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Weekly Worker 574 Thursday April 28 2005
Vote for class independence
Mike Macnair revisits the question of the popular front
lan Daviss response (Weekly Worker April 21) to my article on popular
fronts (Weekly Worker March 31) attempts to defend the International Bolshevik
Tendencys view that it is unacceptable to call for votes for the
candidates of workers parties which are engaged in a popular
front policy. The argument is murky, because it is dependent on
rather slippery quote-mongering and fails to address my basic historical
objection to the IBTs line: that Trotsky argued, at precisely the
time that the French and Spanish peoples fronts were campaigning
for office, that the Trotskyists should enter the Socialist Parties in
order to link up with left opponents of the peoples front project.
Rhetoric and citation-grazing
Throughout his article, comrade Davis characterises the IBTs view
as their opposition to the popular front, the idea being to
imply rhetorically that any other policy is not opposition to the popular
front. However, popular frontism is in the last analysis merely a particular
form of class collaborationism, or the pursuit of, to quote comrade Davis,
the common interests of the workers movement and
a section of the capitalists. The Labour Party, for example, even
when it has been at its most leftist, is a class-collaborationist party.
It has been a class-collaborationist party since before its formal foundation
as an individual membership party in 1918, in the collaboration of the
trade union bureaucrats and most of the parliamentary labour representatives
in the war effort in 1914-18.
If comrade Davis is right in the meaning he attributes to opposition,
then Lenin and Trotsky did not oppose Labours class-collaborationism,
but on the contrary endorsed class collaboration when they
argued that the early British communists should fight for affiliation
to the Labour Party and support the Labour leaders as a rope supports
a hanged man.
The quotations comrade Davis relies on to support his view of Trotskys
policy are selective, and the background position, developed by the Spartacists
in the 1970s, is a systematic historical falsification. He must know this:
the point was convincingly demonstrated by Ian Donovan in his 1998 article,
still up on the website Revolution and Truth (http://members.aol.com/RevolutionTruth/popfront.htm).
The IBT never answered comrade Donovan. Instead, comrade Davis relies
on a brief 1987 exchange between the IBT and Workers Power (in Trotskyist
Bulletin No3, available at www.bolshevik.org).
I do not propose to repeat comrade Donovans researches into Trotskys
approach in the 1930s and the output of the Spartacist school of falsification
in the 1970s. The reason is that at the end of the day it is perfectly
possible that Trotskys approach in the 1930s was wrong, and the
question has to be addressed as one of theory and evidence rather than
citation-grazing. I will, however, add only one quotation to the pile,
this time from Lenin in Leftwing communism:
Prior to the downfall of tsarism, the Russian revolutionary social
democrats made repeated use of the services of the bourgeois liberals:
ie, they concluded numerous practical compromises with the latter. In
1901-02, even prior to the appearance of Bolshevism, the old editorial
board of Iskra (consisting of Plekhanov, Axelrod, Zasulich, Martov, Potresov
and myself) concluded (not for long, it is true) a formal political alliance
with Struve, the political leader of bourgeois liberalism, while at the
same time being able to wage an unremitting and most merciless ideological
and political struggle against bourgeois liberalism and against the slightest
manifestation of its influence in the working class movement.
The Bolsheviks have always adhered to this policy. Since 1905 they
have systematically advocated an alliance between the working class and
the peasantry, against the liberal bourgeoisie and tsarism - never, however,
refusing to support the bourgeoisie against tsarism (for instance, during
second rounds of elections, or during second ballots) and never ceasing
their relentless ideological and political struggle against the Socialist
Revolutionaries, the bourgeois-revolutionary peasant party, exposing them
as petty-bourgeois democrats who have falsely described themselves as
socialists (emphasis added).
In other words, in duma elections the Bolsheviks called for a second-round
vote for the Cadets, the main bourgeois liberal party, as opposed to the
monarchists. Lenin is not exaggerating for effect here: the historians
confirm it. In Whither France? Trotsky quite correctly points out that
this sort of limited agreement (episodic agreements and compromises,
confined strictly to practical aims) is not the same as the programmatic
bloc represented by the peoples front (www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/works/1936/witherfrance/03.htm).
But neither is calling for votes for opportunist and class-collaborationist
parties, while explicitly denouncing their opportunism and class-collaboration,
the same as endorsing the peoples front. Again, Lenin may have been
wrong. But the IBTs position has to stand or fall on its own merits.
Theory
When a bourgeois-workers party appears before the masses
as part of a joint party with the bourgeoisie, the IBT wrote in
its exchange with Workers Power, it explicitly renounces any claim
to stand for the political independence of the workers. For the duration
of the bloc, the latent contradiction embodied in such a formation is
suppressed. A vote for the workers component of a popular
front is a vote for the one party of the bourgeoisie.
This general theoretical statement in the 1987 text purports to summarise
a 1936 passage from Max Shachtman, which in fact makes no such claim.
As an account of Trotskys position it is wholly without support
in Trotskys writings. On the contrary, in Whither France? Trotsky
precisely argued that the mass votes for the Socialist and Communist Parties
in 1936 expressed rising class consciousness among the workers, which
the SP and CP then handed to the Radicals:
Nevertheless, even under these conditions the masses were able to
give expression to their desire: not a coalition with the Radicals, but
the consolidation of the toilers against the whole bourgeoisie. Had revolutionary
working class candidates been run on the second ballot in all the electoral
districts in which the socialists and the communists withdrew in favour
of the Radicals, they would, no doubt, have obtained a very considerable
number of votes. It is unfortunate that not a single organisation was
to be found capable of such initiative. This shows that the revolutionary
groups both in the centre and locally are lagging behind the dynamics
of the events, and prefer to temporise and evade whenever it is necessary
to act. This is a sad situation. But the general orientation of the masses
is quite clear (www.marx-ists.org/archive/trotsky/works/1936/witherfrance/03.htm).
Once again, the fact that it is Trotsky writing this does not make it
true. The question is: are there grounds for the IBTs view independent
of its falsified interpretation of Trotskys position? Or does theoretical
analysis lead to another conclusion?
Class political independence
The elementary political ideas of Marxism are dead simple. Marxists insist
that there is a fundamental antagonism in society between the capitalist
class and the working class. Hence, on the one hand, as long as the capitalists
still hold the political power, they will use it against the working class:
any concessions made to the working class will be taken back as soon as
the capitalists are pressed by a long downturn in the economy leading
to intensified competition. The working class therefore needs to organise
for political action to take the political power out of the hands of the
capitalists, and to begin the process of the socialist reordering of society
and overcoming private property and the state.
On the other hand, Marxism claims that all forms of socialism which are
not based on the working class taking the leadership of society - utopian,
ethical, christian, islamic, green, and so on - are dead ends. This is
partly because they leave untouched the fundamental antagonism between
labour and capital. It is partly because they endeavour to preserve and
promote the petty property rights and independence of farmers,
small businesses and intellectuals and managers: and these petty property
rights and independence naturally give rise both to capital,
and to the bureaucratic-coercive state.
The idea that the working class needs class political independence - its
own party based on its own interests - is therefore utterly central to
Marxism. Marx and Engels spent their lives after the defeat of the 1848
revolution fighting for nothing less - which led them to fight for an
international movement, reflecting the international character of the
working class as a class, and against Lassalles efforts to tie the
workers movement to the national state. They also fought for nothing
more: and therefore against tying the workers organisations to the
particular panaceas of Proudhon, Lassalle or Bakunin, among others; but
equally against Hyndmans efforts to make a particular dogmatic version
of Marxism into a minimum basis for a party.
Of course, there is a lot of theory behind these conclusions - and the
question of how to get there also poses more or less complex theoretical
problems. But the central ideas are simple.
The peoples front rests on the ideas that the divide between the
people and the monopolies (in modern terms the
multinationals), or between democratic capital and fascist
capital, or national capital and comprador capital,
is more important than the fundamental division between labour and capital.
It therefore entails repudiation of the basic ideas of Marxism. Thus far
comrade Davis is right (and he is not saying anything different from what
I said in my March 31 article). The working class can only defend its
interests effectively if it does not subordinate them to alliances, which
will inevitably prove to be no more than temporary, with sections of capital.
Class alliances
On the other hand, society does not consist only of the working class
and the capitalist class. The middle classes are different in the advanced
capitalist countries from those in the less developed countries: fewer
peasants and artisans, and a larger intelligentsia/managerial class. But
they are still there. Nor are the other classes, as the Lassalleans claimed,
merely one reactionary mass.
So even if the working class had organised itself into a mass workers
party with the goal of taking the political power away from the capitalist
class, it would still need to seek to lead - which implies making compromises
and partial alliances with - sections of the middle class.
The working class needs to take the lead in society. So at this level
the question posed is not one of blocs with parties. It is what programmatic
compromises with the distinct objective interests of the petty proprietors
are consistent with the working class struggling to lead the society.
This is the issue discussed in Engelss The peasant question in France
and Germany. Engels argues, for instance, that it is acceptable for the
workers party to promise the peasantry that a workers government
will not expropriate their holdings, or that it will offer limited protection
from certain sorts of fraud practised by the capitalist banks, etc on
the peasants. But it is not acceptable to promise the peasantry that their
holdings will be protected from competition or subsidised, or to promise
peasants (or artisans/small businesses) exemption from the demands of
the workers on issues of wages and conditions.
Bourgeois and petty-proprietor parties
The capitalist class is small relative to the size of modern societies.
It could not govern the society without the support of the middle classes.
This seemingly simple point is reflected in the character of capitalist
parties. No party anywhere - or, indeed, at any time since the rise
of capitalist states - stands for election on a promise to represent the
interests of big capital, as opposed to the workers and petty proprietors.
Nor is there such a thing as a mass party whose activist base is mainly
capitalists. Rather, capital rules through the petty proprietors. A bourgeois
party is just a petty-proprietor party which has got big enough
for the major capitalists to try to control through financial backing,
media support, promises and threats - and which is willing to succumb
to these blandishments. The various brands do not reflect
different class fractions. Rather, they represent different
ideological strategies for making an alliance between the capitalist class
and the petty proprietors (and, in some cases, the top layers of the working
class): democracy, religion, social conservatism, nationalism,
populism ...
A bourgeois party is just a petty-proprietor party which has got big enough
to allow the capitalists to govern through it. The converse of this is
that, even supposing the existence of a mass workers party based
on class independence, there can be no petty-proprietor party
which forms the basis of a class coalition between the workers and a section
of the petty proprietors on more than a short-term basis. Making an alliance
between the workers and a section of the petty proprietors means winning
a section of the petty proprietors to support the workers party,
not a strategic coalition with a petty-proprietor party or parties.
This does not mean that the workers party can do without tactics
towards the petty-proprietor parties or temporary blocs and agreements
with them. To refuse all such blocs and agreements would be to insist
on political impotence and an inability to intervene in actual political
life. But the key here is that these are tactical agreements between strategic
opponents. They do not imply a cessation of hostilities but - as Lenin
wrote in the passage quoted earlier - agreements for limited common action
on the basis that the political battle between the workers party
and the petty-proprietor parties continues even during the common action.
The line of least resistance
Class-political independent organisation of the working class is a difficult
path. It offends the general expectation in capitalist society that the
workers are subordinate to the capitalists (and the middle classes
expectation of a higher status than the workers). The capitalist state
actively resists it.
In this situation the line of least resistance is what Gramsci
called a corporatist approach. That is, that the working class
claims representation as a subordinate group, within the framework of
the nation, the constitution or some other petty-proprietor ideology,
or that it aspires to overcome class division: ie, to reduce
the superficial appearance of class division without overcoming its material
basis, the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie.
The result is not just mass working class support for bourgeois or petty-proprietor
parties, but also a tendency for workers parties themselves to be
incorporated within the bourgeois-party game by adopting leaderships and
politics which subordinate the working class to the state, or to alliances
with bourgeois parties, or whatever. We are now familiar with the phenomenon
of workers parties like the Labour Party and many others,
which can function as instruments through which the capitalist class governs.
When Lenin called the British Labour Party a bourgeois workers
party he meant something different, but the term is convenient and
useful. But there are many more petty-proprietor workers parties:
ie, ones which are committed to one or another form of petty-proprietor
ideology, but are not large enough for the capitalist class to seek to
govern through them.
The root cause is the fact that this is the line of least resistance.
Consequently it is utterly familiar that when a genuine political crisis
develops and the masses begin to break with simple support to their governors,
they turn first to parties committed to petty-proprietor ideologies. It
is a smaller step to take than the step of grasping the idea of class-political
independence all in one go. Thus, for example, the first phase of the
Russian Revolution saw a massive growth of the Mensheviks and Socialist
Revolutionaries.
This is all the more true in the situation which has actually prevailed
as a result of the course of the 20th century: the workers parties
created in the time of the Second International were captured by allegiance
to the bourgeois states in 1914-18; the communist parties, created to
fight for class political independence under these conditions, were captured
by the Soviet bureaucracy, which was a segment of the petty proprietors;
the petty-proprietor Stalinist ideology of national roads, party monolithism
and the peoples front has captured most of the small groups to their
left. As a result, the groups and individuals who genuinely fight for
class political independence are everywhere small and scattered.
Dynamics and contradictory votes
On this basis it should be possible to see why a vote for a class-collaborationist
workers party can have a contradictory character - depending
on the immediate political dynamics. It is undoubtedly a vote for class
collaboration. But it can also and simultaneously in the same individual
voter be a vote for class independence. The class collaborationists present
themselves, sometimes very strongly, sometimes in the most attenuated
fashion possible (as in the Brownite shift of Labours
2005 election campaign) as political representatives of the working class.
They do not thereby cease to be class collaborationists. A vote for them
may be merely a perceived vote for the lesser evil, like a Democrat vote
in the US. But it can express a partial, incomplete and contradictory
aspiration to class political independence. This, I take it, is what the
IBT mean by the latent contradiction embodied in a bourgeois-workers
party.
The task of the advocates of class-political independence (Marxists, communists)
is to find the road to develop this contradiction, to break from the class-collaborationist
leaders those who aspire to class political independence but do not yet
understand it. This is the ground of communist electoral (and other) tactics
towards the Labour Party. The problem is how to dramatise the fact that
the class-collaborationists claim to represent the interests of
the working class is, in fact, inconsistent with their class-collaborationism.
Yes, comrade Davis, contrary to your sneers about tactics, this is a tactical
problem.
Are popular fronts different?
The IBT comrades insist that popular fronts are somehow different and
worse than the class-collaborationism of the Labour Party as a bourgeois
workers party: remember, a workers party through
which the capitalist class governs us.
In the name of avoiding the touch of pitch of popular-frontism,
the IBT comrades prettify the class-collaborationist social democratic
parties. They are somehow better because they are based on the organisation
of the working class (1987 exchange) or reformist workers
parties that draw a crude class line electorally (Davis article).
But this is a complete misconception. The Labour Party was founded in
1918 against the communists. It was founded on loyalty to the British
state and led by people who had loyally supported feeding the European
workers into a mincing machine in 1914-18. Its loyalty has been rewarded:
since 1945 it has been one of the two poles of British bourgeois politics,
and has governed - 1945-51, 1964-70, 1974-79, 1997 to date - in the interests
of imperialist capital. A vote for Labour is a vote for class collaboration
organised through the relation between Labour, the trade unions and the
British state.
Here - contrary to comrade Daviss assertion - the IBTs position
is by no means unique. Reject popular frontism - vote Labour
is the Alliance for Workers Libertys approach to Respect.
But an unqualified vote for Labour in 2005 is a vote for the working class
collaborating with the British state in British imperialisms war
on Iraq ... and all the rest of the New Labour crap. A vote for Bliar
is a vote for the British imperialist state and British imperialist capital.
But there is nothing new here. A vote for Wilson, for Attlee, for Macdonald,
for Henderson was the same.
The truth is that social democracy and popular-frontism are different
forms of class collaborationism, but they are both class collaborationism
nevertheless. There is no difference in principle. Both a vote for a social
democratic party and a vote for a social democratic or Stalinist party
engaged in a peoples front are in slightly different
ways votes for class collaboration. Both are equally capable of also and
contradictorily expressing an aspiration to class independence.
Where there is a difference is in the appropriate tactics towards them.
In the case of the peoples front, the class collaborationism of
the workers parties is expressed by the presence of phantoms
of the bourgeoisie in the front and their veto over the fronts
policy. It is easy to dramatise our rejection of this class collaborationism
by focusing on our opposition to the candidates of petty-proprietor parties
and movements. In the case of the social democracy, class collaborationism
is expressed in relation to the nation and the state power. Focusing on
this question is more difficult. It involves selecting contemporary issues
which critically express the choice between loyalty to the nation-state
and loyalty to the international working class.
In the 2005 general election we - the CPGB - have chosen the question
of the Iraq war as the way to focus this question. Other elections would
imply other choices.
Respect
On the scale of British politics as a whole Respect is a small and unimportant
phenomenon. It is what, in my March 31 article, I called an unpopular
front: one in which a small communist party (here the Socialist
Workers Party) uses popular frontism to try to give guarantees to the
trade union and Labour lefts that if you will get into bed with
us we wont threaten your class-collaborationism.
Given Respects marginality, it would be defensible in principle
either simply to give support to all Respect candidates (because the SWPs
imagined alliance with islamists is utterly marginal to the main character
of Respect as an SWP front and to the overall dynamics of British society,
and a vote for Respect is really a vote for the SWP), or to reject Respect
altogether (because it is merely a sectarian front for the SWP).
The trouble with these approaches has three aspects. The first is that
the British Marxist left needs to reassert the fundamental politics of
class independence after a century which has been dominated by social
democratic and Stalinist class-collaborationism.
The second is that British Marxists need to learn how to handle popular
frontism when it appears on a larger scale than Respect (which it undoubtedly
will when the present two-party polarity does begin to break down more
seriously than it has so far). The Oehlerite sectarianism of the IBT and
similar groups, and the pro-Labour pseudo-class politics of the AWL, will
be worse than useless in those circumstances. So will any tactic based
on critical support for the peoples front as a whole
which does not attempt to draw the class line between the candidates of
workers organisations and the phantoms of the bourgeoisie. In this
sense our line on Respect for the 2005 election is preparation for future
and more serious peoples front projects.
The third is that, while Respect is small and unimportant on the scale
of British politics, the SWP has to date survived, while the other, relatively
large organisations of the British far left - the old official
CPGB, Militant, Workers Revolutionary Party and International Marxist
Group - have fallen apart or got much smaller. The result is that the
SWP, and hence Respect, is large and important on the scale of the British
Marxist left. Respect is, hopefully, a culminating stage in the SWPs
evolution towards official communism and peoples frontism,
which began in the late 1970s with the Anti-Nazi League. If we are to
save as many SWP members as possible for class politics, we need tactics
towards Respect which express sharply the character of this evolution
and attempt to draw the line between class independence and class collaboration.
Propaganda group?
IBT comrades have argued in the past that this line would be appropriate
to an organisation which regrouped a large part of the workers
vanguard (the layer of working class activists, currently scattered
among the trade unions, the Labour Party, the left groups, and various
local and single-issue campaigns and projects). But we are a small propaganda
group, whose task is to win forces to true Marxism away from
the existing fake left. This requires us to make our positions
utterly clear and sharp: to use an expression which CPGB comrades have
employed, to make angular polemics; to use one common on the
far left, to bend the stick. We can only achieve this, they
say, by outright rejection of popular frontist projects like Respect.
The AWL has made very similar arguments against the CPGBs positions
both on Respect and on Iraq.
As applied to these issues, this is an utter misconception, and one whose
consequences would be tragic if they were not so ludicrously trivial.
It is true that the CPGB, the AWL and the IBT are all small propaganda
groups and that our press is read overwhelmingly by existing activists
of the left. This is reflected in our case by the choices we have made
about the character of the Weekly Worker.
Comrade Davis quotes Trotsky as saying - wholly correctly - that communists
must speak the truth to the masses, no matter how bitter it may
be. The problem with angular polemics and bending
the stick is that it precisely risks not telling the truth.
James Robertson of the Spartacists in the 1970s wanted an angular
polemic with the other Trotskyists, and hence came out with the line:
no support to workers parties engaged in a popular front. But to
justify this line the comrades had to adopt both a theoretical falsification
(the idea that the contradiction in class-collaborationist workers
parties is suppressed by the peoples front policy) and
a historical falsification: the falsification of Trotskys views
in the 1930s by selective quotation, continued in comrade Daviss
article.
Sean Matgamna sought to bend the stick against the fake
left or kitsch left over Iraq and Galloway. The result
is that the AWL has bought on a large scale the spin put out by the media
operations of the British and US states and continues, for the sake of
its line, to peddle the bizarre idea that imperialism set out to bring
bourgeois democracy to Iraq and that the imperialist troops protect
the infant Iraqi workers movement.
Both are examples of allowing the desire to create clear red water
between the politics of the small propaganda group and its larger rivals
to lead to distortion and falsification.
Yes, comrades, tell the workers the truth. The truth about Respect is
that a vote for Respect is a vote for class collaboration - because it
is a vote for the SWPs alliance of Marxists and islamists.
It is simultaneously a vote for class independence - because it is a vote
against subordination to the British states war in Iraq. Communists
argue for a vote for working class Respect candidates to drive that contradiction
towards class political independence.
The truth about Labour is that a vote for Labour is also a vote for class
collaboration - both because of the whole history of Labour, and because
Labour is right now in government. It is simultaneously a vote for class
independence - because Labour is still the trade unions party,
still calls itself Labour, and so on. Communists argue for a vote for
anti-war Labour candidates to drive this contradiction towards class political
independence.
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