Irish Marxist Review 2 is now available online at www.irishmarxistreview.net
Here is a summary of the contents
Almost
inevitably IMR 2 focuses first on the linked issues of recession, austerity and
resistance. For nearly four years this nexus has been the central question in
Irish politics – north and south. In our lead article Kieran Allen analyses and
assesses the new spirit of resistance that has been evident in the Irish
working class since the beginning of 2012, as manifested in the Household Tax
campaign and a number of workers’ occupations. This is accompanied by articles
from Peadar O’Grady and Marnie Holborow on the deeply damaging impact of the
recession/austerity on two key areas of our society – health and higher
education.
At the last
election the Labour Party, with its slogan ‘It’s Frankfurt’s way or Labour’s way’, was one of
the main beneficiaries of working class anger at Fianna Fail and the bankers.
However from the moment they took office it was Frankfurt’s way all the way. But this total
embrace of capitalism and neoliberalism has not prevented Labour laying claim
to the legacy of Ireland’s greatest socialist, James
Connolly, as they mark the centenary of the party’s foundation. Donal both
exposes this nauseating hypocrisy and examines some of the problems in
Connolly’s, and the wider movement’s, understanding of reformism, drawing out
the implications for socialist strategy today.
Despite the
fact that by rights the crisis of 2008 should have utterly discredited
neoliberalism it has retained its grip on the economic policies of governments
internationally. Brian Kelly examines how neoliberalism, with the active
collaboration of Sinn Fein, is damaging and distorting the project of a ‘new’ Belfast, serving to entrench sectarianism
rather than uproot it.
Another
aspect of the crisis is the opportunity and challenge it presents to
socialists. A ‘Letter from France’ by Lorcan Gray looks at the very serious
setbacks experienced by the NPA (New Anti Capitalist Party) compared to the
relative success of Melanchon and the Front de Gauche, while Donal Mac
Fhearraigh contributes a background piece on the rise of Syriza who, as we go
to press, have a chance of forming the next government of Greece in conditions
of extreme crisis. John Molyneux contributes a piece on the history and politics
of the Socialist Party (Ireland). See below.
Central to
the Marxist tradition, and in particular to the International Socialist
tendency that the IMR is part of, is the principle of working class
self-emancipation. James O’Toole examines how Marx himself arrived at this
position through real engagement with workers’ struggles, i.e. how the greatest
of our educators was himself educated.
On a
different note, the airwaves this summer, in Ireland, and round the world, will be
dominated by that supreme capitalist ‘spectacle’, the Olympic Games. Gareth Edwards
disposes of the fallacy that sport is, or can be, ‘non-political’ and analyses
the real Olympic spirit from Baron de Coubertin to today. And finally, in what
will be a regular feature, Dave O’Farrell, Memet Uludag and Cathy Bergin revue
some interesting recent books.
Here was my contribution.
The Politics of the Socialist Party
Why
are there two main organisations on the Irish radical left – the Socialist
Workers Party and the Socialist Party? This is a question that many ask today.
Both
organisations work together in the United Left Alliance which currently has
five TDs in Dail Eireann. But while working together in a common front against
the right wing parties, neither the SWP or SP hide the differences that exist
between them.
The
purpose of this document is to trace the connections between the current
political line and conduct of the SP and its fundamental politics developed
over decades. Such a document is necessary not because we have any desire to
quarrel with the SP – rather we wish to be able to work with them in a
comradely and cooperative way where any divergences of perspective and tactics
are debated openly and settled. Rather, its purpose is to clarify the
differences in politics and methodology.
Given
that this document, by its nature, is going to make a series of criticisms of the
SP it is necessary to make one thing clear at the start: the members of the SP,
both leaders and rank-and-file, are undoubtedly genuine and sincere socialists
and working class militants who serve the cause of socialism with dogged
determination, hard work and real commitment; this is precisely why we have
been and remain keen to work with them in campaigns and strengthen our unity in
the ULA. None of the criticisms presented here alter this
.
The Roots of SP politics
The SP is the Irish section of an
international Trotskyist tendency called the Committee for a Workers’ International
(CWI) which consists of a number of affiliated socialist organisations – most
of them very small – in a variety of different countries. Its ‘parent’
organisation was what was then known as the Militant Tendency in Britain and
its political and theoretical leader was Ted Grant, a South African Trotskyist
who came to Britain in the 1930s and who became a leading figure in the
Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP) which for a short period in the late 1940s
united most of Britain’s very few Trotskyists. In the sixties, seventies and eighties what
distinguished the politics of Ted Grant and of the Militant Tendency was their
strategy of ‘entrism’ into the Labour Party, which was also adopted by
virtually all their international affiliates in relation to their respective
social democratic parties.
In Ireland, the Militant first appeared in 1973 with
a paper bearing that name and proclaiming in its banner headline, An
Independent Programme for Labour. The Labour Party was entering a coalition
with Fine Gael at the time and many left wingers had left in disgust. Militant,
however, warned against any attempt to build any alternative party to the left
of Labour. The only place socialists could usefully be, they claimed, was in
the Irish Labour Party.
This policy came to an end in the
early nineties after the expulsion from the Labour Party of a number of their
leaders. Like the rest of the CWI, the Irish Militant then took the view that the
Labour Party and social democratic parties everywhere had become capitalist
parties. In Britain, the change to open party building was
strongly, but unsuccessfully, resisted by Ted Grant, who was expelled, and in
the mid- nineties the name Socialist Party was adopted in both England and Ireland. In Ireland, former leaders of the Militant such as
Finn Geaney also departed at this time.
The current politics of the SP are
a product of this whole long development. In particular they have been shaped
by the following factors: 1) the legacy of Trotsky’s Fourth International; 2)
their analysis of Russia and Eastern Europe; 3) their prolonged ‘entry’ into
the Labour Parties; 4) the poll tax campaign their turn to open work in the
nineties. We shall look at each in turn.
The Legacy of the Fourth
International
When, in 1933, the Comintern or
Third International, failed to mount any serious resistance to the rise of
Hitler and the Nazis, Trotsky decided that it was dead for the purposes of
revolution. From that time on he sought to build a new revolutionary socialist
international. Unfortunately circumstances were very much against him – this
was a period of terrible defeats for the working class – and the Trotskyists
made little progress. However in 1938 they decided to proclaim a new Fourth
International. The founding conference in September 1938 was attended by only
twenty one delegates from eleven countries (only one of whom, the American Max
Shachtman, represented a substantial organisation) and met for only one day in
a house in France.
They compensated for their actual
weakness on the ground by adopting a grand name, ‘The Fourth International
(World Party of Socialist Revolution)’ and an even grander programme, written
by Trotsky, entitled The Death Agony of Capitalism and the Tasks of the
Fourth International which also became known as ‘The Transitional
Programme’. Since then the Trotskyist movement has undergone many splits and
changes but in understanding the SP it is important to know that they and the
CWI see themselves as the true ‘orthodox Trotskyists’ who still stand on the
ground of this document and proclaim their adherence to its political method. They see themselves, and themselves alone, as
the true heirs of Trotsky and of the whole Marxist tradition.
This is unfortunate because there
were major flaws involved in both the founding of the International and in its
programme. In the first place it was highly problematic declaring the existence
of a ‘world leadership’ without any serious base in the working class and bound
to lead to a misplaced pride and arrogance. It led in turn to an over emphasis
on, almost a fetishisation of, the importance of the programme at the expense
of the movement of the working class from below. It also led to a belief that
‘the leadership’ can draw up the programme of the revolution in advance of, and
without interaction with, the actual working class struggle. Marx, by contrast,
used to say ‘One step forward of the real movement is worth a dozen
programmes.’
Moreover the economic and political
perspectives on which the Transitional Programme was based, though plausible at
the time, turned out to be mistaken. The programme declared that capitalism was
in its ‘death agony’ and that, ‘The economic prerequisite for the proletarian
revolution has already in general achieved the highest point of fruition that
can be achieved under capitalism. Mankind’s productive forces stagnate.’ From
this Trotsky drew the conclusion that ‘there can be no discussion of systematic
social reforms’ and that the reformist organisations, both Social Democratic
and Stalinist ‘will depart the scene without a sound, one after the other’. In
reality none of this happened: the Second World War brought the end of the
economic crisis and was followed by the massive post-war boom in which the
productive forces grew rapidly; there were substantial reforms (such as the
establishment of the National Health Service in Britain and a Welfare State
throughout much of Europe) and improvements in living standards across Europe
and the USA; and in general the Social Democratic and Stalinist parties grew in
strength.
Finding themselves having to deal
with these difficulties, and with Trotsky no longer alive to assist them, many
of Trotsky’s followers retreated into a conservative frame of mind in which
defending the programme and maintaining the letter of Trotskyist ‘orthodoxy’
became all important. In 1946 Ted Grant was still repeating Trotsky from 1938:
The
definitive decline of Europe, already begun in 1914, has been aggravated
in the succeeding decades, and World War II has put its seal on this decline.
While cyclical upturns will take place and are taking place at the present
time, there can be no real growth of the productive forces as in the past. The
chronic crisis and death agony of capitalism will once again be revealed in its
full scope... The programme of the Fourth International will become the banner
of the European and world proletariat.
Indeed Grant was still echoing the
words of the Transitional Programme in 1979. ‘...we are now in the epoch of the
death agony of capitalism. There will be a tendency for living standards to
fall in all the countries of capitalism, including the industrial countries,
with only temporary exceptions.
It is a dogmatic and mechanical
approach which still affects the leaders of the SP today. They still believe
they have the correct Marxist programme and that advancing this programme is
the key to the socialist transformation of society This leads to a top down
view of the relationship between the party and the working class. The party is
in possession of vital insights which it must teach the working class because
it has studied Trotsky’s transitional programme. Less emphasis is placed on a
party learning from a working class which has entered struggles and which will
throw up its own demands.
Russia and Eastern Europe: the Stalinist States
As ‘orthodox’ Trotskyists the
Socialist Party, have always felt obliged to defend Trotsky’s characterisation
of Stalinist Russia as a ‘degenerated workers’ state’. They argued that the
Stalinist bureaucracy had betrayed genuine revolutionary socialism in Russia but that the survival of state ownership
and state planning meant that, despite Stalinism, Russia remained fundamentally non-capitalist and
a workers’ state. When in 1948 Tony Cliff first produced his analysis of Russia as state capitalist, it was Ted Grant who
wrote the main reply to him.
What was at stake in this argument
was not just what label to attach to the Soviet Union, but what constituted the
essential, the fundamental, difference between capitalism and a workers’ state.
For Cliff it was which class controls production and therefore runs the
society, for Grant it was the form of property (private versus state property).
This became especially clear in relation to the establishment of Stalinist
regimes in Eastern
Europe. These
regimes became ‘communist’ not by virtue of the working class in these
countries taking power but by virtue of the advance of the Red Army. If state
ownership was the decisive criterion for a workers’ state these countries had
to be regarded as workers’ states, even if ‘deformed’ and not fully socialist,
and this was Grant’s view and the view maintained by the whole of the CWI to
this day. So fixated was Ted Grant with the state property criterion that even
concluded at one point that Burma and Syria were workers’ states with planned
economies. In other words the overthrow of capitalism and the creation of the
economic foundations of socialism did not have to be ‘conquered by the working
class itself’, as Marx put it, but could be established from above by a
‘leadership’ (in this case the Red Army). The subsequent military victories of
‘Communist’ forces, armies based on the peasantry rather the working class, in
North Korea, China, Cuba ,Vietnam and Cambodia , all of which established state
ownership of the main means of production, reinforced the point that making
this the key criteria led away from the self emancipation of the working class from
below as the essence of socialist transformation*. This in turn has dovetailed,
in the political practice of the SP, with the focus on ‘the programme’ over and
above the struggle.
Moreover if the Red Army can
establish a series of workers’ states over the heads of the workers, why
shouldn’t this be possible for a ‘socialist government’ with a ‘socialist
programme’ in parliament? Here we see
one of the original roots of the SP’s current electoralism.
The Effects of Entrism
The tactic of entry into the mass
social democratic parties was advocated by Trotsky, and adopted by his
supporters in 1934 (it was known as ‘the French turn’ because it was first
based on the situation in France) as a short term measure to relate to the
masses of workers who, at that point, were joining these reformist parties. It
was adopted by the Militant tendency as a long term (indeed more or less
permanent) strategy and raised almost to the level of a principle. The long
period, lasting more than three decades, during which entrism was pursued had a
profound effect on shaping the politics of the Militant Tendency, the CWI as a
whole, and the SPs of Britain and Ireland.
In the first place in order to
remain in the Labour Party and not be expelled they had to disguise some
aspects of their Marxist politics. In public they denied they were a
revolutionary socialist or Leninist organisation, insisting they were only a
current of thought around the Militant paper (when in fact they were a very
tight democratic centralist party). They also presented themselves in the
Labour Party, not as revolutionaries who wanted, a la Lenin in The State and
Revolution, to smash the capitalist state but as left reformists who
believed socialism could be brought about by electing a Labour Government
pledged to socialist policies. No doubt, in private, the Militant leadership
told a different, more revolutionary story, but since they recruited publicly
on the ‘Labour Government with socialist policies’ basis there is little doubt
that many of their members and, even more so, of their supporters accepted the
left reformist parliamentary perspective.
The fact that they stood
candidates, and got them elected as City councillors and MPs in Britain (such as Derek Hatton, Terry Fields and
Dave Nellist) as Labour Party members, who had to be especially careful
what they said, only reinforced this tendency.
As entrists they also adapted to
their Labour Party hosts in other ways. They adopted a very narrow economistic
approach to the working class. By economism we mean a near exclusive focus
bread and butter issues and a failure to raise more difficult issues concerned
with repression in the broader working class movement. For Lenin:
Working-class consciousness cannot be
genuine political consciousness unless the workers are trained to respond to all
cases of tyranny, oppression, violence, and abuse, no matter what class
is affected ... the Social-Democrat’s [i.e. Marxist’s – JM] ideal should not be the trade
union secretary, but the tribune of the people, who is able to react
to every manifestation of tyranny and oppression, no matter where it appears,
no matter what stratum or class of the people it affects;
But, in practice, this was not at
all the approach of the Militant Tendency. All issues other than
straightforward economic and class issues were either ignored or massively down
played. Thus while they played a leading role in the Anti Water Charges
campaign in the 1990s or in the fight against bin charges, they did not play a
substantial role in anti-war campaigning at any time. They joined the Irish
Anti-War Movement only after the massive mobilisation on 2003 and then left
afterwards. Instead of targeting US imperialism as the main enemy, they tried
to balance a condemnation of ‘terrorism’ with opposition to the US war efforts.
Anti- imperialism has always been
a particular weakness (as it was for Social Democracy historically) .Thus they
treated the anti-imperialist IRA as equally as bad as the pro-imperialist UVF
and UDA. They refused, for example, to support political status for republican
prisoners during the hunger strike of 1981 instead demanded a labour movement
inquiry to determine who was and who was not a political prisoner. This,
despite the fact, that many of the union leaders played an active role in
conniving with the British and Irish states in trying to breaking the H Block
movement.
On Palestine they tend towards two statism, advocating
both a Jewish and Arab state despite standard socialist objections to ethnic
exclusivity, and to equal opposition to Hamas and Zionism. They oppose the
boycott of Israeli goods as a concrete way giving support to the Palestinian
cause. In both these cases they covered their effective abstention by reference
to Trotsky’s opposition to individual terrorism and by, formally correct, but
completely abstract calls for socialism.
Often what motivated these choices
was a reluctance to offend or challenge the prejudices of ‘ordinary’ workers in
the Labour Party or trade unions whose votes they needed in elections or for
positions in the movement. For example, at the start of the great Miners Strike
of 1984-5 in Britain many of the miners (for very
understandable reasons) held very backward sexist and homophobic views and
would chant sexist slogans on their demonstrations. The Militant comrades were
unwilling to argue with the miners about these things, saying they were just
part of working class culture, and criticised SWP members, who did challenge
these ideas (in a comradely way) as being middle class.
Unfortunately this is a habit that
persists to this day in the practice of the SP in both Britain and Ireland and it is linked to their ‘socialism from
above’ approach and their electoralism. If you see the mass of workers as
essentially a passive army of supporters because socialism will be introduced
by a government with the correct socialist programme, then it doesn’t matter
very much if their heads contain various backward and reactionary ideas, but if
you see the working class as emancipating itself in revolutionary struggle then
the fight for the consciousness of the class is of paramount importance.
Obviously the SP comrades believe
their approach is correct but this leads them to defend it by attributing more
backwardness to the working class than is justified and by quietly going along
with conservative ideas when they can be used against others on the left
(especially the SWP). Thus for example, they have been happy in the past to
denounce the SWP as ‘all middle class students’ or ‘supporters of the IRA’.
Indeed during their period in the Labour Party they used to argue that since
the Labour Party was ‘the mass party of the working class’ anyone not in Labour
Party (again, especially the SWP), were not really part of the labour movement
at all.
Another legacy of entrism was that
to operate semi-secretly under the hostile gaze of the Labour leadership
Militant had to operate with a highly trained, strictly centralised core
membership or cadre. This is in some respects a strength, and one which they
retain, but unfortunately it went hand in hand with training their cadre in
sectarian contempt for others on the left (especially their main rivals i.e.
the SWP). Obviously any small left wing party needs its members to understand
its political differences with other left parties but it does not need to
educate them in a spirit of arrogant contempt which makes working together very
difficult. This is what Militant and later, the SPs have tended to do.
Finally, the experience in the
Labour Party led to a strategy of organising that stressed manoeuvring in back
room committees to win control of particular campaigns. All the emphasis is on
gaining key positions and bizarre alliances are sometimes formed in pursuit of
this objective. Thus in the current anti-household campaign the SP have formed
an effective alliance with anarchists and left republicans to gain control of
key positions. They have even argued against the United Left Alliance
intervening in the movement with coherent tactics that have been debated
democratically within the alliance.
The Poll Tax, the Water Charges
and the Turn to the Open Party
The abandonment of entrism and the
turn to open party building was basically a product of the expulsions they
experienced in the Labour Party in both Britain and Ireland. What made this particularly hard to cope
with was that this was not supposed to happen. For years the Militant
leadership had proclaimed that it was virtually a law of history that workers
would flood into the Labour Party and that the party would move to the left.
The move out of Labour was
preceded in 1989-90 by the struggle against the Poll Tax. First in Scotland (it was the making of Tommy Sheridan) and
then in England and Wales, Militant were able to launch and lead mass
campaigns of non-payment. Similarly, in Ireland the Socialist Party played an important
role in the fight against water charges and managed to secure the election of
Joe Higgins to the Dail, primarily as an anti-water charges candidate.
These two struggles have provided
a mainly positive experience for the current fight against household charges. However
this is not the whole story. There are other aspects of the anti-poll tax
struggle which the SPs are less keen to remember or celebrate and which could have
a bearing on their behaviour in the current household tax campaign.
The first is that the campaign by
no means consisted just of mass non-payment and the poll tax was not defeated
just by non-payment. On the contrary, from the start of the struggle there were
mass demonstrations and protests at town halls, some of which turned into
attempts to storm those town halls. Then on 31 March 1990 the Anti-Poll Tax Federation (under
Militant leadership) called a national demonstration in London. In the run up to the demo Militant
started to worry that it might turn violent. They did their very best to try to
prevent this. On the coaches to London Militant stewards tried to get everyone to
pledge not to be violent. In the event, however, the police attacked the march
and it turned into a massive riot in and around Trafalgar Square.
Inevitably there was a media storm
against ‘violence’ and calls for ‘exemplary sentences’ by the Labour
establishment like Roy Hattersley. Sadly the Militant leadership also condemned
the riot and blamed it on anarchists. Steve Nally, Militant member and
secretary of the Anti-Poll Tax Federation, said they would ‘hold an enquiry and
name names’. Subsequently Militant attributed the defeat of the Poll Tax
exclusively to non-payment and denied that the mass demo and riot had anything
to do with it. Tory Minister, Alan Clark, in his diaries, tells a different
story. ‘Civil Disorder. Could cut either way, but I fear will scare people into
wanting a compromise – just as did Saltley Colliery [in the 1972 Miners
Strike]. In the corridors and the tea room people are now talking openly of
ditching the Lady to save their skins.’ Doubtless the SPs are now embarrassed
by this rather shameful episode but the memory of it may be a factor in their
original hostility to mass protests in the Household Tax campaign.
It is already noticeable that the
move of the household campaign to mass civil disobedience has taken place in
areas where the SP has little influence. In New Ross and Donegal, for example,
crowds of people have invaded council chambers. The SP, by contrast, has
emphasised public meetings and a national indoor rally rather than a mass
national demonstration to the Dail.
Two other things need to be said about
this period. The first was that the election of Joe Higgins to the Dail on an
anti-water charges ticket opened up a huge opportunity for the SP but they
proved unable to adapt their party to dealing with a huge influx of workers.
Political education remained confined to the grooves of a narrow propagandist
group and those who joined as fighters against wage charges soon found it
difficult to adapt to the long meetings discussing the Transitional Programme.
After an initial surge of recruitment, many left.
Unfortunately, the current SP leadership drew
the conclusion from this experience that an even deeper immersion into
sectarian politics was required. In 2004, against the background of the bin
charges dispute, for example, the party produced an extraordinary pamphlet
attacking the SWP and former key figures that had left, including Joan Collins,
currently a TD and Dermot Connolly, the former party secretary. In it, they
proclaimed that ‘Based on experience going back many years we do not believe
the SWP has a positive role in the re-development of the movement’. The aim was
to clearly inoculate their membership against any genuine dialogue with others
on the left. The result of this experience has led the SP to adopt a dual
approach.
On one hand there is a genuine
attempt to engage with mass movements and to encourage them into existence. But
this is often combined with a political methodology of manoeuvring and
denouncing perceived rivals on the left.
The second is that the combination of the
extremely hostile environment in the Labour Party and the success of the Poll
tax and anti-water charges campaigns convinced the Militant leadership to make
a final break from Labour. However entrism had been so central to the Militant
and CWI tradition, so much their political trademark, that this created a
substantial political/theoretical problem for them. Were they to concede that
decades of entrism had been a failure? Or perhaps they could acknowledge that
the strategy was more problematic than they had previously acknowledged?
Neither of these options seemed to have appealed. Instead they opted to argue that
entrism was no longer appropriate because the Labour Party had qualitatively
changed. From being ‘the mass party of the working class’ it had become, they
said, a purely capitalist party, indistinguishable from the Tories or Fianna
Fail. This merely exchanged one mechanical position for another.
The Labour Party had never
been simply a working class party. It had never had a predominantly
working class leadership; it had never fought consistently for working
class interests; and it had never governed in the interests of the
working class when in office. On the contrary it had always propped up
capitalism and accepted all the key priorities of the capitalist class. There
was no heyday of working class politics in the Irish Labour Party. Labour, for
example, had led the campaign against Noel Browne’s Mother and Child scheme in
the 1950s and even when it turned left in the sixties, it was led by a member
of the Knights of Columbanus, Brendan Corish.
Lenin described the British Labour
Party as follows:
...most
of the Labour Party’s members are workingmen. However, whether or not a party
is really a political party of the workers does not depend solely upon a
membership of workers, but also upon the men that lead it, and the content of
its actions and its political tactics. Only this latter determines whether we
really have before us a political party of the proletariat. Regarded from this,
the only correct point of view, the Labour Party is a thoroughly bourgeois
party.
Lenin summed up the contradictory
character of the Labour Party by defining it as a ‘capitalist workers’ party’. So
when Labour moved rightwards under Blair or Spring it was a quantitative shift
rather than a fundamental change. Moreover what constituted the ‘workers’
element in this capitalist workers’ party, namely its working class base - as expressed in its vote, its membership and
its organic relationship to the trade unions -
was weakened but clearly did not disappear.
By adopting the undialectical view
that the Labour Party was now a purely capitalist party the SP threw away decades
of Marxist analysis of Social Democracy
in favour of a position they would previously have denounced as ultra-left.
This is what lies behind the Irish
SP’s current dogmatic and sectarian refusal to contemplate sharing a platform with
even former Labour Party representatives in campaigns. These, it is argued,
must first prove, their genuine socialist credentials before being allowed to
share platforms. This sectarian approach misses out on opportunities to bring
many more people over from Labour to the radical left.
The SP today
The politics of the SP in Ireland today are a product of all this history.
Yes, they are committed and hard working socialists who undoubtedly are genuine
in their desire to end capitalism, but they have a mechanical formalistic view
of how this is to be achieved. They emphasise the question of the programme
over struggle from below, and the ‘socialist programme’ they so exalt
emphasizes nationalisation and state planning over self –emancipation of the
working class. They retain an economistic view of working class struggle,
showing little interest in other issues. They are still weak on issues of anti-imperialism,
especially in the North where they equate republican nationalism and orange
loyalism, and demand that any united left formation in the North must be based
on acceptance of their position. In their own words:
The opposition of the Socialist Party to the
extension of the ULA into North has nothing to do with being slow to move on
the issues that affect the working class, but is based on having a principled
and sensitive approach to the conflict of national aspirations [Note ‘conflict of national aspirations’, i.e.
loyalism – loyalty to British imperialism - is regarded as a ‘national
aspiration’] that exists in the North.
We believe that a new workers party in the North,
even more so than elsewhere, must be based on the emergence of a layer of
working class activists from struggles. It is vital that a new formation is
rooted in the understanding of the need to oppose both loyalist and republican
sectarianism,...and for workers unity against sectarianism and
capitalism.
While sometimes over the last years, the SWP have argued for workers
unity, that does not mean that they have overcome their one sided view of the
national question [i.e. opposition to imperialism] which has been a
hallmark of their position.
The SWP approach has been infected with the view that republicanism as
it emerged during the Troubles is progressive, and that includes an approach
that tends to excuse Catholic sectarianism while highlighting and condemning
loyalist sectarianism.
In the
history of the Marxist movement there is a particular term, ‘centrism’, which
accurately describes the political character of the SP. The term comes from the
German Social Democratic Party (SPD) which at the time of the First World War
contained three currents – the right, led by Scheidemann and Noske, who were
openly reformist, supported the War and helped suppress the German Revolution
(including being complicit in the murder of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl
Liebknecht); a revolutionary left led by Luxemburg and Liebknecht, who opposed
the War, and became the Spartacus League and then founded the German Communist
Party in 1919; and vacillating between the right and the revolutionary left,
the Centre led by Karl Kautsky. In words Kautsky proclaimed his commitment to
Marxism and ‘revolution’ but in practice he always avoided drawing
revolutionary conclusions or pursuing revolutionary action. Hence Lenin and
Trotsky developed the term ‘Centrism’ to describe political tendencies that
waiver between revolution and reform; that in the abstract adhere to a
revolutionary programme but are conservative and cautious when it comes to
action.
This
is the Socialist Party. They are formally committed to revolution but in
practice highly electoralist. They have a top down and controlling attitude in
campaigns such as the household charges where they originally insisted on
drawing up ‘the plan’ in advance and on everyone else adhering to it.
Originally they tried to discourage protests and national demonstrations and
arguing that all the mass of working class people need to do is ‘stay at home
and stay away from their computers’. Working people transform themselves and
their consciousness in struggle. That, Marx says, is how they fit themselves to
run society. But if what you really want is just for them to vote for you, why
not ask them to ‘stay at home’, so long as they remember you when it comes to
the election.
The same electoralism is shown in their role
in relation to the ULA. After much prevarication they agreed to the ULA before
the last election – as an electoral alliance- but since the election they have
opposed any development of the ULA beyond a mere electoral alliance, blocking
virtually all proposals in that direction on the Steering Committee.
As true believers, sincerely convinced that
they and they alone are possessors of the true Marxist method inherited from
Trotsky, they are reluctant in the extreme to put themselves in a position in
any campaign or in the ULA where they might be democratically outvoted by the
rank and file. [The Socialist Party in Britain literally walked out en
masse of the Socialist Alliance when that body adopted the democratic principle
of one person one vote – and claimed this represented the SWP wrecking the
organisation!].
A useful insight into the SPs real modus
operandi is provided by Dermot Connolly’s account of their behaviour over the
question of a list of anti-bin tax candidates.
Having been members of the SP
until very recently, and involved in its leading bodies, we can state without
any doubt that the SP has been and remains absolutely determined not to become
involved in any sort of election pact or list which would involve the SWP.
However, given the events of last autumn, they had to respond to the pressure
from working people that the bin tax campaigns should put up a united front and
really put it up to the right wing parties, and labour, in the June elections.
They therefore came up with the public position that they were in favour of a
slate of anti bin tax candidates, provided it contained genuine people who had
actually had involvement in the struggle. On paper this sounds fine. Why give a
platform to political opportunists to jump on the band wagon? It is also the
case that if a slate was open to anybody and everybody that some people with no
real creditability would have stood, getting derisory votes and weakening the
overall effect and thus the campaign.
The reality though was different. the SP were not concerned with putting
forward a creditable list of candidates, but of ensuring that there was no
list. At a meeting of the four campaigns to discuss a possible all Dublin list, it was
quickly clear that we were not facing a situation where anybody and everybody
was trying to get themselves onto this list. There could have been a list of
twenty plus candidates, all of whom had played some role in building the
various campaigns, and were likely to be nominated as candidates by local
campaigns...
Instead the SP insisted on a limited list, which included only those SWP
candidates who they couldn't argue against. When it was proposed by people at
this meeting that areas where there was a question mark over the local
campaigns' level of organisation and activity, such as in Ringsend or
Coolock/Artane, we could write to the membership, calling a meeting and then
judge whether to support candidates on the basis of the level of turnout and
local support, This was rejected out of hand. So was a proposal to facilitate a
meeting between the SP and SWP (who had made clear their willingness to co
operate and withdraw one or two candidates) to try and resolve differences. The
SP eventually gave an ultimatum; either their version of the list or they would
not participate in it. [My emphasis
- JM]
Despite all these problems the SWP remains
willing and committed to working in a comradely way with the SP in the
interests of Left unity and the wider interests of the working class. We hope
that joint work will improve trust and even help the SP to overcome some of its
more mechanical approaches to issues. Doubtless we will also learn much in the
process. We believe the Household Tax campaign can win and that the ULA, if it
develops, still has the potential to be a pole of attraction to working people.
But we are not willing to be tied down or restricted to the limits imposed by
the SPs mechanistic approach to the struggle.
Dermot Connolly,
‘The Socialist Party, Joan Collins and the Bin Tax Campaign’
**********************************************************************************
V.I. Lenin, What
is to be Done?, Collected Works, Moscow, 1961, Vol.5, pp.412-23
What programme for the
United Left Alliance?
www.socialistworld.net, 14/07/2011 .