The lamentable incidents which
occurred at the ULB [Universitaire libre de Bruxelles– Free
University of Brussels] when Garaudy came to speak there have
induced me to explain once again why we adhere to the principles
of workers democracy.
Workers democracy has always
been a basic tenet of the proletarian movement. It was a
tradition in the socialist and communist movement to firmly
support this principle in the time of Marx and Engels as well as
Lenin and Trotsky. It took the Stalinist dictatorship in the
USSR to shake this tradition. The temporary victory of fascism
in West and Central Europe also helped to undermine it. However,
the origins of this challenge to workers democracy are deeper
and older; they lie in the bureaucratization of the large
workers organizations.
The Social Democratic and trade
union bureaucrats were the first to begin to undermine the
principles of workers democracy. They started calling general
membership meetings at infrequent intervals. Then they began to
rig them, or often to do away with them altogether. They began
likewise to restrict or abolish freedom of discussion and
criticism within their organizations. They did not hesitate even
to appeal to the police(including the secret police) for help in
fighting revolutionary minorities. At the time of the first
world war, the German Social Democracy set a dismal example of
collusion with the state repressive forces. In subsequent years,
the Social Democrats everywhere followed this example.
The Soviet bureaucracy first
and then the bureaucrats in the Stalinist Communist parties (or
in trade unions under Stalinist leadership) simply followed the
pattern established by the Social Democrats, extending it
further and further. They abolished freedom of discussion and of
tendencies. Slander and lies replaced argument and debate with
opponent tendencies. They made massive use of physical force to
prevent their opponents from “causing any harm.” Thus, the
entire Bolshevik old guard which led the October Revolution and
the majority of the members of Lenin’s Central Committee were
exterminated by Stalin during the dark years of the Great Purge
(1935-38).
The young generation of
anti-imperialist and anti-capitalist militants now developing a
revolutionary consciousness are spontaneously returning to the
traditions of workers democracy. This was apparent in France in
May and June when freedom of speech for all tendencies was
jealously safeguarded in the assemblies of students and
revolutionary workers and students. But this new generation is
not always conscious of all the principled and practical reasons
for workers democracy.
This is why the youth can be
vulnerable to a kind of Stalinist-derived demagogy being spread
by certain pro-Chinese sects, which seek to make people believe
that workers democracy is contrary to “the interests of the
revolution.” Therefore, it is necessary to reaffirm these
reasons strongly. The workers movement lights for the
emancipation of the proletariat. hut this emancipation requires
the abolition of all forms of exploitation to which the workers
are subjected. Rejecting workers democracy means quite simply
that you want to maintain a situation like the one today in
which the masses of workers are unable to make their opinions
heard. The Marxist critique of bourgeois democracy starts from
the idea that this democracy is formal because the workers do
not have the material means to exercise the rights which the
bourgeois constitutions formally grant all citizens. Freedom of
the press is just a formality when only the capitalists and
their agents are able to get together the millions of dollars
needed to establish a daily newspaper.
But the conclusion that follows
from this critique of bourgeois democracy, obviously, is that
means must be created enabling all the workers to have access to
the media for disseminating ideas (printing presses, meeting
halls, radio and television, posters, etc.). If, on the
contrary, you conclude from this that only a self-proclaimed
“leading party of the proletariat” – or even a little sect
which declares that it alone is “genuinely revolutionary –
has the right to speak, to use the press, or to propagate its
ideas, then you risk increasing the political oppression of the
workers rather than abolishing it.
The Stalinists often reply that
abolition of the capitalist system equals emancipation of the
workers. We agree that abolition of private ownership of the
means of production, of the profit economy, and of the bourgeois
state are essential conditions for the emancipation of the
workers. But saying that these are “essential” conditions
does not mean that they are “sufficient.” Because as soon as
the capitalist system is abolished, the question arises of who
is going to run the factories, the economy, the municipalities,
the state, the schools and universities.
If a single party claims the
right to administer the state and the society; if it imposes a
monopoly of power by terror; if it does not permit the mass of
workers to express their opinions, their criticisms, their
worries, and their demands; if it excludes the workers from
administration– then it is inevitable that a widening gulf
will develop between this omnipotent bureaucracy and the mass of
workers. Then, emancipation of the workers is only a deception.
And without real workers democracy in all areas, including
freedom of organization and press, real emancipation of the
workers is impossible.
These principled reasons are
rein- forced by practical ones. Like all social classes in
history, the working class is not homogeneous. It has common
class interests, both immediate interests and historical
interests. But this community of interests is interwoven with
differences which have various origins – immediate special
interests (professional, group, regional, craft interests, etc.)
and different levels of consciousness. Many strata of the
working class have not yet become conscious of their historical
interests. Others have been influenced by bourgeois and
petty-bourgeois ideologies. Still others are weighed down by the
burden of past defeats and failures, of skepticism, or of the
degradation caused by capitalist society, etc.
However, the capitalist system
cannot be overthrown unless the entire working class is
mobilized in action against it. And this unity in action can
only be obtained if these various special interests and levels
of consciousness can be expressed in, and little by little
neutralized through, de bate and persuasion. Denying this
diversity can only result in a breakdown of unity in action and
in driving successive groups of workers into passivity or into
the camp of the enemy.
Anyone with experience in
strikes has been able to see in practice that the most
successful actions are pre pared and conducted through numerous
assemblies, First of the unionized workers and later of all the
workers concerned. In these assemblies, all the reasons in favor
of the strike can be developed, all opinions can be expressed,
and all the class enemy’s arguments can be exposed. If a
strike is launched without the benefit of such democracy, there
is much more risk that many workers will observe it
half-heartedly, if at all.
If this is true for an isolated
strike, it holds all the more for a general strike or for a
revolution. All the great revolutionary mobilizations of the
workers from the Russian revolution to the revolutionary upsurge
of May and June 1968 in France and including the German and
Spanish revolutions, to cite only these examples – have been
characterized by veritable explosions of workers democracy. In
these instances, many working-class tendencies coexisted,
expressed themselves freely in speeches and in the press, and
debated before the entire class.
The word “soviet’–
council of workers delegates –presses this unity of opposites
– the unity of the workers in the diversity of their
tendencies. In the Second Congress of Russian Soviets, which
took power in the October Revolution, there were a dozen
different tendencies and parties. Every attempt to repress this
workers democracy – by the Social Democracy in Germany, by the
Stalinists in Spain – has presaged, if not expressed, a
setback or defeat for the revolution.
The absence of workers
democracy not only hampers unity in action, it also obstructs
working out a correct political line.
It is true that the workers
movement has an excellent theoretical instrument to guide it in
the often extremely complicated twists and turns of economic,
social, and political struggles – revolutionary Marxism. But
this tool must still be used correctly. And no one person has a
monopoly on its correct application.
Without any doubt, Marx and
Lenin were geniuses. But life and history ceaselessly pose new
problems which cannot be solved simply by turning to the
scriptures. Stalin, who was considered by many honest Communists
before his death to be “infallible,” ill reality committed
many errors, to say nothing of crimes, some of which – as in
agricultural policy – have had pernicious consequences for
three decades for the entire Soviet people. Mao Zedong whom
other naive souls also consider “infallible,” endorsed the
policy of Aidit, the leader of the Indonesian CP, up until the
eve of the military coup d’état. his policy was at least
partially responsible for the deaths of 500,000 Indonesian
Communists and workers. As for the myth that the Central
Committee of a party is “always right,” or that the majority
of this committee is “always right,” Mao himself rejected it
in the famous resolution passed by the CC of the CCP [Chinese
Communist Party] on the “cultural revolution” in April 1967.
But if no person or group has a monopoly on truth and wisdom,
then discussion is indispensable to deter- mine a correct
political line. Rejection of discussion under any pretext (and
the pretext that a political opponent is
“counterrevolutionary” or an “enemy agent” is as old as
bureaucracy), or substituting epithets or physical violence for
debate, means condemning oneself to remain the victim of false
ideas, inadequate analyses, and errors with debilitating if not
catastrophic consequences.
Marxism is a guide to action,
they often say. That is true. But Marxism is distinguished from
utopian socialism by its appeal to scientific analysis. It does
not focus on action per se. It focuses on action which can
influence historical reality, which can change it in a given
direction – in the direction of socialist revolution, toward
the emancipation of the workers and of all humanity.
Out of the clash of ideas and
tendencies, the truth emerges which can serve as a guide to
action. Action inspired by “monolithic,” bookish, and
infantile thought – which is not subjected to the uninhibited
criticism possible only in a climate of workers democracy – is
condemned to certain failure. It can only result, in the case of
small groups, in the disillusionment and demoralization of
individuals; in the case of unions or larger parties, in defeats
for the class; and where the mass of the workers is concerned,
in defeats with a long train of humiliations, privations, and
impoverishment, if not casualties.
Often these arguments in favor
of the principles and practice of workers democracy are
countered in Stalinist circles by the assertion that workers
democracy cannot be extended to the “enemies of socialism”
inside the workers movement. Curiously, certain groups which
claim to be anti-bureaucratic and very left take a similar line
to justify booing and hissing or resorting to physical violence
as a substitute for debate with their political opponents.
Both the Stalinists and the
ultra- leftists cry: “You don’t argue with revisionists,
capitalist forces, and the representatives of the enemy.” In
practice, the Stalinists try to replace debate by repression, if
not murder and the use of tanks against the workers (from the
Moscow Trials to the intervention in Hungary and
Czechoslovakia). The ultra-leftists limit them- selves more
modestly to preventing Garaudy from speaking, doubtless until
the dreamed-of day when they can use more “effective” means
modeled on the Stalinist ones.
Of course, the working-class
bureaucracies objectively act in the interests of capital,
primarily by channeling the workers’ periodic revolutionary
explosions toward reformist outlets and thereby blocking
opportunities to overthrow capitalism. They play the same role
by influencing the workers on a day-to-day basis in favor of
class collaboration, undermining their class consciousness with
ideas taken from the bourgeois world.
But the objective function and
role of these bureaucracies is not confined to maintaining class
peace. In pursuing their routine reformist activities, they come
in conflict with the everyday interests of capitalism. The wage
increases and social welfare laws won by the reformists – in
exchange for their pledge to keep the workers’ demands within
limits that do not threaten the bases of the system – reduce
the capitalists’ profits somewhat. The trade union
organizations which they lead inject the collective power of
labor into the daily relationships between the bosses and the
workers. And as a result, these conflicts have an altogether
different outcome from the past century, when the strength of
the trade unions was slight or non-existent.
When the capitalist economy is
flourishing, the bourgeoisie is willing to pay the price
represented by these concessions in return for “social
peace.” But when the capitalist economy is in a bad way, these
same concessions rapidly become unacceptable to the bourgeoisie.
Then, it is in the capitalists’ interest to eliminate these
organizations completely, even the most moderate and reformist
ones. The very existence of the unions be comes incompatible
with the survival of the system.
This shows the real nature of
the reformist bureaucracy in the workers movement. This
bureaucracy is not composed of owners of capital who buy labor
power in order to appropriate surplus value. It is composed of
salaried employees (of the workers organizations or the state)
who vacillate and waver between the camp of capital and of me
Proletariat, some times leaning toward one, sometimes toward the
other, depending on their particular interests and the pressures
to which they are subjected. And, in facing the class enemy, the
vanguard workers have every reason to do their utmost to force
these bureaucrats to return to their camp. Otherwise, the common
defense would be greatly weakened.
Overlooking these elementary
truths leads to the worst catastrophes. The workers movement
learned this to its cost during the rise of fascism. At that
time, the “genius” Stalin invented the theory of “Social
Fascism.” According to this theory there was no difference
between the “revisionist’ Social Democrats and fascists. It
was even pro claimed that the Social Democracy had to be
defeated before the struggle against the Nazis could be won.
While the Social Democratic and
Communist workers were happily bashing each other’s heads in
– the reformist leaders shared the responsibility this time
equally with their Stalinist counterparts – neither came to
power, massacred thousands of worker militants, and dissolved
all the workers organizations. Thus, he made possible a
temporary, if some what embittered, reconciliation be between
the Social Democrats and the Communists in the concentration
camps. Would it not have been better, while not making any
concessions in the ideological struggle against revisionism, to
fight together against the Nazis and prevent them from taking
power?
On an infinitely smaller and
less tragic scale, the situation in the university can lead to a
dilemma of the same type overnight. All the left tendencies are
fighting to gain recognition of their right to carry on
“political activism” on me campus. Hut it is quite possible
that the administration will take the incidents surrounding
Garaudy’s visit as a pretext for banning any more political
lectures. What other course, then, is there but to fight
together to win minimum political freedom in the university?
Would it not be preferable to respect the rules of workers
democracy from now on, since they conform to the common
interests of the workers movement and the student confrontation
movement? If subjective criteria (“Anybody who doesn’t
support every one of my tactical turns is a capitalist and a
counterrevolutionary, even if he served as president of the
People’s Republic of China and vice-chairman of the Chinese
Communist party for twenty years!”) are substituted for these
objective criteria, then you fall into complete arbitrariness.
You end, of course, by wiping out the distinction between
“contradictions among the people” and “conflicts with the
class enemy, treating the former more and more like the latter.
Of course, it is impossible to
make an absolute and total separation be between the two.
Marginal cases are possible. We advocate frank debate in
meetings of strikers. We do not think that we need restrict
ourselves to polite discussion with strike breakers.
In every marginal case,
however, we must distinguish acts (or crimes) from opinions and
ideological tendencies. Acts must be proved and judged according
to clearly established, well-defined criteria of the workers’
interest (or after the overthrow of capitalism, of socialist
legality) so as to prevent arbitrariness. Failure to distinguish
between acts and opinions can only result in extinguishing
workers democracy, lowering the level of consciousness and
mobilization of the workers, and progressively robbing the
revolutionists themselves of their ability to orient themselves
politically ...
Note
1.
Roger Garaudy, one of the leading intellectuals of the
reactionary Communist party of France, visited Belgium November
5, 1968 to give a lecture on May 1968 in France, at the
request of the Communist Student Union of Brussels University.
It was not surprising that radical students considered a lecture
on this topic by a representative of the French CP as a
provocation.
In any case, when the meeting
started, a few dozen Maoists carrying portraits of Chairman Mao
and anarchists carrying a black flag persistently tried – for
the most part successfully – to prevent Garaudy from
addressing the audience.
A confused debate followed in
which the question of whether Garaudy should be allowed to speak
was mixed with the question of whether or not a revolutionary
situation had existed in France in May. Finally, the Maoists and
anarchists ended the debate by pushing Garaudy out of the
meeting hall.
This incident raised serious
questions about the norms of democratic debate and behavior in
the working class and socialist movement. In answer to some of
the questions raised, Ernest Mandel, the well-known Marxist
economist and editor of the Belgian socialist weekly La
Gauche, wrote an article on the subject of workers
democracy which appeared in two parts in the November 16 and
November 23 issues of La Gauche. The
translation is by Intercontinental Press.
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