Working Families Party

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Working Families Party
Founded1998
Preceded byNew Party
Headquarters2 Nevins Street
Brooklyn, NY 11217
IdeologySocial democracy[1]
Populism
Progressivism
Political positionCenter-left
Colors    Blue, White (official)
  Purple (customary)
Seats in the Senate
0 / 100
Seats in the House
0 / 435
Governorships
0 / 50
State Upper House Seats
1 / 1,972
State Lower House Seats
1 / 5,411
Website
www.workingfamilies.org

The Working Families Party (WFP) is a minor political party in the United States, founded in 1998. There are active chapters in New York, Connecticut, Oregon and New Jersey with Maryland, Washington, DC, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Rhode Island, and Illinois joining since 2013.[2]

New York's Working Families Party was first organized in 1998 by a coalition of labor unions, community organizations, members of the now-inactive national New Party, and a variety of public interest groups such as Citizen Action of New York and Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now.[3] The party's main concerns are jobs, healthcare, raising the minimum wage, universal paid sick days, the student debt crisis, winning higher taxes on the rich, defending public education and energy/environment reform. It has usually cross-endorsed progressive Democratic or Republican candidates through fusion voting, but will occasionally run its own candidates.

Some of the party's most prominent endorsed candidates include Democratic Presidential Candidate Bernie Sanders[4], Connecticut Governor Dan Malloy,[5] Chicago Mayoral Democratic Candidate Jesús "Chuy" García,[6] US Senators Chris Murphy (CT) and Jeff Merkley (OR), New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, and New York City Public Advocate Letitia James. In 2015, NY WFP ran 111 of its "progressive pipeline candidates", winning 71 local offices.[7]

In addition to endorsing progressive Democrats against other Democrats and Republicans, WFP has run their own candidates. Most notably, Connecticut State Senator Ed Gomes[8] and New York State Assembly member, Diana Richardson.[9]

Ideology

WFP follows the ideals of progressive politics,[10] describing itself as a "grass roots independent political organization".[11] Conservative writer Seth Lipsky of the New York Post describes WFP as "quasi-Marxist" and some publications refer to WFP as the Tea Party of the Left.[12][13][14][15]

Electoral strategy

Like other minor parties in the state, the WFP benefits from New York's electoral fusion laws that allow the party to support another party's candidate when they feel it aligns with their platform. This allows sympathetic voters to support a minor party without feeling like they are "wasting" their vote. Usually, the WFP endorses the Democratic Party candidate, but it has occasionally endorsed moderate Republican Party candidates as a strategy for spurring bi-partisan action on its policy priorities. The support of the WFP is sometimes quite important in Democratic primaries.[citation needed]

In some cases, the WFP has put forward its own candidates. In the chaotic situation following the assassination of New York City councilman James E. Davis by political rival Othniel Askew, the slain councilman's brother Geoffrey Davis was chosen to succeed him in the Democratic primary. As it became clear that Geoffrey Davis lacked his late brother's political experience, fellow Democrat Letitia James decided to challenge him in the general election on the WFP ticket and won Brooklyn's 35th City Council district as the first third-party candidate elected there in 30 years.

In 2006, the party began ballot access drives in California,[16] Delaware, Massachusetts,[17] Oregon, and South Carolina.[18] In 2010 Oregon joined South Carolina and New York as states that allow fusion voting.

In 2015, the WFP embraced their first national campaign with their endorsement of Bernie Sanders for U.S. President.[19]

Historical Positions

Economic Reform Criminal Justice Reform Civil Rights Education
Support Fair Taxes & Budgets Oppose Private Prisons Support Black Lives Matter[22] Support Public Schools
Women's Economic Agenda Support Decriminalization of Marijuana Support LGBTQ Rights Support Debt-Free College
Workers' Rights Support Wall Street Reform Support Immigrant Rights Support Teacher's Unions
Increase Minimum Wage Oppose Militarization of Police Support Reproductive Rights Oppose Private Charter Schools
Provide Living Wage Support Restorative Justice[41] Support Voting Rights Expand Financial Aid
Pay Parity Oppose Felony Disenfranchisement[42] Support Refugee Rights Support Prisoner Education[43]
Fair Work Week Oppose Youth Incarceration[44] Support Veteran Citizenship Universal Pre-K[45][46]
Support Labor Unions
Retirement Security
Occupy Wall Street[47]
Climate Change[48] Healthcare Political Reform Affordable Housing
Green Jobs Support Single-Payer Healthcare Support Campaign Finance Reform Rent Regulation
Green Economy Guarantee Healthcare to Veterans Automatic Voter Registration Low Income Housing
Same-Day Voter Registration Veteran Housing
Corruption Reform Homeless Housing
Women in Politics[49]

The WFP was launched with the agenda of well-paying jobs, affordable housing, accessible health care, better public schools and more investment in public services.

In 2004 in New York and 2014 in Connecticut, the WFP saw the enactment of one of its highest legislative priorities, an increase in the state minimum wage, which it had supported since its inception.

Paid sick days were enacted statewide in Connecticut in 2011, and city-wide in both New York City and Portland, Oregon in 2013.

Another major platform of the WFP is to defeat the "Rockefeller drug laws" in New York State, remnant from when Nelson Rockefeller was Governor. The WFP contributed largely to the victory of David Soares to Albany County District Attorney whose platform was based on reforming drug policy, while generally taking a less punitive approach to criminal justice.

Campaigns

2010s

2016

In the fall of 2015, the Working Families Party conducted a combined membership-drive and open poll among its enrolled members on whom to endorse for President in 2016; the result being Bernie Sanders.[50] Official numbers were not disclosed but party spokesman and co-founder Dan Cantor said the results were "overwhelmingly" in favor of Sanders, with some sources stating it was a 87 to 12 to 1 percent vote with Sanders over Hillary Clinton and Martin O'Malley respectively.[51]

2015

In February, Edwin Gomes was elected to District 23 of the Connecticut State Senate in a special election. He became the first candidate in the nation to win a state legislative office running solely as a nominee for the Working Families Party.[52] Gomes defeated Richard DeJesus (D), Quentin Dreher (R), and the non-affiliated Charles Hare and Kenneth H. Moales, Jr. in the special election on February 24. However, Senator Gomes previously served the district as State Senator as a Democrat and caucuses with the Democrats upon assuming office.

2014

After considering Zephyr Teachout, the party re-endorsed Cuomo for New York Governor despite some dissatisfaction and frustration with his first term. In 2010 more than 150,000 of his votes came on the WFP line.[53] As of November 7, 2014, 120,425[54] votes came on the WFP line for Cuomo, less than in 2010 likely due to "dissatisfaction and frustration" dropping the party from Fourth to Fifth, behind the Conservative Party and the Green Party.

2013

In November 2013 the Party endorsed the successful New York City candidates Bill de Blasio for Mayor, Letitia James for Public Advocate, and Scott Stringer for Comptroller, as well as a dozen WFP-backed candidates to the City Council, dramatically growing the Progressive Caucus. The Working Families ballot line contributed 42,640 votes to de Blasio's total of 795,679 votes, and 53,821 to James's total of 814,879 votes.

2012

In Connecticut, the WFP backed Chris Murphy's successful race against billionaire Linda McMahon for the US Senate seat that was vacated by Joe Lieberman, supported SEIU/CCAG[55] leader and organizer Christopher Donovan for Connecticut's 5th Congressional seat,[56] as well as defeated a ballot initiative in Bridgeport, Connecticut that would have abolished the elected board of education. In Oregon, the WFP backed Jeff Reardon for state house, a challenger who defeated Democrat Mike Schaufler in the Primary. The party opposed Schaufler's conservative record on taxes, healthcare and the environment.

2010

Andrew Cuomo, the Democratic nominee for Governor of New York, accepted the Working Families Party cross-endorsement. Cuomo ran with the WFP's endorsement, because the WFP accepted his policy positions.

In the same year, the Connecticut WFP endorsed Dannel Malloy for governor. He received 26,308 votes as a Working Families candidate, putting him ahead of his Republican opponent, and securing ballot access for the party in that state.[57]

2000s

2009

The WFP endorsed several candidates for local offices, Bill Thompson for New York City mayor, Bill de Blasio for Public Advocate, and Corey Ellis for Albany mayor. Ellis did very well in the Albany mayoral election, 2009, coming in second ahead of the Republican candidate. The WFP also backed eight new members of the city council, including Brad Lander and Jumaane Williams, who helped create the New York City Council Progressive Caucus.

Two candidates for the Board of Education in Bridgeport, Connecticut were also WFP-supported and are now[needs update] members of the board.[58]

2008

The South Carolina Working Families Party convention endorsed five candidates for state and local office.[59] One candidate, Eugene Platt, running for SC State House District 115, was also nominated by the South Carolina Green Party.[60] The nomination of Michael Cone for the US Senate race, opposing incumbent Lindsey Graham, marked the first time the party nominated anyone for statewide office.[61] Cone was defeated by Horry County Republican Committee member Bob Conley in the Democratic Primary.

The Connecticut WFP helped elect congressman Jim Himes, defeating long-term Republican congressman Chris Shays.

The WFP endorsed Barack Obama for U.S. President on all their state lines.

2007

The WFP elected two party members to the city council of Hartford, Connecticut.[62]

2006

In South Carolina, WFP cross-endorsed Democratic party congressional nominees Randy Maatta, (District 1) and Lee Ballenger, (District 3).[63] In the SC State House elections, the WFP cross-endorsed Democratic Party candidates Anton Gunn (Kershaw, Richland), Eugene Platt (Charleston).[64] In New York, the WFP cross-endorsed the statewide Democratic Party slate.

In Massachusetts, Rand Wilson won enough votes in the general election for State Auditor to guarantee the Working Families Party ballot access in the following election. Wilson garnered 19% of the vote in the head to head race against Democratic incumbent Joe DeNucci, allowing ballot access in 2008. However the ballot initiative, "question 2", that would allow candidates to be nominated by more than one party failed. The WFP in Massachusetts dubbed the question 2 campaign, "Spinach for Democracy."

2000

Patricia Eddington of the WFP was elected to the New York State Assembly. In the 2002 election, the Liberal Party, running Andrew Cuomo (who had withdrawn from the Democratic primary), and the Green Party, running academic Stanley Aronowitz, failed to reach that threshold and lost the ballot lines they had previously won. This left the WFP as the only left-progressive minor party with a ballot line. This situation will[needs update] continue until at least 2011 following the party's cross-endorsement of Eliot Spitzer in the 2006 election, in which he received more than 155,000 votes on the Working Families Party line, more than three times the required 50,000.

1990s

In the 1998 election for governor of New York, the party cross-endorsed the Democratic Party candidate, Peter Vallone. Because he received more than 50,000 votes on the WFP line, the party gained an automatic ballot line for the succeeding four years.[65]

Leadership

The state directors of the WFP are Bill Lipton (NY),[66] Lindsay Farrell (CT),[67] Kati Sipp (PA),[68] Karly Edwards (OR),[69] Charly Carter (MD),[70] Delvone Michael (DC),[71] Marina Dimitrijevic (WI)[72], and Chris Torres (RI).[73] WFP's national director is Dan Cantor.[74]

Criticism and controversy

Some left-wing commentators have criticized the WFP for being insufficiently committed to progressive principles. Following the 2010 New York State gubernatorial election, Billy Wharton argued that Andrew Cuomo obtained significant concessions from the WFP by initially refusing their endorsement (and thus jeopardizing their ballot access).[75] Likewise, the editor of the World Socialist Web Site has called the WFP an "opportunist" party for its close work with the Democrats.[76]

Various media raised questions about the relationship between the WFP, a non-profit political party, and a for-profit private company called Data and Field Services (DFS).[77][78][79] A New York Times editorial piece questioned whether DFS may be charging select clients below market rates for political services.[80][81] In August 2010, the federal investigation into the party ended with no charges being filed, and no charges being referred to other law enforcement agencies.[82]

In 2011 Connecticut WFP director Jon Green received a $10,000 fine for failing to wear his badge identifying him as a lobbyist while performing lobbying efforts.[83][84]

Notable Supporters

See also

References

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  • Newfield, J., "Working Families Party Takes Place at the Table", The New York Sun, 11 Nov, 2003.

External links