Average People Won Universal Childcare for New York

One of the critical distinguishing features of the communist movement of the nineteenth century was its insistence, in the words of Karl Marx, “that the emancipation of the workers must be the work of the workers themselves.” Where other movements were willing to advocate on behalf of the working class or other oppressed groups, the First International demanded that it be the oppressed who liberated themselves.

It may seem a leap from that vision to the fact that all New Yorkers, in the next few years, will get childcare for their two-year-olds and, once that is established, perhaps their younger children as well. But I don’t think it is as much of a leap as we sometimes think.

One year ago, at this time, the idea that all New Yorkers would be able to get childcare for two-year-olds was dismissed as so much utopian nonsense, the silly prattle of an unknown Muslim socialist assemblyman who was running a quixotic campaign for mayor. Now it’s happening. Not because of Kathy Hochul, not because of the financial class, not because of elite Democrats or members of the state assembly, and not even just because of Zohran Mamdani, but because hundreds of thousands of you voted for Mamdani, tens of thousands of you knocked on doors for Mamdani, thousands of you organized the people who knocked on doors for Mamdani, and hundreds of you organized the organizers. You made this happen.

Emancipation is not something that is won in one moment or one fell swoop. It’s always a slow boring of hard boards, a phrase of Max Weber‘s that has mistakenly been appropriated by self-styled realists of the Democratic center, but which truly…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Corey Robin

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