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Weekly Worker 542 Thursday September 2 2004
Socialist-Labourism or republican socialism?
Dave Craig of the Revolutionary Democratic Group argues for one step
at a time
The move towards a workers party taken by the Liverpool ex-dockers
and the 47 surcharged former councillors is a significant initiative.
The Campaign for a Mass Party of the Working Class is of interest not
just in terms of what it might achieve, but what it tells us about the
current state of working class politics in England. The Liverpool comrades
have gone beyond calling for a workers party and are now deciding
the party name, its constitution and programme.
The first issue on the agenda is the party name. The Revolutionary Democratic
Group submitted a discussion paper for consideration. We argued that the
name is an important issue which must accurately reflect the politics
of the party. Some comrades may think that the party name does not really
matter very much. Any name will do. This is wrong. The party name is of
great importance. It is a political statement addressed to the working
class about the nature, character, programme and aims of the party. It
must be treated seriously and a name chosen scientifically.
However, we were convinced that the name should not be discussed in isolation
from the other ingredients that define the party. Our submission says:
To chose the name before we define the type of party and programme
is to put the cart before the horse. A name like Respect means
very little until we know what kind of party it is. Is it, for example,
a republican socialist party or a revolutionary Trotskyist party or some
other type of organisation? The name should tell workers about the type
of party, as defined by its strategy and programme. It should be honest
and educative.
Our case is fairly straightforward. We need a republican socialist party
along the lines of the Scottish Socialist Party. In the Socialist Alliance
programme People before profit we have a left unity programme that can
serve as the starting point for a republican socialist programme. We can
begin to build on that basis. The party needs to be organised with the
maximum democracy and rights for platforms and tendencies, including the
right to openly publish their views. Such a party cannot be launched immediately.
But we should be able to make real identifiable progress in preparation
for the forthcoming general election.
The case for a republican socialist party rests on four important developments
in the class struggle. First, has been a collapse of working class political
representation. Traditionally the organised working class was represented
through the Labour Party and the official CPGB. The trade
union bureaucracy supported Labour and working class militants backed
the official CPGB. Over the last 10 years this form of representation
has collapsed, as the Labour Party moved to the right and the official
CPGB was liquidated. There is now a real political vacuum on the left
which points to the need for a new workers party.
Second, the experience of the Labour government since 1997 has convinced
trade union activists that Labour is opposed to their collective interests.
The RMT and FBU are no longer affiliated and other unions are reducing
their financial support for Labour. We are in a similar position to the
end of the 19th century, when trade unions began to break from the Liberal
Party and a new working class party was set up. The fact that some trade
unions show signs of breaking with Labour indicates that a new mass party
is possible.
Third, the parliamentary system (or constitutional monarchy) is now under
severe strain because of economic and political change. The integration
of capital and European states into the European Union has undermined
national sovereignty. The pressure for democratic change in Ireland, Scotland
and Wales has brought greater political autonomy and the growth of new
or previously marginal parties, such as Sinn Féin and the SSP.
The Blair government has concentrated and centralised more power into
its own hands. There is a growing sense of powerlessness and alienation
amongst working people. Labours constitutional changes have made
the system more unstable. There is a new danger from the right with the
growth of the BNP and UKIP. The war in Iraq and the mass anti-war movement
has served to highlight a growing crisis of democracy. Consequently any
progressive working class party must put forward a democratic programme,
providing answers to this crisis.
Fourth, the socialist movement remains weak and fragmented. It is divided
between those inside and outside the Labour Party. The Marxist groups
outside Labour have been unable to form a united party. We now have Respect,
Socialist Alliance, SA Democracy Platform, Socialist Party, Workers Power,
Communist Party of Britain, Independent Working Class Association, not
forgetting the Socialist Workers Party, CPGB, RDG, Alliance for Workers
Liberty, etc. This means that we must fight to unite all socialists into
one party.
The Scottish Socialist Party is an example of a republican socialist party.
It stands for an independent Scottish republic, which it sees as opening
the way to a socialist society. The SSP is neither a Labour-type party
nor a revolutionary communist party. It is a party of socialist unity
with contains both socialists and revolutionary Marxists. The modest but
real progress made by the SSP can be explained in part because it fits
with the objective circumstances in the class struggle.
The conclusion we should draw from all this is that we need a republican
socialist party in England and Wales. What is the scientific name for
this party? Obviously we should call a spade a spade. A republican socialist
party should therefore adopt the name Republican Socialist Party!
As previously reported, the majority of the committee of the campaign
voted for United Socialist Party. Is this the wrong name for
a republican socialist party? Or does this name point to a different type
of party? We made the mistake of choosing a name before clarifying what
kind of party and programme the name should portray. Therefore we must
employ some forensic science to find out what kind of party
and programme is being proposed.
In his interview with the Weekly Worker Terry Teague explains the political
conclusions the dockers drew from their experiences about the need to
try and unite the left, with its different factions, to set up a new democratic
socialist party (August 12). We can heartily concur with this conclusion.
But when asked, Should it be like old Labour or something different?,
He replied: When you say, old Labour, you have to be
specific. It would be a party that would have a lot of the aims and objectives
of, say, Clem Attlees manifesto in 1948 or Harold Wilsons
in 1964 - without the attacks on the trade union movement, of course.
But it would contain many of the policies for social change. It would
have nothing to do with the manifesto of 1997 or 2001.
There has been no discussion about the programme of the new party. But
the draft party constitution makes sufficient programmatic statements
to see which way the wind is blowing. The preamble, for example, says:
We live in a capitalist society, dominated by the interests of big
business, the banks and insurance companies, which exploit the working
class for profit. That is why over 100 years ago a mass movement of the
trade unions and working class communities, to represent their interests
against capitalist exploitation, founded the Labour Party. But the New
Labour Party has broken faith with the working class.
The statement goes on to catalogue a series of New Labour attacks on the
working class, not forgetting asylum-seekers or Iraq. The theme is the
historic betrayal by Blairs New Labour. It is not about breaking
from the political heritage of Labourism.
The draft party constitution puts forward the following points. The new
party:
l stands for the socialist transformation of society. To replace capitalism
with an economic system based on democratic ownership and control of the
key sectors of the economy. A system based on social need and environmental
protection rather than private profit and ecological destruction.
l will provide political support and solidarity to all those who are involved
in fighting back against injustice, whether it be trade unionists, community
organisations, tenants groups, anti-motorway protesters, anti-nuclear
protestors, animal rights campaigners, anti-racist organisations and other
campaigns and protest movements.
- will oppose discrimination in any form on the basis of race, religion,
language, nationality, sex, sexual orientation, age or disability.
- will campaign for a socialist Britain with the aim of establishing a
united and broader alliance of democratic socialist states.
- actively promotes the international solidarity of the working class
and oppressed to defeat capitalism and imperialism, while preserving its
political and constitutional autonomy.
- will build the closest possible links with socialists in Scotland and
Wales, across Europe and worldwide.
- stands ultimately for a new socialist world, where poverty, starvation,
environmental destruction, exploitation, war and racial hatred are eradicated.
It is not that most socialists would disagree with this (although I think
it betrays a nationalist conception of socialism). It is what is missing
that jumps out of the page. It is the silence that betrays the kind of
party that is being conceived here.
Most obviously this programme does not mention parliamentary democracy.
What attitude is the new party taking to that question? Like it or not,
parliamentary democracy is a major feature of politics in Britain. We
can assume the party intends to stand candidates for parliament. Parliamentary
democracy has to be central to the politics of the party, just as capitalism
must be central to its economics.
Compare this with the programmatic statements of the Socialist Alliance
and the SADP in People before profit. Here we find a programme of parliamentary
reform which, taken together, constitutes a democratic republic. Despite
the efforts of the SWP to suck up to socialist-Labourites by ignoring
parliamentary reform, the demand for a democratic republic is a demand
for now, not simply for the socialist future.
Therefore hiding behind the name United Socialist Party is
a socialist-Labour party. This is a type of party whose ideology is economism.
It promotes the idea that progress for the working class means concentrating
on improving economic and social conditions. The working class should
not interfere or involve itself in political matters and especially constitutional
affairs. In the upstairs and downstairs of bourgeois politics,
the servants should stay in the basement where they belong.
A socialist-Labour party therefore accepts the constitutional monarchist
state, and concentrates on social justice and greater equality. Like socialism,
republicanism is a long-term aim. As the official CPGB programme
The British road to socialism says, there will be no place for the monarchy
under socialism. But under capitalism the BRS can accept the monarchist
state as part of the natural order. In bourgeois ideology the monarchy,
which in the UK symbolises the permanent rule of the capitalist class,
harms nobody!
At the last committee meeting on August 21 the focus switched to the constitution
of the new party. The chair, Jimmy Nolan, made clear his view that the
position was polarised between the ex-dockers aim of
a party and the Socialist Party and the ex-councillors, who wanted a loose
campaign. This was not a strategic or programmatic difference. It was
merely a difference over the timing of this move between those
who want a socialist-Labour party. But even a tactical difference can
bring the campaign close to a split.
The dockers proposed all political organisations should dissolve into
the new party in 12 months. Comrade Eric proposed an amendment to extend
the time for dissolution, but retained the principle that in a given time
all political groups must disband. The SP proposed political groups should
affiliate and accepted no time limit. Workers Power proposed the right
to form platforms in the new body and opposed a fixed time scale. The
RDG proposed that the annual general meeting should decide when and if
groups should disband, but accepted that the aim would be a single unified
party with full rights for political platforms, including publications
and public right to disagree.
In their contributions the SP and the 47 accepted this characterisation
of a polarisation into two positions. Workers Power and the RDG argued
that there was a third position. This should be clear in the case of the
RDG, because the party name issue reveals a strategic and programmatic
difference, not merely a tactical question of timing. Along with Workers
Power, we stood in favour of a party project, understood the urgency of
the coming general election and the position in the trade unions, but
did not believe a fixed time scale could or should be set for the dissolution
of socialist groupings into the new party.
This position had support from several members of the committee and the
discussion moved on to a single point. Would the dockers accept the amendment
proposed at the previous meeting and included in the RDG proposals, that
a future AGM of the new organisation should decide when and if groups
should be asked to dissolve into the new party? The dockers through Jimmy
Nolan explicitly rejected any further compromise about moving away from
a fixed time scale for all political groupings to disband. He said that
the dockers had already compromised by accepting comrades Erics
amendment allowing for a longer time.
The meeting pressed for a vote on Tony Mulhearns amendment (tabled
at the previous meeting on August 7) putting any decision about the dissolution
of groups to an annual general meeting. All of the committee expressed
the view that with that amendment a consensus could go to the next full
meeting. The amendment was put and seven votes recorded in favour. At
this point the chair did not ask for votes against or abstentions. It
was assumed by all that the amendment had carried. The chair then argued
that the committee should vote on the amended constitution proposed by
a Socialist Labour Party comrade, as further amended by the dockers, without
mention of the seven votes or taking the new constitution as amended following
the vote.
This caused confusion and requests for the chair to acknowledge the vote
for the amendment. It was only at this point votes were taken for and
against, and after Jimmy Nolan had said the dockers might withdraw
from the entire process. The vote tied at seven for and seven against.
It was agreed by the committee that both positions should be put to the
future full meeting. Comrade Nolan refused to commit to a date for this
meeting and it was not clear if the dockers would proceed with the process
or go off alone. The SP-47 and dockers are moving towards a split.
There are two divisive issues. First, the nature of the party, which is
reflected but not fully clarified in the disagreement over the party name.
Second, the process by which socialist groups will dissolve. The SP-47
are refusing a fixed time scale and prefer a looser, federal arrangement.
The first is a strategic question and the second is tactical.
Nobody said the road to a party would be easy. Nobody should take their
bat and ball home. We need more and wider discussion on where we are going
- to a socialist-Labour party or republican socialist party - and how
we can get there in terms of building confidence and winning the genuine
support from existing socialist organisations. Issues for the working
class cannot be imposed or settled by small committees.
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