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The Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (DSOC) was founded in 1973 by the bulk of those members of the Socialist Party of America who opposed the party's takeover by the followers of Max Shachtman. Founded by Michael Harrington, Irving Howe, and
DSOC ceased to exist in 1982 when it merged with the New American Movement to form the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), though only after a contentious faction fight. The move was favored by DSOC's left wing, led by Denitch and over time winning over Harrington, which hoped to make DSOC into an umbrella organization of the former veterans of the New Left who were in search of a new home. The right wing, led by Howe and calling itself the Committee Against the NAM Merger (CATNAM), urged instead for outreach to larger forces in the labor movement and the Democratic Party and remained unswervingly anticommunist.
The official organ of DSOC was a newsletter called Democratic Left, which continues today as the publication of DSA. The organization also published a number of issues of an internal discussion bulletin, containing typewritten content submitted by its members about various issues of concern.
External links
- We are socialist of the democratic left founding manifesto
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