article | posted August 25, 2005 (September 12, 2005 issue)
The Power of Fusion Politics |
| by Alyssa Katz |
Last election day, as thousands of New Yorkers bused out to Ohio on a
mission to stop George W. Bush from being re-elected, a few dozen stayed
behind in Albany and made sure David Soares won.
The volunteers knocked on doors street by street; in the housing
projects, hall by hall. The day John Kerry lost, the Working Families
Party helped Soares take the job of Albany District Attorney away from a
machine Democrat notorious for condemning drug offenders to extreme
prison terms. With the rallying cry "Reform Rockefeller Drug Laws Now," the Soares campaign got voters to the polls by tapping into public outrage at seeing lives destroyed and billions wasted by the justice
system. Soares had won the primary as a Democrat. In the general
election he was still a Democrat, but on the ballot he was something else, too: the candidate of the Working Families Party.
A few months earlier, the WFP operation hit Westchester County. Volunteers trawled suburban streets delivering the message: "We're
telling State Senator Nick Spano that New Yorkers need a raise in the
minimum wage." A few residents cursed and slammed doors. But more often
than not they agreed, and received a sheet of paper, a pen and a chance
to handwrite a plea to the Senator. "It's about time!" exclaimed an
expensively groomed woman as she took a clipboard.
That wasn't the first or last time Spano, a high-ranking Republican,
heard from his constituents--and the greeting wasn't always so polite. A
few weeks earlier, Spano had endured an "accountability session," a
public event community organizers use to extract commitments from
elected officials. In a YMCA hall packed with some 150 union members and
other activists, filled with cries of "$5.15 is not enough!" Spano
expressed surprise at the turnout--and, knowing he had little choice,
signed a poster-size pledge to push legislation raising New York's
minimum wage to $7.10. "I am on your side," Spano declared. "I will
deliver this personally to the majority leader."
But it was not just because he was caught on the spot that Spano came
around on this issue--he knew that the Working Families Party, which
organized the session, had a card to play: the ballot line in elections
throughout New York State that it has wielded since 1998. In New York,
election laws allow "fusion"--candidates for any public office can run
as the nominee of more than one political party. The votes candidates
receive are tallied separately by party, then combined. Like many
candidates in New York State, Spano was hungry for the extra boost of
that additional ballot line, which could make all the difference on election day. With the WFP's progressive seal of approval, Spano could
expect some votes from people who might never otherwise support a
Republican.
Fusion is powerful. Voting in the Working Families column is no wasted
gesture--every ballot counts. It sidesteps the Nader Effect, since
voters can show their support for a progressive party agenda without
spoiling the chances of a candidate--usually a Democrat--who has a shot
at winning. And if there's an opportunity to take out a bad Democrat,
like former Albany DA Paul Clyne, Working Families can run its own
candidate.
Fusion politics also gets complicated, and occasionally
controversial.
The Working Families Party gave Spano its ballot line--and with it the
race. It turned into a contest so close that it had to be sorted out in
court. Spano prevailed against Andrea Stewart-Cousins, a progressive
African-American Democratic county legislator. He got 1,800 votes on the
WFP line, and held on to his seat by just eighteen votes. This, in a
state where Democrats have been laboring to retake the majority in the
State Senate.
But the Working Families leadership was satisfied. In exchange for the endorsement of Spano and other Republicans in a tight race, state
Republicans relented after years of opposition and hiked the minimum
wage, which raised pay for hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers. By
wielding the power to make or break one of its top leaders, Working
Families pushed the Republican Party to take a progressive stance.
Much more often, that ballot line goes to a Democrat. The expectations
are no different. Last November US Senator Chuck Schumer ran as both a
Democrat and a Working Families nominee, and votes on either
counted equally toward his re-election. But he got nearly 169,000 of his
votes on the WFP line--3.6 percent of his total. Attorney General
Eliot Spitzer, running for governor in 2006, solicited Working Families
as his first endorsement. "What this is about," said Spitzer
as he accepted the party's support, "is embracing progressive politics.
It's about embracing the ideas and the values that will change the lives
of citizens across the state; being willing to challenge the status quo;
being willing to say, If it's broken we will fix it.... You have proven
that substance matters in politics."
It's also about Spitzer buying into the WFP's sophisticated organizing
apparatus. In acknowledgment of his cash contributions--the Attorney
General was a keynote speaker at a party fundraiser--Spitzer can expect
Working Families canvassers to go door to door or hold rallies in key
districts he needs to win. And it's understood that Spitzer will have an
obligation to deliver on Working Families' demands.
Spitzer's a radical by Wall Street standards, but not by the WFP's.
Items on the party's legislative agenda include universal healthcare,
rent regulation, a living wage and closing the income gap through
progressive taxation. Founded and led by a coalition of labor unions and
community organizations--including the Northeast regions of the United
Auto Workers and the Communications Workers of America (CWA), locals of
the garment and hotel workers' union UNITE HERE and the service workers'
SEIU, ACORN and Citizen Action--Working Families claims an organized
bloc of voters committed to economic populism, and the party uses them
to get major-party politicians to follow the Working Families agenda.
Its organizers strive to appeal simultaneously to Nation-reading
liberals, people of color alienated by the Democrats, and working-class
whites.
The WFP's ability to reach that third group, which Republicans have so
successfully wrested from the Democrats, says a lot about what fusion
can accomplish. A poll of New York State CWA members found that
non-Democrats were likelier than Democrats to use the WFP ballot
line to cast a vote for Hillary Clinton in 2000--of the 38 percent of
that group who went for Clinton, eight in ten cast their vote under
Working Families. Votes on the WFP line helped Democratic
challenger Tim Bishop beat a conservative incumbent Republican
Congressman on Long Island--in a district that went overwhelmingly for
Republican Governor George Pataki on the same ballot.
WFP executive director Dan Cantor and a leadership circle of labor union
political directors, community organizers and staff hunt for practical
legislative and policy campaigns that will resonate with the party's
target constituencies. "What issues do you want to move?" asks Cantor."What moral disgrace brings issues into the electoral moment?" They then put those issues into play with a one-two punch: a grassroots field
operation anchored by local chapters in the state's biggest counties,
coupled with the ability, through fusion voting, to cross-endorse
Democrats or Republicans for public office. Targeted politicians can't
afford o ignore the party's agenda.
Less splashily, Working Families has become a fixture in local political
races in the state's bigger cities and in the suburbs of New York City,
delivering a get-out-the-vote apparatus and its progressive WF brand
label in exchange for influence over candidates' policy agendas. Some of
those relationships spawn legislative breakthroughs, including a 2002
living-wage law in Westchester. Many others simply rubber-stamp an
undistinguished major-party favorite.
The party has held off on this year's New York City mayoral race, where
Democratic candidates are struggling. Republican Mayor Mike Bloomberg
leads them in the polls--among Democratic voters. Some of the WFP's
member unions have already endorsed Bloomberg, while others can't agree
on which Democrat to support. The party is showing its influence in
subtler ways--for example, in candidate Fernando Ferrer's proposal to
revive a stock-transfer tax to increase funding for schools, an idea the
WFP actively promoted.
Starting with a campaign this year against Social Security
privatization, Working Families has also begun targeting members of
Congress in between election cycles. And it's not just assaulting
Republicans: In August party leaders called for House minority leader
Nancy Pelosi to remove two black Democratic Congressmen, Greg Meeks and
Edolphus Towns, from their respective positions on the Financial
Services and Energy and Commerce committees because they voted for CAFTA
and other bills benefiting corporate powers. Prodded by Working
Families, unions are sending letters to members in the Congressmen's
districts informing them about the votes. They're doing all this on a
shoestring; the WFP's entire budget is about $1.6 million a year, just
$300,000 of which, according to the WFP, represents dues from its union
affiliates. Revenues from door-to-door canvassing are growing steadily,
a sign of broader public support.
Even the party's opponents acknowledge its influence. Kathryn Wylde,
president and CEO of the business-lobby group Partnership for New York
City, fought the WFP's ultimately successful effort to require some
companies under contract with New York City government to pay employees
a minimum of $10 an hour. "When it comes to bringing resources, bringing
influence to bear on important public policies," says Wylde, "their
political success, in terms of electing and supporting people in key
positions, makes them a force to be reckoned with."
Working Families made 2004, of all years, a moment for progressive
political gains in a state, governed by a Republican and a divided state
legislature, that hasn't recently been out front on social and economic
reforms. Now that it's proving its power to make things happen, the WFP
is looking to export fusion voting to other states. "Common-sense
progressivism is actually popular, but you need a way to make it
visible," says Cantor. "Nothing's more powerful than a ballot line." Franchising fusion is an undertaking somewhere on the highway between
ambitious and quixotic. Most states abolished cross-endorsements more
than a century ago, as the major parties consolidated their power.
Besides New York, fusion remains legal only in Connecticut, Delaware,
Vermont, South Carolina, Mississippi and Utah, and in none is the ballot
line so accessible and useful as in New York. In 1997 the US Supreme
Court ruled in Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party that states cannot
be compelled under the First Amendment to allow candidates to run on
multiple party lines.
So Working Families and its labor and community allies are bracing for a
state-by-state slog. In Connecticut the party is already up and running.
It has to qualify in each legislative district, by first running
candidates exclusively on the Working Families line and getting at least
1 percent of the vote. If it passes the threshold, in subsequent
elections in that district it can cross-endorse candidates from any
other party, in any race. Working Families is now on the ballot in
sixty-five out of the state's 187 districts.
The party made a move for influence last fall: Leaders sat down with
Connecticut State Representative Jim Amann, a Democrat who was enmeshed
in a fight for House leadership, and agreed to pull Working Families
nominees out of races where the Democratic candidate was an Amann ally,
in exchange for Amann's support on the WFP's Connecticut agenda. "Even
in districts where we couldn't cross-endorse, we could withdraw our
candidate, and that gave us some leverage," explains party
organizer Jon Green. Amann won, although that hasn't yet produced
any legislative gains for the WFP.
Next up is Massachusetts. Starting September 21, a Working Families-led
coalition will be collecting signatures to get a referendum on the
ballot legalizing fusion voting. It is likely to be a difficult fight.
In Massachusetts, state legislators have ways to thwart the results of a
referendum. Fusion is unlikely to hold much appeal for them, since the
Statehouse is solidly Democratic. And some of the state's progressive
political organizers are balking at joining the emerging fusion
coalition. They say they've already won some of the same gains WFP
has--including a minimum-wage hike. "We win so much in the legislature
just by going to the legislature," says Harris Gruman, director of
Neighbor to Neighbor Massachusetts, a grassroots organizing group. "We
don't need to change the rules. The rules are working for us, now that
we are working them."
"It's only natural that there would be a healthy dose of skepticism and
nervousness," says Patrick Gaspard, vice president of politics and
legislation for 1199SEIU and a veteran strategist with Working Families.
"But look at what's been made possible in New York State as a result of
people coming in and saying, 'I want to do a chunk of my work through
this political institution.'... Having that flexibility has been a
benefit to [1199's] membership."
The Maine legislature held a hearing earlier this year on a bill thatwould bring New York-style fusion to the state. There's interest in
fusion, explains State Representative Hannah Pingree of North Haven, who
introduced the bill, because the Green Party has repeatedly spoiled
races for Democrats, siphoning off enough votes to let Republicans win.
Democrats control the Statehouse, but by a slim margin. As she works to
acquaint her colleagues with fusion, Pingree also has to acknowledge
that the benefits may not flow just to Democrats. "People look at this
as a way to promote the left, but it also could be a way for
conservatives to advance as well," she notes. That concern is
particularly acute among progressive leaders considering adopting fusion
in Oregon, a state with an active radical right.
Cantor and partners are also sowing seeds in Delaware and exploring
litigation in New Jersey, where they plan to argue that fusion voting is
protected by the state Constitution. And Cantor is particularly excited
about Ohio, under consideration for a 2006 ballot measure legalizing
fusion. Cantor sees the presidential election results--where voters in a
state with huge job losses went for the Republican--as an opportunity.
Working Families' target constituency, he says, is "people who do not
want to vote on the Democratic line but want to vote for the more
progressive candidate. That's how you get somewhere in Ohio."
Wherever it goes next, Working Families will be highly dependent on its
friends in labor for funds, person-power and political muscle. Lately,
of course, those friends have been preoccupied with the decision by
SEIU, the Teamsters and other unions in the Change to Win Coalition to
leave the AFL-CIO. It's too soon to say what the departure bodes for the
WFP. Still, there may be a growth opportunity: As labor works to figure
out how to maintain undivided political influence, Working Families,
with fusion voting, has found a way to build just that, pulling together
unions for common strategic purposes. Bob Master, co-chair of the
party and one of its founders, is Northeast political director of the
CWA, which remains part of the AFL-CIO, as does the UAW, another pivotal
WFP player. But quite a few of the WFP's most active union affiliates
are with Change to Win: large and influential locals of SEIU, UNITE
HERE, the Teamsters and the Laborers. Master's co-chair, Bertha Lewis, executive director of ACORN's New York
City chapter, has to insure that her members--poor people, mostly black
and Latino--get their interests represented in a party dominated by
organized labor. ACORN buys power through its organizing acumen, and
through its communities' sheer numbers. Election turnout shows spikes in
areas in Brooklyn and elsewhere where ACORN worked to get out the vote
(though not always on the Working Families line). "In certain
neighborhoods," says Lewis, "we are the machine." Fusion voting, she
declares, "is the political tool of brown America."
Recruitment into an unknown cause didn't go down easily for ACORN
members. "There ain't no way people are going to give up being a
Democrat in order to be something they never heard of," Julia Boyd, a
Brooklyn ACORN veteran, remembers saying. "There's no track record. Who
are you? People felt like it was just another scam to get publicity or
get your name in the papers. It was a difficult job to convince me."
Working Families showed its ability to turn out large numbers of
minority voters with the election of David Soares as Albany District
Attorney. The party sought out this race. It had interns call every
county in the state to see which incumbents were up for re-election,
then singled out Paul Clyne as especially vulnerable. Working Families
handpicked Soares, who at the time was an obscure prosecutor in Clyne's
office.
"When I went out and sought the endorsement, people laughed at me!" says
Karen Scharff, executive director of Citizen Action of New York and a
leader in Soares's campaign. "There was a strong Democratic arty. The
candidate was completely unknown to the public, not politically active.
It's a majority-white district, with no history of electing people of
color." As a prosecutor, Soares had founded a project that romoted
alternative sentencing for young offenders, and the core of his support
came from civil rights groups and progressive religious institutions.
Working Families and Citizen Action turned out throngs of
volunteers--culled from sources ranging from church choirs to defunct
Howard Dean meetup groups. Some of them are now running for local public
office for the first time.
But building strong local chapters that bring citizens more deeply into
power has been an uphill climb. "There are no resources put into New
York City chapter and club organizing," says Dorothy Siegel, a longtime
Brooklyn civic activist who three years ago decided to focus her energy
on building citizen participation in the Working Families Party--"to
make it less of an alliance of labor unions, ACORN and Citizen Action,
and more of a partnership organization with real grassroots chapters and
clubs." In Brooklyn, she says, she's been doing the work herself, as a
volunteer. "There's just one organizer for all of New York City," Siegel
points out.
"This is a party that does not have a lot of resources," notes
Democratic State Senator Eric Schneiderman, whose campaign committees
have contributed to Working Families. "They have to raise money to put
out the troops." Schneiderman is the former chair of the New York
Democratic Senate Campaign Committee, and he put aside his misgivings
about the Spano endorsement to make an appearance with Working Families
in Massachusetts, supporting the move to bring fusion voting there. He
believes the party is important to progressives' national prospects."There's a lot of concern among progressive activists that the
Democratic Party is too much in the grip of consultants who are always
suggesting that they slide to the right and take conservative positions
to accommodate swing voters, rather than exciting our own beliefs and
animating people," says Schneiderman. "The hope is that the Working
Families Party can empower progressive Democrats within the Democratic
Party."
Working Families' distinction from the likes of the
Independence Party, whose ballot line Bloomberg is
counting on to draw New York City voters who just won't pull a lever for
a Republican--or New York's Liberal Party, which started out as just
that but deteriorated into a patronage factory--is its commitment to
engaging citizen-activists at the local level and building power from
there, much as conservatives did a generation ago. Political consultant
Ethan Geto ran the Howard Dean campaign in New York State. When Dean
dropped out weeks before the New York primary, Geto found himself with
thousands of volunteers who had nothing to do. Though many Deaniacs
didn't know or care about local politics, Geto and others convinced some
to put their energies into the WFP's nominees for state office. "A new
generation of activists responded to that in New York: We have to build
here," says Geto. "It's a way of supporting a national resurgence of the
Democratic Party."
The experience of watching organized labor go all-out for John Kerry
left John Murphy of Boston's Teamsters Local 122 wondering what else
labor could do in states where it's strong (in Massachusetts, 28 percent
of workers are in unions).
"How many times do we have to pour millions of dollars into the
Democratic Party, and thousands of volunteers? And then hoping even if
they win, we still have to get them to pay attention to us?" asks
Murphy, who is a member of the Teamsters' executive board. He has become
a leading advocate for fusion voting in Massachusetts."If we do nothing and hope to simply influence the Democratic
Party, that's doomed to fail," says Murphy. "How many times do you have
to lose before you make a change?"
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