The Socialist Movement Is Bringing Democracy Back
Largely ignored in coverage of the democratic socialist movement that helped produce Zohran Mamdani is this basic fact: at a time of rising authoritarianism, socialists have succeeded by old-fashioned grassroots, democratic organizing.

Zohran Mamdani didn’t simply tell people to vote, he empowered us to organize. (@nycdsa / Instagram)
The state of democracy in the United States, as anyone who has taken a glance at the news knows, is not strong. Donald Trump has continuously and brazenly attacked the norms and laws that shape our democratic practices. This erosion started long before him though. Since Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone, intellectual and political leaders have noted the decline in civil society and corresponding decline in our democracy. Declining unionization, fewer civic clubs and associations, and a general erosion of collective and communal life has meant that Americans have forgotten how to engage in collective decision-making and action-taking. Once people forget how to practice democracy in their day-to-day lives, it becomes much easier to take democracy away in our politics.
There is a significant group countering this trend, though few of those same intellectuals and political leaders lamenting democracy’s decline have noted it: Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).
DSA organizes for a robust socialist vision, and our political agenda tends to get the most attention. But less attention is paid to how we organize: through mass, grassroots, democratic means.