Jim Lawrence, American autoworker and longtime Trotskyist, dies at age 83: A life dedicated to the fight for socialism – WSWS
Comrade Jim Lawrence died in hospice January 25 in Dayton, Ohio, after months of declining health. He was 83 years old. He is survived by wife of 59 years, Lois, son David, daughter Tanza, four grandchildren and two great grandchildren.
Jim dedicated the greater part of his adult life to the fight for socialism. All who met him were impressed by his commitment to principles, his deep interest in culture and history, and his immense confidence in the revolutionary capacity of the working class.
He was won to the program of Trotskyism in the early 1970s, and he played an important role in developing a base of support for the movement among a key section of industrial workers. The experiences gained in this period played an important role in the subsequent political development of the American and world Trotskyist movement, the International Committee of the Fourth International.
Born in Dayton, Ohio, during the last years of the Great Depression, Jim was one of seven children. His father worked at a foundry in Dayton making parts for the auto companies, in particular, General Motors which played a central role in the citys economy.
Jim said his father considered himself a socialist and held a local union post in the Stalinist-dominated United Electrical Workers at his factory. Jim thought his father likely was a member or supporter of the Communist Party, although his father never talked about it. From his father, Jim said he gained an understanding that there was an alternative to capitalism.
According to Jim, two of his uncles had been recruited by strikebreakers at Ford during the 1941 strike for UAW recognition. However, his uncles quickly realized they were being used and along with other black workers joined forces with the strikers, ensuring the victory of the union.
During his youth, Jim saw scenes of militant industrial struggles in Dayton, including the Univis Lens strike in 1948, led by the UE. It developed into a mass confrontation with strikebreakers. Ohio Governor Thomas Herbert eventually deployed National Guard troops, backed by tanks and armored vehicles, in an attempt to break the picket lines. The sight of soldiers in the street evoked mass popular outrage, eventually forcing the withdrawal of the Guard units.
After he graduated from high school in 1957, Jim went into the US Army. When he was discharged, he obtained a job at the foundry where his father worked. Jim told the story about how the local union had sent him in to integrate a section of the plant that was all white at the time. He later said he initially had trouble due to the racial backwardness of some of the workers, but one white worker befriended him and told the others to stop. He said that this experience helped to show him that class solidarity could overcome racial divisions.
In 1966, Jim went to work at the General Motors Delco Moraine brake plant in Dayton. He participated in the 1970 nationwide strike against GM that lasted 58 days, the last contract in which the United Auto Workers achieved any significant gains.
This was a period when masses of students and young workers were being radicalized by the experience of the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights movement. It was also a period of enormous class battles.
Jim met the Workers League, the forerunner of the Socialist Equality Party (US), in 1972. Supporters of the Workers League were distributing copies of the partys newspaper, the Bulletin.
He recounted that he obtained a copy of a Workers League pamphlet, Where Wallace Really Stands by David North, which explained the position of George Wallace, the notorious Alabama segregationist and racist who was seeking the 1972 Democratic nomination for US president. The exposure of the right-wing nature of the Democratic Party impressed Jim, and he decided to attend his first Workers League meeting.
Jim later said that the Workers League was the only political tendency that could explain the role of Stalinism, the political vehicle of a privileged and nationalist bureaucracy that had usurped power in the Soviet Union in the 1920s and advanced the anti-Marxist theory of socialism in one country. In the 1930s, the Stalinist bureaucracy carried out a wave of political genocide, murdering hundreds of thousands of socialists, targeted above all at the supporters of Leon Trotsky, culminating in the assassination of Trotsky himself in August 1940.
I found out that the Stalinists were the murderers of the leaders of the October Revolution, Jim explained. They did more to discredit socialism than any capitalist could ever do. He paid specific tribute to longtime Workers League member Lou Renfrow, who served as his political mentor.
The Workers League also clarified Jim on the role of the Pabloite renegades from Trotskyism, such as the Socialist Workers Party, who promoted various forms of identity politics, including feminism and black nationalism to confuse and divide the working class. Early on, he developed an abiding hostility to all forms of nationalism and racialist politics.
Jim and other supporters of the Workers League established a faction of the Trade Union Alliance for a Labor Party (TUALP) at the Delco Moraine plant, which won wide support through its exposure of the collaborationist policies of the UAW.
At that time, the unions in the United States still had the loyalty of millions of the more politically active and advanced workers and played a significant role in the life of the working class. The Workers League advanced the demand for a Labor Party based on the trade unions as a means of imbuing the militant movement of the working class with a political and socialist perspective by raising the necessity for the workers to rebel against the pro-capitalist trade union bureaucracy and its political alliance with the Democratic Party.
In that period, UAW conventions, though even then tightly controlled, still provided a certain forum for debate over substantive issues. The Workers League would have a large literature table at Cobo Hall in Detroit during the UAW Constitutional Convention, which generally attracted large numbers of delegates. Bulletin reporters were able to circulate among the delegates on the convention floor and hand out leaflets explaining the partys policies. The Workers League was even able to solicit signatures to demand the arrest of the killers of Tom Henehan, a Workers League Political Committee member gunned down at a party event in New York City in 1977.
At one convention, Jim Lawrences presence caused a considerable stir. So many delegates knew about his activity at the Delco Moraine plant and wanted to speak with him that the president of his local, Elmo Parrish, became unnerved. He demanded to know why Jim was not at work. Jim coolly explained that he had taken a personal day so that he could observe the proceedings.
Jim attended the February 1973 founding conference of TUALP held in St Louis, along with 275 trade unionists, and made an important contribution to the discussion.
In the April 1974 local union elections at Delco Moraine, TUALP candidates Jim Lawrence and John Austin received 20 percent of the vote for local president and vice president. TUALP supporters also ran for shop chair and five other executive board positions.
In response to the campaign by TUALP, at one point, UAW President Leonard Woodcock came to Dayton to consult with local leaders. The Bulletin reported that Woodcock raved like a madman against the TUALP caucus. The support won by the TUALP candidates produced a red-baiting campaign by the union and local media, with Local 696 President Parrish even threatening to shoot salesmen of the Bulletin outside the plant.
We were told to come down to the union hall for a meeting with Woodcock, but we refused to go unless we could go with a group of workers, Jim recalled. We figured there would be threats. Despite confusion on socialism, workers recognized Jim and other party members as fighters for the working class, and the UAW was never able to victimize or silence them.
In an interview with David North published in the Bulletin prior to the vote, Jim explained, The reason that local officials always try to prevent us from putting our position forward is that these demands serve to expose the existing leadership of the UAW for what they are ...
He continued, The bureaucrats want to lobby Congress, the same people who passed the laws against the trade unions. They do not wish to take up a fight against the system. They want to fight for reforms, when there cannot be reforms. This has the effect of turning the workers to the existing political parties, and this can only lead to defeat. The workers must know what they are going into consciously, that they are going into a class conflict. ... There must be a break from these political parties, and workers must have their own party.
The ruling class responded to the militant class battles of the 1970s and the protracted decline in the global position of American capitalism by launching a counterrevolutionary offensive in the 1980s. Under the Democratic Carter administration, interest rates were driven to record levels in 1979, forcing into bankruptcy wide sections of industry in order to weaken the working class. The offensive intensified under the Republican Reagan administration, which fired and blacklisted the PATCO air traffic controllers in 1981, opening up a period of unbridled unionbusting.
The unions, based on their nationalist and pro-capitalist program, had no answer to these attacks. The AFL-CIO isolated the PATCO strikers and worked to suppress the widespread sentiment for a general strike. The unions betrayed a series of struggles throughout the decade while transforming themselves ever more directly into instruments of corporate management. Conditions of workers were driven backwards, and hundreds of thousands of jobs wiped out.
Throughout this period, Jim circulated the Bulletin in his plant and continued to fight for the partys policies. He also followed with intense interest the struggle waged by the Workers League and its collaborators in the world Trotskyist movement, the International Committee of the Fourth International, against the national opportunism of the British Workers Revolutionary Party. Jim supported the struggle against the WRP in the 1985-86 split, which laid the basis for an immense theoretical and political development of the ICFI.
In the aftermath of the split with the WRP, the Workers League, on the basis of the experiences of the 1980s and a theoretical examination of the significance and implications of globalization, drew the conclusion that the official unions, controlled by a highly privileged layer of upper middle class executives, had undergone a fundamental transformation. They could no longer be characterized as workers organizations, as they worked deliberately and systematically to lower the living standards of the workers they claimed to represent. Based on this assessment, the Workers League withdrew its previous demand for the formation of a Labor Party based on the unions.
In 1996 Jim stood as the Socialist Equality Party candidate for US Congress in Dayton. He used the opportunity to campaign among workers directly based on the partys program, drawing the lessons of the UAWs endless betrayals and its bankrupt policy of support for the Democratic Party as the lesser evil.
That same year, GM workers struck the two Delco Moraine brake plants in Dayton for 17 days, forcing the temporary idling of 75,000 GM workers. The UAW obtained phony promises from GM to preserve jobs at the plant, which along with all other GM plants in the area were eventually closed anyway with the loss of some 20,000 jobs. Today, Delco Moraine, as Jim explained, is just a concrete slab.
In 2004, the SEP selected Jim to run as its candidate for US Vice President alongside WSWS writer Bill Van Auken. Jim was involved in the drive to place the SEP candidates on the ballot in Ohio, which involved a fight against the unscrupulous actions of Democratic Party state officials in the wholesale disqualification of hundreds of genuine signatures of registered voters based on trivial technicalities.
The 2004 elections were dominated by the expanding imperialist war in Iraq and the ongoing decimation of industrial jobs in the United States, overseen by the UAW and other unions. In a speech given to a meeting in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 2004 Jim explained the role of the unions, The UAW and the AFL-CIO officially adopted the position of corporatism in the 1980s, rejecting the very concept that workers had any interests separate and apart from the corporate bosses. Union officials were put on the boards of directors of corporations like Chrysler, and a myriad of labor-management structures were put into place, allowing the companies to use labor officials to impose speedup and various cost-cutting measures to improve competitiveness.
Hand in hand with management, the UAW and other unions promoted the most poisonous national chauvinism and racism, aimed at convincing American workers that their enemy was not big business but Japanese and European workers who were supposedly stealing American jobs.
What has the promotion of economic nationalism produced? When I first joined the UAW, the union had 2.25 million workers in basic industry. Today it has 638,000 members. Throughout the US, just 8.2 percent of private sector workers belong to unions, and just 2.2 million factory workers belong, down 60 percent from two decades ago.
In 2005, Jim intervened along with other SEP members at a meeting of autoworkers in Kokomo, Indiana, to oppose the massive destruction of jobs at parts maker Delphi. He stressed the need not just for workers to form independent organizations of working class struggle but to build a political leadership based on a socialist and internationalist program.
In his later years, declining health prevented Jim from active participation with the SEP. But he continued to read the WSWS and followed political developments closely. In a video interview in 2018 he made the following appeal to workers and young people:
The policies of the capitalists are such that they are leading us from one war to another war, heading to the destruction of the human race itself. All of this is with the approval of the union bureaucracy everywhere. ... The unions have always been tools of the ruling class. You should not kid yourself. Even in the 1970s the more astute workers understood that if the union bureaucracy was involved in any way, it would be betrayed.
The only way you can free yourself from wage slavery and threat of war is to abolish capitalism. Only the working class has the power to do that.
The working class must be conscious of its power; it is a lot more powerful than the bourgeoisie. But for that it must be organized. The Fourth International has fought for the last 80 years for the interests of the working class. Only the Fourth International has done that. I would ask you to join the Fourth International wherever you live. It is the only way forward for the human race.
To his final days, Comrade Jim remained a committed socialist and fighter for the working class. He will be sorely missed.
Read more from the original source:
Jim Lawrence, American autoworker and longtime Trotskyist, dies at age 83: A life dedicated to the fight for socialism - WSWS
- Abahlali baseMjondolo marks 20 years of struggle for land, dignity, and socialism - Peoples Dispatch - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Dave Ramsey Says His Company Has Never Had A Layoff In 35 Years. 'If I Have To Cut Payroll To Stay Open, I Will. Socialism Doesn't Fix It' - Benzinga - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Hasan Piker on Streaming, Zohran Mamdani, and the Future of Socialism - Home Current Affairs - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- What Would Zohran Do? Reflections on the Prospects for Democratic Socialism in a Small College Town - Amherst Indy - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Business Rundown: Zohran Mamdanis Rise And The Socialism Threat - FOX News Radio - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Trump ramps up private sector intervention even as he warns of socialism - Washington Examiner - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Dont let New York beta test socialism for the rest of America - Washington Examiner - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Labour has just exposed socialism as an exhausted ideology - The Telegraph - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
- Trump Keeps Blurring the Line Between Capitalism and Socialism - The Wall Street Journal - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Democrats on all levels are mainstreaming socialism - The Hill - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Trace Gallagher: Turns out it's socialism that never has to say sorry - Yahoo - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- People Vote for Conservative Policies, Get Socialism Interview With Gerald Grosz - Hungary Today - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Socialism on the Hudson - Manhattan Institute - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Imperialism cannot make us abandon the path of socialism, reaffirms Cuban foreign minister - Peoples Dispatch - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Trace Gallagher: Turns out it's socialism that never has to say sorry - Fox News - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- "Deconstructing Settler Socialism - Anarchism and the Internationals in the Wild West" - Author Talk - Indybay - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
- Democrats Increasingly Favor Socialism Over Capitalism in Shocking Polling Shift - MSN - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Socialism intends to extinguish the light of Freedom in Spain: Lets turn on more - Contando Estrelas - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Zack Polanskis socialism response is really resonating with people - thecanary.co - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Why its folly to recycle a failed ideology like socialism in India - Times of India - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- SBAs Loeffler: NYC businesses sound alarm as socialism, population loss, and capital flight threaten growth - Fox Business - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Why its a folly to recycle a failed ideology like socialism in India - Times of India - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Why socialism resonates with Gen Z and Millennials across the USand how it reshaped NYC politics - Moneycontrol - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- SBAs Loeffler: NYC businesses sound alarm as socialism, population loss, and capital flight threaten growth - MSN - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Texas State professor fired over comments at socialism conference to be reinstated as legal process unfolds - KVUE - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- The legacy of Indian socialism cant be allowed to fade away. Its the Left we need - The Indian Express - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Acton Institute grant funds an exploration of capitalism versus socialism in the Johnson Center for Political Economy - Troy University - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- The economy's moribund. Socialism rules. Police come knocking if you say or think the wrong thing. Now, in an authoritarian new plan that'll make... - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
- Socialism or barbarism: Why you should be a communist - Revolutionary Communist Party - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
- Curriculum, teaching syllabus on Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era published - China Daily - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
- 67: Fighting for socialism in the United States - Green Left - September 21st, 2025 [September 21st, 2025]
- Berrien Makes Hongs Socialism Focus of Governors Race - MacIver Institute - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Shashi Tharoor writes: Rethinking capitalism and socialism in India and beyond - The Indian Express - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Tenured Texas State professor fired for comments at socialism conference sues university over termination - KVUE - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- How Does Socialism With Chinese Characteristics Actually Look and Feel Like? - TheWire.in - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Are Americans ready for the reality of socialism? - Fox News - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
- Charlie Kirk's faith, are Americans ready for socialism, and more from Fox News Opinion - Fox News - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
- What Americans think about socialism and capitalism, according to a new Gallup poll - Corvallis Gazette-Times - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
- What Americans think about socialism and capitalism, according to a new Gallup poll - STLtoday.com - September 15th, 2025 [September 15th, 2025]
- Socialism and Communism Arent What You Think They Are - Vision Times - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- NYC voters wary of Mamdanis socialism, but split field keeps him in the lead - Jewish Insider - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- What Americans think about socialism and capitalism, according to a new Gallup poll - MSN - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- Is US government stake in Intel a good idea or socialism or both? - Asia Times - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
- Gutfeld: Socialism must be perfect to work, which is why it must be done with force - Fox News - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- No, East Germany Wasnt Socialist and Neither Is Democratic Socialism - Left Voice - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Morning Joe Rips Trump Administration's University Patent Proposal as 'Full, Blown-Out Socialism' | Video - TheWrap - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Take up the fight for socialism! Mobilise the working class against genocide, dictatorship and world war! - World Socialist Web Site - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Salazar denounces horrors of socialism in newly introduced resolution - Ripon Advance - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Critics Call the Government's Stake in Intel Socialism. Are They Right? - DTN Progressive Farmer - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- The Socialism of Fools Reaches Record Levels in Britain, Having Doubled in Four Years - The New York Sun - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Americans positive view of capitalism falls, while thoughts on socialism rise - Straight Arrow News - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- 'Socialism': Joe slams Trump official for saying U.S. should take chunk of college's patent revenue - yahoo.com - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Gutfeld: Socialism must be perfect to work, which is why it must be done with force - MSN - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Americans' positive view of capitalism falls, while thoughts on socialism rise - MSN - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- What Americans think about socialism and capitalism, according to a new Gallup poll - AP News - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- Poll: What Americans think about socialism and capitalism - niagara-gazette.com - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- What Americans think about socialism and capitalism, according to a new Gallup poll - Carolina Coast Online - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- What Americans think about socialism and capitalism, according to a new Gallup poll - Weatherford Democrat - September 9th, 2025 [September 9th, 2025]
- This is socialism: Trumps private sector intervention causes heartburn on right - Roll Call - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- AJC readers write about green energy needs and a deal that looks like socialism - AJC.com - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Xi Jinping bonds with Kim Jong Un over 'common ideals' of socialism at first meeting in years - Washington Examiner - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Farage deputy Richard Tice: "Some of our policies... are a form of socialism" - IAI TV - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Exploring the Art of Radicalization at Socialism 2025 - Weave News - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Trump brings socialism to the USA - The Hill - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- NYT reporter: The closest Zohran Mamdani gets to socialism is his belief in 'treating people more equitably' - yahoo.com - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Trump's Intel stake sparks cries of 'socialism' from his party, but he vows more deals are coming - Arizona Daily Star - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Is That Socialism? The U.S. Governments Share of Intel - Advisor Perspectives - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- What to Know About Zohran Mamdani and Democratic Socialism - The New York Times - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- NYT reporter: The closest Zohran Mamdani gets to socialism is his belief in 'treating people more equitably' - Fox News - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- Trump's Intel stake sparks cries of 'socialism' from his party, but he vows more deals are coming - Wahoo Newspaper - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- Socialism has no place in New York City (letter to the editor) - SILive.com - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- Trump buying shares of Intel is socialism! Government should stay out! Robby Soave | RISING - The Hill - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- Trump's Intel stake sparks cries of 'socialism' from his party, but he vows more deals are coming - AP News - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Socialism Is Right Here In Donald Trumps America. Rejoice! - The Daily Beast - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Other Views: Bolivia turns the page on socialism - Yakima Herald-Republic - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Trump's Intel stake sparks cries of 'socialism' from his party, but he vows more deals are coming - MSN - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Trump's Intel stake sparks cries of 'socialism' from his party, but he vows more deals are coming - PinalCentral.com - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Trump's Intel stake sparks cries of 'socialism' from his party, but he vows more deals are coming - The Killeen Daily Herald - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- 'State-owned enterprise is not the American way' GOP senators, former Trump associates question White Houses 10% stake in Intel, critics brand move... - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- Trump's Intel stake sparks cries of 'socialism' from his party, but he vows more deals are coming - Ottumwa Courier - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]