What Happened to the Mumia Movement?
Posted by Mike E on April 6, 2008
There has been, as the following article describes, a major new development in the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal. And actions are being called for later this month — on April 19.
We are reprinting below an article from Revolution newspaper that contains a short summation of the latest federal verdict that unheld Mumia’s conviction but the overturning of his death sentence (in the same outrageous railroad trial).
Meanwhile, many people, including many close supporters and members of the RCP, have had no idea why over these last years the RCP stopped its active national support for this political prisoner. (More results of the RCP’s info diet.)
A decade ago, in alliance with the the MOVE organization, Attorney Leonard Weinglass and Mumia himself, the RCP (and particularly the well-known party supporter C. Clark Kissinger) played an important role in developing and leading a powerful mass movement to stop the execution of Mumia Abu-Jamal, expose the railroad that sent him to prison and oppose the death penalty. That movement gathered support over the 1990s. However it came to an abrupt halt as a significant force within the U.S. after sharp disputes arose within the movement and legal team over the summer of 2001.
Some RCP supporters in Philadelphia have continued involvement around Mumia’s case, but nationally the party stopped virtually all activities on his behalf. The influential mass initiative Refuse and Resist! was allowed to wither away. Meanwhile the post-9/11 climate drew political energies toward opposing the War on Terror, the occupation of Iraq and the rise of domestic police-state measures and.
Less widely discussed: Struggle grew inside and outside the RCP over how much to focus communist political work on promoting Bob Avakian’s cult of personality — eventually leading to a summation that the work around Mumia’s case had been conducted as “part of the revisionist package” — i.e. that, in an economist and reformist way, communists within this movement had not sufficiently appreciate dthe strategic importance of projecting Avakian as a world-historic communist leader.
These three developments — the differences over political strategy, the riptides of the “war on terror,” and the sharp changes in the RCP’s ideological and political line — all played a role in the RCP stepping away from the Mumia movement, and that movement’s overall decline (especially within the U.S.).
The following article appeared in the April 6 issue of Revolution newspaper. It continues the RCP’s policy of not discussing the political disputes and its own changes of line that contributed to the decline of the once-powerful movement to defend Mumia (at least within the U.S.). It does not touch on the RCP’s current criticism of its previous involvement and line within the Mumia movement. And so given that silence and that withdrawal from this movement, there is a profound hollowness and aura of “political truth” to its closing sentence which says: “People everywhere need to continue to demand the freedom of this revolutionary political prisoner.”
Demonstrations in support of Mumia are planned for April 19 in Philadelphia and other cities. One aspect that must be raised actively in the days ahead is that one of the notorious hangmen in the railroad of Mumia, Ed Rendell (who was the district attorney persecuting Mumia) is now governor of Pennsylvania, a key supporter of Hillary Clinton in the coming Pennsylvania primary, and a man on the short list for Vice President if she receives the Democratic Party nomination.
* * * * *
Federal Appeals Court Continues the Mumia Railroad
Philadelphia, March 27, Revolution Newspaper—A divided three-judge panel of the federal 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals handed down its decision on the case of political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal. By a vote of 2 to 1, the appeals court let stand Mumia’s original conviction, but upheld a lower court decision that overturned his death sentence because of a misleading jury verdict form.
This decision continues the 27-year railroad of a Black revolutionary writer and activist, framed by the infamous racist court system of Philadelphia. Mumia Abu-Jamal has been held in isolation on Pennsylvania’s death row since his 1982 trial that was a travesty of justice.
This latest development in Mumia’s case is serious and dangerous. Not only has Mumia’s appeal been turned down by a federal appeals court, the state of Pennsylvania could take this as a green light to have another crack at sentencing him to death by correcting the “error” in the original trial.
Shortly before dawn, on December 9, 1981, Mumia was driving his cab on a downtown Philadelphia street. He saw a cop viciously beating his brother, William Cook, with a metal flashlight. Mumia rushed to help his brother, and there was a confrontation. When the smoke cleared, Mumia was on the curb in a pool of his own blood. The cop lay on the street nearby, dying from bullet wounds. Although others were at the scene, the police immediately charged Mumia, who was well known to them as a revolutionary journalist and a former Black Panther, with the murder of the cop.
At his 1982 trial, Mumia was denied the right to serve as his own attorney and was barred from the courtroom for half his trial. The prosecution claimed that Mumia had confessed—a confession that cops only “remembered” months after the incident. Witnesses were coerced into giving false testimony. Key evidence was never seen by the jury. A court reporter overheard the trial judge saying that he was going to help the cops “fry the n****r.” Mumia was convicted and sentenced to death.
In 1995, when a death warrant was signed for Mumia, an international mass movement arose and made his case a major question in society—it became a dividing line and rallying point for many thousands of people, including prominent intellectuals and artists. The European Parliament, Amnesty International, and others called for a new trial. In 2001 a federal district court judge upheld Mumia’s conviction but overturned his death sentence because of the misleading jury verdict form in the original trial. But he was still denied justice—not only kept in prison but on death row.
The principal issue in Mumia’s appeal was the use by prosecutors of “peremptory” challenges to knock Black people off the jury at his original trial. (Each side can knock a certain number of jurors off without giving a reason.) The practice of using peremptory challenges to keep minorities off juries was outlawed by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1986. But Philadelphia is infamous for this practice. The District Attorney’s office even produced a training video for new prosecutors on how to do it.
The new appeals court decision throws out Mumia’s appeal on the grounds that he failed to raise the issue of the peremptory challenges at his trial and that there were no valid statistics on the race of the whole jury pool.
But wait a minute! Why didn’t Mumia raise this issue at his trial? Because he was represented by an incompetent court-appointed attorney who begged the court to be dismissed from the case, and because Mumia himself was kicked out of the courtroom for continuing to demand the right to represent himself. Yet in the current appeal, Mumia was not allowed to raise the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel. So there you have the “Catch 22”: Mumia can’t appeal the racist exclusions because his lawyer didn’t raise the issue at the trial, but Mumia is not allowed to base his appeal on the very failure of counsel that the appeals court is pointing out.
In a spirited dissent from the majority on the court, Judge Thomas L. Ambro stated: “Excluding even a single person from a jury because of race violates the Equal Protection Clause of our Constitution.” He went on to point out that the majority seemed have made up a whole new set of rules just for the Mumia case because this same court had granted new trials in a number of similar cases where the defendants had not raised the issue of racially stacked juries at trial.
The appeals court decision leaves the state of Pennsylvania with the options of convening a new jury to rerun the penalty phase of Mumia’s trial (in which Mumia could again be sentenced to death) or commuting Mumia’s sentence to life in prison. Mumia’s attorney has announced that the decision will be appealed to the full 3rd Circuit—a procedure where all the judges of the circuit court rehear the case as a group to review the decision made by only three judges.
Mumia has held firm through 26 years in solitary confinement and repeated threats of execution. His books, weekly columns, and radio commentaries inspire people across the globe. People everywhere need to continue to demand the freedom of this revolutionary political prisoner.
Published: 2008Available online at mikeely.wordpress.comSend comments to: kasamasite (at) yahoo (dot) com




April 5, 2008 at 2:20 am
Linda writes (in another thread):
Well, here too one must be dialectical. Many such struggles (including the fight for Mumia and the struggle over police brutality) were affected by the events of 9/11. That was truly one of those pivot points in society where there emerges a sharp “before” and “after.” This was objective and inherent.
And it is not the RCP’s fault that other things (the war in Afghanistan and Iraq etc.) interceded forcefully.
It was also true that there were sharp differences emerging with Mumia (and MOVE) over legal and political strategy, and that some bullshit went down over how the remarkable attorney/activist Leonard Weinglass was treated. And so on… So even there, it is not simply a “total outrage” — for the RCP to pull back and reassess its heavy commitment to that movement.
And it is also true that once Mumia’s death penalty was overthrown in federal court (December 2001) — the fervor of a certain sector of anti-death penalty activists cooled.
In other words, over the last six months of 2001 you had a series of events (internal conflict in June-July, “two towers” falling in September, then the squashing of the previous sentence in december) all of which contributed to the decline of the mass movement.
And then, in addition, you had the emergence (a bit later) of the RCP’s decision to focus more and more heavily on aggressively promoting the cult of personality around Avakian (which clearly left little room for the kind of promotion that a figure like Mumia had enjoyed in the RCP’s press and work).
So, to be allsided, it is not simply an outrage — but a complex real-life set of developments. And one that most RCP supporters have not been allowed to understand all-sidedly. Clearly a core of people in the RCP had a sense of “what went down” — but many people still do not.
How do you train revolutionary cadre and activists to lead (rather than just follow) if their own political work is treated so non-transparently? How do you develop a living MOVEMENT toward revolution if people are yanked out of this, and thrown into that, with a jittery impulsiveness? And finally, how can a revolutionary party connect with the masses of people in a real and powerful way, if its political agenda is so heavily over-booked with its own self-promotion.
April 5, 2008 at 9:54 am
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April 6, 2008 at 12:58 am
The RCP article forgot what is perhaps the most persuasive evidence against Mumia’s guilt: another man’s confession!
April 8, 2008 at 1:01 pm
I think there is reasonable doubt whether this “confession” is real. And these doubts played a role in the conflict within the legal team during the summer of 2001. I think many people think that confession is just not credible (or true).