Les Leopold explains why workers need an independent political party, as polling shows strong support.
Les Leopold Exposes
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Summary
Two veteran labor thinkers delivered a blunt truth: working people know the system is rigged, and they are ready for a political alternative. In this conversation, Author/Labor activist Les Leopold and Retired Dean & Professor Michael Merrill explained why the billionaire class effectively owns both major parties and why a working-class political movement could gain real traction. Drawing from polling in key Rust Belt states, they revealed strong support for bold economic policies and even a new independent workers-focused political organization. Their message challenged decades of neoliberal propaganda that told Americans they must accept layoffs, inequality, and corporate rule.
- A YouGov survey in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin found major support for pro-worker economic policies.
- 57% supported a new independent political organization for working people outside Democrats and Republicans.
- Younger voters under 30 backed the concept at roughly 70%, signaling generational hunger for change.
- The speakers argued that unemployment and job insecurity keep workers politically trapped and fearful.
- Existing third parties often fail because they do not organize deeply within working-class communities.
This discussion made one point unmistakable: Americans are not too conservative for progressive economics. They have been denied authentic representation. When workers hear policies centered on jobs, wages, healthcare, and dignity, they respond. The path forward requires courage, organization, and a politics rooted in people rather than capital.
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For decades, political elites insisted Americans would never support bold economic reform. They said workers hated government, distrusted collective solutions, and preferred market discipline over public investment. That narrative helped justify stagnant wages, union decline, privatization, and corporate domination. But this conversation with labor activist Les Leopold and historian Michael Merrill shattered that myth.
Leopold described a large survey conducted with working-class voters in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Instead of finding hostility to progressive ideas, researchers found strong support for them. Policies such as guaranteed jobs, living wages, anti-price-gouging measures, and limits on taxpayer-funded layoffs resonated deeply. Even more striking, a majority supported a new independent political organization representing workers rather than billionaires.
That result should surprise no one paying attention to material reality. Workers face rising rents, medical debt, insecure employment, and corporate consolidation. Productivity has increased for decades, while wages have lagged behind. The Economic Policy Institute has repeatedly documented the disconnect between worker productivity and pay growth. Wealth flows upward while labor creates the value. When people struggle daily, they naturally seek alternatives.
The political system has failed to meet that need. One party openly serves oligarchic reaction. The other often campaigns on inclusion while protecting donor-class economics. Workers notice. They may differ culturally or ideologically, but many share a sense that neither party prioritizes the other’s material well-being.
That explains why support for an independent working-class politics crosses partisan lines. Leopold noted that even a sizable portion of Trump voters favored the concept. This is crucial. Many voters who drift right are not ideological extremists; they are disillusioned people responding to economic abandonment. A movement focused on healthcare, wages, jobs, and dignity can reach them more effectively than moral scolding ever will.
Merrill added an important historical frame. American politics has always contained a struggle between concentrated power and democratic sovereignty. Whether against monarchy, slavery, or unchecked corporate power, ordinary people have repeatedly expanded democracy through organized pressure. That history matters. It reminds citizens that elite dominance is not permanent.
The call for a jobs guarantee deserves special attention. A right to employment at a living wage would weaken employer blackmail, strengthen bargaining power, and stabilize communities. A. Philip Randolph championed similar ideas generations ago, and modern economists continue to debate federal job guarantees as tools to reduce inequality and mitigate the pain of recessions.
Critics immediately cry “spoiler.” But that argument often serves to preserve a broken duopoly. Every political realignment in U.S. history once looked impossible until it happened. The Republican Party itself emerged from the collapse of older party structures.
The deeper issue is not ballot lines. It is whether workers build independent institutions powerful enough to negotiate, pressure, and, if necessary, replace captured parties. That means unions, local assemblies, media platforms, educational networks, and candidates rooted in working-class communities.
This interview also rejected politics based on fear. Merrill spoke of hope and joy—an underrated strategic insight. Right-wing politics thrives on resentment, scapegoating, and anxiety. A democratic working-class politics must offer security, solidarity, and a believable future.
Americans are told to lower expectations. They are told healthcare is too expensive, decent wages are unrealistic, housing is unaffordable, and democracy is limited to choosing between two donor-approved options. Yet when asked directly, many choose something better.
That is the opening. Not cynicism. Not despair. Organization.
Find the original article at “A Party Of Our Own.”
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