How Progressive Civil Society Became Professional NGO Culture

The Democratic Party has failed to earn the support of what was once its working-class base.

This ought to be a moment of reckoning for the party. The anger it faces is justified and necessary to intensify pressure to abandon its tepid political strategies and overreliance on big donors who oppose large-scale redistribution and pro-worker policies. But while the party deserves a lot of blame, understanding the depth of the crisis on the Left requires a much broader analysis than finger-pointing at Democratic campaign officials and strategists allows.

The problem is the Left’s lack of civil society institutions. Achieving a turn back to the working class and rejecting neoliberalism — with its marketization of social life and hollowing out of government — requires more than finding the right program and messaging. It demands a tremendous democratic will anchored in strong, lasting relationships and institutional ties within working-class communities. Only through such connections can we build a popular coalition that is capable of driving transformational change.

Right now, progressive civil society is poorly equipped for this task. Broadly defined to include left-leaning advocacy groups, NGOs, think tanks, and public forums — such as publications, podcasts, social media networks, and community spaces — progressive civil society has come too close to abandoning mass politics to build working-class alliances and support for left visions.

The roots of this problem lie in a decades-long transformation of civic institutions. Since the 1960s,…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Anthony Nadler

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