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Benjamin Hill
22nd January 2010, 17:14
The Weekly Worker of this week carries two articles on the issue of TUSC. The first is titled "For left unity" and deals with the need for actual unity on the left if we are ever to build a Marxist party.


For left unity

An open letter to Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition from the CPGB

The Communist Party of Great Britain welcomes the launch of the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition because it has the potential to lead towards the sort of principled left unity our class so urgently needs. This is why, despite our reservations about the way Tusc has been launched and the content of its provisional programme, we have written to you registering our willingness to stand CPGB candidates under its banner and to support its campaign.

In one sense, almost any move towards a degree of left electoral cooperation on a common platform should be viewed positively. We squandered the tremendous opportunities that there were from the mid-1990s to establish an electoral beachhead for Marxist politics. Ranged against us, there was a rightward-moving Labour Party and a Tory Party that made itself more or less unelectable for a decade plus. There was space and opportunity. But instead of advances for the genuine politics of the working class, the grim aftermath of the various abortive unity initiatives has been one of splits, bitterness and decline for the revolutionary left. An initiative such as Tusc that coheres something out of this wreckage can be important.

That said, there is too much that is sadly familiar about this latest attempt to present to the electorate what comrade Dave Nellist of the Socialist Party in England and Wales has dubbed a clear anti-cuts and socialist programme (Campaign for a New Workers Party email, January 19).
Yes, we have differences with aspects of the Tusc provisional programme. Democracy and republicanism are not sufficiently stressed; instead of just looking towards the working class implementing its programme within the narrow confines of Britain there needs at least to be a pan-European perspective; left electoral coalitions are all very well, but what is really needed is a mass party of the working class based on Marxism. Of course, from our angle, none of this represents a barrier to joint work: with the democratic space to argue our politics we are convinced that our arguments will win through. In the meantime, we accept majority decisions.

Here we get to the nub of the problem, however. From the bureaucratic, top-down and secretive manner the coalition has been put together, a strong, negative message has been sent out. There is no democracy. Nor bottom-up structures through which supporters can elect representatives and debate and in due course arrive at policy decisions. Bob Crow and an invited inner core get to decide everything of importance. Others, specifically the Socialist Workers Party, Alliance for Workers Liberty and the CPGB, have been banned or proscribed. A regime that characterised Arthur Scargills Socialist Labour Party from the beginning - a control-freakery that produced fiasco and the organisations effective demise.

Hence the worrying comments made by Clive Heemskerk, a leading member of SPEW and a key player in Tusc. Speaking at the Left Unity Liaison Committee meeting on December 19 last year the comrade stated that organisations wanting to join the coalition would need to have some social weight and be able to work by consensus. Responding to requests for clarification, the comrade hedged: No criteria has been laid down to determine social weight, and all organisational requests to get involved will be looked at on merit.

Merit is no more comforting as an entry qualification as social weight, frankly. Who is the arbiter of a political groups merit? Bob Crow? Clive Heemskerk? An unelected inner core?

As for social weight, under present circumstances no strand of the organised left has significant mass support in any meaningful sense. None of the sects that litter the scene today can seriously organise or lead real sections of the working class itself. True, there are those elected to trade union positions. But that hardly represents conscious support for republican democracy, socialism and the project of human liberation. This is something that a serious unity project will doubtless address by patiently overcoming the ideological differences that at present divide us and above all by spreading the ideas of Marxism, mobilising to extend democracy in all spheres of life and building branches and other such structures in every neighbourhood and big workplace.

If comrade Heemskerk means by working by consensus the willingness to accept that political differences, debate and sometimes sharply expressed criticisms are no barrier to democratically agreed unity in action, then we are with him. Again, however, given the poisoned atmosphere that prevails on our left today, this is something that has to be built rather than decreed.

The CPGB has been involved in all the serious left unity projects, from Scargills SLP, through the Socialist Alliance and Respect. In the SA - which was the high point of these unity attempts - we were its most active partisans. We took the lead in establishing the London SA in 1999 and - with active support from the Socialist Workers Party - stood our comrade Anne Murphy in the local elections.

When the SWP fully threw its weight behind the alliance, we participated at every level of the organisation, locally and on the national leadership. We cajoled other more timid groups to present a serious challenge in the June 2001 general election, overcoming those who advocated just six candidates (or 20 from the more ambitious) and eventually our mad perspective, as it was dubbed by some, became SA common sense. In the end the alliance stood 98 candidates.

In that election, a CPGB representative sat on the drafting committee for the SA manifesto People before profit. Particularly in that period of intense political work, but also throughout the lifespan of the SA, the CPGB made considerable financial and logistical commitments to the common project. The CPGB and its newspaper were real assets to the SA. This, we suggest, was of real merit.

The Socialist Alliance generated real enthusiasm not because of the social weight of the groups and individuals participating, but because it united the major components of the revolutionary left in a challenge that seemed to indicate that the Marxists were at last beginning to take their responsibilities to the class seriously. That is, to build a permanent political entity that united different political strands in the workers movement around acceptance of (not agreement with) a political programme. An organisation that was capable of uniting for action, but could contain differences.

In other words, the strength of the SA was not numbers; it was the idea of left unity. Although the political conditions are now less favourable, an initiative that looks to democratically unite all genuine working class political strands for commonly agreed action is still what the situation demands. Start with exclusions and you guarantee yet another failure.

Benjamin Hill
22nd January 2010, 17:26
The second article is titled "No more proscriptions, bans or secret cabals" and deals with the pull out of the CPB, is this project already doomed from the outset? Can unity be built by secretive deals between bureaucrats and leaders of the component organisations?


No more proscriptions, bans or secret cabals

The CPB has pulled out of Tusc, reports Peter Manson. Where does that leave the coalition?

The Morning Star’s Communist Party of Britain has opted out of the leftwing alliance to contest the general election, the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition.

The CPB’s support for another electoral coalition with the Socialist Party in England and Wales, following their joint support, along with the Rail, Maritime and Transport union, for ‘No to the EU, Yes to Democracy’, which contested the June 2009 European Union elections, has been in question for some time. Towards the end of last year the CPB pulled out of the monthly meetings of the ex-No2EU ‘core group’ - a decision that was reversed within a couple of weeks after general secretary Rob Griffiths led a fightback on the executive committee. But this time the withdrawal will undoubtedly be permanent.

The reason given by the CPB in a statement published on its website following the latest EC meeting last weekend is that “the RMT executive has decided not to affiliate formally to any electoral coalition for the forthcoming general election, and that no other union has taken a formal position”. So, despite its name, Tusc enjoys no official support from any national trade union - that is why it is a “trade unionist” and socialist coalition. This is hardly a satisfactory title, clearly adopted as a second-best. It seems to epitomise the sad reality that, while SPEW aspires to win a union-led political alliance and eventual party, unfortunately there are no official takers, only individual trade unionists. Bob Crow and Alex Gordon of the RMT leadership are backers, but, just like No2EU, it seems that more or less all the other leading union members who sign up - Brian Caton of the Prison Officers Association included - will be SPEW comrades. But at least - unlike No2EU - Tusc’s name expresses a pro-working class orientation.

Although the CPB says it “has determined not to participate in a formal electoral coalition”, its statement then immediately goes on to announce: “The Communist Party, and its allies in UK-domiciled communist and workers’ parties, perhaps with other forces, will contest as many constituencies as feasible in the general election, in order to project a clear leftwing alternative.”

So the CPB appears to be saying about Tusc: not this “formal electoral coalition”, and not this “clear leftwing alternative”. Leaving aside the question of which “other forces” the CPB intends to stand alongside (I, for one, cannot imagine who else would be prepared to join with it in such a narrowly based alliance), it is clear that the RMT’s rejection of the coalition was the last straw. Not even the CPB ‘innovator’ wing headed by Griffiths and former Star editor John Haylett would have relished playing a junior role to the SPEW ‘Trots’ (not to mention thellSocialist Workers Party, which is also set to participate).

Comrades Griffiths and Haylett no longer think it possible for the Labour Party to be ‘reclaimed’ and as a consequence favoured working closely with Respect, but their position was defeated in 2004. The ‘traditionalist’ wing, headed by international secretary John Foster, stands by the scenario spelled out in the CPB programme, Britain’s road to socialism, whereby an increasingly leftwing Labour Party, backed up by CPB MPs, delivers a national socialism from on high.

There has generally been an uneasy truce between the two wings, with the question of ‘reclaiming’ Labour - as opposed to the possibility of the unions setting up an alternative “party of labour” - being left open. But this truce was severely tested by the attempt to build upon last year’s No2EU alliance for the general election. Now the RMT pull-out has clinched it for the ‘traditionalists’ (although the failure of the Morning Star so far to mention either Tusc or the CPB rejection of it might imply continuing differences).

Both wings, of course, are agreed that “a Labour victory would be preferable to a Tory victory”, in the words of the EC statement. This means “recommending a vote for Labour in the majority of constituencies, especially where the Labour candidate has a record of opposing imperialist war and privatisation, and supporting trade union and other democratic rights”. The CPB in particular urges support “for those Labour prospective parliamentary candidates who have clearly identified themselves with progressive politics.” However, the CPB welcomes “principled contests against those New Labour figures who have distinguished themselves as the worst advocates of privatisation, war and neoliberalism”.

In reality, despite the talk about contesting “as many constituencies as feasible”, it is only these so-called “worst advocates” against whom the organisation has proposed standing. Elsewhere the CPB is calling for a blanket Labour vote and in this context noises about “especially” supporting “progressive” Labour candidates are meaningless.

So where does the CPB withdrawal leave Tusc, given that another of the No2EU participating organisations, the Alliance for Green Socialism, had already pulled out? Well, we know that the SWP hopes to stand six candidates as part of the coalition, but this week’s Socialist Worker is totally silent on the whole question (January 23).

Similarly The Socialist is strangely muted. A very brief article entitled ‘Support grows for new coalition’ announces that “hundreds of declarations of support have been received” and that Tusc “is receiving enthusiastic support from fighting trade unionists” (January 19). While the article treats readers to a list of some of the initial sponsors (mainly SPEW members who are trade union branch officers), it says nothing about the participation of other groups - as well as the SWP, the CPGB, Alliance for Workers’ Liberty and rump Socialist Alliance have all expressed an interest.

The Socialist also carries a local report from Portsmouth, headed ‘Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition gets started’, which tells us that “‘No2EU Wessex’ has been transformed into ‘Tusc Portsmouth’ and support is growing to back Mick Tosh, an RMT activist and former RMT executive committee member, as a candidate in Portsmouth North for the general election.” It seems that candidates are already being selected before the participation of other left groups has even been decided upon.

No doubt Bob Crow’s opinion on that question will carry a good deal of weight. We know, for example, that, according to a CPB internal circular about the No2EU campaign last year, “SWP, AWL, Weekly Worker and other ultra-left groups have not been considered eligible” (March 16 2009). Considered by whom?

Tusc urgently needs to drop the secrecy and open up to the rest of the left. Where did all those talks behind closed doors with the CPB, RMT and AGS lead? To their withdrawal, one after the other. Now the general election is probably just 15 weeks away - very little time for a genuine leftwing coalition to be built. There should be no more bans and proscriptions

Q
24th January 2010, 10:43
Related to this a statement from the CPB:


Executive Committee statement on elections (http://www.communist-party.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=712:executive-committee-statement-on-elections&catid=69:executive-committee&Itemid=77)
The Executive Committee of the CP meeting this weekend [16/17 January] has issued the following statement on elections.

The Communist Party reiterates its view that a Labour victory would be preferable to a Tory victory. This means recommending a vote for Labour in the majority of constituencies, especially where the Labour candidate has a record of opposing imperialist war and privatisation, and supporting trade union and other democratic rights. We urge especially support and campaigning for those Labour prospective parliamentary candidates who have clearly identified themselves with progressive politics.

However, we welcome principled contests against those New Labour figures who have distinguished themselves as the worst advocates of privatization, war and neo-liberalism.

We confirm our willingness to explore the potential for achieving as much unity as possible on the left and in the labour movement in wider campaigning against neo-liberal policies.

Noting that the RMT executive has decided not to affiliate formally to any electoral coalition for the forthcoming general election, and that no other union has taken a formal position, the Executive Committee of the Communist Party of Britain, in reviewing its own electoral strategy, has determined not to participate in a formal electoral coalition.

The Communist Party, and its allies in UK-domiciled Communist and Workers’ Parties, perhaps with other forces, will contest as many constituencies as feasible in the general election, in order to project a clear left-wing alternative.

The Communist Party will continue to pursue its agreed wider objectives in terms of electoral and campaigning work, which include negotiations to prevent left candidates standing against each other wherever possible, and support for candidates who have gained a personal and significant local potential electoral following.

Additionally, the Communist Party seeks to work with a wide range of left and labour movement forces, inside and outside the Labour Party, to promote mass activity in defence of working people and for wider support for policies towards a left-wing policy programme.
A strange duality here: they don't support any electoral alternative and support Labour yet support an electoral alternative and offer a leftwing alternative.

Orwellian doublespeak.

Serge's Fist
24th January 2010, 17:44
John Haylett expanded on their reasons in the Morning Star yesterday attacking the CPGB and others with: "The top-down nature of decision making drew fire too, although much of this came from ultra-left grouplets eager for an audience to lecture on their own correct political analysis. (morningstaronline.co.uk) Atleast he agrees our analysis is correct!

Revy
24th January 2010, 23:55
Related to this a statement from the CPB:

A strange duality here: they don't support any electoral alternative and support Labour yet support an electoral alternative and offer a leftwing alternative.

Orwellian doublespeak.

They consider the left wing in Labour to be part of the "alternative". Because their electoral strategy is, like the IMT, entryist, they still hope for a defeat of New Labour from the inside rather from the outside.

Vladimir Innit Lenin
25th January 2010, 03:02
Different day, same old shit.

Very thinly veiled attack there by the CPGB. I doubt there will be any real unity between them and the TUSC. It is clear from that letter that they have no interest in long term unity with SPEW, and SPEW probably likewise, judging from their pathetic little spats with the SWP.

Q
25th January 2010, 03:33
Different day, same old shit.

Very thinly veiled attack there by the CPGB. I doubt there will be any real unity between them and the TUSC. It is clear from that letter that they have no interest in long term unity with SPEW, and SPEW probably likewise, judging from their pathetic little spats with the SWP.
I think you're misunderstanding what the CPGB wants to do. They agree with the need for unity, hence their appliance, but to make it succeed a ruthless fight for democracy is needed. This is the basic point of their open letter.

That unity should mean everyone should be happily agreeing with eachother, as you seem to imply, is a very sectarian notion I think and the reason why many of these coalitions failed before.