home
contact
action
weekly worker
respect the unity coalition
european social forum
theory
resources
what we fight for
programme
join
search
communist university
links
our history

Weekly Worker 637 Thursday August 31 2006 Subscribe to the Weekly Worker

Summer Offensive 2006

Conscious planning

Howard Roak reflects on this year’s Summer Offensive - our annual two-month-long fundraising campaign - and offers a suggestion or two for next year

Fighting fund
Familiar

After a couple of months absence the Robbie Rix column is back. But I assure you I haven’t been relaxing with my feet up during the Summer Offensive. I’ve been hard at work dreaming up new ways to persuade all those web readers of ours to contribute to our £500 monthly fighting fund.

For example, last week we had 18,624 hits (remarkably consistent, by the way: there were 57,096 - almost exactly three times that - since the last issue was published on August 10, three weeks ago). Yet not one of them made a donation via PayPal over the last seven days.

I can report some income from familiar sources, however. Comrade TR sends us his usual monthly cheque, accompanied by his usual one-liner: “Please find enclosed £60 for papers and fund.” Which prompts my usual grateful thanks. We also received £10 from comrade SM - an add-on to his annual resub. Thanks also this week to comrades DO (£10) and LP (£25) for their monthly standing order, just come through.

So we start September’s fund (yes, including a bit of August!) with £105. There should be no problem making the full £500. But how about all you web readers making a contribution?

Click here to download a standing order form - regular income is particular important in order to plan ahead. Even £5/month can help!
Send cheques, payable to Weekly Worker, BCM Box 928, London WC1N 3XX
Donate online:

At the end of the first day’s sessions at this year’s Communist University, John Bridge reported to comrades gathered for the August 12 Summer Offensive celebration meal that just over £23,000 had been made towards our June-July target of £30k. So, despite extending this year’s SO by two weeks, we had a shortfall. But it was not a disastrous one, especially given some of the other positive developments the 2006 SO was notable for. However, there are clearly problems with the current format of the campaign that the organisation must think about in a clear-headed and creative way.

Our comrades will be discussing these questions when they gather for the next Party aggregate on September 9. I want to use this final SO column of mine to flag up some of the issues I think need to be chewed over by that meeting. Also, I will suggest ways in which the obvious weaknesses the campaign has revealed can be addressed and, I am confident, overcome.

So what are the key lessons of this year’s fund drive?

There is no question that it showed a level of inertia or complacency in our own ranks and in our broader periphery. Some 130 people contributed to the campaign, with the lion’s share of the cash being raised by party ‘veterans’ - comrades with four or more SOs under their belts. Clearly, this is a small number compared to the number of people who actually read our paper every week and those who have a degree of sympathy with its project.

Also, with a few honourable exceptions, this year’s campaign saw little in the way of real initiative from either our veterans or from newer recruits. Indeed, longer-term cadre now tend to budget for the SO simply as an annual party ‘tax’ on them as individual members.

In turn, this produces a tendency - nothing more than a tendency at this stage, I underline - to fragment the party during the two-month drive, as comrades fall back on their private resources to achieve their target. They cut back on items of personal expenditure, they take extra shifts at work or they take out loans. Again this year, there was little in the way of our comrades turning outwards, using the politics of the organisation to win donations from sympathetic readers in the movement.

There are good and bad reasons for this. Certainly bad ones include the general level of our education and party culture. However, the main explanation must be found in what surrounds us, in the generalised political decay and organisational decline of the ostensibly revolutionary left internationally.

Our comrades do not operate in a positively challenging political environment, where people who call themselves Marxists are honestly engaging with ideas, are willing to think and thus offer practical support to a paper such as the Weekly Worker. Of course, this is not new - it has been like this for some time in the workers’ movement. However, as we have pointed out, in previous years we have occasionally been lucky with the timing of our SOs - or rather, we used our gumption as an organisation to make our own luck. Our work in the Socialist Alliance is one example that springs to mind; the mass anti-war mobilisations are another. In the absence of ‘lucky’ moments such as these, the 2006 campaign - like the previous year’s - has emphasised to us the scale of the task that faces genuine Marxists.

In this politically impoverished environment, we must guard against our Summer Offensives becoming technical exercises. For instance, while it was positive that this year’s campaign saw various party ‘businesses’ revamped, we have to emphasise politics as the motor that drives the SO, not the law of value. Thus, there is a need to recast the SO in the light of the agreed perspectives of the organisation and the tasks that flow from them.

These tasks are not - as suggested by some refugees from the Socialist Workers Party who have recently glanced off our periphery - to ‘get out there’ and ‘get our hands dirty’. We are facing a left in political meltdown. The answer to this drawn out programmatic crisis is not to hand out more leaflets, to flog more papers or shout really loudly into more megaphones. We are not snotty about any of this campaigning work; however, to present it in and of itself as the answer to the degenerate state of our movement is idiotic.

Thinking about it in this way, it is perhaps quite odd that our Summer Offensive effectively ends before the Communist University. In terms of our organisation actually turning outwards, showcasing our open approach to politics, engaging with our sympathetic periphery and exemplifying the need for serious thought and theoretical clarification, the CU is the high point of our political calendar as things currently stand. Indeed, in the week of this year’s school some £8,500 came in from fees, literature stalls, the sale of food and drink plus individual donations. While most of this cash appeared after we could justify including it in the SO total, it meant that the event easily beat any seven-day period during the SO itself for money raised. (The next best week was the ninth, which saw a comparatively small £3,342 stumped up).

So it is odd that we do not make the CU the centrepiece of our annual fundraising drive rather than something comrades think about as a separate event to be organised, built and paid for distinct from the SO itself. The Communist University is when the Weekly Worker - possibly the most successful publishing project the left can currently boast of - goes ‘live’. Actively seeking sponsorship and financial support for it, campaigning to build it instead of simply announcing it is on, using more imagination in its preparation and promotion can give our annual SO the campaigning cutting edge that it currently lacks.

At least, that is my opinion. I look forward to a lively debate on this and related questions at our aggregate.

Finally, let me thank all comrades who have contributed - at whatever level - to this year’s Summer Offensive and, on behalf of the organisation as a whole, congratulate those who raised particularly impressive amounts or showed some real imagination in going about the task of hitting their personal targets - comrades Mike Macnair, Peter Manson and our marathon translation man, Ben Lewis.

Print this page


Comment on this article

First Name Last name
Your email address