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A Socialist Voice

McInally's Blog

John McInally

No Capitulation To Right Wing Witch-hunt – Fightback Now

November 6, 2020 by John McInally Leave a Comment

With the full weight of the establishment and media behind them Keir Starmer and Labour’s right-wing are determined to extirpate socialist, anti-war and anti-imperialist ideas from the party, or, at the very least, neutralise them. This is the real strategy behind the suspension of Jeremy Corbyn – it is a declaration of war, and it is class war. Horrified at how close Corbyn came to being prime minister of a Labour government in 2017 on a Manifesto that offered some alternative to cuts, privatisation and austerity the right-wing are determined to ensure it never happens again.

While debate is heavily focussed on whether socialists should stay in the Labour Party the real issue is whether the left is prepared to launch a serious fightback to defeat this McCarthyite witch-hunt. A fightback must be conducted in the party, the trade unions and the social movements through which workers and youth are challenging a system incapable of offering them a safe and stable life. Starmer and the right-wing would prefer the left to cower in compliant silence but will carry out a wholesale purge of activists if required. The left can challenge and defeat this witch-hunt only by an uncompromising and determined fightback in defence of socialist ideas and policies.

It suits the right-wing if activists leave. But that means a defeatist message is sent out to workers and activists that faced with acts of bureaucratic gangsterism socialists concede without a fight. Right-wing bureaucracies in the trade unions regularly employ these witch-hunting strategies and history tells us the only serious response is to build the most determined and sustained fightback. For over a hundred years Labour has been the traditional mass organisation of political representation for the working class, to hand it over to the forces of pro-capitalist reaction without a fight would rightly be perceived as an historic defeat.

The ruling class’s surrogates and agents in our movement need neither encouragement nor an instruction manual on how to witch-hunt the left. They were as terrified and horrified as much as the Tories by Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party, more so in fact. Corbyn represented a mortal threat to their careers and prestige. For the right-wing it is not enough Corbyn is defeated – he must be broken, crushed and humiliated. Starmer’s claim there was no strategy to suspend Corbyn is a lie, but he must now follow through and expel him, anything less would be a setback for him.

The left’s response so far has been wholly inadequate to the scale of the attack. If the Labour left and particularly leaders of affiliated unions and MPs who demand activists “Stay And Fight” or “Stay And Organise” do not launch a serious campaign to challenge and defeat the witch-hunt these will be no more than empty slogans.

Tories’ In Crisis – Starmer To the Rescue    

Class interests are driving the witch-hunt. The ruling class face multiple crises, the pandemic, Black Lives Matter movement, slump, Brexit and growing support for Scottish independence. All this adds a greater depth and urgency to the Tories aim of dividing the labour movement and crushing any idea there is a socialist alternative to the unfettered market. In times of crisis right-wing labour and trade union “leaders” always prioritise defence of capitalist interests over those of the workers they purportedly represent. It is no accident the right-wing have chosen this time to launch an attack on the left.

Workers in Struggle*

As the pandemic rages it is increasingly clear the Tories are incapable of protecting workers’ lives, let alone their livelihoods. Despite raising some criticisms of the Tories competence Starmer has failed to expose their role in the slaughter and their kleptomaniac looting of the public finances. As England goes into its second lockdown he fully backs Johnson’s insane decision to keep schools open and is keen to show he will stand up to the unions. His aim is to take Labour into a government of “national unity”, in the “national interest” of course – an open alliance with the Tories.

Starmer aims to reassure the ruling class Labour will abandon Corbyn’s Manifesto commitments in favour of the type of pro-capitalist policies that defined Blair’s New Labour. Starmer is an  establishment man to his bootstraps and he wants to show that as a future Labour prime minister he would be a “safe pair of hands”. Ironically, this strategy would ensure Labour loses the next election.

Corbyn Suspended For Speaking The Truth 

The ruling class internationally were appalled at the prospect of Corbyn as Labour prime minister of the world’s oldest, if rapidly declining, capitalist state. Labelling Corbyn and the left as “anti-semites” was an act of ruthless opportunism that expropriated the language and principles of anti-racism and the left all the better to discredit it and to silence criticism of the Israeli apartheid regime. Anti-semitism is abhorrent and while it would be absurd to deny it does not exist in the Labour Party that can never justify it being weaponising for ulterior political motives to smear those fighting for socialism – the antithesis of imperialism, racism and oppression.

Starmer’s said those who deny the existence of anti-semitism or that it was greatly exaggerated are part of the problem. Corbyn was suspended for contradicting this – for telling the truth. The suspension is not about fighting anti-semitism within Labour, it is an attempt to destroy free speech, shut down discussion and provide a catch-all charge for anyone daring to express even the mildest dissent.

It is precisely on this issue the left so far has failed to confront the right-wing. Corbyn’s statement should be fully and unequivocally endorsed by the left, and by every left affiliated union leader and MP. Those spineless, deceitful “lefts” who are acting as apologists for the suspension by criticising Corbyn’s wholly justified statement on the EHRC Report are effectively advising him to issue a grovelling apology, an humiliating capitulation that would embolden the right-wing to even greater excesses.              

Organise The Fight Back Now

Past errors must be confronted. Under Corbyn’s leadership the Labour left naively pushed the idea, despite all the evidence to the contrary, that “unity” with the right-wing was possible. The right-wing reacted to such appeals with open contempt. Failure to drive through mandatory reselection was a catastrophic mistake. In pulling back from holding the Parliamentary Labour Party to the most basic democratic accountability the Blairite bureaucracy were encouraged and emboldened.

Supplicatory appeals to Starmer for “party unity” won’t work. This will not be settled “amicably” or with appeals to goodwill. There can be no unity with people conducting a witch-hunt, they must be taken on and defeated. The right-wing will pursue a scorched earth policy and destroy the party rather that allowing the left to reclaim the party. But while that process has begun, it is some way from completion and the left’s response is the most important factor in determining the outcome.

The left mustdemand the suspension is immediately and unconditionally lifted. Demand the EHRCreport is openly and democratically debated in the party – no silencing of debate. Left unions leaders and MPs should confront Starmer and tell him to either lift the suspension or face votes of no confidence with the purpose of launching a leadership election to remove him. Mandatory reselection should be re-raised and prioritised as a policy. This is the bare minimum to show serious intent.   

If the counter-revolution in Labour is not challenged a rout of the left cannot be ruled out. In such circumstances calls for a new workers’ party will gain even greater currency. Demands for union disaffiliation from Labour will grow. New forces entering struggle to fight in this period will look to their traditional organisations, the trade unions, including those affiliated to Labour. These workers and youth will demand effective political representation and left union leaders who argue Labour is still the best vehicle to represent the interests of our members and our class will need to explain if that is so why then was it abandoned without a fight.       

This struggle is unfolding in a period of multiple crises and rapid shifts in consciousness, not in the relative calm of the 1990’s. The right-wing have nothing to offer to offer the working class but the status quo of austerity, cuts and privatisation. The lack of confidence on the Labour left to seriously confront these attacks is in large part explained by the current relative weakness of Marxist ideas and forces in our movement. Despite this the fightback must be organised now, inside and outside the party, in order to build the type of united front and the widest alliance on a socialist programme that can challenge and defeat both the witch-hunt and the Tories themselves.  

Filed Under: Labour Party

Marxist Method and Orientation to Mass Organisations of the Working Class II

September 18, 2020 by John McInally Leave a Comment

Part Two – Building A Marxist International – Oppose Bureaucratism And Prestige Politics. 

Examine the road over which the fault has passed. – Victor Hugo

“A Matter Of Prestige ” and “Marxist Method and Orientation to Mass Organisations of the Working Class (Part One)”, published in August 2019 and July 2020 respectively, examined the destructive role played by The Socialist Party of England and Wales (SP) in the United Kingdom civil service and out-sourced workers’ trade union the Public and Commercial Services union (PCS) and the subsequent wider split in the Committee for a Workers’ International (CWI).

In this period the need for a genuine Marxist international in the Trotskyist tradition has never been more important. This article, the final in a three-part analysis of the processes that lay behind events in PCS and CWI struggles, contains comment on the SP/CWI role in the unions and outlines some characteristics of the groupings that have emerged from the split, particularly in relation to their orientation and method to the mass organisations of the working class.    

1 – SP & CWI and the Trade Unions

As predicted, the SP/CWI’s surrender to prestige politics and abandonment of the united front strategy has driven an inexorable descent into destructive sectarianism, currently most evident in their continuing “rule or ruin” strategy in the socialist led PCS, one of the most militant, democratic, lay-led unions in the UK. Their abandonment of the principles and method through which the CWI played such an outstanding role in building a united left over many decades that defeated one of the most corrupt right-wing bureaucracies in the movement has left their now tiny forces isolated and alienated from even their erstwhile supporters on the left. Prestige politics inevitably results in a pursuit of “strategies” based on grudge-bearing, vendettas and self-abasing delusions of victimhood rather than a sound method of Marxist analysis. For them everything is now personal.  

The SP/CWI will increasingly pursue similar destructive strategies in other unions. With prestige their sole pre-occupation they seek shortcuts to influence, political leverage and leading positions without the inconvenience of long-term, patient building in the workplaces and consistent united front work amongst the activist layers and in broad lefts. 

UNISON General Secretary Election – Opportunism Before Unity

While the blame does not lie entirely with SP/CWI it is nevertheless true that their approach in the major public sector union UNISON has been a major factor in the failure to build a united left capable of effectively challenging and defeating the right-wing bureaucracy that has played such a backward role during decades of cuts and privatisation.

In the current run-up to a general secretary election in UNISON the SP/CWI are opportunistically placing their own narrow interests of prestige above the priority of building an effective left campaign to elect a socialist general secretary, an event that would have a potentially transformative impact on the movement. They announced their candidate prior to any discussion on the left and then, having participated in a debate and vote at the union’s United Left hustings in which their candidate was defeated by socialist activist Paul Holmes, decided to press ahead and seek nominations for their candidate.  

The SP/CWI are now using the abhorrent methods of the gutter press. In a recent article in the Socialist they have “outed” Holmes by arguing that because he faces an investigation from both from his employer and union bureaucracy, with the threat of disciplinary measures being taken him, he is, in their eyes, not a fit candidate to stand.

The article says in relation to the investigation “This was even accepted by the SWP, who had publicly described them in the Socialist Worker newspaper as “allegations of bullying, that should be taken seriously and investigated.” But this fragment, quoted completely out of context, is a calculated distortion. The full quote reveals a very different perspective: – “It is necessary to deal with a complaint of bullying and harassment and it should be treated with the utmost seriousness. But this comes from a council that has not suspended any manager despite allegations of racist bullying on the bins department.” And, critically, it adds: “The action taken against Paul is clearly related to his trade union activities as head of a branch that fights cuts.”

So, there we have it, for electoral and factional purposes the SP/CWI, a supposedly revolutionary socialist party, in the full knowledge their comments will be viewed by management and the right-wing, think it is acceptable to ruthlessly attack a socialist activist under the threat of serious disciplinary action and before any investigation has even been carried out. As one activist wryly observed, however far an organisation degenerates there is always room for it to degenerate further.

Oblivious to how repugnant their attack on Holmes appears to activists the SP/CWI ironically demonstrated an almost comical sense of victimhood in crying “witch-hunt” when UNISON United Left removed SP/CWI election material from their website, presumably on the perfectly reasonable grounds they were standing against the elected candidate.  

In Other Unions – The Pursuit Of Influence

A small group in Ireland remained with the CWI re-forming themselves as the Militant Left, mostly around the Northern Ireland Public Sector Alliance (NIPSA). These comrades justify their stand in part by claiming the ISA in Ireland (Socialist Party of Ireland) are characterised by the same intolerance and bureaucratism they appear quite willing to live with in the CWI. There are of course deeper reasons for this inconsistency. While the ISA is opposed to its union activists taking up full-time union positions the CWI fully encouraged and supported their leading NIPSA activists to do so. Whether Marxists take up full-time posts in unions is not a straightforward question. The ISA’s position sails too closely to ultra-leftism on the issue but the CWI operates on a wholly opportunist basis.

Militant Left comrades in NIPSA didn’t just prioritise securing full-time posts for key supporters they, in an act of adventurism and cynical opportunism actually, attempted a coup to remove the union’s general secretary, which failed. The SP/CWI in London fully supported and encouraged this reckless action. This move has caused deep disquiet in the union’s Broad Left, once highly regarded in NIPSA the CWI is now seen by many activists as a divisive force.

In UNITE SP/CWI are engaged in the same sort of petty intrigues in the debate to find a left candidate to succeed Len McCluskey by courting various candidates, prioritising their own influence and leverage regardless of the interests of both union members and the left.   

Respect for SP/CWI on the trade union left was built up over decades and, incidentally, largely on the basis of the work and example of those rank and file former comrades in PCS who they now ridiculously slander as “ex-socialists”. Their distorted status driven method is now so ingrained it is ruled out they are capable of playing any consistent or positive role in building left unity or establishing themselves as a significant Marxist tendency within the mass organisations of the working class.

Socialists in the UK trade union movement are increasingly aware they have undergone a qualitative degeneration and change in approach in recent years. It is less clear that those who were expelled from CWI and went onto form the International Socialist Alternative (ISA) fully appreciate this.  

2 – International Socialist Alternative (ISA)  

How Far Has The Apple Fallen From The Tree?

In the most comradely terms we warned ISA leaders in the UK and Ireland if they did not look afresh and analyse the real issues in the PCS struggle their efforts to develop “consistent, principled united front work in the mass organisations of the working class would be hidebound from the beginning.” That analysis was intended as a constructive if forthright appeal, as is this contribution, for the ISA to seriously examine whether it is itself entirely free from the twin deformities of bureaucratic centralism and prestige politics. In other words – how far has the apple fallen from the tree?

Accusations made by the SP/CWI leadership in order to justify the bureaucratic coup and subsequent mass expulsions against those who went on to form ISA have been shown to be false and based on manufactured differences. The ISA’s campaigns have particularly given the lie to the charge they had abandoned trade union work. The ISA has within its ranks many good class fighters. But while its leaders in the UK and Ireland remained wedded to the SP/CWI’s discredited analysis of events in PCS they risk, to paraphrase, a “scratch” developing into “gangrene.”

Given the multitude of pressing priorities it is perhaps understandable other national ISA sections have uncritically accepted the position of the British and Irish ISA leaders on this issue. But the PCS dispute was not some abstract debate, nor an insignificant “local difficulty”. On the contrary, it was a struggle about method, sectarianism, bureaucratic centralism and prestige politics. It was a defining event in the International’s history, rich in lessons for any Marxist serious about developing a correct method and principled strategies in the development of united front work and a correct orientation toward the trade unions.

No one should dismiss the considerable potential of ISA to play a constructive role in building a genuine revolutionary group based on the original principles the CWI was formed. It is therefore deeply regrettable that the response of ISA leaders in the UK and Ireland has been to shut their eyes, cover their ears and refuse to re-visit and analyse these events. The ISA should debate this issue and if its leaders are not prepared to do so rank and file members should ask them, why not?

Preparing For The Future By Confronting The Past

What underlies the ISA leaders’ failure to examine their own role in the events in PCS? It could well indicate the twin infections of bureaucratic centralism and prestige politics are more deeply written into the character of the ISA than its leaders and rank and file understand.  

Two key factors underly the ISA’s leaders’ failure to address this issue. Their current leaders in the UK and Ireland were, in the main, full-timers or former full-timers, and part of the SP/CWI leadership itself. They uncritically disseminated the leadership’s same rotten analysis, repeated the same smears and consciously ignored clear and irrefutable evidence of the abandonment of core CWI principles around the workers’ wage, election of officials and the united front. Serious mistakes certainly, but nothing compared to their ongoing refusal to re-assess and re-orientate in face of hard evidence and harsh experience.  

No-one works and develops, either politically and personally, in the type of bureaucratic, status obsessed culture that developed in the SP/CWI without ingesting to a greater or lesser extent its more unhealthy aspects. The CWI under Peter Taaffe’s decades long leadership became more and more incapable of recognising, let alone admitting or correcting their mistakes and this led to a deep intolerance of even the slightest challenge to its authority. This mentality sprang from an underlying lack of political confidence and in part explains their abandonment of a healthy Marxist method for the intrigue and manoeuvring of bureaucratic “power” politics.

This mentality was echoed in the attitude shown toward the PCS activists by those who subsequently became ISA leaders. For them breaking the party line was as much a heresy as it was for the SP/CWI leadership. Rather than recognising in certain situations the only option open to principled Marxists is “breaking the party line”, their underlying impulse was to fear the implications of such future challenges to their own authority. They instinctively drew the conclusion that however badly the SP/CWI had behaved there is no greater sin than opposing a “party line”. This ”enlightened self-interest”, which is the very essence of bureaucratism and reflects a mindset that will never tolerate a challenge to leadership authority. It has nothing in common with genuine Bolshevism.

With a remarkable lack of irony and self-awareness these same comrades only months later belatedly discovered the very same methods they supported against the lay activists in PCS were being used against them. It takes an almost heroic act of denial to wilfully ignore the blindingly obvious, not to join the dots or even recognise or attempt to understand and address the connections. But these comrades are no fools, their reluctance to tackle the hard questions arising from their supine support for the “party line” was based on political self-interest. They had a firm motivation in avoiding scrutiny on this matter, particularly the scrutiny of ISA members themselves, to whom they still peddle the same rotten, discredited SP/CWI analysis as good coin. Such mistakes have material consequences and will not be easily air-brushed from history.

Consequences Of Denial

In politics, as elsewhere, truth is concrete – so too is error. Failure to confront these errors has already had serious consequences. Incredibly, the handful of ISA supporters in PCS and one or two fellow travellers are still in unholy alliance with the SP/CWI in PCS. They supported SP/CWI’s manufactured “differences” with the democratically decided policy of the union in a reckless attempt to discredit the leadership on the eve of a national pay ballot for electoral and factional advantage, a shocking betrayal of the union’s low paid workers. They remained silent on the SP/CWI’s candidate’s election address in the PCS general secretary election that told members not to vote for all Labour candidates in the general election and they uncritically lift wholesale from the SP/CWI their entire “analysis” on PCS. This includes the infantile smear that PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka and the union leadership argued that all major union demands should be set aside during the pandemic when in fact the union has been in the very forefront of protecting members’ interests in this difficult period. The ISA have also followed the SP/CWI in their “rule or ruin” split from Left Unity, which over decades has been the most successful and effective broad left in the trade union movement to form a left “Network”.

The ISA’s support for SP/CWI’s “rule or ruin” split from PCS’s broad left formation Left Unity is a particularly serious error, the very opposite of a serious orientation to building left unity on a principled basis. No amount of abstract “lead-offs” or discussions on “Trotsky and the Trade Unions” will correct such errors. In failing to apply an honest Marxist method they weaken the struggle to confront sectarianism, insularity, prestige politics and inevitably compromise their own ability to orientate toward the most important mass organisations of the working class, the trade unions.  

The ISA’s failure to distinguish themselves from the SP/CWI has left their comrades isolated and estranged from the union’s left activists and regarded as the latter’s “Little Sir Echoes.” This is regrettable. ISA leaders need to appreciate this is not a game. In concrete terms it means they are failing to develop principled united front strategy and tactics, in living conditions, in a major trade union.

It would be a serious mistake to regard ISA’s and SP/CWI as just two sides of the same coin but this view is gaining traction and is a direct result of the ISA’s tail-gating of their former SP/CWI comrades who regard them with embittered loathing and contempt. No arena of human activity is more unforgiving of error than politics. Continuing this unprincipled alliance with the SP/CWI in PCS will deliver nothing but disappointment, division and failure for the ISA. The ISA can be better than this, but they must confront their past errors, address their current mistaken approach and engage in an honest and comradely way with the union’s left and break with the SP/CWI or risk being dragged down with them into a spiral of sectarianism.  

3 – Splits And New Formations

What lessons have been learned by those expelled from the CWI? What are the prospects for these forces to go on and build a principled International based on the principles the CWI itself was originally formed? 

Significant fractures in ISA have already occurred even at this early stage of its development. Various factors may drive these developments but two core questions stand out: – how to orientate toward the mass organisations and how to develop a healthy internal regime based on the principles of democratic centralism. On the latter the central question is how to develop a regime that allows independent thought, free debate with a conscious shift toward democracy while maintaining the ability to act in unity.  

Splits and expulsions are the organisational consequences of a sharp struggle of ideas, perspectives and method. But can also be the product of a bureaucratic regime. The serious revolutionary is obliged in such circumstances to reassess and re-orientate, and always from a position of revolutionary optimism and confidence, free of the demoralising pathologies of cynicism, bitterness and self-interest that characterises the sectarian and the bureaucrat alike. The capacity and space for independent thought is critical to such a process. Leaders must listen as well as lecture, actively encourage open debate, particularly on difficult or contentious issues, and allow rank and file members to raise differences without the fear or worry they will be identified as “trouble”. Trotsky himself stated a revolutionary must have a good ear, and only secondly a good tongue.

In Ireland Paul Murphy TD and supporters have left ISA and set up RISE. In the United States some leading comrades and their supporters have likewise left and moved toward the Reform and Revolution formation that advocates joining with the Democratic Socialist Alliance (DSA). While it remains to be seen how these new formations will develop in terms of method, perspective and orientation it is clear these comrades are asking the correct questions arising from the CWI’s implosion.

Marxists And The Struggle For Political Representation In The US

In the US the question of whether Marxist revolutionaries should enter into the DSA is clearly a matter of tactical judgement not principle and based on a whole variety of factors. Above all, it is a concrete question. How DSA develops cannot be mapped out with certainty. Millions are being radicalised in the United States as never before, many clearly outside the ranks of the DSA. Many are drawing revolutionary conclusions. Given the tiny forces of Marxism the task is how to reach the best elements.It is clear though that the presence of a Marxist tendency operating within DSA on the principled basis of the united front and also, critically, consciously seeking to educate and win over the amorphous anti-capitalist forces that constitute that formation can potentially bring large numbers toward a revolutionary Marxist programme.

There are those in DSA so infected with the poison of “lesser-evilism” they will never leave the Democratic Party. This is the case with the Jacobin leadership. But many more will be receptive to the idea of forming a new workers’ party, certainly if Biden is elected. DSA may well be a transient formation, it is not like the British Labour Party with its long history and strong connections to the trade union movement but neither does it have the enormous weight of the bureaucratic deformities and conservatism that developed in much of the British labour and trade union movement. Although even a small group can develop a bureaucracy, as we have seen in the CWI.

In the tumultuous period opening up the possibilities for developing a mass organisation that would be a major force in forming independent working-class political representation through the formation of a new workers’ party cannot be under-estimated. In these times a bold approach has the potential to reap considerable rewards for the ideas of Marxism. However, without clear ideas, perspectives and confident, educated cadres, it will be clutching at straws – there are no short-cuts.

Events in The US will propel the working class toward a new workers’ party, as was the case in the 1930’s, but the process then was cut across by the Second World War and the post-war boom. Building such a party is the biggest task for socialists in the coming period. How a Marxist tendency orientates to mass organisations, whether of a transient, or more established character, like the trade unions, will be critical, and it will not be a risk-free process. Abstract demands for a new workers’ party from organisations that have not freed themselves from the insularity and bureaucratic deformities of the CWI will not attract activists or workers in significant numbers.

A Democratic Culture – Opposition to Insularity and Sectarianism

The bureaucratic centralism that characterised the CWI resulted in an insular and defensive mentality in which its leaders, fearful of maintaining their own authority, obsessively monitored members for the slightest sign of heterodoxy. In the SP/CWI in Britain there was no serious education of the rank and file, who were regarded simply as activists. It is therefore genuinely welcome comrades from RISE and those in the US are making significant efforts to develop a more open and inclusive approach to debate in the democratic traditions of the Bolsheviks. Those who have left the ISA and are taking steps to honestly confront these issues are correct to do so. In the final analysis though there is no substitute in developing a healthy political culture and regime other than building a membership steeped in an understanding of Marxist theory and equally steeled through consistent engagement within the wider organisations of the working class.

Paul Murphy and other socialist TD’s like ISA’s Ruth Coppinger and Mick Barry have played outstanding roles as working-class representatives in the Irish Republic. But in standing against Murphy in the most recent Irish general election the ISA in the form of the Irish Socialist Party showed the same petty-minded, personalised vindictiveness that characterised the CWI leadership toward anyone who dared disagree with them. The ISA claim that standing against Murphy and compromising his chances of re-election was based on principled political difference is not credible. The real reason is clear as day, it was because he was seen as a rival and the ISA reaction was based on the rotten Taaffe formulation “he is no longer one of us.”

Open Debate And Dialogue, Testing Ideas And Unity In Action

The immense tasksfacing our class have never been more evident. Capitalism, along with the major existential crisis of climate change, faces triple crises of enormous proportions, the Covid-19 pandemic, the anti-racist uprising in the US that is now an international phenomenon and an economic crisis that will dwarf that of the 1930’s. Never has the need for a revolutionary party based on Marxist principles and method been more necessary.

With its many capable and self-sacrificing comrades the ISA could play a consistent and effective role in building such a party. However, no revolutionary organisation can build a successful, principled movement unless its leaders and members are prepared to wage a relentless and uncompromising political campaign against the same twin tendencies of bureaucratism and prestige politics that led to the failure of the CWI.

Part and parcel of this would also require an honest reappraisal of the 1991-92 split of Ted Grant and Alan Woods, which has been deliberately distorted by the Taaffe leadership. This split was principally driven by the same bureaucratism that developed in a far more recognisable form over the years, the issue of the approach to the Labour Party was an important but secondary factor.One thing is clear, whatever other differences ex-CWI comrades have with the International Marxist Tendency (IMT) the latter’s emphasis on Marxist theory, education and open discussion has borne considerable fruit. Their youth base is very impressive, the recent IMT University that attracted over six thousand from 120 countries around the world is a deeply encouraging sign of interest in the ideas of Marxism. There is reason to believe that the consistent work in developing an educated and confident cadre will reap rewards if IMT develops a deeper engagement in its trade union work. In the past, the leaders of the CWI heralded the demise of the IMT and ridiculed its concentration on theory, but it is the CWI that has suffered the shipwreck.

Political splits by their very nature expose sharp political differences and can produce deep personal antipathies as a result, and the negative impact of the latter can poison attempts at constructive political engagement. But in a period in which the stakes for our class have never been higher and the need for the wide dissemination of Marxist ideas has never been more evident the insular mentality that drives those, like the leaders of the CWI, to treat even the slightest deviation as heresy deserving of hysterical denunciation is the road to nowhere. Unless tackled ruthlessly the deformities of bureaucratism, prestige politics and formalist orthodoxy will initially impede and eventually act as an insurmountable barrier to building an international capable of meeting the unprecedented challenges facing our class and movement.

This does not mean a political “love-in” but open dialogue and democratic debate, testing of ideas, developing perspectives, constructive cooperation and, in the best Marxist tradition, principled unity in action.  

Filed Under: Theory, Trade Unions

Counter Revolution in the Labour Party and the Coming Storm

August 17, 2020 by John McInally Leave a Comment

For A Socialist Alternative: Building A Militant Left Opposition

In Britain Corbyn’s defeat and new Labour leader, Keir Starmer’s clear intention to extirpate socialism from the party has demoralised many socialists. But fatalism and pessimism is misplaced. Momentous developments are unfolding in Britain and internationally. The coming period will be one of continuous, deepening and irreversible crises. Capitalist strategists are reeling from the triple crises of Covid-19, the eruption of social movements like Black Lives Matter and the devastating economic collapse. Such crises will become the norm not the exception and will unfold not just in long timescales but in coming months and years.

It is increasingly evident to working people capitalism is incapable of resolving the huge problems facing humanity, and millions are already searching for solutions to the exploitation, chaos and violence endemic within it. Massive forces will be unleashed as the working class begins to fight back. The right-wing reformism offered by Labour’s “new management” has no solutions.

Campaign To Destroy Corbyn

Labour’s Manifesto did not in itself represent a fundamental challenge to capitalism but exposed what decades of cuts and privatisation had wrought on society and presented a vision of a socialist alternative. The establishment’s deep-seated fear of socialist ideas explains the malicious ruthlessness of the anti-Corbyn campaign, but this reflected the establishment’s weakness as much as its strength.

When Corbyn became Labour leader the forces of reaction, led by the press and media, with the BBC and the liberal Guardian the most vicious, moved into action. The BBC is the most sophisticated state propaganda outlet on the planet and the envy of every dictator on it. Even after Corbyn resigned their campaign goes on, the BBC “journalist” suing Corbyn and Blairite demands he is expelled from Labour are a clear message to all socialists – dare challenge us and we’ll hound and destroy you.

Starmer And Labour Electability

Framing Labour as the “patriotic” party is Starmer’s strategy for electoral success. His every utterance is designed to assure the establishment he is their man. Under him Labour will never be an effective opposition to the Tories, let alone a radical alternative. His credo that “..now isn’t the time for party politics” and “constructive opposition” is parliamentary cretinism. The Tories are responsible for tens of thousands avoidable Covid-19 deaths and are corruptly channelling billions of pounds to outsourced companies owned by relatives and friends. Starmer’s failure to expose and challenge this explains why Labour is ten points behind in opinion polls. Prospects for a surge in support for Labour look grim.

The Red Wall And Scotland

The effect of anti-Corbyn propaganda was a factor but was not the principal reason the so-called Red Wall seats fell – Starmer’s pro-Remain strategy was the main cause. In dismissing Brexit supporters in these areas as stupid racists, the Blairites demonstrated their utter contempt for the working class generally. It is not ruled out Labour can win back these seats, but the negative perception of Labour  that the Blairites created will prove a significant barrier to overcome.

Labour has lost Scotland. In all probability this is irreversible. Starmer is a dyed-in-the-wool British nationalist and chauvinist, and his uncompromising unionist stance shows he and Labour’s tone-deaf Scottish leaders do not understand the underlying class reasons driving demands for independence. They are utterly incapable of addressing the national question in Scotland. They wrongly believe Labour can be the force around which unionism can coalesce, but they are in for a big shock. Unionist forces will almost certainly form around the Tories who will ruthlessly appeal to reactionary sectarian elements in Scottish society leaving Labour to have no strategy but open class collaboration with the British establishment – exactly what sank them in the 2014 Independence Referendum.

Imperialism, Racism And Anti-semitism.

Starmer is wholly committed to the forces of reaction that hold the British establishment together. He gives unconditional support to the police and security services. Ex-MI6 chief Dearlove’s public endorsement of him and his asinine Cold War rhetoric toward Russia and China, while maintaining silence about Russian oligarchs donations to the Tories, speaks volumes. He will seek to re-position Labour as loyal supporters of American and Western imperialism.     

As an open supporter of right-wing Zionist nationalism, his weasel words designed to distance himself from the more egregious actions and atrocities of the Apartheid Israeli state convinces no-one. Opposition to Israel’s occupation is growing in the West and attempts to re-position Labour as a largely uncritical supporter of Israel puts him on the wrong side of Labour members, and history.

Starmer played a significant role in weaponising antisemitism for factional and political advantage but is now faced with the reality this “strategy” is turning into its opposite and is now a millstone around his neck. Having lost control of their own monstrous creation, the Blairites shocking behaviour is increasingly exposed, and no amount of spin, lies, interdicts or cover-ups will prevent the truth coming out.

Starmer’s description of the Black Lives Matter movement as a ”moment” was no slip of the tongue  mendable by Unconscious Bias training. It showed he neither understands nor supports the struggle against institutionalised racism. His silence over revelations in the leaked Labour report of the humiliating and disgusting racist filth thrown at black women MP’s like Diane Abbott is despicable. Cowardly claims these comments were “taken out of context” convinces no-one and all this may well have significant negative electoral consequences for Labour.     

Learn The Lessons – No “Unity” With Blairites.

Starmer’s counter-revolution is nowhere near a completed process, and success is by no means guaranteed. Premature obituaries for the Labour left to assume the future direction of the party is a settled question. But this is not so. The party’s future will be decided by the struggle of living forces in a period of instability in which demands for socialist alternatives will grow and exert a potentially momentous impact on the labour and trade union movement. Blairism has no sustainable future; its only real role now is to serve its big business backers in cleansing Labour of any vestige of socialism.

Ironically, the Blairites are more aware than many socialists that a key lesson of Corbyinism is that Labour is capable of transformation, but only if the left pursue their aims with the same ruthlessness, they themselves exhibited. The right-wing must be resolutely opposed both inside and outside the party. When they demand unity and say the “Tories are the real enemy” they should be reminded that when Corbyn appealed for unity, their response was “No, the Tories are not the main enemy – you are!”.  

While it is true Johnson has an eighty-seat majority and the Blairites now “lead” Labour “worship of the established fact” and the idea this is set in stone is mistaken. This kleptomaniac Tory government may well yet implode through further disastrous management of the pandemic and the unfolding economic crisis: they may even be forced into major concessions by mass opposition from the unions and emerging social movements.   

Beginnings Of A Fightback

Labour’s counter revolution is being carried out with uncompromising ruthlessness. The left must learn the lessons from this, it cannot afford to repeat past mistakes. “Unity” with the Blairites is fantasy and led to Open Selection being kicked into the long grass. 90% of Constituency delegates supported this democratic demand but 90% of union delegates, including the left-led UNITE, voted against. Failure to drive through mandatory re-selection for MPs boosted the Blairites who drew the conclusion it was only a matter of time before they re-claimed the party. Mandatory reselection must now be the non-negotiable position of the left and at the very top of its agenda. 

Starmer’s attacks are creating a backlash and anger is likely to deepen. The “settlement” to the saboteurs was a misuse of members’ money and stinks to high heaven as those authorising it were  the main beneficiaries of this treachery. 

The astounding response for Corbyn’s legal defence fund has surpassed £350,000. UNITE’s general secretary Len McCluskey’s warning on the legal “settlement” given to those who sabotaged the 2017 general election campaign is welcome and significant – but must be followed through. Left union leaderships should withhold funding from Labour if the leaders pursue witch-hunts, do not support strikes or attempt to drop socialist policies. Union sponsored MPs who do not support strikes or socialist policies should have their sponsorships automatically withdrawn. Big business cash for influence “donations” to pursue anti-working-class interests like privatisation of our public services must be ended. The left must send an uncompromising message to the Blairites – if you don’t support us, we won’t support you. And that goes too for Labour councillors implementing cuts.   

Left Unity And The United Front – For A Socialist Programme

Division and demoralisation are natural consequence of defeat. While the fatalism that says there is no point in socialists remaining in Labour is understandable it is a strategic error. Such thinking suits the Blairites: Blair himself stated 300,000 would need to be expelled from the party to make it save. The postponement of meetings due to the pandemic has helped the right but the big battles over policy are yet to come. Effective resistance to the jettisoning of socialist policies can and must be built. Leaving Labour at this stage only strengthens the forces of reaction in the party itself and in the wider establishment.

Fighting for socialist policies within Labour and campaigning in our workplaces, unions and communities are neither mutually exclusive nor contradictory. Blocked on the political front workers will increasingly turn to their trade unions and broader social movements. Labour will not be shielded from the impact of these movements. For socialists the principal task is to unite the left whether within or outwith Labour and build a united front on a socialist programme that puts the concerns of workers at its core with the aim of challenging and defeating the Tories.

To meet its historic task of building an effective socialist opposition to the Tories and Labour’s right-wing the left must adopt a disciplined approach that rejects sectarianism, prestige politics and the elevation of sectional interests over that of the wider movement and coordination that matches that of our class enemies. Sectarian self-interest could result in multiple left candidates standing in upcoming affiliated union elections allowing right-wingers coming through the middle: this would be a self-indulgent betrayal of every worker in the country. Every effort must be made to have one left candidate in these elections with the criteria a firm commitment to a socialist programme and firm opposition to the Blairites.   

There is one clear issue the entire movement can and must unite on – defence of our National Health Service. The putative US trade deal will lead to the full privatisation of the NHS and must be opposed by every union in the country, not just those representing health workers. For too long the cuts and privatisation programmes of successive governments have proceeded without serious challenge. Failure to defeat this deal would represent an historic defeat for the working class a public health catastrophe for generations to come. To oppose it means building for mass, coordinated industrial action, including potentially, a general strike.

Corbynism proved the Labour Party can be transformed but only if the left understands half measures in opposing the forces of Blairism and the Labour bureaucracy will not suffice and only lead to further defeats. The challenges ahead are immense but so too are the opportunities for millions to be won to socialist ideas – the future is ours, not the Blairites.

Filed Under: Labour Party, Theory

Marxist Method and Orientation to Mass Organisations of the Working Class

August 1, 2020 by John McInally Leave a Comment

Part One – Prestige Politics: The Infantile Disorder

“A Matter Of Prestige”, published August 2019, looked at aspects of the degeneration of the CWI and the SP into bureaucratic centralism, prestige politics and rule or ruin sectarian opportunism. Under the leadership of Peter Taaffe, general secretary of the latter for over fifty years prior to his resignation in late 2019, these processes developed over an extended period of time and were contrary to the principles and method upon which the CWI was originally formed. Part One of this contribution examines the destructive role of the Socialist Party of England and Wales (SP) in the United Kingdom civil service and outsourced workers’ union Public and Commercial Services union (PCS).

The split between the SP leadership and its leading rank and file activists in PCS occurred when the latter opposed the re-election of SP member and PCS Assistant General Secretary Chris Baugh to that position. Baugh had consistently undermined the union’s socialist general secretary Mark Serwotka and his own SP comrades in the union’s lay leadership and consistently demonstrated a conservative approach to industrial and political strategy, including advocacy of selling members’ redundancy rights to show the union “could do a deal” with the government. He also refused to abide by the workers’ wage and other key principles of the CWI. The rank and file activists in PCS were summarily expelled from the SP when they refused to support Baugh for breaking the “party line”. Months later a wider split took place in the CWI itself resulting in the mass expulsion of the Majority opposition and the “expropriation” of the international name, brand and finance by the Minority faction led by Taaffe. 

There are serious lessons to learned from these events. History is littered with failed attempts to build an effective revolutionary party, including within the Trotskyist tradition. Certain events tend to expose the real nature of a party’s regime in the most concrete terms. For the SP it was the split in PCS. Their actions in PCS were neither an isolated phenomenon nor a mere aberration and further destructive interventions in the movement will inevitably follow. Multiple instances of the SP’s destructive behaviour in PCS exist, including an attempt to sabotage the union’s national pay campaign. The two examples given below should be of particular concern to anyone serious about building genuine left unity in our movement. They also serve as a warning to the left in our movement and not least of all those struggling to build a genuine international on the principled basis the CWI was originally formed. 

A) PCS General Secretary Election & General Election 2019

Spitefulness in general plays the worst possible role in politics – V.I. Lenin

The Tories called a general election in late 2019 that coincided with the PCS general secretary election. With the overwhelming support of activists in PCS’s broad left organisation, Left Unity, Mark Serwotka sought re-election for a fifth term. The union’s Independent Left grouping that had split from Left Unity many years previously stood a candidate. So too did the Broad Left Network (BLN), the SP’s electoral front. BLN decided to split from Left Unity rather than expose their leading candidates to humiliating defeat in Left Unity elections and a number of their nominated candidates withdrew from the process. BLN then decided to stand SP member Marion Lloyd against Serwotka.

Lloyd’s candidacy was not based on any serious objective political differences but on the SP’s status driven objective to extract vengeance following their defeats over Baugh’s re-election and within Left Unity. Serwotka’s is widely regarded as an outstanding socialist union leader of a union regarded as a “beacon of resistance” against cuts and privatisation. Lloyd’s candidacy was based solely on sectarian, factional considerations aimed at de-stabilising the union’s respected socialist leaderships, whatever the cost to PCS members. PCS election addresses are enclosed with ballot papers and sent to all PCS members. Lloyd’s was the SP manifesto for the union, fully endorsed by its leadership and drafted with their full participation. Before quoting a key extract from Lloyd’s election address a short explanation of how PCS’s political strategy developed is required.

PCS Political Strategy

The union’s political strategy was decided through extensive consultation with strategic objectives and priorities democratically decided by members and activists, and fully endorsed by the union’s annual delegate conference. The core aims of the political strategy were endorsed in the membership ballot held under the previous New Labour government. The political strategy was a direct response to Blair’s vicious programme of civil service job cuts and privatisation. It was also a response to that government’s propaganda campaign aimed at demonising unemployed and disabled workers inorder to  justify policies aimed at the systematic dismantling of the social security system which is, along with the National Health Service, a key pillar of the welfare state. 

The tactics of delivering the political strategy were never intended to be set in stone but built on the core strategic principles of defending PCS members interests, our class and the public sector and to also advocate and fight for policies to improve it. 

Under the slogan of “Austerity” David Cameron’s Coalition government, elected in 2010, intended to carry out a programme of huge cuts in the public sector and mass privatisation and to launch an attack on trade union rights with the purpose of making the working and middle classes pay for their crisis. Although many trade union leaders were cowed PCS quickly responded by producing two key policy initiatives, the Economic Alternative and the Welfare Alternative, both aimed at opposing the message from the Tories and the media that there was “No Alternative”. These “Alternatives” were an object lesson how, on the basis of a transitional approach, a socialist trade union leadership could both expose the nature of the attacks on our class and also present concrete policy alternatives and demands. 

Jeremy Corbyn was elected Labour Party leader in 2015. PCS’s political strategy was then orientated toward the election of a Corbyn-led government. PCS had a long history of working with both Jeremy and John McDonnell and in the 2017 general election the policies set out in the PCS Alternatives were strongly reflected in the Manifesto. This Manifesto gained considerable support but, as we now know, the opportunity to elect a Corbyn-led government was sabotaged by the right-wing Labour bureaucracy. 

Here is the full quote from the relevant section of Lloyd’s election address.

“Political independence: “no” to Labour Party affiliation

I am desperate to see the back of the Tories. I am a socialist and believe a Corbyn government would improve our pay and conditions.

But my opponents in this election have got it badly wrong by telling you to vote for all Labour candidates in England and Wales. We should not support MPs who have attacked our terms and conditions.

Mark Serwotka has placed his personal loyalty to the Labour Party above members wishes.

I will ensure that we retain an independent political voice. I oppose Labour Party affiliation unlike my opponents. I will work with those in the UK parliament, the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Assembly who support us.”

The “strategy” set out in Lloyd’s election address stresses opposition to voting for “all Labour candidates in England and Wales”. This directly conflicted with SP policy and approach in other unions. SP material in other unions supported the election of a Corbyn-led government with no indication they disagreed with the universally accepted view that workers should be encouraged to vote Labour in all constituencies in order to achieve this outcome. Only in Lloyd’s election address do we find that view openly contradicted. 

Leading SP member and former Labour MP Dave Nellist who, as Chair of the SP’s electoral front the Trade Union & Socialist Coalition (TUSC), in the 2017 general election clearly and correctly stated: – “But this election is different, giving working people the opportunity to drive out the Tory government and, on this occasion, put a socialist in No.10”. He went on to say that getting 326 or more Labour MPs elected would not stop the Blairites and concluded “But defeating the Tory government would be seen as such a victory for Jeremy Corbyn it would inspire and give confidence to millions that a different society is possible”. He also correctly pointed out that Corbyn’s election would greatly strengthen his position in the Labour Party and would be a major setback for the Blairites.

Nothing of any substance changed between the 2017 and 2019 general elections to invalidate these statements. No socialist could disagree with Nellist except, apparently, the SP itself, and only in relation to its material in PCS. In telling PCS members not to vote for all Labour candidates the SP showed they were prepared to countenance the election ofa Tory government as a price worth paying in order to pursue their vendetta against Serwotka and their former comrades in PCS. 

If electing a Corbyn-led government was genuinely no longer seen as an SP imperative and voting for all Labour candidates was no longer a necessary condition for electing such a government why then did they not explain their reasoning to the wider movement? If their approach had genuinely changed then why did they not pursue this by standing candidates against those Blairite MPs they were asking PCS members not to vote for? Why didn’t they advocate TUSC stand against the Blairites? To merely pose these questions is to answer them. Nowhere else in the entire movement except in PCS did anyone advocate the formulation used in Lloyd’s election address, including the SP itself. 

Following the publication of the leaked report that revealed the corrupt behaviour of right-wing officials who sabotaged the 2017 general election in order to prevent the election of a Corbyn-led Labour government UNITE union’s general secretary Len McCluskey wrote: “Even the most demented sectarian on the left has not championed a Tory election victory to win an inner-party argument.” While Lloyd’s election address clearly doesn’t “champion” a Tory election victory, it nevertheless sets out in unequivocal terms that PCS members should not vote for all Labour candidates despite the fact any fool knew that to elect a Corbyn-led government this was what had to be done.

An Appeal To Conservative Sentiment

The election address was a calculated and opportunistic appeal to the most conservative and antisocialist elements of the PCS membership itself – the very social base upon which the right-wing Moderates had rested prior to the victory of the left. It remains a Tory objective to destroy the socialist leadership of PCS. Under the Coalition government they made an all-out to attempt to smash the union through the withdrawal of the check-off facility, an attack the union met head-on and defeated. The British ruling class and its security forces like MI5 have always had a deep interest in controlling and manipulating the direction of civil service trade unionism. While the right-wing currently has no organised formation in PCS the SP campaign to de-stabilise the union will be seen by our class enemies as an opportunity to create the conditions for the re-emergence of an organised right-wing, which in this period would most likely coalesce around Blairite elements who have gained confidence from the election of Keir Starmer as Labour Party leader. 

PCS’s leadership explained the political strategy to secure a Corbyn-led Labour government with due regard to differing political circumstances in the devolved areas of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. PCS called on members in England and Wales to vote Labour, with appropriate explanatory material to Welsh members. In Scotland, the union call was to vote to get rid of the Tories, a view supported by the Scottish National Party (SNP) and particularly those on its left wing. In Scotland, the SP’s attacks on the union strategy were based on a cynical appeal to what was an understandable antiLabour sentiment due to the party’s failure to address the national question. Disgracefully this was also designed to appease a tiny grouping of anti-English ultra-nationalists in the union who had allied themselves to the SP.  

Affiliation To The Labour Party – “Half The Lies They Tell Aren’t True”

Lloyd’s election address claims Mark Serwotka advocated PCS affiliation to the Labour Party. There is not a grain of truth in this assertion – it is a calculated lie. A lie made all the worse for being a further conscious and direct appeal to conservative sentiment in the union. As the humorous old saying goes “Half the lies they tell aren’t true”.   

Militant, the SP’s predecessor, like a number of other left parties and groups, supported Labour affiliation in PCS’s predecessor union the Civil and Public Services Association in the 1970’s and 80’s. This demand was dropped in the wake of the Kinnock witch-hunts that cleared the path for the emergence of Blairism. Serwotka himself left the LabourParty as a result of these developments. When Labour affiliation was raisedin a PCS membership consultation only six percent ofrespondentssupported it. A considerable portion of union members and some activists believe that affiliation to Labour would breach the rule that civil servants should be politically “independent” in discharging their duties. This view reflects a conservative and confused mentality amongst elements of the union’s social base. Serwotka and the left in PCS have worked hard to dispel this false view by explaining that while civil servants should carry out their official duties without bias that clearly does not extend to legitimate campaigns against, for example, the closure of an office, a fight for adequate resources etc., or to support and vote for politicians who support union policies.

The SP leaders know fine well the question of Labour affiliation has never been proposed by PCS’s leadership, including Serwotka. In consciously and persistently repeating this deliberate lie The SP is employing the self-same tabloid method of the right-wing press which has no place in our movement. Lloyd’s claim that Serwotka “placed his personal loyalty to the Labour Party above members wishes” is nothing more than a spiteful, personalised, spiteful lie. 

Failure To Orientate To Corbynism

The SP leadership was initially elated when Corbyn became Labour Party leader but this gave way to a gradual realisation that their profile and ability to recruit was being compromised and diminished by the surge toward Labour. Their demand for a new workers’ party was reduced to a fringe view now the traditional mass political party of the working class was led by a socialist. The SP’s central task was to develop a strategy and tactics that orientated towards the class battle being played out in Labour between the left and the Blairites who dominated the Parliamentary Labour Party. But SP leaders were incapable of developing such a strategy, they were manacled hand and foot by their bunker mentality, conservative formalism and prestige politics.

Over the years the SP’s full-time bureaucracy developed a culture in which the “line” was handed down to a membership that had little or no input in developing or even seriously debating the policies they were expected to advocate. Party strategies and tactics were formulated by a small group around Taaffe, adopted by a supine Executive Committee and National Committee, the latter composed almost entirely of full-timers. SP members were conditioned in the repetition of axiomatic formulations and sloganising. The SP leaders have a disdainful, withering contempt for all other trends and tendencies within the movement. This arrogance was imitated and imbued in the approach of many of their members. SP members had little or no experience of consistent work within the wider organisations of the working class, especially the trade unions. They were utterly incapable of effective intervention in the living struggles in the Labour Party.

The SP focused on extolling past achievements, like the Poll Tax victory, rather than on genuine engagement with left forces within Labour on the priorities and issues of the day. Campaigns such as those demanding the re-entry of Militant members expelled in the Kinnock purges and for equal affiliated status to Labour on the same basis of the Cooperative Party were status driven initiatives entirely focused on party building. 

As previously referred to in “A Matter Of Prestige” SP leaders sought to justify their approach in PCS by arguing in internal debates just prior to the split that as both Corbyn and Serwotka were “reformists” a Corbyn-led government would buckle under pressure from the ruling class and Serwotka would sell-out PCS members in the process. This cheap smear was at odds with Serwotka’s record. Contrary to “selling out” he and PCS’s lay leadership and its militant activist base would far more likely have been the bedrock of resisting any such pressures from the ruling class. This is a sharp little cameo of a so-called revolutionary party in sectarian freefall. The SP leadership’s approach and methods are evidence of precisely the “Infantile disorder” Lenin himself showed so much contempt for

Disorientated and staggering from one failed “initiative” to another, the SP became even more isolated from the class battle in the Labour Party and were reduced to the position of by-standers, shouting from the sidelines. They were just not equipped to play a key role in building a fighting socialist left in the Labour Party. A result of this self-inflicted isolation led SP leaders to regard Corbynism more as a threat than an opportunity.

The split in PCS deepened the SP’s erratic mindset toward Labour. Their leaders cold-bloodedly calculated there was considerable factional and electoral opportunity and advantage in attacking PCS’s support for a Corbyn-led government. While not accurate to say SP’s leadership welcomed a Tory victory it is true that it suited their narrow sectarian interests. For them the Tories election victory and Corbyn’s defeat marked a return to old certainties. They calculate opportunities have now opened up for them to grow and develop their influence now the left reformist “distraction” of Corbyinism is out of their path. Like the Bourbon kings of old they learn nothing and forget nothing.

The Petty Self-Interests Of Sectarianism

Sectarianism has multiple features and pathologies of differing significance and impact. In its more extreme manifestations it assists the interests of the ruling class rather than those of the working class. In a state of almost perpetual denial the sectarian retreats into the bunker of so-called ideological purity, covers their eyes to all the evidence of the deleterious impact of their actions and screams that they were representing working class interests, of which they are the sole legitimate voice. 

No amount of spin or “gaslighting” can justify the SP’ telling PCS members not to vote for all Labour MPs in the 2019 general election. The subsequent defeat of Corbyn does not validate their stance but only serves to highlight that their unforgivable actions were not about upholding socialist principles but serving their own petty interests. Every single vote in every constituency was required to elect a Corbynled Labour government – telling PCS activists and members not to vote for all Labour candidates was at best an irresponsible and reckless act or, at worst, a conscious act of class betrayal. 

B) Sectarian Opportunism – The Voice Of The Cult  

During the government lockdown in response to the Covi-19 pandemic an article appeared in the Socialist newspaper entitled “Should the Socialist still be produced during the Corona virus.”  

The background to this was that following full discussion with PCS’ senior officers and with the subsequent full endorsement of the union’s national executive committee Mark Serwotka, in April 2020, had written to Hannah Sell, newly appointed SP general secretary, expressing concern about an SP paper sale conducted at a civil service office in Stratford, East London, on March 31st, at the beginning of the lockdown itself.

Serwotka’s letter addressed issues raised by union reps whose members expressed dismay and concern at the paper sale. These concerns included the potential for increasing the risk posed to members by the Covid-19 virus and further pressure being placed on NHS staff and services. Members felt that the sale demonstrated a “dangerous disregard” for health and safety. Serwotka explained the union was engaged in “hard negotiations” with Civil Service employers to ensure protection for members but nevertheless regarded the government’s guidelines as the minimum that should be followed to “safeguard our communities” and that while they were “..not enough” they would “save lives in this situation.”

Dismissing PCS Members Health And Safety Concerns – Spinning The Narrative.

In responseSell claimed the article raised “broader points” about the role of labour and trade union activists during the crisis. She said the government guidelines allow the buying and selling of newspapers and claimed social distancing was maintained at all times at the sale and those taking material were at no more risk than people buying newspapers at a kiosk. She said that if PCS reps had concerns the SP would be happy to speak to them. She went on to lecture Serwotka on the importance of articles in the Socialist paper and how they would be of interest to civil service workers. Then, in a logic-defying leap Sell goes on to scold Serwotka by saying she hopes that he is not “suggesting that the socialist press should face great restrictions than those placed on media that does not have the interests of workers at heart.”

PCS responded by stating the SP did not understand the government guidelines and were dismissing workers’ legitimate health concerns and had failed to address the union’s request not to repeat their actions. They were also reminded the guidelines clearly stated people should stay at home and that: – “…..whilst PCS is highly critical of the government’s response to the crisis, following these simple rules will mean fewer people will contract Covid-19 and fewer people will die than if they are not followed. You seem to have misunderstood this basic point or you have chosen to ignore it.”

Serwotka answered the SP’s attempt to deflect attention from the central issue in attacking the union’s campaigns by firmly stating “These are matters for our union, not an external organisation such as yours, and are determined through our democratic processes. Your comments are irrelevant to the question of our members statement.” The response ended by stating again – “PCS reps in Jubilee House have expressed serious concern to us and it is a matter of the utmost importance that you do not engage in such actions again.”

Manufactured Differences. 

In a further response Sell drew on her original parallel between the sale of capitalist and socialist newspapers  claiming “.. the fact you dismiss this can only lead to the unfortunate conclusion that you do, indeed, believe that the working class press should face greater restrictions than those placed “on media that do not have the interests of workers at their heart.” She asserts “And if this is so for the workers’ movement, then what are the implications for workers’ independent organisation generally, including the ability of PCS members and reps to organise on behalf of their fellow workers? Should they too face greater restrictions on their ability than the employers?” And finally, “Obviously not, in our opinion. Clearly, there are profoundly different viewsbetween us on these vital questions of how the labour and trade union movement should operate in these extremely challenging times, which is in the interests of the movement to discuss out.” (Our emphasis). 

So there we have it – in PCS daring to raise the legitimate health and safety concerns of workers in the midst of a pandemic the SP draws the bizarre conclusion that the union’s real aim is to shut down the workers’ press and, furthermore, restrict workers right to self-organise. Regretfully there is no polite way to say this – these wholly manufactured “differences” are symptomatic of an irrational mindset so disturbingly disconnected from reality that SP’s leaders seem to believe any accusation made by them, no matter how deranged and dishonest, against those they regard as political opponents is permissable.

It should not be necessary to set out these self-evident facts but the SP’s accusations requires we do: –

  • It was PCS members who raised the issue over the paper sale, not Serwotka. Both he and senior officers had a duty to raise these concerns with the SP. Serwotka’s letter was fully endorsed by the union’s national executive committee. He was not writing in a personal capacity nor expressing his own personal opinion but wrote in his capacity as general secretary of the sixth biggest union in the UK.
  • The letter was clearly not initiating a “debate” on the role of the socialist press. The letter did not raise nor give even the hint of a suggestion the Socialist should not be produced during the pandemic.
  • The letter was raising an extremely serious matter of health and safety and protecting lives.  
  • The letter was not published publicly. It was private correspondence raised in order to resolve a serious health and safety issue. 
  • The purpose of the letter was to resolve the issue and gain an assurance no further breaches of the government’s guidelines occurred as they would compromise the health and safety of PCS members 

Questioning The Legitimacy Of Workers’ Health And Safety Concerns

Any rational socialist would have simply acknowledged those serious concerns and the matter would have ended there. But not the SP. Instead they consciously launched a public attack on the union’s exemplary record in fighting for its members’ interests. They manufactured a phoney “debate” based on the lie Serwotka and PCS were advocating restrictions on the socialist press and even workers’ rights. 

The SP’s request to speak directly to the union reps and members at Stratford was an attempt to underplay and even question the legitimacy of their concerns over the paper sale. The SP was clearly implying the reps, and their members lacked the political understanding as to why the sale was so important but that they were graciously prepared to educate them on the matter. This tone-deaf arrogance and detachment from the concerns of real workers were both insolent and deeply offensive. PCS’s Stratford reps are very experienced activists who, to their credit, acted properly when members raised safety concerns by raising the matter with their union leadership. 

A key aim of the sale was to collect union members names from the signature sheet on the SP table in order to harvest that information for use in PCS internal elections. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with such factional activity which all groups in the union participate in and which is part of a functioning internal democracy. But to do so in the midst of a pandemic demonstrates the same type of self-entitled, reckless and irresponsible mentality, Dominic Cummings, himself displayed. Just like him, they consider themselves so important they were above the rules that applied to everyone else. 

The SP’s paper sale was also linked to their view PCS should have continued with its annual national and departmental group elections. By its very nature such activity would see paper sales and leaf-letting outside workplaces. The PCS national executive committee took a decision to postpone the elections on the basis the overwhelming priority of reps at that time was the health and safety of members.

Increased activity resulting from the elections at the very time the casualties and fatalities from the virus would have been at their peak was the union’s major concern. PCS reps and members did actually lose their lives during exactly this period. The SP were literally the only grouping in the union who opposed the postponement of the elections, they did not even get support for their position from the small number of activists in their Broad Left Network front.

The SP persist in their view the elections should have gone ahead and is the basis for their accusations, shorn of any context, of “anti-democratic” behaviouron part of the socialist PCS leadership. This is despite the fact that the SP gave full support for cancelling these same elections previously due to the exceptional circumstances of the Coalition government’s attempt to smash the union through the withdrawal of the check-off system. Both the postal workers’ union CWU and the education union UCU took decisions to postpone industrial action ballots due to take place after government lockdown measures were put in place. The SP’s position on these decisions was that they “understood” the reason why they were made. Did the SP berate these union leaderships and accuse them of “parking demands” or “denying members their democratic rights”? Of course not. The SP’s priority in conducting their campaign to de-stabilise the socialist leadership of PCS took precedence over any other consideration, including members’ health and safety.

Malice, Insincerity And Manufactured Outrage

If the SP genuinely believed PCS had an agenda of restricting the workers’ press and even the right of workers to organise why then did they not seriously challenge such a nefarious attempt to attack these fundamental rights of the working class? Surely such a serious threat warranted a far more robust response than merely an article in their paper that few would read. Why not, for instance, continue the sales and in-fact, increase them to other workplaces and to members of other unions? Why not highlight an illegitimate attempt by a major trade union to stop the sale of socialist newspapers by exposing the conspiracy to other left union activists and union leaders by directly corresponding with them? Why no outraged appeal to the wider movement to condemn PCS’s actions? Why no motions condemning the plot to union branches in PCS or elsewhere?

The malice, insincerity and manufactured outrage so transparent in the SP responses to PCS is sharply underlined by the fact they actually abided by the union’s demand not to conduct paper sales outside offices where PCS members worked. Other than at Stratfordthe SP did not carry out papers sales outside workplaces where other unions had members, nor have they done so throughout the rest of lockdownbecause theythey would not in such a cavalier fashion have risked alienating such unions’ leaderships, activists or members.

The angry response of a former SP member to a SP Facebook post at the time of the sale neatly summed up the attitude of activists toward the Stratford paper sale: – “How sad that a once solid political party has turned into this. No doubt any criticism of a blatant disregard of our members or the public health will be batted off with some idiotic political slur. Also thanks for potentially putting further pressure on the NHS and its workers too. Top tip I’d disinfect the money donated as it is a petri dish of germs. The new office must be costing a lot to upkeep if you are that desperate for donations.” 

How prescient these comments were, became apparent when the SP article was shared on social media.  Here is a little taste of the “political” comments of SP’s foot soldiers: – “Do you think Mark Serwotka would be bothered if people were selling the Sun.”, “Socialist Party members are among so many other workers who are in the front line. Where it is sometimes impossible to adhere to social distancing. Our members are also putting their lives at risk on a daily basis. How dare Mark Serwotka question us in this regard.”, “I remember being told by Right-wing Labour hacks that I could no longer sell the paper outside meetings despite being on a public footpath.”, “The right-wing have always tried to stop us selling our paper and spreading our ideas. The reason is these ideas are getting a resonance.”, “You can try to silence us. You can try to bully us into hiding our ideas, But you will not succeed.” Then this, “You see my problem here is what will be the next step – that the “Socialist” cannot be sold in a public space inhabited by any PCS member in a public meeting or demonstration or outside a picket line and so and so forth: because a PCS committee does not like it. I had all that in the Labour Party years ago when they dictated to me when and where I should sell the Militant and that ended up in a withchhunt against the ideas of Militant, and this is what this thread has turned into.” In another comment Serwotka is compared with Barry Reamsbottom, the vicious right-wing leader of the Moderate group and elsewhere as a “Quisling”. 

It is significant these comrades didn’t even refer to PCS members’ health concerns and when challenged by PCS they resorted to accusations of victimisation and bullying against them. To top all this they claim PCS advocates the Socialist may be banned from demonstrations and picket lines and, of course, this will result in witch-hunts. Here we have the authentic voice of a sectarian cult.

Had the sale been carried out by raw young activists it would have been serious enough but might be excused as an error made through an overdose of enthusiasm and revolutionary fervour. But it wasn’t; it was carried out by Sell herself and highly experienced industrial organiser Rob Williams. This in part explains the SP’s reaction – they would not dream of giving the slightest concessions to a union leadership they considered in the light of recent history their mortal enemies no matter how reasonable the union’s action in writing to them actually was. 

A socialist organisation may have a fighting chance of reorientating and correcting its course from quite serious errors and deformities, but none can recover from status-obsessed prestige politics. This represents a complete abandonment of Marxist method and a descent into a personalised, vengeance-driven mentality that strips the party of its capacity to analyse circumstances objectively and dispassionately. It leads to exactly the type of destructive and dangerous behaviour exhibited in SP’s actions in both the general secretary election and the episode of the paper sale.

Whether an innate trait or one developed over time, it is a distinctive psychological feature of those who capitulate to prestige politics that they have the most fragile and hypersensitive egos, for them, everything is personal. For SP leaders, their humiliating defeats in PCS induced a pathological embitterment than precluded any rational considerations – Lenin himself stated: “Spitefulness plays the worst possible role in politics.” Prestige politics in a socialist organisation is not just an infection, it is a terminal condition for which there is no cure. 

A Negative Influence

The relatively high regard of the SP on sections of the left and with some left union leaders in recent years was due in large part to the example and record of leading PCS lay activists like Janice Godrich, union president for seventeen years and current president Fran Heathcote, two of the most outstanding socialist woman trade union activists and leaders of the past twenty-five years. But the SP’s antics and negative influence in PCS have shocked many socialists in the wider movement and caused real damage to its reputation, destroying trust built up over the years. There is real anger and contempt over their calculated decision to target Serwotka and PCS’s lay leaderships, a union regarded as a “beacon of resistance”.

Over recent years the SP prioritised building its status in the trade union movement through an unhealthy concentration on securing senior positions in unions without doing the hard, long-term work aimed at building a solid presence in the workplaces. This was is in complete contradistinction to the fifty years of consistent work based on a principled application of the united front strategy and tactics that built a powerful left in PCS and led to the defeat of the right-wing Moderates. 

A Warning To Socialists

The SP’s actions in PCS represent a serious warning to socialists generally and particularly those in the trade union movement. As they sinking more deeply into a morass of a sectarian, status-obsessed mentality they will increasingly pursue in other unions similar” strategies” to that in PCS. This trend will be reinforced and deepened and will be an impediment to building principled left unity in the current period.  

Distortions and deformities developed over an extended period of time within the SP regime are now so ingrained it has rendered them incapable of playing any consistently positive role in building left unity or establishing themselves as a significant Marxist tendency within the unions. The SP will exert no real consistent influence in developing united front work in the movement and it is also ruled out they can build a genuine Trotskyist international capable of meeting the enormous tasks facing our movement and our class. 

Millions of workers are looking for answers. It cannot be ruled out in such circumstances the SP could experience some growth and even a degree of influence, but this would be of a spasmodic and temporary nature. Without a major change of approach, they are not capable of developing a cadre of politically educated youth and workers that could, on a consistent basis, intervene effectively in the mass struggles that will characterise the period opening up. Party loyalty and adherence to the “line” handed down from its narrow and isolated bureaucratic leadership is, in the final analysis, the overarching feature of its culture and regime.

Features Of A Sect

There is an element of comedy in SP’s knockabout dismissal of those of us who fought them to defend correct methods of orientation towards the trade unions in PCS as” ex-Trotskyists” and even “exsocialists.” This is redolent of a fanatical Calvinist sect that decrees only its faithful adherents will enter the Kingdom of Heaven and condemns all the other sinners to the other place. There is a reason for this mindset. By characterising opponents as heretics who have abandoned the faith they are essentially trying to frighten their members into toeing the line or join the damned. This is a cult mentality. Internal SP culture is designed to both control and reassure its members there is no need for them to make any attempt to exercise independent thought, scrutiny or analysis. 

SP leaders suffer from a profound lack of political confidence: this is a consequence of their abandonment of a Marxist method which has distorted any ability they may once have had to respond to events either theoretically or practically in an objective, considered fashion. They are now reduced to concocting easily digested narratives with the prime aim of bolstering their authority with their members rather than confidently reaching out to the wider movement. The Taaffe regime has created a leadership not of confident revolutionaries but institutionalised apparatchiks. They now talk only to themselves and, as a result, are increasingly divorced from the workers’ movement they aspire to educate and lead. 

Under the current leadership, the CWI is incapable of reorientating itself to the mass organisations of the working class, its activities in PCS are concrete evidence of this. Their shrinking membership base has within its ranks some very self-sacrificing comrades who have given many decades to the movement, and they deserve the greatest respect and not a little sympathy. There are two broad categories in SP’s rank and file membership. 

There are those who are the product of two decades of miseducation in which activism was elevated above education, theoretical study, discussion and internal democracy. A firm theoretical understanding is the basic foundation of any revolutionary’s understanding but in itself is of little or no use unless verified, steeled and directed toward effective action on the basis of consistent work and participation in mass organisations of the working class, particularly the trade unions. Here is the tragic nature of sectarianism. Sincere people join a revolutionary party only to be misled and conditioned by “leaders” who are pathologically fearful of dissent, disagreement and debate. For them compliance and orthodoxy are the key aims of “cadre-building.”

Then there are those lay members who have proud records and considerable experience in the mass organisations of the working class, including past involvement in the Labour Party. This older and diminishing band of SP members are fully aware that the strategy and tactics used in the PCS dispute and the SP’s behaviour outlined above were wrong on just about every level. But for them party loyalty is above any other consideration, so they either remain silent or are openly complicit. Their refusal to challenge this descent into sectarianism is accelerating that very process. These comrades are shirking their political duty. And that is more than an error – it is a crime.   

The SP’s actions in the PCS and CWI disputes are a warning to other forces on the left of the dangerous role it will continue to play. The causes and processes that formed the basis of their descent into sectarianism is not the result of an aberration that is capable of correction. On the contrary, these negative features are now written into its DNA. 

The second part of this contribution will focus on some features of the Majority expelled from the CWI and touch further on orientation to the mass organisations of the working class.

Filed Under: Theory, Trade Unions

A Matter of Prestige

July 31, 2020 by John McInally Leave a Comment

A case study in bureaucratic centralism, prestige politics and rule or ruin sectarianism.

The struggle within the Committee for a Workers International.

The recent split in the forty-year-old Committee for a Workers’ International (CWI) followed the declaration of a Faction by Peter Taaffe and his supporters on the International Secretariat (IS) after they lost a vote at the International Executive Committee (IEC), which is the organisation’s leading body, other than the World Congress itself. The Faction claimed major “political differences” with their opponents on the IEC who represented a considerable majority of national sections and members of the CWI. The Majority were accused of abandoning work in the trade unions and, in a calculated provocation, of capitulating to Identity Politics and “petit-bourgeois Mandelism,” i.e., to a reliance on social forces other than the working class. The United States of America and the Irish sections were targeted explicitly as culprits.

In affecting to “call things by their proper name”, the Faction described the Majority as a “Non-Faction Faction”. This opportunist and unintentionally comical characterisation did not honestly reflect the nature of the CWI Majority either politically or organisationally. There was no fully formed and homogeneous “Non-Faction Faction” but a non-factional opposition with a number of different trends representing some quite diverse trains of thinking. A healthy regime, based on the principles of democratic centralism, would have viewed the emergence of “political differences” as a prelude to a patient extended debate in an attempt to identify and resolve them, not a precipitous rush to a split in order to prevent what the Faction themselves described as “regime change”. Whatever “political differences” that may or may not exist they could never justify the crude organisational methods employed by the Faction to split the International before every last avenue had been explored in an effort to resolve the areas of contention. In splitting the CWI they were responsible for an act of political nihilism in which nothing mattered except their own status and political self-interest. 

The Faction argued the Majority had betrayed the political principles on which the CWI was founded. Defining differences in a false or exaggerated fashion without a full debate in order to justify a split is the false method of bureaucratic not democratic centralism. The Faction leadership had no real intention to resolve these “political differences”, real or manufactured, as evidenced in an email inadvertently copied by them to their Majority opponents in the midst of the internal “debate” itself that openly raised the question of their expulsion.  

The Socialist Party of England and Wales (SP),of which Taaffe has been general secretary since the mid-1960s, held a conference in late July of this year that was quickly followed by an “international conference” consisting almost exclusively of English and Welsh members, at which a newly “reconstituted CWI” was announced. Those in England and Wales, who support the CWI Majority, were told at the SP conference they had “placed themselves outside the party,” i.e., subjected to administrative expulsions without the right of appeal. At the “international” conference, a World Congress of the “reconstituted CWI” was announced which meant the inevitable expulsion of the rest of the Majority internationally. The SP leadership took administrative action against leading supporters of the Majority in England and Wales, including removing them from positions and withholding their wages. In pursuing such tactics, the Faction demonstrated its over-arching imperative was the maintenance of power and to secure for themselves the resources of the International including its considerable finances and the CWI “brand” itself. These actions constituted a “coup” by the IS and SP leadership group, the same people in reality, against the overwhelming majority of the CWI.

In making the maintenance of status, power and position their key imperatives the Faction employed a “rule or ruin” methodology, which constituted the worst type of sectarianism and which in this instance meant they calculated splitting the International was a price worth paying to retain their leadership position and, not a secondary consideration, the money. In the process of splitting the CWI, they have also split the SP in England and Wales too, in which they have lost some of their best activists, including amongst its more youthful elements.

Methods of Bureaucratic Centralism

Before the CWI debate was cut short by the “coup”, a number of national sections had raised detailed criticism of the Faction’s position, laying out its failure to develop perspectives and its increasing adoption of a “one size fits all” strategic approach to an increasingly volatile and complex world situation that is witnessing a stepping up of attacks on the working class and oppressed layers but which also opens up tremendous opportunities for the ideas of socialism. To short circuit such an important debate they simply dismissed their opponents as Mandelites, i.e., unredeemable heretics not worth discussing with, in order to secure their hegemony in a “reconstituted” International. This is indicative of a bureaucratic degeneration and a sectarian mindset bordering on cultism which characterises this tendency. The “regime” that the Faction is trying to preserve has been brutally exposed by the methods they employed in this struggle, namely those based on bureaucratic centralism and prestige politics, which elevates status, position and control above political principle. In addition, it jettisons the dialectical method of analysis for formalist “power politics”. It is also a surrender to the obnoxious mentality that “the ends justify the means”.

Taaffe himself condemned this very behaviour in his pamphlet Socialism and Left Unity, (2008), in which he wrote,“A serious examination would show that the SWP in its fundamental ideas, its approach, and above all it’s method has been found wanting.” In an important section on Party Rights and Factions, he says: “A politically self-confident, clear leadership of a Party, which enjoys authority on the basis of its political standing in the eyes of its members – rather than on ‘statutes’ in general, has demonstrated in practice the correctness of its perspectives, tasks and organisational methods to the members. It, therefore, turns to organisational sanctions only as a last resort. Only when political argument and persuasion fails, and there are clear breaches of organisational norms should disciplinary measures be resorted to. While politics is primary in a healthy revolutionary organisation, this does not mean that organisation is secondary or unimportant. The internal character of a party or organisation – and particularly on the question of democratic rights of the members vis-a-vis the leadership has always been vital in the history of the Marxist movement”. He went on to condemn the SWP’s “high-handed, rapid expulsion of leading dissenting members”, providing the example of them expelling en-bloc their 1,000 strong American Section, the ISO, concluding that nothing could be more calculated than examples like this to give Marxism and alleged Trotskyism a very bad name –  in fact, a taint of Stalinism – of intolerance towards the opposition, including summary expulsions. These disputes highlighted the false methods, and the unhealthy internal regime, as well as the utter bureaucratic confusion on how an International, from a Trotskyist tradition, should operate.”

In order to expose, challenge and defeat the methods of bureaucratic centralism and prestige politics and to build a revolutionary International on a principled basis, an in-depth and thorough critique of how the leadership of the CWI, now embodied in the Faction and the SP, came to this stage is not only required but an essential step. As part and parcel of such a process, the question must be posed, just how far have these methods infected other sections of the CWI politically and organisationally and for how long has it been festering unchallenged? It is also vital, as part of such a process, that the Majority seeks to understand and properly assesses the dangers that this descent into sectarian self-interest has had for, amongst other areas, united front work in the industrial and political field, for example, events in the UK-based public sector trade union the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS), considered later in this contribution.

The CWI Majority must urgently re-assess the false argument already evident in some comments by their supporters that the bureaucratic degeneration, represented by the Faction in the struggles within the CWI, only occurred in the last year or so, as if it appeared almost in the manner of an unidentifiable virus. Such a view is both nonsensical and dangerous. Such a process of degeneration must, almost by definition, have deep roots. It is one of the major strengths of Marxism that when faced with such a problem, it provides the tools to analyse and reorientate by carrying out the most honest, rigorous criticism, including self-criticism.

Members of the CWI in Britain have issued a statement on their “World Socialist Alternative” website responding to the split by characterising the crisis in the early 1990s as a “rank and file uprising against the bureaucratic leadership of Grant and Woods”. Those of us who were actually involved in that struggle and who, for the record, supported the political stance of the party leadership on issues like the “Open Turn” cannot support such a distorted version of events which is redolent of those revised versions of “history” in which all the sins of the “victors” are transposed to the vanquished. It was in fact a complete shock to the vast Majority in Militant (predecessor of the SP) when the existence of the rupture in the leadership became known. Ted Grant was deeply respected and had enormous political authority for his understanding of world events. The differences that emerged had not been aired within the membership in any great detail or at all, and the trigger for the dispute came from the top down rather than upwards from the membership.

If the CWI Majority is serious about rebuilding an international-based on sound methods, they must surely start with a critical assessment of how to avoid the errors of the Faction. A first step has to be in rejecting the closed bunker style mentality that characterised the Faction and to look afresh, with a clear eye and open mind, at what the real issues were in those past disagreements within the CWI. In doing so, they need to reject the view which the Faction leaders have instilled in a miseducated rank and file that there is no value in listening to irreconcilable “enemies”. It has been precisely that type of defensive and paranoid fear of “ideological” infection that has turned “analysis and debate” within SP ranks into an echo chamber resonating with tired formulations and spiced with endless reminders of decades old achievements like the Liverpool and Poll Tax struggles, like rousing hymns to lift the spirits of the faithful.

Parallels with the 1991-1992 Split

One does not have to agree with the political stance of Ted Grant and Alan Woods in the 1991-1992 split to recognise the similarities in recently republished material (“The Case Against Bureaucratic Centralism” by Alan Woods) with the methods of today’s faction fight. These methods culminated in the expulsion – they too apparently “placed themselves outside the party” – of Grant, Woods and the Opposition. The documents claim they faced tactics including distortion, slander, the non-payment of wages, withholding maternity pay, sackings and physical searches – many of the hallmarks of the current dispute. Today such practices can be easily revealed to a wide audience through social media but in 1992, exposing such behaviour was not so easy. 

Woods wrote in 1992: “Zinovievism, at basis, is the attempt to solve political problems by organisational means. It is characterised by the use of the apparatus in internal political disputes, and the attempt to slander and distort the arguments of opponents. All these methods have been employed against the opposition by the present leadership in the most shameless fashion”. Written thirty years ago, these words deserve to be taken very seriously in the light of recent developments and if a proper assessment is to be undertaken and understanding reached as to how committed revolutionaries allowed such distortion to arise in the SP and CWI, to which so many comrades have given their lives. The negative effects and consequences of the Faction’s sectarian acts will not be restricted to the CWI but will resonate in a discordant manner across the entire movement, and most damagingly in relation to the mass organisations of the working class, namely the trade unions. A foretaste of the same bureaucratic centralist methods and prestige politics employed in the CWI was fully evident in the destructive and divisive sectarian actions of the SP in the PCS union.

It is a fair assumption that most CWI members who actually took the time to look at the struggle in PCS uncritically accepted the “analysis” set out by the leadership of the SP. It may be understandable that those comrades with no direct involvement in the PCS dispute and who did not have full knowledge of the issues would simply accept the narrative of the leadership. However, it must also be stated, that if those in Britain who cheered on the same leadership that has just expelled them had properly engaged their critical faculties at the time, they might have far better prepared for the onslaught that awaited them. What’s done is done, but if the Majority supporters in Britain and elsewhere for that matter continue to uncritically accept the SP leadership line on the struggle in PCS, with perhaps this or that minor “adjustment” to demonstrate their “independence”, and fail to appreciate the core issues that were at stake, they will, however unintentionally, be validating, endorsing and defending the same false analysis and methods used against themselves – that is neither a credible nor sustainable position.

The struggle in PCS is neither tangential nor irrelevant to that in the CWI. If the CWI Majority does not undertake a serious reassessment of that struggle, then there is a real danger that by accepting the SP leadership’s false narrative, based as it was on the same rotten method of sectarianism and prestige politics that led to the split, they will be doomed to repeat the same mistakes and their efforts to develop consistent, principled united front work in the mass organisations of the working class will be hidebound from its inception.   

The Struggle Against The Socialist Party’s False Method and Sectarianism in PCS

The struggle that unfolded in PCS is an issue of serious concern for the wider left and socialists in general, not just for the CWI alone, not least of all in the trade union movement in Britain. Important questions have been raised by these events, including how best the left builds the strongest possible united front based on socialist policies; how to build effective union organisation and industrial action to defend our class from the incessant attacks they have faced over many decades; how best to defeat cuts and privatisation and win on the industrial field; how to ensure a Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour government can be secured and how to defend it in the face of the inevitable onslaught that will come from the British ruling class and the multi-nationals as it attempts to implement progressive policies. Despite the scale and importance of these tasks, the right for socialists to express legitimate concerns and criticisms must be fully defended. But there can be no place for the type of sectarian self-interest and rule or ruin prestige politics exhibited by the SP in their recent actions in PCS.    

By way of background, PCS is the largest civil service union in the UK. The SP and its predecessor Militant were a major force in the Civil and Public Services Association (CPSA), PCS predecessor, since the early 1970s. They owed its influence and authority to its long term strategic approach based on building principled left unity through the united front tactic and the patient, determined commitment of many comrades, past and present. This correct, consistent approach led to the eventual defeat and organisational destruction of the Moderate grouping, one of the vilest right-wing bureaucracies in the movement with direct links to witch-hunting, anti-socialist organisations, the British and American states and international big business. This victory paved the way to building a democratic, militant lay-led union. Over the past twenty years, PCS has been the principal and most consistent force in the British trade union movement against the cuts and privatisation agenda of various governments, including New Labour under Blair and Brown.

The dog-whistle slander that those of us who opposed the SP leadership had “capitulated to reformism, opportunism and the union bureaucracy” was intended to disguise the fact that our principled refusal to follow their line was solidly based on a rejection of sectarian prestige politics. The concrete issue from which these underlying antagonisms emerged was our refusal to support fellow SP member Chris Baugh, who held the five-yearly elected position of PCS assistant general secretary (AGS) for fourteen years. He had, over an extended period of time, consistently and persistently undermined the Union’s socialist general secretary, Mark Serwotka, the elected lay leadership, his own SP comrades and democratically decided union policies and strategies. Also, and in some respects more critically, he was opposed based on his conservative approach to industrial and political strategy.

The SP leadership claimed all this represented a direct attack on the SP itself. In doing so, they attempted from the outset to define the debate in terms of betrayal and loyalty. This was designed to obfuscate and deflect from the real issues at play and to avoid the scrutiny that must be part of a genuinely considered democratic debate and to prepare the ground for an eventual resort to organisational solutions, always on the basis of a “majority”. Furthermore, it was an attempt to define opponents, not as comrades who were raising legitimate questions for debate, but enemies who must be crushed even by the most unprincipled of methods, justified on the basis of “defending the party” including denial and evasion, distortion and misrepresentation, lies and slander, ostracising and targeting individuals personally as well as expulsion. SP members were told in opposing the party they would “place themselves outside the party”.

SP leaders knew that it was those leading lay union officials and SP members who had worked most closely with Baugh who were the first to oppose his re-election not Serwotka. Over many years they had attempted, with the full knowledge of the SP leadership, to manage Baugh’s destructive undermining behaviour and conservative approach to industrial and political strategy. Positioning Serwotka as a capricious bureaucrat, and claiming it was merely a “personality clash” was a cynical play to party loyalties, as was their endlessly repeated formulation “nobody tells us who our candidate will be”. In fact, Baugh’s behaviour had been consistently raised over many years, and Taaffe had met Serwotka to discuss the issue, with the former giving assurances that he would work constructively. However, despite scoldings from Taaffe, he continued as before.

Until the dispute arose Serwotka was regarded by the SP leadership as their “closest ally in the trade union movement”. PCS itself was regarded as a “beacon of resistance”. All this recognised as recently as 2016 in Peter Taaffe’s From Militant to the Socialist Party(p493-4, p574.) In a remarkable turnaround, the SP leadership began denouncing Serwotka as a “bureaucrat” and the record of PCS, despite the fact every single aspect of its policy and strategy was agreed by these same leaders, was besmirched.  In the launch of Baugh’s bid for re-election at the Union’s 2018 conference, both he and Taaffe incredibly made the false claim that despite these antagonisms stretching back many years they didn’t know what the objections to his candidacy were all about. 

The true nature of a regime is only fully exposed in the course of a political struggle itself. That was the experience of the opposition to the SP leadership in PCS. We did not engage in that struggle with an antagonistic view of the party leadership. On the contrary, we considered ourselves amongst the most loyal of party comrades. Our views about the nature of the SP leadership developed in the course of the conflict in a process that presaged and closely mirrored the way in which the Faction’s Majority opponents drew the same conclusions – through the hard experience of confronting the methods of bureaucratic centralism and prestige politics in their most naked form. 

It is a legitimate criticism to be made of the opposition to the SP leadership in the PCS that we wrongly sought to maintain unity in both PCS and in the SP for far too long.  

There is a perverse and ironic contradiction in the SP leadership’s behaviour. While they were prepared to risk major splits on the left in PCS, causing avoidable division in the Union in the process, they never once over the years backed Baugh on any matter of substance relating to policy or strategy. Yet in order to protect his “job” and preserve their own prestige because they would not tolerate Serwotka “dictating to us”, which was a cynical narcissistic distortion of reality, they were prepared to betray the very rank and file lay activist comrades whose long-term self-sacrificing commitment and activity had done so much to enhance the party’s reputation in PCS and the wider trade union movement.

SP Reputation Damaged

The SP false methods in PCS led to the defeat of Baugh in the union election. Had he won, as the SP confidently predicted, the Faction would have ruthlessly used it as “evidence” of their correct orientation toward trade union work and as a rebuke to those they accuse of abandoning work in the unions. In fact, their “strategy” was the polar opposite of how Marxists should work in the unions and caused catastrophic damage to the SP reputation within the Union itself and the wider movement. Many socialist activists in the British trade union movement have been stunned and disgusted in equal measure by the actions of the SP in PCS and its dizzying descent into sectarianism and opportunism.  

The methods used by the SP were characterised by the rewriting of history for temporary factional advantage, denial and evasion, abandonment of principles around the workers’ wage and the election of full-time officials, elevation of prestige politics and sectarian self-interest above the principled building of left unity, manufacturing of “differences”, distortion of the principles of democratic centralism, opportunism, cover-up, openly lying about points of material fact, the forging of unprincipled alliances, including Blairite elements, gossip, slander and the unscrupulous pressuring of comrades who opposed them. All these methods are familiar features of a bureaucratic regime in which the leadership elevates the short term imperative of “winning” its position over the necessity to conduct an honest democratic debate regardless of the short or long term consequences of their actions.  

In the internal debate the SP (E&W) National Committee (NC), which is composed almost entirely of full-time party workers, and in two PCS caucuses, the leadership view prevailed. But that formal fact cannot disguise the real nature of the debate itself, in which any argument used by the leadership, no matter how unprincipled, inconsistent, patently false or downright dangerous was uncritically accepted and endorsed as good coin in the most supine fashion, without the least hint of serious scrutiny or challenge. A major consequence of allowing the most egregious “arguments” to go unchallenged was that they were repeated parrot-fashion in the wider campaign within PCS, where their rottenness was fully exposed with the result an indelible stain has been left on the reputation of the SP. A few examples require highlighting. 

“A Legitimate Tactical Consideration”

We raised as evidence of Baugh’s conservative and timid attitude to industrial strategy the fact that he had a few years earlier argued for the Union to surrender the redundancy rights of PCS members in workplaces with under thirty staff to “show the union can do deals” with the then Coalition government. The SP leadership claimed that in expressing such a view, Baugh was simply making a justifiable contribution to a “legitimate tactical discussion”. This really is truly shocking. No genuine trade unionist, left or socialist and certainly no revolutionary, would ever have dreamed of making such a proposal, even as a “tactical” consideration. To suggest such a course of action showed a clear willingness and intention to betray workers’ rights consciously. Even the most hardened and cynical right-wing union bureaucrat would have paused before suggesting such a treacherous action. Yet in two caucuses and at the NC of a supposedly revolutionary party this was passed over almost without comment by those who backed the leadership. 

The industrial backdrop to developments in PCS was the pensions defeat of 2010/11, which saw some leaders of public sector unions as well as the Trades Union Congress (TUC), reach a “settlement” quickly after the public sector-wide strike on 30 November 2011 that buckled to the government’s slashing of pensions rights. The strike had given a significant glimpse of the potential power of the movement acting together on the basis of coordinated action, something that terrified many union leaders more than the government. That strike would never have taken place without the tremendous intervention in fighting for and achieving coordinated action by the PC with Serwotka himself playing a critical role. PCS and some other unions fought on for some months following the betrayal of the pensions battle, but to no avail and the changes were imposed. PCS was then singled out in traditional Tory “enemy within” style and subjected to a vicious assault by the government in an attempt to smash it, an attempt that was defeated by the Union but at considerable cost, effort and sacrifice.

History Rewritten

In The Real Issues at Stake, SP deputy general secretary Hannah Sell and industrial organiser and Rob Williams make the bizarre claim that Serwotka and the PCS leadership were responsible for downplaying “coordinated strike action against austerity”. Specifically, they go on to claim that despite motions to the TUC and generalised calls for coordinated action PCS was to blame for not detonating action from below alongside other unions. This situation, they claim, had been the case since the defeat of the pensions strike of 2011. They say that “there has been no serious attempt to create a ‘coalition of the willing’ prepared to act together as a lever on other unions as in 2011 and 2012 – both by publicly appealing to the union tops and by inspiring their rank and file to make demands from below” and that Mark Serwotka failed to act on actions beyond “appeals to the TUC”.

These claims turn reality on its head. There were two attempts at coordinated action in 2014: when PCS members took strike action alongside other public sector unions in July and again in October of that year – the second of which was hit by the late withdrawal of the largest public-sector union UNISON from a three-day rolling strike. The positive role of Serwotka and the PCS leadership in leading the call for and building coordinated action was highlighted in a double centre page article in “The Socialist” entitled “Lessons of the N30 pension strike” by McInally & Williams in 2016, in which none of these criticisms was raised. Following the 2014 campaign, the Union’s key priority was to defend itself from a full-scale attempt by the Tory government to smash it, a priority fully supported by the SP at the time, but apparently now to be written out of history as it no longer fits the narrative of their “differences” with Serwotka.

The Labour Party -The SP Conundrum   

In order to explain the “attack” on the party and the capitulation to “reformism” of the lay SP leaders who refused to support Baugh, the leadership introduced the argument that as both Jeremy Corbyn and Serwotka were “reformists” and that when a Corbyn-led Labour government came to power and buckled under pressure from the bankers and the capitalist class Serwotka would sell out PCS members and the wider class. To condemn Serwotka for the future “sell-out” of his own members and the class generally is a malicious, calculated slander with no basis whatsoever in his history of activity. It could equally be argued and with more basis in actual experience that when a Corbyn led Labour government inevitably came under pressure, it would be leaders like him and unions like PCS that would form the bedrock of opposition to such attacks.

The “sell-out” slander used by the SP leadership is entirely devoid of content and follows in the footsteps of all past sectarians. It is a caricature of serious Marxist analysis which, in this case, reduces the often-repeated formula that “betrayal is inherent in reformism” – true in itself – to empty phrase-mongering indicative of a formalistic rather than dialectical method of thought. It is a “method” that surpasses even the crudest and most fatuous sectarian formulations of the Healyites.

Serwotka and the lay SP leaders in PCS were consistently to the left of Baugh in terms of political strategy. His conservative approach to political strategy led him to describe as “ultra-leftism” the development of the Union’s political strategy under the Blair/Brown Labour government that would have allowed PCS, which is not affiliated to the Labour Party, to support candidates committed to policies in defence of the public sector in parliamentary elections, including against Labour candidates. PCS in the light of Corbyn’s election as party leader is now developing a political strategy correctly aimed at giving whatever support it can to secure the election of a Corbyn-led Labour government. The same SP leadership that years ago dismissed Baugh’s conservative approach to political strategy now collude with him in spreading the totally untruthful charge that this present strategy is part of an attempt to affiliate to Labour by backdoor methods. This brazen lie is nothing more than poisonous slander intended to create a false narrative to undermine the union strategy and leadership regardless of the damage it does to the campaign to secure a Corbyn-led government.  

The SP leadership has never come to terms with the election of Corbyn as Labour Party leader, an “accident” no-one had predicted or expected, and which partly explains the SP leadership’s failure to develop a coherent and strategic approach to this development. Corbyn’s victory changed everything. Though initially welcomed by the SP, it posed a severe problem for its leadership. It raised the dilemma and contradiction of how to respond to the fact that the battle had shifted in large part back into the Labour Party, the traditional political organisation of the British working-class – Scotland being a substantially different case, where Labour’s disastrous strategy of standing four-square with the British establishment in the Independence Referendum of 2014 and its continued inability to develop a correct stance on the national question has seen it stripped of support in large sections of the Scottish working class.

The SP dilemma is this – how can they build their party in the face of this Corbyn surge? Can it engage in the struggle in support of Corbyn and also carry out united front work on the broader movement while maintaining its profile, prestige and even the very forces of the party itself? Their inability to tackle and develop a coherent and confident strategy in response to Corbyn partly explains their destructive strategy in PCS and also in the CWI itself. The SP leaders are now strategists without a strategy. 

The SP leadership’s dilemma has driven them into a retreat characterised by a reliance on a “tried and tested” orthodoxy, which disdains open critical thinking. It is reflected too in a bunker-style mentality that sees every nuance let alone difference, especially if it originates from outside the party, as a threat and cause for suspicion rather than an opportunity to debate and clarify perspectives. This has led to stultified formalism.   

The SP leadership’s sectarian strategy toward the Labour Party reduces their engagement to the sidelines disabled by the same mindset of prestige politics exhibited so disastrously in PCS and in the CWI. An example of the leadership’s confused perspective that demonstrates a strategic lack of conviction was the demand that the SP be admitted on a federal basis into the Labour Party, like the Cooperative Party. But as Taaffe himself said in the internal discussion, if the SP actually was allowed to affiliate it would be the worst thing that could happen due to the dangers it would pose in maintaining the party itself. This inability to formulate a coherent and consistent strategy to fully engage in the class battles in full swing within the Labour Party has left the SP rudderless with its reputation deeply compromised in the movement. The brutal reality is the SP leadership, obsessed with maintaining their political and personal “status” and consumed with their own self-importance are simply incapable of devising a principled re-orientation toward the Labour Party. 

Election Of Full-Time Officials

The SP leadership consistently accused those criticising Baugh of “character assassination”, a charge currently echoed in respect of their opponents in the CWI dispute. At no point in the debate has his considerable contribution to building the left in the Union been challenged or “written out of history”, however, but no-one can simply rest on their previous record. Representing political criticism in this way is a bureaucratic trope, simply employed to avoid scrutiny and derail honest, democratic debate. Politics is conducted by people, and it is impossible to discuss it without reference to individuals and their actions and what they represent. And this particularly applies in relation to the following section on the questions of the workers’ wage and the election of full-time officials. Our criticisms are not character assassination but perfectly valid political analysis based on factual events and actions, to which the SP and Chris Baugh are absolutely entitled to respond. It is lamentable this even has to be pointed out. 

In a lengthy piece penned after the dispute became public by Hannah Sell and Williams, entitled “PCS, the Real Issues at Stake” – Socialism Today (September 2018), they correctly say that our role in trade unions “is to fight for the maximum possible democracy and against any elements of privilege or bureaucracy.”The position of the SP is explicitly set out in its “What We Stand For”, carried in every edition of the “The Socialist” newspaper is the demand –“Full-time officials to be regularly elected and receive no more than a workers wage”. 

The SP leadership were prepared to abandon these core principles to cover up for Baugh. At the NC meeting, they argued that an incumbent “left” senior union officer should only be challenged if there was evidence of “financial irregularity or inappropriate behaviour”. This meant effectively justifying a job for life. Such a formulation could have come from the mouth of Tom Watson or any other Labour Party or union bureaucrat. It is the precise opposite of genuine democratic accountability and scrutiny and reflects an arrogant self-entitlement that should be rejected by a socialist. It is little wonder the SP and Baugh continuously referred to his AGS position as his “job”. That such a formulation could be considered valid by the supposedly experienced leaders of a supposedly Trotskyist revolutionary party is staggering. 

A letter from Baugh supporters in the Left Unity (LU), the Union’s broad left, states: –“We think someone has to have behaved pretty badly to deserve being removed from a position, especially when that would also lose them their job. That could be justified by them no longer supporting the policies of the left in the Union, by laziness, incompetence or improper behaviour.”  

*

It was one of the great successes of the Militant and the left in securing the election of full-time senior officials in PCS’s predecessor union CPSA, in the face of virulent opposition from the right-wing “Moderate” grouping, the reformists and full-time officers themselves. We took on this fight and won it because of our correct position that senior posts in the Union are not “jobs” but should be elected positions subject to the fullest possible accountability and scrutiny of members. If that applies in the Union how much more so when the left chooses a candidate, not on the narrow limits set out by the SP or in the extract quoted above, but on a whole series of criteria, including, but not exclusively, electability, how they work with other comrades, industrial and political judgement, capacity to unify based on open, critical debate.

To its eternal shame the SP, including full-time party workers, claimed that if he was not re-nominated for his “job” Baugh was being “sacked”. Comparing his situation to that of a victimised worker or activist revolted many union activists who instinctively understood that such an assertion denigrated the principles of the wider movement’s democratic traditions. That such a cynical assertion could be made is symptomatic of a leadership regime so detached and arrogant that it is prepared to use any unprincipled formulation for electoral or factional advantage. This also shows an underlying contempt for their own members who they expected to uncritically parrot this contemptible line which, sadly, many did. 

Bureaucratic centralism produces the most unhealthy and destructive relationship between the leadership group and the rank and file. This type of regime developed as a result of more than a generation of “activism”, greatly prioritised and elevated above theoretical education, and also the abandonment of long term patient work within the trade unions.The pursuit of acquiring leadership positions in unions is now prioritised by the SP without the necessity of those aiming at those positions to prove themselves as workplace organisers or strike leaders, on the arrogant assumption that membership of the party is credential enough to earn such positions. The relation between the SP leadership and its membership is no longer that of revolutionary leaders to a cadre of disciplined, but independent thinking Marxists, but increasing resembles that of the guru to the acolyte. 

The Workers’ Wage  

An article on the SP website entitled Reply To Socialist View, 13.9.18says:“When Chris first stood for AGS he pledged to move to London, relocating his family at considerable expense and upheaval, in order to be based in the union HQ and be able to do his job effectively. Despite the financial demands of relocating, he pledged in his election address – with the agreement of other Socialist Party members including Janice Godrich – to repay part of his salary to union funds and make regular donations to strikes and labour movement causes in Britain and internationally. Chris has consistently met that pledge.” 

Some perspective is required in relation to this quote from Sell and Williams. Baugh was AGS for fourteen years on a salary that placed him in the top 1% of earners and in a union of generally low-paid members at a differential of up to 8-1. At the time of seeking re-election, his salary was just under £95,000 p.a. The question of his refusal to abide by the workers’ wage pledge was consistently raised with the party leadership over the years and the claim his position on the pledge was agreed by “other Socialist party members” is a plain lie barely worth refuting, as is the bogus claim about relocation as assistance would almost certainly be part of any such transfer arrangements. 

At a Left Unity meeting in Glasgow, Baugh’s refusal to abide by the workers’ wage was justified by an SP member on the basis “living in London is expensive”. At a London hustings, he told an audience of low paid workers that the AGS salary “didn’t affect my lifestyle”. He also point blank refused to answer whether he actually paid into the union strike fund. SP leaders refused to answer our query as to whether or not over the period of his incumbency he had consistently paid subscriptions to the party. There is not a single scrap of evidence he contributed a penny more than would be expected of any low-paid activist into the Union or the wider movement. When we argued back-sliding on the workers’ wage pledge must cease, and its acceptance must be a precondition for party support in the election, SP leaders supported Baugh’s refusal to do so. What a contrast with the principled position of Dave Nellist who when he was a Labour MP was widely admired for his commitment to the workers’ wage. But even more so with CWI comrades around the world working in the most difficult of circumstances who abide by this pledge.

Allegations of Bureaucracy in PCS – Organising versus Bargaining 

For the last twenty years, the socialist leadership of PCS worked unstintingly to build a democratic lay-led militant trade union. The old right-wing bureaucracy and its apparatus were systematically dismantled, and the Union transformed, including the culture that elevated the power and authority of full-time officers over that of the activist layer with the primary aim of policing activists and frustrating militancy. Full-time officers were invariably recruited from the left, former union activists in the main, including proven organisers and strike leaders. It was one of the few unions in which recruitment of SP members and a connection with the “hard left” was no impediment to being employed. The charge of a developing bureaucracy within PCS only emerged when the internal dispute became public. Until then, Baugh’s ”analysis” was correctly rejected by SP leaders who had accurately characterised the existence of a “left officialdom” in PCS. Devoid of a firm political basis to explain how the situation in PCS had reached such a critical state, they opportunistically capitulated entirely to the “bureaucracy” narrative. 

The nature and characteristics of trade union bureaucracy can be defined in a narrow and impressionistic manner by some socialists, particularly those who have no direct experience in union work. While it is undoubtedly true the bedrock of union bureaucracies is to be found in the cadre of self-interested full-time “professionals” whose first loyalty is to the “management” and their own “careers” that is not the whole picture. Within unions there invariably exists a bureaucratic layer amongst the lay activists themselves.  

Employers are skilled at applying pressure on lay reps through inducements as well as threats or open victimisation, turning such lay officials into the worst type of bureaucrat, the labour movement “diplomat” hovering between the interests of the employer and the workers, but inevitably furthering those of the former rather than the latter. Union facilities, release from work for union duties, is a hard-won concession to conduct collective bargaining and other tasks. But long term release can be problematic unless there is a continued commitment by activists to engage with members in the workplace and avoid a culture of “sorting things out with the employer”. Socialists were not exempt from being pulled into this culture of “bargaining” and “good industrial relations“ as ends in themselves and in the process developing the view that their “skills” and “rational arguments” are the most critical factors in winning concessions and preventing attacks rather than the strength of union organisation itself.

This culture was embodied in the British civil service with the Whitley system, introduced in the early 20th century as a bargaining mechanism to stem the rising tide of union militancy, which saw some of the newly-formed civil service unions take industrial action and even affiliate to the Labour Party. Such a system can only deliver for “skilled negotiators” in periods of relative stability and investment in the public sector. Those days ended as long ago as the 1970s when the capitalist class nationally and internationally embarked on its reactionary strategy of cuts and privatisation aimed at the systematic destruction of the gains made by the labour movement over many decades of struggle. 

A fuller analysis of lay bureaucracy is required but in the context of the division in the SP in PCS this question was a key factor. It was precisely in the interests of “bargaining” that Baugh attacked the union “bureaucracy”. He was actually attacking the democratically decided strategy to build an “organising union” in a period where concessions could only be secured by building workplace strength to deliver effective industrial action. He created a false dichotomy in counter-posing bargaining and organising to justify what was actually a manufactured difference. Bargaining and organising are not separate processes, they are contingent one on the other with the aim of advancing members interests. Rather than work in a collegiate fashion to resolve the type of tensions that arise in any union over the allocation of resources, he and his supporters in the most opportunistic fashion exacerbated them to maximise division.  

The demand for more bargaining resources was not an abstract question as it concretely meant less for organising. In fact, the Union was meeting bargaining demands by assessing where and when certain areas needed to be prioritised. On the basis of his profoundly mistakenly approach, which actually exposed the fact Baugh simply didn’t understand the Union’s organising strategy and to justify the poisonous narrative of “bureaucracy”, the SP in the most opportunistic and populist fashion sought to portray him as the “champion of the lay activists”. In articulating his own failure to understand and adapt to the new industrial realities and in particular, the fact that Whitleyism was effectively dead he reflected a lack of confidence amongst a certain small but significant layer of activists. In a union where the right-wing had been organisationally neutered, he and his supporters became the principal advocates of a backward and defeatist approach.

SP attacks on “bureaucracy” were an invented, inverted and distorted image of their own surrender to the most timid and conservative elements within the activist base, of whom Baugh himself was the major example. The SP leadership were warned repeatedly of the consequences of capitulating to this conservative milieu. But even those of us who issued these warnings did not anticipate the depths to which the infection of prestige politics had reached and how it had so utterly distorted the perspectives and strategic approach of the SP in PCS – until their betrayal of the national pay campaign.

Rule or Ruin Sectarianism – Betrayal of the National Pay Campaign  

In 2018 PCS became the second Union in the UK that attempted to beat the un-democratic Tory anti-union law, which makes it a legal requirement to reach a 50% threshold of members voting in a ballot in a national industrial action ballot. The threshold was not reached, but confidence remained high on the basis of the union strategy of prioritising building and strengthening workplace organisation to reach the threshold. A second ballot was attempted in 2019, during the period in which the struggle to decide the LU candidature for AGS was ongoing.

As the ballot approached, Baugh, the Union’s second most senior elected full-time officer, chose to openly flout the agreed strategy democratically decided by the Union’s national conference, and the NEC, and endorsed by an extensive process of branch consultation. It was also the democratically decided policy of the Left Unity conference. He argued for a failed and rejected strategy of a disaggregated ballot with an additional raft of terms and conditions added, something he knew full well did not constitute a legal national ballot and which would have allowed the government to divide departmental group from group by offering minimal concessions. This “strategy” had no echo whatsoever amongst the activist base or members.

No serious industrial or strategic justification was offered for this “strategy” other than the dishonest formulations this “alternative” was about “flexibility” and that “differences are healthy”. Such formulations are precisely the type of vacuous liberal-style “principles” and arguments used by every unscrupulous opportunist who resorts to such hackneyed, platitudinous banalities to cloak their cynicism and pessimism when incapable of providing a coherent critique of a democratically decided strategy. Such phrases are repeatedly aired by right-wingers and union bureaucrats seeking to derail industrial action and to avoid implementing militant strategies. It is an indelible stain on the reputation of the SP that, for totally opportunistic factional and electoral advantage, they defended his treacherous actions, which was a surrender to the defeatist narrative that victory on national pay bargaining could not be achieved.

This “strategy” would have meant abandoning the national pay campaign and a retreat into concentrating efforts on achieving whatever concessions may be possible at the departmental group level, with the clear consequence that, in doing so, the devil could take the hindmost. It would have meant the most serious issue concerning the overwhelming mass of union members, their living standards, would be put in effective cold storage. This was a genuinely shocking betrayal of members’ interests. In fact, so much so that it must be stated in fairness that even the bulk of Baugh’s supporters, including some SP members, distanced themselves from this “strategy”. Despite the tremendous effort of activists and full-time officer cadres, the Union narrowly missed the 50% threshold. At the PCS conference held in the wake of this disappointment, SP activists acted as mouthpieces for demoralisation and pessimism, cynically playing on the understandable deflation felt by many hard-working activists.

The SP pay “strategy” is a prime example of how short-term opportunism, which is the hallmark of unprincipled sectarianism for factional advantage, will develop a manufactured difference regardless of the potential division and damage it could cause. While the right-wing had been organisationally destroyed in the Union, the social base that underpinned their existence still exists and could be regenerated and re-established in organisational form. Ignoring such dangers, SP speakers provided “left” cover for demoralisation and defeatism in the “parliament” of the Union. That is truly unforgivable.

The SP calculated it could be sold as Serwotka’s personal failure that the legal threshold wasn’t reached and could be used to damage him in the upcoming general secretary election. This has found virtually no echo. This “plan” has already gone further awry as the SP candidate in the LU nomination stage to choose the left candidate has had to humiliatingly withdraw before the process has even finished due to an embarrassing lack of support. Of course, the reasons publicly given were devoid of political content and relied on unfounded allegations of procedural breaches in the process itself.

Double Standards On Identity Politics

One of the most serious charges against the CWI Majority is their so-called capitulation to Identity Politics, a central feature of Mandelism. There is a real necessity for the issue of identity politics to be fully discussed within the movement generally and by Marxists particularly, in the light of the reactionary assault on the rights of oppressed layers. Rights won over many generations are again under threat, with a section of the ruling elite exemplified by Trump on a clear path to abandoning any pretence of their commitment to “liberal values”, which were never, in any case, anything more than concessions given under pressure. In this context the Faction presents no strong material evidence to support their charge, what they do offer is fragmentary, selective, grounded in the “narcissism of small differences”, unconvincing and certainly no justification for a split. The CWI Majority presented strong arguments to refute the accusation of “Mandelism”but in reality, the only serious way to resolve any such differences can be on the principled basis of patient, rigorous debate, not by the Faction’s bureaucratic methods of distortion and false positioning.

The debate on trans rights has caused division within the movement with differences between some sections of the trans movement and socialist feminists. While such differences cannot be swept under the carpet on the basis of summary de-legitimisation, such as through “no-platforming”, socialists must start unequivocally from the standpoint of being the most consistent advocates of the rights of oppressed layers.

The SP has been criticised for its lack of understanding of and commitment to equality issues. Some of this criticism is unfair but is not without foundation. In the late 1980s and 90’s the now long-defunct Womens’ Bureau carried out some ground-breaking work, not least in the trade union field with, for example, the Campaign Against Domestic Violence and the production of the CPSA Womens’ Charter. But this area of work was only reluctantly supported by the leadership and not least of all because of an innate suspicion that any concentration of activity on equality issues contained within it the seeds of “Mandelism”. No consistent work on equality issues has been carried out by the SP since those days and what has been almost entirely directed at party building. This has led to a deficit in responding theoretically to the development of the debate on these issues in the way the Irish section have at least attempted to do.

An example of the Faction’s “tin ear” approach were their comments on the Irish CWI section’s assessment of the repeal of the abortion laws in the Republic that exposed either a failure or, more likely, a conscious refusal to acknowledge the scale of that achievement. Such a victory in Ireland, given its history and the reactionary role of the State and the Catholic Church, cannot be overstated. The repeal was a massive victory for the Irish working class. The Faction’s failure to properly recognise this, even to the point of ignoring evidence of the strong vote for repeal in working-class areas, is deeply disturbing. Attempting to diminish the importance of this victory by begrudgingly and unfavourably weighing its relevance against “future” mass movements was a sly inference that overstating its importance was evidence of capitulation to identity politics.

Lay leaders like PCS president Fran Heathcote along with Mark Serwotka and the wider leadership have unstintingly prioritised the fight for equal rights, fully recognising these struggles are not isolated and separate from the wider attacks on our class and that they are concrete trade union issues and, more than that, an integral part of the struggle for a socialist society itself. What’s more, these leaders support such struggles without conceding an inch to the type of “big tent liberalism” that reflects the capitalist elite’s attempt to dilute and eliminate any socialist content to these struggles on the basis of false and empty identification of interests that supersede the class antagonisms from which inequality and oppression arise.

A letter signed by Serwotka, along with other union general secretaries, condemning the use of violence against women activists by trans activists, was regarded as one-sided by some PCS activists. Strenuous efforts were made by the union leadership to resolve the matter, including fully engaging with PCS Proud. The approach of SP members on the Union’s national committee was reflected in a deplorably cynical section of a document by Taaffe against the CWI Majority in which he echoes their posture that they were defending trans rights against the “transphobe” Serwotka. Rather than working with the union leadership to resolve the issue, the SP leadership urged their activists in PCS to opportunistically weaponise the issue for electoral and factional advantage. In exploiting the cause of trans rights, for which not one of them had shown any previous interest, they demonstrated not the slightest concern for the daily struggles of oppressed trans people themselves by consciously whipping up division rather than attempting to achieve unity on the matter under dispute.

“The Socialist” paper carried an article from these PCS SP activists cleared by the leadership entitled “Liberation StruggleIsClass Struggle”, (10 July 2018).  Had such a “Mandelite” formulation appeared in a CWI Majority publication it would be used as Exhibit A in evidence of their embrace of identity politics.

An article by SP executive committee member Sarah Sachs-Eldridge in “Socialism Today” (Issue 223, November 2018) says:-“the debate around the GRA has been toxic…Groups and individuals who both support and oppose the right to self-identify have adopted methods including no-platforming, shutting down meetings, threats of violence, intimidation, shaming and so on. These methods only create an atmosphere of fear where people feel they cannot voice their concerns and are an obstacle to collective solutions being found” and goes on to agree that “There is a real basis for women’s concerns that their rights, access to services and safety are being compromised”. In reply to a letter received by a NEU activist responding to this article, which amongst other things raised broadly the same points as those in the letter signed by Serwotka, Sachs-Eldridge welcomes his contribution and concludes “hence the importance of trade unions democratically debating and formulating a programme that can win all sections of the working class to a programme of demands that shows how the needs of all can be met. It is important that such a debate allows all views to be heard. There is nothing to be gained from an atmosphere or language that contributes to people fearing intimidation for expressing their fears or views”.  

The contrast with the SP approach in PCS could not be starker and sums up the approach of a leadership that is either completely oblivious to its own double standards or simply does not give a damn.

“In the Interests of The Party”

If it were possible to sum up in one phrase the false nature of the SP approach, it would be the formulation used in one of the internal debates by Hannah Sell, who said: “What is in the interests of the revolutionary party is in the interests of the working class”. Putting to one side the context of the debate (who the party should support in a trade union election) this could have been uttered by any labour movement bureaucrat, company executive, religious or cult leader to an internal challenge, in which they imperiously claim the sole right to embody the wider interests, while those who dare disagree with them are enemies of such interests. To claim the interests of the working class reside in the SP alone or to be more accurate the leadership group itself, is an arrogant and narcissistic self-delusion. It is a caricature and distortion of the type of healthy Marxist method that must of necessity possess a sense of proportion about its place at any given time in the class struggle and which is the hallmark of a confident revolutionary leadership and organisation.

Implicit in this philistine utterance is a demand for blind loyalty and uncritical obedience: it represents a censure against the type of independent critical thinking any socialist requires to fully and properly assess often complex situations and arrive at considered and rounded conclusions on the basis of democratic discussion. It also subconsciously reveals a deep lack of confidence in the methods and arguments put by the SP leaders themselves; it is the mindset of sectarianism and the closed, bunker-style mentality of bureaucratic rather than democratic centralism. 

It is quite scandalous that in the NC debate a roomful of supposed Trotskyists revolutionaries, the vast Majority of them full-time party workers not one of them challenged the contentious and in some instances, ludicrous assertions of the party leadership on the question of the election of full-time officials, the back-sliding on the workers’ wage, the dog-whistle accusations of “bureaucracy” in PCS, the selling of redundancy rights as a legitimate “tactical” discussion, the hard evidence of undermining of not just Serwotka but the leading lay SP comrades, and of Baugh’s timid and conservative approach to industrial strategy. In their uncritical acquiescence, they endorsed the leadership’s slander that those lay union leaders who had fought attack after attack, unflinchingly endured sacrifices, were allies of “bureaucracy” and had capitulated to “reformism and opportunism”. As one comrade commented after the debate – “The world turned upside down”.

This acquiescence does not arise from lack of understanding alone. Members of the NC are in the main long-standing, self-sacrificing and committed revolutionary socialists and it certainly was not because none had doubts about the leadership’s position. This mindset partly reflects the present, relatively weak influence of Marxist ideas within the mass organisations of the working class and the fact the SP activist base is on the whole relatively detached from trade union work and totally divorced from work and influence in the Labour Party. The full-timers also had a personal vested interest in following the leadership line, not only because they were reliant on the leadership for their positions but because they instinctively understood the consequences of stepping out of line.    

The SP full-time staff is grossly over-bloated as against the activist layer, which is numbered in the mid to high hundreds and not the artificially inflated claim of around two thousand members. This unhealthy balance of internal forces has over the course of decades produced a situation were debate is conducted not exclusively but mainly at a national level by the full-time apparatus who “report back” to an activist base. The SP NC has become an organisational insurance policy to obviate dissension in party ranks and to prevent, or at minimum mitigate, splits in which the need for open critical democratic debate has been relegated way below the imperative for “unity” on every issue, whatever its overall significance. The SP leadership have created a regime that places centralism and orthodoxy far above democracy and critical thinking and as a result, has seen its shrinking activist base become increasingly inward-looking. The CWI split was a long time in the making, and the surrender to bureaucratic was hiding in plain sight in the organisational form of the SP in England and Wales itself.

All members of the SP over the past thirty years bear responsibility for allowing this situation to develop, including those of us principally focused on the trade union field. No revolutionary organisation’s leadership should, except in the most critical of circumstances, consist almost entirely of full-time party workers and in such proportions to its activist base – such a relationship inevitably opens the door to bureaucratic and centralist distortion. What has been shown in the SP is not only a failure to strike a principled workable balance between the two imperatives of democracy and unity in action but an abandonment of democracy in favour of a rigidly centralist approach. 

Abandonment of Consistent Work in the Trade Unions

The over-inflated view of the SP position and influence in the wider movement, nurtured by the leadership, has led to a misguided short-term approach, based on quick results and winning positions, something particularly evident in the trade union field. Solid trade union work can only be properly developed on the basis of long-term strategic planning, and decades of dedicated work, with party members in their union roles building in their workplaces, leading strikes, winning the trust of activists and members, and on the basis of a correct approach of applying the united front tactic to build principled left unity. Prioritising winning national leadership positions over workplace building and “advising” comrades that, even before they have won respect amongst their fellow workers as union activists,they should carry out “union work” by pushing the latest SP campaign, does not represent a strategic approach.

The parlous state of understanding amongst the most recent generation of activists was reflected in a comment made by a party full-timer in a debate at a branch meeting on the lessons of the 2011 Pensions strike, who said “It is our job to remove the Serwotka’s and the Wrack’s” (Matt Wrack is the socialist leader of the Fire-fighters union). This reflects a profound lack of understanding of the united front tactic itself, the current conditions that prevail in the British trade union movement and what SP priorities should be.

Measured against the yardsticks of status and prestige, to which the SP leadership is now completely wedded, the work of the National Shop Stewards Network has been a success, and it has certainly made some impressive interventions which have led to affiliations from a number of left-led unions. However, these interventions have been made in the main on the basis of existing disputes and the work of full-timers. TheSP is neglecting and in fact failing to build a cadre of union activists within its own ranks capable of the type of orientation that won over the PCS and which it has held for the left in the past twenty-year period, demonstrating a real dislocation of priorities. The accusation that the CWI Majority has abandoned trade union work is a reflection of its own abandonment of consistent work within the wider organisations of the working class and toa proper approach to the united front.

In From Militant to the Socialist Party, Taaffe outlined the party’s approach – “Principled left unity is essential in maximising the potential within the unions and on a political plane. But it involves a willingness to collaborate in pushing the interests of the left to the fore without being obliged to dismantle the different left organisations. The Socialist Party has always argued for unity and, moreover, has demonstrated it in action within the PCS with the formation of Left Unity, for which the Socialist Party was mainly responsible and which also led to Mark’s victory against the right in the Union.” 

The Sectarian Rampage

The destructive sectarian rampage over the past year in PCS has been viewed with deepening concern and anger by socialist activists in the wider trade union movement, the very people with whom the SP must build or retain relationships on the basis of the united front. In order to “protect” its prestige, it has been prepared to divide the left in PCS with no regard whatsoever to the potential consequences. The SP had built a high degree of trust and respect amongst the left in the unions and, the irony of ironies, this has largely been based on the work of the lay leaders in PCS who they expelled. The squandering of that respect will result in an increasing descent into isolation and sectarianism.

SP actions in PCS were sarcastically but accurately described as “the biggest temper tantrum on the British left in fifty tears”.The behaviour demonstrated toward the Majority in the CWI and the methods used has not gone unnoticed in the wider movement either and the question is being openly asked now – how can they be trusted? The disastrous SP strategy in PCS was no aberration. It is a serious warning to the left that the pursuit of status and prestige leads inevitably to destructive sectarianism. Having failed to learn any lessons from their defeat in PCS, it is not just likely but certain this will have the most negative impact on SP conduct in the trade union field in the coming period.

Sectarianism, amongst other things is an outlook, and one of its features is a chronic inability to behave and respond to differences in a rational and proportionate manner. The CWI split was driven by a Faction leadership that has lost a grasp of unfolding and changing circumstances. Fearful for its own future power and status, it lashed out through the methods of bureaucratism and expulsions at those who are prepared to confront and develop perspectives and strategies to meet these challenges.  

Amongst the characteristics of sectarianism is an utterly closed mentality to how actions appear to others. Amongst other things, the Faction leadership is completely blind to the fact that everyone else can see that their pusillanimous phrase that those who oppose them are “placing themselves outside the party” means expulsion. As Robert Burns wrote in his poem “To A Louse” – “O wad some Pow’r the giftie gie us; To see ourselves as ithers see us!”.

Against this background, it is fair to ask why the SP leadership took this approach in PCS and by extension, why the Faction acted even more calamitously in the CWI itself? It certainly wasn’t to strengthen PCS as a militant union and its ability to fight the many attacks it faces, nor to strengthen the left itself or the SP position in the Union. No, the work of half a century has been sacrificed by the pursuit of the false methods of bureaucratic centralism and prestige politics by a leadership that has lost any sense of proportion and which sees its twin obsessions of status and control as far elevated above the imperative to build principled left unity on the basis of the method of the united front. 

These events mark a critical juncture in the affairs of the SP which under its current leadership is marked for a process of inevitable descent into irrelevance and isolation. If the leaders of the new International that is emerging from the CWI Majority are to place themselves on a principled, non-sectarian basis, they must do more than denounce the false methods that led to this split.They must examine and re-examine the whole history of the CWI over the past thirty or more years in particular, including the crisis of 1991-1992, to trace just how this bureaucratic degeneration developed. Only on that basis will they make the contribution they are capable of in the coming period.

John McInally August 2019

Filed Under: CWI, Theory

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