|
Weekly Worker 488 Thursday July 10 2003
Marxism 2003
Rees lays it on the line
John Rees’s
opening remarks
We are in the midst of a rebirth of radical ideas, of the birth of huge
global movement in resistance to globalisation and war. This is a chance.
These are conditions which have not existed for the left since the late
1960s … what we choose to do will make a difference to the future and
the possibility of lasting social change ….
… we want to construct from this movement the largest possible group
of people who will work with other people but at the same time will propagate
this argument [the need for revolutionary change] … Now you don’t have
to choose between being broad and radical - you can be broad and radical.
And this is what we want to do.
A movement isn’t a creation of the party - it is much greater and bigger
than the party. But the party can assist the building and shaping of that
movement. [If we do not do this] there will be no movement worth the name
… It has to reflect what the non-revolutionaries in the movement want
to do, and that’s why the question of working in the broad movement is
so critical to us now. This is the tactic of the united front. Yes, we
want more revolutionaries, but they are only revolutionaries in any meaningful
sense if they act with others …
We brought a narrow band of the left [together in the Socialist
Alliance]. But the Stop the War
Coalition has brought in new forces … The prospects of knitting together
the left and the unions, … many people in the muslim community and the
existing forces in the SA will not be easy to achieve, but it does stand
there now, waiting to happen… it is a pressing and urgent task in front
of us… this is the spirit of the age.
Stuart King of Workers Power intervened in the debate
… What we can’t do is stitch together the Stop the War movement as an
electoral alliance: there are real differences between us. The drive in
Birmingham towards a Peace and Justice alliance covers over a number of
key differences. Where do these organisations stand on gay and lesbian
rights or secular education? When we stand in an election we put forward
an alternative vision of society. These are important questions which
cannot be covered over. We can’t cover over the deeply held prejudice
in many mosques against gay rights.
Lindsey German counterattacked from the floor, to stormy applause from
assembled SWPers
Comrades, I really think that in this debate and in the wider debate
that we’re having there’s really two ways in which the left can go. Either
the left can maintain itself in its sectarian isolation, nitpicking against
everyone else, criticising people because they are not socialists (or
not pure enough socialists), or we can throw ourselves into the movement,
and out of that build a viable alternative revolutionary presence, and
it is that second option that the SWP is committed to.
I think we need to ask questions about some people in the SA. Stuart
King says some muslims are anti-gay, and this is perfectly true, but it
is not a question we pose to christians who join the Socialist Alliance,
is it? Now I’m in favour of defending gay rights, but I am not
prepared to have it as a shibboleth, [created by] people who … won’t defend
George Galloway, and who regard the state of Israel as somehow a viable
presence, justified in occupying Palestinian territories.
I do think it’s a very serious question for the SA, but - let’s be honest
- there are people in the SA who don’t support the STWC, who don’t support
the muslim community in opposition to the war - that is the real dividing
line on the left, as far as I’m concerned. And out of that we have to
build an alliance which moves outwards and takes on serious forces, and
doesn’t become a sectarian talking shop. About a quarter of the people
at the recent SA conference did not want to leave the room and engage
in the real world.
In the SWP we are moving into the new left. When you talk about
the forums we’re having, the test for the SWP is, do we want to lie back
in the ghetto with these people who don’t want to relate to the real world
or are we prepared to link in with the new forces in this society in order
to change things?
John Rees’s reply
… the anti war movement has created an absolutely new political condition
on the left in this country and I do believe that out of the anti-war
movement it is possible to build a bigger and broader alternative to New
Labour than we have at the moment.
This is possible, but it is not automatic - it is an act of imagination.
It’s popular to get up and say that we want unity. But anyone who has
done this sort of work in the trade union movement or in any campaign
knows that the precondition is that you do not let people who represent
very little stand in your way. When the chair of the Socialist Alliance
in Birmingham wrote in a leftwing paper
that he did not wish to work with the muslim community or the Communist
Party of Britain, that was time for the people who did to take
on the leadership in that city.
As a result of this we had the largest meeting our movement has ever
held in that city in a generation, and I was proud to be on that platform
alongside George Galloway representing the SA.
That is the future: the rest is the past.
Print this page
|