Source: The Nation
Last yearās dreadful miasma of Covid, recession, police violence, and coup attempt obscured some remarkable advances by local and national left-wing movements. Florida voters, while rejecting the Biden/Harris ticket, overwhelmingly approved a $15 minimum wage. Arizona and Oregon approved tax increases on the wealthy to fund public education. Colorado passed paid family leave. Portland, Me., voters approved rent control. All six representatives in historically swing districts who supported Medicare for All won reelection. Ninety-two of the 93 House Democratsāincluding all four in swing districtsāwho ran in November as Green New Deal sponsors won reelection. At least 20 candidates endorsed by Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) won office. In a year of historic uprisings against police brutality and economic inequality, support for socialism rose, especially among younger people.
These developments were not welcomed by establishment Democrats, who sought to blame their own poor showings in congressional races on the progressive movement. āāDefund the policeā is killing our party, and weāve got to stop it,ā declared House majority whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) a week after the election. āDonāt say socialism ever again,ā Representative Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.) said, as votes were still being tallied in early November. While fending off Trumpās attempted coup from the right, Joe Biden and leading Democrats spent a considerable amount of energy before and after the election attacking socialized medicine, the Green New Deal, and the movement to defund bloated police budgets.
That blowback represents a broad effort by leading Democrats, nationally and locally, to steer political discourse away from more radical demands and foist on the citizenry their vision of āa return to normalāāa kinder, gentler neoliberal Gilded Age without the daily White House tweet tantrums.
As 2021 gets underway, ground zero for this sharpening struggle will be in Seattle, where an alliance of establishment Democrats, real estate interests, and Trump backers is coming together to try to recall socialist City Council member Kshama Sawant, who initially won office in 2013, and was reelected in 2015 and 2019. The recall advocates intend to fire a warning shot to socialists and radicals everywhere. The recall campaign has already raised a quarter of a million dollars, and is ramping up efforts to qualify for the ballot sometime in the spring or summer.
In the last year, Sawant and her Socialist Alternative organization won a three-year battle to tax Amazonāheadquartered in Seattleāand other big businesses to fund emergency Covid relief, affordable housing construction, and local Green New Deal projects. And in the midst of nationwide street protests following the Minneapolis police murder of George Floyd, Sawant led organizing to win a first-in-the-nation ban on police use of tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets, and other so-called ācrowd controlā weapons. (Full disclosure: Iāve known and worked with Sawant since 2013 on issue and electoral campaigns, and currently work in her City Council office as a community organizer.)
These victories met a swift response from the political establishment. Democratic Mayor Jenny Durkanāelected in 2017 with help from a record $350,000 donation from Amazonāaligned with the Trump Justice Department in challenging Sawantās weapons ban legislation in court.
The mayor also demanded that the City Council investigate and consider expelling Sawant from office for her leadership in the Tax Amazon campaign and her participation in Black Lives Matter protests. The council demurred, but Durkanās bill of charges got picked up by pro-business forces and converted into a recall petition against Sawant.
The petition is now before the Washington state Supreme Court, which is expected to green-light it in the coming weeks. That will trigger a six-month period for recall advocates to collect 10,700 signatures from Sawantās central Seattle districtāone-quarter of the number of voters in the 2019 electionāin order to qualify the recall for the ballot.
The petition levels four charges at Sawant, only one of which needs to be approved by the court for the recall to proceed. Two of the charges are aimed at the Black Lives Matter movement in addition to the council member: They charge that Sawant misused her City Council position to invite hundreds of protesters (with masks on) into City Hall for a peopleās assembly at the height of the Justice for George Floyd protests, and that she revealed the mayorās confidential home address by speaking at a protest outside the mayorās mansion that had been organized by DSA and the families of police violence victims. A third charge claims Sawant illegally used City resources to campaign for the Amazon tax. The fourth charge alleges that Sawant broke City hiring rules when she involved Socialist Alternative in making hiring decisions.
Washington stateās recall law is powerful protection for a political ruling class seeking to weed out radical threats. Over the years state courts have exercised wide discretion in gatekeeping recall petitions. Lawyers on both sides of the Sawant recall fight say they expect the Supreme Court to approve at least one of the charges, and yet last fall the same court tossed out a petition against Mayor Durkan for overseeing the repeated, brutal police violence of last summer against hundreds of Black Lives Matter protesters.
To approve a recall effort, state courts merely have to conclude that recall petition charges, if true, would constitute malfeasance or a violation of an officialās oath of office. But the court is expressly barred from considering āthe truth of the charges.ā So, for instance, even though Sawant has stated she had no idea where the mayor lived, her mere participation in the protest outside the mansion is being used as the basis for one of the charges. Additionally, in todayās Citizens United world, independent committees can pour unlimited funds into supporting the recall effort.
Sawant is one of dozens of socialists who have been elected to office in recent years, but removing her would represent an especially valuable trophy for the business elite. She has never melded into the culture of closed-door political dealmaking, instead focusing on building movements outside City Hall to define, shape, and advance legislative demands. After upsetting a four-term City Council incumbent in 2013, Sawant and allied forces pushed through $15-an-hour minimum wage legislation in the spring of 2014, making Seattle the first major city to achieve the iconic base wage.
Hoping that 2013 was a fluke, big business spent hundreds of thousands in 2015 to defeat Sawant, an immigrant and a rank-and-file teachers union member. But they fell short as renters, students, and union members turned out in huge numbers, mobilized by hundreds of volunteer door-knockers. Following the 2015 election, Sawant led successful campaigns to cap rental move-in fees, bar rent increases at substandard apartments, and win tens of millions of dollars for affordable housing and social services. Sawant and the movement also won signature organizing battles outside City Hall, organizing tenants to beat back rent increases in public and private housing, and supporting workers organizing into unions and fighting for contracts.
The legislative fights, especially, put the Democratic political establishment on its back heels. Sawant and Socialist Alternative routinely mobilized hundreds of activistsāstudents, low-wage workers, people experiencing homelessness, union members, young people of color, among othersāto pack City Hall chambers. Organizing out of her City Council office, Sawant hosted town hall meetings, led marches demanding city action, and sponsored petitions and mass letter-writing campaigns to elected officials. Sawant legislative initiatives that began with scant support among other council membersālike blocking construction of a new militarized police station in 2016āended up getting adopted by City Council after these sustained public demonstrations.
In 2017, the local Chamber of Commerce was determined to push back against the influence of socialist politics, and it recruited Jenny Durkan to run for mayor. A former US prosecutor and close confidante to pro-business Democratic powerhouses like former governor Chris Gregoire, Durkan was trusted by the board of trade to bring political order to City Hall. At its most basic level, Durkanās candidacy was a bid by business and the political establishment to convince liberal Seattle voters to abandon Sawantās left-wing activism and return to a more centrist political discourse that they could control.
Boosted by nearly $900,000Ā in mostly corporate-dependent expenditures, including Amazonās record donation, Durkan handily beat a crowded candidate field to win the mayorās office. The following year, in 2018, Sawant and housing activists pushed through a modest tax on Amazon and other top corporations, but, with Durkanās encouragement, the local Chamber of Commerce launched a scorched-earth political counterattack that reversed the tax within weeks.
Later the same year, Mayor Durkan negotiated and pushed for City Council approval of a new police contract that rolled back key police accountability measures. Two dozen civil and immigrant rights groups protested, but got steamrolled by the combined forces of the new mayor, local labor council leaders, the police, and businesses. On the council, only Sawant voted no, with the eight other membersāall Democratsāapproving the contract.
For Durkan and her political base, the police contract experience stimulated hope that they could defeat Sawant and the popular movement. The local chamber president, Marilyn Strickland, declared that 2019 would be āa change electionā in Seattle. She vowed to replace local officeholders with pro-business candidates, starting with unseating Sawant. The anti-Sawant coalition drew in conservative building trades union leaders and others who could claim to be past supporters of the socialist put off by her recent tactics. To fund the anti-Sawant campaign, Stricklandās group led the effort to amass $4.1 million in corporate cash for the City Council electionsāincluding a staggering $1.45 million from Amazonāswamping council races that previously saw candidates win with one-20th that amount of money.
The gambit backfired, however, as Sawantās campaignāwith support from other candidates and progressive union forcesāsuccessfully turned the 2019 election into a referendum on Amazon and corporate power. Five of the seven business-aligned office seekers went down in defeat.
In early 2020, Sawant, her Socialist Alternative organization, and renter groups seized the election momentum to win a first-in-the-nation ban on winter evictions, and to launch a renewed Tax Amazon demand.
The arrival of the pandemic shifted the terrain for the reemergent tax movement by making grassroots political tactics like door-knocking and tabling initially off-limits. Yet the economic crisis for working people underscored the dire need to fund services, and rampant profiteering by Amazon and other big businesses made it hard for most pro-business politicians to defend continued corporate tax immunity.
Notably, also, the Black Lives Matter uprising bolstered the tax fight. Street protesters and local clergy drew the connection between police violence and the brutal gentrification and economic displacement that have shrunk Seattleās core Black community by three-quarters in recent decades. āIf Black Lives Matter, then affordable housing for Black families in the Central District should matter,ā the Rev. Carey Anderson, senior pastor at Seattleās First African Methodist Episcopal Church, told media at a pro-Amazon-Tax press conference organized with Sawant and other faith leaders.
Sawant and Tax Amazon volunteers collected more than 30,000 signaturesāmany from the street protestsāthreatening to put the tax measure on the ballot if the City Council failed to act. The Tax Amazon call became a prominent demand at Black Lives Matter protests.
Mayor Durkan openly fought the Amazon Tax, at one point derisively telling a TV reporter, āYeah, that never is going to happen, and I think itās irresponsible for anyone to say that thatās even possible.ā
But in Julyātwo weeks after winning the police weapons ban legislationāSawant and the movement proved the mayor wrong, as the City Council adopted a tax on big business that was more than four times the size of the repealed 2018 measure. A late amendment introduced by Sawant dedicates a portion of the tax every year to building affordable housing in the historically Black Central District, a significant tangible victory for the Black Lives Matter movement.
āVictories like these are why the ruling class wants a do-over, not only of my [2019] reelection, but also of all these victories for the working class and oppressed communities,ā Sawant said.
As for Durkan, the mayorās fortunes tumbled in the wake of the Tax Amazon win and the summerās Black Lives Matter street protests. Joining with millions around the country, tens of thousands of Seattle community members turned out to protest racist police violence, including eight killings by Seattle police on Mayor Durkanās watch. Durkan initially issued public declarations of solidarity with the movement, but then staunchly defendedĀ multiple brutal police crackdowns on protesters.
Faith and community members assailed the mayorās defense of police violence. Key organizations, including the local United Food and Commercial Workers Union, called for her resignation. The Seattle Human Rights Commission, along with the LGBTQ Commission, called on her to quit. Activists launched a recall petition against Durkan (which was quickly dismissed by the state Supreme Court). Politically tattered, Durkan announced in December that she would not stand for reelection in 2021, clearing the path for making the recall against Sawant the marquee political contest this year.
The big corporate cash has yet to make an appearance against Sawantāindependent expenditure mega-donations typically show up just before ballots drop. For now, the recallās early donors reveal the contours of the emerging battle. They include billionaire property developer Martin Selig, a major Trump donor, along with senior executives from Goodman Real Estate, a huge apartment and commercial landlord with $2.5 billion in properties in the US and Canada; Broadmark Realty Capital; National Health Investors, a Tennessee-based real estate investment trust with control in 242 nursing homes and senior living centers around the US; Meridian Capital, a global investment banking firm based in Seattle; Merrill Lynch, and Noble House Hotels, a North American hotel and restaurant chain that in 2018 picked a huge fight with Seattle Unitehere members, whom Sawant actively supported. Notably, many of these executives, aside from Selig, have routinely donated to Democratic candidates like Joe Biden, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
Collecting the required signatures might be a challenge for a grassroots campaign, but itās hardly impossible for a recall effort with limitless cash to spend on mailings and advertising, backed by the local Sinclair-owned TV station, right-wing talk radio, and a Seattle Times editorial board that rarely misses an opportunity to attack the socialist. Once the recall campaign turns in signatures and they are verified, election officials would schedule the recall 45 to 90 days out.
Recall forces doubtless will continue to hammer away on their allegations that Sawant broke the law. They also are likely to try to split progressives in Sawantās left-leaning district, by enlisting community leaders with liberal bona fides who will argue that Sawant is too confrontational and polarizing, and that the city needs elected officials who play āSeattle nice.ā
Sawant and her supporters readily admit they donāt plan to bend to that culture.
āShe doesnāt say, āOh, well, you know, we have to all get along,āā said Kathy Yasi, a child care provider and vice president of SEIU 925. āWell, I donāt really want her to get along. I want her to say, āWhat the hell is happening? Why is this this way?ā And I can count on her to do that.ā
This past summer, as Black Lives Matter protests took off across the country, seven of Seattleās nine City Council membersĀ publicly pledged to halve Seattleās bloated $409 million police budget. But when the budget votes came this fall, only Sawant supported the 50 percent police cut. The other members agreed to trim about 8 percent from the police and pledge to do more at some point in the future, arguing that more community discussion and political deliberation were needed. Their disavowal matched other municipal retreatsāmost notably, in Minneapolisāfrom pledges to defund the police. At the same time, the Seattle council approved the mayorās proposal to cut $200 million from affordable housing, bus hours, parks, and libraries.
Sawant was unsparing in her public response, issuing a statement that āthe budget that Democratic Party Councilmembers have approved today is a budget that deeply fails working people and marginalized communities, including working-class and poor communities of color.ā
Sawant and her allies will seek to galvanize the movement against the recall with their own set of broad demands on the city: increase the Amazon Tax to fund more Covid relief, a jobs program, and ramped-up local Green New Deal projects; cancel rents and mortgages for tenants and small businesses whoāve lost income during the pandemic; and establish a democratically elected community oversight board over the police, with subpoena, investigatory, and policy-setting powers.
They also will enlist a range of political leaders and activistsāsocialists, independents, and progressive Democratsāwho recognize the broader impact of the recall effort.
āI donāt have to agree with everything that Kshama does to know that I am opposed to the recall,ā said Democratic state Senator Rebecca SaldaƱa. āKshama is a democratically elected woman who is doing work on behalf of her constituentsā¦. Instead of spending money on the recall, businesses should focus on supporting economic recovery, our public health, addressing racial inequities, and creating a clean-fueled economy that recognizes the dire climate emergency.ā SaldaƱaās constituency overlaps with Sawantās district.
Seattle civil rights leader Larry Gossett, who recently retired after serving 25 years on the council, noted that the attack on Sawant is an attack on the broader progressive movement. āI know, as an activist organizing Black Student Unions, Third World coalitions, and unemployed Black workers beginning in the 1960s, that our opponents always try to undermine our movement and movement leaders, especially when they are effective,ā he said. āThatās exactly whatās going on here.ā
Indeed, the Seattle power struggle between an embattled but formidable political establishment and a scrappy, socialist-led movement mirrors the growing tension nationallyāthe current honeymoon notwithstandingābetween Bidenās political base and the insurgent left. In 2021, what happens in Seattle will be an important political bellwether, with significance far beyond the city limits.
Jonathan Rosenblum is the author of Beyond $15: Immigrant Workers, Faith Activists, and the Revival of the Labor Movement (Beacon Press, 2017) and a member of the National Writers Union. He works as a community organizer for Seattle City Council member Kshama Sawant.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate