Freedom Socialist Party

The Freedom Socialist Party is a socialist feminist political party based in the United States. It views the struggles of women and minorities as part of the struggle of the working class. It emerged from a split in the Socialist Workers Party in 1966.[2] The party's Seattle branch, with support from individuals in other cities, split off from the SWP over what it described as the SWP's entrenched opportunism and undemocratic methods. The party has branches and members in the United States, as well as Australia, England, Germany and New Zealand.[3] The current National Secretary of the FSP is Doug Barnes.

Freedom Socialist Party
ChairmanDoug Barnes
Founded1966 (1966)
HeadquartersSeattle, Washington
NewspaperThe Freedom Socialist
Ideology
International affiliationCommittee for Revolutionary International Regroupment (CRIR)
Website
www.socialism.com Edit this at Wikidata

History

Freeway Hall in Seattle's Northlake neighborhood was for many years the FSP headquarters.

The immediate forerunner of the FSP was the Kirk-Kaye tendency within the Socialist Workers Party (SWP), led by Richard S. Fraser (Kirk) and Clara Fraser (Kaye) who were then married.[4] At the time, Richard Fraser was seen as the central leader of the tendency due to his development of the theory of revolutionary integrationism. In addition to their distinctive position on civil rights, derived from the theory of revolutionary integrationism, the tendency also took a position that was more sympathetic to China than was the norm in the SWP, in part this being due to the alliance between the Kirk-Kaye tendency and the looser tendency of Arne Swabeck and Frank Glass.

New Freeway Hall, Columbia City, Seattle, Washington, party headquarters.

Political differences, as articulated by the tendency, included what was characterized as the SWP's uncritical support of the Black nationalist views of the Nation of Islam, its orientation towards the labor aristocracy and business unionist leaders, its opportunism in the anti-Vietnam War movement, and its dismissive attitude towards the emerging feminist movement. The nascent FSP advocated the class solidarity of Black and white workers, called for a greatly expanded understanding of and attention to women's emancipation, and urged the anti-war movement to support the socialist, anti-colonial aims of the Vietnamese Revolution.

The FSP became a pole of attraction for Seattle leftists opposed to the SWP's internal politics and established a home at Freeway Hall.[5][6][7] The party formed Radical Women with the dual goal of building a revolutionary socialist feminist organization and teaching women the organizational and leadership skills that were often denied to them in male-dominated organizations.[8]

Ideology

Former logo

The FSP is politically Trotskyist.[9] FSP leaders Clara Fraser (1923–1998) and Gloria Martin (1916–1995) built on the socialist analysis of women's oppression to create a Leninist party that is "socialist-feminist" in ideology and practice.[10][11] The party views the liberation struggles of women, people of color and sexual minorities (such as gay people) as intrinsic to working class revolt, and it looks to these specially-oppressed sectors of society to provide revolutionary leadership. Women comprise a predominant part of the party leadership. Overall, membership is very diverse and is composed of all genders and races. The party characterizes its National Comrades of Color Caucus as offering the party's diverse ranks of people of color an opportunity to work together as a team to grow as leaders and provide direction for the party's work in people of color movements.

Activities

The party has frequently supported united front efforts on a number of issues and often helps other socialist groups get on the ballot, while simultaneously running its own candidates for office. The FSP was affiliated with the Committee for a Revolutionary Socialist Party, an attempted united front of various Trotskyist parties in the 1970s and 1980s.[12] The United Front Against Fascism (UFAF) was founded by the FSP and included a broad coalition of the Left, the LGBT community, labor unionists, feminists, people of color, Jews, and civil libertarians. UFAF took the lead in mobilizing against neo-Nazis in the Pacific Northwest in the 1980s and 1990s.[13][14][15][16][17][18]

The party has branches in a number of U.S. cities, as well as one in Melbourne, Australia. The Freedom Socialist newspaper is produced six times a year. Red Letter Press is the party's publishing arm. The FSP is affiliated with Radical Women, an autonomous socialist feminist organization.In 2003, Red Letter Press and its managing editor, Helen Gilbert, were the target of a complaint to the Federal Election Commission by the campaign committee of perennial presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche. LaRouche alleged that Gilbert and the FSP publishing house, which had issued a pamphlet by Gilbert critical of LaRouche's ideology and political history,[19] were in violation of campaign finance laws. The FEC found LaRouche's complaint to be without merit and dismissed it.[20]

Election results

The FSP has fielded electoral candidates in the United States for local, state, and federal offices. FSP candidates usually run as official FSP candidates, in contrast to the Party for Socialism and Liberation.

No FSP candidate has yet won an election.

Presidential elections

YearPresidential candidateVice presidential candidatePopular votes%Electoral votesResultBallot accessNotesRef
2012Stephen DurhamChristina López117
0.00%
0Lost
164 / 538
write-in campaign[21][22][23][24][25]

In 2016, the FSP critically endorsed Jeff Mackler of Socialist Action for president.[26]

In 2020, the FSP again critically endorsed Jeff Mackler of Socialist Action for president.[27]

Congressional elections

YearCandidateChamberStateDistrictVotes%ResultNotesRef
2018Steve HoffmanSenateWashingtonClass 17,390
0.43%
Lostblanket primary, did not advance to general[28][29]

State legislature elections

YearCandidateOfficeAreaDistrictVotes%ResultNotesRef
2004Jordana SardoState RepresentativeOregon452,297
8.74%
Lostran as Freedom Socialist Party candidate[30][31]
1998Marian SundeState SenateCalifornia227,665
10.53%
Lostran as Peace and Freedom Party candidate[32][33]
1998Adrienne WellerState RepresentativeOregon18496
3.99%
Lostran as independent candidate[32][34]
1998Guerry HoddersenState RepresentativeWashington371,439
4.56%
Lostran as Freedom Socialist Party candidate[32][35]
1998Stephen DurhamState AssemblymemberNew York71366
1.80%
Lostran as Freedom Socialist Party candidate[32][36]

Local elections

In 1991, the Seattle FSP ran two members for Seattle City Council, who campaigned on guaranteed income for families living in poverty, community control of the police, and domestic partnership rights for same-sex couples.[12]

YearCandidateOfficeAreaDistrictVotes%ResultNotesRef
1991Heidi DurhamCity CouncilSeattleLostnonpartisan blanket primary, did not advance to general[12][37]
1991Yolanda AlanizCity CouncilSeattle127,991
17.5%
Lostnon-partisan election, advanced to general[12][38]

See also

References

Further reading

Archives

Articles and interviews

Books

  • Ellie Belew, High Voltage Women: Breaking Barriers at Seattle City Light, Red Letter Press, 2019.