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Metro DC DSA Urges DC Council to Put Working People Before Autonomous Vehicle Companies

For immediate release

Metro DC DSA Urges DC Council to Put Working People Before Autonomous Vehicle Companies

Date: May 29, 2026

Media Contact: For all press inquiries, please contact media@mdcdsa.org.

Washington, DC: On May 4, the text for Councilmember Charles Allen’s Autonomous Vehicle Deployment Authorization Amendment Act of 2026 was published. Allen’s bill begins round two of Waymo’s campaign to profit off of our city’s streets after their last industry-written bill, put forward by former Councilmember Kenyan McDuffie, completely collapsed in July of last year.

In its current form, this bill risks paving the way to the future it says it wants to avoid. It threatens the livelihoods of thousands of DC workers, risks wasting the time of hundreds of thousands more in worsened traffic, explicitly permits yet another form of surveillance technology on our streets, and leaves any potential safety benefits in the hands of the people who own the software, not The People who own the streets.

Neither the auto industry—the driving force behind our country’s deadly, inaccessible, and inequitable transportation system—nor big tech—the nation’s prime innovator in exploiting workers—should be in the driver’s seat of DC’s transportation future. DC residents need better transit and paratransit, traffic calmed permanently with changes to pavement (not paint or software), and social policies that protect people from exploitation on the road and at their destinations.

Metro DC DSA is organizing with our labor and community partners to stop undemocratic tech giants like Waymo from suffocating our streets for profit. To that end, Metro DC DSA urges Councilmember Allen to lean on his record of championing public transit and safe streets to prioritize the working people of DC, not AV companies.

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DSA Labor Statement on Spanberger Veto of HB1263 and SB378

For immediate release

DSA Labor Statement on Spanberger Veto of HB1263 and SB378

Date: May 21, 2026

Media Contact: For all press inquiries, please contact media@mdcdsa.org.

Washington, DC: This past Thursday, Democratic governor Abigail Spanberger vetoed House Bill 2363 and Senate Bill 378, which would have restored collective bargaining rights to more than 500,000 public sector workers in Virginia. Metro DC DSA strongly condemns this veto. Workers in Virginia have been without such guaranteed union rights since the Jim Crow era. The state stripped public sector workers of collective bargaining rights in 1946 in response to a group of Black workers organizing a union at the University of Virginia hospital. As her Republican predecessor, Glenn Youngkin, vetoed similar legislation last year, Spanberger’s veto is part of a continuous bi-partisan assault on Virginia’s working class majority, which voted to put her in the governor’s mansion.

These bills enjoy broad popularity within Virginia, as evidenced by them being supported by every single Democrat in the state legislature and overwhelming support from labor unions. This is something Spanberger herself is well aware of: while she declined to support repealing Virginia’s right-to-work legislation she promised to sign public sector collective bargaining rights into law on the campaign trail last year. According to the Economic Policy Institute, these bills would have helped to boost the state’s public-sector unionization rate which, at 14.1%, is the fourth lowest in the country, and narrow one of the largest public-sector pay gaps in the country (state and local government employees in Virginia earn, on average, 26.7% less than private-sector peers with similar education and experience). This would have improved public education and services in the state by reducing crisis-level shortages of educators, first responders, health care workers, and other essential workers. By being so eager to throw the working class under the bus, Spanberger has shown where her allegiances truly lie.

While this action is deeply disappointing, it is not surprising and has proved most Virginia unions that refused to endorse her last year correct. Governor Spanberger is a former CIA intelligence officer, the very same government agency that has suppressed working-class movements for justice at home and abroad. The CIA has spent millions of taxpayer dollars attempting to overthrow other nations’ governments over 72 times, while undermining and splitting labor unions abroad, drowning workers’ hopes in blood in places such as Guatemala, Iran, Congo, Dominican Republic, Brazil, Indonesia, Chile, Jamaica, El Salvador, and Nicaragua. Spanberger has also taken millions from corporations and billionaires, including the Murdochs, Sports Betting Alliance, and Dominion Energy. Our legitimate demands should not be subject to vetoes by the rich and their cronies, but so long as we have an undemocratic political system that allows one powerful individual to veto the will of the majority, these assaults on the working class will continue.

While Spanberger’s veto is undoubtedly a setback for workers, there is a solution, and you are a part of it. As working-class people who make society run, we must organize ourselves in our workplaces and unions to create a movement capable of standing up for our rights. These efforts must be merged with the socialist movement to wrest power from the two parties of the capitalist class and build a real democracy for all. History will look back on this act of cowardice with the disdain it deserves, but only if we continue the work of building a fighting independent labor movement brick by brick, and merge it with the broader struggle for democracy and socialism. In the words of A. Philip Randolph, whose National Brotherhood of Workers of America successfully organized African-American shipyard and dock workers in the Tidewater region of Virginia over a century ago, “Justice is never given; it is exacted, and the struggle must be continuous.”

Join DSA! Organize your workplace! Join a union!

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Electoral Campaign

Electoral Campaign

The Electoral Priority Campaign is run by the Political Engagement Committee.

Metro DC Democratic Socialists of America has endorsed Shayla Adams-Stafford in the 2025 Prince George’s County Council District 5 special election!

 

She’s a former teacher and union shop steward and currently a member of the Prince George’s school board. While on the school board Shayla has fought for project labor agreements and to replace the cops in our schools with mental health support and tutoring. School board member Adams-Stafford is running for the tiebreaking vote on a County Council divided between developer-backed conservative Democrats and a progressive bloc.

Sign up now at this link to support our electoral efforts and build power for working class communities in the DMV! You don’t have to be a member of DSA to join our canvasses and other activities, we’re open to anyone who wants to help.

Recently we also campaigned for the Maryland Reproductive Freedom constitutional amendment, Janeese Lewis George’s Ward 4 DC Council campaign, Uncommitted Maryland, and a rent stabilization bill in PG County, totaling 45,000 doors knocked in 2024.

Our campaigns face strong opposition from conservatives, lobbying groups, and moneyed interests. But with your help, socialist campaigns with a people-powered movement behind them can win. Our chapter members have knocked on more than 210,000 doors and made more than 61,000 phone calls to voters since 2017. We’ve helped elect candidates and pass laws with progressive and labor coalitions in Virginia, Maryland, and D.C. Our endorsed candidates have gone on to fight for legislation to build social housing, increase taxes on the rich, cap insulin prices, repeal anti-union “right to work” laws, create social wealth funds, ban revolving-door lobbying, close corporate tax loopholes, create a universal basic income, expose confidential police records, end for-profit migrant detention across the state, and much more.

Our *highest* priority is canvassing, because in person door-knocking conversations are proven to persuade people and ensure they vote or contact their representatives. But there are ways for everyone to contribute, including phone banking, research, communications, and administrative support. Sign up here to let us know what you’re interested in! We’ll contact you about current/upcoming campaigns, and keep you updated on MDC DSA’s activities. 

Please email pec@mdcdsa.org with any questions, visit our slack channel, or view our Linktree to get involved.

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Abolition Campaign

Abolition Campaign

MDC DSA’s Abolition Working Group is organizing in coalition with Black-led and racial justice organizations to move toward prison abolition in DC, Montgomery County, and Northern Virginia. Short-term tasks include defunding the police departments to fund social services such as free public transit and social housing, redistributing funds to restore underfunded agencies such as public libraries and parks and recreation, replacing police in schools with supportive non-police staff, and freeing our neighbors from occupation and incarceration as a path towards abolition — a world without cops and prisons. As part of our vision for racial and economic justice, we demand that the funding removed from police and prisons be reinvested in real public safety: housing, schools, jobs, healthcare, and mental health services, community-based support programs, violence interruption, and other public goods and services.

To get involved, fill out this form.

To get involved in Montgomery County, fill out this form.

To get involved in NoVA, fill out this form.

To get involved in PG County, fill out this form.

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SANTA AND METRO DC SOCIALIST ELVES DELIVER COAL TO CONGRESS

SANTA AND METRO DC SOCIALIST ELVES DELIVER COAL TO CONGRESS

December 26, 2020

Washington, D.C. — At 9:30 a.m. on Christmas Day, the Metro D.C. chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) gathered in front of the U.S. Capitol on the east lawn to make a very important delivery: a large sack of coal! Santa and his socialist elves declared Congress made the naughty list this year on account of the miserly stimulus package Congress passed earlier this week.

Following months of both parties playing political games during negotiations as millions fell into poverty, Congress voted to give working Americans a measly $600, while providing $4 billion for the U.S. Navy, $2.4 billion to an unnecessary and ridiculous Space Force, $1.4 billion for a racist border wall, $500 million to help uphold apartheid in Israel, and $33 million to help Juan Guaido try once again to usurp the democratically elected Venezuelan government.

On the steps of the Capitol Santa declared that he is indeed a socialist who believes our world should not be dictated just by a handful of wealthy 1%ers. He declared, “Merry Christmas to all! And to the workers of the world, unite!”

While other nations around the world are recovering from the pandemic, the United States faces a mounting COVID-19 death toll, the worst economic recession since the Great Depression, and a wholly inadequate patchwork of state and local virus prevention measures. Metro D.C. DSA demands that Congress pass an amendment to the bill increasing the single $600 stimulus check to $2,000 every month for the duration of the pandemic, at a minimum, so that everyone can stay home, stay healthy, and ensure that hospitals have the capacity to treat new patients.

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DSA Organizes to Protect Neighbors in Need from Power Disconnections

Montgomery County DSA Says: “The People, United, Will Fight to Keep the Lights On”
(SILVER SPRING, MD) — Montgomery County DSA’s Power for the People campaign is providing direct aid to neighbors who are unable to pay their energy bills. The campaign has donated $3,000 so far, protecting nine low-income households from gas and electricity disconnections, and is continuing to raise funds through an Action Network campaign.

Maryland’s statewide ban on power disconnections expires on November 15. Governor Hogan stopped extending the moratorium at the request of Pepco and other utility companies, and he has no plans to offer real relief to struggling families. Montgomery County DSA stands in solidarity with our neighbors who will lose access to gas and electricity in the coming weeks.

While Pepco’s parent company, Exelon, continues to pay quarterly dividends to shareholders, the coronavirus pandemic has emptied families’ pocketbooks. In June, 150,000 Pepco customers in Maryland’s DC suburbs were more than 60 days behind on their energy bills. Meanwhile, the hurdles to existing assistance programs are even higher than before. In-person appointments are scarce. Signup events have been canceled. Additionally, Maryland’s undocumented residents are not eligible for government-run energy assistance programs.

Power for the People fills these gaps by providing a simple request form in English, Spanish, and Amharic that does not ask for proof of income. 100% of donations raised through the Action Network campaign are credited to recipients’ Pepco balances. One of the campaign’s first recipients, Kathy M., had this to say: “Your donation helps me in ways that you can’t imagine. In what seems a lifetime ago, I joyfully gave of myself in service to others. However, life circumstances can change your existence in a nanosecond. Your gift has given me hope that there will be a better day.”

The campaign has set a goal of raising $5,000 in additional funds to meet all the requests that have come in. Power for the People co-organizer Sarah Brand said, “In an economic crisis, mutual aid is more important than ever. Our neighbors need to stay warm this winter, and students need reliable power to attend classes. I encourage anyone who can help to pitch in.”

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Montgomery County DSA Opposes “Developer Blank Check” County Council Bill 29-20


Montgomery County DSA

Montgomery County DSA Opposes “Developer Blank Check” County Council Bill 29-20

September 16, 2020

The steering committee of the Montgomery County, MD branch of the Democratic Socialists of America (MoCo DSA) strongly opposes the proposed Payment In Lieu Of Taxes (PILOT) scheme offered in the Montgomery County Council bill’s 29-20, and condemns the lack of financial transparency. The bill as proposed would offer a “blank check” to corporate developers who build on certain leased WMATA (Metro) properties, rather than offering real solutions to the housing affordability crisis in Montgomery County. Bill 29-20 gives developers a 100 percent exemption from property taxes for a period of 15 years, even as the Council prepares cuts to public services in the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression.

The County Council is abdicating its role in managing the County’s finances during an unprecedented fiscal and public health calamity affecting all million-plus residents in the County. 

Cuts to public services are looming, and the Council has frozen the compensation of County government workers. Yet in this bill, the Council is offering developers a 15-year, 100 percent tax-exemption in exchange for a reduced payment of unknown size. The bill also stipulates that the County government may negotiate this reduced payment directly with developers, without any further public input into the terms of such agreement – for example, the size of the tax subsidy to developers, or any stipulations on the amount, if any, of affordable housing. 

This is an unconscionable bill, especially as prime real estate on Metrorail property does not require a subsidy to entice developers to build dense housing and commercial development.

The county government and the state of Maryland have a long-track record of corporate giveaways under the guise of “economic incentives.” But things like the loss of Discovery Communications in Silver Spring and close to 700 layoffs by Marriott in Bethesda make us question whether any long-term benefits have trickled down to working-class communities after we handed out tens of millions dollars in subsidies over the last decade.

Montgomery County DSA believes that quality housing must be secured as a human right, not a commodity, for all people. To that end, we agree with the stated goal of the County Council to increase the stock of affordable housing, especially in close proximity to economic opportunity, vibrant communities, and reliable public transit. But a small number of MPDUs in new high-rises are a drop in the bucket and are not even affordable for low-income residents. 

If private interests will not construct affordable housing without fiscal support, then the County Council and the state of Maryland must explore options such as Delegate Vaughn Stewart’s Social Housing Act (House Bill 1149) to create vibrant, socio-economically diverse housing modeled after the publicly-built Social Housing in Vienna, Austria. The converging economic, public health, racial injustice, and climate crises call for bold action to address the housing crisis, not a continuation of the same failed logic that brought us to our current situation.

illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building
illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building
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Montgomery County Residents Again Demand End to Country Club Giveaways


Montgomery County DSA

Montgomery County Residents Again Demand End to Country Club Giveaways

January 8, 2020

Montgomery County DSA Says: “Money for Jobs and Education, Not the Wealthy’s Recreation”

(CHEVY CHASE, MD) — Montgomery County residents gathered at Columbia Country Club today to demand that state delegates put an end to tax subsidies given to private country clubs. This is the first of a series of planned protests.

The protesters held banners and signs that said “End Tax Breaks for Country Clubs.”

The State of Maryland provides property tax subsidies to country clubs by assessing their property at a rate far below market value when determining clubs’ tax liability. Columbia Country Club, for example, pays less than 25% of what its property tax bill would be if it was taxed at the same rate as homeowners.

Last year, revenue shortfalls forced the County to propose painful budgetary cuts, including $25 million from Montgomery County Public Schools and $3.9 million from Health and Human Services. Now, the County is predicting a $100 million shortfall next year. Meanwhile, the tax giveaways enjoyed by elite country clubs amount to $10 million annually — even as these clubs charge initiation fees of $80,000 to $100,000. 

Montgomery County DSA Chair Elissa Laitin remarked, “Today is the first day of the Maryland legislative session. We are sending a message that it remains unconscionable for the working class to pay more in order to continue subsidizing the recreation of the ruling class. A few years ago, the County raised property tax rates on homeowners by almost nine percent, and we’re told we have to live with budget cuts to essential services. Meanwhile, these clubs for the 1% continue to pay lower taxes than the rest of us. This needs to end.”

Said MoCo DSA Steering Committee member Zach Wiita, “We once again call upon the Maryland General Assembly to pass a bill ending these giveaways to the playgrounds of the wealthy, and put working Marylanders first.”

illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building
illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building
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MoCo DSA Calls For a Moral Minimum Wage for All Maryland Workers


Montgomery County DSA

MoCo DSA Calls For a Moral Minimum Wage for All Maryland Workers

March 19, 2019

(SILVER SPRING, MD) — The Steering Committee of the Montgomery County Democratic Socialists of America released the following statement today: “While we are pleased to see that the statewide minimum wage for most Maryland workers will likely increase soon, we are dismayed with the exemptions and delays contained in the bills passed by both houses of the Maryland General Assembly.

The Economic Policy Institute’s Family Budget Calculator determines that a single adult in Montgomery County needs to be paid at least $25.67/hour to afford housing, food, health care, transportation, and other basic needs. A family of two adults and two children needs to earn a combined wage of at least $50.22/hour. Yet, our Governor and General Assembly seem content to allow numerous Marylanders to live in poverty while their employers profit off of their underpaid labor.

The version of the bill passed by the House of Delegates won’t fully implement a $15/hour minimum wage until 2025, and the Senate version won’t fully implement $15/hour for smaller businesses, which make up the majority of Maryland companies, until 2028. Both versions will exempt increasing the minimum wage of tipped workers and agricultural workers — allowing restaurants, for instance, to pay tipped workers as little as $3.63/hour. Therefore, many Maryland workers wouldn’t be paid $15/hour for nine more years, and many others wouldn’t see their wages increase at all.

Perhaps most egregiously, the General Assembly stripped provisions from the original bill that tied the minimum wage to inflation, so that it would automatically increase as the costs of food, housing, and other necessities increase. By not indexing the minimum wage to inflation, the General Assembly has ensured that working-class Marylanders will be forced to fight this same battle again and again as the value of $15 decreases with inflation.

Governor Larry Hogan says he will only support raising the minimum wage to $12.10/hour, and only if our state’s neighbors also increase their minimum wages. When the costs of food and rent and consumer goods increase but workers’ wages do not, the capitalist class is earning more money but is not passing any of its increased profits on to workers. So when we delay increasing the minimum wage for years, this means we are transferring a staggering amount of wealth from workers to the capitalist class.

“We call upon the Maryland General Assembly and the Governor to sign into law a moral minimum wage — one that will increase as inflation increases, and one that pays all workers in Maryland the wages they need to provide housing, food, transportation, child care, and their families’ other basic needs.”

illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building
illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building
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Montgomery County Residents Say: “Money for Jobs and Education, Not the Wealthy’s Recreation”


Montgomery County DSA

Montgomery County Residents Say: “Money for Jobs and Education, Not the Wealthy’s Recreation”

February 19, 2019

(ROCKVILLE, MD) — Montgomery County residents gathered at Woodmont Country Club yesterday to demand an end to tax subsidies given to private country clubs. This was the first of two such protests. The next will be held at Columbia Country Club on Friday, February 22, at 8:00 AM.

The protesters held banners and signs that said “End Tax Breaks for Country Clubs.”

The State of Maryland provides property tax subsidies to country clubs by assessing their property at a rate far below market value when determining clubs’ tax liability. Columbia Country Club, for example, pays less than 25% of what its property tax bill would be if it was taxed at the same rate as homeowners. The Montgomery County state delegation is currently considering bill MC 27-19 which would scale back tax breaks for the largest private golf clubs in the county.

Elissa Laitin, Chair of the Montgomery County Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), stated, “Elite country clubs like Woodmont, Columbia, Chevy Chase and Congressional enjoy a property tax break that costs the county $10 million annually. This is outrageous. These are clubs whose members can afford to pay initiation fees of upwards of $90,000 – well more than what a typical worker in the county makes in a year.”

Meanwhile, revenue shortfalls have forced newly-inaugurated Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich to propose painful budgetary cuts to the County government, including $25 million from Montgomery County Public Schools and $3.9 million from Health and Human Services. If country clubs were assessed at standard rates, the County would receive about $10 million in additional tax revenues annually.

Laitin continued, “While MC 27-19 is a good start, this bill doesn’t go far enough. Woodmont and some other clubs are exempted from these bills, which we don’t agree with. We strongly support the bills, but we also want our elected officials to go further. It is unconscionable for the working class to pay more in order to continue subsidizing the golf games of the ruling class.”

Said MoCo DSA Steering Committee member Zach Wiita, “This kind of class privilege is obscene. Public services are being cut, but our government is holding working people and elite country clubs to different standards. A few years ago, the County raised property tax rates on homeowners by almost nine percent, and we’re told we have to live with budget cuts. Meanwhile, private country clubs continue to pay lower taxes, and in some places these tax breaks are used for what can only be described as scams in order to build luxury housing for the rich. Simply put: these giveaways to the elite need to end.”

Laitin warned, “The Maryland General Assembly has a choice: take a step to provide tax fairness and adequate revenue for vital public services, or side with the whims of the one percent. DSA will be watching the vote to see whether Delegates and State Senators take the side of working people or millionaires in Montgomery County.”

illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building
illustration of lightning bolt striking a rose on top of U.S. Capitol Building