In
the annals of American socialism, the name of Eugene V. Debs stands out as the
most prominent personality in the movement’s history. Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders, the self-described independent socialist now campaigning for the Democratic
presidential nomination, considers Debs one of his heroes.
It’s almost
certain Debs would not have approved of Sanders running for nomination in the
Democratic Party. As a leader of the early 20th-century Socialist Party, Debs
once said he was more proud of going to jail for leading a rail workers’ strike
than early in his career serving in the Indiana state legislature as an elected
Democratic representative.
Unfortunately,
there’s a tendency among defenders of the status quo to turn great historical
figures into harmless icons, saintly martyrs to high ideals who loved everyone
and threatened no one. This to a degree has happened with the Rev. Martin
Luther, King, Jr., a radical fighter for civil rights in his day that the
political establishment now treats with a kind of perfunctory reverence.
Sanders may
have his own ideas about Debs’ legacy, but at least he recognizes the
historical significance of the socialist leader’s life. These days Debs
(1855-1926) is not nearly as well known as King, or as he was in his own
lifetime. In this way the historical legacy of Debs has endured a similar
affront, reducing him in popular culture to more or less a historical footnote.
As such, conservative AFL -CIO bureaucrats probably don’t mind referencing the old Debs
legend as a labor hero once in a while, forgetting his militant opposition to
World War I or support for the Bolshevik-led 1917 revolution in Russia .
Radical
vision, principled politics
Actually,
some of the sanitizing occurred while Debs was still alive, as in socialist
editor David Karsner’s sympathetic biographical portrayal of Debs published in
1919, when he was in federal prison for attacking the war effort and supporters
were trying to win public sympathy to his case. But Debs was far more than the
benevolent humanitarian with a little book of “kind
sayings,” as writer Floyd Dell of The Liberator complained
about Karsner’s portrayal, which he and others thought downplayed his
revolutionary principles.
In fact,
Debs was an articulate, far-reaching critic of American society, staunchly
anti-capitalist and opposed to both the Democratic and Republican parties,
which he saw as controlled by Wall Street. In his five campaigns as the
Socialist Party candidate for president of the United States , Debs excoriated the economic
exploitation of workers, including the then rampant abuses of child labor, with
rare oratorical skill. He advocated for unions in all major industries and
promoted a vision of socialism as grassroots economic democracy. In a deeply
racist, patriarchal society, he was also staunchly anti-racist and pro-women’s
rights.
When war
hysteria swept the country, Debs openly defied the warmongers to oppose U.S. entry into World War I. He did so
not as a pacifist, but because he saw the world war as an inter-imperialist
dispute among the ruling classes of competing capitalist nations. He saw no
reason for working people to die for a war they had not started nor in which
they had any real stake.
Such was
the climate of wartime intolerance that Debs was charged with sedition for making
a speech against the war in Canton , Ohio in June 1918. His sentence was 10
years in prison. The sedition charge fell under the Espionage Act of 1917,
a law promoted by President Woodrow Wilson that essentially criminalized free
speech. Indeed, under the wartime repression several thousand labor, anarchist,
socialist, and pacifist voices were similarly prosecuted. Even distribution of
antiwar literature through the U.S. mail became illegal. For his part, Wilson labeled Debs a “traitor.”
Debs
appealed the conviction, but in 1919 the U.S. Supreme Court upheld his original
10-year sentence. The court took precedent from a similar case earlier that
year involving another convicted Socialist Party leader. Then Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes had made the famous argument that free speech didn’t mean the
right to yell fire in a crowded theater. Holmes metaphor was specious. In
this case, the crowded theater was a European battlefield red in blood and
violence, the fire of inter-imperialist war and millions of casualties very
much a reality.
In truth,
Debs was yelling fire in a burning theater, enraging the likes of the
sanctimonious Wilson by identifying the ruling classes of Europe and America
for what they essentially were—arsonists of human hope and civilization. Mass
murderers.
If the
“liberal” Wilson had his way, the aging Debs would have stayed in prison for
the full sentence—and likely died there. When word came in 1920 of Wilson ’s refusal to commute Debs’s
sentence, despite notable public pressure to do so, the socialist leader
smuggled a statement out of the prison denouncing Wilson as “the most pathetic figure in the
world. It is he, not I, who needs a pardon,” declared a defiant Debs.
Ironically,
it was Republican President Warren G. Harding who would commute Debs’s sentence
in December 1921. Considering that even A. Mitchell Palmer, the U.S. Attorney
General who led many of the wartime raids and arrests of radicals, had come to
favor Debs’s release from prison, Wilson’s personal vindictiveness toward Debs
was likely fueled by the way the latter’s principled antiwar stance exposed the
hypocrisy of the president’s moralistic posturing as some sort of progressive
visionary of “world peace.”
Such was
the world of that time that the man who sent some 116,000 young Americans to
their battlefield deaths, who took a hammer blow to the free speech rights of
peace advocates, would be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1919. Yet Debs, who
never killed anyone and was guilty only of the deed of the word, had his freedom
cruelly taken away.
Such our
world also remains. Now another Nobel Prize winner in the White House embraces
this same Espionage Act with vigor unprecedented since Wilson ’s day. This time the persecuted
include Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden, John Kiriakou, and other
“whistleblowers” who dare to expose U.S. war crimes and threats to political
freedoms by the U.S national security state.
A man
of a different cloth
As a
principled left-wing socialist, Debs was cut from a different cloth than most
mainstream politicians, then and now. How many career politicians today would
be willing to go to prison for their views and ideals? In the 2008 primary
campaign, then-Democratic Senator Barack Obama couldn’t even bring himself to
openly declare his support for same-sex marriage rights, which he did in fact
privately support. Instead, fearful of losing votes, he publicly insisted he
only supported “civil unions” for gays and lesbians.
This admission comes
from former Obama advisor David Axelrod in his recently published
book, “Believer: My Forty Years in Politics.” Obama was following
Axelrod’s advice to lie about the issue, counseling the future president that
he would lose support from conservative Black churches. That’s not to
particularly single out Obama. After all, that’s just politics!
Actually,
for Debs that was not politics. For him, political leadership always meant
telling the people the truth. “I am not going to say anything that I do not
think,” declared Debs in the 1918 speech that earned his conviction for
sedition. Debs believed in organizing working people to realize their own
power, through independent social and political action, union organizing, and
building grassroots mass movements for social justice. It was a vision of
a new society that inspired him, one in which popular economic democracy would
rule and inequality and exploitation would be vanquished to history’s
proverbial dustbin.
Sustained
by his identification with the socialist cause, Debs went to prison at the age
of 63 characteristically optimistic and defiant. After a few months in a West
Virginia facility, he was transferred to the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
Debs did
not exactly languish in prison. In 1920 he ran for president in the national
elections on the Socialist Party ticket, earning over 900,000 votes, or about
3.5 percent of the total vote. Indeed, his fighting spirit remained
strong. But Debs was also in poor health in prison. He suffered from
chronic myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, a condition he had
for much of his adult life. The stress of the prison environment, including
poor nutrition, caused his health to worsen. At times he was hospitalized,
while his weight dropped from 185 pounds to 160.
When
finally released in December 1921, Debs returned home to Terre Haute, Ind.,
greeted by an enthusiastic crowd of more than 30,000 people. There he hoped to
rest and regain his strength, but as the months passed his health did not
improve. In the summer of 1922, Debs decided to register as a patient at the
naturopathic Lindlahr Sanitarium in the Chicago suburb of Elmhurst, Ill.
Debs stayed
at Lindlahr for more than four months, benefiting from a strict but healthful
diet, exercise, physical therapy, nature walks, and other restorative
treatments. He became fond of the Lindlahr staff, telling his brother that his
palpitations, back pain, and exhaustion had lessened considerably as a result
of the “nature cure” regimen he was following.
Debs
returned to work for the Socialist Party, speaking around the country, and
returned again to Lindlahr in 1924. Unfortunately, by 1926 Debs health began to
take another turn for the worse. Larger doses of digitalis prescribed by his
Terre Haute physician, Madge Stephens, MD, could not reverse his failing heart
condition. In the final weeks of his life, Debs returned to Lindlahr on Dr.
Stephen’s advice, hoping for yet another reprieve from his suffering.
After collapsing while walking back from a visit at the nearby home of friend
Carl Sandburg, Debs lapsed into a coma and died on October 20. He was 70 years
old.
The
political legacy
As a
politician, Debs was primarily a speaker and writer, skills he used to great
effect in his campaigns for elected office. As a party leader, Debs had a
tendency to avoid the many internal factional debates in the all-inclusive
Socialist Party. In doing so he sometimes became, as contemporary socialist and
early Communist Party leader James P. Cannon later recalled, a pawn of those
who by every measure were far less the leader Debs was.
Yet perhaps
even this weakness stemmed from one of Debs’s attributes. By nature Debs was an
engaged, generous personality, capable of “beautiful friendliness,” as Cannon
described. As a man steeped in the spirit of human solidarity, it went against
the grain of his personality to engage too much in the sometimes heated,
vituperative debates that can mark the internal life of a political
party. Instead Debs preferred to reserve the full flame of his words and
spirit for those who oppressed the ordinary people, the poor, the dispossessed
and exploited whose cause he spent his life championing.
Whatever
his limits, the record of Debs stands in tribute to the heights an individual
can ascend in devoting their life to the cause of human liberation. Unlike
a wealthy narcissist like Donald Trump, Debs saw himself essentially only as an
instrument of the cause he served.
When in the
1920s Carl Sandburg told him he hoped to write a tribute to his friend,
Debs begged
off, telling the great writer and poet he feared there was “not enough
of me to warrant any such venture.” Nor was Debs a politician like Hillary
Clinton, long ensconced in the visionless “realpolitik” of the Washington
beltway, a liberal war hawk and friend of Wall Street, charging private groups
$200,000 or more a speech.
Neither was
his brand of socialism limited to democratic reform of capitalism, to softening
the harsh facts of inequality under capitalism without getting rid of
capitalism itself, as Bernie Sanders represents.
The life
and legacy of Eugene V. Debs stands as a rich and vibrant testament to one
man’s dedication to a liberated future. Indeed, Debs was an individual for whom
solidarity with his fellow humans was in his blood.
Debs also
thought for himself, and he evolved. His experience as a labor organizer
for the American Railway Union pushed him toward socialism, which he didn’t
embrace until he was nearly 40 years old. Once he did he never looked back,
abandoning the more conservative outlook of his younger years.
As a
socialist, Debs denounced as irrational and unjust a capitalist system that
created extravagant wealth for a few at the top, while millions of ordinary
working people struggled to get by. Most important, he thought it was possible
to build a new, cooperative society, to transcend the irrationality,
waste, and greed of the capitalist economic system, and to end wage slavery and
all forms of social oppression. He called this socialism.
Rose
Karsner: “He belonged to us all”
Coincidentally,
during Debs’s last stay at Lindlahr in 1926, Cannon, then national secretary of
the International Labor Defense (ILD), a civil rights group established by the
Workers (Communist) Party to defend political prisoners, was also a patient at
the Elmhurst clinic. When the ILD was established the year before, Debs in
typical fashion had offered to serve on its national committee.
While at
Lindlahr, Cannon’s partner, Rose Karsner, recalls how they wanted very
much to talk to Debs, but under the circumstances were hesitant to intrude upon
the ailing man. On the day after their arrival, Karsner saw Debs sitting in the
reception room while waiting for his room to be made up. In the moment she
decided to very briefly say hello to Debs.
“I went
over to Gene and attempted to make myself known, but I believe he did not get
my name,” recalled Karsner in a letter written
on ILD letterhead to Theodore Debs a week after his brother’s death. “It was
quite clear to me that he was very weak and I tried to get away. But Gene, in
his characteristic way, would not permit me to leave. He did not know who I
was, but he heard me say ‘comrade’ and that was enough for him. He sat and
spoke to me for a few seconds.”
As Karsner
concluded, “Personally, I feel that Gene belonged to us all and especially to
those of us engaged in work which characterized his activities most—the united
action of ALL in behalf of the working class, regardless of political, industrial, or
philosophical opinions. He rose above party differences and factional lines,
and we love him for it. The tradition of Gene is the greatest treasure of the
younger generation.”
In the
twilight of his days, there was revealed perhaps in that fleeing moment with
Rose Karsner something of the full measure of Eugene V. Debs, a man for whom
the word “comrade” was always enough for him.
> The article above was written by Mark Harris.
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