RESPECT
Lessons of Socialist Alliance
Around 50 people attended the June 22 Respect meeting in North
East London, convened to discuss 'After the elections - where do
we go from here?' Despite the generally upbeat mood of the meeting
- we achieved a "fantastic result", said GLA candidate
Dean Ryan (Socialist Workers Party) - it is clear from the sometimes
contradictory or ambiguous contributions at the meeting that a period
of sober reflection and debate is needed to map out the way ahead.
The audience was overwhelmingly SWP, with not much evidence on
the evening of new activists from the muslim, Turkish or Kurdish
local working class communities that the campaign did undoubtedly
activate to a certain extent. This is a weakness, but it is still
early days. Speaking from the platform, Veli Yadirgi, a muslim college
lecturer, pointed out that, while "the overwhelming majority
of muslims did not vote for Respect", it did receive a percentage
of the votes of those who are "members of the working class".
The lesson being that we needed to campaign on "class issues"
- perhaps a corrective to the populism that marred so much of Respect's
propaganda?
Her emphasis on class was contradicted by Taylan Sahbaz from the
Turkish community centre, Day-Mer, who argued forcefully in favour
of populism. According to him it was true that "we have made
some mistakes" - but, incredibly, they were of a leftist nature:
"We should not have limited our potential outreach by presenting
ourselves as a left alternative. That will have put people off."
He said that it was the fact that "Respect is not a real political
party, but a unity project" that made it attractive to Day-Mer.
Clearly, the move by some political organisations of the Turkish
and Kurdish community into British political life is tremendously
positive. For too long, the leaders of these groups have attempted
to maintain them simply as organisations of foreign workers or political
activists rather than seek integration into the society where they
find themselves. However, this can only come about through active
political struggle. The revolutionary élan and dedication
of these communities need to be absorbed by our rather dozy 'indigenous'
left; on the other hand, a hard political struggle is required against
the traditions of Stalinoid populism that so many revolutionary
organisations from this part of the world will perhaps bring with
them.
The emphasis from SWPers - on the top table and in the audience
- was very much on campaigning on very localised issues and getting
away from the habits and modes of work of "the old left",
as Lindsey German - a hoary stalwart of that old left herself, of
course - rather disingenuously put it (there was little or no mention
of class).
On one level, comrade German had a point, of course. The left today
is very conservative and unimaginative, compared to yesteryear.
For example, speaking on housing, Lindsey cited the way the "the
CPGB did it in the 50s, when they housed people in thousands of
empty buildings in London". She also has a point when she says:
"We certainly do not want to repeat what the old left has done
- sitting in horrible little rooms, talking only to each other.
Instead, do it like the Kurdish community: go to picnics together,
talk politics over dinner." With the "old left" painted
in these rather dismal colours, who could disagree?
However, the comrade's real message could be a rather grim one
for the future of Respect. The strong implication was that people
could forget about the transformation of the coalition into a party,
with 'boring' or 'old fashioned' infrastructures such a branches,
democratic membership conferences and an accountable leadership.
If this is true, then Respect - however much campaigning effort
the SWP devotes to it - will suffer from the same disorientation,
demoralisation and eventual decline that laid low the Socialist
Alliance. While the SWP leadership refuses to confront the party
question, all such initiatives will founder.
Naturally, quite a number of speakers from the floor raised precisely
this question, amongst them the CPGB's Anne Mc Shane: "We have
built on the success of the Socialist Alliances and expanded this
support. But if we really want to become a lasting alternative to
New Labour, we need to do become a campaigning, political party,"
she argued.
Another comrade reported that in Brent "there were more people
campaigning for the Socialist Alliance than for Respect. We need
to discuss why that is". He also reported that he had "come
across quite a few leftwing friends and colleagues who didn't vote
for Respect because of George Galloway and his position on abortion.
I couldn't convince them that it didn't matter what Galloway personally
had said."
However, comrade Nick Rogers (formerly in the Scottish Socialist
Party) quite rightly pointed out that it "matters a great deal
what the leader of Respect says publicly just before an election".
Exactly. In a party, the reactionary views of an individual comrade
- however prominent - are not key. The discipline of the collective
- expressing democratically agreed national policies - would be
what all our comrades are obliged to abide by at the end of the
day.
Comrade Rogers also argued against comrades German's and Sahbaz's
dismissal of the "old left", which could be seen as an
excuse to ignore the "democratic structures" of organisation.
Plaintively, another member of the audience wondered how he could
actually get involved in the structures of the new organisation:
"Is there a branch I can join? How can I get involved?"
His request for this pretty basic information fell on deaf ears.
Not one speaker addressed the question of structure; instead the
focus was on planned local campaigns.
Now if we take as the template the regime the SWP fought to impose
on the SA, this implies that the Respect membership can expect to
turn up to really boring, apolitical meetings, while genuine decisions
are made elsewhere. They can expect to be told where to leaflet
and when. They perhaps should not anticipate too much debate and
democratic input into what Respect should actually be campaigning
about.
The lessons of the death of the SA must be learned if Respect is
not to go the same way.
Tina Becker
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