News

Dean Debate Inspires D5 to Rethink What’s Possible

Supervisor debates tend to be sleepy affairs, especially six months before a special election. But last Monday over 200 people came out to hear Dean Preston and Vallie Brown in their first debate.

Dean proposed doubling the amount of a housing bond from $500 million to $1 billion, buying up land to build social housing on, and piloting a free muni service. Brown got booed for claiming she lives paycheck-to-paycheck while owning property in San Francisco.

The campaign continues to inspire D5 residents to rethink what’s possible in San Francisco. Volunteers come out every Thursday night to phone bank and on Saturday mornings to knock doors in the neighborhood. About 70% of voters at their doors support Dean after speaking with a canvasser.

If you want to help get the word out about Dean, come to a phone bank or canvassing event! Too nervous to talk to strangers, but don’t mind telling your friends about Dean? Volunteer to host a fundraising party! More of a reader than a talker? Join the policy research committee! It’s easy to plug in, and there’s no better way to learn critical organizing skills and level up your activism.

Find out more about the campaign and get involved at votedean.org.

News

May Day Events

What’s May Day?

May Day is a day for workers to unite in solidarity across the globe. Although it started in the United States, it isn’t widely recognized here. The holiday emerged from the radical struggles of the nineteenth century and commemorates workers and activists who fought and died for the workplace protections that we enjoy today.

In 1889, the International Socialist Conference declared that May 1 would be an international holiday for labor in commemoration of the Haymarket affair of 1886. What is the Haymarket Affair, you ask? It’s a story of heroism in the face of power. Over 200,000 workers banded together across multiple industries to leave their workplaces and demand an eight hour workday. The next May Day–and every May Day since–workers across the world have gathered to protest a world in which production is motivated by profit, not human value.

But in the United States, powerful interests have tried to erase May Day. In 1894, President Grover Cleveland moved it to the first Monday in September to obscure its radical history. Dwight Eisenhower later proclaimed May 1, 1958 as “Law and Order Day,” signaling the beginning of an attack on unions and labor rights that continues up to the current day.

But times are changing. Mobilization is on the rise. In the last few months alone, DSA SF has helped secure union contracts for workers at Anchor Brewing and Ford GoBike. Meanwhile, polls show that the majority of Americans view organized labor favorably, and the legacy of May Day teaches us that solidarity among workers is an incredibly powerful force.

Get Involved!

In DSA-SF, we see the month of May as an opportunity to double down on the wins we’ve achieved, strategize for those yet to come, and honor the workers and organizers who made all of this possible. We’ve got events scheduled all month long!

On May 1st, International Worker’s Day, join DSA-SF and EBDSA comrades– along with workers from Anchor Brewing and ILWU–as we fight the privatization of the waterfront and a billionaire’s land grab to build an Oakland As ballpark at the expense of unionized dockworkers and working class West Oakland tenants.

On May 4th, come picnic with Bay Area DSA chapters in Marx Meadow in Golden Gate Park.

On May 12th, meet us at a Dogpatch WineWorks in the heart of San Francisco’s historic warehouse district as we engage in a wide-ranging conversation with labor activist David Ranney, who gave up a tenure-track position in academia to engage in a 20-year struggle as a labor and community activist in Chicago, working in factories to make ends meet. His new book, “Living and Dying on the Factory Floor,” is the culmination of 25 years reflecting on his life in the labor movement, and a testament to a lifetime of struggle against capital in solidarity with working  people.

On May 16th, cheer with us at the Tenderloin Museum as we hear from workers and organizers from DSA-SF, Anchor Brewing, the Transport Workers Union, and the Tech Worker’s Coalition. Learn about the risky, underground world of organizing a winning union drive.

On May 23rd, join us again at the Tenderloin Museum as we take stock of one of the most important moments in our nation’s history — the 1934 San Francisco General Strike led by Anchor Brewing’s own Internal Longshoremen and Warehousing Union.

Keep on fighting, comrades, and Happy May Day!

News

DSA SF rallies with VCA workers

Amidst a national assault on organized labor, standing with workers has never been more important. Workers at the VCA Animal Hospital in the Mission have been fighting for a fair contract in 2019. While members of the ILWU bargaining committee continue to make concessions to meet the needs of the company, VCA has dragged their feet on every issue.

Short staffing and lack of training remain contentious issues that management refuses to budge on. Doctors have been laid off in order to “handle short staffing issues” in other departments. The single on-site oncologist has accepted a position elsewhere and in response VCA is closing the department and a service which it has offered for at least 19 years instead of reinvesting in needed care.

Despite the decades-long neoliberal effort to cripple unions, workers and their allies are still resolved to tip the balance of power at VCA toward those who do the work. Over a hundred ILWU members, DSA SF comrades, Anchor workers, and Supervisor Hillary Ronen came out in solidarity with veterinary workers last Thursday, April 11th, to send this message to VCA management.

These workers deserve a fair contract – now! 

News

All About the 2019 National Convention in Atlanta

Every two years, DSA holds a convention where the membership discusses and votes on changes to our national structure and our political goals. This year, the convention will be held on August 2-4 in Atlanta, GA. Any member or group of DSA members in good standing may submit resolutions to be debated at the DSA National Convention in August between April 2nd and June 2nd.

The DSA SF Special Meeting: All About the National Convention
was held on Sunday, April 7, 2019 1-4PM at The Redstone Building

The meeting covered:

  • How to submit by-law amendments to the national constitution, how to submit resolutions, the drafting process before the convention, and the process in which they’re voted on
  • What a delegate actually does, how delegates need to prepare for the convention, how much time/work is expected of them, and how YOU can run to be a representative of DSA SF
  • The role of the National Political Committee, how much time/work can be expected from an NPC member, and how YOU can run for NPC

For more information about the National Convention in August, please read this informational packet and contact the National Convention Task Force Slack Feed.

The National Organization has all relevant information here.

News

DSA San Francisco Endorses Green New Deal Principles!

On Tuesday, March 26, the San Francisco chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America voted unanimously to endorse the DSA Ecosocialist Working Group’s Green New Deal: Guiding Principles. Motivated by our local Climate and Environmental Justice (C&EJ) committee, our chapter is in full support of a unified nationwide framework for ecosocialism in DSA.

Except from the resolution:

Future generations are entitled to a beautiful planet with a vibrant natural world that can sustain a good life for all people. Creating a fully ecological society will require a revolutionary transformation to replace the capitalist social order based on exploitation and oppression with a new society based on cooperation, equity, and justice. A Green New Deal must serve as a bridge toward this future. To that end, we support the resolutions introduced by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the House​and Sen. Ed Markey in the Senate​while recognizing that they are conversation starters—not complete and adequate blueprints. Their proposals are facing fierce opposition from corporate politicians and nervous ridicule from Wall Street pundits, but the opportunity to campaign for a radical and effective Green New Deal remains in our hands…

The radical Green New Deal we need will not be introduced in a single bill or resolution—it can only emerge from the grassroots struggles of working people and social movements. Together with our allies, we can organize a powerful multi-faceted movement to catalyze the major left turn in American politics and massive structural changes that are necessary to ensure climate justice and human survival…
Because we see the fight for the climate as a struggle against capitalism itself and the myriad forms of oppression which sustain it, we propose to organize within Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and without around the following guiding principles for a radical Green New Deal:

  1. Decarbonize the economy fully by 2030.
  2. Democratize control over major energy systems and resources.
  3. Center the working class in a just transition to an economy of societal and ecological
    Care.
  4. Decommodify survival by guaranteeing living wages, healthcare, childcare, housing, food,
    water, energy, public transit, a healthy environment, and other necessities for all.
  5. Reinvent our communities to serve people and planet, not profit.
  6. Demilitarize, decolonize, and strive for a future of international solidarity
    and cooperation.
  7. Redistribute resources from the worst polluters with just and progressive taxes on the rich, on big corporations, and on dirty industry, as well as by diverting funds away from policing, prisons, and our government’s bloated military budget.

News

Anchor Brewing Workers Vote To Join ILWU

Today, Anchor Brewing workers voted to join the ILWU. This victory has been the result of workers’ organizing to win control over their jobs and life, and DSA has been proud to organize with these workers every step of the way. 

The fight is far from over, on Friday, workers at Anchor Public Taps vote to join the ILWU. DSA will be there to support them, and then in their push for a fair contract that lets them live with dignity and raise their families in the Bay Area. 

We hope that this is just the start of DSA organizing workers to win unions at their workplaces. All power to the workers, solidarity forever.

News

Hands Off Venezuela! Rally and March

Hands Off Venezuela! March & Rally – No Coup; No War; No Sanctions march and rally was held on March 9 to protest US intervention in Venezuela.

The US aims to continue it’s imperial domination of Latin America by overthrowing the current regime in Venezuela, waging economic warfare against the people, fomenting a coup and preparing for military intervention either by US forces or through proxy forces.

The US has a long history of such interventions in Chile, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Cuba, Honduras and the Dominican Republic among others which has resulted in the deaths of many thousands and the impoverishment of the people of those countries. We joined other anti-imperialists, socialists and peace-loving people to oppose the looming war.

News

#StopTheSweeps Board of Supervisors Hearing

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors met for a hearing during a special meeting of the Public Safety and Neighborhood Services to discuss the city response to homeless residents during storms, on March 7th.

Representatives of city agencies who defended policy delivered dubious testimony and left before public comment. Supervisor Matt Haney expressed sympathy with public opposition to the sweeps.

News

DSA SF Chapter Statement on Proposed National DSA Bernie Sanders Endorsement

San Francisco DSA Calls on the DSA National Political Committee to Defer the Question of Endorsing Bernie Sanders to the 2019 National Convention and Reject the Previously Approved National Independent Expenditure Campaign

Overview

On February 19, 2019, Bernie Sanders announced that he is running for President of the United States. This set in motion an immediate response from the DSA National organization, and an announcement that the DSA National Political Committee (or NPC, our elected national board of directors) would vote by March 21, 2019 whether to endorse Bernie in his campaign for the Presidency.

Our chapter values democratic debate, bottom-up campaigns, and facilitative leadership. This structure has led it to many worthy struggles and successes, including (to name just a few) our successful electoral campaign to enshrine into law the nation’s first-ever universal right to civil counsel for renters facing eviction, our ongoing campaign to unionize workers at the Anchor Brewery, and our many struggles in partnership with longstanding community groups fighting against housing insecurity, environmental racism, and police brutality. The instruction to consider Bernie’s campaign was not something we were given a choice in, and we speak on it now only because we find DSA National’s actions and proposed plan to be unacceptable.

Positions on Bernie Sanders in our chapter run the gamut. To list just a few of the opinions held by our members, some strongly desire to endorse Bernie, believing that DSA’s supporting his run for the Presidency in some fashion is a critical recruiting tool and way to build power for the American left. Others believe that whatever Bernie’s merits, it is far too early to consider endorsing a candidate who has not requested our endorsement, particularly when it is a full year before California’s presidential primary. Still others believe that we should not endorse a presidential candidate at all or Bernie in particular in light of certain political positions he has taken in opposition to DSA’s values, notably his vote in favor of FOSTA/SESTA and his failure to support BDS.

These beliefs are all fairly held and deserve more time than we are being given to address them. We cannot resolve our position on Bernie’s campaign as a chapter in the span of a few weeks at the very beginning of a presidential campaign, particularly not when it was not our decision to begin discussing the issue.

Our chapter is, however, united on two critical points: First, the NPC’s accelerated endorsement process has been unacceptable in its lack of transparency, in ignoring chapter and member input, and in favoring a particular tendency and strategy by seemingly rushing to endorse Bernie Sanders and implement an expensive national independent expenditure campaign (the “Proposed National I.E. Campaign”) as early as possible. It is the 2019 National Convention that should decide whether DSA endorses Bernie Sanders, not the NPC. Second, if the NPC nonetheless carries out its seemingly preordained decision to endorse Bernie Sanders before the convention, the Proposed National I.E. Campaign must be rejected.

The NPC’s Unacceptable, Anti-Democratic Process

Our membership is severely troubled by the behavior of the NPC and National Staff in attempting to pass an anti-democratic endorsement plan without allowing meaningful input by chapters or members. As we see it, the below-listed events demonstrate that the endorsement process is intended to create a pretense of democracy only:

  • Fall 2018: At its October meeting, with little debate or explanation, the NPC voted to circumvent the National Electoral Committee — the national body properly vested with debating these issues in the first instance — to instead create the “Exploratory Committee for the 2020 Presidential Primary” or “2020 Exploratory Committee” consisting of a small cadre of nine individuals, apparently chosen based on their political tendency and desire to implement a national independent expenditure campaign for Bernie 2020.
  • January 21, 2019: After several months of secret work, the 2020 Exploratory Committee released its “Report from the Exploratory Committee for the 2020 Presidential Primary” on the DSA National forums. This plan was widely panned, and an alternative proposal quickly written and adopted by the Libertarian Socialist Caucus garnered hundreds more member signatures in a matter of days, indicating a groundswell of opposition to the 2020 Exploratory Committee Plan.
  • January 26-27, 2019: At its January 2019 meeting, the NPC approved the 2020 Exploratory Committee plan. Notably, the NPC rejected amendments to the 2020 Exploratory Committee Plan that would have increased chapter input and bottom-up democracy. One amendment put forth would have required the “DSA Bernie 2020 Committee” (the governing committee for the proposed campaign) to include one representative chosen by each chapter in an early primary state; other amendments would have required the NPC to give chapters or members binding votes on the proposed Bernie endorsement. The NPC, on apparent factional lines, rejected all amendments to the 2020 Exploratory Committee Plan.
  • February 9-10, 2019. During the Bernie 2020 debate required by DSA National at the California-Hawaii Regional Conference, the first of the planned regional conferences, the majority of the voices in the room were outright opposed to endorsing Bernie or expressed significant concerns with the endorsement process and Proposed National I.E. Campaign.
  • February 19, 2019. Bernie announced his campaign, triggering DSA National to email all members and announce an emergency NPC meeting would be held by March 21 to vote on whether to endorse Bernie. DSA National announces that an “advisory poll” would be emailed to all members. However, it appears this poll will present a binary choice of “Yes” or “No” as to the endorsement, but will give members no say on whether to accept or reject the Proposed National I.E. Campaign.

San Francisco DSA does not believe that chapters or members are being given a meaningful democratic choice as to whether our organization endorses Bernie Sanders.

DSA National’s Proposed Independent Expenditure Campaign is Flawed, Exposes Us to Significant Legal Risk, and Must Be Rejected

Beyond the binary issue of whether to endorse Bernie, our chapter has severe concerns about the structure of the Proposed National I.E. Campaign. Endorsing Bernie does not require DSA to adopt the expensive, elaborate campaign structure set forth in the 2020 Exploratory Committee Report. We question why National has not presented us with any other options for what DSA’s support of Bernie would look like if we do endorse. Certainly, there are other options available.

While we defer until later the question of exactly how (or if) San Francisco DSA will become directly involved in Bernie’s campaign, for now we recommend that our members who wish to support Bernie’s campaign for president do so by applying to work with his campaign as open socialist organizers, or by working with our allies in Our Revolution or other organizations supporting Bernie. We believe this kind of rank-and-file approach, in concert with other Bernie staff and volunteers from many backgrounds, is the best approach to use Bernie’s run to spread DSA San Francisco’s socialist values beyond our chapter’s boundaries. By having our organizers work directly with Bernie’s campaign, we can show critical socialist support for his run while helping to educate progressives on the ways that Bernie can still improve, notably with respect to FOSTA/SESTA, BDS, and imperialism. Indeed, a number of our members have already expressed interest in working as paid staff or volunteers for Bernie’s campaign or with our allies in the local Our Revolution affiliate, the SF Berniecrats.  

It disturbs us that DSA National would consider putting in place the Proposed National I.E. Campaign, which might legally prevent our members from pursuing this kind of work in coordination with our allies. We fear that the Proposed National I.E. Campaign would expose us to significant legal risk at the hands of the Republican-controlled Federal Election Commission, the agency that enforces federal campaign finance violations.

Our chapter includes members who have done extensive work on independent expenditure campaigns and are familiar with implementing them. These kinds of campaigns come with significant, complicated legal restrictions, notably that members working on a candidate’s campaign cannot have contact with individuals working on an independent expenditure campaign (such as are often run by PACs). In our experience, having to implement these kinds of necessary legal barriers between members has often created unhelpful divisions that serve to split members apart, rather than bring them together in generative coordination.

Based on the discouraging interactions our chapter has had with National to date, we do not believe that the National Political Committee, the National Electoral Committee, or National’s staff have developed the capacity to build up the necessary infrastructure that chapters will need to run a legally compliant independent expenditure campaign. While our chapter is large and fortunate enough to have significant resources, we are very skeptical that National can deliver the kind of compliance infrastructure and training necessary to ensure that we (let alone smaller, resource-poor chapters) avoid running afoul of elections law.

We do not wish to expose our members to complex legal risk. If DSA does ultimately endorse Bernie, a rank-and-file strategy encouraging members to work directly with Bernie’s own campaign and Our Revolution makes far more sense and is much safer than establishing the expensive, risky, counterproductive Proposed National I.E. Campaign.

Resolution

ACCORDINGLY, in light of all of the above, it is hereby RESOLVED:

  1. San Francisco DSA calls on the NPC to defer the issue of whether DSA should endorse Bernie Sanders to the August 2-4, 2019 National Convention, the highest decision-making body of our organization, and joins the DSA Fresno Co-Chair’s “Petition: Defer Endorsement Vote to August Convention” under Art. X Sec. 3 of the DSA National bylaws;
  2. San Francisco DSA rejects and will not participate in the proposed independent expenditure campaign set forth in the “2020 Exploratory Committee Report” that was approved by the NPC at its January 26, 2019 meeting. In the event that the NPC does endorse Bernie Sanders prior to the 2019 National Convention, San Francisco DSA calls on the DSA NPC to amend the plan set forth in the 2020 Exploratory Committee Report to:
    • Eliminate the proposed independent expenditure campaign that the Bernie 2020 Exploratory Plan calls to be run through DSA National’s own 501(c)(4) non-profit corporation entity;
    • Forbid DSA National from spending any of its own money or devoting any in-kind resources (including paid staff labor) to support an independent DSA Bernie 2020 campaign, whether styled as “Democratic Socialists for Bernie” or otherwise;
    • Encourage all chapters to determine in a democratic manner whether they wish their work (if any) on Bernie 2020 to be conducted in coordination with Bernie Sanders’s own campaign and/or with Our Revolution, or instead through local independent expenditure campaigns funded through chapter-level PACs;
    • Encourage interested DSA members to seek staff and volunteer positions on Bernie Sanders’s own campaign and/or with Our Revolution; AND
    • Add to the proposed Bernie 2020 Committee one member from each chartered chapter (selected by that chapter’s own processes) in each state holding a primary up to and including Super Tuesday.
  3. San Francisco DSA calls on all DSA and YDSA chapters to pass this resolution.