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Debating the issues
Last weekend saw the second annual Communist University Wales. Held
in Cardiff, it offered an opportunity for left activists to discuss
issues affecting both the Welsh and international left. Ben Lewis
reports
It was refreshing to see comrades from the Alliance for
Workers Liberty, along with some of the Plaid Cymru left and
a few independent socialists, at the CU Wales. Nevertheless the
absence of what is still quite a numerous, although extremely fragmented,
left in Wales says a lot about the situation we find ourselves in.
Comrade Houzan Mahmood of the Worker-communist Party of Iraq opened
the first session by giving a unique analysis of the situation in
Iraq, the forces operating within it, and the ongoing struggle of
the Iraqi people. Branding this weeks so-called handover
of power as nothing but a sham, she said that her partys
declaration was something communists should support because it opposed
the puppet regime and also distanced itself from political islam,
which denied the workers movement even the tiniest of
freedoms.
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From this, the debate naturally led on to the relationship between
genuinely progressive and secular forces and those forces who, comrade
Mahmood argued, are exploiting the occupation of Iraq for their
own interests. Cameron Richards of the CPGB argued that this relationship
was something not only relevant to the situation in Iraq. It is
relevant to Respect and electoral alliances with forces such as
the Muslim Association of Britain - which is quite open about its
links to the Muslim Brotherhood. Comrades Richards and Mahmood both
agreed that the left should learn the lessons of Iran.
CPGB national organiser Mark Fischer said that in certain cases
it is tactically beneficial to unite with such forces around certain
issues - the occupation of ones country being a rather significant
example. Many comrades agreed that there is a so-called third
camp - neither backing the imperialist occupation nor blindly
supporting the resistance, irrespective of the nature of the forces
leading it. Comrade Mahmood pointed out that the western left has
a rather frustrating tendency to do just this. In response to comrade
Fischers argument that the AWL supports the first camp, seeing
the occupation as the lesser evil, comrade Rob of the AWL replied
that to call for a withdrawal of the troops is unrealistic
- it would hand over power to political islam, which would crush
the workers movement just as it did in Iran in 1979.
Mike Macnair, however, argued that this missed the point. He said
that a feature of imperialism since World War II had been to destroy
the infrastructure of countries where it intervened, leaving in
its wake warlordism - Afghanistan and Iraq being the most recent
examples. Now, the US administration is looking for an exit strategy,
which involves political wheeling and dealing with forces like shia
leaders and so forth, effectively meaning that they would hand over
power to the islamists anyway. This follows on from British imperialisms
strategy of divide and rule and creates rival communalist movements
which are far from progressive.
The afternoon session saw Mark Fischer and Cameron Richards, a supporter
of the CPGBs Red Platform, debate After Respect: what
are the lessons? Comrade Fischer argued there was no need
to dress up the SWPs shift to the right - it was a sect that
has been inspired by the two million people marching in London against
the war on February 15 2003; but frustrated that it had failed to
get the slightest boost in numbers to show for it. The response
from the SWP was to ditch the Socialist Alliance and veer off sharply
to the right. Nevertheless, while this was far from welcome, the
fact of the matter is that Respect has been created and has gathered
together slightly bigger forces - and as a site for struggle that
at least was positive. Our Red Platform was certainly sectarian
and misguided in its approach, said comrade Fischer. The conditions
it chose to place on Respect candidates were artificial, in that
they did not apply to other left candidates, and reflected both
political immaturity and impatience with the SWPs shift to
the right.
Comrade Richards insisted that his stance is not determined by George
Galloway, but rather the way in which the SWP, with the CPGB following
them, had given up on the third campism of the International Socialist/Cliffite
tradition which once held to the slogan, Neither Moscow nor
Washington, but international socialism.
The Red Platforms identification of MAB Respect candidates
as unsupportable under any conditions was not - as some in the SWP,
and even in the CPGB, have suggested - due to islamophobia. Rather
it is based on the same reasoning that last year led Jack Conrad
to ague that political principles should not be abrogated in working
with such forces as the MAB. Furthermore, comrade Richards argued,
the programme of engaging with the so-called muslim community was
not only demeaning. It further alienated the white working class,
who are increasingly drawn to voting for the BNP already. Rather
we should seek to unite all of the working class along socialist
lines.
This was arguably the most controversial debate of the weekend,
with disagreements over the political nature of the MAB, the way
in which communists should overcome religious ideas and prejudices,
and also what the relationship between the workers movement
and the church/mosque should be.
The evening session on Saturday was given over to the European Social
Forum. The CPGBs Tina Becker was of the opinion that, although
the ESF was an excellent initiative in terms of bringing together
the left across Europe, as presently organised it offered no real
solutions. The danger was that it could simply become an annual
jamboree for charity-mongering NGOs, left-posing careerists and
the various sects. In Britain building local social forums had been
practically ignored simply due to the fact that the SWP, the main
left force, was not interested. Instead it has promoted its now
almost defunct front, Globalise Resistance. Yet, where the left
was pursuing a non-sectarian agenda, the social forum movement tends
to be strong. This has created a wide political space within which
the left can operate and find a degree of real social purchase -
such as in Italy with Rifondazione Comunista.
The final day was dedicated to politics within Wales, covering the
language and culture of the Welsh people. There was also debate
around whether or not Welsh independence would bring forward socialist
change in Britain. In these discussion the presence of Plaid Cymru
left thinkers Alun Cox and Leanne Wood was very much welcome, of
course.
Comrade Cox outlined the decline in the Welsh language since the
rise of the industrial revolution. He argued that as socialists
it was our duty to defend the Welsh language, just like all minority
languages. We should uphold the rights of all to be educated in
ones own mother tongue and the right to receive state material,
etc, in that language.
Comrade Bob Davies agreed that it is not possible to be a communist
without defending the right of Welsh-speaking people to use and
fully develop their language. He also highlighted how back in the
days of primitive capitalist accumulation the best jobs went to
English speakers. Hence the relative decline of Welsh to this very
day. Nevertheless, the recent renaissance in the Welsh language
is indicative that defending it has proved successful.
Mark Fischer argued against narrow nationalism. It was good to create
the conditions where the Welsh language could flourish, but what
was key was creating the political conditions where people voluntarily
merged on the basis of the highest possible culture. Although the
world was moving towards one culture under the impulse of capitalism
and its fake icons celebrities, he nevertheless thought that it
was positive that some kind of common culture was emerging. Communism
would surely be build on this objective reality: it would see the
light of day only when the whole of humanity has voluntarily merged
to such an extent that it speaks one language.
The final debate of the weekend was devoted to the rise of socialist
nationalism within the United Kingdom left. Leanne Woods put forward
the argument that it was more likely that Welsh workers would achieve
socialism through independence, since Wales, she said, has a much
more leftwing tradition than Britain as a whole. Far from the stifling
atmosphere of London, the democratic aspirations of the population
could be met far more quickly.
Bob Davies argued that it was unnecessary to call for independence.
It was also unviable. Put into practice, a three-million-strong
Welsh socialist state would either be a social democratic version
of Ireland or a horrendous rerun of Enver Hoxhas Albania.
Socialism is international or it is anti-socialism.
Leanne Woods argued that it was necessary to split Wales from the
British state. Time and time again all attempts to unite the UK
left have failed. Comrade Woodss observation, is of course,
not without foundation. But like the struggle for socialism we should
expect failure after failure
that is, until we succeed.
Ben Lewis
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