DSA/Jacobin/Haymarket-sponsored âSocialismâ conference features US gov-funded regime-change activists


Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond
From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas

The 2019 Socialism Conference, sponsored by American leftist juggernauts the DSA, Jacobin magazine, and ISOâs Haymarket Books, features regime-change activists from multiple US government-funded NGOs.
By Ben Norton and Max Blumenthal
Socialism is now apparently brought to you by the US State Department.
From July 4 to 7, thousands of left-wing activists from across the United States are gathering in Chicago for the 2019 Socialism Conference.
At this event, some of the most powerful institutions on the American socialist â but avowedly anti-communist â left have brought together a motley crew of regime-change activists to demonize Official Enemies of Washington.
One anti-China panel at the conference features speakers from two different organizations that are both bankrolled by the US governmentâs soft-power arm the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), a group founded out of Ronald Reaganâs CIA in the 1980s to grease the wheels of right-wing regime-change efforts and promote âfree marketsâ across the planet.
Another 2019 Socialism Conference panel rails against the socialist governments of Nicaragua and Cuba â two-thirds of John Boltonâs âtroika of tyrannyâ â with outspoken proponents of regime change. One of the speakers, Dan La Botz, hosted an event in 2018 that featured right-wing Nicaraguan activists wearing masks and disguised as students, who were junketed to meet with Republican lawmakers in Washington by the US government-funded right-wing organization Freedom House.
The Socialism Conferenceâs regime-change lobbying âNicaragua expertâ La Botz has admitted in leaked emails obtained by The Grayzone that âthere is virtually no left among the oppositionâ to Nicaraguaâs democratically elected socialist government.
La Botz, a leader within Democratic Socialists of America, likewise acknowledged in these emails that there is âlittle likelihood of an outcome to the rebellion that goes beyond a more democratic capitalist regime.â But he has still vociferously lobbied for Nicaraguaâs Sandinista government to be overthrown by US government-backed insurgents â and is using his platform at the biggest socialist conference in the United States to do it.
The 2019 Socialism Conference is advertised under the catchy slogan: âNo borders, no bosses, no binaries.â
Each ticket comes in at a neat $105 per person (or a $250 âsolidarity rate,â for the hardcore supporters) â and this doesnât include the rate for the rooms at the hotel where itâs held.
For years, the Socialism Conference functioned as a platform for the International Socialist Organization (ISO), a small group steeped in the tradition of sectarian American Trotskyite politics, which pushed a hardline anti-communism and attacked virtually all socialist governments in history as ânot truly socialist.â
Founded in 1977 after a long line of sectarian splits, the ISO never became a significant political force. It was mostly relegated to recruiting young impressionable students on liberal arts college campuses.
As an avowedly anti-communist organization, the ISO eschewed symbols long associated with the communist left, like hammers and sickles and red flags. Instead, it chose a clenched fist â one eerily similar to the symbol used by the US government-funded Serbian activist group Otpor and similar offshoots in Eastern Europe, which carried out Washington-backed neoliberal âcolor revolutionsâ in the years following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the restoration of capitalism.

The ISO claimed to be anti-war, but its leaders spent a disproportionate percentage of their time and resources attacking the anti-imperialist left. They could more accurately be referred to as the anti-anti-imperialist left.
This March, the ISO voted to dissolve â in a decision some former members joked was the most democratic act ever undertaken by the organization, which had been dominated by an unelected leadership of veteran Trotskyite activists.
The dissolution was prompted by evidence that the ISOâs steering committee mishandled sexual assault allegations. It also came as the ISOâs membership was shrinking and rapidly being absorbed by a newly burgeoning anti-communist organization, the Democratic Socialists of America, or DSA.
RELATED CONTENT: ISOâs Vote to Dissolve: What Comes Next
Now that the ISO has dissolved, some of its past prominent members have entered the ranks of the DSA, burrowing from within to inject their anti-anti-imperialist politics into the group.
Because Trotskyites are so sectarian and notoriously incapable of holding together organizations, they are infamous for infiltrating larger, more popular groups and trying to take them over, in a tactic known as entryism.
This is precisely the strategy being used by former members of the ISO â and by another tiny US Trotskyite organization, Solidarity, which was led by anti-Nicaragua regime-change activist and Socialism Conference speaker Dan La Botz, now a leader in DSA.
Democratic Socialists of America is the largest self-described socialist organization in the United States, with more than 60,000 card-carrying members. It is also very heterogeneous, with many internal contradictions and conflicting political views.
In 2019, for the first time, the organizers of the Socialism Conference â including many holdovers from the ISO leadership â joined together with two new sponsors: DSA, and the closely DSA-allied Jacobin magazine, another platform for anti-communist and anti-anti-imperialist politics.
At the bottom of the Socialism conference website, a note reads, âBrought to you by Haymarket, Jacobin, and the Democratic Socialists of America.â Haymarket is the book publishing arm of the now defunct ISO, and its editorial board features some of the groupâs former leaders.

Top speakers at the conference include Democracy Now host Amy Goodman, Jacobin magazine founder and editor Bhaskar Sunkara, and journalist Naomi Klein, the inaugural Gloria Steinem Endowed Chair in Media, Culture and Feminist Studies at Rutgers University. Klein was chosen to head the final plenary, titled âCare and Repair: The Revolutionary, Democratic Power of a Global Green New Deal.â
The 2019 Socialism Conference, like its annual predecessors, combines calls for radical economic democratic transformation and progressive social progress with the demonization of independent foreign governments that are targeted by the US government for regime change, such as Nicaragua, Cuba, Syria, Iran, China, and Russia.
The schedule of panels on foreign policy and international issues features a veritable whoâs who of leftist regime-change activists.
Curiously, the 2019 Socialism Conference has no panels devoted specifically to Venezuela, which since this January has endured a US-led right-wing coup attempt, and which is suffering under suffocating sanctions that amount to a de facto economic blockade. In the past, the ISO has harshly criticized Venezuelaâs democratically elected socialist government, condemning Presidents Hugo ChĂĄvez and NicolĂĄs Maduro for not being radical enough and for not supposedly implementing the vague concept of âsocialism from below.â
In this way, the 2019 Socialism Conference also stands out as a sign of the effective political merging of what had previously been two distinct political trends: the Cliffite Trotskyites of the International Socialist Organization and the anti-communist social democrats of the Democratic Socialists of America.
Anti-China âworkersâ rightsâ groups funded by anti-labor US government
One of the most eyebrow-raising panels at the 2019 Socialism Conference is entitled âChina and the US: Inter-Imperial Rivalry or Class Struggle and Solidarity?â The panel portrays the US and China as equally malicious imperialist powers, downplaying and whitewashing the uniquely destructive nature of Washingtonâs foreign wars and corporate domination.
The panel features three speakers, two of whom work for anti-China groups that are funded by the US governmentâs regime-change arm, the National Endowment for Democracy. The third speaker is Ashley Smith, a former leader of the ISO who has spent the past eight years romanticizing foreign-backed, far-right sectarian Islamist âmoderate rebelsâ in Syria.

The first speaker listed on the panel is Elaine Lu, the program officer at China Labor Watch. This group is described by the Socialism conference website simply as âa New York-based NGO advocating for workersâ rights in China.â
What Socialism Conference sponsors DSA, Jacobin, and Haymarket did not disclose is that its speakerâs employer is funded by the National Endowment for Democracy.
The NED states without qualification that its goals include supporting âfree marketsâ abroad. At the top of the about page on its website is a video of right-wing cold warrior Ronald Reagan inaugurating the US government-funded body.

The National Endowment for Democracyâs 990 tax forms show how Washingtonâs regime-change arm has bankrolled China Labor Watch for years. Substantial NED funding goes back to at least 2009.
According to the NEDâs 2015 form 990, China Labor Watch received a $150,000 grant that year. On the NEDâs 2013 tax form, it lists another $110,000 grant for China Labor Watch.

In 2014, China Labor Watch got $150,000 from the NED. According to the groupâs annual report that year, its total revenues for all of 2014 was $238,003, meaning 63 percent, or nearly two-thirds of its funding came from the US government.
China Labor Watchâs other major donor is the Tides Foundation, a liberal organization that also happened to be one of the main financial sponsorâs of the ISOâs parent non-profit. In 2014, Tides gave $40,645 to China Labor Watch, another 17 percent of its budget that year.
Joining Elaine Lu as the other main speaker on the Socialism Conferenceâs anti-China panel is Kevin Lin, who coordinates the China program at the Washington, DC-based NGO the International Labor Rights Forum.
The Socialism Conference once again failed to mention that this group is also bankrolled by the National Endowment for Democracy.

According to the NEDâs 2016 form 990, the US governmentâs regime-change arm gave the International Labor Rights Forum $150,000 that year alone.
The International Labor Rights Forum likewise received $96,590from the NED in 2015, and $62,500 in 2014.
The Socialism Conference also identified Kevin Lin as a co-editor of the Made in China journal, which focuses on labor rights. A disclaimer at the bottom of the publicationâs swanky website notes that it is funded by the European Unionâs Horizon 2020, a neoliberal business program which the European Commission describes as âthe financial instrument implementing the Innovation Union, a Europe 2020 flagship initiative aimed at securing Europeâs global competitiveness.â

These are the financiers behind the speakers that the Socialism Conference and its sponsors the DSA, Jacobin, and Haymarket brought together to explain why China is a malevolent imperialist power.
Some of these groups may seem progressive, but they operate in effect as vehicles for US government soft power, exploiting the cause of human rights or labor rights to undermine and destabilize foreign governments that Washington has targeted for regime change.
China Labor Watch and the International Labor Rights Forum are far from the only ostensibly progressive anti-China groups funded by the US government.
Other China-related NED grantees include âhuman rightsâ organizations like the Network of Chinese Human Rights Defenders, Human Rights in China, China Aid, China Change, and China Rights in Action (another Tides grantee), along with the New York-based Chinese Feminist Collective and news websites like China Digital Times.
China Labour Bulletin, which maintains a map of strikes going on across the gigantic country, is likewise frequently cited by left-wing websites in the US. While its slogan is âSupporting the Workersâ Movement in China,â China Labour Bulletin (CLB) is actually based in Hong Kong, and it is funded by the US government.
CLB notes on its website that it âreceives grants from a wide range of government or quasi-government bodies, trade unions and private foundations, all of which are based outside of China.â For decades, CLBâs founder and executive director Han Dongfang broadcasted anti-China programming on Radio Free Asia, a US government-funded propaganda outlet that was founded by the CIA to push anti-communist disinformation. Hanâs work is funded by the National Endowment for Democracy, and he was a leader of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.
The ISOâs newspaper Socialist Worker has praised Han Dongfangas a leftist hero, without ever disclosing his extensive links to the US governmentâs regime-change machinery. Socialist Worker has repeatedly drawn on the work of China Labour Bulletin, over more than a decade. The ISOâs journal the International Socialist Reviewhas also relied on the US government-funded organizationâs research, and Jacobin magazine has noted CLBâs âroots go back to the Tiananmen Square protests.â
Human Rights Watch, another key part of the regime-change lobby, has lionized Han, happily noting that his show on the US governmentâs Radio Free Asia âis one of the networkâs most popular programs.â
China is just one of the countries where the US governmentâs soft-power arm funds such putative progressive groups. The NED likewise funds many liberal anti-Cuba organizations, such as the Foundation for Human Rights in Cuba, Center for a Free Cuba, the Cuban Institute for the Freedom of Expression and Press, and the news website CubaNet. Or there are NED-funded groups pushing regime change against Syria and Iran, like the Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies and Human Rights Activists in Iran.
While the United States has one of the lowest rates of unionizationin the industrialized world, a bloody history of worker repression and anti-labor laws, and historically weak unions among those that still do exist, its regime-change arm the NED has funded workersâ rights groups to promote a progressive image of America abroad.
For decades, for instance, the NED has bankrolled the international Solidarity Center of the major union federation the AFL-CIO. The center receives tens of millions of dollars from the US governmentâs regime-change arm annually, and returns the favor by avoiding topics that would anger the US State Department and bite the hand that feeds it.
Throughout the Cold War, the AFL-CIO remained a reliably anti-communist union that received funding from US government agencies, including the CIA, in order to combat and ultimately try to eliminate communist influence in the American labor movement. It was a textbook example of a controlled opposition.
This is not to say that NED-funded groups cannot at times have a positive impact on the lives of average people and intellectuals operating in repressive environments. But their work is always part of a larger agenda, with ulterior imperial motives guiding them along the way. A controlled opposition can make some changes, but it always remains controlled.
Another noteworthy 2019 Socialism Conference panel, called âProblems of the US Left:Â The Cases of Cuba and Nicaragua,â is led by Dan La Botz and Samuel Farber, veteran Trotskyite activists and outspoken proponents of regime change in the two respective countries.
The speakersâ problem with the US left appears to be that it has demonstrated too much solidarity with socialist governments in Havana and Managua, which, in their view from inside the United States, ârely more on bureaucracy than democracy.â
Farber is a Cuban exile who left the country for unspecified reasons in 1958 â a year before its revolution â and spent the rest of his life as a professional critic of its socialist government. Today, he contributes regular attacks on the Cuban Revolution to journals from Jacobin to New Politics to In These Times, where he published a trenchant denunciation of Fidel Castro upon his death in 2016.
Farber accuses Castro of developing a model of âstate capitalism,â wielding a term Trotskyite ideologues routinely fling at any revolutionary government that is insufficiently pure. He calls for âa revolutionary democratic alternative⌠through socialist resistance from below.â
RELATED CONTENT: âCritical Chavismoâ met with Guaido
The concept of regime change âfrom belowâ is also central to the rhetoric of exile groups like the Peopleâs MEK, a US- and Saudi-backed cult of personality that calls for toppling Iranâs government through âindigenous regime change.â
Dan La Botz, for his part, has risen to prominence as a full-time opponent of another member of the Trump administrationâs âtroika of tyrannyâ: the socialist government of Nicaragua, and the Sandinista movement that it represents.
La Botz has published an anti-Sandinista manifesto with ISO publisher Haymarket Books, which is advertised as a survey of âthe failures of the Nicaraguan Revolution, by one of the most important Marxist-historians of Latin America.â
In June 2018, as a US-backed, violent regime-change attempt surged across Nicaragua, threatening the rule of democratically elected President Daniel Ortega, La Botz attempted to mobilize left-wing US support for the anti-Sandinista opposition. That month, he joined an anti-Sandinista event â co-sponsored by DSAâs New York branch, Haymarket, the academic journal NACLA, and the Marxist Education Project â at Saint Peterâs Church in New York City, to drum up local support for the coup.
The event featured speeches by several Nicaraguan anti-Sandinista activists who were involved in the regime-change attempt, including self-described students who wore masks on stage, concealing their identities from the audience.

The Grayzone has obtained internal DSA email reports authored by La Botz which revealed that, days after the event at Saint Peterâs Church, those same students met with right-wing Republican legislators on Capitol Hill, including neoconservative Senators Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.
The students beamed with pride, appearing without masks in photo ops with the avowedly anti-socialist members of Congress. Their trip was financed by Freedom House, a right-wing soft-power organization that is funded almost entirely by the US government.
Humbled to meet with Nicaraguan student leaders who are risking their lives fighting for freedom. Their bravery and perseverance will overcome the Ortega dictatorshipâs tyranny. #SOSNicaragua pic.twitter.com/BGkc6kEVTc
â Senator Ted Cruz (@SenTedCruz) June 6, 2018
The studentsâ US-backed delegation included Victor Cuadras, a fanatical right-wing activist who openly supported Donald Trumpâs agenda for Latin America and blamed the governments of Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua for the caravan of desperate asylum seekers on the US-Mexico border.
Victor Cuadras (@AndinoCuadras), the Nicaraguan student coup leader who was flown to DC by US govt @freedomhouse to drum up regime change, echoes and endorses Donald Trump’s anti-migrant fanaticism against the #Caravan pic.twitter.com/CzwDCOMiMu
â Max Blumenthal (@MaxBlumenthal) November 6, 2018
On June 15, 2018, Dan La Botz sent an email report to DSA leadership, reflecting on the event. He acknowledged that âthe Nicaraguans both on the panel and in the public had virtually no political analysis and no vision or program for the future of their country.â
Then in a follow-up email report sent to DSA leadership on July 24, La Botz defended the studentsâ collaboration with neoconservative politicians like Rubio and Cruz.
âThe students, ages 21 to 24 or so, who spoke on our panel then went off to speak with Republican legislators, guided by a rightwing foundation,â he wrote. âWhile, of course, we do not think that this is a good strategy, this is perfectly understandable given that the Republicans are in power and have the ability to do something about Nicaragua.â
While marketing the anti-Sandinista activists as grassroots youth deserving of left-wing solidarity, La Botz admitted in his internal DSA report, âNicaraguan opponents of the regime in the United States hold a wide variety of political views, though there is virtually no left among the opposition here that I am aware of.â
And while publicly framing the regime-change operation in Nicaragua as a progressive uprising, La Botz privately conceded, âThere is, however, little likelihood of an outcome to the rebellion that goes beyond a more democratic capitalist regime.â

As The Grayzone reported in 2018, the US governmentâs regime-change arm the National Endowment for Democracy boasted of spending millions on anti-Sandinista civil society and media outfits âto lay the groundwork for insurrectionâ in the years and months ahead of the coup.
While the coup attempt in Nicaragua was portrayed as a peaceful peopleâs uprising by figures like La Botz, it was in fact a violent putsch that saw armed elements erect roadblocks across the country, holdingup ambulances, torturing, brutalizing, kidnapping, and murdering supporters of the Sandinistas.
Anti-Sandinista insurgents dragged an unarmed, on-leave police officer to death from a truck and then burnt his corpse at a roadblock. They raped a 10-year-old girl at a roadblock and burnt the homes of local Sandinista legislators. They occupied and ransacked a public university campus, wrecked a womenâs health center, and torched a daycare center.
The armed opposition wreaked this havoc while attacking police stations with mortars and gunfire, during a national dialogue in which the police were ordered to remain in their barracks. In the end, Nicaraguaâs opposition caused the deaths of over 60 innocent people, while grinding the countryâs previously productive economy to a halt.
Once the coup was extinguished, the USÂ Congress passed the Nica Act without debate, imposing harsh sanctions on Nicaraguaâs economy that emulated those already leveled against Venezuela and Iran.
On January 9, Dan La Botz appeared at a meeting of the New York City DSA Anti-War Working Group to amp up the attack on Nicaraguaâs socialist government. There, he was challenged by Gunar Olsen, a contributor to The Grayzone, about the event he organized last year with masked right-wing Nicaraguan students sponsored by Freedom House.
La Botz claimed that the event had originally been planned as a discussion of his book, but that âsomebody said, these students were coming through. And I said, that sounds great.â
He continued: âMy view is, they came from their country because someone gave em some money, and they can come to the United States and they wanted to talk to somebody who might be able to help their country⌠It may have been though that there were some conservative political forces working with them and the Republicans, it may have been that there was some of those four students that was more hip than the others but it wasnât my impression.â
La Botz concluded by telling Olsen and the DSA crowd, âI donât feel at all bad, I donât think it was a terrible thing. I think they were four young people coming to this country that wanted to speak there. We didnât know they were going there, we didnât know where they were heading, I didnât know they were gonna speak there. Would I do it again? If I knew what was going to happen Iâd probably say, letâs see if we can find some other students.â
However, in his private email assessment of the event to DSA leadership, La Botz had defended the studentsâ subsequent meetings with right-wing Republicans as âperfectly understandable.â
In his internal DSA report, La Botz went on to characterize those in the US left that opposed the coup in Nicaragua as âforeign leftistsâ who are âbackers of Putin, Assad, Iran, Hamas, and now Ortega.â
La Botz did not respond to several attempts to reach him by phone.
The force behind the annual Socialism Conference, the International Socialist Organization marketed itself as a radical, even revolutionary movement supporting âsocialism from below.â But it was deeply embedded in the non-profit industrial complex.
The ISO operated legally through its parent non-profit organization the Center for Economic Research and Social Change. A tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization, CERSC received huge grants from the Tides Foundation.
The Tides Foundation is well known for funding progressive groups, but only as long as they do not rock the boat too much.
A Canadian environmental activist who has participated in projects funded by Tides told The Grayzone that the foundation funded a trip to the 2011 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa, but eventually pulled funding for their environmental groupâs excursion to the 2012 UN conference in Doha, Qatar, because the foundation was afraid the activists would carry out peaceful forms of civil disobedience.
âThey funded some people â those who wouldnât rock the boat because they didnât want people engaging in civil disobedience,â the Canadian environmental activist told The Grayzone.
Another activist published a âwhistleblowerâs open letter to Canadiansâ explaining that the Tides Foundation, which funded many environmentalists in the country, was âtoo afraid of reprisals from the government to act,â after the office of right-wing Prime Minister Stephen Harper threatened to challenge the foundationâs charitable status.
Why a milquetoast liberal foundation would fund the ISO, a supposedly revolutionary socialist organization, raises serious questions about that groupâs agenda.
In fact, while the Tides Foundation was serving as one of the biggest financiers of the ISO, it was also funding Democratic Party-aligned organizations and even pro-Israel groups like J Street and the New Israel Fund, which actively campaign against the Palestinian call for BDS (Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions against Israel) and support the preservation of a settler-colonialist ethnically exclusivist state.
While the ISO was marginal during its existence, it punched above its weight through front organizations and prominent members who worked in the mainstream media and academia.
The ISOâs publishing arm, Haymarket Books, has been especially influential. Haymarket describes itself as a âradical, independent, nonprofit book publisher based in Chicago,â which had been the base for the ISO.
Haymarket has indeed published many important books on pressing issues. However, it has supplemented these works with anti-anti-imperialist screeds that echo the US State Departmentâs rhetoric, but framed as âfrom the left.â
Among Haymarketâs most aggressively marketed releases of 2018 was âThe Impossible Revolution,â a collection of essays by the Syrian exiled writer Yassin al-Haj Saleh, who now lives in Turkey and functions as a lodestar to self-styled left-wing supporters of regime change in Syria.
Al-Haj Salehâs book was blurbed by Charles Lister, a former functionary of the UKâs Conservative Party who became a top lobbyist for arming Salafi-jihadist insurgents in Syria at the Gulf monarchy-funded Middle East Institute in Washington, DC.
State Department cables exposed by WikiLeaks indicate that Yassin al-Haj Saleh was a US government informant in regular correspondence with American officials in Damascus. One such memo, dated April 24, 2006, features advice by al-Haj Saleh apparently delivered to US officials in the country to use Islamism as a weapon against the government of Bashar al-Assad.

Haymarket has also recently published âIndefensible,â a book-length denunciation of the anti-imperialist left by the writer Rohini Hensman.
The manifesto features ham-fisted attacks on journalists Julian Assange, John Pilger, and Seymour Hersh, along with unqualified support for virtually every US and NATO military intervention in the past 30 years, as well as the dirty war on Syria and the Maidan coup in Ukraine.
Anand Gopal, a journalist who routinely appears at ISO events while serving as a fellow at the State Department and corporate-funded New America Foundation, praised Hensmanâs book as a guide to âhow to be a principled internationalist in the era of imperialism.â
More recently, Hensman took to the DSAâs official website to attack The Grayzone editor Max Blumenthal, Seymour Hersh, and Robert Fisk as âneo-Stalinistsâ engaged in a âconvergenceâ with neo-Nazis. No evidence was provided to support the extreme claim.
Ashley Smith, an ideologue of the now-defunct ISO, says he is currently writing another anti-anti-imperialist book for Haymarket entitled âSocialism and Anti-Imperialism.â
Trotskyite groups are notorious throughout the world for their extreme sectarian tendencies. The organizations rarely last long, frequently splintering into tiny groupuscules over political disagreements.
Unsurprisingly, then, the so-called âleftâ opposition in Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Cuba â which is celebrated by Trotskyite groups like the ISO â is in fact infinitesimal and insignificant.
Nils McCune, a socialist and environmental activist who has lived in Nicaragua for years, explained in an interview on our podcast Moderate Rebels that one of these parties, the Movement for the Renovation of Sandinismo (MRS) is a tiny group that is irrelevant in the country. Unable to mobilize popular support, this âleftâ opposition can only lobby the US government for regime change.
As Blumenthal, a co-author of this article, revealed in MintPress News, the MRS has received direct support from the US government in its campaign to prevent the election of Daniel Ortega as president, and lobbied for sanctions against Nicaragua after he was elected.
Similarly, in Venezuela the ostensible left opposition has offered âcritical supportâ to Washingtonâs regime change efforts.
This February, a leader of the marginal Venezuelan Trotskyite group Marea Socialista held a friendly meeting with Juan Guaidó, the US-appointed right-wing coup leader.
On February 5, GuaidĂł tweeted a photo of a meeting with Marea Socialistaâs Nicmer Evans.
Juan Guaidó hails from the far-right party Voluntad Popular, which was practically founded by the US government and has been deeply involved in street violence throughout Venezuela.
Hoy sostuvimos un encuentro con ex Ministros del Gobierno del ex presidente ChĂĄvez. Escuchamos sus planteamientos, y coincidimos en la necesidad de resolver los problemas de los venezolanos.
Seguimos trabajando y escuchando a todos los sectores que quieren un cambio #VamosBien pic.twitter.com/4FGM0gecZO
â Juan GuaidĂł (@jguaido) February 5, 2019
Jesus Rodriguez Espinoza, a Chavista who lives in Venezuela and is editor of the independent news website, the Orinoco Tribune, told The Grayzone when we reported in the country in February that Marea Socialista is âtinyâ and has âno power.â He was genuinely surprised at how much coverage these minuscule groups have received in the US progressive media, because inside Venezuela they have negligible influence.
Yet the Trotskyite organization has constantly been given a platform by the ISOâs newspaper Socialist Worker (Marea Socialista even enjoys its own tag on the website). Jacobin Magazine, the self-declared âleading voice of the American left,â has also given a huge platform to Marea Socialista operatives to push for what they call a âChavismo from belowâ â despite the fact that the Trotskyite group is virtually unknown to average Venezuelans, including to millions of poor and working-class Chavistas.
Also featured in the February 5 photo of the meeting with US-backed coup leader Juan Guaidó was the anti-Maduro liberal intellectual Edgardo Lander, who is popular in anti-communist left-wing circles in the US but almost unknown inside Venezuela. Like Marea Socialista, Lander has enjoyed very positive coverage in the progressive Anglo press.
Democracy Now, which has advanced regime-change propagandaon Syria on repeated occasions, offered its platform to Lander this May. Hosts Amy Goodman and Nermeen Sheikh lobbed softball questions at the intellectual, and failed to disclose that he met with Guaidó.
In his Democracy Now segment, Lander admitted that his outfit is a âsmall collective,â whereas the Chavista movement he criticizes is massively popular in working-class barrios across the country.
The International Socialist Organization has played a similar role in the US, with little visibility outside the left and almost no grassroots base.
Now that the ISO has disbanded, its veterans can reach into the rapidly growing ideologically diffuse world of Democratic Socialists of America, using platforms like Socialism 2019 to infect DSAâs youthful core with the imperial politics of regime change â but always âfrom the left,â and always âfrom below.â
 
                Max Blumenthal is an award-winning journalist and the author of several books, including best-selling Republican Gomorrah, Goliath,The Fifty One Day War, and The Management of Savagery. He has produced print articles for an array of publications, many video reports, and several documentaries, including Killing Gaza. Blumenthal founded The Grayzone in 2015 to shine a journalistic light on Americaâs state of perpetual war and its dangerous domestic repercussions.
 
                Benjamin Norton is the founder and editor of the independent news website Multipolarista, where he does original reporting in both English and Spanish. Benjamin has reported from numerous countries, including Venezuela, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Ecuador, Honduras, Colombia, and more. His journalistic work has been published in dozens of media outlets, and he has done interviews on Sky News, Al Jazeera, Democracy Now, El Financiero Bloomberg, Al Mayadeen teleSUR, RT, TRT World, CGTN, Press TV, HispanTV, Sin Censura, and various TV channels in Mexico, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia. Benjamin writes a regular column for Al Mayadeen (in English and Spanish). He was formerly a reporter with the investigative journalism website The Grayzone, and previously produced the political podcast and video show Moderate Rebels. His personal website is BenNorton.com, and he tweets at @BenjaminNorton.