AMID A CHORUS OF GREAT JOY AT THE ELECTION OF A SELF-DESCRIBED SOCIALIST IN NEW
YORK, IT FALLS TO THE ANARCHISTS, AS EVER, TO SOUND A DISCORDANT NOTE OF CAUTION
~ Andy and Simon discuss Zohran Mamdani’s victory, which has energised much of
the left even in Britain—but at regional level the purse is much tighter and
vulnerable to the interference of greater power. This side of the pond, we’re
seeing Reform UK implosions in Kent, Cornwall and Lancashire well before Nigel
Farage gets a sniff of national power. Over in the activist scene meanwhile
we’ve had a pair of sentences handed down for Just Stop Oil members, with two
being found not guilty of criminal damage to Stonehenge after a cornflour and
orange dye incident, and six being convicted for climbing a gantry on the
M25—notably, having been denied the right to offer their reasoning to the jury.
And we round off with a bit of chat about Freedom stories of the week, including
the targeting of Elbit Systems insurer Allianz in Europe, the conviction of ten
students in Leicester for protesting the university’s complicity in arms
trading, and the infamous, lethal police raid on a favela in Rio.
The post Anarchist News Review: Mamdani’s win, Reform’s travails and JSO
jailings appeared first on Freedom News.
Tag - Zohran Mamdani
TRUE CHANGE WON’T COME FROM THE BALLOT BUT FROM SUSTAINED, PEOPLE-POWERED
MOVEMENTS
~ Andrew J Boyer ~
Two recent developments have jolted voters out of despair on both sides of the
Atlantic: Zohran Mamdani’s upset win in New York City’s Democratic mayoral
primary, and Zarah Sultana’s announcement that she will leave Labour to launch a
new party with Jeremy Corbyn. Think-pieces will spring up about how these
insurgents will finally listen to working people, and those who have felt
utterly hopeless may feel a surge of relief and optimism—even if only briefly.
For anarchists, this cycle is all too familiar. There is no denying that
sympathetic politicians can deliver gains—minimum-wage increases, housing
pledges or public-health reforms—but the system in which these office-seekers
operate invariably snaps back into oppression, often with greater force. The key
question is not which short-term reforms make headlines, but what abuses these
new office-holders will permit once they secure institutional power.
Since relocating to Britain in 2016, I’ve seen five different prime ministers
assume office. I asked a half-dozen friends, “When did Britain last feel
well-governed?” Every one glanced at the ground and came up blank. Even die-hard
Labour supporters could not point to a single year when they felt in control.
Brexit votes, U.S. presidential seasons, a global pandemic and the
cost-of-living crisis have each promised salvation, only to deliver deeper
inequality and attrition. Politicians dangle hope, then enact the opposite of
what people demanded.
The United States plays a similar game, dressed in pageantry. Many rightly
praise the Obama administration’s role in securing marriage equality in 2015—yet
that same era saw record deportations, aggressive policing and drone strikes
abroad, fuelling the conditions for today’s resurgent far right. Progressives
such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Rashida Talib rode the 2019–20 “big blue
wave,” alongside fellow Democratic-Socialists like Zohran Mamdani, into Joe
Biden’s presidency. CNN hailed the trifecta: White House, House of
Representatives and Senate under one party’s control. Still, key victories
remained unsealed: Roe v. Wade was not codified into federal law, deportations
and police violence continued at alarming rates, and U.S. funds kept flowing to
Israel’s assault on Palestinians.
Across the pond, Jeremy Corbyn’s 2017 Labour campaign—built on anti-austerity
themes like free education, social housing and expanded welfare—resonated more
deeply than Bernie Sanders ever did in 2016. His manifesto hit all the right
marks, yet Brexit-obsessed Tory and Labour centrists swiftly side-lined him. By
the 2019 general election, Labour turnout plunged to its lowest since 1935.
Corbyn’s departure paved the way for Keir Starmer, whose centrist pivot has
included an open purge of Labour’s socialist wing. This internal cleansing
underscores how the system preserves itself, no matter how principled or skilful
the leader.
Politics is quintessentially relational. Whether we cast ballots on televised
election nights, debate policy in neighbourhood assemblies or refine personal
ideologies in conversation with friends, we place faith in others to safeguard
our material realities. That leap of hope is intimate—but also precarious,
because it trades direct action for the promise of representation.
If we accept that politics will always carry emotional weight, the question
becomes: where should we stake our hopes? On the fast-paced, high-stakes
spectacle of elections, or on slow, organic movement-building? The former
resembles an arcade claw machine: patrons—often children—feed coins, maneuver
the claw, and occasionally win a plush prize, but most of the time the toy slips
away. Casinos follow the same logic: gamblers know the odds favour the house,
yet the thrill of the chase keeps them returning. In our 24-hour social-media
climate, where hot takes and breaking news are one swipe away, the “chase versus
reward” circuitry in our brains is even more tightly engaged by election cycles.
This is not to brand voters as gullible. From elementary school onward, we learn
to vote: first on class themes, then student body councils, and eventually local
and national contests. Voting feels sacred because it is our primary civic
ritual. Yet non-voters often face scorn and assumptions of apathy, when in
reality many are active in mutual aid, tenants’ unions, direct action and other
vital, non-electoral work. Some of history’s most significant change-makers
operated outside the ballot box. If mainstream media treated community
organising with the same fervour they reserve for politicians, our sense of
viable alternatives might expand.
As the saying goes, “Be tough on systems, soft on people.” Elections will always
stir our emotions, and perhaps an independent Labour alternative or a
Democratic-Socialist mayor of New York will achieve breakthroughs. Still,
history warns that office-holders promising change from within will either
moderate or be absorbed by the system’s self-preserving logic. If we seek
lasting liberation, we must sustain people-powered movements that render
oppressive structures obsolete—beyond the ballot.
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Image: Radio Onda d’Urto CC BY-NC-ND
The post Hopeful highs and electoral lows appeared first on Freedom News.