Make a contribution to the SPUSA
Campaigns
Activist Campaigns
Electoral Action
Activism Blog
About Us
Principles
Platform
Handbook
Statements
National Committee
Locals and Commissions
National Office
National Convention
Media
The Socialist
Literature
The Organizer
Bulletin Board
SP Members E-List
Membership
Join Us/ Renew
Make a Contribution
Members Mail Log-In

Socialist Party Handbook
-
Defining Democratic Socialism

While there is a wide spectrum of opinion within the Party, it is not unlimited, and the Party reserves the right to exclude those who will not operate democratically.

Liberalism – First of all, liberals have no place in the Party. A liberal is one who accepts the current system while working for improvements on it. Socialists, no matter how gradualist their approach may be, all believe the present economic system must be replaced. David McReynolds, Presidential candidate of the SP in both 1980 and 2000, described the difference between liberals and radicals in terms of choice: a liberal, if given the choice of death by fire squad or the gas chamber, will agonize endlessly over which is superior. A radical will try to escape. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, the radical will be killed trying to escape, but a hundred out of a hundred the liberal will die from one of the two choices he or she could not see beyond.

Leninism – In 1920, the Socialist Party in the U.S. split into three groups: the SP, the Communist Party, and the Communist Labor Party.
   
The SP, while sympathetic to the initial stages of the Russian Revolution, could not accept Moscow’s compete domination of the Comintern (The Communist International), and thus was not eligible for membership. Rosa Luxemburg, in Leninism or Marxism and The Russian Revolution, criticized the extreme centralism of Lenin’s notion, a vanguard party, which would lead the working class. Party discipline is to be enforced internally by “democratic centralism,” which means party members cannot deviate publicly from the party line. In practice, the “dictatorship of the proletariat” has been the dictatorship of the vanguard party, often under the control of one of a few men. (“Men” is used deliberately; there have been women in the lower bodies by not in the Soviet Politburo.)


What the Socialist Party Believes
Economic Democracy
Working Class Unity
Class Consciousness
Internationalism

Socialist Feminism
A Multi-tendency Organization
Defining Democratic Socialism
Strategies for Transition to Socialism
Tactics/Organizing
Socialist Party History


            Socialist Party USA 339 Lafayette St. #303 New York, NY 10012