Socialist Organizer

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For the British newspaper, see Socialist Organiser.
The Organizer newspaper
The Organizer newspaper

Socialist Organizer is a Trotskyist political party in the United States. It originated in a 1991 split from Socialist Action (SA) led by Alan Benjamin—then editor of the Socialist Action newspaper—who had developed sympathies with the "Lambertist" current of Trotskyism. Failing to win SA as a whole to their politics, about a dozen activists left to form Socialist Organizer.

Socialist Organizer is the U.S. fraternal section of the Fourth International—"reproclaimed" in Paris in June 1993. It claims political continuity with the best traditions of the Socialist Workers Party (US) of James P. Cannon and the militant leadership of the Minneapolis Teamsters Strike of 1934 on the basis of its acceptance of the original Fourth International's founding text: Leon Trotsky's Transitional Program of 1938.

Socialist Organizer believes, with the Fourth International, that the emancipation of the working class from the chains of capitalism will come only at the hands of the working class itself. Thus it seeks to build the Labor Party in the U.S. and a Workers' International. To this end, it has participated in campaigns of the International Liaison Committee for a Workers' International (ILC)—a multi-tendency international regroupment of trade unionists and political activists in 92 countries—since its formation at Barcelona, Spain, in January 1991.

Since Socialist Organizer began publication of its newspaper The Organizer in February 1991, it has focused on helping to advance the struggle for independent political action by the working class and all the oppressed, both at home and abroad. In order to further this aim, it claims that The Organizer is an open forum for all individuals and currents in the workers' movement that seek to build the Labor Party and a Workers' International.


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