On Van Jones’ Resignation

Van Jones portrait Over the Labor Day weekend Van Jones resigned his position as an special adviser on green jobs to the Obama administration amid a flurry of controversy around attacks by the usual suspects on the right raising a fit over his past associations with the left. Its hard to speculate whether it was his own decision to resign and leave the attacks behind or whether this brought from above by an administration hoping to polish its image (as well as engage in some political capitulation) while under attack from an aggressive right.

Either way, Jones seems to have been thrown under the political bus by the White House. As Rosa Celemente, former Green Party Vice President candidate, put it in a commentary piece, Jones was a “high-profile casualty of an administration that started at the center and continues to move to the right.”

Previously, Machete 408 had written about Jones in a commentary piece “Revolutionaries in High Places- Van Jones, “ which right wing blogs picked up as a source for the pieces discussion of his membership in STORM (Standing Together to Organize Revolutionary Movements). Interestingly, shortly before his resignation, Eva Paterson, who first hired Jones as a legal intern in the early 1990′s, wrote a piece defending Jones from the right-winger attacks. Here she characterizes his recent book, The Green Collar Economy, as “a veritable song of praise to capitalism, especially the socially responsible and eco-friendly kind” and as someone who had left behind his flirtations with radical politics to move on to “more effective and attainable solutions [ie mainstream politics and questions of policy for the capitalist state].”

There are two points that I think are worth drawing from this situation. The first goes back to my original commentary on Jones and the analogy I was attempting to draw with the labor movement in “Revolutionaries in High Places- Van Jones,” which is pointing out that the top ranks of the mainstream unions in the AFL-CIO are full of those who think of themselves as opposing capitalism and supporting some form of a socialist economy, or at least at one point did. Even Samuel Gompers himself was once a socialist (see Fletcher and Gasapin, Solidarity Divided, page 14). But the question remains, what has been the practical effect of former or current anti-capitalists in positions of power with either the state or in large, reformist and top-down business unions?

Lastly, is the issue of whether of Jones’ advocacy around green jobs is a strategy to help capitalism, which Clemente raised, or a strategic approach  the larger political landscape that the left should take up? I think as “a business-based solution to attack poverty” relying on capital to promote job creation and make up for the decline of the manufacturing sector, I think it clearly rests in the first camp. But what’s striking is that this approach is exactly in line with a popular analysis of the state centered socialist left, that advocated by Carl Davidson, ex-SDS member and founder of Progressives for Obama, in his November 2008 piece “The Bumpy Road Ahead: Obama and the Left.” Interestingly it continues the idea that we can divide capitalism into worse and a better (“progressive”) half, rather than a rotten system as a whole with contradictory aspects and players. Here’s an excerpt from Davidson’s piece:

Obama is carving out a new niche for himself, a work in progress still within the bounds of capitalism, but a ‘high road’ industrial policy capitalism that is less state-centric and more market-based in its approach, more Green, more high tech, more third wave and participatory, less politics-as-consumerism and more ‘public citizen’ and education focused. In short, it’s capitalism for a multipolar world and the 21st century. The unreconstructed neoliberalism and old corporate liberalism, however, are still very much in play. The former is in disarray, largely due to the financial crisis, but the latter is working overtime to join the Obama team and secure its institutional positions of power, from White House staff positions to the behind-the-scenes efforts on Wall Street to direct the huge cash flows of the Bail-Out in their favor … there will be a major tension and competition for funds between two rival sectors–a new green industrial-education policy sector and an old hydrocarbon-military-industrial sector. It’s a key task of the left and progressive movements to add their forces to uniting with and building up the former, while opposing and weakening the grip of the latter. This is the ‘High Road’ vs. ‘Low Road’ strategy widely discussed in progressive think tanks and policy circles.

"The Green Collar Economy" by Van Jones

"The Green Collar Economy" by Van Jones

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6 Responses

  1. I really love the demand ‘Green Jobs’ and I think its revolutionary. Think about how the demand for ‘jobs’ is revolutionary because capitalism can’t just provide jobs when you tell it to. It only produces jobs when the capitalists need to use your labor and think they can turn a profit off of it. But by saying ‘green jobs’ you are saying, either implicity or explicitly, that you want jobs that and good for the earth and meaningful too. Capitalism certainly does want to start handing out meaningful work. Shit no! In addition, you are linking working people, and the unemployed in particular, with the environmentaly movement and saying – we can solve two problems in one, just give us the shit and we’ll solve everything – which is pretty much my view on socialism: If you solved the ‘money’ problem (the need to hold up every project until it can turn a profit) then people would be able to fix almost anything themselves. So its like this – if the state/capitalism does create green jobs – great! If it doesn’t or can’t then you keep raising hell until capitalism has to get out of the way. As for Van Jones, I don’t know anything about him specifically but the Ella Baker Center always seemed awesome and practical too.

    I love Machete 408 by the way! Keep it up!

  2. I suppose I understated my contempt for the current ‘Green’ frenzy in the above comment. I do think that the current ‘Green’ trend is simply marketing scheme for new products. “Throw away that OLD washer and dryer and buy this new GREEN washer and dryer!” Also, the so-called ‘green’ movement itself functions as ‘trouble shooters’ for capitalism as well an ingenious tool for encouraging people to voluntarily lower their own social wage. “Don’t pay me more than I need! I can live with 5 other strangers, cut my energy costs by using only candles, sell my car, and ride a bike to work!”

  3. [...] [6] Weaver, Adam. On Van Jones Resignation. [...]

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