Die Neue Zeit
11th February 2013, 20:41
Learning something new everyday: http://books.google.ca/books?id=cFwgXLau6mMC&printsec=frontcover
Measured against these standards, the Austrian party, considering first the party as a unity and then its German portion, comes off as the most Marxist during the years under consideration. This judgment is based on the superiority of its party program as a Marxist document, the party's ability to represent the nation's organized industrial workers in fact (rather than just claiming to do so), the prevalent notion among major party leaders that the proletariat as a whole was something larger than the party, and the party's notable success in both parliamentary and extra-parliamentary tactics.
Measured against these standards, the Austrian party, considering first the party as a unity and then its German portion, comes off as the most Marxist during the years under consideration. This judgment is based on the superiority of its party program as a Marxist document, the party's ability to represent the nation's organized industrial workers in fact (rather than just claiming to do so), the prevalent notion among major party leaders that the proletariat as a whole was something larger than the party, and the party's notable success in both parliamentary and extra-parliamentary tactics.