It's Time for a Progressive Activist/Blogger Union
Fellow Philly blogger and local activist Susie Madrak, aka the Suburban Geurrilla and former Press Secretary for mayoral hopeful Tom Knox, had a post last week about the death of another Philly blogger: Rittenhouse Review’s Jim Capozzola. Susie is obviously extremely sad at the loss of her friend, but she's also really pissed:
There is not even a little doubt in my mind that, if Rittenhouse Review’s Jim Capozzola had remained a Republican, he’d be alive now. He would have been in a well-paid think tank job, living the high life. (He did, after all, have a masters degree in foreign policy.) Most importantly, he would have had health insurance for the past six years.
And what did his talent and dedication get him on the liberal side of the political noise machine? Some free books. A life that, as intellectually stimulating as it was, reduced him to living on the charity of strangers.
People saying really kind and thoughtful things about how important he was to the cause - after he’s dead. Isn’t that ironic?
The current state of progressive politics is all kinds of FUBAR. I myself just became insured again a few months back, due to my wife getting a job with benefits, but most activists and bloggers don't have a spouse they can get insurance through, so most go through life with, as Susie called it, the sword of Damocles hanging over their head every single day.
The few months that I went without insurance put so much stress on my relationship, that under other circumstances might have ended it. It also could have landed me in debtors prison if anything would have happened to either of us, but luckily, and with the help of a few family and friends with access to medicine (I have asthma, which requires pretty constant maintenance) we made it through. Which is to say that I am lucky. But a movement, if this is in fact a movement, can not rely upon the individual luck of all of its members if it is going to remain viable.
Whether we are talking about the "free" work that bloggers do for the party and movement, or the sweat and tears that activists pour into making political change a reality, the time for change is NOW. There are certainly a few donors who continue to fund what I feel is the movement, but most of the money being funneled into political communications still goes to the same G-d damned thing: 30 second ads. At the same time, most of the large Democratic organizations that have field operations continue to outsource them to the predatory PIRGs and PIRG clone Grassroots Campaigns, Inc.
If the party wont help to insure that its own toiling proletariat, than how can we honestly put any hope in the idea that they can or will help working people on the whole. I am now 100% convinced that the next major step in this movement must be for its workers to come together and form a union. I have become convinced that only after our own workers are organized and have successfully pushed for reforms of our institutions and party towards supporting their own heart, mouth, mind, feet, and hell, even soul, will we start to see the broader societal level changes that we all demand.
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The following charts and graphs are meant to contextualize the unique role that young voters played in the 2008 election, and their increasingly important role in a winning electoral coalition:
2008 Youth Electoral Map

2004 Youth Electoral Map

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Youth Vote Historical Support: 1976 - 2008

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clap clap!
Unless I'm mistaken, though, such a union would have to be entirely non-traditional. Not only are the laws slippery enough for conventional trade laborers, but for a number of reasons the campaign professionals who most need the institutional backing are not going to be able to legally be in a union.
What might fit your definition is more like a guild than a union. Professional development resources, health benefits (of some sort), and maybe some sort of unofficial collective bargaining power (or at least a monitoring function). Now that sort of thing could get funded by foundations, etc. It would face all sorts of threats along the way before it gained any real power. But if it worked, and it reached a sort of critical mass, it could potentially have all the power a union has and more to address the market failures of the progressive activist industry.
And the germ of the idea would surely have to be nurtured by communities like this.
Just don't expect to get any help from yr friends over at Open Left! They talk the movement game quite well, and they work hard, but those are their buddies in the Big Boss chairs at the organizations that need to be held accountable.
"In it to win it!" -- Beating Bush