Since the reelection of President Barack Obama, United
States “citizens” from over 30 states have filed petitions to formally secede
from the Union, and more than 10 have reached the signature requirements that necessitate
a response from the Federal government.
While the secessionist movement is not a new social
phenomenon, in fact many of its modern roots go back to passage of the Voting
Rights Act in 1965, its present mass resurgence should be something that gives
pause to progressive forces. Not because the secessionist movement will likely
succeed (at least in short-term), but because it is a reflection of deep white
reaction to various demographic and political transformations in the United
States empire that will have multiple expressions, many of them likely to be
rather deadly. When we put the secessionist movement in the broader context of
the ideology and historic social system of white supremacy then we see that is
much more than just a fringe movement.
As Obama’s reelection in part demonstrated, the 500 + year nexus
between the systems of capitalism, imperialism, and white supremacy is
fracturing beyond repair. There are now ruling class elements and a broad
social base in the United States that are willing to jettison many of the
social manifestations of white supremacy in order to preserve the
capitalist-imperialist world system and the material benefits they reap from
it. The secessionist movement reflects in part the interests of the forces of
white supremacy who are materially dependent on the old-systems of production
that require the unity of this historic nexus for their material well-being or
are socially and ideologically committed to its perpetuation.
For much of the 20th century the far right forces
of white supremacy were generally satisfied with the post-Reconstruction
reinterpretation of the “states rights” doctrine, which was the result of a set
of compromises established at the founding of the United Sates empire between
the states that wanted to expand chattel slavery and those that were
transitioning to a fully articulated system of wage labor. This reinterpretation
rested on the notion that the Southern ruling class interests could continue
subjugating the colonized (New) African and Indigenous nations contained in the
region for the purposes of having a super-cheap labor force to exploit so long
as they accepted the hegemony of the Federal government, which was rooted
primarily in the controlling hands of monopoly industrial and finance
capitalists based along the Northeastern seaboard. This reinterpretation
contained secessionist aspirations for nearly a century, but it never
completely vanquished them. The Black Liberation movement of the 1950’s, 60’s
and 70’s weakened the post-Reconstruction “states rights” compromise, and
breathed new life into the secessionist movement.
Playing up “states rights” as code for the perpetuation of
white supremacy was at the heart of the “Southern Strategy” developed by the
Nixon regime to defeat the “New Deal” alliance of the Democratic Party that was
forged in the 1930’s and 40’s (the alliance that gave birth to the political
ideologies and social forces now breaking with white supremacy). The
reactionary “Southern Strategy” worked brilliantly until the 1990’s, when it
was appropriated by elements of the Democratic Party (particularly the
Democratic Leadership Council) to regain political legitimacy and power. This
appropriation heightened contradictions amongst the forces of white supremacy,
which in turn have opened space for more far right movements like the secessionist
movement, to operate and compete within for ideological hegemony. For these far right forces the reelection of
a Black man to conduct the affairs of the White House over what was supposed to
be a white man’s country is just too much to bear. In this context, secession
is not so much fringe, but in fact is rather logical.
It may also turn out to be brilliant strategy. The “right to
secede” is a democratic right and one technically enshrined in the United
States constitution. If this right is denied without sufficient political
struggle to clarify the issues, particularly by a Black man who is deemed and
demonized as a dictator due to his different interpretation of the Constitution
and management of the capitalist-imperialist system, it can and will become a
rallying cry for the far right that could potentially mobilize millions of
white settlers, particularly as there are strong preexisting settler narratives
to support and justify their cause (from “don’t tread on me” to “no taxation
without representation”), and give life to the civil strife, if not all out
war, that many Republican and Tea Party commentators spoke to leading up to the
November 6th elections.
So, this movement is something that progressive forces
should pay attention to and think strategically about. And not because
progressive forces should be aiming to preserve the political or structural
integrity of the United States as it is presently constituted. We have to
remember that there is nothing sacred or sacrosanct about the present borders
of the settler states that comprise the so-called Union. This government and
these borders have not always existed, are not inherently legitimate, and
definitely have not served the interests of Indigenous, African, Xicano, Puerto
Rican, and other colonized and oppressed peoples who live on the Great Turtle
island (one of the Indigenous names of the North America continent). Rather,
our primary interest should be protecting our people, exploring solutions that
will advance our total liberation, and combating the repression these
reactionary forces are and will direct against us. As the contradictions of
this imperial society become more acute, we need to be as aware and prepared as
possible to address them with sufficient organization in the pursuit of our own
interests – least we be caught unaware and used as pawns once again to preserve
the “white man’s systems”.
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