Carry on Recruiting! (Why the SWP Dumped the 'Downturn' in a 'Dash for Growth') by Trotwatch (AK Press).
Carry on Recruiting! is certainly not boring. The
irreverent manner in which it catalogues the SWP's regular changes in line
and the tortuous arguments used to justify them is undoubtedly its
strength. Trotskyism still has far more credibility amongst would-be rebels
in the UK than anywhere else, and needs therefore to be subjected to
repeated criticism. But we need not take the Trots too seriously, as if
another Krondstadt were threatening. After all, ideas which have hardly
developed since the demise of the classical workers movement are unlikely
to have much resonance in a modern revolutionary upheaval, for all the
students that get taken in the meantime. Trotwatch wickedly take the piss out of
the SWP's abandonment of their 'downturn' theory in October '92. As they
point out, the SWP clung vehemently to the theory in the face of the '81
inner-city riots and the '84/'85 miners' strike only to argue that the
'upturn' had arrived when faced with the backbench rebellion over the pit
closures programme and a fifty year record low in the level of strike
activity. Similar treatment is meted out to the SWP's about turn on Poll
Tax non-payment and the meaning and significance of the Trafalgar Square
riot. Throughout this, plus a section looking at the SWP's
contradictory positions on the '74-'79 Labour government, the underlying
aim of the pamphlet is "to examine the reality of the SWP's 'critique'
of the labour movement and the bureaucrats that run it. It goes on to
question the SWP's understanding of what constitutes a 'genuinely
independent' working class movement. In doing so, it uncovers an
organisation whose politics and practice negate its claim to be
revolutionary."[1] Trotwatch's commitment to working class
autonomy and emphasis on self-activity underpins the piss-taking. But
merely allowing this perspective to inform its jokes about the SWP's
opportunistic inconsistencies is obviously insufficient - a point
Trotwatch acknowledge in the final section, 'What's wrong with
the SWP'. Following on as it does from a long catalogue of details
this section is crucial; tying the ends together with a stinging critique
of Leninism as the knock-out blow. Unfortunately Trotwatch don't
quite manage it. Because of the SWP's eagerness to recruit anyone with
vague anti-Tory sentiments, it is argued, the party must be structured to
ensure that the Central Committee maintain a tight grip over the
organisation. Generalising their critique, they state:
In reality, a Leninist party simply reproduces and
institutionalises existing capitalist power relations inside a supposedly
'revolutionary' organisation: between leaders and led; order givers and
order takers; between specialists and acquiescent and largely powerless
party workers. And that elitist power relationship is extended to include
the relationship between the party and the class.[2]
The attack on hierarchical organisational forms is
obviously a necessary component of the critique of Leninism, but is
insufficient in itself. This line of argument is reminiscent of that of
libertarian socialists who accuse the Leninists of employing the wrong
means (the party) for the right end (socialism). And whilst it would be
wrong to accuse Trotwatch of being wishy washy liberals their critique
relies heavily on a paper produced by dissidents within Southampton SWP
which simply complains that the party isn't democratic enough.
A thorough critique of Leninism requires a critique of
representation and democracy. The advocacy of democratic-centralist
'Revolutionary Party' must be shown to arise from the fact that their
programme is the capture of state power in order to abolish the 'anarchy of
the market'. Not the abolition of work but a planned reorganisation of
work. Not the destruction of alien 'productive forces' but their liberation
from fetters. Leninists have an objectivist critique of capitalism, which
is why they can't grasp its real negation. In other words a critique of
Leninism must address the fact that Leninists are not communists; they have
not broken sufficiently with Second International orthodoxy, which is why
their relationship with Labourism appears contradictory. One cannot abolish
alienation with alienated means, but we cannot just attack their 'means'
without distinguishing our 'ends' from theirs.
Trotwatch's 'negative, critical and destructive'
publications provide handy ammunition for arguments with Trots, sparing the
rest of us the trouble of reading their banal papers and turgid magazines.
And they make no claim to provide a complete or definitive critique of
Leninism or even the SWP in particular. But partial critiques provide
fertile ground for the forces of recuperation. We don't need better
organisations to deliver socialism- we need to organise our emancipation
from all forms of alienation.
Bolshevism will remain formidable as long as it can
maintain its monopoly on the interpretation of revolution.
Many people find a critique of Bolshevism boring. Unfortunately even one's uninteresting enemies can be powerful.
Call It Sleep
Call It Sleep
[1] 'Introduction' to Carry on Recruiting!
[2] Carry on Recruiting!, p. 41.