Lessons From Chicago’s Left, Two Years in Power

Interview by
Daniel Denvir

What is going on with Chicago? It’s a question that people on the American left have been asking a lot since Zohran Mamdani won his spectacular upset in New York. That’s because in 2023, Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) leader Brandon Johnson won Chicago’s mayoral election. It marked one of the most significant electoral victories for the American left. In particular, it was a crowning achievement for that city’s militant labor and social movements. Those movements have grown powerfully over the past decade and a half as left-wing activists took over the CTU and took their members out on strike with widespread community support, setting off a new era of teacher union militancy across the country.

At the same time, Chicago has been a thriving center of black organizing against both police violence and the abandonment of poor communities of color. The Johnson administration, however, has faced intense opposition from the real estate industry, organized Zionists, the Democratic Party establishment, and the charter school industry. Johnson’s approval ratings now are much, much lower than we would hope — something that mainstream media reports on Mamdani really love to mention. But while the Chicago project has faced big defeats and confronts enormous challenges, it has also won many victories and has a vision to keep pushing it forward.

Dan Denvir, host of the Jacobin Radio podcast The Dig, spoke to organizer and executive director of In These Times Alex Han, Black Youth Project 100 cofounder Asha Ransby-Sporn and Chicago alderwoman Jeanette Taylor about the hurdles the Chicago project has faced and how a left in power next time can avoid making…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Alex Han

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