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Weekly Worker 658 Thursday February 1 2007 Subscribe to the Weekly Worker

What sort of programme?

Members of the Campaign for a Marxist Party in the Midlands area met last Saturday (January 22) in Birmingham. Dave Spencer reports

Fighting fund
Generous sacrifice

Last week I was pretty confident we would easily exceed our £500 target in this, our first fighting fund of 2007. We did, after all, already have £420 with a week to go.

I was not disappointed. The very first envelope I opened contained a gift of £100 - comrade TG’s “usual half-yearly donation in lieu of expenses”! An excellent display of generosity and sacrifice in recognition of the value of our paper. But that’s not all - by a long chalk.

I must thank comrades GJ, FL and SW for their £20 cheques, not to mention JL, GL, FP and CV, who all gave £10. I can also report two contributions made via our website - a further £10 each from comrades TK and RJ. They were two out of 24,884 visitors to www.cpgb.org.uk last week.

We end January with a healthy £640 - nowhere near enough to recoup all the additional expenses incurred by our office and printshop move, but a help. Now we need to repeat the success in February.

Our move revealed a serious fault in our printing machine, which may mean we have to change our printing arrangements altogether. Either way, the next few months could turn out to be very costly.

Yet we have ambitious plans, with this paper central to them all. Whether in support of the Campaign for a Marxist Party, Hands Off the People of Iran and Communist Students or in helping redraft the CPGB Draft programme, the Weekly Worker is vital.

Robbie Rix

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The main discussion focussed on the development of a programme for the CMP and was introduced by Phil Sharpe.

Phil argued that the CMP programme needed to appeal to a new generation of workers and should not be a programme just written by the left for the left. We need a propaganda element to make the arguments for communism. We cannot assume a vanguard of workers with socialist consciousness, as, for example, Lenin could in 1917 or Trotsky in 1938.

Social democracy and Stalinism have failed and the left groups are turning to reformism. Underlying our propaganda must be a Marxist understanding of global capitalism - it is fairly clear that Lenin’s analysis of imperialism has been superseded by events, he argued.

The CMP programme must also be an action plan. The Weekly Worker has featured the debate between, on the one hand, the notion of a minimum-maximum programme and, on the other, a transitional programme. This debate is crucial and central to it is the question of workers’ control. Is the CPGB’s idea of extreme democracy part of a transitional prelude to communism?

We have to recognise there are different and opposing views among Marxists. Therefore the programme should be polemical - arguing against crucial strategic errors in opposing programmes. For example, we need now to have a credible alternative to the various forms of opportunism supported by the Socialist Workers Party and Socialist Party. Also we need to discuss whether the Labour Party can still be described as a ‘bourgeois workers’ party’. And can the present trade unions revive class struggle?

A fourth aspect of the programme, according to Phil, is one of theoretical discovery. There are questions on which Marxists need to do some investigation. As examples he suggested ecology, crime from the standpoint of the victim, immigration, the family and sexual relations, racism and fascism, and religion.

In discussion one comrade raised the issue of party and class and the question of Leninist vanguardism. The CMP needs to take a position on that. We need to oppose directly the bureaucratic centralism and undemocratic regimes of the left groups. Linked to that are the questions of whether we are in favour of a one-party state and what exactly the dictatorship of the proletariat meant. This led to a lively debate.

Another comrade raised the whole matter of the transition to communism. Would there be a role for the market and what about encouraging the role of communes or cooperatives within capitalism as a part of the transition? Also how do we overcome the problem of the ‘artificial needs’ created by capitalism?

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