President Bernie?

President Bernie?

We talk about socialism in America: where it comes from, what it means, why it's so associated with Bernie Sanders and whether it can actually reach the White House. What's the difference between democratic socialism and social democracy? How would the workers gain control of businesses like Facebook and Amazon? Who are the workers these days anyway? Plus, we ask what a Sanders vs Trump contest would actually be like. With Adom Getachew, from the University of Chicago, and Gary Gerstle.


Talking Points:


In the U.S. context, is there a meaningful difference between democratic socialists like Bernie Sanders and social democrats like Elizabeth Warren?

  • Warren is more focused on politics: reforming the Senate, imposing taxes on corporations, etc.
  • Sanders sees socialism as a revolution, but his actual aims are fairly modest: strengthen labor, etc.
  • Warren wants to break up Amazon; Sanders wants to empower the workers to take on Amazon themselves.
  • One key difference is that Sanders comes out of a grass-roots, movement-type politics. Warren does not, and she’s explicitly denied a commitment to socialism.


Can you have socialism without a labor movement? What takes its place?

  • In 1935, 35% of American workers belonged to a union. Today it’s only 11%.
  • There have been a number of strikes during the Trump presidency, such as the teachers strike.
  • We need to reimagine who the working class. It’s not the industrial working class anymore. It’s the service sector, and these are historically unorganized labor forces.
  • Today it’s the precariat, not the proletariat.
  • How does a labor movement speak to a radically altered working population?


For many young people, the Occupy movement was a moment of political awakening.

  • The establishment seemed unable to deal with the crisis, and this opened up a new sense of political possibility.
  • For many young Americans, who have grown up in the absence of a real Left, Sanders represents an authentic commitment to a different kind of politics.
  • There may be some problems for Sanders. For example, his reluctance to support reparations opened him up to criticism about a blindness to racial justice.
  • A socialist in the U.S. has never become a major party nominee. The historical role of socialism in the U.S. has been disruptive, pressuring centrist candidates to move left. Can Sanders break that mold?
  • The American political project is designed to be slow. To have big change, you need a mass movement outside of politics too.


Mentioned in this Episode:


Further Learning:


And as ever, recommended reading curated by our friends at the LRB can be found here:

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(379)

New Podcast: These Times

New Podcast: These Times

UnHerd political editor Tom McTague and Cambridge professor Helen Thompson team up to investigate the history of today’s politics — and what it means for our future. Each week they will explore the gr...

11 Maj 202352s

New Podcast: Where Are You Going?

New Podcast: Where Are You Going?

Talking Politics producer Catherine Carr returns to her role as mic-wielder in 'Where Are You Going?' a unique storytelling podcast, delivered in bite-size episodes.Called 'utterly compelling and uniq...

24 Apr 20233min

New Podcast: Past Present Future

New Podcast: Past Present Future

Past Present Future is a new weekly podcast with David Runciman, host of Talking Politics, exploring the history of ideas from politics to philosophy, culture to technology. David talks to historians,...

21 Apr 20232min

Finale

Finale

David, Helen and Catherine get together for our final episode, to reflect on podcasting through six extraordinary years of politics, and what it means to be ending at the beginning of a war. We talk a...

3 Mars 202239min

Helen Thompson/Disorder

Helen Thompson/Disorder

For our penultimate episode, David talks to Helen about her new book Disorder: Hard Times in the Twenty-First Century. It’s a conversation about many of the themes Helen has explored on Talking Politi...

24 Feb 202246min

The Meaning of Macron

The Meaning of Macron

David talks to Shahin Vallee and Chris Bickerton about the upcoming French presidential elections. Can anything or anyone stop Macron? Why has French politics moved so far to the right? And what do le...

17 Feb 202245min

The Meaning of Boris Johnson

The Meaning of Boris Johnson

David, Helen and Chris Brooke have one more go at making sense of the tangled web that is British politics. Can Johnson really survive, and even if he does, can his brand ever recover? Is this a scand...

10 Feb 202252min

Putin’s Next Move

Putin’s Next Move

David and Helen talk to Shashank Joshi, Defence Editor of the Economist, about what Vladimir Putin hopes to get out of the Ukraine crisis and what anyone can do to stop him. Is some sort of invasion i...

3 Feb 202250min

Populärt inom Politik & nyheter

svenska-fall
tv4-nyheterna-story
p3-krim
aftonbladet-krim
flashback-forever
aftonbladet-daily
rss-krimstad
motiv
de-fyras-gang
spar
rss-sanning-konsekvens
rss-vad-fan-hande
mannen-utan-spar
rss-aftonbladet-krim
rss-expressen-dok
kungligt
olyckan-inifran
rss-krimreportrarna
grans
rss-flodet