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Weekly Worker 521 Thursday March 25 2004

Two conferences
The contrast between the Scottish
Socialist Party and the Socialist
Alliance in England and Wales could hardly be more marked. One is
living, confident and growing; the other lies dying - struck down, foully
murdered by its own misleadership.
By a margin of two to one the SAs March 13 special conference voted
not only to suspend electoral work - which in effect means ending all
activity - but to actually forbid surviving branches from standing in
the forthcoming June 10 local elections. This control-freakery was imposed
at the insistence of the Socialist Workers
Party. No opposition was brooked. There could be no compromise nor
any accounting for different, specific local circumstances. Everything,
above all the continued existence of the SA, must be subordinated to the
untried and untested Respect
coalition and getting John Rees elected as an MEP.
Not that the SWP is itself giving 100%. Before Londons March 20
Stop the War Coalition demonstration Chris Bambery, SWP national secretary,
issued one of his infamous weekly circulars: only 100 SWPers were to be
assigned to work for Respect (email, March 18). The rest were told to
sell Socialist Worker and dish out SWP placards. According to what we
know about the real size of the SWPs membership that translates
in the language of mathematics into a mere 5% commitment to Respect.
The March 27-28 SSP conference in Edinburgh faces no such demands to
liquidate from the Socialist Worker platform, nor from any other faction
for that matter. On the contrary the SSP faces the challenges that come
with proven success and growth. Specifically that means quickly integrating
RMT and other potential trade union affiliates into its regional and national
structures (there is a whole raft of constitutional changes proposed by
the SSP executive committee) - that and gearing up for the June 10 elections,
in which the SSP is expected to do well.
As with the SA, the SSP began as a unity project between left groups.
In that sense the SSP holds up a mirror of what might have been in the
rest of Britain. Quite clearly the much more favourable situation in Scotland
results not from objective conditions. Eg, strikes throughout Britain
remain at historically low levels and the 2003 anti-war movement saw its
biggest manifestations in London, not Glasgow or Edinburgh.
The difference is subjective. Scottish Militant Labour, under the leadership
of Alan McCombes and Tommy Sheridan, had the necessary foresight and accumulated
organisational weight behind them to rally the left in Scotland and then
patiently build a party based on a culture which still tolerates minorities
and generally operates in a spirit of openness.
Not that we communists are uncritical. The SSP cannot strictly be regarded
as a socialist party. Yes, unlike Respect, it calls for socialism week
in and week out in the pages of Scottish Socialist Voice and in every
election manifesto. Tommy Sheridan eloquently expounds upon its virtues
and rails against the inequalities of capitalism. The SSPs five
other MSPs hammer home the same message. However, the socialism of the
SSP is both reformist and nationalist.
For Marxism, of course, socialism is a universal, revolutionary task.
The capitalist state has to be dismantled by the armed power of the working
class, and capital superseded at the global level. Using the existing
state to introduce socialism - which usually means nothing
more than the nationalisation of the means of production - inevitably
leads to attacks on the working class. Nationalised capital is still capital
and workers remain exploited wage slaves. That is the lesson of history
and the real movement of the working class in the 20th century. In short,
there can be no socialism in one country, not even in a breakaway Scotland.
SSP leaders disagree. The tartan revolution would not, we
are assured, suffer the horrible starvation and wars of intervention witnessed
in Russia or Cubas isolation and grinding poverty. Scotland will
not be brought to its knees by an American economic blockade.
A socialist Scotland will be able to stand up to the forces
of global capitalism and become an international symbol of resistance
to economic and social injustice (T Sheridan and A McCombes Imagine Edinburgh
2000, p189).
Scotland can succeed apparently where others before it have failed because
it is fabulously wealthy. Scotland already has the material
foundations for a thriving socialist democracy. Besides
long coastlines and a clean environment, Scotland
has a flourishing culture and legions of internationally
acclaimed musicians, writers, actors and film directors. On top of these
blessings Scotland has land, water, fish, timber, oil, gas and electricity
in abundance. Better still, Scotland has a moderate climate
(ibid p189). While a fully-fledged socialist society might
not be possible in Scotland, nonetheless a socialist government
could move in that direction by taking control of the countrys wealth
and using it for the common good (ibid p190).
Frankly this is threadbare and deeply worrying. Joseph Stalin used to
rebuff Leon Trotsky with reference to Russias continental proportions
and immense wealth in natural resources. Land, oil, forests, gold, a population
that stood at around 150 million ... and a very, very long coastline.
He did not mention a moderate climate, true. Despite that
absence Stalin boasted in his version of Imagine - the second edition
of Foundations of Leninism - that Russia had all it needed internally.
Not to achieve the final and complete victory of socialism
- that needed the efforts of other countries - but to build up a
socialist society (JV Stalin Works Vol 6, Moscow 1953, p111).
In the McCombes-Sheridan schema Scottish nationalism is proletarian.
British nationalism bourgeois.
Logically this has led the SSP leadership to pursue a strategic alliance
with the Scottish National Party. Nowadays the SSP is quite clear: independence
in and of itself would be progress. A capitalist Scotland which has its
own armed forces, currency and bureaucracy is bizarrely proclaimed as
a step in the direction of socialism. Last year the SSP national council
duly agreed the perspectives document, Where now for independence
and socialism?, drafted by comrade McCombes, and subsequently an
independence convention was launched.
Thankfully there is some opposition - implicit and explicit - to this
outright capitulation to left nationalism (though unsurprisingly not from
the Republican Communist Network). Motions 9, 10 and 11, plus the amendment
to motion 11 from the Workers Unity platform, all appear to take issue
with the McCombes-Sheridan strategy.
Motion 9, submitted by Edinburgh Pentland, is, to be frank, mealy-mouthed
and to all intents and purposes worthless: eg, the position of the SSP
regarding Scottish independence should be based on whether it will
strengthen or weaken the political, ideological and industrial position
of the working class. The Cathcart West and Cathcart East motion
11 is no better. It too has the sticky fingerprints of the SW platform
all over it. Being for, or against, independence is conveniently skirted
round. Pure opportunism.
On the other hand motion 10 from Dundee West reflects the new thinking
of the Committee for a Workers
International. They want to put some clear red water between themselves
and their former Militant comrades who now dominate the SSP leadership.
The independence convention was mistaken. No significant
numbers have been attracted and support for national independence
has fallen in the past few years.
Though damning the concessions made to nationalism by the
McCombes-Sheridan leadership, the CWI shares essentially the same rotten
programme. It would support an independent capitalist Scotland,
as a democratic right, if wished for by the majority of the
population (supporting self-determination does not, of course, oblige
communists to advocate the Balkanisation of Britain - or anywhere else,
for that matter). But instead of campaigning for this outcome the CWI
wants to prioritise other issues - the fight for a decent
minimum wage, the scrapping of the council tax, a shorter working week,
public ownership of industry and anti-war work.
Nevertheless the CWI holds out the long-term goal of achieving independence.
This would, though, be a socialist Scotland and part of a
voluntary and democratic socialist confederation with England, Wales
and Ireland.
But why exactly the British nation-state needs to be broken up remains
unexplained. As is well known, the CPGB calls for a federal republic of
England, Scotland and Wales and an independent, united Ireland under existing
socio-political conditions. That would simultaneously provide a democratic
solution to the national question and deepen working class unity in the
British Isles. But it should be emphasised that in general Marxists seek
to bring about the organisation of the working class in the biggest possible,
centralised states. Federalism in Britain and an independent Ireland would
today represent a real step in that direction.
The only remotely principled position is the one advocated by the Workers
Unity platform. Though is appears to reject the right of the Scottish
people to self-determination - a piece of unnecessary Luxemburgism - the
comrades advocate working class unity, not as a pious, empty slogan, but
concretely. They call for unity against the existing United Kingdom state
and sketch out a plan for the building of a British socialist party
using the strength of the SSP as a lever.
Naturally such a genuinely internationalist and partyist approach commands
our support.
Jack Conrad
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