In our YouGov survey of 3,000 voters in the Rust Belt States of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin, 57 percent of the respondents supported a new political formation outside the two major parties; Only 19 percent opposed. This finding is especially notable because these voters were asked to support a very radical statement of anti-corporate populism:
Would you support a new organization, the Independent Workers Political Association, that would support working-class issues independent of both the Democratic and Republican parties. It would run and support independent political candidates committed to a platform that included
Stop big companies that receive tax dollars from laying off workers who pay taxes.
Guarantee everyone who wants to work has a decent-paying job, and if the private sector can’t provide it, the government will
Raise the minimum wage so every family can lead a decent life
Stop drug company price-gouging and put price controls on food cartels
Every demographic group supported this proposal, led by 71 percent of Rust Belt voters less than 30 years of age, and 74 percent of those who feel very insecure about losing their job.
So How Do We Build It?
The knee-jerk response when hearing about building a new political party is to either think too big or too small, or to think it just can’t be done given the nature of our two-party system.
Some believe a new party will only be possible with the emergence of a charismatic figure who leads us out of the wilderness. They long for a progressive version of Trump, someone who can capture the Democratic Party —as he did with the Republicans —or smash it into smithereens. As my insightful friend put it: “Needless to say, your new party needs a charismatic leader. Mr. Trump is an entertaining idiot celebrity millionaire with a Borsht Belt sense of timing and a mean streak as deep as the Grand Canyon. Top that! Where is your Fidel or your Lech Walesa or your Jesus Christ?”
That’s exactly what’s wrong with building a new party on the back of a charismatic leader. Good luck finding one.
Others argue for the “go small” approach, running independent progressive candidates to capture local seats on town councils, school boards, and as county supervisors. Local offices are an important part of developing a new party, but it is very hard at the local level, except in large, prosperous cities, to enact policies that meet the needs and interests of working people. Focusing locally often means delivering small or delivering not much at all. It is a start, but it doesn’t speak to the alienation workers feel about national politics.
The biggest argument against third parties, however, is the limitation built into our two-party system. A third party in most cases becomes a spoiler, siphoning away votes that help the worst party win. For instance, if an independent working-class candidate enters a race as a third party, most of their votes will come from the Democratic candidate, and most likely assure victory for the Republican. There are still many, especially among labor leaders, who blame Ralph Nader for the election of Geroge W. Bush in 2000.
This argument is true on a national level, but it no longer applies to many congressional races because much of the country now has a one-party system. Nearly 60 percent of all House races in 2024 were won by 25 percent or more. In 132 districts, the Republican won by 25 percent or more (and there were another 112 similarly lopsided Democratic districts). And between 2020 and 2024, the Republicans won 20 Senate races by 25 percent or more. You can’t be a spoiler in a one-party race. The terrain for challenges in those contests is wide open.
Dan Osborne showed how that could be done in deep-red Nebraska
Republican Deb Fisher won the Nebraska Senate seat in 2012 by 15 percent against Bob Kerry, the Democrat. In 2018, she upped her margin of victory to 19 percent. In 2024, running for a third term, she was viewed as so strong a favorite that the Democrats decided not to waste resources by running anyone against her – a true one-party race.
Two working-class organizers noticed the vacuum in Nebraska sought to identify a labor candidate who would run as an independent. After canvassing many state and local labor union people, they found Dan Osborne, a pipe fitter and former local union president who had led a strike against the Kellogg corporation. They pitched him on the idea, and he decided to give it a go.
Together they raised funds, designed literature, formulated ads, and traveled around the state speaking to voters about the needs and interests of working people.
It scared the hell out of Fischer and Republicans, who ended up pouring millions of dollars into the race as Osborne gained traction.
Osborne threatened to unseat the three-term senator, but lost by 6.7 percent, a strong showing compared to the 20 percent margin by which Kamala Harris lost to Trump in the state.
Imagine if unions and progressives formed an Independent Workers Political Association and fielded dozens of working-class independent candidates in bright red congressional districts, especially the 20 one-party districts in the Rust Belt states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Our polling strongly suggests those candidates, running on a strong populist economic platform, would do very well.
Would they win? Some might, but even if they all lost, close challenges and strong campaign rhetoric would help elevate issues important to working people and might even lead to concessions on the part of the opposition during the heat of a close campaign. And, as in Nebraska, a credible challenge will force campaign spending into districts where candidates unfriendly to labor are expected to win in a cake walk.
But as Ringo sang, “You know it don’t come easy.”
The monied interests in the U.S., with trillions of dollars at their disposal, will make sure the two major parties come down hard on any efforts to build a new working-class political formation. They will spend millions to trash working-class candidates like Dan Osborne. They will try to outlaw third party efforts by making it nearly impossible for newcomers to gain ballot lines. Already, the New York state government, run by Democrats no less, has banned the use of the words “independence” and “independent” from ballot lines.
But the monied interests can’t stop the growing working-class understanding of the self-evident truth: The billionaires have two parties; we need one of our own!
How do we move forward?
I can’t tell you what you should do, but I can share what I’ll be trying to do. I’m not a political organizer. I’m not an elected political or labor leader with a large base. I represent no one. But I am an educator, especially an educator of working people. My job and the job of the Labor Institute is to create educational programs, conduct research, and write articles that engage working people in the discussion of whether a new political formation should be built, and if so, how to do it.
Too many activists see education as a side show, a diversion from the goal of building something new. But every successful movement that has challenged the monied interests, from the anti-abolitionists to the rise of the trade union movement, required an educational core. People not only need to move forward, but they need to understand why.
In the late 19th century, the populists fielded 6,000 educators to build the most powerful anti-corporate movement our country has ever experienced. That educational core helped to build an interracial working-class political formation that fought hard to protect the lives and livelihoods of small farmers and factory workers against the robber barons and Jim Crow. They spread the ideas that eventually led to controls on corporate power. Their dreams became the basis of the New Deal, the growth of the labor movement, and the establishment of working-class power and prosperity after WWII.
Sadly, that power and prosperity has been whittled away over the last generation. The Democrats, once the party of the working-class, seemed to have switched sides. Working-class prosperity was transferred to the richest of the rich. Now, we need a new educational effort that addresses how to provide decent jobs and livelihoods for all working people, instead of fattening the wallets of the superrich, (something we have started to do with our Reversing Runaway Inequality educational programs.)
Those with large, vibrant constituencies, like labor union leaders, will have to take on the task of organizational building. They will need to test the waters by fielding independent working-class candidates in one-party districts, and running ballot initiatives that protect working-class needs, like prohibiting compulsory layoffs at corporations that receive taxpayer money.
It’s going to be a fight, and it’s going to take some time. But working people are more than ready for something new. Our polling shows that clearly.
Now is the time to build the politics of the future, instead of coming up with reasons from the past for why it can’t be done.
Les, you don't have to apologize for doing your job. We on the activist side need accurate info to argue our case effectively--and you know the econ trickle up defenders (neolibs) of the D party and their media allies aren't about to.
At 77, I'm too old to do organizing from the ground up. But as a veteran of both labor and political organizing, I could for sure serve as an advisor. If anyone thinks now is very different from then, my 1st piece of advice is to read the farmer-labor Populists, Eugene V. Debs, the C.I.O. organizers of the 1930s, and MLK.
My 2nd piece is to learn basic econ theory. The American and by extension the world econ system is justified by assertions with little empirical evidence. They're no more than a deep hatred for the New Deal and Keynesianism. Which were proven effective thus why the econ elites fear them. So we have a center-left economics that works with and for labor. The facts are on our side; working people need to hear that.
The D apologist argument about 3rd parties, that Nader cost Gore the election, is all sorts of wrong. It's just another red herring to deflect attention away from the fact the Ds haven't offered anything of substance for decades. And that they're sponsored by the same 1%er and corporate elites as the Rs.
Most grating is the D party assumption our votes belong to them. Plus that "lesser of two evils" ploy, like upper income elitist Ds believe they can get away with offering us crumbs from their table. Nader got votes because he was what we wanted to vote FOR. BTW, Dems, the non-voters are saying NO to you, too! As young supporters of Bernie said to the elite DNC: get it through your heads--you don't own us. We're outsiders, independents who might vote D if you actually field a candidate we can vote for. Same then for an avowedly pro-labor party, especially when the working class is the majority. Give us what we need to survive or we will do it ourselves.
PS: A last piece of advice that might seem irrelevant to pol and econ issues, but is even more basic. When we talk about the common good, implicitly we're invoking ethics. In addition, the question of the meaning of life. Is it merely to accumulate material goods? Granted, physical basics must take precedence. But working with and for each other is also to enable each person to find purpose. I'm saying spiritual concerns and artistic expression, what in academia are known as the humanities, are the other half of what makes us human. Let's not forget that.
My main thesis is long enough; here's a separate comment on "charismatic leader." The idea is total b.s. The implication is we lessers aren't capable.
The capitalist and bureaucratic version is exposed in those offensive and excruciatingly dull "leadership" seminars predicated on the assumption the attendees buy into the belief they're superior and indispensable.
Same for the D elite with their smug Ivy League "meritocracy." They learned nothing from what is so well described in D. Halberstam's book on the horrible errors in Vietnam due to the certitude of what he named The Best and the Brightest.
The left version is the dogma "vanguard of the working class." My grandpa was a Wobbly and my blood boils at this notion we're too stupid to lead ourselves. In current parlance, it's the claim class is the only thing; issues important to LGBTQ or BIPOC are diversions. Most often preached by white cis male armchair theorists who've never had to fight to be recognized for what they are. And for that matter, have never held a tool in their lives. In addition to close to 30 years of blue collar experience, I'm also within both sets of letters. Contrary to the old Aristotelian either/or and to Enlightenment certainty, quantum reality has room for both/and as well as for ambiguity.
Eugene V. Debs summed it up brilliantly. "I would not lead you into paradise even if I could because if I led you in, someone else would lead you out. You must use your heads as well as your hands and get yourself out of your present condition; as it is now, the capitalists use your heads and your hands." In other words, part of that "leadership" propaganda is to convince us we're only fit to serve as hands for their superior heads.
Les, you've trained union workers. You know what is to be done.