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Weekly Worker 573 Thursday April 21 2005
Half a million hits
Mary Godwin outlines the issues at the April CPGB aggregate
Last week the total number of hits on the CPGB website passed half a
million since we started counting exactly five years ago. Today we get
an average of 14,000 hits a week - a figure that has been increasing week
on week (only a year back the average was nearer 8,000). Comrade Mark
Fischer informed CPGB members of these statistics during his talk on the
partys financial situation during the April aggregate of members
and supporters.
There is a large audience for our ideas, even if some of it is likely
to be hostile, he said. For example, 1,310 people had already downloaded
the pdf version of Jack Conrads book Remaking Europe. These readers
do not pay for the book of course, but, although we always need more money
- including to pay for the publication of future books, such as the forthcoming
one on religion - there are no plans to charge for access to books or
other items on our website.
Often our political opponents imagine they have got one over on us by
accessing our paper without paying for it, but we are glad that our ideas
will at least be registering with them. As comrades have said before in
reply to suggestions that we should introduce an online subscription for
access to our paper and other material, the chance to win people to communism
is more valuable than any income we would generate by charging for access
to our website. Communist ideas are powerful because they are true, and
we want to spread them as widely as possible.
Comrade Fischer explained how party finances have been squeezed by the
changes in the print industry, which means that our printshop can no longer
make a profit. It is natural for ambitious organisations to live slightly
beyond their means, he said, and the party needs to reinvigorate its business
activity to finance future work. At present just about all the money received
in the form of dues, donations, book sales and Weekly Worker subscriptions
is used up on printing, rates, rents and other day-to-day expenses, leaving
next to nothing for important party actions.
Comrade Fischer described the imminent move to more accessible offices
and a new printshop, which, coincidentally, should reduce some of these
costs. He emphasised that the party will keep its own print machine, even
if it can no longer make a profit. Owning our own equipment, and thus
being able to print whatever we want, is an essential prerequisite of
political independence.
Financial independence is just as important. Parties calling themselves
communist in the past and present have become dependent on
subsidies from states and other organisations, and have become political
prostitutes - Gerry Healys Workers Revolutionary Party and the official
New Communist Party spring to mind. The CPGB retains its financial and
thus political independence through the hard work and self-sacrifice of
its members.
In this context, comrade Fischer announced that the 2005 Summer Offensive
will cover two months from the beginning of June. It is a period of intense
fundraising, which should ideally be in the form of political work rather
than simply doing overtime or reducing personal expenditure. The collective
target for the Offensive is set at £30,000. Comrade Fischer emphasised
that fundraising should be a collective task, and should be on the agenda
of every meeting of every party cell.
Despite the lefts overall decline, this years Summer Offensive
should be a good one. There is a large periphery of sympathisers around
the organisation, and members will be encouraged to contact them and ask
them to contribute, as part of the process of drawing them closer to the
CPGB. There are also plans to revamp the website, with prominence given
to the Summer Offensive and how readers can take part.
Comrade Fischers opening was followed by a short debate, in which
several comrade suggested new ways of raising money. Comrade Mc Shane
observed that in recent years the Summer Offensive has often got off to
a slow start, and she proposed that several launch meetings should be
held - not just in London but around the country. This idea was welcomed,
with comrades from Sheffield suggesting holding a launch on June 8 to
coincide with a G8 event in Sheffield, which will provide an excellent
opportunity for both political intervention and fundraising. Briefings
on the Summer Offensive, with suggestions on methods which have worked
in previous years, will be sent to members in the near future, comrade
Fischer concluded. The goals of the Summer Offensive are to activate the
membership, draw in the periphery and, not least, safeguard the partys
financial and thus political independence.
The aggregate also included a discussion of the general election, continuing
the debate at previous aggregates about our criteria for deciding which
candidates to critically support. Comrade John Bridge explained once again
the thinking behind the CPGB policy of supporting working class candidates
who are against the occupation of Iraq and in favour of immediate withdrawal
of troops. In the Labour Party the question of Iraq is crucial, and in
Respect the retreat from class needs to be brought to the fore. Our intervention
is designed to dramatise the contradictions in both, in order to draw
attention to the importance of building the communist alternative.
A small minority of members at the aggregate continued to argue for a
policy of supporting all Respect candidates on the basis of its platform
rather than the individual. Others claimed we were wrong to offer support
to all Respect candidates in the European elections last year, but leading
comrades, including John Bridge and Peter Manson, argued that as conditions
evolve our tactics must also change. Even the best of the candidates we
will support are in one way or another opportunist and if any are elected
it will be crucial to continue to criticise them, and use any opportunity
that arises for principled communist intervention.
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