
Van Jones
In late June, Van Jones – a former “green jobs” czar in the Obama administration and currently a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress – officially launched a new organization known as Rebuild the Dream. The group’s first mission is to help spark a new economic justice effort called the American Dream Movement, an alliance focused on economic justice fights across the country. Amid conservative efforts to divide Americans by blaming scapegoats such as immigrants and unionized teachers for our county’s problems, the American Dream Movement instead seeks to recreate a politics of common purpose – one that advocates for broadly shared prosperity in our country, appeals to a set of common values and highlights the need for creating good jobs that will allow people to work with dignity.
Founded in partnership with groups including MoveOn.org, the AFL-CIO, Change to Win, the Center for Community Change and the Campaign for America’s Future, Jones describes the endeavor as “a national movement to defend the American Dream itself.”
At the June 24 launch event for Rebuild the Dream in New York City, Jones elaborated on this general idea, emphasizing the need to reframe our national political discussion so that we refute four key lies: 1) that our country is broke, 2) that asking the super-rich to pay their fair share hurts America; 3) that it’s patriotic to hate America’s government and to undermine our national infrastructure; and, finally, 4) that we are helpless to change things.
Shortly after the New York event, I had a conversation with the ever-busy Jones to discuss the vision for the American Dream Movement, what we can learn from the Tea Party and what it will take to change the direction of national politics.
Defining the American Dream
I first asked Jones to define what he means by the “American dream.”
“By the ‘American dream’ I don’t mean the ‘American Fantasy,’” he said, “which is what the commercializers have done with that concept. They’ve promoted the idea that everybody’s going to be rich someday and that buying a bunch of stuff will make you happy. That version of the dream has led to an ‘American nightmare’ for most people.
“I reject that stuff,” Jones continued. “I believe in something much more fundamental to the American ideal. I’m talking about the idea that you don’t have to have a fancy last name to make it in America. That where you start off in life does not determine where you end up. That hard work should pay. And that ordinary people should be able to work hard, play by the rules, have a decent job, a paycheck, that give their kids a better life. That is the American dream that we are seeking to defend.
“The real fight is not between conservatives and liberal, or even between Wall Street and Main Street. The real fight is between ‘cheap patriots,’ who are trying to destroy the American dream and ‘deeper patriots,’ who are trying to restore it. It’s really a fight between two different versions of patriotism, two visions of what American greatness will require in the next century.
“You have these cheaper patriots who have taken their wrecking ball agenda,” Jones explained, “painted it red, white and blue and used it to smash down all of the institutions that made America exceptional: unions, public schools, the sense of responsibility among Americans to invest in the country that made their success possible.”
How Did We Get to the American Nightmare?
I asked Jones to say more about how we got to the place we’re in now: the American economy is in crisis and the historic link between increasing productivity and rising wages has been severed. We have undone the connection in our country between economic competitiveness and community well being. Given this, I was curious about what institutions he thought would need rebuilding, especially in the context of our global economy.
“I don’t have a magic answer to the question,” Jones said, “but I do try to promote a process that will get us closer to good answers. It’s going to take a mix of approaches, some of them governmental, some having to do with individual behavior, some of them having to do with finding smarter ways for the labor movement to revive. But fundamentally, the deck is stacked against patriotic corporations that want to hire in America.
“You have trade policy and tax policy that encourage companies to take advantage of every possible benefit and to give back nothing. So you have your tax havens, where you can hide your money overseas. If you want to create a job or open a plant, you can do that overseas. You aren’t punished for doing that by the tax code; in fact you’re rewarded for doing it. It’s an exploitative relationship. I say that corporate America would be the worst boyfriend ever: just take, take, take and give nothing back.
“We need to make sure the American government is a partner to the American people in solving this problem. Right now, unfortunately, the American government is a captive of some of the worst economic interests on the planet.
“So there has to be change in trade and tax policy. But also, we can’t wait on Washington, DC to fix these things.”
Where Do We Go From Here?
To explore how this change might come about, I asked what people who are not currently part of a union or community organization can do to connect with the movement.
“First, people who are Internet savvy should go to rebuildthedream.com,” Jones said. “We are having house meetings on the 16th and 17th of this month across the country. They can find a meeting to go to. You don’t have to be a part of any organization to go to these meetings and bring your best ideas.”
Still curious, I mentioned that, in his public speeches, Jones had spoken of the need to build a progressive version of the Tea Party. I wondered what exactly that meant – what the constituent elements of such an effort would be? What really would we want to emulate?
Jones replied, “The Tea Party is really an extraordinary achievement and people who disagree with their politics do themselves a disservice not to study them very carefully. Twenty-four months ago, nobody was talking about austerity. People were talking about a New New Deal and Keynesianism and about the return of [Franklin Delano] Roosevelt. Twenty-four months later, even the Democrats mostly talk about cuts. That’s a big achievement by the Tea Party.
“On the whole, what we call the Tea Party represents a set of preexisting assets – both ideas and individual organizations that long pre-dated the declaration of the new movement. Some of them go back to the Ross Perot days. Yet this set of libertarian ideas was not taken very seriously, even within the Republican Party.
“It’s sheer genius to be able to take a very old set of ideas and an aging set of assets and realign them and re-brand them so that they must be taken seriously in the current context. That’s something we can learn from the Tea Party: How to take existing infrastructure and ideas but find a way to re-present them to the American people.
“We don’t have to go out and start a bunch of organizations from scratch. We can bring together groups that are fighting effectively against cuts, against tuition hikes, but that are fighting alone, without a common banner. I would say, frankly, that we are already outperforming the Tea Party at its peak in terms of popular mobilization, if not in terms of electoral success. They got all this credit in September 2009 for bringing 150,000 people to D.C. and it shook everybody up. Well, we had 150,000 people on the streets of Madison, Wisconsin. We’ve had major protests in Ohio, in Montana – with the largest protest in the state’s history – and more.
“In terms of the level of popular mobilization and fight back, we’re probably two to three times the size of the Tea Party. But we don’t have a common banner or a shared patriotic narrative about what common values we’re advancing.”
The Appropriate Use of Leadership
I asked what sort of leadership would be required in order to make the American Dream Movement into this kind of common banner and also what we can learn from past efforts on the left. Jones pointed to the limits of charismatic leadership.
“We have to be very attentive to the appropriate use of charisma,” he said. “I think we had a big overdose of charisma with President Obama in 2008. People surrendered a lot of their own authority and initiative to our president. This is quite understandable because of his personal gifts and what he meant to the world. But I don’t think it gave us the outcomes we wanted.
“The Tea Party has made a brilliant use of charismatic leadership. They have leaders that people can look to – Sarah Palin, Michele Bachmann, Glenn Beck, Dick Armey and others. But none of those individuals could stand up tomorrow and say, ‘the Tea Party is over’ in a press conference. It wouldn’t be over, because they have a network that is much bigger than any individual who is part of that network.
“One of our aspirations is to create a banner under which many leaders can shine and grow and learn, but where no one leader is the personification of the movement. People will always let you down. Principles endure. So having a network that is based on principles and values first, not based on politicians or even a political party, is critical.
“What the Tea Party has been able to achieve is that they have the benefits of a third party, but none of the downside. They can run primaries against Republicans they don’t like. They can take very, very strong values-based positions. And at the same time, when it’s all said and done, they don’t have to go their own way, as they did in the Perot years.
“I think the people on their side of the divide have learned the lessons of Perot and come up with a very positive solution. For lack of a better term, we have not learned the lessons of Nader and come up with our own positive solution. So those of us who are in the American Dream Movement and care about partisan politics still have a great deal to learn from them.”
Hard Struggle and Hard Study
Our time was growing short, yet I was interested to gain more insight into how Jones approaches his own work as a thinker and movement builder. While I doubted that he has a lot of free time on his hands these days, I asked what he has been reading in the spare moments he does have available this summer.
“It’s interesting. There’s a couple things. Carl Jung is back on my list. That relates to one of three things I feel I don’t know well enough yet that I am trying to address. The first is persuasion. I’m still trying to figure out how to be a decent communicator. I think I’ve improved, but I think I have a long way to go. And I think to really understand persuasion you’ve got to go fairly deep into understanding human psychology. Jung is somebody I have admired a great deal, but who I still don’t know enough about.
“I also am still learning about the American economy beyond green jobs. Green jobs is such a big chunk of the economy: it’s energy and water and many other areas in which I feel very well prepared. But I’d like to learn about things like how Wall Street works. That’s another of my goals for the summer.
“The last piece is trying to understand and refine my grasp on social media and social networks,” he said. “I think that the Tea Party and Madison and Egypt and the Green Revolution in Iran all showed that you can drive a lot of change in a society really fast with no one leader. You can drive an awful lot of change with surprising tools.
“But I’m old fashioned,” Jones concluded after reflecting another moment. “I think that hard struggle without hard study leads to futility and hard study without hard struggle leads to impotence.”
This piece was written for Amy’s “Walking the Walk” series on Truthout. Amy Dean is co-author, with David Reynolds, of “A New New Deal: How Regional Activism Will Reshape the American Labor Movement.” She worked for nearly two decades in the labor movement and now works to develop new and innovative organizing strategies for social change organizations in progressive, labor and faith communities. You can follow Amy on Twitter at @amybdean.



16 Comments

I have sympathized with Van Jones in the past. But that was then and this is now. This explanation given here, is NOT what we can learn from theTeaBaggers.
What we learn from them is they are Fascists who will continue to use violence against their true enemy, The Left. That is anyone the KochRoaches tell them is the Left. Obama has enabled the TeaBaggers more than anyone by constant capitulation on everything.
This is wrong. Yes the fight is against Wall Street. Is Van Jones stupid or has he sold out with Big Zero? I guess sell out, since this is the day after Obama offers Social Security for Wall Street to steal.
Van Jones did show some courage at one time. But that was then and this is now. And 9-11 was an Inside Job, as Obama and Cass Sunstein continue the coverup.
Frank33:
Did you even bother to visit “rebuildthedream.com”? I did and signed up for a house meeting 1.7 miles from my home. Personally, I think the idea of learning (tactically) from the Tea Party is logical. Yes, I realize that they are being used by corporate America and have the advantage of being actively promoted by the corporate media, but they cause the rank and file of the Republican party shake in their boots!
Congressmen take notice of two thing; money or being unseated! We on the left have very little money, therefore we must become masters at unseating these bastards.
Keep in mind Van Jones went out of his way to say that it was not about Van Jones:
“Jones pointed to the limits of charismatic leadership.”
““One of our aspirations is to create a banner under which many leaders can shine and grow and learn, but where no one leader is the personification of the movement. People will always let you down. Principles endure. So having a network that is based on principles and values first, not based on politicians or even a political party, is critical.”
I was going to write exactly what you did, vector56.
Frank33, trying to cull positive, constructive things from the vast negativity that is the Tea Party is what we should be trying to do, rather than shouting “FASCIST! RACIST!” (no matter how strongly you believe that).
Like vector56 so wonderfully phrased it, learning tactically from the TP is logical. Look at the enormous effect they’ve made! And the amazing thing is that they DON’T have one leader… so if you think Van Jones is a sell out, then find someone else to look to in the Dream Movement!
That being said… I find the Tea Party policies frightening…!
When you thing about the TeaBaggers, here is what you should always remember, Gabby Giffords
I have nothing against Van Jones. Same as the Democratic Party, he has become the Establishment. The majority of the American people do not support the Wars, or Obama’s lack of a backbone or Petey Peterson’s theft of Social Security. But Big Zero is a torturer and a war profiteer and he makes jokes about Blackwater remote controlled Murder from Armed Drones.
There are three things in this article that turn me off 1. Tea-Party 2.)Move-on.org 3.) AFL-CIO. If the Tea Party doesn’t screw up the country we’ll swing the other way and move-on and unions will do it to us on the other side of the spectrum. I’m gonna shoot right down the middle with the rest of the majority because the LEFT-RIGHT debate is useless.
Until peace tops the progressive agenda progressives aren’t going anyplace.
Tens of thousands of words have been written about this American Dream Movement and not one single mention of how these dirty wars are destroying our country right along with destroying the countries we bomb and the children our soldiers kill.
It is these wars fought to protect Wall Street’s profits that are the main problem along with Wall Street then making profits from these wars.
This struggle, contrary to what Van Jones claims, is a fight between the American people and Wall Street.
I have never heard such nonesense about “patriotic corporations.” The patriotism of corporations extends no further than their profits.
This “green economy” is a crock of crap. Haven’t tax-payers subsidized Wall Street enough already? If tax-payers are going to be subsidizing a “green economy” then tax-payers should reap the benefits— including the profits.
Any country sending its youth to die in these dirty wars isn’t going to do right by working people. Any government that can’t provide its own people with a National Public Health Care System because its priorities are focused on funding wars isn’t going to implement a “green economy” that benefits anyone except Wall Street.
lflb20:
other than pimping your useless crap do you have anything to add to the discussion?
Alan Maki:
Alan I agree with you 100%! Until we get out of the business of being “baby-killing mother-fu*kers” anything we do at home will not change our status as global war criminals. Some one has to answer for the million plus slaughtered in Iraq. OOPS! We attacked the wrong country! The citizens of Rome considered themselves “good” people while the watched human beings being butchered for entertainment in the Colosseum. Your point is unavoidable.
Don’t be so hard on Jones; he dwells in a puritanical Calvinistic
country pumped up by the corporate media with American Exceptional- ism. One has to start somewhere.
Makes a lot of sense. The problem to figure out is that the Tea Party has an advantage because they are trying to demonize many functions of government. Unfortunately it is always easier to mobilize people against something than for something. For a progressive movement to succeed, a well defined problem to be against is just as important as having a solution.
Congrats, then. You’ve got the party America deserves, which does nothing and stands for nothing and nobody.
And as this party of yours has moved to this center you cherish, it has lost me and many more I know. This party of yours which will fail to address the problems which ordinary people face while they continues to trade away pretty much the entire cupboard (starting with the payroll tax deduction last December and which now proposes DEEP cuts to the social safety net – and, oh, they’re still arresting gays in the military, which is what we were supposed to get out of that totally crappy bargain).
I started calling for a tea party on the left almost two years ago myself, and I’m glad someone who actually has a voice has finally come to the same conclusion, though I’m personally suspicious of Van Jones. He has previously told the left to shut up and get with the program in Washington, and this is basically your message as well. At least, it’s the logical conclusion of the direction you advocate.
All I can say is, don’t claim to stand for the lives and dignity of ordinary people, because you don’t. Don’t claim to stand for a sane environmental policy, because you don’t. Don’t claim to stand for the restoration of fairness in the American democratic process, because you don’t. Don’t claim to stand for a sane national security policy which abandons it’s attempt to remake the Islamic world, because you don’t. Don’t claim to stand for a sane balance between the wealth being looted by hedge fund managers against the increasingly difficult position people like me find ourselves in.
Because you don’t.
One last thing. While not standing for anything but not being on the radical left or radical right, good luck trying to elect people who demonstrably lie when they claim that they stand for anything at all besides being reelected.
Congrats. You’ve got a big problem.
I watched Van Jones pimp for Obama, calling him “A good man” at the Netroots Nation. I spoke to him about Obama and he brushed me and my concerns off.
This after Obama threw him under the bus. Not to mention the long, long list of betrayals.
Dear God. Is there any Dem or their legions of apologists who are not craven cowards?
No smearing attack.
Deadly serious question.
If Jones is supporting Obama in 2012 then he’s a total waste of rhetoric.
The Tea Party only exist because they were created by and have the financial backing of ultra right-wing billionaires. They’re part of the problem of big money holding our government and the people hostage. There’s nothing to learn here for authentic grass-roots liberal organizations. Jones is an idiot.
Michael Cavlan RN:
Are we talking about the same Van Jones?
Vector
Yes, we are talking about he same Van Jones. Black man, bald haircut, was on Obama Administration, signed petition about 9-11, attacked by right wing, thrown off Obama Administration.
That Van Jones.