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Weekly Worker 606 Thursday January 5 2006
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Up a notch
This may be the first Weekly Worker for three weeks, but
a number of CPGB comrades have seen very little by way of a break.
That is because comrades in London have been busy - some of them
working virtually non-stop - helping to ensure our move to new premises
went according to plan (I can’t say without a hitch).
Our new offices and printshop area are more centrally located and
should enable us to respond more quickly and efficiently to events
in 2006. Hopefully the quality of our paper will improve both politically
and technically over the coming year also.
Which is why we need a constant flow of funds from readers. Although
in 2005 receipts from our fighting funds were generally good - we
mainly achieved our monthly £500 target - we fell rather short in
December.
This was despite a couple of excellent gifts: MM, in recognition
of the Weekly Worker as a “vital outlet for Marxist ideas
and discussion”, sent us a magnificent £70, while SM matched his
£50 resubscription with a donation of the same amount. Thanks to
them, as well as FK, who apologises for not giving more than a tenner
as he is on the dole, not to mention KL (£25), FJ (£20), LP and
SC (£5 each).
We also received two £10 contributions via our online PayPal facility
- thank you, comrades TT and RL (although two out of almost 37,000
readers since the last issue is not a high proportion). Unfortunately,
though, we raised only £320 in December - hopefully a glitch, since
we certainly need to step things up another notch. And we have upped
our monthly target to £600.
While last month’s fund was disappointing, the response to our
appeal for regular standing order donations has been encouraging,
with a good number of new and increased SOs. More details next week.
Robbie Rix
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On the eve of the Socialist Workers Partys annual conference this
weekend (January 7-8), SW Kenning looks at what is going on behind the
scenes and the official claims of one magnificent success leading to another
Pre-conference bulletin No3 should be of interest to the wider
workers’ movement. Why? Firstly, simply because the SWP matters. It plays
a leading role in the Stop the War Coalition, Respect and Unite Against
Fascism and its activists staff many trade union committees. More importantly
- much more importantly - any attempt to build a mass revolutionary workers’
party that tries to avoid the SWP, or go round its machine, cadre and
undoubted influence, is either pure self-deception or a cruel joke. Either
way, all such schemes - in the Labour Party and out - are bound to fail.
To build a party in more than name one must go through the SWP.
First and foremost that means an ideological war. The SWP must be politically
defeated.
So when veteran SWPer John Molyneux announces his candidature for the
forthcoming election to the central committee it is vital to take note.
Not least because of the undemocratic slate system, he has little or no
chance of being elected. Yet the simple fact that he is standing is an
event in itself. For the last 15 or 20 years elections to the SWP’s central
committee have been uncontested!
On what platform is comrade Molyneux standing? There is nothing militantly
Leninist or particularly radical about it. Indeed, as he confesses himself,
it is a “simple platform” … and it conspicuously fails to challenge the
central committee when it comes to today’s strategy, not least the disastrous
Respect popular front. A weakness fully exploited in the central committee’s
reply: “John’s complaints [are] about a central committee that no longer
exists … What are his complaints about the present CC?” .
Comrade Molyneux highlights the lack of honesty that has built up over
the last decade or so and how the central committee assesses the results
of political interventions. Despite repeated boasts about the role of
the SWP there has been a decline - both in membership and Socialist
Worker circulation. Molyneux calls for honesty and a modicum of
democratic accountability.
On one level, given the general atmosphere in the SWP, it is no surprise
that Molyneux constitutes almost the sole critical voice to be found in
the Pre-conference bulletin Nos 1-3 (see Weekly Worker November
24 and December 8 for the truly dire
nature of the bulk of the ‘debate’ so far).
His intervention actually contains little that is new. Last year he raised
his rather mealy-mouthed doubts about the lack of meaningful inner-SWP
democracy (see Weekly Worker November
18 2004 for our comments on his original critique).
Nevertheless, to read a leading member deflate SWP hyperbole about its
size and the circulation of its press is confirmation for this paper of
what we always knew. We have long catalogued the decline of the SWP amidst
the hysterical promises to an increasing bewildered and demoralised rank
and file that the imminent breakthrough will come with the next demo,
the next election.
There are not 10,000 fighters for Cliffism. Nor has the SWP even got
5,000 members. Given those who do not pay dues, real membership
- as opposed to those recruits made and lost in the space of a year -
the figure is much nearer 2,000.
Molyneux wants an explanation. Why despite all the hype has the SWP declined
in recent years? The central committee replies that the SWP’s united front
work only produces slow results. This claim hardly matches the experience
of the communist parties in the 1920s. Their membership did soar. It was
sectarianism which saw them stagnate and then rapidly lose membership.
Popular front projects too - not dissimilar to Respect - added many recruits,
albeit at the price of derailing them politically.
Given the bureaucratic centralist nature of its regime - as we have argued
many times before - a revolution in the SWP must begin above. Molyneux
might or might not rally support. However, even if he is fantastically
successful, that will result not in a civil war and the ousting of the
John Rees clique. Rather it will result in a purge - of Molyneux and co.
Despite this, any crack in the facade of SWP uniformity must be a good
thing. It will encourage more of the comrades to think.
Despite some telling comments, Molyneux’s platform is extremely weak.
The central committee has little difficulty in landing some effective
counter-punches. For example, he feels the need to end his contribution
defensively - to “avoid misunderstandings”. He stresses his complete
loyalty “to the historic positions of the SWP and the IS”, he also wants
it known that he “strongly” supports the SWP’s “united front initiatives,
including and especially the Respect project”.
In other words, apart from the culture of overblown hyperbole emanating
from HQ and the lack of democracy, everything the organisation is doing
today is fine and dandy.
However, in the past - “particularly in the 90s”, perhaps - these
same flaws produced serious political deviations. The lack of democracy
compounded the problem in the sense that without “adequate and
honest information about the state of the party it is very difficult for
[members] to participate in democratic debate about its strategy and tactics.
Moreover they are not really expected to do so, whatever the formal democratic
procedures.”
In other words, at the bottom of the problems of the SWP’s awful culture
lie strategic questions -“the question of perspective”, as comrade Molyneux
puts it.
Thus, despite Molyneux’s ritualistic genuflection towards the positions
of today’s leadership, it is an inescapable fact that his criticisms,
even by implication, relate to the contemporary “question of perspective”
- that is, Respect and his organisation’s dominating and controlling role
in that popular frontist party formation. Form and content make up a dialectical
unity - they cannot be separated. One cannot be good, the other bad. If
one is bad, so is the other.
Comrade Molyneux has already described the practice of denunciation and
cold-shouldering. Any half-serious criticism of the leadership line brings
down an avalanche. Raising differences, he has said, is “a highly disagreeable
experience with little prospect of success” (Weekly Worker November
18 2004) - probably a gross understatement.
The hysterical reaction of comrade Dave Crouch to our reprint of his
contribution in Pre-conference bulletin No1, which criticised the
populist drift of Socialist Worker from a Harmanite viewpoint,
gives a chilling glimpse of how dissenters feel intimidated and fearful
(Weekly Worker December 8 2005). In
a frantic statement to this paper, the comrade declared that he was “not
a member of” the CPGB - as if anyone other than a witch-hunting bureaucrat
could have made such a ridiculous charge on the basis of anything comrade
Crouch had written.
But then the SWP employs and is led by witch-hunting bureaucrats.
John Molyneux: Why I intend to stand
Central Committee: Reply to Molyneux
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