CPUSA co-chair Sims: Fighting fascist threat a top priority / by Blake Skylar and Mark Gruenberg

Communist Party USA Co-Chair Joe Sims speaks at the CPUSA’s 32nd National Convention in Chicago, June 7. | Taylor Dorrell / People’s World

Reposted from Peoples World


CHICAGO – “The battle lines are clear. We’re fighting a fascist danger at home and a genocidal war abroad. And to defeat the danger at home, we’ve got to defeat the war abroad.” CPUSA co-chair Joe Sims gave this warning on June 7, as he keynoted the 32nd National Convention of the Communist Party USA.

It isn’t just a matter of the wolves at the door. Sims’s words cautioned that we’re already in the midst of plenty of trouble. “Let’s make it plain,” he said. “Biden’s Israel policy must be defeated today so that” Republican presidential nominee Donald “Trump and MAGA can be defeated tomorrow.”

While the double threat may be a challenging prospect, Sims outlined the strategy to combat it: “We keep the pressure on. In fact, turn it up, turn it way up! Mass public pressure is the only thing this ruling class understands. It’s all about power and relationships of power. It’s only by building mass working class-led movements that real change can be achieved.”

Such fighting words are spoken at a time when, even amidst an embattled ceasefire movement in the U.S. and beyond, problems for people in the U.S. are already festering here at home. “Never forget the Confederate flags,” said Sims. “The nooses, the bear spray, the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers, the neo-Nazis, the Ku Kluxers. But more than that, never forget the men in blue pin-striped suits, and their attempt to stay in power no matter what. Never forget Trump standing in front of the White House, claiming the election was stolen.”

The groups, the rebel flag, the nooses, and the bear spray were all features of Trump’s Jan. 6, 2021,  invasion, insurrection, and attempted coup at the U.S. Capitol to keep the now-convicted felon in office. The corporate class and big Republican donors provided the invaders’ cash. MAGA politicians cheered them on, or worse.

The opening of the 32nd CPUSA National Convention. On stage, from left: Roberta Wood, Rossana Cambron, Joe Sims, Melissa Parks, Paul Kaczocha. | Taylor Dorrell / People’s World

Sims also spoke of the “raw racism at the very heart of MAGA,” and added, “Immigrants are a special target.

“First, they tried the wall,” Sims said of Trump’s scheme to keep migrants from entering the U.S. across the Mexican border. “Then the Muslim ban, now they’re planning concentration camps. That’s right, we said it. And if they come for immigrants in the morning, they’re damn sure coming for us at noon.

“Think mass firings, public lynchings, public trials for the act of thinking. Think it can’t happen here? Think again, it already did. It was called McCarthyism.

“Hell yeah, there’s a fascist danger,” Sims said,  emphasizing that’s why everything has to be done now to prevent it. “And what will Trump do when the people rise up and say no? Will he invoke the Insurrection Act, call out the National Guard and the militias, suspend the Constitution? Honestly, we don’t know. What we do know is we don’t want to find out. Fascism in this country could mean a dictatorship. Democracy as we know it could be eliminated.”

Responses from the crowd were positive, including frequent interruptions of applause from the 270+ delegates and dozens of invited guests.

“We are geared up to fight the battle,” one delegate declared. “The forces in this country that want a dictatorship are fired up and we have to be fired up.”

But we’re not at fascism yet, of course, Sims said. And that moment of respite – for however long it lasts – means that for now, “There is room for struggle. Let us use that space to fight for a ceasefire in Gaza and for an end to the war in Ukraine. Let us use it to stop the expansion of NATO, end the blockade of Cuba, and bring the Cold War against China to a close.

“Let us use that space to address the enormous problems we face here at home: The stagnant wages, the homelessness, the poisoned environment, the epidemic of police murder, the mass shootings, the opioid crisis, the epidemic of domestic violence against women.

Artists from the People’s Music Network perform at the opening of the CPUSA Convention. | Taylor Dorrell / People’s World

Sims said it’s going to be a long and difficult fight, but he said the good news is the struggle has already begun. “Workers are starting to take the fight to bosses. Strikes are up and concessions are down. Unions are putting new muscle into organizing drives. The AFL-CIO has declared its independence from MAGA and pledged to defeat them up and down the ballot. Then a few weeks later they declared their independence from Biden’s Israel policy and demanded a ceasefire.

He also emphasized that the African-American ministry was the first to challenge” Democratic President Joe Biden’s unflinching support of Israel’s war on Gaza. “And just yesterday, the NAACP demanded Biden cut military aid to Israel. If you want something to occur, do something about it!”

Acknowledging that the ever-present roadblock of economic hardship can still worsen the plight of workers, Sims continued, stating, “We’re told the economy is booming. But booming for who? Rent is skyrocketing. Homelessness is increasing. Millions of children have been returned to poverty. Prices are still high and workers still have to work two and three jobs to make ends meet.

“Add to that the climate emergency – the worsening storms and the summer forest fires – while Trump promises Big Oil to undo the little progress achieved since he left office for the small fee of $1 billion to his campaign fund.”

He then turned to the historic question the Communist movement has always asked, “What, then, is to be done?” He said, “The answer can be summed up in one word: Organize. Now is the time for workers to organize and push as hard as possible for wages and benefits and for health and safety. Now is the time to push for housing and for canceling student debt. Now is the time to tax the rich.

“While doing so, we point out over and over again the capitalist roots of these crises and the need for socialist solutions. That’s our plus. We are fighting for the right to a job, quality education, control over our bodies, the right to vote, and the right to live free of police murder. Capitalism constantly undermines and overturns those rights. That’s the nature of the system and the whole point is to reveal that nature in the course of struggle.”

“We have to gear up to stop the military machine,” one delegate from Connecticut responded. He linked the anti-MAGA fight to overturning the war economy and for the shift of funds and priorities the CPUSA advocates. Sims said, as an aside, that MAGA Republicans even want a war on Mexico.

As Sims spoke to wild peals of applause, he said, “On the one side, there’s the ruling class forces of white supremacy and MAGA pulling the country apart. On the other, there’s the working-class forces of democracy pulling the country together.”


We hope you appreciated this article. At People’s World, we believe news and information should be free and accessible to all, but we need your help. Our journalism is free of corporate influence and paywalls because we are totally reader-supported. Only you, our readers and supporters, make this possible. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, please support our work by donating or becoming a monthly sustainer today. Thank you!


Blake Skylar is a writer and production manager, responsible for the daily assembly of the People’s World home page. He has earned awards from the IWPA and ILCA, and his articles have appeared in publications such as Workday Minnesota, EcoWatch, and Earth First News. He has covered issues including the BP oil spill in New Orleans and the 2015 U.N. Climate Conference in Paris.

Mark Gruenberg is head of the Washington, D.C., bureau of People’s World. He is also the editor of the union news service Press Associates Inc. (PAI). Known for his reporting skills, sharp wit, and voluminous knowledge of history, Mark is a compassionate interviewer but tough when going after big corporations and their billionaire owners.

Despite felony verdicts, Billionaire class rallies behind Trump / by Mark Gruenberg

Donald Trump arriving at Florida fund raiser with billionaires backing him for president. Despite felony verdicts, Billionaire class rallies behind Trump. AP

Reposted from Peoples World


NEW YORK—Forget Donald Trump’s 34 felony convictions. Forget his coming court cases revolving around his attempted coup d’etat against his own government and the Trumpite insurrection at the U.S. Capitol three years ago. Forget his plans to be a dictator. The billionaire class is rallying behind Donald Trump.

And with one of the biggest of the billionaires, Elon Musk, owner of Tesla, SpaceX, and Twitter—which he renamed as X—in the lead.

That’s the big campaign development over the last month that has been largely hidden from public view as Trump was tried and convicted in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan for paying hush money to adult film star Stormy Daniels—as well as to former Playboy playmate Karen McDougal—to shut them up about his past sexual affairs with them.

Instead, focus on Trump’s $50 million fundraiser at his Mar-a-Lago mansion with big givers, his quid pro quo with oil company barons where he promised them complete freedom from governmental controls in return for a billion bucks in campaign cash. With follow-up fundraisers on the horizon.

And follow-up deals behind closed doors, too, Yahoo News reports.

“On several occasions, Trump has asked for checks of $25 million or $50 million—and tested the bounds of campaign finance laws by tying the requests to promises of tax cuts and favorable business policies,” its article said a week ago.

And, of course, there is Trump’s now-notorious statement to a Fox “News” shill that he’d be “a dictator on Day 1” if he wins the November election. Nobody, including devoted Trumpites or his foe, incumbent Democratic President Joe Biden, believes he’d stop after that.

Indeed, Trump’s Project 2025 espouses the controversial “unitary theory” of the presidency, which, bluntly, says the president can do whatever he wants—and nobody, not Congress, not the courts, not the people—can stop him.

None of this worries the billionaires who stand to benefit from all of it.

The Wall Street Journal reports Elon Musk, one of the nation’s three wealthiest people, talks with Trump “several times a month,” giving Musk the chance for personal lobbying by the top of the billionaire class. That’s important because most of the few features that benefit the middle class in the 2017 Trump-GOP $2 trillion tax cut for corporations and the rich expire next year.

The billionaires won’t mind that, as long as their lion’s share gets preserved. When it comes to the Constitution and the specifics of Trump’s Project 2025, conceived for him by the radical right Heritage Foundation, they’re completely silent.

Trump and Musk “have developed a closer relationship” the Journal reported. They share views on immigration (against), diversity, equity, and inclusiveness (against), Trump’s allegations of voter fraud (for), and Musk’s portfolio of companies. That includes Twitter.

“There is either a red wave this November or America is doomed,” Musk wrote on Twitter two months ago. He’s pushing the cause by hosting fundraising dinner parties for Trump.

There is no evidence of voter fraud, says Trump’s last Senate-confirmed Attorney General, veteran conservative Bill Barr—who himself lied about former FBI chief Bill Mueller’s findings before the first Trump impeachment. When Barr said “there’s no fraud” to Trump, Trump fired him.

Close to Trump

Musk is one of the top billionaires close to Trump, but not the only one. The Financial Times reported hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman plans to endorse Trump. Ackman, too, hates diversity-equity-inclusion policies and rails against anti-Semitism on college campuses.

Driving the news: Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman, who has crusaded against DEI policies and antisemitism on college campuses, is likely to endorse Trump as well, the Financial Times reported last week. Blackstone CEO Steve Schwarzman told Axios he would support and donate to Trump.

Which brings us back to Project 2025. The Constitution isn’t its sole target. Try manipulating the entire government in Trump’s favor—and against the rest of us—by invoking the “unitary executive” theory, the idea the president can do whatever he wants and nobody can stop him.

Discrimination against LGBT people would return. Affirmative action would end.

That includes abolishing efforts to combat climate change, while, as Trump said in Milwaukee, embracing “Drill, baby, drill.” It includes turning independent agencies, including the National Labor Relations Board, into presidential tools. It mandates governmental “basic research only be funded if it suits conservative principles,” Wikipedia reports.

Abortion would be completely outlawed, and Affordable Care Act coverage of emergency contraception would end. And it “would infuse the government with elements of Christianity,” Wikipedia adds. Right-wing Christianity, though it did not say so.

And, in the most chilling prospect of all, Project 2025 follows the lead of discredited top Trump advisor Michael Flynn, a retired general whom prior presidents warned Trump about, to “immediately deploy the military for domestic law enforcement and to direct the Justice Department to pursue Trump’s adversaries by invoking the Insurrection Act of 1807.”

The Zinn Education Project, named for the progressive historian Howard Zinn, recalls other instances where presidents used that law to send in troops against civilians.

“In the 19th century, it was called upon when the United States wanted to suppress American Indian sovereignty. It gave Abraham Lincoln powers to send federal troops into Southern states.

“With a few exceptions, the law has historically been used to make a federal military response to labor disputes or anti-racism protests,” the project continues. Ike and JFK invoked the Insurrection Act against white supremacists, and President Ulysses Grant used it three times against the Klan.

And Grover Cleveland, overriding Illinois Democratic Gov. John Peter Altgeld, used it to send in troops to break the Pullman Strike.

That’s the law Trump would use against civilians and that’s the law the billionaires are turning a blind eye to.


Mark Gruenberg is head of the Washington, D.C., bureau of People’s World. He is also the editor of the union news service Press Associates Inc. (PAI). Known for his reporting skills, sharp wit, and voluminous knowledge of history, Mark is a compassionate interviewer but tough when going after big corporations and their billionaire owners.

Guilty! Jury convicts Trump on all 34 criminal counts / by Mark Gruenberg and John Wojcik

Former President Donald Trump walks to make comments to the media after a jury convicted him of felony crimes for falsifying business records in a scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election, at Manhattan Criminal Court, Thursday, May 30, 2024, in New York. | Seth Wenig/AP

Reposted from Peoples World


NEW YORK—“Guilty! Guilty! Guilty! Guilty! Guilty!” people in the New York courtroom heard, over and over again yesterday, May 30, after the jury emerged from two days of deliberation. They heard the word 34 times after the jury decided unanimously that Trump was guilty of every single one of the 34 felony crimes with which he was charged by the people of New York.

They decided unanimously that he falsified records to cover up a sex scandal that was about to derail his presidential campaign. The verdicts are reverberating across the nation today and also around the world as an entirely new type of presidential campaign gets underway in America – one that aims to put a convicted criminal in the White House.

If the Republican Party has its way that party, transformed now into a fascist party, will have as its standard bearer in the 2024 election a convicted felon who will be sentenced on July 11. The sentencing date is just four days before the start of the Republican convention which is slated to officially nominate him for his third try at the presidency.

Under New York State law Trump could receive probation or up to four years in prison for the crimes for which he was found guilty yesterday. None of that counts the possible sentences he could receive for crimes that are being tried in numerous other state and federal cases. None of those additional trials, however, are expected to happen until after the election.

Although Trump becomes the first president or ex-president, ever, to be convicted of a felony he can still run for the office. Crafters of the U.S. Constitution decided impeachments would bar felonious presidents. Senate Republicans, however, let Trump beat impeachments, twice.

Jurors convicted Trump on all counts of falsifying business records in a plan to cover up his past sexual affairs with stripper Stormy Daniels and former Playboy playmate Karen McDougal during the presidential election campaign eight years ago.

Trump knowingly signed checks to his lawyer-fixer-bagman Michael Cohen after Cohen, at Trump’s direction, paid off the two to shut them up. And then Trump OK’d the second part of the scheme by having staffers disguise the checks on his company’s books as “legal fees.”

That raised the crimes, ordinarily misdemeanors, to be felonies, as did their use as illegal campaign contributions under New York law. The illegal contributions were the hush money Trump paid to shut Daniels and McDougal up.

Trump paid $130,000 to Daniels via Cohen, and evidence included a video of the two men discussing the deal, plus photostats of the canceled checks. Trump paid $150,000 to McDougal, via Cohen, who taped their phone conversation about that. Trump asked how much was needed, then agreed. Cohen was the prosecution’s star witness, confirming and discussing the payoffs.

Trump is coasting to this year’s Republican presidential nomination, at a convention that will open in Milwaukee on July 15, four days after his sentencing by State Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan. Surveys differ about how the guilty verdicts will hurt the political prospects of serial liar, white nationalist, misogynist, and criminally convicted Trump. The right-wing propaganda machines are working overtime to convince people that Trump is not a criminal who perpetrated fraud upon the American people but is, instead, a victim.

One survey shows two-thirds of Republicans and Trumpites believe the leaders of what has become their cult is a victim of a conspiracy led by his Democratic foe this fall, President Joe Biden. Another, earlier, survey says half of Trump’s voters would abandon him after any conviction, and even more would do so if Trump is sent to jail.

Trump is expected to appeal his conviction. Each count carries sentences ranging from fines up to one-and-a-half to four years in prison. New York criminal law favors concurrent rather than consecutive sentences in cases where counts intertwine with each other.

Would be a disaster for workers

The political impact of Trump’s conviction is important because Trump’s plans are a disaster for workers, the Constitution, voting rights, civil rights, people of color, and others he hates—which is almost anyone who’s not a white male right-wing “Christian.”

Trump’s plans for workers include a national right-to-work law, abolition of Project Labor Agreements and prevailing wages for federally funded construction, destruction of worker rights, and deregulation of everything from job safety and health to the nation’s oil companies. At a fundraiser the week before, Trump demanded those execs donate a billion bucks to his re-election drive. Quid pro quo.

Trump would also renew campaigns to turn the civil service into a spoils system—where the money you get from government contracts, payments, or even Social Security—depends on who you voted for. And Trump would again attempt to privatize, and de-unionize, the Department of Veterans Affairs hospital system and other agencies.

And as “a dictator on day one” he’d trash the Constitution and start deporting millions of people. Nobody, including Trump himself, believes he’d stop being a dictator after day one.

The dozen jurors vindicated the prosecution’s case in the six-week drama, the first criminal trial of four big cases Trump faces as he tries to regain the presidency.

His lawyers managed to stall the other three trials. That includes two—one each in Georgia and D.C.—dealing with Trump’s ordering, aiding, and abetting the Trumpite insurrection and invasion of the U.S. Capitol three years ago.

Trump’s lawyers couldn’t save him this time. Justice Merchan previously fined Trump $10,000 for violating a gag order banning Trump from insulting and threatening prosecutors, jurors, court officials, and even the justice’s family.

“SCOTUS did not issue any opinion on presidential immunity today,” presidential historian Michael Beschloss tweeted about Trump’s claim to the Supreme Court that an ex-president—him—is permanently immune from federal criminal prosecution. That claim is delaying the D.C. case. “Anyone have any opinion on why they seem to be taking their time on doing so?” Beschloss deadpanned.

Outside the courthouse, Trump again denounced Justice Merchan—calling the trial “disgraceful”—but his Trumpites were quiet.

By contrast, Democratic President Joe Biden, Trump’s foe this fall, kept his reaction low-key. “No one is above the law,” he commented. His campaign’s communications director, Michael Tyler, told the New York Times: “There is still only one way to keep Donald Trump out of the Oval Office: At the ballot box. Convicted felon or not, Trump will be the Republican nominee.”

Other commenters were not as low-key as Biden, but all repeated Trump is not above the law.

No one above the law

“Today’s verdict shows no one is above the law, not even a former president,” said AFT President Randi Weingarten, a New York City civics teacher who also holds a law degree.

“The jury decided clearly and unanimously on the charges before it—and now Trump is a convicted felon. It’s time for political leaders of all stripes to stand up and say loud and clear that a criminal should not be allowed anywhere near the White House.” Trump’s Republicans, though, show no signs of political courage against their party’s tyrant and his adoring hordes.

“Today, we should take comfort in the fact that our laws and Constitution apply equally to all and that in the face of Trump’s baseless attacks, a jury of everyday Americans acted to protect our freedoms, our families, and our futures,” Weingarten concluded.

“No one in this country is above the law–including former President Trump,” said Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., a “Squad” member and a School Administrators member. “Being convicted for falsifying business records with hush money is only the beginning of being held accountable for his crimes.

“Trump attempted to illegally overturn election results in Georgia and worked to incite the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, both in an effort to overthrow our government to advance his fascist cause. His continued calls for protests are just another dog whistle for his followers: Destroy our democracy.

“Republicans will continue to claim this was a political conviction, but they can’t continue to hide behind their lies, misinformation, and racist attacks. It’s time we ensure Trump is banned from running for any public office again and from there, finally take action to fix our democracy.”

The jury “delivered a unanimous guilty verdict” against Trump, showing “no one is above the law,” tweeted Rep. Jahana Hayes, D-Conn., a National Education Association member, Waterbury social sciences teacher and former National Teacher of the Year.

“Our justice system was tested in unique ways during this trial,” Hayes continued. “The rule of law, the presumption of innocence, due process, and trial by jury are cornerstones of our democracy. Donald Trump had his day in court and today he is a convicted felon.”

Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., another “Squad” member, reminded people Trump is still a danger.

“Trump is not a man persecuted because of his politics,” said Pressley. “He has been defrauding people, exacting harm, and evading legal accountability for decades. From discriminating against Black tenants to defrauding small businesses, to bribery, hush money schemes, election interference, and insurrection, this man has broken the law to advance his own interests at the expense of other people and to the detriment of our democracy.

“Accountability is welcome and long overdue. This man is undoubtedly unfit to serve in public office. The threat he poses to our nation and our democracy cannot be overstated.”

And Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., also a “Squad” member, started a town hall session with her Bronx constituents by declaring: “He was found guilty on all 34 counts. The rule of law applies to everyone.” The crowd applauded.


We hope you appreciated this article. At People’s World, we believe news and information should be free and accessible to all, but we need your help. Our journalism is free of corporate influence and paywalls because we are totally reader-supported. Only you, our readers and supporters, make this possible. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, please support our work by donating or becoming a monthly sustainer today. Thank you!


Mark Gruenberg is head of the Washington, D.C., bureau of People’s World. He is also the editor of the union news service Press Associates Inc. (PAI). Known for his reporting skills, sharp wit, and voluminous knowledge of history, Mark is a compassionate interviewer but tough when going after big corporations and their billionaire owners.

John Wojcik is Editor-in-Chief of People’s World. He joined the staff as Labor Editor in May 2007 after working as a union meat cutter in northern New Jersey. There, he served as a shop steward and a member of a UFCW contract negotiating committee. In the 1970s and ’80s, he was a political action reporter for the Daily World, this newspaper’s predecessor, and was active in electoral politics in Brooklyn, New York.