This is an
extended version of a recent letter, to the Weekly Worker, responding
to Mike McNair's argument in relation to the – Labour Party. Mike's article was itself a response to my earlier letter, which
was, in turn, a response to a previous article by Mike. The issues
raised expose serious questions that Marxists need to address in
relation to the issues of the role played by both structure and
struggle, and how we apply the theory of Historical Materialism, and
the method of dialectical logic.
In his
original article of 12th April, Mike set out the CPGB's attitude
towards the LP. The CPGB adhere to the conventional Leninist
description of the Labour Party as a “Bourgeois Workers Party”.
This description, developed by Lenin, is based on the idea that the
LP is a Party, which is based upon the working-class, particularly
via its historic link, with the Trades Unions, its membership is
drawn largely from the working-class, its voting base resides,
largely, within the working-class, but the Party has never been
founded upon the ideas of Marxism (or even Socialism), but has, from
the beginning, been based on a bourgeois ideology, which commits it
merely to seeking reforms within Capitalism. In fact, this ideology
of reformism, or bargaining within the system, is merely an
extension, into the political sphere, of the ideas which lie behind
Trades Unionism. This makes the Labour Party different to the
Workers' Parties developed in the rest of Europe, for example in
Germany, which were founded upon Marxist principles.
Herein lies
what I think is the crux of the argument. The distinction here is
that the other Workers' Parties were established not on bourgeois
ideas, but on Marxist principles. The reason these parties, every
one, ended up indistinguishable from the LP, in the ideas they
promote, is seen as being down to some kind of degeneration, rather
than the actual nature of these Parties at inception, or the material
conditions within society, which conditioned that. Often, the
degeneration is laid at the feet of the leaders of these parties, who
“betrayed” the working-class, and the principles they once
proclaimed.
The
implications, for the CPGB, of this, are clear. Those who declare
that the Labour Party is not now a bourgeois Workers' Party, but a
bourgeois Party pure and simple, are wrong, Mike argues –
correctly. The Labour Party continues to attract the support of the
vast majority of workers. Any attempt to create some new “Workers'
Party”, that simply recreates the old Labour Party, is then not
only pointless – because why would Marxists want to create a
bourgeois Workers Party? - but is doomed to failure, because no space
exists to create such a Party, given that workers continue to adhere
to Labour. That has been repeatedly shown in the abysmal
performances of the Left, where they have stood, and by the strong
showing of Labour, in working-class districts, in 2010.
If Marxists
are to seek to build a new Workers' Party then, Mike argues, they
should build, not a new bourgeois Workers Party, not a LP Mark II,
but a new Marxist Party, even if that Party is very small to begin
with. They should begin by uniting their own forces for such a
project. This doesn't preclude such a Party working within the LP,
but they should do so on the basis that Lenin had proposed, by
demanding to be allowed in, as an affiliated organisation, on the
same basis as, say, the Fabian Society. In the meantime, those
outside the LP are to be free to continue to act in such a way as to
ensure no such demand would be granted, and to alienate ordinary
workers within the LP, by, for example, standing their own
candidates, in elections, against Labour, or supporting other
candidates, against Labour, as the CPGB did in relation to TUSC.
Hegel's Dialectic saw the material world as a reflection of the unfolding of The Idea |
There are a
number of elements in this approach, which I would take issue with,
as I set out in my letter of 19th April. It sees struggle
almost entirely in ideological terms, and in the process also
privileges struggle over structure, seeing the latter as almost
entirely a function of the former, a shapeless form that can be
simply given shape by a top down process of ideological
determination. So, the primary task is seen as being the
establishment of the necessary structure – the Marxist Party –
and the means of achieving this is through struggle, which in turn is
essentially reduced to an ideological struggle. So class struggle
becomes primarily a struggle to “Build The Party”. The first
thing to say is that this approach belies a strangely narrow
Parliamentarist approach for a revolutionary organisation. Its whole
emphasis revolves around seeing the activities of the revolutionaries
in electoralist terms. That is not necessarily electoralism in the
sense of winning bourgeois Parliamentary elections, but in the
broader sense that the Left has consumed itself with. That is of
seeing everything in terms of passing resolutions, through Trade
Union or other Labour Movement bodies, and of getting its supporters
elected to positions within it. This is the necessary consequence of
privileging ideas over material conditions in the dialectical
relation between the two. It also provides an explanation as to
why each of the sects fails to unite with others, because each
privileges its own ideas over the ideas of every other sect, as each
seeks to build its own “Party”, as the necessary precondition for
any further development. In his latest response, Mike seems to argue
that, if material conditions have any role to play, it is in that
they create conditions, in society, that necessarily lead the workers
to oppose the bosses, and, on the basis of that opposition, to
automatically be driven towards socialist ideas, thereby facilitating
the work of the Marxists in winning them over. But, as I pointed out
in my letter of the 19th April,
"Revolutionaries" have often captured positions, but on what real basis, to what real effect? |
In
other words, as
Marxists, we recognise that ideas do not spring into existence out of
the ether as the Idealists suppose. Certain sets of ideas gain
traction, not for wholly inexplicable reasons, but do so because they
represent the real experiences of human beings in their everyday
lives. But, this is not some mechanical process, whereby, for
example, workers experience the horrors of Capitalism and
automatically become Socialists! Were that the case, there would be
no need for a Workers Party, and Capitalism would have been swept
away long ago. In fact, quite the opposite is the case. It is the
experience of every day life, under Capitalism, that, not only
reproduces the material foundations of the system, that reproduces
Capital and Wage Labour, but it is the fact, as Marx sets out in
Capital, in the Grundrisse, and elsewhere, that these are, in
reality, two sides of the same social relation, which ensures that it
also reproduces the very ideological basis upon which it rests. To
the extent that it does not, it has the fall back of the Capitalist
State, whose function is also to ensure the reproduction of the
material conditions of Capitalism (a Welfare State to ensure the
adequate reproduction of Labour Power, a Warfare State to secure the
external defence of domestic Capital, property laws to defend Capital
internally, bodies of armed men to defend it physically from internal
dissent, and a panoply of ideological means from the Schools and
Universities, through the Churches, and the media to ensure
conformity within the bounds of pluralism) as well as the continued
dominance of bourgeois ideas.
The Fabian view of Socialism was workers settling merely for an amelioration of their condition under Capitalism through Economistic distributional struggles over wages and the Social Wage. |
As
Marx and Engels pointed out, these kinds of struggles are extremely
limited precisely because they occur within, and accept the
continuation of the structures of Capitalism.
“The
history of these Unions is a long series of defeats of the
working-men, interrupted by a few isolated victories. All these
efforts naturally cannot alter the economic law according to which
wages are determined by the relation between supply and demand in the
labour market. Hence the Unions remain powerless against all great
forces which influence this relation. In a commercial crisis the
Union itself must reduce wages or dissolve wholly; and in a time of
considerable increase in the demand for labour, it cannot fix the
rate of wages higher than would be reached spontaneously by the
competition of the capitalists among themselves.”
“I
think I have shown that their struggles for the standard of wages are
incidents inseparable from the whole wages system, that in 99 cases
out of 100 their efforts at raising wages are only efforts at
maintaining the given value of labour, and that the necessity of
debating their price with the capitalist is inherent to their
condition of having to sell themselves as commodities. By cowardly
giving way in their everyday conflict with capital, they would
certainly disqualify themselves for the initiating of any larger
movement.
At the same time, and quite apart from the
general servitude involved in the wages system, the working class
ought not to exaggerate to themselves the ultimate working of these
everyday struggles. They ought not to forget that they are fighting
with effects, but not with the causes of those effects; that they are
retarding the downward movement, but not changing its direction; that
they are applying palliatives, not curing the malady. They ought,
therefore, not to be exclusively absorbed in these unavoidable
guerilla fights incessantly springing up from the never ceasing
encroachments of capital or changes of the market. They ought to
understand that, with all the miseries it imposes upon them, the
present system simultaneously engenders the material
conditions and the social forms
necessary for an economical reconstruction of society.”
In
other words, here we have the question posed in stark contrast of
structure and struggle. So long as workers remain within the
structure of Capitalism, the limits of their struggles are defined.
As Luxemburg put it,
“In
other words, the objective conditions of capitalist society transform
the two economic functions of the trade unions into a sort of labour
of Sisyphus...”
The Miners Strike was heroic but what has been the long term effect on workers class consciousness? |
As Marx put it,
“For revolutions require a passive element, a
material basis. Theory is fulfilled in a people only insofar as it is
the fulfilment of the needs of that people. But will the monstrous
discrepancy between the demands of German thought and the answers of
German reality find a corresponding discrepancy between civil society
and the state, and between civil society and itself? Will the
theoretical needs be immediate practical needs? It is not enough for
thought to strive for realization, reality must itself strive towards
thought.”
Forward To Part 2
1 comment:
Ah, but there are two types of bourgeois worker parties to begin with:
http://www.revleft.com/vb/lesser-two-evils-t172262/index.html
To start off, no bourgeois worker party or "party" strives for all three goals of "formation of the proletariat into a class, overthrow of the bourgeois supremacy, conquest of political power by the proletariat" (Marx and Engels). However, a recent discussion that overrated British organized labour prompted me to start this discussion on the types of bourgeois worker formations. There are two types, but lots of leftists, even the likes of the CPGB, haven't realized the significant differences between the two, and thus tactics pursued have proven to be fruitless.
There are Labourite bourgeois worker formations and there are Continental bourgeois worker formations.
The first type of formation is established by so-called "organized labour," by tred-iunionisty bureaucrats and member grunts. Income-wise they tend to be the country's "aristocracy of labour" (Engels) or "labour aristocracy." Economic struggles are conducted by "organized labour" directly at the point of production, while political and even semi-political struggles are channeled to the formation. Here, the logic of growing political struggles out of mere economic ones is most self-evident. Examples of this first type of formation include the British Labour Party, the Socialist Labour Party, any front work initiated and led by SPEW, the historic Cooperative Commonwealth Federation and present-day New Democratic Party of Canada, the Australian Labor Party, the New Zealand Labour Party, and even the Workers Party in Brazil.
[Polemically, "Labour Mark II" projects are more accurately described as those seeking new formations based on the above.]
The second type of formation, "Continental," is established outside so-called "organized labour," which comes into play as either a tail or as a vehicle of co-option. Income-wise they tend to be less dependent on the country's labour aristocracy, and linked to this, more importantly, is the members' immediate realization that their immediate problems can only be solved politically, not economically. Point-of-production-struggles, other mere labour disputes, and other equally not-so-important economic struggles take a back seat to the political formation's political program, activism, and, for the more successful formations, even communication savvyness. Examples of this second type of formation include Die Linke, Front de gauche, the Left Alliance in Finland, the Left-Green Movement in Iceland (a governing coalition partner), the Movimiento al Socialismo in Bolivia, the Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela, Quebec solidaire, Sinn Fein in Ireland, SYRIZA, the Brazilian Socialist Party, and the newly-formed United Left and Peasants formation in the Ukraine. More mainstream formations include the Social-Democratic Alliance in Iceland (the main governing coalition partner) and Spanish Socialist Workers Party.
[In relation to Guy Standing's literature on the so-called "precariat," this new social strata would be more at home in a "Continental" formation.]
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