Jack Barnes (politician)

Jack Barnes
National Secretary of the
Socialist Workers Party
Assumed office
1972
Preceded byFarrell Dobbs
Personal details
Born
Jack Whittier Barnes

1940 (age 83–84)
NationalityAmerican
Domestic partnerMary-Alice Waters
EducationCarleton College

Jack Barnes (born 1940) is an American communist and the National Secretary of the Socialist Workers Party. Barnes was elected the party's national secretary in 1972, replacing the retiring Farrell Dobbs.[1] He joined the SWP in the early 1960s as a student at Carleton College in Minnesota and quickly became a leading member of the party's youth wing. From the 1990s to the present, Barnes has directed his party to support the governments of North Korea and Equatorial Guinea; has instructed the party to abstain from antiwar or anti-racist activism; and in January 2016 lent his support to the occupation of federal lands, in Oregon, by militia movement members.[2] Barnes was a key advocate of the party's "turn to industry" in the 1970s, its exit from the Fourth International in the 1980s and its orientation towards the Cuban Communist Party in the 1990s.

  1. ^ Hadjor, Kofi Buenor (1995). Another America: The Politics of Race and Blame. South End Press. p. 318. ISBN 9780896085152. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  2. ^ Oregon actions demand ‘Free Hammonds,’ open land use, The Militant

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