Maclean's Magazine on the Leap Manifesto, featuring Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis on the provocative cover |
Party
should heed Occupy Wall Street cofounder Micah White's new advice: real change requires electoral
success.
Bill Tieleman’s 24
Hours Vancouver / The Tyee
column
Tuesday April 19, 2016
By Bill Tieleman
"My mission is to persuade activists to stop ignoring
failures and to stop repeating tactics."
- Micah White, The End of
Protest: A New Playbook for Revolution, 2016
It's the height of irony that while Occupy Wall Street's
co-founder outlines how protests are finished and electoral success is
critical, the federal New Democratic Party will talk about a protest movement for
the next two years.
And so while Micah White's new book outlines how the Occupy
movement, marches, social media clicktivism and "environmental
materialism" have all failed and that new approaches to win elections are
needed to achieve progress, the NDP convention jumped at the chance to discuss
in every riding the radical Leap Manifesto
that relies on tired tactics and failed leftist/enviro rhetoric.
Talking for two years about a controversial climate change
agenda that opposes natural resource development, trade deals, military
spending and more won't help the federal NDP's electoral success in 2019 -- but
it could hurt provincial parties.
That's why Alberta's NDP Premier Rachel Notley strongly opposed
the move, saying that the Leap Manifesto is naïve, ill-considered and
tone-deaf, and that it "doesn't actually reflect NDP values" by
failing to understand working people's need for economic security and
stability.
That sets the stage for a true reckoning between social
democrats who say don't Occupy and don't Leap -- and those who do.
BC NDP leader John Horgan also quickly dismissed the Leap
Manifesto, which has been fronted by Toronto filmmaker Avi Lewis and author
Naomi Klein, who are married.
"In total collectively it doesn't reflect the values of
British Columbians. Our past and our future will be dependent on the
development of natural resources," Horgan said
last week.
"We won't be proceeding under any Leap Manifesto... under
my leadership," he added,
to be even clearer.
'An ideological battle'
Given Maclean's magazine's current cover story with a photo of
Klein and Lewis surrounded by the headline: "How To Kill The NDP,"
that's understandable.
To be fair, Lewis admits the negative response to the release of
the Leap Manifesto during the 2015 federal election surprised him.
"We know this is an ideological battle. What we did
misjudge was how this would be used against the NDP. That was certainly not our
intent. Maybe we were a bit naïve," Lewis told Maclean's
last week. "People have said it's the NDP's left flank attacking [then-NDP
leader Tom] Mulcair. That's not true, but we lost control of that
narrative."
That narrative is critical to winning elections -- and White
says to think that anything but elections will change society is wrong.
"Occupy was holding assemblies in public squares to create
a consensus-based democracy that we hoped would give us broad social
legitimacy.
The thinking was that, if every day people convened in these
democratic assemblies, the police wouldn't be able to attack us because we
would be the sovereign power," White told
The Globe and Mail in March.
"Well, we realized that that's not true. Actually,
sovereignty, in our societies, is only given to the people who either win
elections or win wars. Winning wars isn't possible or desirable. Winning
elections actually seems like something that can happen," White said.
But there is another important ideological battle going on as
well -- over pay for play politics in both the United States and British
Columbia.
White's book points out that the original and single aim of the
Occupy Wall Street movement he co-created with Adbusters magazine founder Kalle Lasn was
simply to get big money out of American politics.
"If money determines electoral victory and corporations and
unions are able to give unlimited amounts of money, then it is clear that
elections are no longer being decided by the people," White writes,
outlining how a single #OccupyWallStreet hashtag on Twitter launched an international
protest.
That's exactly what's happening in British Columbia today, with
BC Liberal Premier Christy Clark steadfastly rejecting the NDP and Horgan's
longtime demands to end business and union political donations.
The BC Liberals have been raising triple or more of what the NDP
can collect, thanks to massive corporate contributions, giving them an enormous
electoral campaign advantage.
And White stresses that it's those elections -- not protests --
that can bring real change.
"We need to build social movements that can win power --
which means being able to swing elections, hack elections," White told
CBC TV this month.
"The 99 per cent could really be governing the world in our
lifetimes -- that's the kind of grand vision that we're heading towards,"
White says.
But getting there won't happen with old-style protest politics,
he adds.
"It's beholden on activists and everyday people to see that
we're in one of those moments where protest isn't working and break out of
it," White told CBC.
"We can't stay here, we can't stay in a time when we just
kind of go through the rituals of marching and stuff like this where even
though we really know it isn't going to do what we want."
'No more marches'
In The End of Protest, White takes straight aim at one of the
left's most predictable tactics.
"No more marches. Orchestrating a synchronized global march
with millions of people in the streets rallying behind one demand is an
impressive logistical feat that attracts tremendous publicity, but it is not an
effective method of social change," White writes.
"The fact is that governments today are not required to listen
to their citizens or heed their marches."
That message isn't very welcome to some, like those who
organized giant climate change rallies, White admits.
"I do think I've become kind of unpopular in the activist
community. They like to tell one story. Nothing's ever a failure. 'We're
actually winning' -- this feels really good when people say this to themselves,
but it doesn't help us learn anything," he told the CBC.
White also has alienated environmentalists with a withering
critique of their failures in his book.
"To move forward, environmentalism must end its obsession
with materialism," White writes. "There has been a fetishization of
our ability to correlate climate change with scientifically verifiable
hypotheses."
"Environmentalists got stuck in proving the scientific
argument and have been falling down the rabbit hole of computer models and
intellectual abstraction ever since."
White is not anti-environmentalism; indeed he says that "it
is the ecological struggle that has the greatest potential to unite
humanity."
But White is very clear once again that anyone taking the same
approaches that doomed Occupy Wall Street and other mass protests simply will
not work.
Neither Occupy nor Leap -- just win elections. It's a
revolutionary idea.
.
2 comments:
You know it is possible to do both: to Leap to an environmentally sustainable economy and win elections while doing it. In fact life on this planet demands we manage both. An economy based on materialism and resource extraction is simply not sustainable. An elected government can and must change that. Which party in BC is most likely to make the necessary transition to sustainability? Oh, and its not the Green.
I agree with what you say. It is not the greens that have a vision, it is the NDP. Check this website to see their policy.
https://www.bcndp.ca/sustainablebc
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