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How New York Socialists Won Big on Climate
Anyone perusing Twitter or reading the works of Karl Marx will notice that socialists can get fractious with one another. But as one hardworking ecosocialist leader in the New York City chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America (NYC-DSA) will tell you, an existential threat to humanity like climate change can bring people together. 鈥嬧淚t鈥檚 not like we鈥檙e debating about Lenin,鈥 Charlie Heller joked over coffee in June (though he acknowledged his comrades did have diverse perspectives on Lenin).
鈥淪omething about being focused on climate makes you crazy in a unique way,鈥 Heller says. 鈥嬧淲e are here to win, and we have to seize the power of the state because nothing else can address this global crisis at a scale that can match it.鈥
Heller was reflecting on a major ecosocialist victory, a phrase that would have seemed oxymoronic five years ago. That victory was New York state鈥檚 Build Public Renewables Act (BPRA), a big step toward a Green New Deal. While other states have taken steps as well鈥擨llinois鈥 2021 labor-led comes to mind鈥擭ew York is the first state to do so in a way that explicitly rejects the neoliberal obligation to put corporate profits first. Instead, the BPRA puts the publicly owned New York Power Authority in charge of building renewable energy with a mandate to do so in the interest of working people.
Ecosocialists in New York won because their goal was unabashedly socialist, because they鈥檇 built a bench of elected leaders, and because they were willing to try everything鈥攅ven with great risk鈥攚hile rethinking strategies that weren鈥檛 working.
Where To Start
In 2017, as DSA membership skyrocketed in the wake of the Bernie Sanders presidential campaign, a handful of DSA members formed a national ecosocialist working group. It seemed clear that capitalist profiteering was fueling the climate crisis, confirmed by a that found that just 100 corporations had produced more than 70% of total greenhouse gas emissions since 1988.
A socialist solution felt urgent. For decades, leaving the problem to the capitalist elites who caused it had yielded mostly empty greenwashed rhetoric.
But even within DSA, not everyone was convinced climate should be a focal point. The question (shared by centrist Democrats at the time) was whether climate, as a broad issue, could mobilize working-class Americans. 鈥嬧淚t sounds crazy to say now,鈥 says Mike Paulson, one of the leading strategists on BPRA and an early member of the Ecosocialist Working Group, 鈥嬧渂ut four years ago, a lot of socialists just didn鈥檛 care about climate. So we had to prove ourselves within DSA.鈥
In 2018, these attitudes began to change quickly. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a democratic socialist bartender and a Standing Rock protester, won a congressional seat in Queens and championed the idea of a Green New Deal. It was the first time a United States elected official had proposed a plan to decarbonize the economy that matched the scale of the climate crisis.
Meanwhile, more and more young people were painfully aware of the climate crisis. Paulson remembers this time well. 鈥嬧淚 was becoming increasingly despondent,鈥 he says. 鈥嬧淚t鈥檚 really dark to confront that without any framework for thinking about how there could be anything other than a totally disastrous future.鈥
By the end of 2018, it was clear that DSA had a good model for , having won 46 electoral victories that year, from the local to the federal level. And socialists have had a model of how to organize workers for more than a century. 鈥嬧淪o the question was,鈥 Paulson recalls, 鈥嬧渉ow would socialists do climate work?鈥
With Trump as president, demanding a Green New Deal felt too ambitious, potentially demobilizing in its impossibility. They needed an intermediate step. They considered some proposals on composting and on transportation, but to demand something too small could squander the sudden momentum of the socialist movement. Heller recalls the group wondering, 鈥嬧淲hat is the biggest thing that we could conceivably win?鈥
The most powerful idea to emerge from these discussions was a public power campaign. It would be modeled on a fight in Providence, Rhode Island, known as #NationalizeGrid, which was waged by Providence DSA (now Rhode Island DSA) and the George Wiley Center. (That project has stalled because of the chapter鈥檚 shift in focus toward Medicare for All and medical debt, but the project did succeed in reducing a proposed rate hike.)
Because utility profiteering affects everyone, and because it disproportionately affects working-class New Yorkers, the issue is a natural fit for a socialist organization. Plus, a public takeover would open the door to a green energy transition.
While Providence was the inspiration, the model for how to win legislation in Albany was closer to home: . Championed by democratic socialist Julia Salazar, the first of the recent wave of DSA-endorsed candidates to win state office in New York, the new reforms made New York鈥檚 tenants possibly the best-protected in the country. In a state where the real estate industry is easily the most powerful interest group, the fight was won through targeted canvassing of rent-stabilized tenants to build awareness and organize pressure on politicians.
The New York power campaign canvassed in neighborhoods suffering unreasonably high electric rates and the fallout of climate disasters. The devastating 2019 blackout in New York City left many stranded in elevators and subways, which revealed鈥攁ccording to Amber Ruther, then an NYC-DSA member who was part of the early organizing鈥攖hat Con Edison (ConEd), a for-profit company with a monopoly, 鈥嬧渄idn鈥檛 have the incentive to invest in even basic grid maintenance.鈥 Public power advocates argued that the government, without the profit motive and with democratic oversight and obligation, could do a better job. (Ruther, now of Syracuse DSA, also works for Alliance for a Green Economy, part of the Public Power coalition that worked to pass BPRA.)
The campaign also held town halls in affected neighborhoods. It turned out that ConEd had kept the lights on in wealthy areas but had cut off power in working-class Black communities like Flatbush. Ruther recalls 鈥嬧渁 lot of righteous anger from the community about those blackouts鈥 during town hall events. As one Flatbush resident interviewed for a DSA video put it, 鈥嬧淲hy are we always in the dark?鈥
Also in 2019, newly empowered progressives in Albany passed an ambitious-sounding climate law requiring New York to reduce its economy-wide greenhouse gasses . The Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) wasn鈥檛 as groundbreaking as it sounds, accompanied by few enforcement or operational mechanisms. That is typical of many climate pledges in a neoliberal system, which depend largely on voluntary corporate action.
But the CLCPA did hand socialists an argument: At the time, wind and solar made up less than 6% of New York鈥檚 energy, and complying with the new law would take massive systemic change. If New York didn鈥檛 enact public power, socialists said, the state would be breaking its own law.
Outsiders in Albany
The 2020 elections expanded DSA鈥檚 Albany slate to six (and put Jamaal Bowman, who played an unusually vocal role in advocating for BPRA, in Congress). New York鈥檚 socialists were in a unique position, with more elected officials than anywhere else in the nation, though far from a governing majority. The evolving idea of the BPRA began to attract support from some other Democrats in Albany, especially as DSA demonstrated more political power.
So DSA began experimenting. During one town hall event, Mike Gianaris, a state senator from western Queens, was put on the spot and asked whether he would support BPRA. With the growing electoral muscle of DSA in Queens, Gianaris agreed.
But not every tactic worked. DSA had previously been successful in some campaigns by organizing constituents to call their representatives. On BPRA, this approach wasn鈥檛 effective, perhaps precisely because of those previous DSA successes: Politicians had started to get hardened against mass outreach from constituents.
Still, DSA鈥檚 newly elected slate was already learning how to challenge the culture of Albany. One of these new socialist officials, Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani, from Astoria, Queens, says colleagues were puzzled by his lobbying for BPRA, since he wasn鈥檛 the sponsor鈥攍egislators customarily spent political capital only on their own bills. When he called them, they鈥檇 say, 鈥嬧淲hy are you calling me? It isn鈥檛 your bill.鈥
Assemblymember Robert Carroll, a member of the relevant committee who had agreed to sponsor the bill, was a committed progressive and an 鈥嬧渋ncessant champion鈥 of the bill, Mamdani says, but the socialist politicians saw themselves as a necessary part of the inside-outside pressure required.
Such matters of etiquette were not the only challenges for the neophyte lawmakers. BPRA鈥檚 sponsor in the state Senate, Kevin Parker, chair of the energy and telecommunications committee, wasn鈥檛 a socialist or a passionate supporter of public power, Heller says, but DSA activists didn鈥檛 realize how little good faith Parker brought with him. According to Heller, Parker committed to pushing BPRA if the group could get other legislators to support it. But when the DSA members approached other elected officials, Heller says, they were told no one supports a bill unless the lead sponsor asks them to.
鈥淗e just lied to us,鈥 Heller says. 鈥嬧淲e realized that, even though we鈥檙e socialists, we weren鈥檛 cynical enough. The Democrats in Albany didn鈥檛 want to pass a climate bill because there was too much money on the other side.鈥
DSA activists analyzed data from the National Institute on Money in Politics and found that New York state鈥檚 Democratic campaign committees had taken more than $600,000 from the energy industry since 1997. Parker himself had received more than $110,000 since his first electoral campaign in 2002. (Parker did not respond to a request for comment on this story.)
The activists asked one sympathetic senator (outside of DSA) what they should do. Should they continue playing nicely, or would a negative campaign be more effective? The response: 鈥嬧淕oing negative is always better.鈥
DSA activists held a sizable demonstration in 2021 with protest signs that depicted some of the politicians standing in the way of BPRA鈥攖heir faces on Venmo graphics listing all of their fossil fuel donations. The rally won both media and political attention. 鈥嬧淭hey were fun, they were funny,鈥 recalls Paulson, 鈥嬧渁nd the people targeted were extremely upset.鈥 BPRA did not pass in 2021, but it did move from being a fringe campaign to a focus of media attention.
Throughout this time, the group often discussed and rethought their approach, with many strategy retreats. According to Gustavo Gordillo鈥攑art of DSA鈥檚 Green New Deal committee as well as its National Political Committee鈥攖he questions they asked were, 鈥嬧淲hat are the major conditions we鈥檙e facing? How much power do we have? Can we win? What do we need to do to win?鈥 The openness, Gordillo says, 鈥嬧渁llowed us to be very honest with ourselves and made the strategy a lot better.鈥
Making Them Fear You
In January 2022, as the group decided to continue the negative, confrontational approach, DSA organized a big 鈥嬧淏uild or Burn鈥 protest with signs putting new Gov. Kathy Hochul鈥檚 face on two fake City & State magazine covers: One, in which Hochul failed to pass BPRA, featured a burning background, while the other depicted a happier scenario in which Hochul did the right thing. The message was, Heller says, 鈥嬧淚f you don鈥檛 pass this, you鈥檙e evil. You鈥檙e condemning our future.鈥
These tactics made headlines, but the group realized they needed to do more. 鈥嬧淵es, you can upset people with the Venmo boards,鈥 says Paulson, 鈥嬧渂ut how do you make them fear you?鈥
To build their bench of socialist elected officials and to strike fear into the hearts of Albany lawmakers, DSA decided to primary Kevin Parker, the BPRA bill鈥檚 main sponsor鈥斺渘ot a Sierra Club move,鈥 laughs Lee Ziesche, a DSA member and spokesperson for the Public Power Coalition, who has also worked with Sane Energy. This move was controversial within the organization; turning on people who were, on paper, allies of the cause defied conventional wisdom. But in a series of heated meetings, they hashed it out, and the idea carried the day. They chose to run David Alexis, a serious, charismatic rideshare driver and organizer whose daughters suffered from asthma.
The group ran other ecosocialists for office in 2022, an effort that took enormous organizing capacity. Many quit their jobs to work full-time on these electoral campaigns, all of which were extremely organizing-intensive, with door-to-door outreach throughout the city and upstate. Only two of seven candidates won their seats. The experience led many to wonder whether the diversion of BPRA organizing into electoral work had been a mistake: 鈥嬧淲e did way too many campaigns, and most of them lost,鈥 says Heller, 鈥嬧渨hich sucked.鈥
But the electoral campaigns turned out to be crucial to BPRA鈥檚 eventual passage in ways no one anticipated. The political effects became especially apparent during the June 2022 Democratic primary.
Sarahana Shrestha, in her Hudson Valley campaign for state Assembly, made climate and BPRA her main platform planks, defying conventional wisdom that climate was not a kitchen table issue, especially outside of the city. Plus, her opponent was already known in Albany as a climate advocate鈥攏ot the sort of politician that conventional environmentalists would oppose. But Shrestha won the primary, and her victory became understood as a mandate for BPRA and a warning to politicians who didn鈥檛 get on board. Shrestha became the bill鈥檚 biggest champion in state government.
In Queens, Kristen Gonzalez, a DSA activist who鈥檇 been a leader in a successful campaign to block fossil-fuel giant NRG from building a new gas plant in Astoria, also won her primary, crushing Elizabeth Crowley, an unremarkable mainstream Democrat (and a cousin of Joe Crowley, the incumbent machine boss ousted by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in 2018). Gonzalez鈥檚 state Senate victory鈥攁nd the size of it鈥攚as a huge show of power for NYC-DSA. It scared mainstream Democrats and was a crucial reason why labor unions began taking BPRA more seriously.
Despite DSA鈥檚 efforts to bring unions on board as early as 2018, parts of labor had opposed BPRA, reticent because they did not believe DSA and its allies were powerful enough to ensure strong labor protections in the bill. Within DSA, the question of whether to keep campaigning for the bill without labor鈥檚 support was a fraught one.
The strong electoral challenges of 2020, and especially 2022, brought labor to the table. The labor provisions of the final BPRA bill were written by the AFL-CIO and include strong labor standards for the new public renewables sector, as well as an Office of Just Transition to train workers for the new jobs. Equally important, labor鈥檚 turn brought many Democrats in Albany on board. The New York State United Teachers鈥 full-throated endorsement of BPRA in April 2022 was an especially key turning point in winning over many legislators.
David Alexis lost his primary to Kevin Parker, but the campaign served its purpose of instilling fear. In the middle of the legislative session, a few weeks before the primary, Parker decided to bring the bill to a vote in the state Senate, removing what had appeared to be its biggest obstacle. In advocating for BPRA鈥檚 passage, Parker even used DSA talking points, insisting that BPRA would allow the state to meet its climate goals and that converting its grid to renewables was 鈥嬧渋mperative.鈥
The bill passed. DSA鈥檚 most maverick move鈥攖he primary challenge to BPRA鈥檚 lead sponsor鈥攈ad worked, to the astonishment of many within the organization.
Says Gustavo Gordillo, regarding the Albany establishment, 鈥嬧淲e found out that the way to get them to do what we want is by open conflict that they can understand.鈥
Although leadership in the Assembly, the lower house of the state legislature, still refused to introduce BPRA, DSA had built enough power that Sarahana Shrestha and other socialist legislators were able to press for a hearing. Shrestha says that hearing in itself was a sign of how far the Albany common sense had evolved, although, she emphasized, 鈥嬧渢hat was before the Inflation Reduction Act passed and definitely before we knew what it meant.鈥
The federal Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), passed in August 2022, provides direct funding for any public agency that builds renewable energy. The Public Power Coalition commissioned a report revealing that failing to pass BPRA would cost the state billions of dollars in federal funds, a convincing argument for many in state government. At that point, Shrestha emphasizes, 鈥嬧渢he consensus was moving toward this bill.鈥
The Assembly still refused to bring it to a vote. But the visibility of the issue continued. #BPRA became a top trending hashtag on Twitter in New York, even ahead of #NationalDonutDay.
In January, confirming the labor movement鈥檚 fears, Gov. Hochul tried to remove BPRA鈥檚 labor and environmental justice provisions. This watered-down version of the bill became known by activists as 鈥.鈥 BPRA-lite took the coalition by surprise. It was clear that the governor was trying to divide the labor, socialist, and environmental forces backing the bill. They couldn鈥檛 allow that to happen.
The usual approach in Albany by progressive lobbying forces would have been to take BPRA-lite as a partial victory, but DSA and the Public Power Coalition took the opposite approach. They saw that Hochul was vulnerable and put up a billboard in Albany pointing out that 68% of New Yorkers supported BPRA, while only 52% voted for the governor.
In May, BPRA passed with nearly everything DSA wanted, including the closure of six power plants causing asthma in Black and Brown communities. BPRA creates thousands of well-paid, green, union jobs and imposes annual checks to ensure New York is on track to meet the decarbonization targets mandated in 2019 (70% renewable by 2030, 100% clean by 2040), which had previously seen little progress.
Shrestha emphasizes that BPRA鈥檚 passage is 鈥嬧渘ot the end鈥 of the fight. 鈥嬧淣ow,鈥 she says, 鈥嬧渨e have to work to make sure that, every step of the way, this is implemented correctly, something that I find very exciting.鈥
The Horizon of the Possible
BPRA poses a challenge to most people鈥檚 modest assumptions about what is possible to win in the United States鈥攈ow far the government will veer from serving the interests of the capitalist class. Many people want climate action, and many also want more socialist policy. 鈥嬧淭hey just don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 possible,鈥 Heller says. As Gordillo emphasizes, 鈥嬧淲e were able to challenge the ideological consensus.鈥
Winning a huge victory like BPRA also helps counter 鈥嬧渄oomism,鈥 the idea that it鈥檚 too late to fix the climate crisis, which, Heller believes, is 鈥嬧渢he worst鈥 of many prevalent climate narratives because it convinces people that 鈥嬧渨e don鈥檛 have to do anything.鈥
BPRA isn鈥檛 precisely replicable in every state. Franklin D. Roosevelt created the New York Power Authority when he served as governor of New York鈥攚hich became a precursor to such New Deal projects as the Tennessee Valley Authority鈥攁nd most states don鈥檛 have an analogous body. But this barrier shouldn鈥檛 be exaggerated. Gordillo says there are fights socialists can wage everywhere that are analogous to BPRA.
Because the Inflation Reduction Act offers direct funding to 鈥嬧渁ny public agency鈥 that wants to create public power, Gordillo explains, 鈥嬧渁ny DSA chapter in the country鈥 can campaign to get a school board to build solar panels, or even get a city to create large-scale renewable projects. Indeed, other DSA chapters, including in Milwaukee and Maine, are launching their own versions of the Public Power campaign now.
The BPRA fight shows that socialists can win big on climate, and its organizers hope everyone will take that possibility personally. 鈥嬧淲e鈥檙e all total randos,鈥 says Heller. 鈥嬧淲e didn鈥檛 know anything when we started out. If we can come together and do this, anyone can.鈥
This article was originally published by . It has been published here with permission. Ivonne Ortiz provided fact-checking.
Liza Featherstone
is a聽columnist for聽Jacobin, as well as for the聽New Republic鈥嬧檚聽鈥嬧淎pocalypse Soon鈥 vertical. She鈥檚 also a聽contributing writer to聽The Nation.
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