"... IF YOU CAN KEEP IT!":  

The Fight for Democracy in America

*  Civic Engagement and Leadership Development 2025  *

 

Join us to discuss the challenges of building a progressive working-class politics in 2025.  Hosted by Alethia Jones, Director of the Civic Engagement & Leadership Development program at the Murphy Institute.

 

Fridays at Noon (ET) beginning March 7.  Virtual via Zoom webinar.

 

Register:   slucuny.swoogo.com/CELD2025/register

 

FRI. MARCH 7:

"From Multiracial Democracy to Multiracial Fascism?"

FRI. MARCH 14:

"Labor's Fight for Democracy"

FRI. MARCH 21:

"On the Frontlines of the School for Democracy"

FRI. MARCH 28:

"Where is the Working-Class Majority?"

FRI. APRIL 4:

Can We Keep It?  Reflections on "The Fight for Democracy in America"

 

 

FULL PROGRAM SCHEDULE:

 

Fri. March 7 -- 12:00pm-1:30pm:

 

"From Multiracial Democracy to Multiracial Fascism?: 

What is the Future of the American Experiment?"

 

Guest Speakers:

Alexis McGill Johnson (she/her)

President and CEO

Planned Parenthood Federation; Planned Parenthood Action Fund

 

Eric Ward (he/him)

Executive Vice President

Race Forward

 

Dorian Warren (he/him)

Co-President

Center for Community Change; Community Change Action

 

Moderator:

Alethia Jones (she/her)

Director, Civic Engagement and Leadership Development

Distinguished Lecturer, Labor Studies Department

CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies

 

Alexis McGill Johnson

Eric Ward

Dorian Warren

Alethia Jones

Fri. March 14 -- 12pm-1:30pm:

 

"Labor's Fight for Democracy"

 

Guest Speakers:

Carlos Aramayo (he/him)

President, UNITE HERE Local 26 (Greater Boston & Rhode Island)

Vice President, Massachusetts AFL-CIO

 

Adolph Reed (he/him)

Professor Emeritus, Political Science

University of Pennsylvania

 

Moderator:

Samir Sonti (he/him)

Assistant Professor, Labor Studies and Urban Studies Departments

CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies

 

Carlos Aramayo

Adolph Reed

Samir Sonti

Fri. March 21 -- 12pm-1:30pm:

 

"On the Frontlines of the School for Democracy" 

 

Guest Speakers:

Jamala Rogers (she/her)

Standing for Democracy 

 

Shane Larson (he/him)

Assistant to President; Senior Director, Government Affairs & Policy

Communications Workers of America

 

Jessica Tang (she/her)

President, AFT Massachusetts 

Vice President, Massachusetts AFL-CIO 

 

Moderator:

Stephanie Luce (she/her)

Chair and Professor, Labor Studies Department

CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies

 

Jamala Rogers

Shane Larson

Jessica Tang

Stephanie Luce

Fri. March 28 -- 12pm-1:30pm:

 

"Where is the Working-Class Majority?: 

From Demographic Destiny to Strategic Action"

 

Guest Speakers:

Javier Morillo (he/him)

Senior State Strategy Director - Movement Voter Project

Former president - Local 26, SEIU Minnesota

 

Erica Smiley (she/her)

Executive Director

Jobs With Justice 

 

Loan Tran (they/them)

National Director

Rising Majority

 

Moderator:

Alethia Jones (she/her)

Director, Civic Engagement and Leadership Development

Distinguished Lecturer, Labor Studies Department

CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies

 

Javier Morillo

Erica Smiley

Loan Tran

Alethia Jones

Fri. April 4 -- 12pm-1:30pm:

 

Can We Keep It?

Reflections on "The Fight for Democracy in America"

 

Moderator:

Alethia Jones (she/her)

Director, Civic Engagement and Leadership Development

Distinguished Lecturer, Labor Studies Department

CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies

 

Alethia Jones

 

 

REGISTER:  slucuny.swoogo.com/CELD2025/register

 

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Series Description:

 

Democracy as direct decision making by the people through voting has a tortured history in the United States. The Founders didn’t love it. On September 17, 1787, when  Elizabeth Willing Powel asked Benjamin Franklin : "Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?," he replied, “A republic, if you can keep it."  A republic — or representative democracy — ensured that persons with character, means, and judgment would represent voters and make decisions on their behalf (originally only property owning, white, men were eligible for elected office). The system of checks and balances forced compromises between competing views by ensuring multiple power centers which prevented rapid, sweeping and decisive changes fueled by the passion of the masses. And the constitution protected the rights and freedoms of those who didn’t agree with majority sentiments.

 

It has taken centuries of diligent advocacy and fighting to build governmental systems to serve all Americans, not just a privileged few and to ensure freedom of political perspectives. But in January 20, 2025, we face a federal government where the judiciary, the legislature, and the executive branches share the same party and a newly invigorated worldview to return America to its past. They have few obstacles to unilateral decisions and can revoke decades of changes and centuries of rules and norms. Some argue that this moment is as significant as the end of Reconstruction in the 1890s, an era defined by the decisive reversal of freedoms won during the Civil War. Others point out that one-party trifectas have dominated state-level politics for some time and that a decisive electoral re-alignment is unfolding nationally. 

 

The labor movement remains the largest organization of working class people in the country, despite counting only 6% of the private sector workforce (the lowest since 1900s) as members.  While America will always be a multiracial society, less clear is whether that rainbow will be democratic or a neo-autocratic and fascistic future endorsed by elections. Anti-incumbency and elected authoritarians are on the rise worldwide.  

 

  • Is the republic at risk or can we keep it? Will the unprecedented experiment that is the US continue apace or will it take a decisive turn?
  • How did we get here and what is to be done?
  • What is the labor movement’s role at this historical juncture?

 

For this season, we are inviting guest moderators to guide panels reflecting on this historic turn. Together, we will assemble a range of leaders from labor and progressive organizations to share how they are grappling with the challenges of building a progressive working-class politics at this moment and explore new strategies and new directions.  

 

 

 

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In December 2024, the Civic Engagement & Leadership Development program at the Murphy Institute sponsored a kickoff program for this series.  We invite you to view the video of that program in preparation for the discussions we will have in March 2025.

 

"NEW DIRECTIONS IN LABOR POLITICS" - Tue. December 3, 2024

(click image below to view video of this program)

 

Featured Speakers: 

Maurice Mitchell - National Director, Working Families Party; 

Rosslyn Wuchinich - President, UNITE-HERE Local 274 in Philadelphia; 

Daniel Judt - PhD student, Yale University; Political Education Coordinator, Worker Power

Jenna Fullmer - President, Blue Compass Strategies; 

Moderated by Bob Masterformer Political Director, Communications Workers of America - District One.