At that time he was appointed to the
Daily Worker as editor. He was city editor for the
Daily Worker for about two years in the early 1930s. He was co-publisher of International Publishers from 1945 until about 1947, when he left the
Communist Party. Landy was an influential Marxist thinker during the 1930s and 1940s, especially through his educational and editorial work, and also through his articles in various leftist journals. He taught at both Phi Beta Kappa- Ohio State University and The University of Wisconsin. Landy orientated his daughter Sonia to become a translator in global politics, and he hired her to do the French research for his new book
The United States and the Paris Commune of 1871. With the four time election of
President Franklin Roosevelt, Landy joined
Earl Browder, head of the CPUSA, in believing that the USA was on its own historical destiny, a democratic mix of socialism and capitalism. == Legacy ==