Against the Current, No. 174, January/February 2015
-
Why We Can't Breathe
— The Editors -
Whose Lives Matter in America?
— Malik Miah -
We Are All Ayotzinapa
— Dan La Botz -
The Politics of Mass Incarceration
— an interview with James Kilgore -
What's Behind Detroit Happy Talk?
— Dianne Feeley -
Rasmea Odeh's Long Struggle
— David Finkel -
Introduction to The Two-Party System, Part II
— The Editors -
The Two-Party System, Part II
— Mark A. Lause - Black Struggle Then and Now
-
March to Freedom, 1963 and Beyond
— Charles Simmons -
Introduction to Shaping 20th Century America
— The Editors -
Shaping 20th Century America
— Allen Ruff -
Wilson's Open Door to World War I
— Allen Ruff -
If We Must Die
— Claude McKay -
African-American Self-Defense
— Malik Miah -
Reckoning with Apocalypse
— Robbie Lieberman -
A Folklorist of Black America
— Brian Dolinar -
Continental Cultural Communication
— Kim D. Hunter - Labor and Socialist Strategy
-
Unions and the Road to Socialism
— Milton Fisk -
Life Support for Labor?
— Meredith Schafer -
Queer Activism in the Labor Movement
— Sara R. Smith - Reviews
-
How Much Does Climate Change Change?
— Janice Cox and Michael Gasser -
Socialism Taken Seriously
— Shannon Ikebe
The Editors
WE PRESENT HERE the second of a four-part series by historian Mark Lause on the history and evolution of the two-party system in the United States. The first installment in our previous issue, “The Other Peculiar Institution,” discussed the system from its British-derived origins through the U.S. Civil War (ATC 173, online at http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/4291). The present essay is a conversation on the American Two-Party System from post-Civil War Reconstruction to the Crash of 1929.
The relevance of this discussion is increasingly evident in the wake of the November 2014 midterm elections, with the Congressional ascendancy of rightwing Republicans, the continuing debacle of the centrist corporate Democrats, and signs of a potential emerging independent political challenge — as seen for example in the strong showings of Green gubernatorial candidate Howie Hawkins in New York, independent socialist Angela Walker running for Milwaukee County sheriff, the victory of the Richmond Progressive Alliance in that California city, and previously the election of socialist candidate Kshama Sawant to Seattle City Council.
How to build from these and similar candidacies toward a break from the stranglehold of the capitalist parties is a critical and urgent discussion for the left.
January/February 2015, ATC 174