Terry Liddle Memorial Event

Terry Liddle Memorial Event
Saturday 20th April 2013, 2pm to 5pm. Brockway Room, Conway Hall, Red Lion Square, London WC1R 4RL
All welcome to come and enjoy a few nibbles, a bit to drink and good comradeship in honour of Terry Liddle 1948-2012
In wild, but considered celebration of Terry Liddle’s maverick life of activism, Atheism, Socialism, Animal Rights, Republicanism, Trades Unionism, Temperance (sometimes), Deptford and the World.
Bookstall on the day. A couple of speeches, with contributions from the floor and the Workers Music Association:
Joe Hill; The Land it is the Landlords’; William Brown; Solidarity Forever; The Internationale
David Goodway on ‘The Making of ‘The Making of the English Working Class”- 20 April 2013, Bradford
The Northern Radical History Network are pleased to announce that their next meeting will take place on Saturday 20 April 2013 in Bradford.
This year marks 50 years since the publication of E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class, and the book, its author and the book’s impact and legacy will be their meeting’s topic of discussion.
The NRHN are delighted to be joined by David Goodway a social and cultural historian who has become increasingly known as an authority on anarchism. Between 1969 and 2005, David worked in Continuing Education at the University of Leeds, and he was Helen Cam Visiting Fellow in History at Girton College, Cambridge, for 2006-7. His publications include London Chartism, 1838-1848 (1982), Talking Anarchy (with Colin Ward) (2003) and Anarchist Seeds beneath the Snow: Left-Libertarian Thought and British Writers from William Morris to Colin Ward (2006).
David will present a paper entitled The Making of ‘The Making of the English Working Class’ (further details to follow)
The meeting will take place at The Equity Centre, 1 Longlands Street, Bradford, on Saturday 20 April 2013 from 11am – 3pm.
For further details in the interim, please contact Fiona Cosson, email f.cosson [AT] mmu.ac.uk
Beyond The Fragments: Feminism and the Making of Socialism (Moving Beyond The Fragments) by Hilary Wainwright
That going beyond the fragments is a problem for many socialists is very much a sign of our times. If we were socialists in the twenties we might be agonizing over whether we should join the Labour left through the ILP or whether we should join the Communist Party which anyway was trying to affiliate to the Labour Party, but there would be little doubt that the Labour Party, warts and all, was the way to go ‘beyond the fragments’.
Since the Labour Party became a party of government, and, more particularly, a party of reactionary government, joining the Labour Party is no longer the automatic choice of people looking for a way of changing society. In the absence though of any socialist alternative, with roots in the local labour movements, it does still offer many socialists a way of gaining a wider political influence than, say, involvement in the women’s movement can achieve. There are many socialist feminists who feel like Sally Alexander from Pimlico, London, that
After ten years in the women’s movement a lot of us felt the desire to take out feminist politics into the socialist movement The women’s movement had brought me closer to SOC} because our demands, even at their minimum, cannot be achieved without a fundamental reorganization of society. And feminism led me to a serious study of Marxism. In this way the urgent net for a socialist strategy was confirmed through my feminism. So for some time I hovered around, wanting to join a socialist p. The Communist Party seemed a possible option. But in their debates on the ‘British Road’ the Communist Party argued for policy of working with left Labour and changing the Labour Party. I thought it was better to join the Labour Party directly; Another thing was that I wanted to be involved in local politics, with socialists from other situations and experiences. The Labour Party offers that possibility. The local Labour Party is very divided but on the left I find a surprising number of people who are very militant socialists. They just would not have given the revolution groups a thought but they are just as deeply committed t~ socialism. A third factor which led me to join was a desire to understand this mammoth institution, and the extraordinary hold which it has. Having been at Ruskin College, involved with man~, active socialists in the Labour Party, I was always interested in this. For any historical relationship between the working class and: the socialist intelligentsia in Britain has taken place mostly within the Labour Party. It is the programme and organization of the Labour Party which have shaped the aspirations of much of the
socialist left and of the working class. As far as I can see, it will continue to do so.
Any discussion of new forms of political organization must take account of these peculiar staying powers and pulling powers: the Labour Party. For in the revolutionary euphoria which followed May 1968 and the Vietnam movement, occurring against a background of the Wilson government and the decay of the Labour left, it was too easy to sound the death knell of the Labour Party without taking these peculiar staying powers into account. As a result there is a danger of there being two lefts, inside and outside the Labour Party, split partly by generation, I partly by region, partly by educational and class background, rather than by politics. These two lefts are often in agreement about all the practical struggles of the day and about the general objectives of social ownership and a new popular form of political power. Yet the issue of whether someone is inside or outside the Labour Party holds back any unified political framework for common action, sustained political debate, and clarification of strategy and policy. However, there are now strong pressures at a local level and within national movements-e.g., in the anti-racist movement, among socialist feminists, etc.-for unity between Labour Party and non-Labour Party socialists. We will describe some of these later. These pressures are vital signs of the ways in which existing party political structures no longer reflect the reality of practical political alignments and struggles on the ground. The working-out of these pressures into new forms of socialist organization are held back partly by overdue respect for the old political structures and partly by the assumption that the only viable political form of organization independent of the Labour Party must even at this early stage be that of an alternative party. This latter assumption immediately precludes the possibility of a political alliance-more than unity on a single issue, single movement basis-between socialists inside and outside the Labour Party. In order to see the urgency of such alliances, to understand the problems they would be up against within the Labour Party, and to see how far the positive experiences of unity within, for example, the socialist feminist movement, have a wider application, we will look at three main problems concerning the Labour Party and socialists within in.
Labour Governments, the Labour Left and the Vision of Socialism
First is the way that Labour governments have killed the idea of socialism as a practical alternative and the way the .message of the Labour left has in effect got tarred the same brush. The first point is generally accepted socialists in or close to the Labour Party. John Bohanna, a shop steward at Ford, an active socialist, not in the Labour Party himself but from a strong Labour family, sums up way this has happened, what this has done to commitment of ‘ordinary folk’ to the idea of socialism:
Ater the war there was a vision of a real alternative, and not j among the activists. The people of this country returned a Labour government with a great majority in the hope that a new, and time positive, socialist society would be born. I don’t find anything like these feelings now. People just think its a choice between bad and the very bad, Labour or Tory. After the war the government did seem to carry out its manifesto promises, and what people thought would be the first concrete steps towards a just and fair society. All to the good. But by 1959 the Labour leaders: now out of office, began to argue that inequalities of class were no longer a problem. They tried to write Clause 4-for social ownership of production-out of the party’s aims. Yet to many party members this clause was the proof that it could be a party for the working class. Although these leaders were unsuccessful at time, ever since, the leaders’ policies have repeatedly conflicted with working-class needs. It’s very difficult now to see what good will come of a Labour government. Of course people can see some good fellers and women in the Labour Party; real tryers like Eddie Loyden. But they see the likes of them getting battered all the time so those that aim for socialism within the Labour Party become no more than the likes of Callaghan and Wilson in the eyes of ordinary folk. And everyone’s bleedin’ disgusted with them.
This moving away by the Labour Party (if it was ever anything different) from what people expected has meant that there are, less activists around the Labour Party than in my dad’s day. It’s strongly felt that there’s little worth in fighting for the Labour Party. So people take the easy way out and grab what they can; ignoring the wider fight for a society in which we can all have the opportunity to live a more fulfilled life.
Perhaps things will get revitalized now we are forced to fight the Tories. I can sense something on Merseyside. Attempts are being made by the left to set up industrial branches of the Labour Party in Fords and elsewhere. Its a good way of getting political debate on the shop floor. But I don’t hold out much hope of change in direction of the whole party. Still, although the arrow towards socialism has one shaft it has many heads, and socialists in the Labour Party are one of them.
What about the people who seem to get ‘battered’ all the time, those people busy organizing in the Constituency Party General Management Committees and at the party conference to turn the Labour Party into a real socialist party? Why cannot they reach out to would-be Labour voters and potential socialist activists to persuade them not to be misled by recent Labour governments? For these governments, it is argued, are not the real thing.
Somehow this argument has lost a lot of its appeal. The Labour left have not, since Bevan, been able to establish a credible and distinct identity from the leadership in the eyes of most working-class people. They’ve become compromised by their long association with the policies of the party leadership. In fact they often come off worse, for their message comes across via Labour Party debates as ‘more of the same’. Left and right have always tended to appear as just different ends of a spectrum of policies on state intervention. The debates between left and right in the Labour Party have normally been about more or less nationalization, and more or less state control.
This used to be enough to establish a distinct vision of socialism. Before the war when Labour’s ability to control the state machinery had not been tested, and when the state’s distance from production and economic life gave credibility to the idea that the state was a neutral instrument to be used for socialist ends, their vigorous advocation of Clause 4 provided a clear strategy and programme for socialism. It made sense to think of the state as ‘a sword atl the heart of private property’, as Bevan put it. People knew~ what socialism was, and in general they saw the Labour left” as its true representatives, even if they were wary of supporting them. But for the past thirty years people have” lived through and been brought up in an economy in which~ the state plays a leading role, differing little from govern- f ment to government. In this situation the policies of the Labour left, for slightly more state intervention (though not’ even as much as Bevan used to argue for) on more sociaI1, criteria, do not add up to an inspiring or even distinct alternative to the policies of the right.
A fresh and convincing vision would require a move away from the traditional framework of Labour Party debates, away from the issue of what an elected Labour government would do with the state-as if the state were as malleable as putty. It would require a move to confront the reality of private capital’s extra-parliamentary power and the constraints of international trade, both of which make the state so resistant to the good intentions of many parliamentary socialists. It would require a strategy for organizing the extra-parliamentary powers of working people, on an international scale.
The ‘Bennite’ Labour left which emerged out of the debris of the Labour governments of the sixties made some tentative moves in this direction by establishing ad hoc links, while in opposition, with a number of shop stewards’ committees and by pu tting greater stress on some form of workers’ control. But, at a national level at least, they are inhibited from developing this further. They are trapped in the contradictions created by their belief that the. way to implement their policies is to win power within the Labour Party. F or this they have to concen trate their energies on winning positions within Constituency Parties, getting policy resolutions to conference, and winning the support of trade union leaders in order to get conference support for a change in the constitution and in the leadership. At a local level much of this might well be compatible with developing the extra-parliamentary power of workers’ organizations. (Although it would require some improvisation on present forms of constituency organization to make close links with socialists outside the Labour Party possible.) But as a consistent national strategy it comes up against the purely electoral priorities of the party, the pressures for unity when the conflict comes to any kind of crunch, the reluctance of trade union leaders and officials to encourage or even allow industrial action on political issues-other than in defence of normal trade union organizing and bargaining rights.
In this way then, the left within the Labour Party cannot establish an independent credibility with-or even a means of communications to-the mass of working people. It is tied to a platform of politicians to whom fewer and fewer people are in fa..ct listening with any hope or expectation.
Can They Change It?
Is this just a temporary problem, a result of the left’s cramped, ineffectual tactics while the party was in government? Could there come a time when socialists in the Labour Party could remove the consensus politicians from this platform and turn the Labour Party into a socialist party able to confront the power of private capital through extra-parliamentary as well as parliamentary action? This is an important issue, for there are many thousands of active socialists, some actually members of the Labour Party, some just paying their political levy and canvassing election time, who are instinctively reluctant to create political alternative to the Labour Party. They feel that as the party of the working class, it could, as workers’ struggles grow and political consciousness is heightened become a socialist party. ‘The left has nearly won control over the NEC; with just a few more heaves we’ll have won control of the Party.’ Under the present government and with the struggle for succession to the Labour Party, leadership, these pressures for ‘one more go’ are intensifying.
Gertie Roche who has been active in the labour movement in Leeds for many years, in her union, community groups, the Communist Party and now the Labour Party sums up this feeling with a very cautious optimism.
I think history is made very slowly. People are slow to change their attitudes. They have an emotional involvement in something that concerns them and then it melts away. So I do not think [I the Labour Party will change quickly and do not expect very ! much from it. But people are pushing all the time. I watched the debate at the party conference today and we managed to get MPs made accountable for their behaviour. I think that’s a big step forward. There’s so little accountability in the public services.
I get angry when ,some of the people I work with on different issues attack me for being in the Labour Party. At least when you’re in the Labour Party you get listened to which is more than used to be the case with the Communist Party. I think we should stop fighting each other’s allegiances and get on with the issues. There are so many things that I find I can work together on with socialists and others outside the Labour Party-on women’s liberation, the cuts, supporting a centre like TUCRIC (Trade Union Information and Research Centre) in Leeds. I support the emphasis of these people on extra-parliamentary action. That’s very necessary, although the small amount of support you get can sometimes be depressing.
Before we talk then about the sort of socialist organization we need, and the contribution which feminism can make to it, we need to see the blocks which its development will come up against as far as the Labour Party is concerned, and why therefore organizing for socialism will eventually be based outside the Labour Party.
There are many factors which weigh heavily against the possibility of changing the Labour Party: the power and autonomy which the British Constitution gives to the moderate parliamentary leadership, the overwhelmingly electoral priorities of the party, and so on. It may seem as these problems could be overcome if the Constituency Parties won more formal power, giving them more say in electing the party leadership and drawing up the manifesto. But there is a virtually insuperable problem for the left in making much real headway even in this constitutional direction. The problem is inherent in the origins and basic make-up of the party. It lies in the overwhelming dominance of the unions, and the power of the trade union leadership to determine how this influence is exercised. Of course different unions will move to the left on specific issues and vote for generally left motions at conference. But to change radically the direction of the Labour Party would require trade union leaders, under pressure from their members, to actively commit themselves and a Labour government to overthrowing the economy and the state in which, despite Tory threats, they have such an established role and status. Of course we hope for a time, when the majority of trade unionists will be actively involved in achieving such a transformation, dragging their leaders behind them. But such mass socialist activity could not be built up, unless there were already a socialist organization giving a lead in the factories, offices and communities.
In this way, socialists trying to change the Labour Party are caught in a vicious circle. To turn the Labour Party into a socialist party there needs already to be a socialist party. And there are insuperable constraints to possibilities of such a party operating within the Labour Party. The constraints are especially strong as far as any left grouping making an open organized alliance with rank and file trade unionists against right-wing trade union leaders. At the first signs of such a threat the trade union leadership is able to use its power within the party, directly or behind the scenes, to mobilize rules and disciplinary powers against the left. This was one of the problems facing the Bevanites in the fifties when they gave support to dockers rebelling against the pro-Gaitskell T&GWU leadership. Benn and his supporters have similarly faced the wrath of right-wing trade union leaders when they have made common cause with shop stewards through unofficial channels. The left rarely resists such threats because to take on openly the trade union leadership in this way would jeopardize all their short-run ambitions of winning control over the party. This contradiction is likely to become increasingly apparent as the smouldering resentment and frustration of trade union members with their leadership flares up out of control.
The Communist Party’s national strategy of pushing the Labour Party leftwards is weakened by the same contradictions. For although it has the organizational independence to build up left oppositions within the unions, its considerable success in this is blunted by depending too much on national left leaders like, in the past, Scanlon and] ones who offer the illusion of a short cut to a left Labour government. In a few important localities, however, left Labour constituencies and left groupings in the unions are sufficiently strong and autonomous from national Labour and trade union leaderships to create an impressive and powerful alliance. South Yorkshire is the best-perhaps the only-example. Such a local alliance is one of the many heads of the arrow which John Bohanna talked about earlier. But it is not the basis for the single shaft.
Why Don’t They Split Then?
However we cannot leave the matter like this: we cannot leave the Labour Party socialists to stew in their own contradiction while we hurry away to build a separate party in the hope that one day they’ll~see the error of their ways. That would be to ignore all the important points of agreement between socialists inside and outside the Labour Party; and the strength which can be gained from ways of organizing that provide for both joint action and sharp debate.
Historically, in Western Europe any new socialist parties with a degree of mass influence have been created out of splits within a pre-existing mass workers’ party. However in Britain this scenario is slowed. down and blocked by the peculiarly ambiguous and deceptive structure of the British Labour Party, with its appearance of being the united, democratic party of the workers’ movement, giving full and free expression to every socialist view, concealing the reality of power in the hands of a well-protected parliamentary group, shielded as it is by the trade union leadership. Mainly because of its link with unions the Labour Party does not have the normal character of a political party. It is a hybrid of a radical party made up of individuals committed to a radical programme, a powerful trade union lobby, and a parliamentary leadership of professional consensus politicians. For while the left is continually being defeated by the practice of every Labour government (the professional consensus politicians), defeat and failure never seem conclusive, for, after all, ‘we won at conference’, ‘we are in control of the constituencies’ (the radical party)-it’s just 11 matter of putting on more pressure next time, of making the parliamentary leadership accountable. But the powerful trade union lobby working behin’d the scenes, with varying degrees of unity, makes success perpetually elusive. People are always leaving in disgruntled little groups, when they’ve had enough, and when one issue, entry into the Common Market, incomes policy, the cuts, etc.,. is ‘the last straw’. And many are no longer joining, because trying to change it, after fifty years of failure, seems a dead end, and there are better things to do. But these same people carryon paying the political levy, voting Labour and canvassing for Labour. Most of them could not really imagine setting up an alternative political party unless a major split took place in the Labour Party, even though they may be involved in all sorts of campaigns and projects which have little significant support from the Labour Party.
Some socialists wander in and out of the Labour Party, not out of any enthusiasm and hope for national change but through the absence of any other adequate political framework and the existence of many congenial and leftwing constituency parties.
Val Clarke, for example, who used to be in the IS (SWP) is now very active in the local Labour Party near Huddersfield, Yorkshire, not ,because of any confident belief that the Labour Party can become a genuinely socialist party but because
When we came here and got involved in campaigns on industrial issues, housing, and education problems, virtually all the main socialist activists were in the local Labour Party. That’s where socialist policies on all these issues were being thrashed out. Being outside the Labour Party meant we got all the discussion and information second hand. We could not influence things. And it would have been impossible to set up any alternative left focus. In a sense there was no need to, any militant who was any good was in the local Labour Party. This may not be typical, I recognize that, but Labour Parties like this must be taken account of when we talk about alternatives.
This blurred, indecisive quality of socialist politics in Britain is partly a product of local variations and partly of the ambiguous structure of the party. But it is also reinforced by the fact that when it comes to who should represent them in Parliament socialists and other radical activists have little political choice. This monopoly that is reinforced by the present electoral system gives Labour MPs and councillors an important hold on socialist militants whose campaigns and struggles can often be strengthened by having allies within the political system.
If then Labour Party socialists are unable to turn their local socialist politics into an effective national strategy and socialist party, and yet if the inevitable postponement of the final outcome of debate within the Labour Party and the wider trade union movement makes conditions for an alternative party extremely unfavourable, how and from where will the sort of socialist organization we referred to earlier be created?
Filling the Vacuum
Ever since the growth of CND, and then the movements which grew up in the late sixties and early seventies among students, trade unionists, women, blacks, gays, and, more recently, youth, there has been a growing force of people, inside and outside the Labour Party, who are impatient with the fruitless reliance on a Labour government, who are organizing directly for control over political and industrial decisions, and who are contesting the state in almost every sphere. But, partly as a result of the ambiguous features of the Labour Party, partly because of the pro-Stalinist record and present-day lack of internal democracy of the Communist Party, and partly because of the sectarianism of the revolutionary left, these activists do not have a political voice which expresses their grass-roots strength. That is, we are without a sustained way of organizing beyond our specific oppressions and experiences. We lack the means to develop a general theory and programme for socialist change from these varied experiences. And we do not have adequate ways of convincing people of the wider political changes which need to be fought for if their specific demands and needs are to be met. Our fragmented movements and campaigns are that much weaker without this political focus and back-up. This will become more and more painfully obvious as a strong, determined Tory government makes isolated victories more difficult. Many of the socialists involved in such movements and campaigns are instinctively aware of these weaknesses. As a result, here is a growing tendency to develop and make explicit he wider political implications of whatever movement or project socialists are involved in. Some people thought that he pressure of the political vacuum on the left would draw much activists towards the banner of a new socialist party. Instead, it has tended to induce people to make the wider links, elaborate the more general policies and theories, relate the cultural alternatives, through a whole variety of industrial, community, and cultural organizations. In effect left-wing trades councils, socialist resource centres, socialist women’s groups, theatre groups, left bookshops, militant shop stewards’ committees often carry out, in sum, the functions of a socialist party but without the co-ordination and long-term perspectives of a party. It is as if the different parts of a piece of cloth-a political organization-were being woven creatively and with ad hoc contact between the weavers, but without anyone having a master plan. Though occasionally we need, from different points of view, to stand back and see where we’ve got to, where the cloth is weak and where the pattern is becoming blurred.
This sounds all very well, and perhaps a bit overoptimistic. Where are the signs of these developments? It is not a uniform picture and no one person could draw it. We can only outline certain indications from our own experiences.
In some areas, for example, trades councils have come to act increasingly like socialist alliances, taking up militant socialist positions, directly critical of the Labour and trade union leadership, and through -their subcommittees organizing together local women’s groups, unemployed youth, active tenants’ groups, socialist research workers, with the relevant local trade unionists. In Coventry, for instance, the Trades Council has played a leading role over housing in fighting the -council and private building companies, in giving practical support for the demands of the women’s movement, in. organizing anti-imperialist campaigns, in organizing anti-racist campaigns; and, more recently, in rethinking socialist policies towards state intervention in industry, in the light of Labour’s rationalizations and closures. The Trades Council in Newcastle has played a similarly political role, in addition, taking a strong stand against British imperialism in Northern Ireland. On Tameside in the North West the ‘Trades Council set up what began as a cuts committee but which for a period became the focus for all sorts of different issues-abortion, ~ti-racism, unemployment, and so on.
The Hull Trades Council is launching a weekly newspaper which is likely to become one focal point for socialist activity in the area. There are many other examples from trades councils throughout the country. The point here is not that trades councils have taken an occasional militant stand. There’s nothing new in that. What has developed in the last ten years or so is a pattern of trades councils which act pretty consistently as socialist organizations, as consistently, that is, as the limits of being a trade union body will allow. We shall return to these limits later.
Another indication of the strongly felt need to reach beyond our own problem and shape a more general political perspective is the development of widely supported socialist tendencies within the women’s movement and the gay movement which play an active role in trade union struggles, e.g., organizing contingents on the Grunwick mass picket, organizing against racism and fascism, and playing a leading role in fighting the cuts. Along with this, these groups have considerably deepened and extended Marxist theory and socialist policies.
There are similar, though less developed signs coming from a number of tenants’ organizations, in which there is a strongly felt need to make more effective links with industrial workers, and women’s groups. For example, there is the work of the Socialist Housing Activists Workshop which brought together activists in local and regional tenants’ movements with socialist research workers to produce the ‘R,ed Paper on Housing’, a set of proposals for socialist policies on housing that is being discussed in places where there is a reasonably strong tenants’ group, like Tyneside, Cardiff, Liverpool and Coventry. The activities and policies of the National Tenants’ Organizations also reflect a strong socialist influence, the effect of an alliance of socialists from different localities and different political tendencies.
Similar developments can be seen in organizations connecting industrial issues and the interests of workingclass communities. Since the late sixties there have been numerous local industrially-based organizations, formed over one issue but developing to take on many others, and acting almost like a political alliance for many of the activists concerned. For example, in South-East London an organization was formed from different shop stewards’ committees and union branches during the fight against the closure of A.E.!. Woolwich. Its purpose was to campaign against closures and redundancies in the area more generally. But very soon it was taking on incomes policy, racism, and all the other issues that socialists campaigned over at that time. As Jim Coughlin, its chairman, said
It really became a political focus at the time; local right-wing MPs like Mayhew and Marsh could see that. They did their best to stop us being represented at important meetings. But for a period SELAC [South East London Action Committee Against Closures] provided a very militant forum and propaganda organization.
In Speke, on Merseyside, a few years later, the Speke Area Trade Union Committee (SATUC) brought together industrial and community-based militants to fight on the single issue of no. redundancies on the Speke estate, but the committee got involved in other matters as well.
Maureen Williams, a member of SATUC describes its origins, political potential and the problems it faced:
It was set up in early 1975 as a direct outcome of the fight to prevent the closure of a local factory. From there we got involved in a wide range of disputes in Speke where jobs were at stake and we were asked to help. Al it developed SATUC took up wider issues. We had speakers on Chile and Portugal and sent delegates to conferences on these issues. After a year or so members of the committee actually got involved in fighting a rent rise and joined a community picket of the town hall. This was very different to when I had first raised the issue and been met with disinterest or considered diversionary. Within eighteen months members were prepared to fight-even if only as individuals and not as representatives of -;heir organizations. SATUC also got involved in organizing conferences on health and safety at work and unemployment.
Late in 1977 our activity began to diminish. As a committee we were totally dependent on whether or not a fight was going on on the industrial estate. If workers did not fight redundancy we couldn’t. In a sense we fell between two stools. On the one hand we were too much a trade-union-based and -orientated body, with delegates and finance from branches and shop stewards’ committees, to carry on as a militant alliance when active support from the branches began to dwindle. On the other hand we were too unorthodox to get support from trade union officialdom. Many trade union officials were outright hostile to us.
SATUC did have potential as a political alliance. Various socialist organizations were in it, left Labour, IS, Big Flame, as well as unaligned ‘lefties’, but to develop in this way we would have had to clarify our relationships to the Labour Party, the trade unions and the shop floor. [The Garston Labour Party (and many local union branches) are left wing and we needed to work with them rather than appeal’ as a complete alternative.] We also would have needed to reassess ourselves as ‘political’ rather than militant to protect jobs’. Neither of these items was ever seriously on our agenda.
Another radical movement in which many people are developing and extending a socialist perspective and organizing more closely with working-class organizations is the movement of radical technologists and environmentalists. This ‘movement’ covers a multitude of sins as well as many creative and highly political advances. While some have remained interested only in individualistic improvements in the quality of middle-class life, others like the British Society for Social Responsibility in Science, the Socialist Environmental and Resources Association have become increasingly concerned to link their critique of capitalist technology with the working-class organizations which alone have the power to fight for alternatives. The initiative of the shop stewards in Lucas Aerospace in drawing up and fighting for products which used and modified modern technology to meet social needs and to enhance rather than destroy the skill of the worker was an important catalyst in this.
This initiative by the Lucas Aerospace Combine Committee is itself an illustration of new ways in which activists are building on their own resources and organizations to meet the new political needs that no single socialist organization fulfills. The combine committee brings together trade unionists from all sorts of political traditions but it was, and still is, faced with the problems of structural, technological unemployment to which no one political organization has an answer. The idea Of fighting around specific proposals for socially useful production, for skill-enhancing instead of skill-reducing work came from a belief in the political power of independent combine committees. That is, the power of shop-floor and technical workers to take on management over the highly political issues of investment, the purpose of production, and the nature of the labour process. Of course no combine committee can take on these issues alone. The Lucas Aerospace stewards make this clear in the introduction to their plan where they deny the possibility of ‘islands of socialism in a sea of capitalist exploitation’. But the principles> behind workers’ plans for production according to need have been taken up, modified and developed by other shop stewards’ committees; for example, in power engineering, in so~e sections of the armaments industry, to a small extent in shipbuilding, the rubber industry, and elsewhere. And th,e tentative beginnings of organized links between these shop stewards’ groups is taking place.
Another rather different process of politicization has been going on among Marxist academics, many-but by no means all-of who·m are increasingly sensing the need for their work to be engaged with socialist, political, community, and industrial organizations. There is a sense of unease about the sort of theory produced without the discipline, the stimulus and the constraints of interaction with political movements. Discussions at the Conference of Socialist Economists have come increasingly to concern issues of strategy and working-class politics; many of its members on a local level are working with trade unionists, tenants’ and women;s groups. The History Workshop Journal explicitly sees its work as closely related to the wider socialist movement; it gives special support to, for example, locally-based publishing projects, like Strong Words in the North East, Centerprise in East London and others in Brighton and elsewhere. These local publishing projects have begun to recover and inspire critical working-class writing as part of the tradition of workers’ self-education through which working-class people develop their consciousness and creativity. State research is another example of the growth of research and writing with a political urgency and purpose. State Research is a collective of journalists and researchers which investigates policing, intelligence and the military. Through a bi-monthly publication it spreads its findings to the activists who come up against these parts of the state, arid to the wider media, sympathetic MPs, etc. New Left Review in its debates on nationalism,revolutionary strategy in the West, socialist opposition in the East and on the substantive implications of materialism has served to highlight fundamental problems facing the development of a coherent socialist practice.
The women’s liberation movement has been an important catalyst in many of these moves towards a richer unity of theory and practice. Its insistence on theoretical work which is accessible and relevant to the growth and strengthening of the movement has produced a selfconsciousness about the political purpose and practical process of theoretical work which was rare. A recent editorial in Fem£n£st Rev£ew, a theoretical journal produced by a collective within the women’s movement reflects this:
In our first issue we said that our intention in publishing Feminist Review was to contribute to the political development of the women’s liberation movement by providing a space where ideas could be discussed and information exchanged. To do this we stressed the importance of the accessibility of the material we publish; but accessibility isn’t just a question of language and presentation, although these are very important issues. Equally important is the process of discussion between readers, contributors and the editorial collective.
Feminists have taken these sort of principles into many of the projects just mentioned above, with good effect.
An important consequence of this ad hoc politicization is that many so-called ‘sectoral’, ‘single issue’ or ‘merely local’ campaigns, movements, and organizations have been created on the basis of consciously socialist values. This does not mean that such organizations are, or necessarily will ever be, fully socialist in their policies or ways of organizing. What it does mean, however, is that behind specific labels ‘the women’s movement’, ‘alternative press/bookshops’, ‘tenants’ action groups’, local and national ‘shop stewards’ combine committees’, ‘trade union and community resource and research centres’, there is often-not always-a wealth of ideas, experiences, and ways of organizing which are of direct political relevance to the creation of a socialist organization.
Socialist Alliances
But before we discuss how these advances can best be built on, we need to be aware of the limits of _ this ‘organic’ way in which the political vacuum has been filled. The problems vary, but they all become apparent at times like the last five years when there is no massive tide of class struggle sweeping everything along with it. At such times the trades councils and shop stewards’ bodies which have tended to become more of a left alliance than a trade union organization are in dangeI’- of becoming isolated from their mass membership, and consequently unable, when things come to a crunch, to show any real industrial strength. Trades councils do not suffer so obviously as a result, because they have long-established roots which can survive failures and isolation. Though they do come up against attempts by the TUC to restrict the scope of their activity, and sometimes the national TUC can enlist the support of the Regional TUC to keep the trades councils in check. The unofficial industrial bodies we have mentioned like on Merseyside or in South-East London are more dependent on being able to deliver some practical goods to the membership. If the organization begins to move too fast, more at the tempo of a political organization, it loses .its base. And unless the leading members are conscious of its potential as a political alliance, it loses its rationale and disintegrates, as happened on Merseyside and in South-East London. In addition, because such bodies are essentially trade union bodies, they cannot usually allow for the political debate and education necessary to develop a united political strategy and programme. This in turn leads to political misunderstandings, the predominance of personal hostilities, splits, and falling away of political initiatives.
Within campaigning movements like the women’s movement, the tenants’ movement, radical technologists, and so on, the problems facing socialists are different. They mainly concern the difficulties of socialists making the necessary links beyond their own movement with other trade unionists and other community-based groups when they are not in any party or, when, as is usual, the links need to go beyond the small circles of existing socialist parties. The same problem arises in elaborating policies which need to take account of wider working-class interests beyond the movement initially concerned. For example, socialists in the tenants’ movement on Tyneside are trying to develop pressure to extend the direct labour force. For this they need to make contact with building workers and trades councils and sympathetic sections of the Labour Party. The activists irivolved can see very clearly how very much easier and more effective the whole campaign would be if the socialists involved in all the different organizations affected were in the habit of meeting with each other, discussing policies, reaching some common understanding of the problem and its wider context. As Kenny Bell, one of the activists involved, put it:
For tenants as consumers the issue of who does the repairs and the building and what control tenants have over it is really important. In this way they have a clear interest in expanding the direct labour force. But there’s been so much rundown of the direct labour force in Newcastle, jobs are so insecure, wages and conditions so bad, that many building workers are glad of a job in the private sector. So creating the links, putting over the argument about the potential of direct labour isn’t easy. We need to be working closely with socialists in the building trade. But it’s difficult to make that contact out of the blue. It is much easier if there is some tradition of wider contact between socialists in the different unions and campaigns. The Tyneside Socialist Centre’s network has been useful and also the various resource and information centres. The socialist centre has also been helpful as a way of clarifying ideas about strategy. But we need to build a lot more on that.
Similarly with, socialist feminists in the National Abortion Campaign wanting to make contact with hospital workers and other trade unionists. Small numbers of socialists across the sectors are in organized contact with each other, through being in the CP, the SWP or the IMG, but this nothing like covers even the majority of the activists who would/could be politically united and be very much stronger for it.
Experience of these sorts of problems has, in several localities led to socialists from different campaigns, movements, unions, and from different political tendencies, creating local s9cialist alliances, forums, or centres. In Hounslow, for example, the need to provide a focal point for socialist activists in the area arose from the experience of the thirteen-month occupation of Hounslow Hospital. The occupation had demonstrated to many of those involved the possibilities of a new way of organizing; Karl Brecker, Chairman of the shop stewards’ committee at the West Middlesex Hospital, describes this:
To sustain such a long occupation we. had the problem of raismg people’s political awareness, and therefore of taking political discussion beyond minimal agreement on action, without allowing sectarian differences to destroy the cohesion of the occupation. It took a long time to work this through; but gradually people learnt to debate with, and yet respect, each other’s views. It wasn’t a matter of yielding your opinions into a mish-mash. And gradually people learnt how to speak and discuss in a nonsectarian way. They had to. There were a lot of hospital workers at the meetings, not in any political organization, who would not tolerate the sort of rejection of people’s views because they are members of another organization, which often goes on in sectarian circles.
The other thing that was important was the ways that all the time we had to break down hierarchies and make people feel involved. The whole occupation would have disintegrated unless the normal divisions such as those between ancillary workers and nursing staff were broken down. We had to make sure people did not feel put down, that their personal problems were recognized, and that they were given support. The influence of the women’s movement was important here.
The occupation became a base; a centre for other campaigns and struggles in the area. It became a sort of school for activists, learning how to do leaflets, and so on. It was used by the firemen in their strike, by the NUJ, also by some Labour Party socialists who stood in the local elections on a no cuts, no unemployment platform.
Many of us felt that with all this that we had created something different, it stronger way of organizing, and we did not want to lose it once the occupation was over. We thought we should build on this experience modestly. That’s why a group of us set up the Hounslow Socialist Forum in the third week of January this year. We hold meetings every fortnight, on topics which put local issues into a broader context. Forty of fifty local activists turn up from all the main socialist organizations as well as a lot of independent socialists. People use it as a place to get support for campaigns and local disputes. We meet at the Labour Hall. We have not thought about premises, or anything more ambitious yet. We need to move slowly, as people get used to working together and we define the areas of agreement and debate.
On Tyneside in 1975 a socialist centre was set up initially for educational, cultural, debating and general propaganda purposes. But since the centre was bringing socialists together-albeit in a haphazard way-it began to take on a more practical role: organizing anti-fascist leafletting, helping to provide support for strikes, initiating local campaigns and debates around political issues such as the deportation of Agee and Hosenball, the oppositions in Eastern Europe, workers’ plans for socially useful production, British investment in Southern Africa and support for the Zimbabwean Liberation movements. Then for a year or so it became overwhelmed by the practical problems of maintaining and improving the only socialist bookshop and book service in the area. But it is now re-emerging from this, stronger perhaps as a result of the very practical, material responsibilities that this entailed, and able to strengthen united action against the Tories and to extend debate about policies and strategy. Its constitution provides for the representation of affiliated political tendencies (e.g., the SWP, and the CP), trade union organizations and other movements on the Centre’s co-ordinating committee. It has regular general meetings of individual supporters and representatives of organizations. Working groups take more specific responsibility for the Centre’s projects, like the bookshop, the bulletin and meetings.
In Islington a similar sort of alliance and forum was created out of a conference called by the Islington Gutter Press in early 1978. The conference was attended by activists in local campaigns against racism, on women’s groups, in unions (mainly the public sector) in the Labour Party, the CP, IMG, SWP and Big Flame. This conference elected a Socialist Centre committee which now organizes regular Sunday evening debates, educational meetings, and socialist cultural events. At their last conference they decided to look for premises, and also to play a more active role in supporting strikes and campaigns. Lynne’s piece in this book describes this in more detail.
In Hackney too, meetings of socialist and radical activists to learn from one another and discuss common problems and different views have begun. The existence of a local alternative paper, bookshop and cafe as well as a trades council building with a pub and meeting rooms help in communicating this development.
There are many factors which could make for these local socialist alliances. In some areas like Tyneside and Merseyside, Clydeside, parts of Yorkshire, the steel towns, and indeed, increasingly, just about everywhere beyond Westminster, the stimulus could be the real threat of decline and collapse.
In most such areas some kind of official campaigns against the threat usually grind into motion. But after ten years or more of decline in some regions, many socialists have learnt from the campaigns of the past. They have witnessed the demoralization which comes from relying on these leaders, from the futility of their lobbies, their token demonstrations, and their reluctance to agitate and argue among the membership and the community for something more. Such socialist activists are increasingly aware of the need to come together to take more militant initiatives and to elaborate policies of more a socialist content than the ‘grab what we can get. for this region’ sort which often dominate official campaigns. Alec McFadden, a former member of the Communist Party, now in no political organization, Treasurer of Newcastle Trades Council and an organizer of the Trades Council Unemployed Centre summed this up from his own experience:
We can’t just unite vaguely against the Tories like we did under Heath and leave it at that, like the TUC is talking about now. Though that was necessary, it wasn’t enough. It meant we weren’t ready to deal with the policies of the Labour government, we had not got alternative policies and we had not got the strength to act independently when MPs, officials and the like wouldn’t fight.
We need to get real socialists together in the area, to build upa fight, yes, but also to prepare for the future. It can’t be a matter of uniting for unity’$ sake. If it’s just that, we’ll be back to the same sort of Labour government as before. We’ve got to prepare alternative policies. I learnt that from the closure of Tress [part of Fairey, owned and closed by the NEB of which McFadden was AEUW convenor] and from the failure of the campaign to keep Vickers Scotswood open. The socialists involved should have got together more and worked things out, to give a lead.
The way such alliances might come about will vary tremendously according to local conditions. Sometimes under the pressure of the onslaught from the Tories and the hopelessness of official campaigns, the local branch of the strongest left-wing organization or left Constituency Labour Party might set an alliance in motion. It might break with the normal customs, and making its discussions the forum for socialists, in other smaller organizations or unaligned.
In other areas the experience of successfully working together over some nationally-initiated campaign might lead people to seek ways of establishing that unity on a more permanent, wider political basis. Or there might already be some form of uni ty, a local socialist newspaper, a shared resource centre, a bookshop, socialist club or centre, which can be built on to create a more· active political alliance. Whatever the process, the signs are that .conditions for such alliances-ad hoc and loose though they may be-are especially favourable at a local level. There are many reasons for this, one is closely related to what was said earlier about the nature of debates within, and splits from, the Labour Party. Because of the endless postponement of decisive conflicts in the Labour Party; because of the poverty of political debate within most constituency and ward Labour Parties; because of the absence of a mass circulation socialist paper, the left in Britain has not been through a common process of debate on strategy and programme-even of the kind which precedes major splits from socialist and communist parties on the Continent. As a result there is a lack of agreement or even discussion of strategy and programme between any sufficiently strong groupings at a national level to determine nationally the framework of unity at a local level. At a local and regional level however there are plenty of opportunities, first, for unity around the major practical problems of the day; also around socialist projects like bookshops, socialist trade union information and research centres, resource centres, alternative newspapers. So many of these projects are quite beyond the resources of anyone political organization. (F or example, the SWP could not sustain any socialist bookshop outside London and Glasgow, although they tried.) Their success, though, is vital to the creation of a popular socialist party. There is a peculiarly restrictive notion of unity which holds back revolutionaries from creating these sort of alliances. It is argued that if unity goes much beyond specific issues or within particular unions then it will either suck away our energies in endless argie-bargies with other left groups, or it will be so wishy-washy as to be useless and passive. Yet we have found in the women’s movement and among socialist feminists that it is possible to have a single unifying framework within which we unite to act where we agree, e.g., abortion, equal pay, nurseries, fascism, and other issues, and within which we have useful debates over things on which we go our own ways. This can work if you are not defensive about debate and argument and do not see it as ruling out unity On other issues, etc. The unity will have to be vague and loose to begin with. But in developing the basis for political unity one vital function such alliances could perform would be to provide exactly the forum for political debate and education which is so lacking nationally. Without the (re)building of this groundwork of political debate and socialist culture, related to problems and differences encountered in practical struggle, national political co-ordination is bound to flounder.
The pace at which these local socialist alliances coalesce and develop, the dialectic between them, and, emergence of a national socialist organization, cannot be laid down in advance. A revolutionary upheaval in Italy or Spain, for example could rapidly extend people’s horizons for united socialist advance far beyond the local or regional level.
The Revolutionary Groups
Isn’t this all a bit ramshackle? Wouldn’t it be much simpler, clearer and ultimately more effective to encourage everyone to join one of the revolutionary groups/parties and hope that through proving itself in action, this organization will eventually encompass the activists, some of whose diverse projects we have just sketched? The problem with much a solution is not ‘Leninism’ as a theory of the class !1ature of the state. Nor is it what follows from this in terms of a need to destroy the coercive state machinery and establish a new form of democratic political power. Neither s the organizational condition for such a transformation, a mass revolutionary organization based in the movements of he working class and other oppressed groups in question. The problem is rather- with the way in which most of the existing revolutionary groups seek to establish such a mass evolutionary organization. One of the main problems lies in the leap they make from a belief in the need for mass socialist organization to the conclusion that they are the infant stage (SWP), or the nucleus (IMG) of such an organization. They therefore take on the essential structure and features of the central leadership which they hope one day to be. Like the Elizabethan children who were dressed up like full-grown adults, the result at worst is absurd, puffed up and very constricting! Perhaps the problem can be more seriously elaborated by applying Marx’s basic principles on the relation between revolutionaries (Communist) and the rest of the workers’ movements.
As he puts in in The Communist Manifesto:
They [Communists) do not setup any sectarian principles of their own, by which to shape and mould the proletarian movement … The Communists are, on the one hand, practically, the most advanced and resolute section of the wor king-class parties of every country, that section which pushes forward all others; on the other hand, theoretically, they have over the great mass of the proletariat the advantage of clearly understanding the lines of march, the conditions, and the ultimate general results of the proletarian movement.
The major revolutionary’ groups in Britain tend to make the mistake of assuming that it is they alone (and their close contacts) who are, in Marx’s phraseology, the Communists. In fact they are merely a small section though with a specific and important contribution to make-of those who are, at the grass-roots, giving a political lead to workers and other oppressed groups. The mass of ‘Communists’, are the socialist activists whose diverse projects and struggles 1 have just sketched. Some are in other workers’ parties, some are in none, but, as already argued, they are none the less socialist for that. In this way then the ‘vanguardist groups’, though alert, in abstract, to the dangers of substituting for the class, tend all the time to substitute themselves for the diverse emerging vanguard of that class.
This criticism applies most directly to the Socialist Workers Party. The International Marxist Group, a much smaller organization, but none the less, an influential one, does not make such a claim. It conceives of itself as merely :he nucleus of a future party which will be formed through 1 lengthy process of united fronts, splits and fusions with )ther organizations. This leads them to put more emphasis m projects aimed at unifying the left (e.g., the initial launching of Socialist Challenge around a basic programme >n which many socialists not in the IMG could agree, similarly with the idea of a united electoral alternative to he Labour Party, organized through ‘Socialist Unity’).
However, their attitude to the way in which a correct programme is developed weakens their ability to make these projects anything much more than ways of slightly widening their own ‘periphery’ of contacts and supporters. ‘heir model is premised, correctly, on the belief that the creation of a socialist society is, above all, a conscious political process, not an outburst of irrationality or the unintended effect of thousands of uncoordinated decisions. ‘here is therefore, they argue, a need for a scientific pproach to politics. So far so good. Their model, however, f such a scientific approach is based on far too monistic
view of scientific development. For they do not lerely fight for their own beliefs as we all do; they also ~gue that their own internal processes of democratic iscussion, and decision-making are the processes through hich a scientific socialist politics is elaborated. Of course, ley assume in this that their members learn from their involvement in wider struggles and campaigns. But the process of synthesis goes on within the IMG. Such a notion flies in the face of the way that all other scientific ideas develop, that is, through a process of more or less structured contestation and of diverse but ‘co-ordinated experimentation. Of course the development of a science of practical politics differs from other sciences in that its practice does not involve artificial experiment but human struggles. But in a way this makes the substitution of the processes of theoretical/political debate and practice of one political tendency for the possibilities of co-ordinated debate and action of the wider socialist involvement,even more disastrous. It seems to flow from the assumption that there is one timeless organizational interpretation of the concept of democratic centraJism. Ironically, it is Ernest Mandel, a leading theoretician of the Fourth International (of which the IMGis the British section), who points to the real political significance of this concept when he says:
The essence of democratic centralism is not really organizational, but political, or bettex:, socio-political. The immediate experience of workers [we should add ‘and other oppressed people’-H. W.] is always partial and one-sided. Real workers, as opposed to idealized ones, are active in one factory, in one branch of industry, in one city. The lessons they draw from their immediate experiences are therefore always partial. The spontaneous activity of the working class, while it may be quite varied, is always fragmented and therefore always tends to lead to fragmented consciousness. The essential function of democratic centralism is to overcome that fragmentation by centralizing the experience of the working class as a w}:lOle, drawing the proper lessons from it, and organizing a strategy that can unify the proletarian front in its battle for state power. [Revolutionary Marxism Today, New Left Books, London, 1979, p. 222.]
No single organizational form is implied by such a process. Neither is there any justification for making the logical leap from a belief in the IMG’s ideas to the conclusion that it is only through the processes of democratic discussion in the IMG or the Fourth Interrlational that an adequate programme can develop. The forms of organization which provide the most favourable :onditions for a scientific socialist politics will vary. For !xample the forms required in a period when the majority )f socialist activists have come from a variety of different lOlitical traditions and experiences rather than mainly ‘rom, say, a split in a previous mass party (as was the case vith the Bolsheviks who came from a split within the ~ussian Social Democratic Labour Party) are likely to be ‘ery different from those required when there is the sort of lolitical homogeneity which is usually produced by such a ommon political experience and debate.
The extent of the pluralism of political tendencies and Durces of socialist inspiration and vision then will ary, as with all forms of scientific development. When a ominant theory of socialist changes collapses in the face f economic and social problems that it can no longer “plain or resolve, and when no alternative has matured I previous contestation with the dominant view, then iere is likely to be tremendous variety in the attempts to II the vacuum. Especially when the objective problems “e’ urgent and there is a periodic groundswell of mass :tivity in response to them. This, in effect, is the situation e have described earlier, with the decline of left formism. Out of this diversity can then come new lutions, greater agreement, and greater strength. But only
we create a new way of organizing through which to rry out sharp, principled debate between the diverse lditions and move men ts, and at the same time to achieve lity in action on the major issues of today. We are not arguing that revolutionary groups should dissolve themselves, as some have done in Italy, into an illusory idea of an undifferentiated mass movement. In any mass socialist organization \\~ich is eventually created out of the fragments, there will always be different political tendencies with some degree of national organization of their own. Among other thiJlgs, these tendencies are in a sense carriers of the revolutionary traditions of the past; they have kept those traditio~s alive in periods where there was no wider layer of socialist militants. Learning from, debating with and developiJIg the traditions which these revolutionary groups apply to contemporary problems will be vital to the process by which a sociali.st organization is woven together.
At present the componentS of such a mass organization are far from reaching the,political cohesion and the clear understanding of the lines of march to which Marx refers, and for which he has providea the markers. The revolutionary groups could be impoitant catalysts in overcoming these weaknesses; they have ~t least mulled over the lessons for the present, of the marJ1es of the past. But their ideas are inevitably limited. They ~ave been able to develop only the bare bon~s of a strategi and programme for socialist revolution in the modern capitalist world. As small organizations emerging onli in the last ten years from discussion groups, their polities are, not especially ‘advanced’ on most of the issues which have come to the fore in these ten years in new and complex ways: sexual politics, the contemporary institutions of ideology and bourgeois culture; the massive extension of state intervention in production; the extent and form of the recession; the new forms of technology and its impact on workers’ living and working conditions, and so on. This is partly because of the major gulf between the last period when revolutionaries in Britain could achieve any significant hearing-the 1940s-and the period 1968 onwards when thousands of militants began to search again for socialist alternatives. When this happened, the revolutionary organizations were not in any position, either in terms of organizational strength or in terms of the richness and breadth of their analyses, to provide an overall political leadership. The result has been many centres of socialist initiative and analysis, of leadership, of political growth.
The unwillingness of the groups to fully recognize this and adopt a more humble political stance towards these many foci of socialist activity has reduced their capacity to influence and catalyse these initiatives towards a more co-ordinated political movement. It has also reduced their capacity to work together.
Once these groups had, as they saw it, made the leap from being propaganda/discussion groups to being fullyfledged democratic centralist parties, or embryos of such, the contradiction between their grandiose conceptions of themselves and the reality of political life on the ground, in the localities and in the various movements and struggles often became too much for many members or possible members to accept. I remember sensing this very sharply when I was a member of the IMG while being very involved in the women’s movement. At first we in the IMG used to prepare our ‘interventions’ as if we really could, and had a duty to, give an overall political lead to the movement. This Soon seemed too absurd to carry on, not because we were a politically isolated vanguard trying to convince a mass of ‘backward elements’, but because all sorts of other socialist feminists had developed better ideas and initiatives along similar lines. Gradually our rather ridiculous pretenslOns were abandoned by many of us active within the movement. We continued to benefit from the sustenance of the political tradition and analysis which the IMG represented and from the contact it provided with socialists involved in other activities. But for us this became a basis for working on one or two issues without any wider pretensions. In this way we probably made a much more valuable contribution, and we worked much better with other socialists and feminists. But we were not acting as the revolutionary leadership of the women’s movement, neither were we aspiring to it. We just became one of, or part of one of, the many sources of leadership and initiative. Neither were we acting according to strictly democratic centralist norms. Sometimes it would be a help to convince the IMG to take a national initiative, e.g., support for the Working Women’s Charter. Sometimes we would just work out and test out in the movement our own ideas and then feed them back into the IMG. We did not feel bound by the discipline of the IMG; on anyone issue we felt as if we might just as well work with another political tendency if their ideas seemed better. We felt accountable to IMG only in the sense of the comradeship of being accountable to people with whom you share ideas and with whom you carry out collective projects. In other words, so long as the IMG recognized its limits as one socialist grouping among many, and always likely to be so, then being a member of it was a source of strength. But whenever it puffed itself and the Fourth International into something more, into an embryonic party with all the pretensions that go with it, then it became a problem.
This over-estimation of their own importance became a problem not only for the real contribution which members organizations. If the two groups controlling the papers were to drop- their party pretensions and recognize that they are botn tendencies in essentially the same political movement, re sources could be combined-and with others, like Big Flame and unaligned revolutionaries-to produce both an effective popular socialist paper and a paper of debate and analysis for the left. Such papers, not tied to any particular group, would also benefit from a much better relation with the independent socialist and broadly radical newspapers which are produced in numerous localities.
The Relevance of the Women’s Movement
All this Concern with the Labour Party, with local socialist alliances, with national socialist papers must at first sight seem along way from feminism. But women have a strong vested interes~ in the success of the socialist movement. And after organizing ourselves for some years we feel we’ve got things to say about all the wider organizing and agitating which needs to be done if we are to create a truly democratic and egalitarian society.
The movement that feminists and socialist feminists have succeeded in organizing may not have achieved many effective legislative; and industrial changes. But it has increased the strengti} and confidence of thousands of women, both those working in the home and those earning a wage, both in white’collar unions and in manual unions. It has drawn into political activity many of the millions of people who have always considered politics wasn’t for them, it was for the politicians. In other words, the women’s movement, in all its diverse ways, through all its different political tendencies, has helped to give women the power to organize ourselves to fight for control over the decisions by which our lives are shaped. And that surely is what soC£alist organ£zatz’on should most centrally be about, for all oppressed and exploz’ted people.
Some might say that the objectives of the women’s movement are very specific and limited, that, for example, it takes on the state in only marginal ways and over issues on which some concessions can and will be granted. Whereas, by contrast, a socialist organization has a far more fundamental, difficult task. The corollary of this is that the organizational forms of the women’s movement may be appropriate for its specific tasks but organizing for socialism requires something very different. Not much can therefore be learnt from feminism. In a crude sense this contrast has some truth in it. A socialist organization will have to take on many issues and problems which do not now confront the women’s movement. We are not holding out the organization of the women’s movement as a complete model on which the left should base itself. But the women’s movement has made an absolutely vital achievenent-or at least the beginnings of it-which no socialist :hould ignore. It has effectively challenged, on a wide cale, the selfsubordinat£on, the acceptance of a ~econdary ole, which underpins most forII}s of oppression and :xploitation. This may not be confronting the state-though he women’s movement does plenty of that-but unless such
self-subordination is rejected in the minds of men, of the nemployed, of blacks, gays, and all other groups to which ocialists aim to give a lead, there will never be much chance f confronting the existing state with a democratic socialist alternative.
The ways in which the women’s movement is achieving lis then have a wider relevance. From the point of view of arning from the women’s movement it is the values which underlie our organizations which are important. The particular organizational forms have relevance only to the specific purpose they were created to fulfil. The values underlying our ways of organizing have been ones which pu t emphasis on local control and autonomy; on small groups within wider co-ordinating structures; on local centres and social and cultural activities; on relating theory to practice; on discouraging forms of procedure and of leadership which make others feel inadequate or uninvolved; on recognizing that different views on strategy and tactics come from some real experience and are worth listening to and discussing. Sheila and Lynne explain these ways of organizing in detail and point out the contrasts with more traditio1}al ways.
These values have created a groundwork on which national and regional structures, co-ordination, theoretical debate, and self-disciplined national action around an agreed programme of demands have been built. They have led to the creation of a movement with many focuses of initiative and leadership and a movement which combined unity with the existence of many different political tendencies. Such unity is not a matter of complacent tolerance. After periods of conflict and mistrust, the movement builds on the distinct contributions of different political views. For example, the movemen”t gained a lot of its ability to influence the trade unions, to get trades councils to set up women’s subcommittees, to involve union branches in actively campaigning for the demands of the movement from women in or close to the lMG and the CPo Recently Women’s Voice has been a strong influence in many areas in adopting a more aggressive, outward-going approach in many of our campaigns. ,
These ways of building a movement are not specific to women. They have been a necessary part of the women’s movement because the subjective experie~ce of political organizing, whether it is ‘off-putting’ or involving, whether it builds up your sense of your own power to change things or makes you feel powerless, is so vital to whether or not women become active. Distant national structures over which you feel little control, formal procedure which does lot seem to achieve anything, rigid notions of the correct .ine which suppress hesitant disagreement and questions, :heoretical debates which do not shed light on practice, :olidarity based on abstractions with little commitment to :ach other-none of these could have moved women to :ast off their passivity and self-subordination. And this .robably applies to a lot of working-class men as well.
There are many lessons to be drawn from the women’s lovement which would help us as socialists to create tructures, arrange meetings, debate with each other, plan :l.ctics, take decisions in ways which draw new people into )cialist activity, and which keep them involved far more ffectively than in the past. Another shift which the lessons f the wornen’s movement would produce would be a -eater respect for initiatives which people are already tking in a socialist direction. I have tried to show in this !ece how important this recognition is at the present age of creating a more co-ordirtated socialist movement It of the fragments. It has been the experience of the omen’s movement which has made us sensitive to these eas of growth. Finally, the women’s movement, at its :st, has taught us how to unite as a movement on the aJor practical issues of the day while debating and respect- 5 each others political differences and frequently agreeing
differ and go our own ways without jeopardizing the 19le movement. If the left could achieve that, at least at a local level, we’d be a long way towards showing people that there could be more than a choice between the ‘bad and the very bad’; there could be real alternatives which they will have a hand in shaping.
________________________________
Thanks to all those friends and comrades with whom I have argued about and discussed these issues, especially those in the Tyneside Socialist Centre.
Beyond The Fragments: Feminism and the Making of Socialism (The Women’s Movement and Organizing for Socialism, Notes / References) by Sheila Rowbotham
1. E.P. Thompson, ‘Outside the Whale’, The Poverty of Theory, Merlin Press, 1978, pp. 31·2
2. Martin Shaw, ‘The Making of a Party?’, Socialist Register 1978, Merlin Press, p. 11 o.
3. Grace C. Lee, Pierre Chalieu and J.R. Johnson, Facing Reality, Correspondence Detroit, 1958, pp. 130-1.
4. Two books which deal with the history of this period do not disentangle the similarities and differences. David Widgery’s The Left in Britain 1956-1968 (Penguin, 1976) has an implicit movement within it towards the emergence of International Socialism as the hidden denouement of the left after the book ends. Nigel Young’s An Infantile Disorder? The Crisis and Decline of the New Left (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1977) contrasts the American and British New Left.
He assumes that all aspects of Marxist politics before 1956 in Britain belonged to the dark ages, and sees the fact that the British labour movement had survived during the fifties as a disadvantage which prevented the emergence of a genuinely ‘new’ left. He appears to have little sense of political ideas developing through the clash and interconnection of different traditions in which people can learn to respect one another’s cultural political heritage.
5. Jan O’Malley, The Politics of Community Action, Spokesman, 1977, pp. 25, 29-32.
6. See, for example, Conference of International Socialists on Revolutionary Unity Documents, February 1978. Two of these were published: Richard Kuper, ‘Organisation and Participation’, Sociaiist Review, july/August 1978; Julian Harber, ‘Trotskyism and the IS Tradition’, Revolutionary Socialism, no. 2; Richard Gombin’s The Origins of Leftism (Pelican, 1975) is useful to compare the British left groups with France.
7. Shaw, ‘The Making of a Party’, p. 107, op. cit.
8. See Rose Shapiro and Tricia Deardon,’No Leaders, No Dogmas: Getting Personal about Politics’, The Leveller, no. 14, April 1978.
9. See, for example, Fernando Claudin’s account of the Communist International, The Communist Movement: From Comintem to Cominform, Peregrine, 1975.
10. E.P. Thompson interviewed by Terry Ilott, ‘Recovering the Libertarian Tradition’, The Leveller, no. 22, January 1978, p. 20.
11. F or a discussion of Trotskyism as an identifiable political tradition see Geoff Hodgson, Trotsky and Fatalistic Marxism, Spokesman Books, 1975. Jim O’Brien’s summary of the histories of American Leninist groups makes for an interesting comparison with Britain. Jim O’Brien, ‘American Leninism in the 1970s’, New England Free Press, 1979. (This article originally appeared in the November 1977/February 1978 issue of Radical America. .
12. Rosalind Petchesky, ‘Dissolving the Hyphen. A Report on MarxistFeminist Groups 1-5’, in Zillah R. Eisenstein (ed), Capitalist Patn”archy and the Case for Socialist Feminism, New York, Monthly Review Press, 1979, p. 386. (For discussion of these problems see the Feminist Review, Red Rag and Scarlet Women.)
13. Felicity Edholm,Olivia Harris and Kate Young, ‘Conceptualising Women’, Critique of Anthropology (Women’s issue), Vol. 3, nos. 9 and 10,1977, p.126.
14. Bea Campbell, ‘Sweets from a Stranger’,Red Rag, no. 13, p. 28.
15. W.B. Yeats, Memoirs (ed. Denis Donogue), London, Macmillan, 1972, p.192.
16. On women’s consciousness and relationship to radical organizations in the past see, for example: Barbara Taylor, ‘The Woman Power’, in Sue Lipschitz, Tean”ng the Veil; Gail Malmgreen, Neither Bread nor Roses: Utopian Feminists and the English Working Class 180~1850, PO Box 450, Brighton, SUssex BNl 8CR, John L. Noyce (60p + postage); Ingrun LaFleur, ‘Adelheid Popp and Working Class Feminism in Austria’, Frontiers. A Journal of Women’s Studies, VoL 1, no. 1, Fall, 1975, University of ‘Colorado; Jill Liddington and Jill Norris, One Hand Tied Behind Us, London, Virago, 1978; Temma Kaplan, ‘Other Scenarios, Women and Spanish Anarchism’, in Renate Bridenthal and Claudia Koonz (eds.), Becoming Visible: Women in European History, Boston, 1977; Anne Boboff, ‘The Bolsheviks and Working Women, 1905-1920’, Radical America, Vol. 10, no. 3, May-June 1976.
17. Joanna Bomat, ‘Home and Work. A New Context for Trade Union History’, Radical America, Vol. 12, no. 5, September-October 1978, p.54.
18. Dorothy Thompson, ‘Women and Nineteenth Century Radical Politics’, in Ann Oakley and Juliet Mitchell (eds.), The Rights and Wrongs of Women, Penguin, 1974, p. 137.
19. I think now that Women: Resistance and Revolution, in asserting the existing involvement of women in revolutionary movements tends to dismiss the various currents within feminism from the late nineteenth century as well as the involvement of women in non-revolutionary organizations like the Independent Labour Party or the Women’s eo-operative Guild So while it challenges women’s position in socialism, it does not raise the relationship of socialist organizations and the feminist movement. Also, because it was written just as the women’s liberation movement was emerging in Britain (1969-71), it inclines towards seeing the particular understandings of the new contemporary movement as a synthesis with answers that evaded movements in the past. Ten years after, the strengths of past movements are more apparent am! it is possible to have a perspective on the modern movement which enables us to see our weaknesses as well as our gains.
A much clearer example though of the uncritical acceptance of a simple polarity between socialism and feminism appears in an otherwise useful introduction: Barbara Winslow, A Short History of Women’s Liberation Revolutionary Feminism, (USA, Hera Press, no date). Although recently reissued the bulk of this pamphlet dates from the early period of the women’s movement too.
For an example which rushes enthusiastically into the same trap see Anna Paczuska’s ‘The Cult of. Kollontai’, Socialist Review, December 1978/January 1979. This eccentric effort purports to be attacking a ‘cult’ which is the creation of the author’s own imagination, while herself adopting an uncritical stance to Kollontai’s sectarian approach to feminist organizations.
20. Bea Campbell and Sheila Rowbotham, ‘Women Workers and the Class Struggle’, Radical America, Vol. 8, no. 5, September-October 1974, p.63.
21. Richard Kuper, ‘Organisation and Participation’, Socialist Review, July-August 1978, p. 36.
22. Ralph Miliband, ‘The Future of Socialism in England’, The Socialist Register 1977, Merlin Press, p. 50.
23. For a recent example of whooshing see Chris (Super) Harman, ‘For Democratic Centralism’, Socialist Review, July-August 1978, p. 39.
24. Adriano Sofri, Italy 1977-78: Living With an Earthquake, Red Notes pamphlet, no date, p. 95. See also the criticisms made by women in Lotta Continua of the leadership’s response to feminism.
25. ‘Newsreel Five Years On’, Wedge, no. 3, Winter 1978, p. 41.
26. See Reg Groves, The Balham Group: How British Trotskyism Began, Pluto Press, 1974.
27. See, for examples of this, Hal Draper and Anne G. Lipow (eds.), ‘Marxist Women versus Bourgeois Feminism’, The Socialist Register 1976, Merlin Press,179-226. Draper and Lipow seem to be unaware that the political contribution of the women’s movement and the work of feminist historians can enable us to unravel various strands of feminism ‘and quite different relationships between women and radical movements which do not involve setting the leading women in German social democracy upon a pinnacle of correct socialist consciousness. The documents they translate are nonetheless useful for tracing how Marxist positions on ‘The Woman Question’ emerged.
28. Paul Thompson and Guy Lewis, The Revolution Unfinished: A Critique of Trotskyism, Big Flame pamphlet, 1978, p. 23.
29. See Temma Kaplan, Anarchists of Andalusia 1868-1903, Princeton, 1977, pp. 86-7, 135-67. On the contemporary relevance of anarchism for feminist organizing see Lynn Alderson, ‘Anarchism and the Women’s Liberation Movement’, CatcaU, Issue 6,july 1977.
30. See E.P. Thompson, Wl1liam Moms: Romantic to Revolutionary, Merlin Press, 1977, and Emma Goldman, Living My Life, Dover, 1970.
31. See Elizabeth GUrley Flynn, The Rebel Girl: An Autobiography, New York, International PUblishers, 1973,
32. Alix Holt (ed.), Selected Writings of Alexandra Kollontai, Allison and Busby, 1977, p. 208.
33. Ibid., p. 215.
34. See Linda Gordon, Woman’s Body, Womans Right, Penguin, 1977, chapter 9, on birth control and American socialism and syndicalism, and Sheila Rowbotham, A New World for Women: Stella Browne, SOCialIst Feminist, Pluto Press, 1977.
Veronica Beechey in ‘On Patriarchy’, Feminist Review, no. 3, points out this dualism in some contemporary uses of the word.
35. See, for example, Emma Goldman, ‘Woman Suffrage’, in The Traffic in Women and Other Essays on Feminism, \Yith a biography by AIix Kates Shulman, US, Times Change Press, 1970, pp. 51-63; Lily Gair Wilkinson, Revolutionary Socialism and the Women’s Movement, SLP, c.1910; and Women’s Freedom, Freedom Press, c.1914; Bruce Dancis, ‘Socialism and Women in the United States 1900-1917’, Socialist Revolution, no. 27, Vol. 6 no. 1, january-March 1976; Alexandra Kollontai, ‘The Social Basis of the Woman Question’, in AIix Holt (ed.), op. cit.
36. See Sam Aaronovitch, ‘Eurocommunism: A Discussion of Carillo’s Eurocommunism and the State’,Marxism Today, july 1978.
37. See Carl Boggs, ‘Marxism, Prefigurative Communism and the Problem of Workers’ Control’, Radical America, Vol 11, no. 6 and Vol. 12, no. 1, November 1977/February 1978.
38. On the need for the organizations on the left to learn from the women’s movement see: Margaret Coulson, ‘Socialism, Politics and Personal Life’, in ibid.; Frankie Rickford, ‘The Development of the Women’s Movement’, Marxism Today, July 1978; Celia Deacon, ‘Feminism and the IS tradition’, Conference of International Socialists on Revolutionary Unity Documents, February 1978.
The East London Socialist Feminist Group Conference Paper 1978 discussed the need for us to also look at general problems of socialism, not only women’s issues.
39. Bob Cant in Documents, op. cit.
40. Fernando Claudin, Eurocommunism and Socialism, New Left Books, 1978, p. 125.
Margaret Coulson makes the same point in criticizing John Ross’s article on ‘Capitalism, Politics and Personal Life’. He confines women’s liberation to a social sphere, trade unions to the economic and politics to the revolutionary party. She says, ‘his formula blocks us off from understanding the processes involved in the development of politics’. (Margaret Coulson, ‘Socialism, Politics and Personal Life’, Socialist Woman, October 1978.
41. Red Collective, ‘Not So Much a Charter, More a Way of Organising’, mimeograph, 1974. (The Red Collective were a small group of men and women concerned to relate socialism and sexual politics.) This statement is quoted in Barbara Taylor, ‘Classified: Who Are We? Class and the Women’s Movement’, Red Rag, no. 11, p. 24.
42. See. for example, Case Con, Women’s Issue, Spring 1974, and London Educational Collective in Women and Education, no. 2, 1973-4, on Rank and File’s resistance’ to takin gup women’s subordination in education.
43. V.L Lenin, What is to be Done? quoted in Carmen Claudin-Urondo, Lenin and the Cultural Revolution, The Harvester Press, 1977, p. 69.
44. Ibid., p. 71.
See also Lindsay German, ‘Women and Class’, in Socialist Review, no. 5, September 1978, and the reply by some Hackney Socialist Feminists, ‘Feminism Without Illusions’, in Socialist Review, no. 7, November 1978.
45. V.I. Lenin, What is to be Done? quoted in Carmen Claudin-Urondo,
Lenin and the Cultural Revolution, The Harvester Press, 1977, p. 70.
46. Ibid., p. 7 O.
47. Ibid., p. 72.
48. Claudin, The Communist Movement, p. 630, op. cit.
49. E.P. Thompson, ‘The Poverty of Theory’, p. 352, op. cit.
50. Ibid., p.364.
51. Ibid., p. 363.
52. Dorothy Thompson, ‘Women and Nineteenth Century Radical Politics’, op. cit., p. 122.
53. Unofficial Refonn Committee, The Miners’ Next Step, 1912, Pluto, 1973, p. 27.
54. All the left organizations have sought to encapsulate the implications of the women’s movement within the terms of equal rights 01′ concrete demands and campaigns, ‘issue politics’. They were distrustful of the emphasis upon challenging and transforming relationships and upon the COnsequences of this approach to politics. They preferred the language of ‘rights’ and ‘discrimination’ to that of ‘liberation’. Liberation has tended to be suspect and has been sorted away under ‘culture’ which has dubious middle-class connections and might even be a mere creation of an over-heated feminene imagination! I think these anxieties have affected not only the leaderships of left groups but socialist women within and without them. Personally it has been the continuing practice of the movement which has helped to shift some of the nervousness for me.
Amanda Sebestyen makes a similar point in Cat Call, Issue 3, July 1976.
55. Paul Atkinson, ‘The Problem With Patriarchy’, Achilles Heel, no. 2, 1979, p. 22.
56. Zillah R. Eisenstein, ‘Developing a Theory of Capitalist Patriarchy’, in ed. Eisenstein, Capitalist Patriarchy and the Case for Socialist Feminism, New York, Monthly Review, 1979, p. 7-8.
57. See Vic Seidler, ‘Men and Feminism’, Achilles Heel, no. 2, 1979 (this is part of a longer MS on self denial, sexual politics and the left to be published soon).
58. Sarah Benton, ‘Consciousness, Classes and Feminism’, Red Rag, no. 12, p.27.
59. Linda Gordon and Allen Hunter, ‘Sex, Family and the New Left:
Anti-Feminism as a Political Force’, Radical America, Vol. 11, no. 6; Vol. 12, no. 1, November 1977/February 1978. (This article is also available in pamphlet form published by the New England Free Press, 60 Union Square, Somerville, Mass. 02143.)
60. Introduction, Rape Crisis Centre First Report, p.I.
61:. Not so much a Nursery … , Market Nursery, Hackney, London, 1977, p.22.
62. On NAC see Ruth Petrie and Anna Livingstone, ‘Out of the Back Streets’, Red Rag, 00. 11; Roberta Henderson, ‘Feminism is not for Burning’, ‘Speculations’, in Cat Call, Issue 2, April 1976; NAC and its Lessons for the Socialist Feminist Movement, document, Socialist Feminist Conference.
63. Unofficial Reform Committee, The Miners’ Next Step, p. 12.
After this was finished I read two articles which are arguing along similar lines from rather different starting points. If you are interested in following some of the ideas through either in terms of strategy of the women’s movement and socialism or in terms of working-class community organising, see: Nancy Hartstock, ‘Feminist Theory and the Development of Revolutionary Strategy’, in ed. Capitalist Patriarchy and the Case for Socialist Feminism, op. cit., and Kathy McAfee, ‘City Life: Lessons of the First Five Years’, Radical America, Vol. 13, no. 1, January-February 1979.
Beyond The Fragments: Feminism and the Making of Socialism (The Women’s Movement and Organizing for Socialism, Part Two: V) by Sheila Rowbotham
Prefigurative Political Forms
It has become evident that the power of capitalism to survive cannot be challenged only by demanding gains of quantity, or even simply questioning the quality of life. We need political forms which consciously help people to overcome the continual mining of our capacity to resist which is characteristic of modern capitalism. Socialists have been learning this in the last two decades but it goes completely against the grain of a Leninist approach to socialist organization. How can we struggle for prefigurative changes through an organization which reproduces the· relationships of power dominant in capitalism?
The right, being part of how things are, often grasps the significance of the connection between areas of control more thoroughly than the left. In education, for example, left groups have supported comprehensive schools and opposed streaming and authoritarian teaching methods, but also have been quite capable of using exactly these authoritarian approaches to their own ideas of political education and propaganda. Similarly, sections of the left have developed a theory which is critical of bureaucracy within the trade union movement while remaining blithely unselfconscious about the effects of bureaucratic power in revolutionary organizations. Force of circumstance in modern capitalism has been bringing socialists into confrontation in areas of control which throw into question the internal relationships within left organizations. This process is making it harder to caricature the struggle to make new kinds of relationships which can be the, means of growth and transformation in the making of socialism, as a mechanical and arbitrary utopianism. We do not seek isolated and impossible alternatives to the way of the world. We need to strengthen and give space and substance to the positive understandings which come from all our ,experiences of resisting capitalism.
The slogan ‘the personal is political’ has been important in the women’s movement. Its appearance indicates how shifts in the relationships of gender have affected the terms in which notions of individual identity can be seen in modern capitalism. These are shifts which socialists need to explore more fully. Specifically in relation to the question of organization though, the slogan implies a very different view of practice and consciousness than is current on the left. This involves both the forms of activity which are regarded as important and our approach to relationships within the movement for change.
Two obvious examples of forms of activity which have been important in the women’s movement are consciousness-raising groups and self-help groups of various kinds like women’s health, Women’s Aid, Rape Crisis centres.
The consciousness-raising group assumes that our consciousness is changed in the realization that we share a common predicament, this has been the aspect of consciousness-raising which the left groups are now prepared to accept and in the case of the IMG extend to men. But the other aspect of consciousness-raising is that we experience a different kind of relationship with other women than we knew before. The ideal is an openness and trust, a recognition of other women’s experience as well as our own. In practice we know consciousness-raising groups can become frustrating, as for example it is difficult sometimes to make general connections from personal experience. People feel other women know more than them, and are holding back. Mysterious silences appear in the meeting. It is sometimes hard to assert individual personal experience against a collective consensus which may appear because of hidden power structures. There are unstated ideological assumptions or an emotionally terrorizing morality. So consciousness-raising groups, like other political forms, are not magic. But they are still part of a crucial process of learning and feeling towards alternative relationships from those which predominate in capitalism. I know I really do feel a closeness and love towards women I have known within women’s group situations which is quite different from the experience of socialist branch meetings. This collective experience has been a vital force in the women’s movement’s strength. I see no reason why it should be gender bound.
Self-help groups emerged in the community politics of the New Left in America and have become an important form of organizing in the women’s movement.
Linda Gordon and Allen Hunter comment on the American experience:
The model of collective self-help, while not in itself a socialist strategy, strengthens the connection between personal and social change. In the best of cases, self-help groups combine consciousness-raising with material aid and an opening to a new community of people; thus providing not only the ideas but some or the connditions for adopting a less passive stance towards the world. The self-help model is a way of dealing with the fact that politics often becomes a part of one’s life only when a political problem is directly experienced.(59)
Everyone knows there are enormous problems involved in doing this. Nonetheless the political experience gained from these very diverse activities is a crucial part of learning to resist in the process of changing ourselves. The Rape Crisis Centre in Britain for example is concerned with providing practical help to raped women. It is also a collective effort to overcome the fears within women and a sense of ourselves ls victims. They point out that a raped woman has been victimized but ‘this is not her total identity, she does not remain the “passive subject of attack” as implied by the word “victim” ‘. One of the aims of the Centre is ‘to help ourselves, as women, to become aware that we do not have to accept the identity given to us by the society’.(60)
One of the objections which the CP and the Trotskyist groups made to self-help projects as they first emerged in the women’s movement in Britain, with close political links to libertarian Marxism, was that they evaded the necessity of making demands on the state. They eased the pressure on the social provision we had to force ou t of capitalism. They were middle-class projects, not popular demands. Supporters of self-help projects replied that making demands on the state did not leave you with control ‘over the kind of social provision you needed. This issue of control has been very important in women’s health groups against the bureaucratic formality of the National Health and against a male-defined concept of medicine. It has also come up in the question of nursery provision. How could we simply demand nurseries when we were insisting on the need to transform gender relationships from the beginning?
In certain areas of women’s health and in the growth of community nurseries this has been a really fruitful collision in which two quite different assumptions of organizing have learned from one another. For example the Tower Hamlets abortion centre which is part of the National Health System is sensitive to the needs and feelings of women and firmly committed to women’s right to control their own fertility. Here the health workers themselves have been influenced by the women’s movement. Community nurseries allow for more democratic participation from parents, are committed to non-authoritarian nonsexist childcare and are partly financed by the council. A Hackney mother describes the effect on her of the local community nursery:
I found attitudes at the nursery were very different from those of the school. Everyone was encouraged to take an interest in how it was run-for the sake of the children. At that time I didn’t understand that our nursery was different from any other nursery, such as those run and controlled by the council. Now of course I realized the nursery was different and it was up to us-the parents-to take all decisions about how the place was to be run.. Problems were met and overcome not by them, but by us. Gradually I was drawn into helping. I liked the idea because I am a very independent person.(61)
I am not suggesting that the idea of mutual self-help is new or limited to the women’s movement in the last decade. Indeed it has an ancient genealogy from the creation of friendly societies and co-operatives to the cycling clubs, Workers’ Esperanto groups, nurseries and Socialist Sunday Schools of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Mutual self-help was an integral part of the creation of a new culture of fellowship in the movement towards a Socialist Commonwealth. Moreover there has been a recent growth of an enormous variety of forms of self-help which relate to personal and social problems, like playgroups, One o’Clock clubs, Gingerbread, Parents Anonymous, Alcoholics Anonymous, Stigma along with voluntary organizations from the Samaritans, Citizens Advice to radical therapy and co-counselling. There has been a similar development of community projects, the lav. centres for example. These movements assert the possibility of people changing themselves, and helping one another through co-operating. They are concerned about our social lives. Some carry an alternative to the monopoly of the state over welfare and question the partiality of the law Some of the forms of organizing in the women’s movement relate to these self-help groups and can best be seen within this more general context. I am not suggesting that we car evolve to socialism through self-help or that all forms of self-help are necessarily radical or that self-help cannot coexist with a new form of labour reformism. It is evident that the coercive power of the state must be contested that several class interests can use similar forms of organizing and that some strands of the right can assert self-activity as well as the left. With the active support working-class people in a community, mutual self-he I) forms provide a potential means of distinguishing between the coercive aspects of the state machinery and those activities of the state which are necessary to people in their everyday life. They raise the possibility of welfare control Self-help community activity is not a substitute for the equally important radical struggles within the welfare stilt sector. But they can indicate ways of questioning the rill of professionals and the means of creating more direct forms of control over welfare resources.
There is of course a very old argument between anarchists and socialists about how we regard the state and whether we should make demands on the state. In one sense it is obvious that we cannot ignore the power of the law or the need for welfare provision. On the other it is true that laws which workers or others have fought for can be interpreted against them, that welfare reforms which were the result of past victories can circumscribe resistance. In one sense there is no absolute solution within capitalism.
But it is possible to approach the problem without simply falling into the acceptance of either polarity. If the anarchists close their eyes and wish the state would float away, Trotskyists present the state as a big balloon. If we all blow hard enough it goes pop. When it does not go pop the answer is we must blow harder. The trouble is we tend to burst before the state, which is nowadays a most wiggly and wily, stretchy monster. More dialectical dealings are suggested in the recognition that past gains need not simply contain present militancy and that they have contributed to important shifts in power within society. These shifts allow people to develop the confidence and the space in which mutual self-help groups, therapy and community politics have grown. The women’s movement itself has :merged partly out of certain fissures in the relationships of power.
Within the women’s movement self-help forms can be seen to be directed towards several aspects of resistance. Some are specifically against men’s hold over women as a ex and the consciousness which this relationship of l1equality and possession generates. Women’s Aid Centres and rape crisis centres are two examples. They provide a leans of protection against women’s encounters with male violence and a means of sustaining our resistance. Though they are in practIce also linked to work and housing conditions, to the law as well as to our ideas of sexuality and of masculinity and femininity and are thus issues which must affect men as well as women. Other forms of self-help organizing are not aimed against the hold of men as a sex but primarily against the power of the state to determine and distort work and kinship relations, for example claimants’ unions and community nurseries. Indeed men are involved in these as well as women. The struggle against men’s hold over women and against the state are not identical. Different forms of power relationships are involved. The state in capitalism still basically expresses the po\ver of an elite of ruling-class men. From this power their women derive a certain though not equal privilege. Nowadays the ruling class in the modern state in order to retain this power have had to make concessions to pressure from workers and other subordinated groupS including women. Feminism has been a force along with the labour movement in the making of the welfare state. But of course there remain great inequalities in people’s power to define and secure welfare, as well as differences of interest within the working class between men and women, black and white, skilled and unskilled, because of their differing social circumstances. However men as a group do not have equal degrees of power over state policy. The struggle for welfare rights and legal changes cannot be seen as primarily against men. Indeed as in the work situation there are shared interests in combining resistance.
It has been the strength of feminism that in beginning with the particular circumstances of everyday life it is possible to move towards the interlocking relationships of power which contain not only women but men as well. This is certainly limited by the particular class composition of the women who have been most radicalized by changes within relations in capitalist society and by the absence of a mass socialist movement in Britain which can complement the organizational initiatives and activity of an autonomous movement. Nonetheless this has been a significant and valuable. breakthrough which urgently requires a more general means of development.
Feminism has also been the main organizational form through which the idea of prefigurative politics has begun to influence the contemporary left. Consciousness raising, therapy and self-help will imply that we want change now. They are involved in making something which might become a means of making something more. They do not assume that we will one day in the future suddenly come to control how we produce, distribute and divide goods and services and that this will rapidly and simply make us new human beings. They see the struggle for survival and control as part of the here and now. They can thus contribute towards the process of continually making ourselves anew in the movement towards making socialism.
The women’s movement has played a vital part in challenging the politics of deferment. From the start feminists have said some changes have to start now else there is no beginning for us. This was not initially expressed as a theoretical position but as a practical need. For example, women in the student movement in the late sixties pointed out that the structure of meetings made it impossible for nearly all the women and many men to participate. Women with children said, ‘We want creches at meetings otherwise it is impossible to come.’ Women’s liberation also involved obviously changing relationships at· home. Feminist consciousness was not seen as isolated from how we make love or from our intimate selves. It was not merely an item to be included in a programme.
It was harder to go on from the practical need to its full implications. This has been a problem in the women’s movement, and has perhaps contributed to the recent interest in theories of consciousness which emphasize the strength of the hold of circumstance against the earlier stress on voluntarism. ‘I will change and no one shall stop me’ has shifted to ‘Why do I change so slowly?’
There is not a simple one to one connection between various forms or power. Our consciousness of ourselves in fucking cannot be neatly transferred to our activity in a union. branch, any more than change in the mode of production automatically changes men’s attitudes to women. We have to struggle in several dimensions, which involves a fundamentally different attitude to ourselves in relation to other people and thus to our politics. This is a long-term project!
But to say that change is more complicated does not mean that we have to accept a fatalism that denies personal change is possible. The personal is political even though people are more personal than any form of politics can express.
On the left the slogan ‘the personal is political’ has become rather an embarrassment as if everyone had heard it all before. But hearing and doing are different matters. The questions remain. How do the form of meetings reflect much deeper relationships of power for instance? How can we confront these not by merely altering the forms but changing the relationships? For example the creche might appear nowadays but remain a child-parking place. It is not necessarily seen as a living part of the political practice of socialism or, sadly, always of feminism. Nonetheless all these creches have had and will have an influence on how our children experience the socialist and feminist movement. This is as important at least as what happens in most meetings. But it is rarely acknowledged as part of the main business of socialism or even feminism. Theoretically the connection between changes in power relationships in the family and within left groups has remained sotto voce. In the left there are still plenty of Dads who rule OK, and remain relatively unruffled. I mean not the fathers of children but the founding fathers of left groups. Feminism is rather more vigilant but we all carry a Dad and Mum boss in us. In other words, the implication of challenging sex-gender relationships has only partially become a critique of power relations within radical organizations and movements.
It is important that we remember radical politics are also personal affairs. Feminists have argued that the personal is political and that this has implications’ for how you organize. It is possible however for socialists to interpret this narrowly. Under pressure ‘personal’ subjects like rape or abortion can be taken up but in the terms of an existing public politics. The forms of organizing around these issues are simply transplanted from the parliamentary pressure groups, the factory meeting or the committee room. Not that these experiences are invalidated. There are certainly strengths and resources which left groups can bring to feminist campaigns. But- the exchange has to be between equals and the learning process’ two-way. The strangled antagonism which appeared in the National Abortion Campaign came out of this feeling in the women’s movement. It was nonetheless difficult to assert the unspoken understandings about organization and the lived encounter we knew with a different kind of politics when the public world of politics loomed so large and men and women in left groups saw the argument in terms of efficiency (themselves) versus inefficiency (the women’s movement). Feminists responded by being suspicious of NAC because it included men.(62) There has been an obvious difference between the relationship of men and women in left groups to the women’s movement, and this has influenced how they work politically. There is an immediate link between left group women (Leninists included) and feminists because they are all affected by their social predicament. Socialist women have been changed by feminism. Nonetheless, I think it cannot be seen simply as a male/female split, but is in fact a political argument about organizing. Some men feel as alienated as many feminists from vanguard assumptions of organization. There are also many socialist women who believe in the Leninist approach to organizing.
There is a missing element here. It goes beyond simply applying established forms of organizing to the areas of personal oppression which feminism has revealed. We need also to question the approach to what the left defines already as public politics. I think it is hard to see this from the vantage point of either the ‘women’s movement or the male-dominated left. It emerges from the politics of men who have been both driven and encouraged by feminism to explore and expose the areas in which men of different classes and races are reared for various forms of domination and submission. This means disentangling the distortions in how men reach manhood which contributes, for instance, to the appeal of fascism, or’ to soldiers’ obedience to their officers even when it means killing someone of their own class, or makes it possible for a trade unionist to be economically militant yet look down on labourers, blacks, apprentices and women. To bring it closer to home, it also involves looking at how people relate personally to left groups. The connection of personal and public politic: involves not only making personal questions political, it means approaching ‘public’ politics personally as well.
A negative short-term consequence of the resistance of socialists to sexual politics has been to alienate many men from all existing forms of left politics. This has tended to leave men’s groups stranded within purely personal forms of politics. Socialist men have been caught between two stark options in ways that socialist feminists have been able to avoid through the women’s movement. The only compromise possible has been individual participation on the left combined with a separate existence in men’s groups. But this reinforces the existing male split between public and personal. An example of the different political predicaments of men and women affected by feminism has been the experience of radical therapy. It has been easier for women involved in Red Therapy to go outwards through the connection with the women’s movement. There has been a much greater gap and in some cases strong hostility towards both men’s and mixed consciousness-raising and therapy groups in the socialist movement. This enforced isolation breeds its own kinds of paralysis and defensiveness.
Nonetheless the positive potential of the sexual politics which has radicalized men as well as women lies in developing an understanding of how our personal experience of gender is bound up with the politics of class and racial struggles and indeed in our very assumptions of what it means to be a socialist. The inspiration for this understanding was feminism .. But such an integration cannot obviously be the work of the women’s movement alone.
CONCLUSION
It has required a big argument on the Leninist left to take up even one aspect of ‘personal’ power relationshipsthe question of inequality between men and women within socialist organizations themselves. The feminist movement has challenged this reproduction of inequality within the left. After nearly a decade sexism (like racism) is now admitted to exist even within left parties themselves by most organizations on the left. This used to be denied or it was said that it was utopian to expect anything else until after !iOcialism. The ground has shifted because men and women affected by sexual politics have been saying both inside and outside socialist groups that we can’t wait. We have to find effective ways of struggling against these inequalities for they are not only wrong in themselves, they paralyse many socialists and restrict our communication with many people who can see little difference between socialist and right·wing organizations. They also block understandings vital for the making of socialism.
However the implications of this recognition are still not followed through. The assumption within left groups has continued to be that the remedy for inequalities was the exhortation to improvement. It is presumed that within the organization itself change can be a result of an effort of pure reason. It is true that we can change our minds when confronted with ‘facts’ and argument. But they are inadequate on their own to touch th~ full extent of the problem. This emphasis on reason and will is the reverse side of the coin to the fatalism which denies the possibility of prefigurative change before socialism. Leninists are saying at once no change is possible and yet all changes necessary can be made by political education in the Party.
Feminists have been urging the need for a form of politics which enables people to experience different relationships. The implications of this go beyond sex.gender relationships, to all relationships of inequality, including those between socialists. Leninist organizations have made piecemeal concessions to the women’s movement and the gay movement under pressure. They have been affected also by the contradictory pulls in modern capitalism which have led to questioning certain areas of control in everyday life. But they have resisted the implications of these social changes and movements as a more general challenge to their notion of politics. The notion of organization in which a transforming vision of what is possible develops out of the process of organizing questions some of the most deeply held tenets of Leninism. The weight of Leninist theory (Gramsci apart) and the prevailing historical practice of Leninism is towards seeing the ‘Party’ as the means by which the working class can -take power and these ‘means’ have a utilitarian narrowness. Other considerations consequently have to be deferred until the goal of socialism is reached. But socialist feminists and men influenced by the women’s movement and gay liberation have been saying that these are precisely the considerations which are inseparable from the making of socialism. These involve considerable disagreement about the meaning of socialist politics and what it means to be a socialist.
So I don’t believe it is a matter of adding bits to a pre-existing model of an ‘efficient’ ‘combative’organization through which the working class (duly notified and rounded up at last) will take power. You need changes now in how people can experience relationships in which we can both express our power and struggle against domination in all its forms. A socialist movement must help us find a way to meet person to person-an inward as well as an external equality. It must be a place where we can really learn from one another without reference or resentment and ‘Theory’ is not put in authority.
This will not just happen. It goes too deeply against the way of the world. We really cannot rely on Commonsense here. We need to make the creation of prefigurative forms an explicit part of our movement against capitalism. I do not mean that we try to hold an imaginary future in the present, straining against the boundaries of the possible until we collapse in exhaustion and despair. This would be utQpian. Instead such forms would seek both to consolidate existing practice and release the imagination of what could be. The effort to go beyond what we know now has to be part of our experience of what we might know, rather than a denial of the validity of our own experience in face of a transcendent party. This means a conscious legitimation within the theory and practice of socialism of all those aspects of our experience which are so easily denied because they go against the grain of how we learn to feel and think in capitalism. All those feelings of love and creativity, imagination and wisdom which are negated, jostled and bruised within the relationships which dominate in capitalism are nonetheless there, our gifts to the new life. Marxism has been negligent of their power, Leninism and Trotskyism frequently contemptuous or dismissive. Structuralist Marxism hides them from view in the heavy academic gown of objectivity. For a language of politics which can express them we need to look elsewhere, for instance, to the utopian socialists in the early nineteenth century, or to the Socialist League in the 1880s, or Spanish anarcho-syndicalism. We cannot simply reassert these as alternatives against the Leninist tradition. There are no ‘answers’ lying latent in history. But there is more tl encourage you than meets the Leninist eye. We have to she, completely the lurking assumption that Leninism provide the highest political form of organizing and that all othe approaches can be dismissed as primitive antecedents or a incorrect theories.
It has been difficult in the last decade for us to brinl together our political experience. The versions of Leninisrr current on the left make it difficult to legitimate any alter native approaches to socialist politics which have been stumbling into existence. These Leninisms are difficult to counter because at their most superficial they have a surface coherence, they argue about brass tacks and hard facts. They claim history and sport their own insignia and regalia of position. They fight dirty-with a quick sneer and the certainty of correct ideas. At their most thoughtful intensity they provide a passionate and complex cultural tradition of revolutionary theory and practice on which we must certainly draw. Socialist ideas can be pre-Leninist or anti-Leninist. But there is no clear post-Leninist revolutionary tradition yet. Leninism is alive still whatever dogmatic accoutrements it has acquired. The argument is about the extent of its usefulness for making socialism now.
I know that many socialists who have lived through the complicated and often painful encounters between sexual politics and the left in the last few years believe we must alter Leninism to fit the experience gained in sexual political movements. I have been edged and nuzzled and finally butted towards believing that what we have learned can’t be forced into the moulds of Leninism without restricting and cutting its implications short. Moreover the structures of thought and feeling inherent in Leninism continually brake our consciousness of alternatives. If Stalinism made it impossible to challenge aspects of Leninism, the growth of Trotskyist and neo-Trotskyist groups since 1968 has postponed this by appearing to provide the solution. 1 don’t see the way through this as devising an ideal model of a non-authoritarian organization but as a collective awakening to a constant awareness about how we see ourselves as socialists, a willingness to trust as well as criticize what we have done, a recognition of creativity in diversity and a persistent quest for open types of relationships to one another and to ideas as part of the process of making socialism. In the long term I think we need new forms of socialist organizing which can grow from such a practice and bring together these efforts towards a different politics. The spirit in which we could make such an organization (or organizations) cannot be the distinguishing correctness which Leninism has fostered; I find the spirit of The Miners’ Next Step more appropriate. The authors said the pamphlet was ‘the best product of our time and thought, which we freely offer as an expression of our oneness of heart and interest as a section of the working class. Do what you will with it, modify or (we hope) improve, but at least give it your earnest consideration.'(63)
After this was finished I read two articles which are arguing along similar lines from rather different starting points. If you are interested in following some of the ideas through either in terms of strategy of the women’s movement and socialism or in terms of working-class community organising, see: Nancy Hartstock, ‘Feminist Theory and the Development of Revolutionary Strategy’, in ed. Capitalist Patriarchy and the Case for Socialist Feminism, op. cit., and Kathy McAfee, ‘City Life: Lessons of the First Five Years’, Radical America, Vol. 13, no. 1, January-February 1979.
Beyond The Fragments: Feminism and the Making of Socialism (The Women’s Movement and Organizing for Socialism, Part Two: IV) by Sheila Rowbotham
A. Where Does Consciousness Come From?
Lenin argues in What is to be Done? in 1902 that the working class, bogged down in their day-to-day economic struggle and without culture (in the sense of education and knowledge) could not understand and act upon the interconnection between their exploitation at work and the political form which secures this, the state. So he maintained that,
Class political consciousness can be brought to the workers only from without, that is, only from outside the economic struggle, from outside the sphere of relations between workers and employers.(43)
The Party, as vanguard, is presented as the means of combining the revolutionary potential of the working class and the scientific knowledge necessary to plan revolution which is to be brought into the Party by the intellectuals.
Carmen Claudin-Urondo sums this up in her book Lenin and the Cultural Revolution.
This vanguard, the Party, thus realises, in the persons of its professional revolutionaries’, its ‘full-timers’ in the service of the revolution, the symbiosis of social being of the proletariat and ill consciousness, and embodies the reconciled identity of the historical class and the class as a concrete reality.(44)
Lenin was arguing against a reliance on the working class becoming spontaneously revolutionary in the context of a period of Tsarist repression and he was to shift the emphasis between party and class later. Indeed the Bolsheviks had great difficulty in even keeping up with the working class in the making of the revolution. But he did not fundamentally reformulate the theory of consciousness present in What is to be Done? This theory is an essential part of the case for a Leninist Party. The polarization is presented as being between the conscious knowledge of the Party and the ‘instinctive urge’ or the ‘elementary instinct’ of the workers in movement. This may change the immediate course of action chosen by the Party but it still cannot (within the terms of Leninism) fundamentally transform the nature of the revolutionary organization itself.
The issue of the ascendency of the Party and conflict between the Party and autonomous movements of workers and of women had arisen within the Second International. The conflict itself was not created by Lenin. However, Lenin’s emphatic assertion of central direction over self-activity and self-direction gave the concept of the monolithic Party a much greater authority because the Bolsheviks had led a successful revolution. Fernando Claudin in The Communist Movement traces how this emphasis was put into effect internationally and how it was to harden under Stalin.
The claim that the Party ‘knows best’ persists even when t is said that the Party (or parties) must learn from autonomous movements. There is still the belief that it is the Party, itself, which will decide what it wants to learn. The Party is presented as soaring above all sectional concerns without providing any guarantees that this soaring will not be in fact an expression of the particular preoccupations of the group or groups with power within it. It is claimed that the Party is separate from the relations within capitalist society merely by being the revolutionary Party. Yet it is also claimed that any attempt to change relations within the Party is utopian. So how do they become separate and distinct? Or what makes Leninists different from other people? Within Leninist terms it is a closed debate. Leninists are different because they are members of the revolutionary Party. The Party is ascendent because it holds the correct scientific understanding. (Other Leninist parties are not ascendent because they are only pretending to have the correct ideas. They will be found out in time.) Now correct ideas can certainly be tested in practice to make sure that they are correct and may need a few hasty adjustments en route to the conquest of state power. But they are basically there (but only in the Revolutionary Party).
So where did they come from in the first place? Lenin and the Bolsheviks? They must have got them from their own lives and times. So personal and historical factors creep into scientific understanding. What else creeps in? Kautsky, the German social democrat hovers in this dawn revolutionary science.
For, like Kautsky, Lenin saw socialist consciousness as essentially the knowledge of certain theoretical truths with which the Party educates and trains its members. Although the test of this knowledge/consciousness is the experience , of agitation and class struggle it cannot be derived from experience. The notion of agitation is also narrow in scope. It does not touch inner subjective forms of consciousness.
When it comes to the personal hold of ideas, Lenin and Trotsky recognized there was a problem but presumed emotional responses will change after socialism.
There was disagreement among the Bolsheviks about the need to make explicit the creation of new forms of organizing to meet the problem but these took place after the revolution. They were not seen as part of the transition to socialism.
For Lenin the lessons of consciousness through struggle remain generally subordinate to the leadership of the Party. Here he broke with Marx’s view of consciousness and adopted the position of the German social-democrat Kautsky who argued that socialism and class struggle arose side by side. He went on from this historical observation upon the circumstances of the late nineteenth century to announce this as a ‘law’ of Marxist organization, which Lenin accepts. According to Kautsky: ‘Modern socialist consciousness can arise only on the basis of profound scientific knowledge.’ He goes on to say it was the bourgeois intelligentsia who possessed this knowledge/ consciousness, not the working class.
Thus socialist consciousness is something introduced into the proletarian class struggle from without and not something that arose within spontaneously. . . The task of Social-Demeocracy is to imbue the proletariat [literally saturate the proletariat] with the consciousness of its position and the consciousness of its task(46)
But where then does this consciousness of the bourgeois intelligentsia who join the Party come from? It is in fact a circular argument. Their consciousness comes from knowledge. So the consciousness of the intellectuals comes not from their lives and relationships like other people but from the pure development of Thought. By possessing these intellectuals (suitably tamed to make sure the development of Thoaght does not go against the interests of the working class, as defined by the Party), the Party possesses Thought. The working class cannot become the revolutionary class without this superior knowledge which the Party possesses. Crudely then the Party has to nab the intellectuals, discipline them and guard the working class from any contenders who might mislead them with incorrect thoughts (variously defined at different times as bourgeois feminism, syndicalism, anarchism, Trotskyism, centrism, etc.).
Carmen Claudin Urondo points out in Lenin and the Cultural Revolution that this ‘makes class consciousness dependent necessarily on socialist theory and the latter a pure product of culture’.(47)
Culture is defined here in its narrow sense of high culture. This means that organizational forms workers create only have a revolutionary validity when they are under the authority of the Party. Anarcho-syndicalist arguments contested this. But they do not raise the question of. the relationship of the Party to other autonomous movements which arise, for example, among black people, women, and gay people. The emergence of these movements has called into question the whole relationship of the Party and autonomous movements ancl with this the view of how consciousness is formed.ti Equally the experience of Stalinism has made thinkers an4! historians within the new left tradition re-examine the differences between Marx’s view of consciousness and Lenin’s theory. It was no longer possible to simply equate the consciousness of workers with the revolutionaryl political organization.’
Fernando Claudin, for example in The Communist Movement points out that Lenin was forced to quote Kautsky because he was breaking so decisively from Marx.(48) Marx had not argued that conscioµsness and knowledge could be equated in this way as if socialist thought was the sole source of wisdom. He believed that, we make our consciousness in the process of making” ourselves and changing the world, within the limits of the particular historical circumstances in which we find ourselves. A dogmatic adherence to Leninism has effectively blinkered many socialists not only to Marx’s views but to unfolding contemporary understandings.
E.P. Thompson shows in ‘The Poverty of Theory’ that Marx’s view of consciousness has since been developed in relation to particular historical contexts and within non-capitalist societies. Thus historians and anthropologists working in the Marxist tradition,
· . . have insisted that ideas, norms and rules be replaced within the mode of production, without which it could not be carried on for a day; and on the other side by cultural materialists who have insisted that the notion of a ‘superstructure’ was never materialist enough.(48)
This exposes the model of a tidy trade union consciousness arising from the economic struggle as both mechanical and unreal. It simply does not fit our understanding of reality. For in the last decade the process of both women’s and men’s involvement in trade unions had not been simply a response to conditions at work but part of a wider process of radicalization. It also makes nonsense of the view that socialist theoretical consciousness is derived purely from an objective scientific knowledge. The people doing the deriving, however intellectual they might be, are still people expressing in various ways their understanding of the world in which they find themselves. In Leninism thought comes from thought which means there is no room to.o.qualify certainties with the historical experience which might reveal how actual people arrived at Leninist ideas or might lead them to seek alternatives. By disguising the process which went into the creation of ideas they are protected by a timeless inviolability. The clear separation of the Leninist Party from everyday consciousness can be artificially secured and the Leninist concept of the Party can thus hold out the trump card of being the only means by which the particular experiences of exploitation and oppression can become generalized. But the trump card is part of a neat confidence trick. Again we can question this with reference to the process through which many people have become radical in the last few years. In the case of the women’s movement, for example, many women have become involved in socialism through feminism without, indeed often despite, the intervention of parties. Equally many socialist women have come to shed the assumption that they already had the answer by the questions raised why feminism and the experience of being in a movement which is continually pressing against and dissolving removed ideas which pretend they do not have people inside them or behind them.
E.P. Thompson also argues that there is a missing dimension. Marx neglected the particular ways in which not only handle our experience through our consciousness but through our ‘culture’. Culture is being used here in the broad sense in which intellectual culture combines with vocabulary of norms, values, obligations, expectations, taboos, etc.'(50)
There is thus not a simple opposition between the theoretical knowledge which is the monopoly of the Party and an undeveloped instinct for rebellion among workers (or other subordinated groups). There is another significant aspect of people’s consciousness.
They also experience their own experience as feeling and they handle their feelings within their culture, as norms, familial and kinship obligations and reciprocity, as values or (through more’, elaborated forms) within art or religious beliefs. This half of culture (and it is a full one-half) may be described as affective and moral consciousness.(51)
This restores real men and women, the relationships in which they find themselves, and their efforts to change these and their feelings about their situation, themselves and other people. It connects theoretically to movements which have been concerned to change feelings and desires. gay liberation, feminism and the black movement.
The implication of these views of consciousness is to dislodge the superior relationship of the Party to the movements of the working class and to other radical I autonomous movements. They also break down the separation between movements and the monolithic concept of ‘the Party’. It becomes impossible to regard ‘the Party’ or socialist organization as a kind of red zone from which professional revolutionaries sally forth with a superior knowledge untouched by culture themselves to insert, inject, imbue or saturate and drown other movements. Even Gramsci’s version of this relationship which stressed the need for working-class intellectuals within the Party and the existence of forms of leadership within ‘spontaneous’ movements is also being contested. For he still assumed that these leaders within spontaneity were necessarily confined within the dominant assumptions about the world. Without the Party, and hence theory, they could not transcend ‘common sense’. But the women’s movement, gay liberation or the cultural self-definition present in movements of racially subordinated groups have required that changes in feeling and desire become part of the movement of resistance. They have been assailing those elements within the ‘common sense’ of society which deny and oppress them. This process of transforming what is taken for granted has come from the interior. ‘The person’, to echo Bea Campbell again, has become a ‘political problem’ – including persons within the revolutionary parties. The ‘lived relation, of subordination’ is to be contested wherever it is to be found.
B. How Does Consciousness Change?
How then do people come to see the possibility of socialism? How do we conceive and imagine a completely different society, involving not only change in the external structures but an inner transformation of our consciousness and our feelings? How do we begin to connect our own experience to other people’s? There is no clear simple ‘theory’ of how such changes might take place. There is no straightforward, complete alternative to Leninism as an organizing idea and as a historical practice. But it is possible to open up certain entrances which people have made in other movements. They have become rather silted over and unfrequented but they are still there.
Historically many radical movements in the past havd\ raised the connection between changing our consciousne ,ui and making a new culture with opposing values. This was . vital aspect of Owenite socialist feminism, for example. Irt:’J attacking the hold of religion the Owenites began to maket their own marriage ceremonies. In contesting the values of capitalism they created their own schools. Similarly the Chartists called their children after radical heroes.
The Morning Chronicle commented in 1849 that in Middleton, Lancashire
. .. a generation or so back, Henry Hunts were as common as blackberries-a crop of Feargus Q’Connors replaced them, and latterly there have been a few green sprouts labelled Ernest Jones.(52)
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries socialists understood this need for a protective culture. They extended the ideas of the labour movement, of ‘brotherhood’, ‘solidarity’, ‘fellowship’ and ‘comradeship’ into their relationships within socialist organizations. ‘Brotherhood’, though gender-bound, has a warmth which ‘comrade’ with its echoes of commissars and ice picks lacks. ‘Solidarity’ carries most immediately the strength of being solid. But it has also had an interpretation which involves conscious individual commitment. In the words of The Miners’ Next Step, the document produced by South Wales miners, influenced by revolutionary syndicalist ideas, in 1912, ‘Sheep cannot be said to have solidarity.'(53) Workers had a vision of a new kind of community, which was partly sustained by their resistance to capitalism but also moved towards the future co-operative commonwealth.
It helps to remember that there were these other kinds of socialism, as well as anarchism, which stressed the transformation of values and relationships in the process of making the new world. We need to be able to learn what we can from them just as much as from the Bolsheviks. And on the creation of a new culture as part of the transition to socialism they have more to say than Leninism.
Discussion of the quality of relationships was common in the early British socialist movement. Becoming a socialist meant for many people a spiritual rebirth. Socialist culture, particularly in the Socialist League, the Clarion cycling clubs and choirs and the Independent Labour Party, but even at a local level in the Social Democratic Federation, was a means of sustaining the faith as well as transmitting socialist values. People used the word ‘fellowship’ to describe their sense of community within the socialist movement. These understandings of the personal, spiritual meaning of becoming a socialist were quite alien to Leninism. The growth of the Communist Party as the revolutionary party meant that such discussions were no longer central to the socialist experience. I don’t think they ever died out altogether, even in the Communist Party itself. They ceased however to be explicitly recognized and accepted. They did not belong to the new pantheon of ‘correct’ ideas which Leninism brought as a theory of organization. Instead they lived on as part of a twilight oral tradition which was passed on by working-class socialists. I think that the shock of 1956 and the post-war disintegration of older forms of working-class politics in both the Communist Party and the Labour Party weakened this oral tradition of the personal meaning of socialism. From 1968 many of the informal links of communication were severed.
For the post ’68 generations on the left it seems that these old understandings have little resonance. This was just at the moment when an awareness began to grow that the personal meaning of socialism needed to be recreated anew.
I feel sadness at this apparent loss. But I know too that there is a false security in sentimentalizing the demise of all aspects of this culture. While implicit values are an important means of surviving in a hostile world, without becoming theoretically explicit and part of a new order they are forced to seek some form of accommodation. So although the labour movement has carried an implicit opposition to reproducing hierarchy and a partial assertion of different forms of relationship these have coexisted with less democratic values. Not only have the terms in which they could be expressed been predominantly male, reflecting the importance of workers in jobs like mining and the docks in the labour movement, but a vital source of working-class male dignity has been bound up with having a skill. Although revolutionary socialists have always opposed craft elitism in theory, the reality has been that these workers’ resistance to economic threats to skill have often also vitally contributed to the political vanguard organization of the wo.rking class against capitalism. Thus the destruction of skills, an important area of creativity allowed to some workers, has been countered by a passionate assertion of manhood within the cultural assumptions of the labour movement. Economic militancy, class pride and confidence, political involvement in revolutionary and shop-floor organization have combined to make workers like printers and engineers ‘advanced’ in the Leninist sense. But groups like these have also been extremely suspicious of the threat of women and the unskilled generally.
In one sense the militancy of skill is a “ital opposition to the degradation and paralysis of exploitation. But it also contains our perception of dignity as a characteristic of masculinity and skilled work. It closes in on itself and becomes exclusive. Not only does this vision of militancy fail to reach most women as workers, as they are mainly among the unskilled, but it cannot reach beyond the confines of wage work to question the apportioning, scope and circumstances of our whole lifetimes. In relation to the family it has a paternal conservatism. It implies that the man must be the sole provider for the family, pass on his trade tQ.. his son and keep a stern eye on his apprentice. Responsibility merges with possession and authority. The exclusive~ conservative features of this concept of militant dignity have become clearer because it has not only been under attack because of the influence of feminism. Within capitalism the continuing dissolution of the older forms of craft skill and the imperatives of inflation which require the exploitation of both men and women’s capacity to labour have combined with changing ideas of how men and women, young and old sho,-!ld interact personally. No one is completely certain any more that a man should be master in his own home. It has been difficult for Leninists to grasp the significance of these developments because of the lack of attention to personal responses and the implicit nature of the dignity carried within this male class pride.
The terms in which consciousness and culture have been discussed in the contemporary women’s movement do not provide an intact alternative organizational model to set against the ‘partial’ view of the male-dominated labour movement. But the particular circumstances of the women who have become radicalized by feminism in the last decade contribute towards connecting certain aspects of consciousness. Splits between work and home or between the very process of their partial dissolution. Young women swept into the educational expansion, thrown out into the expanding welfare service sector in significent numbers were cut off from the lives and values which most of their mothers had known and communicated to their daughters in western capitalism. This was intensified by the startling intervention of technology in women’s biological destiny. Despite the real problems about the coil and the pill they did mean that women could with much greater reliability for the first time in history assume that heterosexual intercourse did not mean they chanced getting pregnant. This represented a most dramatic break with the past experience of women of their bodies. Yet these changes coincided with the growth of media stereotypes of femininity and an ideological emphasis on the family and the psychological responsibility of the mother for the child. Women found themselves vulnerable in the public world of work and then expected to readjust to the private sphere of isolated child care as many nurseries had been closed after the war. These uneven and awkward shifts which appeared in modern capitalist society were factors in forcing a new feminist consciousness which questioned the demarcations set by men upon the personal and the political. For example it is evident that our views and feelings about trade unions come from our home, our sex, our community, from the media, from legal judgements as well as from our work and class. Equally it is clear that our vision of sexual relationships comes from the personal lived relationships we have with our family, our friends as well as our class or our knowledge of other times and other societies. For women, quite unrevolutionary steps like speaking at a meeting, writing a pamphlet, joining a union or even a football team immediately open up other wider issues of authority. They question the relation of public and private spheres. They involve immediately notions of gender and concepts of ·human nature. Apparently straightforward actions are easily seen to relate to deeper power relations. They extend the immediate issue into a myriad of questions about human existence and the society in which we live. The women’s movement has never been comfortable with only demanding more or simply equality with men, in the sense of equal rights, or even accepted the terms in which Marxists saw the ‘woman question’. Instead it has probed the rela~onship of power which exists between the sexes. It has thus helped to extend our concept of how power is passed on and held in a crucial area of everyday life. The personal is political here in the sense that the dominant male definition of ‘what is left politics?’ excludes crucial aspects of this power struggle between the sexes.(54)
A complex understanding has grown. up through the practice of the women’s movement of the interconnecting nature of different forms of power relationships. For instance the campaign for a woman’s right to choose freely whether to have an abortion or to have a child raises immediately control over her own fertility and maternity which leads to the more general issues of man’s sexual hold over woman, of human beings’ relationship to their bodies and the importance of sexual pleasure. All four aspects of the question have been neglected by Marxism. But the campaign also involves an argument about laws and parliament, about a democratic and social medical service, an extensive system of childcare facilities, about the power of the state to determine population policy, about how decisions about investment in contraceptive technology and medical research are made and in whose interests. It implies a discussion about the strategy of a campaign both to pressurize Parliament and to transform the relationship to the body.
I think the implicit recognitions about how our consciousness emerges from the interrelationship of the power relationships which have come from our practice as a movement are actually more complex than the concept of . ‘oppression’ can express. When the black movement in the late sixties, followed by women and gay people asserted the idea of oppression which could include the cultural and personal experience of being subordinated as a group as well as economic and social inequalities, it was an important corrective to the emphasis within the left on class and economic exploitation. When all these movements went on to argue for autonomy and the people involved insisted that they understood their own situation best, this was an essential form of resistance to oppression being reduced by the left to an economic or equal rights issue and spoken for by ‘professionals’ who claimed they knew better than the people involved in the movements. But arguing in terms of a series of separate ‘oppressions’ can have an ironic consequence. We can forget that people are more than the category of oppression. ‘Each of us lives these conditions but is at the same time more than them.'(55) Movements which initially stressed self-activity and self-development can come to distrust their own origins and reduce human potential to a total, determining, fatalistic state of oppression if this is ignored. We thus have the means of seeing people as victims but not the means of seeing the sources of power which all subordinated groups have created. Equally we do not experience a single defining relationship of subordination in our lives any more than we possess trade union consciousness. We live within a complexity of relationships. This means we have certain sources for comparison and contrast. We can imagine how relationships might be different. We are capable of myopia about other people’s culture and experience. But we are also able to extend our understanding and feelings towards others in the past as well as the present.
Zillah Eisenstein in Capitalist Patriarchy and the Case for Socialist Feminism describes how Marx’s theory of alienation could provide us with a more dialectical approach to women’s subordination.
The theory of alienation and its commitment to ‘species life’ in communist society is necessary to understanding the revolutionary capacity of human beings … Reality for Marx is more than mere existence. It embodies within it a movement towards human essence. This is not a totally abstract human essence but rather an essence we can understand in historical contexts … Without this conception human beings would be viewed as exploited in capitalist relations, but they would not be understood as potentially revolutionary … When extended to women this revolutionary ontology suggests the possibility of freedom exists alongside exploitation and oppression, since woman is potentially more than what she is. Woman is structured by what she is today-and this defines real outer limits of her capacities or potentialities. This of course is true for the alienated worker .•. By locating revolutionary potential as it reflects conflicts between people’s real conditions (existence) and possibilities (essence), we can understand how patriarchal relations inhibit the development of human essence. In this sense, the conception of species life points to the revolutionary potential of men and women.(56)
If we think about our experiences in the light of these ideas we can grasp the actual complexities of how we develop a critical consciousness about our predicament, how we – imagine alternatives and relate these to other people’s lives as well as our own. I know from my own political experience that innumerable men and women have in fact changed as part of such a process in the last decade or so. This has sometimes been outside political parties, sometimes within one organization or several. But it has not been the work of any creature called ‘the Party’ for the simple reason that no such creature exists. More particularly, for several years I have taught a Workers’ Education Class in social history. At various tiIlles we have drawn upon our own experience and members of the class have talked about how they became interested in socialist or radical politics and how the women’s movement has affected them. The extraordinary diversity of influence upon even people within roughly the same age group, the combination of private and public experience which had brought them together even simply to study the history of radical movements, was a salutary lesson for anyone attempting the history of a social movement. They made nonsense both of the mechanical notion of trade union consciousness and the static categories of certain limited forms of oppression. In fact we all have some such experience and understanding in our lives but it is always difficult initially to hold on to these and put them against a ‘theory’.
The recognition which was present within pre-Leninist radical movements of the importance of making values and culture which could sustain the spirit and help to move our feelings towards the future, has been reasserted by the women’s movement. This means we can begin to think again about the problem of how we move towards socialism. Leninism has been particularly weak in relation to the actual transition to socialism. Although Eurocommunism raised the problem of the transition, it is not preoccupied with the creation of new forms of power and consciousness but of how to occupy and inhabit the existing institutions. The experience of sexual political movements suggests that not only can gains we make shift the balance of power relationships significantly but that the existence of radical movements concerned to make a new culture and to release and develop the potential of subordinated groups, can also touch and begin to transform not only the ideas and feelings of people within them but of those outside. They bring with them different ways of interpreting, and perceiving the world.(57)
They also reveal a dimension of consciousness which has been missing from socialism and certainly from Leninism. We can recognize and comprehend intellectually without wanting something to change. We can be opposed to hierarchy and elitism and yet feel superior. We can oppose men’s control politically and then feel deserted when it is not asserted in our own lives. We can resist being treated as an object and yet still want to be desired in this way, as this remains our means of valuing ourselves. These dimensions of transformation have been a vital part in the practice of the contemporary women’s movement.
Sarah Benton in ‘Consciousness, Class and Feminism’ in Red Rag describes how the women’s movement has approached our emotional resistances to changes which we may consciously desire.
It’s not enough for the individual woman to ‘know’ she is possessed or dominated; in order not to be possessed or dominated, indeed in order not to want to be, there must be an alternative culture in which such values are seen to be dominant and to be practised (in however erratic a way) in relation to which she can define herself.(58)
This understanding has been central for. women because of the circumstances of our particular oppression as a sex. But its implications are not limited to the politics of the women’s movement. This personal approach to consciousness is relevant in the ways in which dominance appears in left organizations and to limitations present in the contemporary labour movement’s resistance to capitalism. For example, a middle-class man who becomes a leading theoretician may also be quite inept at relating openly to people. Indeed he may have become a theoretician initially out of this shyness and loneliness. But the psychology of theoreticians does not come within the scope of Leninism! In time indeed isolation will be increased by responsibility for other people. It will be encased within this concept of the role of a leader. The justification of such a personal distance will always be of course service to the Party. It will be further accentuated by his need to be invulnerable because he expresses only what is objectively true, not what he personally feels. But this necessarily restrains his relations with other people. A sure sign of a leader of a Leninist political group is a tendency to look past your ey’es and over your head when they talk to you. Either they are taking a long objective view which does not involve encountering you, or they are looking for more prestigious ‘contacts’ in the shape of a shop steward or so. They quite forget how to meet person to person because they always have a thick wadding of more important purposes stuffed under their belts. This does give them an unreality but it also gives a certain power. They are untouchable andapart. This is of course just like leaders in the public world of government and institutions like the trade union movement. The pattern is reproduced. There are informal cultural correctives to this process in the labour movement. But men who are shop stewards and convenors can become locked and isolated by a sense of their need to prove their manhood which removes them from other people, excludes women and makes co-operation between people as equals difficult. These personal characteristics of organization may be privately noted by Leninists but they do not belong to the public discussion of politics. In a consciousness-raising situation (or in a radical therapy group) this source of power in removed objectivity is dissolved. It becomes irrelevant and the personal unhappiness behind it can be revealed. The idea (though it hasn’t always been the reality) of a consciousness-raising group is that you can be vulnerable and open without being destroyed because you are protected by the group. Feminists have called this sisterhood, which carries a more intimate notion of democracy than the trade union ‘brothers (and sisters)’.
In fact the very act of me writing this has been affected by such a personal tremor in the pattern of feeling-my own involvement in a women’s group formed to discuss our relationships and feelings towards our fathers. I struggled against the hold my father had over my life desperately and when he died twelve years ago I was still too scarred to open up to my feelings about him. Over the last few years I have been searching to understand and know him as a person rather than as the projection of my resistance to his authority. I saw obscurely that unless I could spiritually meet my own father person to person, I would continue to simply react against and oppose all forms of authority rather than confront and contest them in the open. Talking and listening to other women in a consciousness-raising situation has helped to shift some of my fear. As I was able to open to some of my affectionate feelings towards him and to respect him within his own life and times rather than in his disastrous relating to me, he became not an object of dread, anger and humiliation but a muddled and uphappy human being. This has released a source of courage and made it possible to evade the authority and dread which theories of organization have always held for me. It has become possible to translate the general understanding within the women’s movement, that we are all equally responsible for making ideas and ways of resisting a society we oppose, into thinking critically about theories of organization which have always held a particular terror for me.
Beyond The Fragments: Feminism and the Making of Socialism (The Women’s Movement and Organizing for Socialism, Part Two: II) by Sheila Rowbotham
A. The Problem of Democracy
If there was an ideal equal relationship between organizations and movements we should just pool our strengths and weaknesses and get on with it. Unfortunately it is not that simple. Bolshevism has a particularly long and sinister record in these matters which I think it’s too easy to foist off onto Uncle Joe. More immediately the left groups have often been wrong in the last ten years or so but this seems only to make them more certain they hold the most complete understanding. This absurd paradox might begin to be cleared but for an enormous reluctance at the centre of organizations to say simply that they were wrong, that they have learned this of resisted that out of fears and misconceptions. These seem obvious enough things for human beings to say, not as a great beating of breasts and tearing of hair but as a basis for working together as equals, But it seems to me that a Leninist approach to organization (and here the name is important) is inconsistent with such equality, regardless of the intention of individual Leninists.
For although Leninist and Trotskyist groups acknowledge the need to learn from the working-class movement, I think that secretly they feel deep down they already know better? What else could distinguish the member from the ‘contact’? Along with this inner assumption there is an acceptance of hierarchy within the organization itself. If members know better than non-members then the leaders know better than members and the world is felt to be an orderly place. Why else would they be leaders-mere staying power? The thought brings a rash of intolerable anxiety. Away with it-such psychologizing leads into the black holes of cynicism.
But there is democratic centralism, that wonderful device without which it would be impossible for everyone to do everything at the same time. We know the enemy all right. Here is real socialist democracy, none of your liberal nonsense. And haven’t we learned from the crimes of Stalinism? Don’t we allow factions even. Don’t we just!
Democratic centralism was one of the issues raised in 1956 by the men and women who left the Communist Party to form the New Left. They argued that it was inherently undemocratic. Behind the versions of democratic centralism in the Trotskyist groups and the neo-Trotskyism of the SWP now is the conviction that it is a neutral form which can be adapted in a non-Stalinist context. With this goes the belief that the basic problem of making socialism is primarily the making of a leadership through the creation of an ‘efficient’ organization.
Richard Kuper. in ‘Organization and Participation’ questions the separation between efficiency and democracy. He pointed out the way in which Leninist groups still tend to reduce the criteria of success to an old-style managerial concept of efficiency at the expense of democracy, long after the real managers have caught on to the ‘efficiency’ of limited forms of participation.
He believes that ‘it is ludicrous to believe that we can reduce the goal of the party to a simple formulation about a decisive act-the conquest of state power’.
As for the ‘efficiency’ of democratic centralism he says that the question of the degree of centralization we might decide is necessary, depends on our assessment of the nature of the task in hand. It requires also that we have a very general kind of agreement. If that is not present ‘democratic centralism’ is merely a tool to quell opposition. Richard Kuper argues that when it is presented as an absolute rule the concept itself tends to provide a structure which is ‘uniquely vulnerable to a certain kind of degeneration and one extraordinarily difficult to regenerate’. (21)
Whether we argue for a more generous or a more scrupulous interpretation of democratic centralism, or a more relative concept of the relationship between centralism and democracy, or whether we believe with Ralph Miliband that it ‘ … has always served as a convenient device for authoritarian party structures'(22) and should be simply dumped, we have to concede that the evidence of this century indicates that it is not a ‘neutral’ form. There has been something very funny indeed about it in practice. This has not only been a feature of Stalinism but of the more recent experience of the Trotskyist groups in the last decade. For instance it is a curious fact that the hard core of the leaderships of these groups, despite a series of palace revolutions, manage to tuck themselves into the centre into perpetuity and that bits of broken-off leaderships resurface within the splinters. They have a permanent advantage against all incipient oppositions because they are at the hub of communication and can organize to forestall resistance quicker than people who are scattered in different branches and districts. Also they are known-and better the devil you know!
Even if it gets a bit hot at the top now and then, there is a loophole. The members-poor old things, tramping around getting sore feet on their paper sales up and down all those concrete council-flat steps, getting calloused hands lassoing elusive ‘contacts’ over the balconies. Well they have a tendency to get routinized. Not the leadership. It is up to the leadership to spot when this is happening and leap out towards ‘the class’ to knock the members into shape. Whoosh-Superman! Poor old members they look on with awe. Some get a bit grumpy. Why isn’t democratic centralism binding on the leadership? Because the leaders know best. How else could they possibly be leaders? Whoosh goes Superman again, only doing his duty. How does Superman leadership know when to go whoosh towards the advanced sections of the class? Because he is leader of course. Pop go the poor members. The cosy ones’ fall by the wayside to seek comfort in discussion circles while the neurotic ones disappear to be cuddled in therapy groups. The intransigent form a small splinter replica. And the leaders go whoosh, whoosh all the way back to the centre.(23)
Soon they are safely ensconced again with the added authority of the patent they have out now on ‘the class’. No wonder leaders of Leninist groups have staying power. They are further legitimated by the respect in Leninism due to leaders and by the assumption that just as the members know better than non-members leaders know better than opposing members. The factions can stand up democratically and be counted. They can thus be rapidly isolated. But even if the opposition is based within a campaign, a movement, a trade union or community activity, there is a strong possibility that the leaders’ position will prevail. The individual member will face a split loyalty between a commitment to an autonomous group and the organization. The theory says the Party must be more important. The choice is either to get out of the organization (which seems from within to be leaving socialist politics itself), to ignore the centre (in which case democratic centralism has proved unworkable), or to accept the line. So however unsectarian this socialist may be, he or she has very stark choices and a political ideology which sanctions accepting party discipline more than helping to develop the self-activity of other people.
I am not trying to assert against this that the women’s movement has found the answer about how we should organize. Though it is certainly worth noting that the women’s movement has found a means of remaining connected while growing for a decade, and that shifting and spontaneous initiatives have been taken by an extremely large number of women within the movement. But I am arguing that the form in which you choose to organize is not ‘neutral’, it implies certain consequences. This has been ‘l growing recognition on the left since the late sixties. If you accept a high degree of centralization and define yourselves as professionals concentrating above everything upon the central task of seizing power, you necessarily diminish the development of the self-activity and self-confidence of most of the people involved. Because, for the women’s movement, the development of this confidence and ability to be responsible for our own lives was felt to be a priority, this became part of the very act of making a movement. The enormous weight of the inner passivity which was the result of the particular nature of the subordination of the women who became involved meant that the effort to struggle, both against the personal forms of men’s control and our oppression within capitalist society, became inseparable from the struggle against the ways in which these had become internalized. We had to learn to love ourselves and other women so we could trust one another without falling back 0n men. We inclined consequently towards small groups, circles rather than rows, centres as information and research services, open newsletters. The attempt to avoid individual women being is0lated as exceptions, either as spokesperson or as freak, the need for our own movement and the feeling of sisterhood came from this understanding.
I am not suggesting that such concerns are unique to women or that such forms are biologically determined. Indeed 1 believe that the problem of how people can overcome the passivity, self-ha!red and lack of trust which is peculiar to modern capitalism is crucial for making a socialist movement-which is not to say that recognizing this as central solves the problem of how to do it.
Basically the women’s movement accepts a form of ‘participatory democracy’ which has a long tradition from democratic religious groups to the American New Left of the late sixties and the anti-authoritarian currents in the student movement. The problems about participatory democracy are evident. If you are not able to be present you can’t participate. Whoever turns up next time can reverse the previous decision. If very few people turn up they are lumbered with the responsibility. It is a very open situation and anyone with a gift for either emotional blackmail or a conviction of the need to intervene can do so without being checked by any accepted procedure. Participatory democracy only works if everyone accepts a certain give and take, a respect for one another’s experience, a desire and need to remain connected. If these are present it can work very well. If they are not it can be a traumatic process. We have lived these difficulties in the history of women’s movement conferences and the arguments about the Workshop Centre and Women’s Day March. Despite obvious inadequacies though, ‘participatory democracy’ does assert the idea that everyone is responsible equally and that everyone should participate. 1 t concedes no legitimating respect for permanent leaders or spokespeople.
It has been modified in the practice of the women’s movement by women bringing in other concepts of how to organize from tenants’ groups, trades councils, trade unions or from the Labour Party, the CP and from Trotskyist and Maoist groups. Sometimes these have been met with a defensive suspicion and dismissed simply as male dominated. But in cases when the women’s movement has been stronger and more confident we have been able to meet these ideas and recognize the validity of some of their criticisms. The resilience of the women’s movement has been partly because of this openness. In practice what we have been doing is adapting several forms of organizing to fit the· particular circumstances we are engaged in. This does not remove the dangers of ‘substitutionism’, or centres losing contact with local groups, or small groups of people doing all the work, or people not knowing what other people are doing. All the problems of democracy do not magically disappear. But it does make for an approach to organization which is prepared to test forms and discard or select according to the situation rather than asserting a universally correct mode. It also means that the ‘movement’ is perpetually outwards. As women encounter feminism they can make their own kinds of organizing depending on their needs. It is this flexibility which it is extremely important to maintain. It means that, for example, groups of women artists or groups of women setting up a creche or on the subcommittee of a trades council can decide for themselves what structure is most useful.
The women’s movement shares with the ‘anti-authoritarian’ movements of the late sixties a commitment to a notion of democracy which does not simply recognize certain formal requirements of procedure. Obviously the danger of this is to reject completely any understanding of how these formal procedures have historically come to be used. When the dust of the first rush of enthusiasm settles it is often handy to have them. But if we simply respond to this by dismissing ‘anti-authoritarian’ movements as naive and just ignorant of the ‘correct’ political procedure, we miss an insistence which carries a deeper meaning of democracy. Faced with the opposition of women and workers in Lotta Continua, an Italian revolutionary organization, Adriano Sofri, its founder and undisputed leader, made a self-criticism. He said democracy involved not only formally contesting theories of organization which left politics to the professionals. It involved examining his own inner sense of being a professional. It meant uncovering in public his own capacity to survive and not be frightened by political opponents. He could no longer take refuge in the objectivity of the socialist theoretician. His desire for power could no longer assume a paternal legitimation in a sense of responsibility. There was a strange sense of history repeating itself. He compared the confrontation that he faced to his own opposition, with others, to the Communist Party leadership in 1968. This was ‘not a conflict over political line, but a conflict over what politics was all about’ .(24)
The encounter of the left groups with women’s liberation, gay liberation and men’s groups in Britain over the slower time scale of a decade has also been such a conflict and has assumed a particularly sharp form in relation to the political assumptions of Leninism held by Trotskyist groups.
B. Leaders and Cadres
Feminism has implicitly questioned the whole notion of the professional revolutionary who is cut off from other people and the training of revolutionaries which has been a feature of Leninism and Trotskyism. It is evident that if politics are to be the domain of professionals, most women will be excluded. The emphasis on training professionals has been particularly important in the Trotskyist groups presumably because their isolation was so extreme that for a long time they could do little else. But it was important in the early days of the CP and persists still in the upper ranks of the Communist Party. Within Leninism there is a tension between the concept of leadership as the training of political administrators or theoreticians and leadership as a process of learning the ability to act in local and immediate struggles. Both the Communist Party’s general approach in Britan and lS/SWP now place greater emphasis on the creation of a leadership through practical experiences than the orthodox Trotskyist groups. But despite this organizational power still tends to accrue with the political administrators at the centre of parties who are necessarily cut off from the immediate local problems of political agitation.
There was an awareness of the problems of permanent leaders in the pre-Leninist socialist movement which seems to disappear in the 1920s or become implicit. The Miners’ Next Step (1912), for example, listed what could be the immediate short-term advantages of leaders but pointed out how the acceptance of permanent leaders also took away from people their capacity to develop initiative and responsibility.
I think it is foolish to deny that you must train people in particular skills of that certain kinds of knowledge which we need take time to develop. We need also to recognize the value of experience in agitation in which individuals can have decisive effects and of differences rather than inequalities in our abilities to do various things. But the recognition of the whole range of capacities for leadership people can develop is not the same as training leaders.
Members of Newsreel described their approach to this in the context of a film collective:
The problem politically … is how to separate bourgeois notions of ‘skill’ and ‘talent’-which are always used to divide people, to create hierarchies,. to- make some people feel superior or to assume more power than others-from the very real differences of skill and experience and inclination which we do have that aren’t only expressive of our conditioning, but of our individual creative selves which need nourishing …
But they also said:
… we recognise different capacities as skills which go entirely unrecognised in the bourgeois media; the ability to relate to people. to express feelings directly; to recognise and express differences and personal needs; to take care of one another. These skills are often also unrecognised on the left.(25)
When you bring in this much wider concept of political ability the Leninist notion of training becomes absurd and even the definition of learning through agitation appears too narrow.
Opposition to individual leaders emerging in the women’s movement has come from the same understanding that the rank and file trade unionists who wrote The Miners’ Next Step in 1912 expressed as the danger of passivity. Women, having such a far-reaching struggle against the hold of men’s authority have been loathe to circumscribe this within a new female hierarchy. Also women’s liberation recognized from the start the impossible pressures on a woman acting as an individual. Individual women could be both absorbed as exceptions and . devoured as victims. Sisterhood extends the notion of collectivity which is present in solidarity. It’s not merely the public act of being together consciously, it is the personal care and love without which growth and creativity are impossible. The women’s movement in recognizing it was not just what you said and did but how you said and did things which transmitted your politics, extended the scope of practice. Within this approach to politics the significance of a training for leaderships shrinks. The capacity to initiate such a myriad of transformations can be encouraged, tended, reared, nurtured, developed but not simply trained.
The problems which have arisen out of this resistance to making a movement with no clear hierarchy are well known. The danger of informal leadership structures has been much discussed in the women’s movement internationally. The fraught relationship between collective sisterhood and individual self-expression has been a paralysing and sometimes agnoizing experience. There is also a more personal, informal, female version of leadership through an oppressive kind of mothering which smothers rather than smashes opposition.
Despite these real difficulties, the women’s movement has still created ways of organizing in which leadership has been much more widely dispersed than in left organizations. Groups of women have taken initiatives but these have varied considerably in the decade or so of our existence. Individual women have synthesized ideas but the sources of these ideas have been innumerable discussions and the shared experience of hundreds of women. These initiatives and ideas have flowed and combined in countless shapes and forms which make it impossible to locate a single leadership of the women’s movement. It has meant that the women’s movement has been able to grow organically in areas of life in which it is difficult for Leninist groups to ‘inject’ themselves into. It implies a politics in which the very process of radicalization carries the necessity of taking initiatives in many aspects of our lives. If this is not to be an impossible and soul-breaking ideal it requires the conscious creation of cultural forms and a personal vision of politics. I think the women’s movement experience of this spreading and transformation of the idea of leadership is vital for the making of socialism.
C. The Leninist Sleight of Hand
Values, attitudes and forms of organizing are thus carried and recreated by people in the ways in which they associate. We learn not only from what is said or what we read but from our relationships with other people. This process does not mysteriously stop when we desire to associate in order to create a socialist society.
Our encounters with other people in capitalism are not free, open and equal. But there are different degrees of inequality, distance and coercion involved. These differences in degree make it possible to imagine how things might change. They force the cracks which open to illuminate the soul.
If our imagination is to be sustained by our associating, the ways we meet and co-operate and feel towards one another must develop not from our experiences of the most repressive and authoritarian encounters, but from our understandings of more loving, free ways of connecting to others and acting.
A vital feature of Lenin’s concept of the Party is based on its Supposed capacity to bring together, spread and transcend the limited, uneven notions and experiences of an alternative to capitalism which are present in the various sections of the working class and among the groups of people who support them. Now this is obviously a real and enormous problem. We are limited and cut off by our specific experiences of oppression and by the conflict of interests between us. The ·disagreement is about how this can best be overcome.
Let’s pretend for a moment that there was a revolutionary party in real life which did bring together all the elements most ‘advanced’ or developed in their opposition to capitalist society. Why does it follow from their bringing together in this pretend ideal party that their limitations are transcended rather than partially reflected and reproduced? If there is no conscious acknowledgement of the need to create and develop political forms which seek to overcome inequalities, and release the full”potentialities of all socialists, what is there to prevent power consolidating with the powerful but moral strictures? How can the real antagonisms which are the source of division between oppressed people in capitalism disappear within the Party? Isn’t this assuming that the Party is an island?
If we descend from the ideal party in the sky to more earthly groups and parties, the prospect is even more gloomy. Central committees scurry like a lot of white rabbits through a series of internal and factional documents and the smaller the party the greater the hurry. In such circumstances the pressure to neglect inequalities within the organization in pursuit of the ultimate goal are great. But the theory of what a Leninist Party should be leaves hardly any space to help people participate more equally much less to develop their potential. Without any theory or structure it seems to me idealistic folly to expect ‘the Party’ to overcome rather than simply reflect and harness these inequalities( of power which we are opposing in capitalism.
The argument used against these criticisms is always to deny that ‘the Party’ or ‘parties’ should be places where people experience anything other than the relationships which dominate capitalism. This gruesome state of affairs is presented as being necessary for the working class to take power. Though it is not the working class who are to be relied on to reach this conclusion but ‘the Party’, which by a process like apostolic succession inherits Lenin’s words. The criticisms he made of the non-Bolshevik strands in the Russian revolutionary movement are cited as vindication. These sources of dispute were undoubtedly present in the whole process internationally of Bolshevization which brought the new Communist Parties into line with Lenin’s concepts of organization. And these arguments about the nature of political organization were certainly there in conflict between the Communist Party and some members of the left of the Independent Labour Party between the wars. Ironically the original Trotskyists in Britain were perhaps closer to the left of the ILP in their criticism of the CP than Trotskyist groups would now acknowledge. (26)
This issue has involved a continuing argument between anarchists and communists. It was present in different ways in the New Left after 1956 and in the libertarian Marxism of the early 1970s. The black, gay and women’s movement have been bringing the criticism more closely home, because they have raised inequalities actually within Leninist organizations. They have demanded that changes have to be made now. These changes involve examining how real life inequalities as opposed to ideal interpretations are disregarded and perpetuated within socialist parties. They have argued that it is not enough to declare that people should not be ‘prejudiced ‘. The socialist organization has to create forms of associating and relating which actively seek to overcome the sexism and racism within it. It has become more and more difficult to dismiss these demands as ‘utopian’. Not only do they involve a loss of membership, but they come up again and again.
Now the problems of relationships within the Party have been discussed by Leninist organizations in the past though not in these terms. They have been seen as particular deformities which arise and have to be dealt with as they emerge. The emphasis in the Communist Party historically has been on the relationships between workers and middle-class intellectuals (mainly men). More recently it has been a tortured and painful area in the Socialist Workers Party, because of .. the effort to change the class basis of this organization. Both the Communist Party and the Socialist Workers Party have relied formally upon political education and informally upon guilt to try and curb the confidence of middle-class intellectuals. Sometimes it has been used by one group of middle-class administrators against another, or by the permanent administrators against intellectuals who might challenge the central bureaucracy. It has also been used, more understandably, by working-class people as a defence against being made to feel ignorant and humiliated by the intellectuals’ use of theory as a form of power against them. But whatever the reasons this negative control through the public orchestration of personal guilt has a terrible record and disastrous ramifications. It is certainly not caused by Leninism. For instance, guilt between blacks and whites, women and men, gays and heterosexuals bedevilled the American New Left in the late sixties and early seventies. Leninism serves in fact to hold the extremes of this negative response to power relations at bay. But this is not the same as providing a solution by going directly to the sources of the antagonisms producing guilt and allowing them free expression which implies trusting the imaginative capacity of human beings to enter one another’s predicaments and learn from the attempt.
The inequalities between men and women within ‘the Party’ have not been given the same continuing scrutiny as class or race. But the whole issue of relationships of the sexes and the position of women within the Party were the subject of debate in the Soviet Union and in the International Communist Movement in the 1920s and early thirties. These were far-ranging in their implications despite the tendency to dismiss sex-gender conflicts as cultural or superstructural problems.
But the outcome of the debate around the organizational power of women’s sections in Communist Parties had been partly pre-empted by the approach which had prevailed from the 1890s in the Second International towards the women’s movements of the day. The oversimplified and sectarian dismissal of all autonomous forms of feminism with the insistence on the Social Democratic Party as the only place for women’s agitation isolated many socialist women from the more radical currents within feminism. (27) This necessarily curtailed their capacity to· question the Marxist theory of the ‘woman question’ or to challenge the hegemony of the male leaderships of the Social Democratic Parties. The tighter discipline of the Bolsheviks and the acceptance of democratic centralism cut off the possibility of appeal outside the parties. Under Stalin of course all forms of inner party democracy in the Soviet Union perished and wit~ them the women’s section. This had international implications.
The position of gay socialists has a much murkier record. A formal tolerance has been the best response. Homosexuality and lesbianism have either been defined as personal questions or regarded as diversionary decadence before the emergence of the recent movement for gay liberation. On this point the educators really had to be educated.
Not until the 1960s when the black question was raised by the growing militancy of American blacks and revolutionary movements in developing countries was the power relationship between autonomous movements and socialist organizations seriously contested. 1n the course of this confrontation the need for autonomous movements of self-definition was clearly asserted. This was to be a decisive influence on the emergence of the women’s liberation movement.
We have no clear alternative of how to combine the advantages of autonomous movements with the strengths of a more general combination. But at least we must now recognize it as a problem to face. Leninism does not ‘know’ the answer. It merely asserts an ideal transcendence.
There remains then no effective guarantee within Leninism that the groups who are in a dominant position in capitalism won’t bring their advantage into ‘the Party’. Worse there is an effective sleight of hand which conceals this inherent tendency in the assertion of the ideal of the Party transcending the interests and vistas of its sections.
This does not imply that we should deny that people can become stuck in their own grievances and not see the wood for the trees. There is always the temptation to attack the people in the same boat as you, as this takes the least effort and involves the least risk. The argument is about how to overcome this. We need a form of organization which can at once allow for the open expression of conflict between different groups and develop the particular understandings which all these differences bring to socialism. For if every form of oppression has its own defensive suspicions, all the movements in resistance to humiliation and inequality also discover their own wisdoms. We require a socialist movement in which there is freedom for these differences, and nurture for these wisdoms. This means that in the making of socialism people can develop positively their own· strengths and find ways of communicating to one another what we have gained, without the transcendent correctness which Leninism fosters.
The attitude towards power relations within socialist organizations has an important bearing on how such an organization will relate outwards.
Indeed opposition within the Communist Party was caught within this dilemma. Trotskyism was born in the realization of the need to combat Stalin’s silencing of democratic criticism among the grass-roots of the Bolshevik Party. But Trotsky retained the assumption that the reconstituted (Trotskyist) Communist Party must be the hegemonic authority. Though both Lenin and Trotsky argued at various times that the Communist Parties must learn from workers’ struggles, this was still in the terms of the director consulting the workforce. The heresy of Trotskyism, like the more conservative branches of protestantism, was limited to the claim of being the rightful church. The vital issue of democratizing the relationship between the reconstituted ‘Party’ and other left groupings and popular movements was not made. Though this has been a rumbling subject for concern among breakaway libertarian currents within Trotskyism it has never been resolved because Trotskyism has been confined to a minority sectarian tradition. The clash between the contemporary women’s movement and the Trotskyist groups has again brought this whole issue to the surface.