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Weekly Worker 549 Thursday October 21 2004
More
articles on the ESF can
be found by clicking here
Missed opportunity
The opportunity presented by the ESF to launch a united working class
campaign against theEuropean Union constitution was unfortunately missed.
While most sections of the European left are committed to a referendum
no, for the SWP, the largest component of the revolutionary
left in Britain, the whole question is a non-issue.
So the Friday morning Alexandra Palace seminar, The new EU constitution
and our responses, was attended largely by some 400 comrades from
the continental mainland, with only a small minority from Britain. The
SWP was nowhere to be seen. Whereas for seminars on other topics people
with similar ideas had come together to thrash out a common approach,
here several organisations with a variety of views - both for and against
the proposed constitution - had been forced to share a single seminar.
Of course, a structured debate between opposing views can serve to clarify
ideas, but in this case we had the worst of both worlds: there were so
many speakers (nine in a truncated two-hour session) that only the barest
exchange was possible between people with quite contradictory positions.
Brendan Donnelly of the Federal Union, Titto di Salvo of the Italian CGIL
union and Peter Szigeti of Attac Hungary all gave a variation on the reformist
yes viewpoint. While the EU constitution might not be all
that we wanted, they argued, it was the best we could get right now (Sometimes
the best is the enemy of the good, said Donnelly). The constitution
did talk about workers rights and protection of the environment
and it did help to consolidate the EU as a counterbalance to the real
danger - US imperialism.
While Martin Rocholl of Friends of the Earth Europe sat on the fence,
there was at least some measure of agreement amongst the remaining five
speakers: yes, we needed to oppose this constitution, but we had to put
forward our own, positive alternative too. Bernard Cassen (Attac France)
based his no on the need for participatory democracy,
as opposed to neoliberalism, while Francis Wurtz, a Parti Communiste Français
MEP, stated that the proposed constitution championed free movement for
capital irrespective of the social cost in terms of public services and
workers rights. Andy Storey (Action for Peace, Ireland) pointed
out that the EU was just as much a threat as the US.
The viewpoints of Frank Slegers (Belgian Social Forum and Fourth International)
and Jack Conrad (CPGB) were to some extent complementary (although, of
course, with more time to develop their arguments, no doubt clearer differences
would have emerged). Comrade Slegers said we needed to put forward concrete
demands as a bridge between the present and the Europe we want - even
if the fight for those demands provoked a crisis.
Jack Conrad - in a comment aimed at the British left in particular - said
it was easy to point to what we were against in the constitution, but
it was essential to spell out what we were for when it came to the EU.
Europe must have the stamp of the working class put on it: a parliament
with real powers, as susceptible as possible to pressure from below; the
abolition of standing armies, to be replaced by peoples militia;
free abortion on demand and substantive equality between men and women.
It would not be a counterbalancing, imperialist Europe designed to rival
the US for world domination.
Despite the efforts of the CPGBs Tina Becker in the chair, only
a handful of people were able to intervene from the floor in the time
available. The absence of much in the way of developed argument, combined
with the noise from the adjacent plenary on Palestine (throughout the
ESF the West Hall, with its two simultaneous meetings side by side, produced
varying degrees of cacophony), meant that this and other seminars were
often frustrating experiences.
A more fruitful discussion took place an hour later at the plenary on
Privatisation, social movements and political parties. Despite
the misleading title (a welcome discussion on the role of parties vis-à-vis
the social movement did not really get off the ground), this
proved a useful session, in particular for the strongly expressed views
of both Piero Bernocchi (Cobas) and Pierre Khalfa (Attac France).
Everyone on the platform was united in condemning the drive to privatisation
across the EU. But comrade Bernocchi went further: We say what we
oppose, but we seem incapable of staging one single demonstration on social
issues. We need common action between working class parties and the left
on a European level. He referred specifically to the end-of-ESF
demo against the occupation of Iraq and for Palestine. But
what about a demo against European neoliberal policies? He
wondered what the situation would be at the Athens ESF in 2006. Unless
we take some concrete steps, this movement will sink in boredom.
We spend a lot of time talking, but we need to do something.
Comrade Khalfa concurred: We need a change of ideology on the European
level, not just words. I agree with Piero. He too called for a common
European demonstrations. Absolutely correct, of course, but in fact we
need to go further. We also need to take steps towards common political
organisation.
LCR presidential candidate Olivier Besancenot, was less controversial.
He, like Anastasia Theo-dorokopoulou of the Greek Social Forum, was content
to denounce the evils of privatisation - like the final speaker, the Communist
Party of Britains part-time general secretary Rob Griffiths.
I am not aware of any linguistic talents that comrade Griffiths may have,
but he seemed able to understand speeches in Italian, French and Greek
without the need of an interpretation headset. Or perhaps he was, after
all, oblivious to their content, since he proceeded to offer the European
comrades pearls of CPB wisdom on what privatisation was all about: We
can tell you about our experience here in Britain. This is what you have
in store for you, thanks to EU directives. Those who still have illusions
that the EU is somehow progressive are now seeing the truth.
Comrade Griffiths did not respond to the calls for common action across
Europe - as a national socialist, how could he - even if he had bothered
to listen in the first place?
Peter Manson
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