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Weekly Worker 226 Thursday February 5 1998
Thesis on revolutionary openness
This thesis was discussed at the CPGB's aggregate last weekend. Comrades
from Manchester opposed it and presented an alternative motion. The thesis,
itself the result of intense discussion and amendment, had the backing of
the Provisional Central Committee and was overwhelmingly carried, but with
the Manchester comrades voting against. Their own motion was then carried
by a large majority. The Weekly Worker will be discussing this important
question over the coming period.
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What matters for communists is unity in action. Beyond those bounds there
must be the broadest and freest discussion and the open fight against all
harmful decisions and tendencies. Openness is as much a matter of principle
as it is a weapon. The working class must be fully informed about every faction,
shade and opinion in the Party as well as the working class movement as a
whole. That way the class can be educated and won to take sides.
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Members of the Communist Party of Great Britain accept the principles of
the organisation, as outlined presently in the 'What we fight for' column,
and abide by majority decisions on practical actions. Members are though
by no means necessarily united on theoretical questions, including matters
of strategy and tactics. Even when it comes to the programme of the reforged
Party it is perfectly legitimate to criticise points and formulations.
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For communists such differences and their open expression are not signs of
weakness but strength. The Communist Party strives to organise and contain
within itself all partisans of the working class, because that unity can
only strengthen and intensify revolutionary practice - which alone provides
the ultimate proof about truth or error in theoretical matters.
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Communist unity, the unity of communists within the CPGB, does not in the
least mean members should hide disagreements on strategy and tactics or refrain
from fully explaining their views whenever and wherever appropriate. The
political struggle for what a communist regards as correct should be carried
on openly, straightforwardly and resolutely.
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In the communist press different ideas contend, criticisms are made and answered.
The open battle of ideas is the best assurance of the functioning of democratic
centralism, even in circumstances of illegality where formal democracy may
not be able to function.
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The CPGB is not only the most honest organisation on the British revolutionary
left: it is the most open in British politics in general. We have never been
afraid to honestly discuss our weaknesses and mistakes. We have already enshrined
in resolution form - passed unanimously by the sixth conference of the Leninists
of the CPGB on September 4 1993 - the right for open factions, even ones
highly critical of the majority positions of the Party. Our tolerant and
candid treatment of the Open Polemic faction - which was allowed a faultfinding
weekly column in the Party press - underlines that this was not simply a
formal stance. Both our theory and practice demonstrates our commitment to
openness in the workers' movement.
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We understand that this approach is not the result of a concern for liberal
sensibilities. The Communist Party is a process and like every dialectical
process it contains "the seeds, admittedly in a primitive, abstract and
underdeveloped form of the determinants appropriate to the goal it is destined
to achieve..." (Lukács). Thus, just as Summer Offensive campaigns
anticipate - albeit in "primitive, abstract and underdeveloped form" - the
nature of work under communism, so too the openness of the Communist Party
anticipates communism, a world association characterised by transparency
and the conscious regulation of the laws of nature and society.
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It would be foolish and highly dangerous to make absolutes out of our principles,
however. Just like a workers' state of the future, our Party operates in
the field of politics and is thus in a daily relationship of unity and conflict
with other political organisations, both on the revolutionary left and beyond
it. Our principles are subordinate to the fight for world revolution.
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Thus, we use openness as a weapon in the class struggle, driving it into
the hearts of our opponents and enemies to underline that our organisation
is fighting neither to preserve intact some sect-orthodoxy or to defend bourgeois
society. Our method both exposes their hypocrisy and exemplifies the type
of politics and society we are fighting for. We have wielded this implement
of war with deadly effect against others. But precisely because it is a weapon
it must be used with great care, precision and with a mature eye on the needs
of the broader struggle. As a weapon, it can potentially be used against
us.
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Within the principle of revolutionary openness, in raising differences comrades
must be guided by revolutionary morality. Actions which facilitate the fight
for world revolution are moral; anything which harms that fight is immoral.
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Serious criticisms of our organisation should in general be raised firstly
with Party comrades and committees. In this way we have the opportunity to
either resolve the problem to everyone's satisfaction, or at least take some
of the 'sharp edges', bad formulations and false charges out of the debate.
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The Weekly Worker as the central organ and weapon of the Party as
a whole must act as the collective organiser, agitator and educator at the
highest possible level. All Party members have a responsibility to contribute
to and develop the paper with this aim. This of course includes a responsibility
to engage with debates in the paper and to develop criticisms in print. However,
we must avoid flip polemics and ensure that debate between comrades in the
pages of our paper is as rounded and informed as it possibly can be.
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Thus there can be no absolute right of publication for any viewpoint in the
open Party press. The leadership of the Party or the bodies delegated with
editorial functions must have the right to refuse contributions they consider
harmful or ill-considered. At certain times for instance, the open discussion
of our tactical orientations can constitute a breach of Party security.
Disagreements over such decisions should be raised with the relevant Party
committee and if necessary at an aggregate of the organisation.
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Comrades must however have a greater degree of latitude to distribute material
internally, though this itself cannot be unbounded. Individual comrades or
groups have the right to publish outside the Party to advance the struggle
for revolutionary communism.
Manchester motion
Revolutionary openness is a principle and practice of the CPGB. The principle
of democratic centralism implies universal and full freedom to criticise,
so long as this does not disturb the unity of a definite action.
Comrades raising criticism of our organisation should first raise the question
with Party comrades and committees. In this way, we have the opportunity
to either resolve the problem to everyone's satisfaction, or at least take
some of the 'sharp edges', bad formulations and false charges out of the
debate before it may spill into the pages of the paper. In this way, we ensure
that debate between comrades in the pages of our paper as rounded and informed
as it possibly can be.
The leadership of the Party or the bodies delegated with editorial functions
must have the right to refuse contributions they consider disrupt a definite
action or of low political merit. Disagreements over such decisions should
be raised with the relevant Party committees and if necessary at an aggregate
of the organisation. |