts – means that for now, “There is room for struggle. Let us use that space to fight for a ceasefire in Gaza and for an end to the war in Ukraine. Let us use it to stop the expansion of NATO, end the blockade of Cuba, and bring the Cold War against China to a close.
He then turned to the historic question the Communist movement has always asked, “What, then, is to be done?”
you are not him
As Sims spoke to wild peals of applause, he said, “On the one side, there’s the ruling class forces of white supremacy and MAGA pulling the country apart. On the other, there’s the working-class forces of democracy pulling the country together.”
Link to @Alaskaball@hexbear.net take on Joe Sims tailism
SSettler KKKolonial Unity : The Communist Party of Israel greets CPUSA’s 32nd Convention twitter
In which the CPI blames Hamas for the Gaza war, denounces the Operation Al-Aqsa Flood (i guess palestinians just have to get used to dying) and washes the hands of the israeli state by claiming that its netanyahoo the problem and not the State of ISSael itself
how do you manage to be on the Right of the DSA??
The electoral campaign isn’t expensive because we don’t have any money in the first place. Its two people occasionally traveling around the country and otherwise entirely local work done by members and volunteers.
We fundamentally are not an electoral party. The vast majority of our work is non-electrical and the campaign’s purpose is to amplify that, not the other way around.
Literally yesterday a PSL organized protest brought out 100k people to DC and physically surrounded the white house. We do not show up and co-opt - we are the ones that organize in the first place.
How did I not see that had happened, that’s a lot of people to get in one place for that kind of organized protest effort! I’m looking for information, and of course mainstream media is vague and lib-coded, but it got their attention, so that’s a win. Also:
Does PSL often work with other orgs like DSA and/or FRSO, or do they tend to stick to themselves?
What’s the plan for after the election? I know you clarified that they do other things, and the campaign amplifies those things, but what happens when they no longer have that amplification? How do they plan to keep up the momentum? I hope this (or any of this) doesn’t come off as rude, I’m genuinely curious and I don’t know a lot about how PSL operates.
Yeah they would much rather not report but we are able to pull big enough numbers for these nationwide calls that they can’t entirely ignore it.
We have a few nationwide relationships that are very strong. Most prominent is with Palestinian Youth Movement, who we coordinate with at the national and local levels all over the country. Individual branches develop relationships based on their particular conditions. My branch has a good relationship with local DSA and cooperates with them on some Palestine work. There’s no local FRSO that I’m aware of so I can’t say about that. As a rule we try to avoid beefing with other orgs.
So far our work on Palestine has been far more significant for the growth of our profile and party than the campaign. We work on every struggle that affects the working class and the consistency and strength of our political position, organizing capacity, and internal training program (candidacy) are the reason for our success. We’ll continue to do that work. For example, my branch right now is:
continuing to organize for Palestine as part of a local coalition that includes PYM, DSA, USPCN, and some entirely local groups; we are targeting our county for divestment and organizing with healthcare workers for solidarity actions
doing a series of Pride events focused on reclaiming the radical anti-imperialist history of pride - marches, educational panels, etc
organizing black-brown solidarity between working class black folks and Palestinians
running renovations for a local African American Museum in poor condition that is too radical to receive foundation support
operating our physical location, the Liberation Center, as a community space and citywide activist hub
doing clerical support for an AIM run Native American museum
running three separate Juneteenth marches with different focuses, including one that’s queer focused
planning for some [redacted] labor organizing
utilizing links between the local Puerto Rican community (of which many members are a part) and the island to build a socialist independence movement
and a few local members are in Cuba on solidarity work as we speak
That’s just presently ongoing work - we have done tons of other stuff the last few months, including student encampment support (our members were the first to get arrested) and carrying out a successful ballot access petitioning campaign in coordination with other branches in our state.
Physical Location? That’s pretty cool, I was actually going to mention the possibility for a community/third space but I don’t think other orgs do that either so it’s not like a standard had been set. Also glad to see they are hosting pride events as well, intersectionality is good to see.
It is an objective of every PSL branch to get a Liberation Center set up. It’s the main thing dues go towards for our branch, but it massively amplifies our organizing capacity. Plus the cheapest spots are usually in the kinds of neighborhoods where we want to do the most work.
Not just good to see but fundamental to our approach. It is impossible to have a serious liberation movement that doesn’t aggressively stand up against all forms of oppression and chauvinism.
I’m practically sold. Hope the SF PSL is as lit as your branch.
I believe that is the first branch 🫡
I was reading about this protest, and I’ll be honest it wasn’t obvious to me (maybe I just missed it) that the PSL was involved. Which, to me, strikes me as a messaging issue (again I have so little time, so maybe I just missed it). But even ignoring that I definitely get better vibes from PSL vs CPSUSA.
We were deeply involved on every level of planning, staffing, and communication. We don’t blast it out because (despite the accusations) that is the opposite of how we operate. But it was my local branch that organized our city’s bus caravan and PSL folks doing all the support work - street leadership, A/V, security, and a big chunk of the speakers.
That’s really awesome to hear! Is there a prevailing thought behind working behind the scenes as opposed to advertising the org with the event?
For these huge national events it’s under the ANSWER coalition, of which we are the largest but not only member. They are the name on the tin for that stuff because we are working in concert with other ANSWER members. And we are explicit about PSL involvement, it’s just not the lead org. Local stuff we always put our name on.
Got it, that all seems logical to me! Thanks for the info.