Against
The Sectarians
Mike
is also factually incorrect when he claims it was,
“the
Georgist electoral movement Engels recommended to Florence Kelley
Wischnewetsky”.
Engels
did no such thing. Quite the opposite. In the US Preface to “The
Condition of The Working Class”, Engels attacked the narrow
programme of Henry George, saying,
“And
it seems to me that the Henry George platform, in its present shape,
is too narrow to form the basis for anything but a local movement, or
at best for a short-lived phase of the general movement.”
And
in his letter to Florence Kelley Wischnewetsky he makes his
opposition to sects like George's even clearer writing,
“The
great thing is to get the working class to move
as a class;
that once obtained, they will soon find the right direction, and all
who resist, H.G. or Powderly, will be left out in the cold with small
sects of their own.”
Rather
Engels saw the German-American Marxists as having a key role to play,
and his advice was for them to orientate to the Knights of Labour,
which “aimed at the liberation of the workers by means of
co-operatives. They took in all skilled and even unskilled trades,
without discrimination on account of sex, race, nationality or
religion. The organisation reached the highest point of its activity
during the eighties, when, under the pressure of the masses, the
leaders of the Order were compelled to consent to an extensive strike
movement. Its membership at that time was over 700,000, including
60,000 Negroes. However, on account of the opportunist tactics of the
leaders, who were opposed to revolutionary class struggle, the order
forfeited its prestige among the masses. Its activity expired the
next decade.” (Note 2 to US preface)
Engels
was all in favour of the various socialist sects uniting, he wrote,
“To bring about this result, the unification of the various
independent bodies into one national Labor Army, with no matter how
inadequate a provisional platform, provided it be a truly
working-class platform — that is the next great step to be
accomplished in America. To effect this, and to make that platform
worthy of the cause, the Socialist Labor Party can contribute a great
deal, if they will only act in the same way as the European
Socialists have acted at the time when they were but a small minority
of the working class.”
But,
as his comment above demonstrates his overriding concern, as had been
that of Marx in setting up the First International was to fuse that
socialist movement with the real working class movement. It was the
sectarianism of Henry George, and of the Socialist Labour Party in
failing to heed that advice that allowed the Opportunism of the
leadership of the Knights of Labour to go unchallenged, without an
alternative for the membership being provided. Indeed, that is a
direct parallel to the sectarianism of the British Left in relation
to the LP today.
Mike's
comments about the SDF and ILP, acting to pressurise the Trade Union
leaders, from outside, to set up the LP, because they could no longer
guarantee the workers votes for the Liberals, are equally misplaced.
As Engels pointed out, the Tories were themselves using Keir Hardie
to split the Liberal vote, and financed his 1892 election campaign.
And in 1895, when the ILP stood 28 candidates, all of them including
Hardie were defeated. As for the SDF I have elsewhere -
1905 Reform & Revolution
– described the role played by one of its members John Ward who was
leader of the Navvies Union in London, and who was at the meetings of
the Labour Representation Committee. Ward was one of the first
Labour MP's, being elected in Stoke in 1906, and moved increasingly
rightward, recruiting Labour Battalions as part of the intervention
forces against the Bolsheviks. In the above article I have given
extensive reports on the 1905 TUC Congress held in Stoke, where the
decisions on setting up the Labour Party were taken. It includes,
details of the meetings held around the Congress too. I don't think
it is at all true that it was pressure from sects like the SDF or
ILP, let alone their electoral success that led the TUC leaders to
set up the LP. I think it was genuine rank and file pressure from
the actual working-class, alongside the need to address the attacks
that were being waged against them in Parliament and in the Courts,
which brought that about.
Mike
says,
“But
it (The Left) is
in a position to change the relationship of forces both within and
outside the Labour Party by uniting itself to fight openly for
Marxist politics. Its refusal to do so is a matter of the subjective
choices made by small groups due to a false conception of the
‘revolutionary party’. ”
This
reminds me of Marx's critique of Proudhon in the “Poverty of
Philosophy”, that I referred to earlier.
Marx
writes,
“When,
consequently, in order to save principles as much as to save history,
we ask ourselves why a particular principle was manifested in the
11th century or in the 18th century rather than in any other, we are
necessarily forced to examine minutely what men were like in the 11th
century, what they were like in the 18th, what were their respective
needs, their productive forces, their mode of production, the raw
materials of their production – in short, what were the relations
between man and man which resulted from all these conditions of
existence. To get to the bottom of all these questions – what is
this but to draw up the real, profane history of men in every century
and to present these men as both the authors and the actors of their
own drama? But the moment you present men as the actors and authors
of their own history, you arrive – by detour – at the real
starting point, because you have abandoned those eternal principles
of which you spoke at the outset...
Just
as the economists
are the scientific representatives of the bourgeois class, so the
Socialists
and Communists
are the theoreticians of the proletarian class. So long as the
proletariat is not yet sufficiently developed to constitute itself as
a class, and consequently so long as the struggle itself of the
proletariat with the bourgeoisie has not yet assumed a political
character, and the productive forces are not yet sufficiently
developed in the bosom of the bourgeoisie itself to enable us to
catch a glimpse of the material conditions necessary for the
emancipation of the proletariat and for the formation of a new
society, these theoreticians are merely utopians who, to meet the
wants of the oppressed classes, improvise systems and go in search of
a regenerating science. But in the measure that history moves
forward, and with it the struggle of the proletariat assumes clearer
outlines, they no longer need to seek science in their minds; they
have only to take note of what is happening before their eyes and to
become its mouthpiece. So long as they look for science and merely
make systems, so long as they are at the beginning of the struggle,
they see in poverty nothing but poverty, without seeing in it the
revolutionary, subversive side, which will overthrow the old society.
From this moment, science, which is a product of the historical
movement, has associated itself consciously with it, has ceased to be
doctrinaire and has become revolutionary.”
But,
what is this development of the productive forces that “
are not yet sufficiently developed in the bosom of the bourgeoisie
itself to enable us to catch a glimpse of the material conditions
necessary for the emancipation of the proletariat and for the
formation of a new society? It
cannot be simply the development of Trades Union struggle, whose
limits Marx had so lucidly described in Value, Price and Profit. Nor
can it be the kind of Lassallean Statism that he condemned in the
Critique of the Gotha Programme, and which Engels condemned in
numerous places including his Critique of the Erfurt Programme. It
can, in fact, only be in the basic element of Marx and Engels ideas
about the working-class liberating itself through its own
self-activity. And that is what Marx sets out here when he says that
it is to be found in the ideas of the Utopians. They were Utopians
only in the sense that they did not and could not at that stage
understand the role of the working-class in bringing about these new
forms “within the bosom of the bourgeoisie”. In particular, Marx
could not be clearer about what he meant in this respect than when he
wrote in his Inaugural Address to the First International,
“But
there was in store a still greater victory of the political economy
of labor over the political economy of property. We speak of the
co-operative movement, especially the co-operative factories raised
by the unassisted efforts of a few bold “hands”. The value of
these great social experiments cannot be overrated. By deed instead
of by argument, they have shown that production on a large scale, and
in accord with the behests of modern science, may be carried on
without the existence of a class of masters employing a class of
hands; that to bear fruit, the means of labor need not be monopolized
as a means of dominion over, and of extortion against, the laboring
man himself; and that, like slave labor, like serf labor, hired labor
is but a transitory and inferior form, destined to disappear before
associated labor plying its toil with a willing hand, a ready mind,
and a joyous heart. In England, the seeds of the co-operative system
were sown by Robert Owen; the workingmen’s experiments tried on the
Continent were, in fact, the practical upshot of the theories, not
invented, but loudly proclaimed, in 1848.”
In
fact, this can be read as following almost entirely logically from
Marx's comments above. We can have no doubt about exactly what this
development is of the productive forces that provides a “glimpse
of the material conditions necessary for the emancipation of the
proletariat and for the formation of a new society?” when
we combined it with Marx's statement in Capital,
“The
co-operative factories of the labourers themselves represent within
the old form the first sprouts of the new, although they naturally
reproduce, and must reproduce, everywhere in their actual
organisation all the shortcomings of the prevailing system. But the
antithesis between capital and labour is overcome within them, if at
first only by way of making the associated labourers into their own
capitalist, i.e., by enabling them to use the means of production for
the employment of their own labour. They show how a new mode of
production naturally grows out of an old one, when the development of
the material forces of production and of the corresponding forms of
social production have reached a particular stage. Without the
factory system arising out of the capitalist mode of production there
could have been no co-operative factories. Nor could these have
developed without the credit system arising out of the same mode of
production. The credit system is not only the principal basis for the
gradual transformation of capitalist private enterprises. into
capitalist stock companies, but equally offers the means for the
gradual extension of co-operative enterprises on a more or less
national scale.”
Mike
fails to ask the question of what is the basis of these “subjective
choices” their false conception of the revolutionary party.
Marxists have frequently theorised the role of the Trades Union
bureaucracy, and understood it as stemming from the material
conditions within society, in particular the role of that
bureaucracy, in standing between the workers and the bosses, its role
dependent upon a continuation of the existing system in order that
they can continue to act as such a mediator. Yet, it has not,
located the explanation for its own role, its own actions in the same
way! In fact, the sects are almost exclusively made up of
intellectuals and academics - even those who have taken up employment
largely come from, and still orient to this milieu. It is not
surprising then that such individuals privilege the role of ideas
over material conditions when theorising class struggle. They see
their role as educators of and lecturers to, the working-class,
administrators and organisers of its actions, rather than
facilitators of the workers own self-organisation. In an article
written 20 years ago, the role of the material conditions, the social
background of this Left was described by Simon Clarke in an article
“Crisis of Socialism Or Crisis Of the State?”, in Capital &
Class 42, Winter 1990. He writes,
“The
social base of state socialism lies in the stratum of intellectual
workers, including such groups as managers, administrators,
scientists, technicians, engineers, social workers and teachers as
well as the intelligentsia more narrowly defined.” These groups
believe that the key to a more just society lies “in their
mobilisation of their technical, administrative and intellectual
expertise... The ability of this stratum to achieve its rationalist
ambitions depends on its having access to positions of social and
political power.”
So, it is not
surprising then that we see class struggle represented as being a
matter of ideological struggle, represented by the need to pass this
or that resolution, to win control of this or that union or Labour
Movement organisation, and the way this plays into the factional
struggles of the sects. It is not surprising that working-class
“self-activity” is reduced to nothing more than Economistic
struggles rather than a struggle to break out of the constraints of
existing structures, and to create new alternative working-class
structures imminently opposed to those of Capital and the social
relation it reproduces, including the ideas that flow from it.
Clarke
continues,
Kronstadt Sailors |
“For
the working-class the Party is a means of mobilising and generalising
its opposition to Capital and its State, and of building autonomous
forms of collective organisation, while for the intellectual stratum
it is a means of achieving power over capital and the state... As
soon as the party has secured state power, by whatever means, it has
fulfilled its positive role as far as the intellectual stratum is
concerned. The latter's task is now to consolidate and exploit its
position of power to secure the implementation of the Party's
programme in the interests of the 'working class'. Once the Party
has seized power, any opposition it encounters from the working class
is immediately identified as sectional or factional opposition to the
interests of the working class as a whole, the latter being
identified with the Party as its self-conscious representative.”
Clarke
echoes the view expressed by Draper saying,
“The
distinction between the Bolshevik and social democratic variants of
state socialism should not be ignored, but it is more a matter of
degree than of substance. The 'degeneration' of the Russian
Revolution was not a matter of Lenin's intolerance, nor of Trotsky's
militarism, nor of Stalin's personality, nor of the economic
backwardness nor of the relatively small size of the Russian working
class, nor of the autocratic character of the Russian State, nor of
the embattled position of the revolutionary regime, although all
these factors played their part in determining the extent of the
degeneration. The degeneration was already inherent in the class
character of the revolution which underlay the statist conception of
socialism which it adopted as its project.”
Moreover,
Mike McNair's conception of sect, and sectarianism is completely
misplaced. An organisation of 1 may not be a sect or sectarian,
whereas an organisation of 1 million can be! What makes an
organisation a sect and its actions sectarian is not its size, or
even its refusal to join with others, but the fact that it places its
own interests above those of the class as a whole. It is not
sectarian to remain independent of other sects, and to refuse to join
with them, if doing so would mean being tied to their sectarian
attitude to the class. The first responsibility of a Marxist is to
the class, and its interests. That means doing whatever can be done
to assist the class in its own self-organisation, and self-activity
irrespective of the inadequate basis on which it does that at any
particular stage. That was why Engels advised the US socialists to
work inside the Knights of Labour, and thereby to try to raise its
level up. It was the same approach he and Marx took in respect of
the workers and the German Democrats, and later in their attitude
towards the unification of the Eisenachers and Lassalleans. If
sections of the Left can unite then that is good, but only on the
basis of a non-sectarian attitude to the existing working class, and
Labour Movement, including the Labour Party. All experience suggests
that is not likely. Under those circumstances I agree with Engels
comment,
“The
great thing is to get the working class to move
as a class;
that once obtained, they will soon find the right direction, and all
who resist, H.G. or Powderly, will be left out in the cold with small
sects of their own.”
Back To Part 3
Back To Part 1
1 comment:
"Yet, it has not, located the explanation for its own role, its own actions in the same way! In fact, the sects are almost exclusively made up of intellectuals and academics - even those who have taken up employment largely come from, and still orient to this milieu. It is not surprising then that such individuals privilege the role of ideas over material conditions when theorising class struggle. They see their role as educators of and lecturers to, the working-class, administrators and organisers of its actions, rather than facilitators of the workers own self-organisation."
Actually, you're looking at the wrong end. The sects are made up more of agitators than educators, seeing themselves as repeating tired left sloganeering (when sensationalism, "charismatic" communication savvy, and even conspiracy theories are way more effective), emphasizing Action and more Action as opposed to education.
"The role of ideas over material conditions" is exaggerated, unless you're referring to those intellectuals who are extremely philosophical. There's also the role of public policy, not enough of which is found in left organization. Wilhelm Liebknecht's slogan is "Educate! Agitate! Organize!" for a reason.
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