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Recent experiences in left regroupment and reconstruction

By Jim McIlroy
November 23, 2009 -- How
do you build socialism in the First World countries right now? Of course, we
are part of a world movement for socialism, including the Third World. We can
learn a lot from recent and current experiences in left regroupment and party building
that are happening around the world at present -- with all proportions guarded,
and realising that there is no direct transposition of one historical, national
experience onto another.
When
we talk about left regroupment and reconstruction, unlike some of the other
overseas examples that I will refer to, Socialist Alliance in Australia is not
at this stage a broad left party or a regroupment organisation in quite the
same way as some of the other international experiences. But it is a vehicle
for constructing one and it is a nucleus for building a broad-based socialist
party in the future.
We
know that we went through a regroupment stage, in the first period of Socialist
Alliance, from 2001 to 2005 or so, when the fundamental character of Socialist
Alliance was a regroupment of left
organisations. And now it’s another form of regroupment, between the Democratic
Socialist Perspective, as a revolutionary core organisation, and various
individual, independent socialists and small groups of socialists.
While
there are major differences between this and many of the left regroupment processes
happening in around the world, there are similar principles involved.
What
are we trying to do? We are attempting to break out of the relative isolation
of the socialist movement in the First World, we are trying to find a way to
achieve that goal and we are trying to see how do you build Socialism of the
21st century in a very concrete way, in every country, and internationally.
So
it is a change in the traditional left organisational form in the West in the
direction of what could be dubbed ecosocialism. That is, in my personal
opinion, the direction we will be looking in the end.
And
that will eventually involve some kind of regroupment with left sections of the
Greens, and some sections of the “ecosocialist” movement, and the formation of
an ecosocialist party.
Revolutionaries
and broad left parties
There
have been some interesting articles published recently talking about some of
the recent regroupment experiences in other countries. There’s one in
particular by Phil Hearse, from the Socialist Resistance organisation in
Britain, titled ``Revolutionaries and broad left parties’’, from October 25,
2009 (at http://www.socialistvoice.ca/?p=721).
Hearse
notes that in this decade there have been attempts around the world to re-build
the left. But, he says, unlike 1956 and 1968 when there were also regroupment
periods, “In the first decade of the 21st century, things are much more
difficult objectively, with the working class mainly on the defensive. Multiple
debates on orientation and strategy have started to sweep the international
left toward a reconfiguration of the socialist movement in several countries. Positive
aspects of this process include historic events in Venezuela and Bolivia (with
all their problems), and the emergence of Die Linke (The Left) in
Germany, the Left Bloc in Portugal, and new left formations in other
countries.”
Hearse
refers to a whole series of attempts and moves towards regroupment in many
countries, and if you list them all, there is quite a lot. A debate opened up
about what kind of left we need in the 21st century. “This is of course normal.
Each successive stage of the international class struggle, especially after
world historic events of the type we have seen” -- the collapse of the Soviet
Union, and the setbacks suffered by the world working class under the impact of
the capitalist neoliberal offensive. We have to pose the question of how to
organise and reorganise the socialist movement once again.
So
Hearse talks about the issue of the relationship between revolutionary
socialism and broad left parties. And, there are (at least) two ways of
approaching this question: “For some on the revolutionary left, what we might
call the ‘clean hands and spotless banner’ tendency, … attempts at political
recomposition are a waste of time. Far better to just build your organisation,
sell your paper, hold your meetings, criticise everybody else, and keep a
‘spotless banner’.’’
That
a very pervasive tendency in both the Australian and international left. Of
course, there’s nothing wrong with building your organisation, selling papers
and holding meetings. But that can’t be all you do in the current conditions,
if you want to reconstruct the socialist movement today.
Recent
international experiences
On
the other hand, we have seen another tendency which is expressed in the German
Die Linke, the Portuguese Left Bloc, the Danish Red-Green Alliance and many
others. “This was the importance of the Workers’ Party in Brazil and the
Communist Refoundation in Italy at their height: that they articulated a
significant national voice against neoliberalism that would have been
impossible for the small forces of the revolutionary left’’, writes Hearse. “More
than that: the very existence of these forces, at various stages, had an
important impact on mass mobilisations and struggles – as for example the
Communist Refoundation did on mobilising the anti-war movement and the struggle
against pension reform in Italy.”
And
I would add, as the Socialist Alliance did have on the anti-Work Choices
industrial campaign in Australia, especially in the early days. Socialist
Alliance was able to have an actual
material impact on the class struggle in Australia.
“The
existence of a mass political alternative raises people’s horizons, remoralises
them, brings socialism back onto political agendas, erects an obstacle to the
domination of political discourses by different brands of neoliberalism and
promotes the struggle. It also acts as a clearing house of political ideas in
which the revolutionaries put their positions”, notes Hearse
We
don’t necessarily see political regroupment or broad left formations as the end
product or the final organisation that will be able to carry out a socialist
revolution. As Hearse explains: “They are interim and transitional forms of
organisation…. Our goal remains that of building revolutionary parties. It’s
just that, as against the ‘clean hands and spotless banner’ tendency, we have a
major disagreement about what revolutionary parties, in the 21st century, will
look like – and how to build them.”
Phil
Hearse goes on to talk about the role of revolutionaries in a broader left
formation:
Inside broad left formations there has to be a real, autonomous political life in which people who are not members of an organised current can have confidence that decisions are not being made behind their backs in a disciplined caucus that will impose its views – they have to be confident that their political contribution can affect political debates.
That’s
a very important point that we are taking into this merger process [between the
DSP and the Socialist Alliance] in Australia. The way to operate in these
formations, whether it is a broad left regroupment or more of a nucleus like the
Socialist Alliance, is that “revolutionaries – individuals and currents – have
to demonstrate their commitment and loyalty to the broad left formation of which
they are part. This means prioritising the activities and press of the broad
left formation itself. Half in, half out doesn’t work. We should put no a priori limits on the evolution of a
broad left formation. Its evolution will be determined by how it responds to
the major questions in the fight against imperialism and neoliberal capitalism.”
The
last section of Phil Heare’s article is on different conceptions of the left. He
refers to a statement we ourselves in the DSP used to quote 30 or more years ago,
from Leon Trotsky in 1938: “There is no revolutionary tendency worthy of the
name on the face of the earth outside the Fourth [International].”
There
could have been some kind of argument for that proposition then. However, it
probably was an overstatement even at that desperate time. But now, in post
World War II circumstances, in the last 50 years, it’s a really bizarre idea.
And you can relate this to every form of grouping which tried to put forward
that exclusivist concept in recent times. I think Trotsky himself, even though
he did put forward that statement, would be revolving in his grave to see
what’s been done in his name in the post-war period.
European examples
So,
that’s a reasonable overview of how we should approach the question of left regroupment
in general in the current political situation. Let’s look at some recent
concrete examples.
There’s
another article, also distributed online through, Socialist Voice, the Canadian left publication, by Ian Angus
entitled “Positive developments in the European left”, October 7, 2009 [also at http://links.org.au/node/1289]. Some of
these examples give us an idea of processes happening overseas, which are very
different from the Australian situation, but on the other hand there is a
reach-out approach which is very similar.
First
of all in Germany, Die Linke (The Left) is the result of a long history from
the East German-based Party of Democratic Socialism, which joined up with a
section of left social democrats who became disillusioned with the pro-capitalist
Social Democratic Party (SPD). Together they formed this new left party, which
is a fascinating example of the direction which the left can take.
The
opening for Die Linke was partly a result of the failure of the German Greens,
which dropped the ball by allying themselves too closely in government with the
SPD. The Greens had the opportunity to become the dominant ecological and left
party in Germany, but that didn’t happen, for various reasons.
Die
Linke has gone from strength to strength, winning around 12 per cent of the
vote in the late September 2009 general elections, an increase of more than 3
per cent on the previous poll. “The party now has 76 members in the Bundestag,
up from 54. In most parts of the former East Germany, Die Linke is now the
largest party,” Ian Angus notes.
“Die Linke’s election platform has resonated
with the population”, Duroyan Fertl, reported in Green Left Weekly, October 14, 2009. “It calls for improving social
justice and public welfare, introducing a minimum wage, higher taxes for the
rich, relaxing harsh unemployment laws, and cutting greenhouse gases by 90 per
cent by 2050. More than 80 per cent of the population opposes the war in
Afghanistan, and Die Linke is the only party pledging to pull out German
troops.”
That
is a very important policy, clearly distinguishing Die Linke from all other
parties, including the German Greens.
This
is a turning point in recent German politics. Of course, the right-wing
Christian Democrats won the election, and support for the SPD collapsed. But
the success of Die Linke reflects an increasing polarisation in German
politics, with a shift to the right in overall votes matched by a turn to the
left by a significant section of the working class.
There
is quite a tense situation in German politics at present, with the people hard
hit by the global economic crisis. The potential is there for a major
radicalisation of a large section of the workers and the poor in the next
period.
Left Bloc of
Portugal
Another
interesting case is that of Portugal, where the Left Bloc has made important
gains in recent times. The history of the Left Bloc is quite different from the
situation in Australia, but there is one similarity in the fact that one of the
components of the original Left Bloc was the Revolutionary Socialist Party, the
former section of the Fourth International in Portugal.
The
RSP linked up with a group of former Maoists, and a wing of the Portuguese
Communist Party, together with a number of independent socialists, to form the
Left Bloc in 1998. The Left Bloc has gradually developed its unity and its base
of support over the past decade.
In the recent Portuguese elections, also held on September 27, 2009, the ruling pro-capitalist Socialist Party held on to office, but its vote fell from 45 per cent to just over 36 per cent. “At the same time, the Left Bloc increased its vote from 6 per cent to nearly 10 per cent, and doubled its representation in the Assembly from 8 to 16 members”, Angus reported. ``In a 2007 interview, Left Bloc leader Francisco Louca, described the party as a ‘pluralist party of the socialist left’':
When the Bloc was formed, eight years ago, we made a political choice which I believe is still valid: to create our party on the basis of the political confrontations which define our activity and not on the basis of a priori ideological cohesion. We thus brought together very different traditions, coming from the Communist Party, Maoist or revolutionary Marxist (Trotskyist) currents, as well as people from independent social movements. The possibility of building this regroupment, in a very defensive situation, implied that we were able to formulate political proposals and to have an impact on society. So we started not by discussing a programme of historical reference, but a programme of political intervention.
We defined ourselves as socialists shortly after our foundation, in a double sense: initially, by rejecting ‘real socialism’ (Stalinism, the experiences of the USSR, Eastern Europe or China), then by identifying ourselves with the anti-capitalist struggle, against the social-democratic experience and its current social-liberal version.
In this sense, we defend the idea of collective ownership. But what is really important, in particular for the organisations which followed the path of small minority groups, is to find the means of expressing political ideas which fight to have an influence on the masses. So we translated our socialist ideas into specific proposals, very much linked to the modalities of political life in Portugal.
For example, we recently proposed the socialisation of the services of water, energy, etc., and one of our principal campaigns this year centres on the defence, the modernisation and the transformation of the national health service. That enables us to concretise our perspective of socialisation on the basis of social needs and concrete struggles.” (International Viewpoint, January, 2008).
On
a smaller scale, this approach is not dissimilar to that which the DSP has
pursued with the Socialist Alliance over a number of years. And this kind of
involvement in the class struggle on the ground has the other effect of deepening
the radical programmatic basis of the organisation itself.
New Anti-Capitalist Party of
France
The
third main example of left regroupment in Europe is in France, which is a
really interesting development. And that’s another example of what can come out
of the Trotskyist movement, in the right conditions and with a positive
approach.
The
Ligue Communiste Revolutionnaire (LCR), the French section of the Fourth International,
has been changed and transformed by its deep involvement in the class struggle
in France. They have been open and able to see the enormous opportunities there
to begin to construct a broad formation of the socialist left.
The
LCR was not held back by dogmas and sectarianism from breaking from its organisational
and political forms of the past.
The
New Anti-Capitalist Party (NPA) was formed in February 2009 on the initiative
of the LCR, which then dissolved itself into the new formation.
The
NPA recently called on the entire “anti-neoliberal and anti-capitalist left” to
begin discussions about joint action in the 2010 regional French elections. It
has now put together a joint declaration by six groups, aimed at uniting their
efforts to combat the right-wing offensive led by President Sarkozy. “Together
we can help reverse the relationship of forces between the political right, the
employers and the popular classes in struggle and at the polling booths,” the
statement says.
So
the NPA is now pushing for united left action on all fronts, even beyond the
substantial regroupment reflected in its own establishment less than a year
ago. It is very ambitious about what it is trying to do in France.
But
at the same time the former LCR leadership has made it very clear that the way
forward was not to go into the NPA as an organised faction, but to formally
dissolve the LCR and become totally immersed in the new party – still as a
revolutionary current, but seeking to win the members of the NPA in an increasingly
radical direction.
This
is an interesting example for us in the DSP, in relation to Socialist Alliance,
bearing in mind that the NPA is now a party of many thousands of members, while
the Socialist Alliance is less than 1000. Nevertheless, the LCR had many fewer
members than the NPA, and has sought to widen the activist base of socialist
struggle in France by moving in this direction.
Britain: Green Left
One
other instructive case study in Europe is the example of Britain, as much for
the negative as the positive lessons. When you look at the history of the
English left over the last 60 years, it is one of the tragedies of the Western
left in general.
Literally
tens of thousands of young and older militants have passed through the ranks of
the British left organisations over the decades, but without the establishment
of a long-lasting, united left organisation – despite a number of initially
promising beginnings.
(The
Scottish Socialist Party is a special case here. After the great advances of
the SSP in the past, the split with Tommy Sheridan’s Solidarity has set back
the SSP considerably in recent times. However, the SSP is gradually moving to
re-establish its base again, with modest success.)
All
is not lost, however. There have been positive developments in Britain
recently. As we know, the original Socialist Alliance was established in
England at the start of this decade, which inspired the formation of Socialist
Alliance in Australia in 2001. Following the collapse of the Socialist Alliance
in England, the formation of the Respect party showed considerable promise for
left renewal. However, a recent article by British Socialist Workers Party
leader Alex Callinicos paints a grim picture of the state of left renewal in
Britain – as well as in Europe as a whole.
Ian
Angus refers to this report:
Callinicos’s article is particularly scathing about Britain, where despite ‘a decade’s sustained efforts at socialist regroupment,’ there is still no united Left electoral alternative to the Conservatives and New Labour. He describes the Respect party led by George Galloway and Salma Yaqoob as ‘once the most promising product of these efforts,’ but – perhaps understandably – he is silent about the role of the SWP’s 2007 walkout in weakening that group.
Several British groups, including the SWP, have this year called for renewed efforts at left unity, but none of these appeals has yet produced anything resembling a practical result. The failures of previous combinations have left a legacy of distrust that will be difficult to overcome.
One
significant development, which is very relevant to the Australian situation, is
the formation of Green Left, the ecosocialist wing of the Green Party of
England and Wales. The steering committee of Green Left, on September 30, 2009,
called on the Green Party in Birmingham not to stand a candidate against Salma
Yaqoob of Respect, “in order to give a strong, progressive and environmentally
aware candidate the chance of taking the seat. We believe that Salma Yaqoob of
Respect is the candidate most likely to do this and her victory would be a
victory for all those opposing the policies of privatisation, war, greed,
racism and environmental destruction.” (Remember that there is no preferential
voting system in Britain, so unified progressive candidatures are even more
important there than in this country.)
This
is perhaps just a straw in the wind, but it does give in indication of possible
future directions toward unity between left Greens and the socialist left in
Britain. That would be an important breakthrough for the future of the
progressive movement in that country, and internationally.
Latin America: PSUV in Venezuela
To
finish, we will jump right across the world to Latin America; Venezuela to be
exact. The initial focus of this article was intended to be on developments
with the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) and its congress at the end
of November 2009, as an instance of a quite different kind of left regroupment.
Now,
events in the last two days have broadened the context, not only to regroupment
in Venezuela, but regroupment in Latin America and the whole world.
The
situation of the PSUV is in one sense a totally incomparable to that of the
Socialist Alliance in Australia. The PSUV had an initial nominal membership of
nearly 7 million, with an active membership of almost 2.5 million!
However,
the PSUV is a form of regroupment, because after President Hugo Chavez’s call
at the end of 2006 for the formation of a united party of the revolution in
Venezuela, there was the beginning of a sifting-out process within the Chavista
movement through the process of forming this new party. Obviously, there is a
very long way to go with this process, as the PSUV continues to be dominated by
bureaucratic forces overall. However, a sizeable group of well-known
revolutionaries have been elected as delegates to the congress. There is a big
struggle ahead to transform the PSUV into a genuine mass revolutionary and
socialist party.
The
push from below by the popular movement in Venezuela, propelled by the growing
class polarisation inside the country, together with the pressure of increasing
military threats from the US, via Colombia, creates the real possibility of sharp
struggle inside and outside the PSUV, which can eventually push the new party,
or significant sections of it, in a revolutionary socialist direction.
Clearly,
further political clarification will likely lead to further regroupment and
realignments on the Venezuelan left in the future.
New international
At
the recent meeting of International Left Parties in Caracas, at which the
Australian Socialist Alliance was
represented by comrades Fred Fuentes and Kiraz Janicke, President Chavez issued
a call for the formation of a new international organisation of left parties,
which he dubbed the “Fifth Socialist International”.
This
would appear to be a most important and exciting development in the Latin
American and world socialist movement. Chavez has a history of seizing the
vital moment and putting out a call for action, which answers the crucial needs
of the time.
Often
it can be an ambit claim at first, which also catches people, including many of
his friends and allies, by surprise. But he challenges people to face up to
critical responsibilities, in a way which forces them to think outside the
square.
The
full implications of this dramatic call will only unfold in time. And we will
need to discuss our attitude to it in much more detail, including all the
possible consequences for international collaboration.
It
is impossible to envision that any such new international, whether it comes to
be called the ``Fifth’’, or something quite different, would resemble the Third
International (or Comintern), even in its early revolutionary days under
Lenin’s leadership. However, it is also unlikely to bear much comparison to the
Fourth International under Leon Trotsky either.
It
could bear more historical analogy with the First International, under Karl Marx
and Friedrich Engels, in the sense of being an attempt at a new start for the
world socialist and workers’ movement.
Chavez’s
call has already galvanised the movement and has won widespread support from
left parties in Latin America – where its greatest strength and initial centre
would undoubtedly lie. Realistically, the initial basis of a new international
would be to provide a vehicle for establishing greater collaboration between
left and socialist parties in Latin America.
But
it will have an impact well beyond that, including in First World countries.
Chavez said during his speech to the November 19-21 Caracas conference of
international left parties, “I assume responsibility before the world. I think
it is time to convene the Fifth International, and I dare to make the call,
which I think is a necessity. I dare to request that we create my proposal” (quoted
in Kiraz Janicke, Green Left Weekly,
November 25, 2009.)
He
insisted that the conference of left parties should not be “just one more
meeting” and invited the representatives of the organisations present to
participate in a truly new project. “This socialist encounter should be of the
genuine left, willing to fight against imperialism and capitalism”, he said.
Chavez
briefly outlined the experiences of previous “Internationals” and also stressed
that any new international would have to function “without impositions” and
would have to respect diversity. He also emphasised that the new international
would not be confined to those organisations present at the conference, but
would have to be open to drawing in other organisations from different
countries.
Chavez’s
proposal does open a big door. Where the plan could go from here is anyone’s
guess. But when you think about the enormous challenge facing the world left
and working class, with the ecological, economic and social crisis wracking the
capitalist system, this call is incredibly timely. There is probably no one but
Chavez who could realistically issue a call like this right now, and have it
taken up in a serious way on a broad basis.
Even
the most limited result in the short term, of the creation of an effective
international network of progressive solidarity, would be a definite step
forward in the current situation of world left disunity.
Next stage
So,
to wind up, what we are trying to do here in Australia is rather different from
the international left regroupment examples mentioned above. The experiences we
have had here with Socialist Alliance has been a bumpy ride, as everyone is
aware.
We
are planning to enter the next logical stage of the process, with the proposed
merger of the DSP and Socialist Alliance, with the idea of building a broader
socialist party, as part of a process of putting the socialist movement on a
stronger basis in this country. We want to put the socialist alternative back
on the map of politics in Australia.
There
are a variety of different experiments and processes happening around the world
at present, in quite different political circumstances to our own. But now,
even as we speak, there’s a call out there for much greater international
collaboration. Both national left reconstruction and international
collaboration are ideas whose time has come.






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