Daily Worker
The Daily Worker was a newspaper published in New York City by the Communist Party USA, a formerly Comintern-affiliated organization. Publication began in 1924. While it generally reflected the prevailing views of the party, attempts were made to reflect a broader spectrum of left-wing opinion. At its peak, the newspaper achieved a circulation of 35,000. Contributors to its pages included Robert Minor and Fred Ellis, Lester Rodney, David Karr, Richard Wright, John L. Spivak, Peter Fryer, Woody Guthrie and Louis F. Budenz.
History
Origin
The origins of the Daily Worker begin with the weekly Ohio Socialist published by the Socialist Party of Ohio in Cleveland from 1917 to November 1919. The Ohio party joined the nascent Communist Labor Party of America at the 1919 Emergency National Convention.The Ohio Socialist only used whole numbers. Its final issue was #94 November 19, 1919. The Toiler continued this numbering, even though a typographical error made its debut issue #85 November 26, 1919. Beginning sometime in 1921 the volume number IV was added, perhaps reflecting the publications fourth year in print, though its issue numbers continued the whole number scheme. The final edition of the Toiler was Vol IV #207 January 28, 1922. The Worker continued the Toilers numbering during its run Vol. IV #208 February 2, 1922 to Vol. VI #310 January 12, 1924. The first edition of Daily worker was numbered Vol. I #311.
The Ohio Socialist became Toiler in November 1919. In 1920, with the CLP going underground, Toiler became the party's "aboveground" newspaper published by "The Toiler Publishing Association." It remained as the Cleveland aboveground publication of the CLP and its successors until February 1922.
In December 1921 the "aboveground" Workers Party of America was founded and the Toiler merged with Workers Council of the Workers' Council of the United States to found the six page weekly The Worker.
This became the Daily Worker beginning January 13, 1924.
In 1927, the newspaper moved from Chicago to New York.
Popular Front changes
In politics, the Daily Worker consistently adhered to a Stalinist party line from the time of Joseph Stalin's rise to power in the Soviet Union. The paper maintained a series of correspondents in Moscow, including Vern Smith in the mid-1930s, who invariably depicted Soviet reality in the most favorable possible light. The paper upheld the verdicts of the Moscow trials, criticized at the time outside the USSR as show trials, and later exposed as having used fabricated evidence and extorted confessions. The Daily Workers editorials constantly criticized all opponents of Stalinist socialism, including other communists, such as Leon Trotsky, who was assassinated at Stalin's order in 1940.Beginning in the Popular Front period of the 1930s, when the party proclaimed that "Communism is Twentieth Century Americanism" and characterized itself as the heirs to the tradition of Washington and Lincoln, the paper broadened its coverage of the arts and entertainment. In 1935 it established a sports page, with contributions from David Karr, the page was edited and frequently written by Lester Rodney. The paper's sports coverage combined enthusiasm for baseball with the usual Marxist social critique of capitalist society and bourgeois attitudes. It advocated the desegregation of professional sports.
Post-World War II
The Daily Worker had constant financial and distribution problems. Many newsstands and stores would not carry the paper. The revelations of Soviet MVD spy rings inside the U.S. government, the 1945 revelations of former Daily Worker managing editor Louis F. Budenz, a self-admitted recruiter of agents for the Soviet NKVD, combined with the resultant intense anti-communism of the 1950s caused a large drop in the paper's circulation.The membership of the American Communist Party had fallen to around 20,000 in 1956, when Khrushchev's speech to the 20th Congress of the CPSU on the personality cult of Stalin became known. The paper printed articles in support for the early stages of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, a popular revolt by the Hungarian people against continued domination by the Soviet Union, which subsequently installed a puppet regime, the János Kádár government, in Budapest and had begun to persecute its political opponents. The Daily Worker's editor, John Gates opened the paper for discussion of the topic, a novel event for a party-line newspaper, and one appeared to promise further liberalization and dialogue inside the Communist Party in the United States.
Despite widespread dissension in the CPUSA, the paper finally endorsed Moscow's suppression of the Hungarian uprising. In the disruptions that followed, about half of the remaining party membership left the party, including Gates and many staff members of the Daily Worker. Owing to greatly reduced operating income associated with a reduced membership, the CPUSA was forced to cease publication of a daily paper, with the final issue of the Daily Worker appearing on January 13, 1958.
After a short hiatus, the party published a weekend paper called The Worker from 1958 until 1968. A Tuesday edition called The Midweek Worker was added in 1961 and also continued until 1968, when production was accelerated. According to ex-CIA agent Philip Agee, a large number of subscribers during this period were CIA agents or front companies linked to the CIA. Agee claimed that the CIA's funding in this manner prevented the Worker from having to cease publication.
Two newspapers and a merger
In 1968 the Communist Party resumed publication of a New York daily paper, now titled The Daily World. In 1986, the paper merged with the party's West Coast weekly paper, the People's World, which had been slightly less closely hewed to the Moscow political line as the New York party organization and paper had been. The new People’s Daily World published from 1987 until 1991, when daily publication was abandoned.The paper cut back to a weekly issue and was retitled People's Weekly World, which remains the paper of the Communist Party USA today. Print publication of the People's World ceased in 2010 in favor of an online edition.
Currently, People's World claims that, "Peoplesworld.org is a daily news website of, for and by the 99% and the direct descendant of the Daily Worker." Its publisher is Long View Publishing Company. The online newspaper is a member of the International Labor Communications Association and is indexed in the Alternative Press Index. Its staff belong to the Newspaper Guild/CWA, AFL-CIO.
Masthead
1920s
- Maurice Becker, cartoonist
- Jacob Burck, cartoonist
- Walt Carmon, circulation manager
- Whittaker Chambers
- Kyle Crichton as "Robert Forsythe"
- Paul Crouch
- Samuel Adams Darcy
- Fred Ellis, cartoonist
- Harry Freeman
- Sender Garlin
- Hugo Gellert, cartoonist
- Mike Gold, columnist
- Jolan Gross-Bettelheim, cartoonist
- L. E. Katterfeld
- Robert Minor, cartoonist
- Richard B. Moore
- Harvey O'Connor
- Moissaye Joseph Olgin
1930s
- Robert Bendiner
- Richard O. Boyer
- Louis F. Budenz, managing editor
- Ben Burns
- Benjamin J. Davis Jr., editor
- Theodore Dreiser
- Nelson Frank
- Harry Gannes, foreign editor
- Eugene Gordon
- Woody Guthrie, "Woody Sez" columnist for People's World
- Clarence Hathaway, editor
- Syd Hoff, cartoonist
- Jacob Kainen, cartoonist
- Sergey Nikolaevich Kurnakov
- Edna Lewis
- Walter Lowenfels
- Samuel Putnam
- Lester Rodney, sports writer
- Howard Rushmore
- Ryan Walker, cartoonist / editor
- Marguerite Young, Washington DC bureau chief
1940s
- Edith Anderson-Schröder, culture editor
- Bill Mardo
- Alexander Saxton
1950s
- John Gates
- Si Gerson, executive editor
Pamphlets
- The state and revolution: Marxist teaching on the state and the task of the proletariat in the revolution by Vladimir Lenin Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1924
- Chicago; Published for the Workers Party of America by the Daily Worker Pub. Co. Feb 1925
- by William Z. Foster, Earl Browder and James Cannon Chicago, Ill. : Published for the Trade Union Educational League by the Daily worker 1925
- by Earl Browder Chicago: Published for the Workers Party of America by the Daily worker publishing company, 1925
- translated by Max Bedacht Chicago: Published for the Workers Party of America by the Daily worker 1925.
- by William F. Dunne Chicago, Ill. : Published for the Workers Party of America by the Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- edited by Manuel Gomez Chicago: Published for Workers Party of America by Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- by Joseph Stalin Chicago: Published for the Workers Party of America by the Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- Chicago: Published for the Workers Party by the Daily Worker Publishing Co. 1925
- by Joseph Stalin, Lev Kamenev and Grigory Zinovyev Chicago: Published for the Workers Party of America by the Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- by Yemelyan Yaroslavsky Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- by Tom Bell Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- by Shapurji Saklatvala Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- by Hermynia Zur Mühlen, trans. by Ida Dailes Chicago, Ill., Daily Worker Pub. Co. 1925
- Chicago: Daily Worker Publishing Co., 1925
- by Charles E. Ruthenberg Chicago, Ill. : Published for the Workers Party of America by the Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1925
- The international: words and music. : Daily Worker New York Agency, Dec 1925
- by Heinz Neumann Chicago : Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- by Michael Gold Chicago : Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- by Max Shachtman Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co. 1926
- by Bertram David Wolfe Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co. 1926
- by Max Bedacht Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- by William F. Dunne Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- by Albert Weisbord Chicago; Published for the Workers Party by the Daily Worker Pub. Co., November 1926.
- ' Chicago, Ill. : Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- by James Dolsen Chicago, Ill. : Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- Labor conditions in China and its labor movement by James H Dolsen Chicago, Ill. : Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- Lenin on organization. by Vladimir Lenin Chicago, Ill. : Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- by Nikolai Bukharin, A Berdnikov and F Svetlov Chicago : Daily Worker, 1926
- by Fred Ellis Chicago : Daily Worker, 1927
- by V Yarotsky and N Yekovsky Chicago : Daily Worker, 1927
- by G Schüller Chicago: Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1926
- ' Chicago ; New York : Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1927
- by Executive Committee of the Communist International New York, Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1927 The little red library #12
- by Jay Lovestone New York: Daily Worker Publishing Co., 1927.
- ' New York : Daily Worker, 1928
- ' New York : Comprodaily Pub. Co., 1929
- How to sell the Daily Worker. New York, Daily Worker, 1920s
- Burning Daylight by Jack London New York, Daily Worker, 1930s
- "Soviet dumping" fable: speech by Litvinov New York : Published for Daily Worker by Workers Library Publishers, 1931
- Anti-soviet lies and the five-year plan: the "Holy" capitalist war against the Soviet Union by Max Bedacht New York: Published for Daily Worker by Workers Library Publishers, 1931
- Dimitroff accuses by Georgi Dimitrov New York, Daily Worker, 1934
- The iron heel by Jack London New York, Daily Worker, 1934
- The ruling clawss by A Redfield New York, Daily Worker, 1935
- Hunger and revolt: cartoons, by Jacob Burck New York, Daily Worker, 1935
- Martin Eden by Jack London New York, Daily Worker, 1937
- William Z. Foster and William Z Foster New York: The Daily Worker, 1937
- The Daily worker, heir to the great tradition, by Morris Schappes New York, Daily Worker, 1944
- by Harry Raymond; intro. by Benjamin Davis New York, Daily Worker, 1946
- The killing of William Milton by Art Shields New York, Daily Worker, 1948
- The Ingrams shall not die!: story of Georgia's new terror by Harry Raymond; intro. by Benjamin J. Davis New York, Daily Worker, 1948
- A tale of two waterfronts by George Morris New York, Daily Worker, 1952
- "Throw the bum out": official Communist Party line on Senator McCarthy. New York, Daily Worker, 1953-1954
Footnotes
Articles
- Fetter, Henry D. "The Party Line and the Color Line: The American Communist Party, the Daily Worker and Jackie Robinson." Journal of Sport History 28, no. 3.
- Gottfried, Erika, "Shooting Back: The Daily Worker Photographs Collection," American Communist History, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 41–69.
- Lamb, Christopher and Rusinack, Kelly E. "Hitting From the Left: The Daily Worker's Assault on Baseball's Color Line". Gumpert, Gary and Drucker, Susan J., eds. Take Me Out to the Ballgame: Communicating Baseball. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 2002.
- Rusinack, Kelly E. "Baseball on the Radical Agenda: The Daily and Sunday Worker Journalistic Campaign to Desegregate Major League Baseball, 1933-1947". Dorinson, Joseph, and Woramund, Joram, eds. Jackie Robinson: Race, Sports, and the American Dream. New York: E.M. Swift, 1998.
- Smith, Ronald A. "The Paul Robeson-Jackie Robinson Saga and a Political Collision". Journal of Sport History 6, no. 2.
Theses
- Evans, William Barrett. "Revolutionist Thought in the Daily Worker, 1919-1939". Ph.D. diss. University of Washington, 1965.
- Jeffries, Dexter. "Richard Wright and the ‘Daily Worker’: A Native Son’s Journalistic Apprenticeship". Ph.D. diss. City University of New York, 2000.
- Rusinack, Kelly E. "Baseball on the Radical Agenda: The Daily and Sunday Worker on Desegregating Major League Baseball, 1933-1947". M.A. Thesis, Clemson University, South Carolina, 1995.
- Shoemaker, Martha Mcardell. "Propaganda or Persuasion: The Communist Party and Its Campaign to Integrate Baseball". Master’s thesis. University of Nevada, Las Vegas, 1999.
Books
- Hemingway, Andrew. Artists on the Left: American Artists and the Communist Movement, 1926-1956. New Haven, Yale University Press, 2002.
- Schappes, Morris U. The Daily Worker: Heir to the Great Tradition. New York: Daily Worker, 1944.
- Silber, Irwin. Press Box Red: The Story of Lester Rodney, The Communist Who Helped Break the Color Line in American Sports. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2003.