Portugal: Left Bloc calls for a left government to confront austerity

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For more on Portugal's Left Bloc, click HERE.

Francisco Louçã, Left Bloc (Portugal), interviewed by Mark Bergfeld

May 17, 2013 -- The Bullet

Mark Bergfeld: Across Europe we have witnessed three strands of resistance to the Troika (the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank) : mass strikes by workers, youth revolts like the indignad@s, and electoral revolts such as SYRIZA in Greece, Front de Gauche in France, and the CUP in Catalonia. In Portugal we have witnessed the former two but haven't seen an upsurge in support for the Left Bloc or the Communist Party for that matter. Why hasn't the Portuguese left been able to take advantage of a favourable situation?

Francisco Louçã: The opinion polls indicate growing support for the left anti-Troika parties. Today they represent more than 20 per cent. In order to elect a left government – one which is anti-memorandum and calls for the end of the Troika's rule – much more would be required. A left government would have to restructure and partially cancel the debt to regain the capacity for investment and employment. The million-strong demonstration on March 2, 2013, showed the readiness of a large section of the Portuguese people to fight for their wages and pensions as part of their democratic responsibility.

At the Left Bloc's congress in November 2012 delegates voted overwhelmingly to adopt the slogan for a “government of the left”. You outlined some of the premises for a left government in your opening speech (YouTube). However, a left government would only be possible with the participation of the Socialist Party, which isn't explicitly against all austerity measures. What does the slogan mean and what can it achieve?

It is not a slogan. It is a proposal to all those men and women fighting for a viable left-wing alternative. In that sense, it is not a compromise with the Socialist Party. As long as it supports or accepts the memorandum and the Iinternational Monetary Fund's blackmail, this party is absolutely unable to provide a solution. To accept the Troika simply means to pursue the policy of unemployment. A left government is defined by its popular mandate to break with the Troika – just as SYRIZA has proposed in Greece. We do not abdicate responsibility or hesitate in the fight for a strong short-term solution. We advocate a rupture with the impositions of finance capital, [German leader] Angela Merkel and her associates. This policy represents the popular demand for a left government against the Troika.

With the current balance of forces do you believe that a left government in Greece or Portugal could beat the Troika?

It is the only way. Of course, such a government would come under threat. It must be ready to look for allies in Europe and elsewhere since the European Union and European Central Bank are devoted to austerity and serve the interests of the finance capital. Its victory depends on popular support, its coherence and capacity for initiative.

The total of Portuguese state debt amounts to €209 billion, equivalent to 126.3% of the gross domestic product. During the alter-globalisation movement activists demanded the cancellation of Third World debt. Today there are similar discussions about “debt renegotiation”, “debt cancellations” and “debt jubilees” among the left in Europe. How should the European left respond?

Exactly in the same way. An economy with a deficit of 3 per cent cannot pay an interest rate of 4 per cent. If debt creates debt, cancellation is the only possible solution.

We have witnessed a number of strikes by workers, in the public sector, and a number of general strikes called by the CGTP trade union confederation. On the other hand, we have seen outbursts of popular anger in the streets on the “Que Se Lixe a Troika” demonstrations. How do these two strands of resistance relate to one another? Are there common initiatives?

The strike movement is weak. The popular movement by young people and the social movement has mobilised for very large demonstrations on two occasions: September 15 and March 2. Both times more than a million people marched in a country with a population of 10 million. This is a huge success! It demonstrates to what extent an open and united political platform can transform the situation.

In 1974 a coup by left-wing military officers overthrew the Salazar dictatorship and ignited the revolutionary upheaval of the Portuguese workers. What role does the memory of the Revolution of Carnations play in the current round of mobilisations against austerity?

The Revolution of Carnations was the last revolution in 20th century Europe. It ignited the movements to replace the dictatorships in Greece and Spain. It is deeply engrained in the memory of older generations. Young people today chant “Grândola, Vila Morena”, the wonderful and meaningful song used as the radio signal for the military operation in April 1974. One generation later people have re-appropriated the symbols of the revolution. But new modes of politics require different visual representations. We need to provide solutions through the proposal for a left government rather than rest on what happened some decades ago.

Francisco Louçã is an economics professor at Lisbon's Instituto Superior de Economia e Gestão. He is the author of numerous books and essays including Ensaio para uma Revolução (Rehearsal of a Revolution); As Time Goes By – From the Industrial Revolution to the Information Revolution, with Chris Freeman; Portugal Agrilhoado – A Economia Cruel na Era do FMI (Portugal in Chains – The Cruel Economy in the Age of the IMF); and most recently, co-authored with Mariana Mortagua, A Dividadura (The Dictatorship of the Debt) and Isto é um Assalto (This Is a Robbery).

Louçã was part of the student movement against the Salazar (and his Estado Novo) dictatorship in the 1970s. He was arrested for a protest against the colonial war in December 1972. He is one of the Left Bloc's founding members, stood in the Portuguese presidential elections in 2006, and served as the Left Bloc's chief coordinator between 2005 and 2012. He continues to play an active role inside the Left Bloc and the social movements internationally.

Mark Bergfeld is a socialist activist living in London. He was a leading participant in the UK student movement in 2010. He currently is reading for his PhD in networked movements and the challenge for left parties. He tweets @mdbergfeld and his writings can be found at mdbergfeld.wordpress.com. This article first appeared on the MRZine website.