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Title: Socialism and Strategy Author: Anthony Zurbrugg Date: 2014 Language: en Topics: authoritarian left, Leninism, bolshevism, russian revolution, Trotskyism, Stalinism, Spanish Revolution Source: Scanned from *Anarchist Studies*, Volume 22 Number 1 (2014), pp. 16â51
Socialists seeking strategies for a better future have to consider what
forms of organisationânow and in the futureâmay promote a new equitable
society. It is natural that they should reconsider which facets of their
traditions are useful and worth preserving, and which are not. This text
considers some contrasting features of the strategic thinking of
particular libertarians and Marxists. It reviews recent contributions by
two writers in this area, both advocating an ongoing value for the
Leninist tradition: the first by Charles Post, in Socialist Register
2013, who suggests that there is a rational core in Leninism[1] and
secondly two texts by Paul Blackledge, on Marxism and Anarchism, in
International Socialism.[2] This text considers the content of socialism
and touches on aspects of gender, authority, (trade) unions, parties,
and councils. Following Malatesta, it assumes that libertarians are
socialists, who look for cooperation:
âwhen the Socialist Party rests on the terrain of revolution, when
workersâ organisations remain organisations of struggle against the
bosses, when co-operatives are experiments in workersâ direct
management, for the benefit of the collective, in short when socialist
institutions remain really socialist, our entire sympathy and
co-operation is won thereby. Also because for the moment we cannot by
our own efforts alone begin or make the revolution triumph. And because
we are convinced that socialism if it is really socialism will
necessarily merge itself with anarchism.â[3]
In writing about libertarian thinking it has to be noted that
syndicalism and Industrial Unionism took varied forms both in the past
and in more recent times,[4] and developed various sets of priorities in
different contexts. Anarchism was even more variegated. For the most
part the particular strand of anarchism that is referred to below draws
on the anarchist communism of Errico Malatesta and Luigi Fabbri.[5]
Whatever one may think of it, Leninism(s) has some strength. It looks
for strategies and seeks clarity as to the way forward; it discusses
issues of unity in struggles among working people; it embraces some
tactical flexibility allowing for tactics to be modified in the light of
circumstance. Before going further one should also recognise that
writing about one Leninismâjust as much as writing about one anarchism
or one syndicalismâis problematic. Bolshevism, to name the party rather
than to focus on one man, took many forms: for the most part, early in
1917, it tended to view the revolution that had come in February 1917 as
predominantly bourgeois; later in 1917 the stress was for âAll Power to
the Councilsâ; in 1918 the stress changed to âiron disciplineâ;
thereafter, party factions were banned, and those who had taken to heart
the clause in the party programme on unions managing the economy were
condemned as syndicalists.[6] Over time there were some changes in the
contents of the Bolshevisms and Leninisms codified and propagated by the
Third International to influence the labour movement in Western Europe
and the wider world, but there were also constant themes, not the least
of these being the necessity of following the line set by leaders in
Moscow.
It is sometimes said that there is a libertarian Lenin, and this moment
in his thought is represented in State and Revolution.[7] A quick glance
at it will show that Lenin re-defined some aspects of Marxist theory,
but left much else intact. Lenin is famous for redirecting Bolshevik
priorities in April 1917. Some six months after the first February
revolution he wrote:
For socialism is merely the next step forward from state-capitalist
monopoly. Or, in other words, socialism is merely state-capitalist
monopoly which is made to serve the interests of the whole people and
has to that extent ceased to be capitalist monopoly.[And further:]
state-monopoly capitalism is a complete material preparation for
socialism, the threshold of socialism, a rung on the ladder of history
between which and the rung called socialism there are no intermediate
rungs.[8]
For the Bolsheviks, large scale industry was the foundation of
socialism. This was set out in their party programme. âWe must promote
the painless transition of this obsolete form of production[in the home
or on a small scale] into the higher forms of large-scale
manufacture.â[9] Luigi Fabbri condemned a belief that relied only on
large scale factory production; in his view according to circumstance, a
mixture of large and small scale production was appropriate and
decisions in this matter should be taken by the workers concerned.[10]
Lenin had set out a strategy involving everyone working for the state as
employees of the national state syndicate. He argued in State and
Revolution:
âAt present the [German] postal service is a business organized on the
lines of a state-capitalist monopoly. Imperialism is gradually
transforming all trusts into organizations of a similar type, in which,
standing over the âcommonâ toilers, who are overworked and starved, is
the same bourgeois bureaucracy. But the mechanism of social management
is here already to hand. We have but to overthrow the capitalists, to
crush the resistance of these exploiters with the iron hand of the armed
workers, to smash the bureaucratic machine of the modern stateâand we
shall have a splendidly-equipped mechanism, freed from the âparasite,â a
mechanism which can very well be set going by the united workers
themselves...â[11]
Characteristics of the German Post Office deserve to be noticed:
particularly that most employees expected respect for their uniform and
authorityâas âBeamteââstate officials. Many ex-soldiers, habituated to
obedience and compliance, were employed. Such people may have been
accustomed to taking orders. What was on Leninâs agenda was the
promotion of a modern efficient industrial economy, patterned on the
model of German capitalism.
Although he talked about checking and accounting by workers, Leninâs
agenda did not prioritise measures to promote workersâ power at
workâsocialist features desired by many syndicalists, Industrial
Unionists and socialists. Between the beginning of the century and 1914,
many of those to the left of mainstream social-democracy had a very
different vision of socialism than Leninâs, and looked for a wider
agenda. It is worth pausing here and reminding ourselves what was on the
agenda of other socialists in this era. Take James Connolly, for
example:
âPolitical institutions are not adapted to the administration of
industry. Here is a statement that no Socialist with a clear knowledge
of the essentials of his doctrine can dispute. The political
institutions of today are simply the coercive forces of capitalist
society they have grown up out of, and are based upon territorial
divisions of power in the hands of the ruling class in past ages, and
were carried over into capitalist society to suit the needs of the
capitalist class when that class overthrew the dominion of its
predecessors...
âIn short, social democracy, as its name implies, is the application to
industry, or to the social life of the nation, of the fundamental
principles of democracy. Such application will necessarily have to begin
in the workshop, and proceed logically and consecutively upward through
all the grades of industrial organization until it reaches the
culminating point of national executive power and direction. In other
words, social democracy must proceed from the bottom upward, whereas
capitalist political society is organized from above downward. Social
democracy will be administered by a committee of experts elected from
the industries and professions of the land; capitalist society is
governed by representatives elected from districts, and is based upon
territorial division... every fresh shop or factory organized under its
banner is a fort wrenched from the control of the capitalist class and
manned with the soldiers of the revolution to be held by them for the
workers.â[12]
Connollyâs visionâof workers running industry,[13] and using that
economic organisation as a lever to destroy capitalism and create
socialismâdrew on American traditions of revolutionary Industrial
Unionism. Revolutionary Syndicalism had a similar and greater impact
than Industrial Unionism in much of Europe and Latin America.
William Paul, of the British Socialist Labour Party, wrote in similar
vein: âCapitalism cannot be controlled. But it can be destroyed and
replaced by a workersâ Industrial Republic.â He also argues: âIndustrial
Unionismâs most important function is to unite all the workers for the
great and glorious task of carrying on the production of wealth under
Socialism on behalf of the community. The work of the political weapon
is purely destructive, to destroy the capitalist system... Industrial
Unionism is the constructive weapon in the coming social revolution.â
Paul continues:
âWhen the revolutionary working class captures the State, when it
overthrows Capitalism, it will not, like all previous revolutionary
classes, use the State to enforce its will upon either a subject or an
enslaved class. Since the working class is both an enslaved and a
subject class, and since there is no lower class in society, its
emancipation will mean the emancipation of all classes. The triumph of
the proletarian revolution will mean true economic and political
freedom; it will mean the abolition of all classes and propertied
conflicts. The revolutionary Socialist denies that State ownership can
end in anything other than a bureaucratic despotism. We have seen why
the State cannot democratically control industry. Industry can only be
democratically owned and controlled by the workers electing directly
from their own ranks industrial administrative committees. Socialism
will be fundamentally an industrial system; its constituencies will be
of an industrial character. Thus those carrying on the social activities
and industries of society will be directly represented in the local and
central industrial councils of social administration. In this way the
powers of such delegates will flow upwards from those carrying on the
work and conversant with the needs of the community. When the central
administrative industrial committee meets it will represent every phase
of social activity. Hence the capitalist political or geographical
State, will be replaced by the industrial administrative committee of
Socialism. The transition from the one; social system, to the other will
be the social revolution. The political State throughout history has
meant the government of men by ruling classes; the Republic of Socialism
will be the government of industry administered on behalf of the whole
community. The former meant the economic and political subjection of the
many; the latter will mean the economic freedom of allâit will be,
therefore, a true democracy.â[14]
In these times Syndicalist railway workers concluded that they did not
want to be employees of a state run company, but instead wanted to run
the railways for themselves.[15] They saw no advantage of being
exploited by one big state-owned company as opposed to being exploited
by several capitalist companies. In the syndicalist vision of a
socialist future, a railway syndicate would run the railwaysâand this
syndicate, like others, would co-ordinate its activities in conjunction
with other workplace and community associations. Power was to be spread
through a co-operative selfâmanaged network.
Pier Carlo Masini[16] wrote of socialist transformation in Italy and the
role of the factory councilâin contrast to the unionâin these terms:
âIn the first place: instead of developing in the worker the mentality
of the wage-earner, it promotes the exploration of a [new]
consciousness, that of a producerâwith all those consequences that
follow: in the fields of learning and psychology. Secondly, the factory
council educates and trains workers in management; day after day it
brings to them useful aspects of running a business. In consequence of
these two new facts, even the most modest and marginal workers
immediately understand that the conquest of the factory is no longer a
magical chimera, or a confusing hypothesis, but the result of their own
liberation. So, in the eyes of the masses, expropriation loses mythical
contours, assumes precise features and becomes immediately evident.â[17]
Thus these councils represented a real, albeit partial, prefiguration of
socialist society even within the bounds of capitalism. Such thinking
contrasts with the Leninist focus on accounting and control that was to
prevail after October 1917 in Russia.
Before the start of the civil war in the summer of 1918, Lenin conceived
of socialism in terms of changes in âpolitics,â but not so much in terms
of changes in âeconomicsâ or âsociety.â In his view the revolution was
compatible with forms of monopoly capitalism, made to serve a new
polity, and with managerial power. In his viewâa view in conflict with
many radical and left socialists in Germany itselfâGerman society and
economy, with authoritarian and hierarchical features, accentuated more
than ever by the war was âone half of socialism.â[18] Some six months
after the second, October revolution, he wrote that world revolution
âhas given birth in 1918 to two unconnected halves of socialism existing
side by side like two future chickens in the single shell of
international imperialism. In 1918 Germany and Russia have become the
most striking embodiment of the economic, the productive and the
socio-economic conditions for socialism, on the one hand, and the
political conditions on the other.â[19]
My contention is that although Leninismâas compared to the socialism of
the Second Internationalâdid re-define âpoliticsâ insofar as Lenin
endorsed the construction of a new state, his focus on the state and
party neglected âeconomicsâ and forces that were already pressing for
self-managed socialism in the workplace. In my view, there were large
elements of continuity between the Kautskyite and the Leninist
conceptions of social-democracy. In each case, change was expected to
come through the mechanism of the state. Neither challenged the gendered
division of labour; neither prioritised empowering workers in the
workplace. The relations and class identities of operatives and
managers, family-carers and absent husbands were barely challenged. New
states were created, pre-capitalist social features were abolished, new
legal rights were legislated, but the work of developing non-patriarchal
socialist relations was scarcely begun. Such Marxisms were no model for
change in times past. A failure to analyse their limitations is a
disservice to the socialism of the present and future.
One may also trace continuities between the politics of the Bolsheviks
and the politics of German Social-Democracy in the area of gender
relations. A popular exposition of the SDP programme noted: âThe
household of the working man suffers whenever his wife must help to earn
the daily bread.â[20] This discourse aspired to the equality of men and
women, but framed thinking in terms of the family and household
belonging to the male of the species, with women being ânaturallyâ tied
to work in the home; such a framework undermined commitments to
equality.
The programme of the Bolshevik party expressed commitments to the
equality of individuals regardless of factors of sex, race, religion or
nationality. It was recognised that it was easy to create rights on
paper, and less easy to make equality real. The ABC of Communism notes
of woman that âshe has to devote so much time to housekeeping...â[21]
Lenin remarked that âvery few husbands, not even the proletarians, think
of how much they could lighten the burdens and worries of their [sic]
wives, or relieve them entirely, if they lent a hand in this âwomenâs
work.ââ[22] But the thought that men should take an equal share in
family responsibilities found no place in the party programme.
Work was conceptualised as waged work, leaving aside, or downplaying
recognition of unwaged work as real work.[23] The future of gender
relations was predicated on the development of the collectivisation of
âhouseworkââcollective facilities for living, cleaning, childcare,
eating, etc.; but there was no challenge to the gendered division of
labour. It was thought that collectivisation would allow women space to
âinterest herself in all those matters which now interest the
proletarian man.â[24] Women would be free when collectives assumed
housework responsibilities; meanwhile, there was no effort to encourage
men to take on equal family responsibilities or to challenge prejudices
that justified inequality in the family. Collectives were conceived of
not on a small or intimate scale, drawing in the energies of neighbours,
but more on a factory scale, receiving state funding and functioning as
efficient industrial units.
The new Bolshevik state that emerged after 1917 had one woman, Alexandra
Kollontai, amongst its leaders and rapidly changed laws on marriage,
divorce and abortion. There was a rapid expansion in the provision of
nurseries and childrenâs homes. But there was no independent and
autonomous womenâs organisation, with representation in the leading
bodies of the state that could fight for the development of collective
facilities. In the network of organisation that developed after 1917,
little or no power was located amongst women and in the community.
Insofar as local initiatives were not encouraged, new centres of social
power were not promoted. There was little pressure building up to
promote the redistribution of scarce resources. Subsequently, in the era
of the New Economic Policy, there was little social organisation with a
capacity and strength that could be mobilised to oppose cuts in
community services that had been promoted in the era of war communism.
Thereafter, in the era of Stalinâs power, family law was also revised.
Socialists have looked towards a future with economic and political
freedom. Marx famously thought of socialism in terms of his ability to
be a hunter, a fisherman and a critical critic.[25] But this vision left
Mrs. Marx holding the baby and taking care of the family. In such
thinking socialism was ready to envisage changing some aspects of the
division of labour in the future, but, being somewhat blind in respect
of gender inequalities, it had thus far failed to develop the categories
that might facilitate challenging patriarchal relations. Lenin could
say: âWe want no separate organisations of communist women! She who is a
communist belongs as a member just as he who is a Communist.â Bolshevism
derived its organisation principles from its ideological
conceptions.[26] Blind or par-blind ideological conceptionsâfailing to
recognise that there was another vector of oppression beyond
capitalismâobstructed understandings of the need to confront issues of
patriarchy and obstructed the development of spaces in which women might
organise autonomously.
There were challenges to patriarchal thinking in these times. In the
Ukraine, libertarians in the Nabat (Tocsin) youth organisation called
for a struggle against all forms of oppression, including: âA struggle
against the existing family, which has turned us into deceitful
hypocrites nourished on the poison of corruption.â[27] Alexandra
Kollontai nibbled away on the fringes of Bolshevik thinking, and wrote
about patrimony and free love; love that rejected possessiveness. Lenin,
however, rejected such thinking. He believed that in current
circumstances, radical talk, talk of free love especially, was
ridiculous. âNowadays all thoughts of Communist women, of working women,
should be centred on the proletarian revolution, which will lay the
foundation, among other things, for the necessary revision of material
and sexual relations. Just now we must really give priority to problems
other than the forms of marriage among Australiaâs aborigines, or
marriage between brother and sister in ancient times.â In his view the
priorities of German proletarian women should lie in struggles around
the problems of Soviets, or of the Versailles Treaty and their impact on
the lives of women and not on sexual issues.[28] Lenin rejected
promiscuity in terms of drinking dirty waterâand his images seem to
arise from a disrespect of non-monogamous womenâfailing to condemn men
who do not embrace monogamy. Thus radicals such as Kollontai, who wanted
to discuss free love, were disrespected. Prevailing Bolshevik thinking
was ill-prepared or inimical to advancing beyond civil and legal
equality, and permitting abortion.[29]
Accomplishments similar to those made by the early Bolshevik government
were also achieved in the short time that anarchist ministers
participated in the Spanish government in 1936 to 1937, when Frederica
Montseny was the only woman minister. Here too social attitudes were
less easy to change. In Spain the sight of women dressed in blue
overalls and carrying rifles was something extraordinary. A libertarian
womenâs organisationâMujeres Libresâspread, building a membership of
some 20,000. Nevertheless women were very often expected to carry on
doing those tasks that the gendered division of labour assigned to them:
cooking, cleaning and childcare. As in Russia, union officials and
leaders were male, even when the majority of union members were female.
Syndicalist movements ânaturallyâ focussed on organising waged workers.
Unwaged workers, and the recognition of unwaged work, did not fit easily
into such a movement. This was a pattern that some women began to
challenge. It was argued that: âRevolutionary woman on the other hand
must fight on two fronts: firstly for her external struggle for freedom,
a struggle in which, thanks to common ideals and a common cause, she has
men as allies, but in addition she must struggle for her interior
freedom, a freedom enjoyed by men since ages past. In this struggle,
women are on their own.â[30] Such challenges and changes were seldom
welcomed. Mujeres LibresâFree Womenâcame together as a new and
independent organisation, something not structurally bound within the
CNT or FAI. Mujeres Libres sought to work with these bodies and with the
Libertarian Youth (FIJL). Although it received occasional subsidies, it
did not receive parity of recognition as an equal with the CNT, FAI and
FIJL. Nevertheless Mujeres Libres did have something that Russian women
lackedâan autonomous structure deciding priorities for itself. In this
respect, an anarchist humanism that recognised a diversity of forms of
oppression permitted diversity in organisation. Despite some opposition,
Mujeres Libres had some autonomy, and its own space.
Marx and many Marxists thought that communists had an advantage over
other socialists in that they could foresee the line of march of the
labour movement.[31] Experience showed that the challenge to both
genders to share childcare and family responsibilities would take many
years to develop and gain recognition. Many progressive thinkersâin all
tendencies of socialismâwould drag their feet before revising their
thinking.[32] Progress came with the autonomous organisation of women
and with men accepting that socialism without real gender equality was a
contradiction in terms.
For Lenin, hierarchical and managerial relations were natural to
industry: âunquestioning subordination to a single will is absolutely
necessary for the success of processes organised on the pattern of
large-scale machine industry. On the railways it is twice and three
times as necessary.â[33] For Lenin, as for Engels, authority was
natural. But consider for a moment a comment on the running of transport
in Catalonia after the July 1936 revolution in Spain, as described at
the grass-roots level by one witness:
âAgreement was therefore also permanent between engineers and workers.
No engineer could take an important decision without consulting the
local Comité, not only because he agreed that responsibility should be
shared, but also because often, where practical problems are involved,
manual workers have the experience which technicians lack. This was
understood by both parties and thereafter, very often when the Comité of
the syndicate or a delegate thought up an interesting idea, the
specialist engineer would be called in for consultations; on other
occasions it was the engineer who proposed the examination of a new idea
and in that case manual workers were called in. There was complete
collaboration.â[34]
This might suggest that the experience of unqualified workers had a
value, and that those with better technical education benefited from
that experience. There was a dialogue between those with practical and
technical expertise: authority was shared between both, and was not the
absolute prerogative of either. In a similar situation Lenin had argued
for a reliance on experts: âWe have bourgeois experts and nothing
else.â[35]
In the decade before the First World War, working people expressed a
pride in their production when they attached union labels to products;
conversely they developed a capacity to sabotage production in order to
impose themselves when under attack. Before the revolution Russian trade
unions had little capacity to organise; but in parts of Western Europe
working people did challenge managerial authority. Such challenges
helped promote an understanding that authority might be a social
construct, reflecting social norms and experience; indeed it might
reflect wider factors, not just in the workplace but also in the field
of education and in family life.
In the economic sphere, Leninâs thinking in 1917 and 1918 focused on
this agenda:
âAccounting and controlâthat is the main thing required for âarrangingâ
the smooth working, the correct functioning of the first phase of
communist society. All citizens are transformed here into hired
employees of the state, which consists of the armed workers. All
citizens become employees and workers of a single nationwide state
âsyndicate.â All that is required is that they should work equally, do
their proper share of work, and get equally paid.â[36]
Earlier he wrote:
âWhen we say: âworkersâ control,â always juxtaposing this slogan to
dictatorship of the proletariat, always putting it immediately after the
latter, we thereby explain what kind of state we mean. The state is the
organ of class domination. [...]If it is of the proletariat, if we are
speaking of a proletarian state, that is, of the proletarian
dictatorship, then workersâ control can become the country-wide,
all-embracing, omnipresent, most precise and most conscientious
accounting of the production and distribution of goods.
âBy a single decree of the proletarian government these employees can
and must be transferred to the status of state employees, in the same
way as the watchdogs of capitalism like Briand and other bourgeois
ministers, by a single decree, transfer railwaymen on strike to the
status of state employees.â[37]
âAccounting and controlâ was, in these times, and in his view, the next
step in a process of socialist transformation. Businesses and workplaces
were to open their books and workers were to check what was going on.
Strict records were to be kept of stocks and assets. But this accounting
and control was conceived of as a check on managerial power and not as a
reversal of the power of management. Management in a particular
workplace was not accountable to workers. Even this very limited agenda
would be subordinated to the political revolution. Later, in 1920, Lenin
would argue that: âDemocracy is a category proper only to the political
sphere.â[38] Lenin says rail workers should by decree be made state
employees. It did not occur to Lenin to ask whether railway workersâor
other workersâwanted to be state employees.
Earlier Leninâs views on workersâ control were quoted from State and
Revolution. Lenin set out that âThe state is the organ of class
domination.â The un-stated corollary of this was that class
dominationâof managers over workers in industryâwas compatible with a
form of transition to socialism so long as the state was proletarian.
Where workers attempted to take over management and began to set up
factory committee networks as a forum for industrial planning
responsible directly to their constituencies, they came into conflict
with this statist and managerialist conception. As we have noted above,
Lenin advocated a mixed post-revolutionary society, one where a new
polity regulated management but left private ownership of large industry
in being, subject to âworkersâ controlâ but not swept away by
self-management. This policy held sway in 1917 and in the spring of
1918. It was faced with challenges wherever management fled and wherever
ambitious workersâout of necessityâbegan to take on managerial
responsibilities, for example when workers began to seek out supplies to
keep their enterprises going.[39] In August 1918 a conference of
anarcho-syndicalists condemned the downgrading of the influence of
factory committees and saw state-capitalism as a âbureaucratic Behemothâ
using capitalist managerial practices.[40] The prevailing conception of
âsocialistâ planning was often hostile and/or disparaging towards
grassroots individual initiative, and to small scale artisan production
and looked instead to state initiatives on the scale of the factory. The
state, however badly it managed the economy, was supposedly socialist,
because it could plan things rationally and adopt efficient scientific
managerial norms. The Russian Marxism that emerged in symbiosis with the
state embraced managerial power and rejected conceptions of workersâ
management.
âIron disciplineâ had become the key slogan spread by Lenin and the
Bolshevik Party from the spring of 1918 onwards, designed to consolidate
and stabilise the new state.[41] The ranks of officialdom swelled. The
earlier emphasis on equalityâof pay and conditionsâwas abandoned.[42]
This compromiseâand it was regretted by some Bolsheviksâaffected the
distribution of income and rations, but it only reinforced the powers of
management that had always been a constituent part of Leninâs thinking.
After October a new system was burdened with the growth of an
unproductive, swollen and unpopular state apparatus. Party members
received jobs in this state apparatus, privileged rations, and other
perks unavailable to most working people. It was âjobs for the boysâ to
use popular parlance. Many workers received administrative jobs and
became managers: they were co-opted into the new system. âmost of the
partyâs members were managers and administrators. Whereas in 1917,
Communists actively participated in the assault on such personnel, by
1921 they were often the enforcers of unpopular policies... â[43] By
1920 there were some 150,000 officials in Moscow, and the city had more
bureaucrats than workers; St. Petersburg had over 170,000
âemployees.â[44] The 8^(th) Party Congress recognised that many
officials were divorced from the masses.[45]
The profile of the economy had changed greatly in the summer of 1918,
when events impelled the new state, somewhat reluctantly, to accept the
nationalisation of swathes of the economy. If Leninâs prognosis about
rungs on ladders had been correct, socialism should have been created in
industry and in urban areas as all of Russiaâs industrial economy came
under state control. In the cities everyone was to become a state
employee. Butâas syndicalists had fearedâthe nationalisation of
ownership in the workplace created not socialism, but a society ruled by
managers. Piece-work and Taylorist labour relations were promoted as
means to increase labour productivity. The status and authority of
management in nationalised industry facilitated the reproduction of
unequal relations empowering managers and disempowering workers,
rewarding some more than others.
Some Bolsheviks did not take advantage of their authority, working on
the principle of share and share alike, but most took advantage of a
situation in which there were few checks on the powers of the manager or
commissar. The rationing system embodied aspects of privilege, with
managers and commissars getting better and more reliable rationed
supplies than common folk. In addition, perks were widespread:
commissars were recognised by having leather coats, for example.
Conversely, those who fell foul of the state were liable to be
re-classified and to receive poorer rations. One of the demands of those
who rebelled in Kronstadt in 1921 was the ending of this system of
privilege. Such feelings were not confined to these rebels. A Moscow
conference of metal workers meeting in February 1921 called for the
abolition of privileged rations, for greater wage equality, for workers
to have a right to transfer to other jobs, for free and democratic
elections and for factory committees to have rights for their workersâ
meeting to determine who should be appointed to factory committee.[46]
Unequal rewards and the reversal of the egalitarian ethos of the 1917
revolution were widely resented. Ante Ciliga observed conditions in
Moscow in 1928 and commented that by then âpiece-work had been driven up
to an output unknown in Western Europe... the Russian workman was so
backward, so docile, so incapable of action that this discontentment
remained sterile.â[47]
Lenin was half-aware of the limitations of the revolution. By December
1921, worried about the failings of the economy, he declared at the
Ninth Congress of Soviets:
.â.. in the economic field we did very badly. We have to admit this and
do better. âStop wagging your tongueâ is what I will say to any trade
union worker who puts the general question of whether the trade unions
should take part in production. It would be better to give me a
practical reply to the question and tell me (if you hold a responsible
position, are a man in authority, a Communist Party or a trade union
worker) where you have organised production well, how many years it took
you to do it, how many people you have under youâa thousand or ten
thousand.â[48]
Lenin understood the reality of Party and union officials having
authority but the reality that these new relations of power were
oppressive escaped him. In Leninâs thinking, the power of the manager
was acceptable because the manager was in turn subordinated to a new
state, a state in which working people supposedly had power. At the
9^(th) Party Congress, in 1920, he argued: âThe prime thing is the
question of property. As soon as the question of property was settled
practically, the domination of the class was assured.â[49] Lenin drew on
Engels who wrote: âThe proletariat seizes the state power and to begin
with transforms the means of production into state property. But it thus
puts an end to itself as the proletariat, it thus puts an end to all
class differences and class antagonisms, and thus also to the state as
the state.â[50] Trotsky argued in similar terms: âThe dictatorship of
the proletariat is expressed in the abolition of private property in the
means of production, in the supremacy over the whole Soviet mechanism of
the collective will of the workers, and not at all in the form in which
individual economic enterprises are administered.â[51] In 1935 he
stressed: âIn so far as the Soviet bureaucracy is forced in its own
interests to preserve the frontiers and institutions of the Russian
Soviet republic against foes without and within, and to give heed to the
development of the nationalized productive forces, this bureaucracy is
still fulfilling a progressive historic task, and has the right to the
support of the workers of the world.â[52]
In such arguments, socialism is equated with state property and
nationalised productive forces are deemed to be progressive. However,
the nationalisation of property did not by itself determine a
progressive transformation of class and gender relations. The
proletariat was still constituted and reconstituted in everyday life in
work and society; class and gender antagonisms continued and were
reproduced as âSovietâ society empowered new layers of managers and
subordinated workers and women.
One way of adapting to new thinking is to add demands to a shopping
list. Such lists of demandsâthose of the past and those of the
presentâmay include demands for aspects of social revolution: demands
for workersâ management or workersâ control, equal wages and conditions,
changes in gender relations, etc. Some of these were also set out in the
agenda of the Bolshevik Party.[53] But priorities matter. Leninâs
priority was a âpoliticalâ revolution dominated by his party, with
questions of change in the fields of social relationsâin respect of
gender and managementâhaving little current interest or priority. If,
within such a matrix of priorities, new state structures are formed, it
does not follow that such formations will facilitate the economic and
social structures that socialists want. A government influenced by
âcommunistâ parties may be in office, but âcommunistsâ will not be in
power. Rather the pressures and attractions exerted by unchanged social
relations may jell with persons having a measure of managerial and
executive power obstructing social liberation.
Paul Blackledge defends the construction of workersâ states and notes:
âThe rational kernel of the anarchist caricature of Marxism is the fact
that the most powerful voices claiming to be Marxists in the 20^(th)
century were statists (of either the Stalinist or Maoist variety) who
presided over brutal systems that were far from anything we would
recognise as socialist.â[54] He defends a Leninist tradition: âThe
struggle for socialism from this perspective is not so much a struggle
against authority as it is a struggle to smash one undemocratic form of
authority and replace it with a democratic alternative.â[55] What then
is a democratic alternative, or a democratic form of authority?
Insofar as modern society involves expertise and specialisation, people
naturally accept that in particular fields they habitually depend on the
particular expertise of other people. Butâas Bakunin wroteâan acceptance
of expertise is not to be equated with coercive authority.
âI bow before the authority of special men because it is imposed on me
by my own reason. I am conscious of my own inability to grasp, in all
its detail, and positive development, any very large portion of human
knowledge. The greatest intelligence would not be equal to a
comprehension of the whole. Thence results, for science as well as for
industry, the necessity of the division and association of labour. I
receive and I giveâsuch is human life. Each directs and is directed in
his turn. Therefore there is no fixed and constant authority, but a
continual exchange of mutual, temporary, and, above all, voluntary
authority and subordination.â[56]
There is a difference between an authority which presupposes the right
of someâmanagers, commissars, scientists and academicsâto order others
about and an expertise which may be voluntarily recognisedâor rejected.
Leninâs conception assumed both authority and uniformity. Coercive iron
discipline was naturally âproletarian.â[57] We have quoted above his
view that democracy was something proper only to the political sphere
and not to economic life. Blackledge writes:
âWhereas capitalist states deploy military and ideological powers to
maintain capitalist social relations, workersâ states mobilise their
resources in the interests of suppressing the barriers to building a
society based around meeting human needs. Because workers do not exploit
any class below them, as these barriers are gradually overcome workersâ
states will tend to âwither away.ââ[58]
Lenin, as we have noted, saw authority as a natural, and his slogan of
âiron disciplineâ begged the question of who would discipline whom?
Coercive disciplining involved the construction and reproduction of
authorities obstructing the development of equitable social relations.
There are many instances of Lenin talking about cultural revolution, or
comradely relations amongst working people, but reality did not reflect
such talk. It is not easy to uncover in Bolshevik practice any model
practices showing how forces imposing discipline might be democratically
constrained or controlled. Centralised power and iron military fashion
discipline left little room for the development of self-management and
social solidarity. Libertarians and socialists documented the Bolshevik
stateâs use of coercion against working people and others.[59]
Blackledge writes: âAnarchists argue that, because they reject the goal
of winning state power, they have no need of the centralised political
structures of those that do.â[60] In his view anarchists deny the need
for concerted and collective action, and are trapped at the level of
civil society.[61] Some anarchists, such as Luigi Galleani, did condemn
organisation. This was not helpful. All socialists, insofar as they wish
to live in a society with complex systems of technology and production,
have to look to forms of organisation that best maximise freedom, but
differ as to what shape these may take. They may look to communities
(large and small, at work and in localities), to varied forms (neutral
or politicised unions, organisations or parties of this or that trend of
opinion or councils or factory committees) and to varied relationships
between such organisational shapes. Soviets were widely accepted by many
anarchists as a form of non-oppressive participatory polity. All sorts
of rebels who rejected Bolshevik domination demanded free Soviets. On
occasion, anarchists chose weaker or stronger forms of organisation
depending on tasks faced. Malatesta noted that certain delicate tasksâa
euphemism for preparations for armed struggleâcould not be discussed
openly. After July 1936 many anarcho-syndicalists exercised
self-discipline and accepted unity of command amongst their militias.
Many anarchists do accept non-coercive forms of co-ordination and do
look for national and international structures for matters that are best
tackled on a wider scale,[62] and that cannot be resolved on a local
scale. Anarchists describe the form of collaborative coordination that
they choose as federalism and counter-pose this to centralised Leninist
forms, which they view as Jacobin, bourgeois and managerial.[63]
Experience in Spain in the 1930s suggests that de-centralisation was no
panacea. In the run-up to 1936, Spanish anarchists and socialists
organised regional risings and an attempted revolution, but these went
off one by one, and were more easily defeated because they did not take
place all at once. There were dangers in decision making at a local or
regional level, where wider national factors were not weighed up. But
the Leninist contention that disrespects particular local preferences
and argues for one central or international leadership was no panacea
either; it obstructed discussion and the reconciliation of diversity.
This disrespect continues if Leninists continue to argue for a choice
between centralisation or chaos, rather than a range of choices.
Hierarchical relations of productionâbetween owners and the
dispossessed, between managers and the managed, between leaders and the
led, between the old and the youngâmay be reformulated where property
and capital is taken away from private capitalists, but may survive in
new forms. Sexist relations of productionâwhere women cook, clean and do
childcare and men do notâmay survive transformations defined primarily
by the expropriation of capital and of property rights. Insofar as
Leninists have embraced authority, centralism, and have prioritised
âpoliticsâ above social revolution, the political democracy that has
been prioritised has been seen as neglectful and failing to support the
development of socialist and feminist forces for participation and
sharing in social and economic life.
Leninâs practice in and after 1917 subordinated the social agenda to the
creation of a new state, and then pushed it out of sight. Blackledge
writes that Lenin had a ânominal position of powerâ and floundered
before unbeatable odds.[64] A quick look at the range of subjects
addressed by Lenin in messages to Bolshevik leaders will attest to the
huge range of his influence. It might be fair to say that in his last
years and with illness Lenin lost some capacity, but prior to this his
power was as substantial, wide ranging and largely unaccountable.
It is true that circumstances were incredibly difficult. No strategy
would have been easy to implement. But the fact remains that Bolsheviks
did not value critics, but sought to crush them.[65] Within the Russian
Party and at Leninâs behest opposition factions were banned. Bolshevism
allowed no space for doubts and made a virtue out of necessity.
Bolsheviks sought to export their thinking and mould others in their
image. In much of Western Europe, it was taken as axiomatic that they
had been successful and their model should be followed. The Third
International did not accept a pluralist model; from its early
congresses it set out to promote its scientific socialism, and ideology,
as a world-wide model. Insofar as Bolshevism prioritised the
construction of a new state, it is useful to consider what forces were
working within this new structure.
What were the features of the new state constructed, or reconstructed,
by the Bolsheviks? Consider this decree from the Soviet of Peopleâs
Commissars of 7 January 1918:
1. Soviets of Workmenâs, Soldiers,â and Peasantsâ Deputies, being local
organs, are quite independent in regard to questions of a local
character, but always act in accord with the decrees of the central
Soviet Government as well as of the larger bodies (district, provincial,
and regional Soviets) of which they form a part.
2. Upon the Soviets, as organs of government, devolve the tasks of
administration and service in all departments of local
life-administrative, economic, financial, and educational.
3. Under administration, the Soviets carry out all decrees and decisions
of the central Government, take measures for giving the people the
widest information about those decisions, issue obligatory ordinances,
make requisitions and confiscations, impose fines, suppress
counter-revolutionary organs of the press, make arrests, and dissolve
public organizations which incite active opposition or the overthrow of
the Soviet Government.
NOTE. The Soviets render a report to the central Soviet Government
regarding all measures undertaken by them and important local events.
4. The Soviets elect from their number an executive organ which is
charged with the duty of carrying out their decisions and the
performance of the current work of administration.[66]
The Central Soviet Government did not recognise any commitment to
consult with local Soviets or with the working people within these
bodies. Reading these lines, and between these lines, one can see a
pattern of power distribution with reports flowing upwards, orders
flowing downwards. Russiaâs new central state wanted to encourage the
creation of executive committees in localities, so that it could hold
specific people responsible for carrying out its orders. Local Soviets
were ceasing to be participatory bodies and were becoming mere executive
committees, now subordinated to central government. The local state was
more a cog in a centralised and bureaucratic nexus of power, rather than
a forum for working menâstill less for womenâto make decisions on their
own initiative, in co-operation with others. If non-conformists won
control of Soviets they were replaced. There was a change of name as
Ministries became Commissariats, but not a change of organisational
practice.
Charles Post, like many latter-day-Leninists, seeks to draw a line
around the year 1923.[67] After that date brutal features are to be
condemned, and Stalin can safely be blamed for the degeneration of the
revolution, whilst the errors of Lenin and Trotsky can be overlooked.
Such a view distorts reality and excuses the authoritarian dynamics of
the post-October polity, not to mention the brutality and venality that
existed already, before 1923.
The concept of party organisation is susceptible of various
interpretations amongst those who aspire to a radical and socialist
refashioning of society. The organisational ethos on the German
Social-Democratic Party has been characterised as: zombie like obedience
typical of centralism... [and]... The secure appointment, the heightened
social position, the punctually paid salary, the well heated office, the
quickly learnt routine in the carrying out of formal administrative
business, engender a mentality which makes the labour official in no way
distinguishable from the petty post, tax, community or state official as
much in his post as in his domestic milieu. The official is for correct
management of business, painstaking orderliness, smooth discharge of
obligations; he hates disturbances, friction, conflicts. Nothing is so
repugnant to him as chaos, therefore he opposes any sort of disorder; he
combats the initiative and independence of the masses; he fears the
revolution.[68]
A libertarian or anarchist partyâin the tradition defined by
Malatestaâmay be characterised by a measured diversity and a tolerance
of some varied tactics, so long as tactics used are not at variance and
in conflict with strategies of the organisation. In this view the
âpartyâ has particular characteristics: it seeks to be provocative
rather than directing:
.â.. I think that what is essential is not the triumph of our plans, our
projects, our utopias, which moreover need to be confirmed in practice
and which in practice may need modification, development and adaptation
to real material and moral conditions of time and place. What matters
most, is that people, that all, lose the instincts and habits of being
sheep acquired through the millennia of slavery, to learn to think and
act freely.â[69]
Any anarchist organisation seeking to promote its agenda against other
agendas is partisan. What may distinguish libertarian and Bolshevik
organisational models is the ambition of each. Libertarians will be
concerned with decentralising and socialising of power and leadership
more than winning power for itself; they have preconceptions but seek to
test these ideas, and to develop new insights through experience.
Libertariansâat least those who value Malatestaâs contribution to
anarchismâmight recognise that leadership exists, and that the problem
of leadership lies in the nature of relations between leaders and the
led. In the late 1920s, Malatesta commented as follows in a debate as to
whether an anarchist party could direct struggles:
âIt is possible to direct through advice and example, leaving the
peopleâprovided with the opportunities and means of supplying their own
needs themselvesâto adopt our methods and solutions if these are, or
seem to be, better than those suggested and carried out by others. But
it is also possible to direct by taking over command that is by becoming
a government and imposing oneâs own ideas and interests through police
methods.â[70] [...]
âIt is in fact a question of education for freedom, of making people who
are accustomed to obedience and passivity consciously aware of their
real power and capabilities. One must encourage people to do things for
themselves, or to think they are doing so by their own initiative and
inspiration even when in fact their actions have been suggested by
others, just as the good school teacher when he sets a problem that
students cannot solve immediately, helps the pupil in such a way that
the student imagines that they have found the solution unaided, thus
acquiring courage and confidence in their own abilities. This is what we
should do in our propaganda. If our critic has ever made propaganda
among those who we, with too much disdain, call politically
âunconscious,â it will have occurred to him to find himself making an
effort not to appear to be expounding and forcing on them a well-known
and universally accepted truth; they will have tried to stimulate
thought to get them to arrive with their own reason at conclusions which
they could have served up ready-made, much more easily so far as he was
concerned, but with less profit for the âbeginnerâ in politics. And if
one ever found oneself in a position of having to act as leader or
teacher in some action or in propaganda, when others were passive one
would have tried to avoid making the situation obvious, so as to
stimulate them to think, to take the initiative and gain confidence in
themselves.â[71] <quote> In this view leadership is constituted by the
repudiation of authority. The leader is someone in dialogue who seeks to
promote consciousness and solidarity. A leader may have some useful
ideas, but such utility is defined through timely dialogue and not by
her or his assertion that they have some superiority of consciousness.
Restraints can fall away in hot times: âIt was amazing, everybody turned
into a parrot, everyone wanted to say what he or she thought and felt.
They obviously felt themselves in charge now and with the right to speak
for themselves...â[72]
Such a view contrasts with the style of Marxists who wrote that their
party:
â... leads the workers in all the manifestations of its class struggle,
reveals to it the irreconcilable conflict of the interests between
themselves and the exploiters and explains to the proletariat the
historical importance and the necessary conditions of the imminent
social revolution. At the same time the party reveals to other sections
of the toiling and exploited masses the hopelessness of their condition
in capitalist society, and shows them that the social revolution is
indispensable...â[73]
Such perspectives have been criticised for disrespecting the capacity of
working people and for asserting that the party knows best, and
possesses thought.[74]
In a revolutionary situation, in April 1920, having in view the need to
encourage working people to act and not to wait on initiatives from
party and union leaders Malatesta argued: âThe necessity of the hour is
insurrection, armed insurrection.â He called for discipline, not the
discipline of sheep, a blind dedication to leaders, but revolutionary
discipline, in accordance with accepted ideas, and with commitments
made, a sense of sharing between comrades in struggle. To win, the
movement needed to spread throughout Italy. Arms were needed. Services
needed to be cut off if they served the state but maintained if they
served the people. âWe need to agree on what we must do, and when
particular circumstances come about, we must act at once without waiting
for orders from anyone, and disregarding orders which are contrary to
the action agreed.â[75]
Malatesta also called on his own particular organisationâthe Italian
Anarchist Unionâto carry out certain delicate military preparations.
Certain forms of organisation were more appropriate for particular
tasks. The idea that varied forms of organisation were appropriate for
distinct tasks would also develop in the feminist movement.[76]
It is sometimes noted that although present, the party concept is given
little emphasis in Leninâs The State and Revolution.[77] Whatsoever the
form may be of a new transformed polity, socialists may perhaps assume
that people will come together and organise in disparate and conflicting
organisations and parties (or fragments) to explore and promote
particular ideas for social change. The French syndicalists Emile Pataud
and Emile Pouget had quite another perspective in a book that set out
their vision: How we shall bring about the Revolution.[78] Pataud and
Pouget looked to a future where parties voluntarily effaced themselves.
This prognosis has, so far, never become reality. If parties continue to
exist in a new society, how should they relate to each other, and how
should party members relate to non-party people? Socialists who accept
pluralism may value organs of mass participatory democracyâwhatever they
may beâbecause they facilitate negotiation and accommodation between
currents of opinion and their organisations and parties. Rudolf Rocker
set out this conclusion to his survey of Bolshevism: âFor all power to
councils, and for nothing above councils! This is our slogan which will
also become the slogan of the revolution.â[79]
One can find writings by Lenin that support initiative. However, these
were not incorporated into the Bolshevik tradition of âPartyâ set out
between 1919 and 1921, and set out as a model for the Third
International. Bolsheviks regularly lambasted opponents with dishonest
and or sexist epithets. Such discourse often opposed a ridiculous
optionâsuch and such a course causes chaosâto other propositions that
appear more sensible and reasonable. Of course it did not follow that
the particular changes advocated were the only ones, or best ones that
should be adopted now as the alternative to a particular problem.
(Contemporary politicians use a similar discourse, for example: the
British National Health Service is not well, so we must make these
pro-business changes.) Such discourse was and is a facet of bourgeois
management, where managers seek to foreclose some options and to curtail
space for alternatives and oppositions. When one reads Lenin one must
always âmind the gap,â the gap between some option that he may condemn,
and the assumption that there was only one other choice, the one that he
favoured. For example, in May 1920 Lenin wrote this of those wishing to
have a holiday on 1 May:
âonly malicious enemies of the working people, only malicious supporters
of the bourgeoisie, can treat the May 1^(st) subbotnik with disdain;[80]
only the most contemptible people, who have irrevocably sold themselves
to capitalists, can condemn the utilisation of the great First of May
festival for a mass-scale attempt to introduce communist labour.â[81]
Mensheviks were the particular target of this scorn. In calling them
contemptible and sold out to capitalism, Lenin was using prejudicial
either/or logic. In his view those who wanted a May Day holiday, were to
be cursed; a challenge to party policy, and party supremacy was
damnable. He was using an amalgam of the sort that would subsequently
often be used by the Stalinists. His vituperative discourse worked to
support a brutal confrontational polity, where democratic sentiment had
little place. Thus in a speech in June 1920 he argued:
âThe proletarian dictatorship should display itself primarily in the
advanced, the most class-conscious and most disciplined of the urban and
industrial workers- the greatest sufferers from hunger who have made
great sacrifices during these two years- educating, training and
disciplining all the other proletarians, who are often not
class-conscious, and all working people and the peasantry. All
sentimentality, all claptrap about democracy must be scrapped.â[82]
This conflated the party with those conscious industrial workersâor at
least those who did continue to support the Bolsheviksâas the master of
working people in general. Party dominance over Soviets was decreed in
party norms: âThe party must ensure that its decisions are implemented
through Soviet organs... â âEvery question which is to be decided by
that non-party organization in which the faction works must be discussed
beforehand... â all members should subsequently vote together in line
with decisions of the faction.[83]
In the debate on the role of the party, at the Second Congress of the
Third International, in August 1920, Zinoviev defined the CP as follows:
âThe Communist Party is created by the method of the natural selection
of the best, the most class-conscious, the most self-sacrificing, and
the most far-sighted workers. The Communist Party has no interests that
differ from the interests of the whole working class.â[84] The party had
always been predominantly male, it took on a new form with many members
being managers and commissars in the state, army, security services,
unions, or in industry. âNatureâ had its roots in current social,
gender, and class relations.
After the middle of 1918, much of the support that the Bolsheviks had
had ebbed away. One might extrapolate that notwithstanding the fact that
for one moment a tendency had support or was offering a positive lead,
yet, this capacity was not to be assumed at a later moment or facing up
to other circumstances. For a moment and for a time a party might be
useful, but this utility might well be temporary and fragmentary. A
âfragmentâ would never have all the answers, and could not offer a
useful lead in all circumstances. Other âfragmentsâ might have some
capacity to lead in other contexts. Malatesta believed that
organisations do not last forever:
.â..the life and permanence of an organisation depends on how successful
it has been in the long struggle we must wage, and it is natural that
any institution instinctively seeks to last indefinitely. But the
duration of a libertarian organisation must be the consequence of the
spiritual affinity of its members and of the adaptability of its
constitution to the continual changes of circumstances. When it is no
longer able to accomplish a useful task it is better that it should
die.â[85]
Charles Post writes that Leninism has an ongoing valueâand âthat
Leninism cannot be reduced to the post-1923 caricature of âdemocratic
centralism.ââ[86] Paul Blackledge writes of the dictatorship of the
proletariat as âreal democratic control by the working class.â[87] Was
there some reasonable democratic centralism? This is how the Bolsheviks
set out their objectives:
âThe Communist Party has undertaken to win definitive influence and
unquestioned leadership in all organisations of working people, in the
unions, co-operatives, village communes, etc. The Communist Party
strives especially to carry out its program and to exercise unlimited
leadership in the present governmental organisations the soviets... By
practical daily dedicated work in the soviets and by filling all soviet
positions with its best and most loyal members, the Russian Communist
Party must win undivided political rule in the soviets and practical
control over all is activities.â[88]
These norms assumed that: âOutright military discipline is needed in the
party in the present epoch.â[89] This conclusion was also taken as being
axiomatic for the Third International as a whole. At the 9^(th)
Communist Party Conference on 24 September, 1920 it was argued that:
âThe chief conclusion of the proletarian revolution is the need for an
iron, organised and monolithic party.â Zinoviev, leader of the Third
International set out the creation of party based âiron disciplineâ as
the chief teaching of Bolshevism for the wider world;[90] and Lenin
wrote: âWhoever brings about even the slightest weakening of the iron
discipline of the party of the proletariat (especially during its
dictatorship), is actually aiding the bourgeoisie against the
proletariat.â[91] Trotsky offered nothing to those who challenged
Bolshevik party megalomania.[92] It was he who set out the view that the
Party was always right at its 13^(th) congress in May 1924:
âNone of us desires or is able to dispute the will of the Party.
Clearly, the Party is always right... We can only be right with and by
the Party, for history has provided no other way of being in the
right.â[93]
History had created an alternative to this model, with soviets providing
a means of negotiating differences between different sections or working
people but the Bolsheviks had resolved on unquestioned, unlimited, and
undivided mastery. Organs of mass participation had been gutted or
destroyed wherever they challenged Bolshevik dominance. Soviets,
factory, and housing committees and assemblies had become empty shells.
The party intimidated opposing left organisations. What was created in
Leninâs years of power did not evolve passively, just as a function of
harsh events and circumstances, as apologists maintain, but was shaped
by party resolutions and choices. Management was empowered through the
slogan of âiron disciplineâ and was not held in check. Democratically
elected Soviet delegates could not prevent the abuse of power.
Rather, managers and commissars managed the electoral process to obtain
desired results. At this time the potential of Soviet or mass democracy
was sidelined and forgotten, and a partyist conception was promoted
throughout the Third International.
Some anarchists also may be afflicted by a macho mania that they alone
have all the answers, but this is a mania seen more often and more
rabidly amongst Leninists who see themselves as the natural leadership
of the class, a natural vanguard, with a uniquely elevated level of
consciousness. This mania was first advanced by Marx and Engels in the
Communist Manifesto where they set out that communists could see further
than the rest.[94] Bakunin recognised some genius in the political
economy of Marx, but he never conceded that this genius endowed Marx and
his friends with any particular rights to govern and shape the labour
movement. In their discourse of leading the working class, Leninist
leaders spoke for themselves, for layers of a coordinator class, or
perhaps for fragments of working people but not for a majority of
working people.[95]
Those seeing authority as a normal-relationship, rather than as a
problem-relationship, are also prone to reproduce hierarchy and
authority in their own organisations. In recent, times one can see
harder and softer forms of Leninism. Some left organisations or parties
have a largely democratic internal regime allowing tendencies the right
to organise internally and, to a degree, may prefigure a pluralist left
polity. Some âLeninistsâ have embraced socialist pluralism and one might
say they have ceased to be Leninist, as this term was understood by the
Third International before 1923. Paul Blackledge writes:
âNevertheless, because the working class is fragmented and workersâ
struggles tend to be sectional, the idea that workersâ councils
represent a more democratic form of political organisation must be won
inside the workersâ movement against those who deny it. This implies the
need for some form of political organisation whose aim is to win the
majority over to socialism. Such an organisation cannot prefigure
socialism because by its victory it begins to create the conditions for
its own dissolution.â[96]
In this last sentence socialism is predicated on the single party and
its victory. Criticisms of the internal workings of the particular party
embraced by this writer are in the public domain.[97] These suggest that
the vituperative discourse that Lenin used routinely against internal
and external oppositions lives on into present times. If such
viciousness prevails within the party, it is hardly likely to be kept
out of party activities with non-party people. If such discourse is
allowed, a partyâs capacity to prefigure or promote socialism must be
limited.
There is perhaps little likelihood that any one party or organisation
will predominate in a new socialist society. It seems more reasonable to
assume that for socialism to develop democratically (and without
democracy socialism is inconceivable) various formsâparties and other
bodiesâmight come together in councils to resolve differences. If so,
socialism would be predicated on conviviality, rather than on the
victory of the singular party. In this view socialists might look to
other models of party and might repudiate the macho, militarist and
scientific-socialist brutality that is a constituent part of Leninâs
Leninism.
Socialists may perhaps prefer to look to a future in which organs of
mass democracy make decisions, respecting the rights of others to
organise. They may prefer to obstruct any monopolistic ownership of
power, either for themselves, or for any other single party or
organisation, and may prefer to promote the sharing of expertise and the
destruction of authority. Conversely, expertise might be recognised, and
where it is agreed that that expertise is being applied for the benefit
of all, experts might be appreciated and esteemed.
Particular circumstances influenced the development of the German labour
movement. The state legislated that national union federations should
not discuss political questions. Leaders of the free trade unions,
allies of the Social Democratic Party, chose to work largely within
these parameters, leaving political questions to the party. They took
these norms and sought to make them common within the trade union
international that they led in the years running up to the outbreak of
the First World War. Politics was divorced from economicsâby order of
the Bismarkian state. A small dissident tendency which preferred local
organisation, in which political discussion was allowed did resist this
legislation, eventually these former socialists developed a syndicalist
identity.
Errico Malatesta set out an anarchist-communist perspective on the value
and limitations of unions. At the Anarchist International congress held
in Amsterdam in 1907, he drew a distinction between the labour movement
on the one hand and syndicalism on the other. The movement was a fact,
but syndicalism was not; the doctrine of syndicalism being sufficient in
itself was mistaken. Malatesta spoke of potential conflict within the
working class and viewed all unions or syndicates, as potentially
conservative. Whilst he supported activity in the workersâ movement he
argued that, in general, those who worked as union officials were lost
to the movement because they came to be indebted to the unions that paid
them rather than to the wider movement. If they followed their
conscience, they could lose their union job; if they followed their
self-interest to preserve their job in the union, they lost their
politics. As with parliamentary socialism, unionism led to corruption.
âIn the workersâ[union] movement, the official is a danger, one that can
only be compared with parliamentarianism: both lead to corruption and
from corruption to death there isnât far to go.â[98] In periods of
relative calm, and later, when fascism was advancing Malatesta preferred
broad and politically neutral unions. He doubted that new members would
have the agenda of older members and thought that union politics would
mostly exist only on paper. In 1920, in the midst of revolutionary
upheavals in Italy, Malatesta was more positive about the utility of
working in unions: <quote> âIt will therefore be necessary at all costs
to win the confidence of the masses, and be in a position to âpushâ them
when they are in the mood for action, and for this it seemed useful to
secure executive posts in the workersâ organisations. All the dangers of
reformism, corruption were pushed into the background, and in any case
it was assumed that there wouldnât be time for them to take effect.â[99]
Beyond Germany other patterns of union organisation developed in the run
up to 1914. Radical workers in hundreds of thousands chose to reject the
routine quietness of social-democratic union centres and parties. The
French General Workersâ Confederation (CGT) defined itself by a
rejection of political schools and by a preference for direct action as
opposed to parliamentary politics. In Italy, Spain, and Portugal, mass
radical syndicalist unions came together in opposition to
social-democratic labour organisations, sometimes drawing in
dissatisfied ex-party members. The Italian General Labour Confederation
(CGL), close to the Socialist Party, harboured a variety of conservative
and left tendencies. When an Italian Syndicalist Union (USI) came
together in 1912 many CGL members chose to break away to join them.
Syndicalists and anarchists had considerable influence among railway
workers but the rail union preserved its autonomous status, outside the
USI and CGL. In Spain, the syndicalists in the CNT organised a new union
confederation in 1910â11 larger than the union centre allied with the
Second International. Smaller bodies developed in other parts of Europe.
These organisations, and a large part of the French CGT,[100] organised
opposition to pre-war colonial interventions, and for the most part
resolutely opposed mobilisation and war.[101] In the run up to 1914, the
CGT had made use of links in the trade union international that ran side
by side with the Second International to attempt to have that body
resolve to launch strikes and struggles to prevent war breaking out. The
German free trade unions obstructed any such resolution and at times
even prevented these matters from being raised at international trade
union meetings.[102]
Many âsyndicalistsâ[103] were working to form a broad anti-war and
revolutionary network before 1914, providing an alternative to the
parliamentary socialists and combating the nationalism that prevailed in
and around the Second International. Moreover, the disquiet roused by
the practices of the Second International was not confined to
syndicalistsâ organisations. There were dissidents even in Germany
expressing alarm at compromised, quietist politics. Sometimes, where
they roused the ire of union officials, they were expelled, and went on
to join a small localist/syndicalist union centre. Others, Anton
Pannekoek as well as Rosa Luxemburg, were challenging the leadership of
the German Social Democratic Partyâboth the right (Ebert) and the centre
(Kautsky).
Charles Post makes three rather doubtful points in his article in
Socialist Register 2013. He writes (1): âThe First World War ended the
unstable social-democratic alliance between reformist union and party
officials and militant rank-and-file workersâ[104] (2) that âradical
trade unionists constituted the mass audience for the ârevolutionary
left wing of social democracyâLuxemburg, Lenin, Trotsky, Gramsci, and
before 1914, Kautsky.â[105] (3) That mass communist parties formed in
1920â21 and ârejected the politics of left communism,â embracing a
strategy of common action with social democratic workers.[106]
Regarding the first point, we have noted above that rifts were
developing within and against social democracy before 1914. In Italy and
Spain, syndicalists organised mass organisations against the passivity
and reformism of the Second International before the outbreak of the
First World War. These and others came together in a Syndicalist
International and rejected both Second and Third International parties.
Regarding the second point, while there were some commonalities between
them, Luxemburg, Lenin, Trotsky, Gramsci and Kautsky did not stand
together in these times.[107] Luxemburg criticised the party form as
espoused by Lenin before 1917, and thereafter was critical of Leninâs
undemocratic Russia.[108] She was a critic of Kautsky before 1914,
criticising his alliance with the right wing of German social-democracy.
Gramsci only began to draw on a Leninist party concept from 1920; before
that time his viewpoint reflected experiences within the mass democracy
that emerged in factory committees in Turin in 1918â9, and his
inspiration came from De Leon, and the IWW as much as by early Leninist
texts.[109] Only after 1925 did he replace Bordiga as leader of the
Italian communist party.
Commonalitiesâopposition to war and support for revolution in Russiaâdid
help build bridges amongst all left tendencies, but conflicting
perspectives divided these tendencies both before and after the
watershed of war and revolution. Revolutionaries were not a homogenous
lot. They were not confined to followers of Lenin and Trotsky, (or the
late Rosa Luxemburg); there were many revolutionariesâLeft Communists,
Industrial Unionists, and syndicalistsâwho rejected the social democracy
and the Third International.
The third point on communistsâ common action with social democrats is
also dubious. On at least two key occasions, pro-Moscow orthodox
communists adopted sectarian politics, whilst others embraced a timely
policy of united action with social democrats. When the Kapp putsch
threatened, syndicalists were among the first to call for a general
strike, whilst the German CP rejected this policy. In Italy it was also
syndicalists who helped build Arditi del popolo to fight fascist squads,
whilst the CP refused to work together with syndicalists, anarchists,
and socialists. At these times parts of the radical left worked for a
united class campaign against fascism whilst the official CPs embraced
sectarianism.
Earlier, in 1918â9, in the matter of trade union organisation in
Germany, there was common cause between those who would become orthodox
communists and those left communists, syndicalists, and Industrial
Unionists who by 1920 would be entirely outside the bounds of
Moscow-defined-orthodoxy. There was a modicum of consensus against
Social-Democrats and their trade union allies. The foundation conference
of the German Communist Party agreed that given the abysmal war record
of the trade unions it was appropriate to leave them and to build new
Industrial Unions.[110] Two networks developed: one looked more to the
IWW as model,[111] and another looked more to unions with localist
roots,[112] promoting the concept of a Social General Strike.[113]
Luxemburg chose to challenge the Social Democrats and their unions from
the outside, a strategy of trying to win them (and others) over to
radical and participatory politics. In 1920â21 these new unions sought
to promote active worksâ councils with open agendas as opposed to worksâ
councils with an agenda regulated by the state. Elections were held for
council representatives. In these elections, the left beyond the
official CPâin the KAPD, FAUD, and AAUD[114] often obtained respectable
support as compared with the old trade unions. Given the small numbers
holding membership in such organisations,[115] they must have obtained
some support from members of older trade unions. So, even in these very
hard times, when hopes for change were failing, there were opportunities
for lefts to try to pull those who were affiliated to the right wing of
the labour movement towards an active and participatory politics rather
than mere electioneering. Left sectarianism was not precluded amongst
supporters of parties embraced by Moscow and being a critic of Moscowâs
line and adopting left communist and or syndicalist positions did not
imply left sectarianism.
Proposals for common action between different currents raise the key
question of what politics and ends are to be served, at that moment and
in the longer term. Charles Post writes: âthe enduring legacy of
Leninism remains the goal of constructing an independent organisation of
anti-capitalist organizers and activists who attempt to project a
political alternative to the forces of official reformism not only in
elections, but in mass extra-parliamentary social struggles.â[116] Much
of the radical and libertarian left looked on the new CP formed in the
1920s as bodies with compromised politics. The form of capitalism
prevailing in Russia before 1917 had been overthrown, but the new form
of society entrenched a bureaucratic, managerial, and commissar
collectivism. Its bywordââiron disciplineââreminds us that it
constructed an amalgam of socialist rhetoric and managerial power,
reconstructing a new society, but one not linked in to a chain of
socialist development. If the Third International was an anti-capitalist
project, its socialist credentials were dubious.
Be that as it may, what is being proposed here, in this Socialist
Register, is not just what may be considered as a misleading gloss on
the past but also something for the present, i.e. the (re)creation of
anti-capitalist organisations combining some form of parliamentary
politics with campaigns at large. Such a project would not appeal to
those anti-capitalists who do not choose to prioritise electoral
politics. Amongst those who might accept a broad anti-capitalist label,
there will be diverse priorities and perspectives. If anti-capitalists
of all persuasions do find it useful to collaborate, they might consider
another model. Malatesta described his preferences for the development
of a Third International as follows:
A true workersâ international should bring together all workers who are
conscious of their class interests, all workers suffering the yoke of
exploitation and wanting their liberation, all workers ready to fight
capitalism, each tendency using those methods which it judges most
appropriate. All, anarchists, socialists, syndicalists, could join in
such an International and no tendency would be forced to renounce its
own aims and means. All would find both a place for their propaganda and
at the same time a powerful lever to push the masses into a decisive
struggle.[117]
Perhaps this inclusive perspectiveâwhich might be extended to include
those who prioritise other vectors of struggle encompassing feminists
and anti-racistsâhas more to offer?
If the points suggested here are helpful in mapping the past, those who
find this viewpoint compelling may seek other models and not those
advanced by latter-day-Leninists. Of course, times change and contexts
vary. History teaches only that circumstances never repeat themselves in
quite the same way. If some axioms are provoked by these perspectives,
these will need to be tested and adapted to new circumstances.
Perhaps these thoughts suggest that socialists may look to a broad
social transformation; one that creates a new polity but does not
prioritise âpoliticsâ only. Rather than seeking to create a party where
the leaders know best, they will seek to promote organisations with a
more communal and convivial praxis. In current conditions they may
choose to promote organisations with some common understanding and
priorities, embodying participatory economics, and participatory
organisation.[118] For a socialist future they may seek to have debates
about future priorities decided not primarily within their own
organisations, but in bodies where there are democratic and
participatory norms; and they may look to the development of new forms,
where perhaps workplace and community organisation intertwine serving
all men and women.
Three key propositions may emerge from the arguments above on how
socialists might organise in current times and may perhaps have some
future relevance. Firstly, that a socialist vision of change demands
that coercive authority should be destroyed and power should be
socialised, shared, and diffused amongst working people of both sexes.
Secondly that transformations engendering socialism are âsocialâ and
âeconomicâ and not just âpolitical.â Thirdly that it is in organs of
mass democracy, and in coalitions, that diverse communities may choose
to create structures for a new society rather than only, or primarily,
in (fragmentary) political parties akin to those of the pre-war German
Social-Democrats or the Bolsheviks. Out of partial struggles there may
evolve prefigurative bodies shaping forms of mass participatory
counter-power to supersede capitalism, patriarchy, and the state. The
organisation or party that socialists may choose to promote socialism
may be one that prefigures the future in two ways at least: it will seek
to share skills and reject hierarchy and authority and it will
facilitate discussion between those who have different views outside its
ranks.
---
Email:
The author wishes to thank Jordan Kinder for careful, constructive
editing of the final draft of this article.
[1] Charles Post, âWhat is left of Leninism? New European left parties
in historical perspectiveâ in The Question of Strategy: Socialist
Register 2013, London: Merlin Press, 2012. (Hereinafter SR 2013)
[2] Paul Blackledge, âMarxism and Anarchismâ in International Socialism,
No. 125, pp 189â206, http://www.isj.org.uk/?id=616, (hereinafter IS
125); and Paul Blackledge, âAnarchism, Syndicalism and Strategy: A reply
to Lucien van der Waltâ in International Socialism, No. 131, pp 53â80,
http://www.isj.org.uk/index. php4?id=746&issue=131, (hereinafter IS
131).
[3] Errico Malatesta, Umanita Nova, #38 & #153; 11^(th) April, 1920,
25^(th) August, 1920; quoted and translated from Errico Malatesta,
Anarchistes, Socialistes et Communistes, Annency: Groupe 1er Mai, 1982,
pp 119; 141â2.
[4] For example, in Spain, the largest libertarian union is the CGT;
there are also two syndicalist networks: http://www.cgt.es;
http://www.solidaridadobrera.org; http://cnt.es. In Italy, there are a
range of base unions: e.g. http://www.unicobas.it;
http://www.sdlintercategoriale.it; http://www.cub.it;
http://www.usiait.it, and http://www.usi-ait.org. In France, there are
analogues of such bodies, but perhaps the largest alternative centre is
http://www.solidaires.org
[5] Such thinking is alive in such organisations as the Italian
Anarchist-Communist Federation (Federazione dei Comunisti Anarchici).
http://www.fdca.it; and perhaps also in Alternative Libertaire.
http://www.alternativelibertaire.org
[6] For a discussion of the Bolshevik party programme see âLooking Back:
An Afterword,â in Bukharin and Preobrazhensky, The ABC of Communism,
London, Merlin Press, 2007, pp 335ff, esp. 360â3.
[7] âThereâs a kind of a libertarian Lenin in 1917 with State and
Revolution and The April Theses, and so on.â Noam Chomsky interviewed by
Joe Allen and Phil Gasper, International Socialist Organization;
November 3, 1989; http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/19891103.htm,
(accessed 12.11. 2012)
[8] âThe Impending Catastrophe and How to Combat It,â September 1917, in
Collected Works, Vol. 25, Moscow: Progress Publishers, and London:
Lawrence and Wishart, 1964, pp 362â3. Most Lenin texts may be found on
http://www.marxists.org
[9] In Bukharin and Preobrazhensky, The ABC of Communism, London, Merlin
Press, 2007, p 19.
[10] Writing c. 1920â1, in Luigi Fabbri, Dictature et Revolution, Paris:
Monde Libertaire, 1986, pp 145â7; it should be noted that in these times
many more people lived in rural communities than do so now and
strategies needed to adjust to this reality.
[11] âState and Revolution,â September 1917. Collected Works, Vol. 25,
pp 431â2.
[12] In Ken Coates & Tony Topham, Workersâ Control, London: Panther,
1970, pp 10â14.
[13] The term warrening is used by E.P. Thompson, âThe Peculiarities of
the English,â in E.P. Thompson, The Poverty of Theory and Other Essays,
London, Merlin Press, 1978, pp 281.
[14] William Paul, The State: Its Origin and Function, Edinburgh:
Proletarian Publishing, 1974, pp 157â8, 196â200. [First published,
1917].
[15] E.g. âRailways to the Railwaymenâ headline in The Syndicalist, in
January 1912, [Facsimile reprint], Nottingham: Spokesman Books, 1975.
[16] Italian historian, 1923â1998.
[17] Pier Carlo Masini, âAnarchistes et communistes dans le mouvement
des Conseils a Turin, premier apres-guerre rouge 1919â1920â in
Autogestion et Socialisme, No. 26â7, March-June 1974; see also
http://kropot.free.fr/Masini-ConseilsTurin.htm
[18] These views may be contrasted with texts by Bordiga, who was to
become the leader of the Italian Communist Party, also available on the
internet. Interestingly, experience of state direction of industry in
the First World War had led German radicals to redefine âsocialism.â
Socialism involved conscious workersâ self-administration of their work.
Pannekoek concluded: âNationalization of enterprises is not socialism,
socialism is the force of the proletariat.â 27^(th) May 1917, Bremer
Burger-Zeitung, quoted in Serge Bricanier, Pannekoek and the Workersâ
Councils, St Louis (Mo.): Telos Press, 1978, p 143.
[19] Lenin, âLeft Wing Childishness and the Petty Bourgeois Mentality,â
May 1918, in Collected Works, Vol. 27, Moscow: Progress Publishers, and
London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1965, p 340; Lenin judged that the general
situation was unchanged three years later and this passage was reprinted
in Leninâs pamphlet of May 1921, âThe Tax in Kind,â Collected Works,
Vol. 32, pp 329â365.
[20] Karl Kautsky, The Class Struggle (Erfurt Programme), Chicago:
Charles Kerr, 1901, p 26.
[21] Bukharin and Preobrazhensky, The ABC of Communism, London, Merlin
Press, 2007, p 10 and pp 177ff.
[22] Clara Zetkin, âMy Recollections of Lenin,â in Lenin, On the
Emancipation of Women, Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1977, p 114.
[23] Such issues were discussed in âUnwaged work within capitalism,â in
a supplement of Libertarian Communist, (Libertarian Communist Group),
1979.
[24] The ABC, p 179. In Bolshevik thinking proletarian soldiers and
metal workers were seen as highly conscious, unskilled women were seen
as highly unconscious. Respect, or disrespect, flowed from this.
[25] Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels, The German Ideology, London: Lawrence
& Wishart, 1970, p 53; written in 1845â6.
[26] Leninâs thinking as recorded in Clara Zetkin, âMy Recollections of
Lenin,â ibid., p 110.
[27] Paul Avrich, Ed., The Anarchists in The Russian Revolution, London:
Thames & Hudson, 1973, p 57.
[28] Clara Zetkin, âMy Recollections of Lenin,â p 103.
[29] A contrasting position is: âNo feminism with socialism, no
socialism without feminism,â e.g.
http://socialistresistance.org/5443/in-womens-liberation-thefirst-step-is-self-consciousness.
âSocialism and Strategy: A Libertarian Critique of Leninism.â was
written in the summer and autumn of 2012, before the events described
here:
http://internationalsocialistnetwork.org/index.php/ideas-and-arguments/organisation/swp-crisis/253-trigger-warning-rape-in-the-swpa-comrade-s-testimony-and-experience-of-the-disputes-committee
[30] Mary Nash, Femmes Libres: Espagne 1936â1939, Claix: la pensee
sauvage, 1977, p118.
[31] âtheoretically, they have over the great mass of the proletariat
the advantage of clearly understanding the line of march, the
conditions, and the ultimate general results of the proletarian
movement.â Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels, The Communist Manifesto, New
York: Monthly Review Press, 1964, p 26.
[32] Bakunin once wrote âI am truly free only when all people around
meâmen and womenâare equally free.â Michel Bakounine, âDieu et lâEtat,â
in Ćuvres, Vol 1, Paris: Stock, 1882, pp 312â313; not all libertarians
were as progressive.
[33] Original emphasis, Lenin, reiterating in 1920 arguments from
âImmediate Tasksâ (1918); Collected Works, Vol. 30, 1965, p 475.
[34] Gaston Leval, Collectives in the Spanish Revolution, London:
Freedom Press, 1975, 1975, p 247. [Also: Espagne libertaire; from
http://1libertaire.free.fr/GLeval03.html]
[35] March-April 1919, in Collected Works, Vol. 29, p 70.
[36] âState and Revolution,â September 1917. Collected Works, Vol. 25,
pp 431â2.
[37] âCan the Bolsheviks Retain State Power?â October 1917; Collected
Works, Vol. 26, 1972, pp 106â7.
[38] âOn the Trade Unions,â December 1920, Collected Works, Vol. 32, p
26
[39] For a fuller discussion see Maurice Brinton, The Bolsheviks and
Workersâ Control, London: Solidarity, 1970 and David Mandel, Factory
Committees and Workersâ Control in Petrograd in 1917, Amsterdam:
International Institute for Research and Education, 1993.
[40] Paul Avrich, The Russian Anarchists, Princeton University Press,
1967, p 191.
[41] âIron discipline and the thorough exercise of proletarian
dictatorship against petty-bourgeois vacillationâthis is the general and
summarising slogan of the moment.â Collected Works, Vol. 27, p 317.
[42] See âLooking Back: An Afterword,â op. cit, p 344; Leninâs precept
of equal wages was abandoned at this time. In the Spanish revolution two
sorts of wage differential were often accepted: firstly, in agriculture,
wages of men were made equal, but wages of women and children were very
often 75 per cent or 50 per cent of the male norm. In industrial
collectives wage differentials were also accepted.
[43] William J Chase, Workers, Society and the Soviet State, University
of Illinois Press, 1990, pp 50â51.
[44] âEmployeesâ designated white-collar office workers. Mary McAuley,
Bread and Justice: State and Society in Petrograd, Oxford University
Press, 1991, p 398.
[45] Mervyn Matthews, Soviet Government: A Selection of Official
Documents on Internal Policies, London: Jonathan Cape, 1974, p 135.
[46] Frederick I Kaplan, Bolshevik Ideology and the Ethics of Soviet
Labor, New York: Philosophical Library, 1968, p 243; Jonathan Aves,
Workers Against Lenin, London: Tauris, 1996, pp 130â136.
[47] Ante Ciliga, The Russian Enigma, London: Ink Links, 1979, pp 45â6.
[48] Collected Works, Vol. 33, 1965, pp 173â4.
[49] Collected Works, Vol. 30, p 456.
[50]
F. Engels, Anti-Duhring, Peking: Foreign Language Press, 1976, p 362.
[51]
L. Trotsky, Terrorism and Communism, London: New Park, 1975, p 170.
[52] Our emphasis; from the 1935 English introduction to the second
edition of Terrorism and Communism, p 9.
[53] Bukharin and Preobrazhensky, The ABC, 2007, pp 9â10.
[54] Note 15 in Blackledge, IS, 125.
[55] Blackledge, IS, 125.
[56] Writing in âGod and the State.â
http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/bakunin/works/godstate/index.htm
[57] âWe, the workers, shall organize large-scale production on the
basis of what capitalism has already created, relying on our own
experience as workers, establishing strict, iron discipline backed up by
the state power of the armed workers.â Collected Works, Vol. 25, pp 431.
[58] Blackledge, IS, 125.
[59] For example, see Gregory P. Maxsimov, The Guillotine at Work,
Volume 1, Sanday, Orkney: Cienfuegos Press, 1979. (First published
1940.)
[60] IS, 125.
[61] IS, 131, p 198.
[62] See for example, Gregory P. Maxsimov, Constructive Anarchism,
Chicago: Maxsimov Memorial Publication Committee, 1952, pp 133â4.
[63] Rudolf Rocker, Les Soviets trahis par les Bolsheviks, Paris:
Spartacus, 1973, Chapter 7.
[64] IS, 131, p 200.
[65] The revolution in Spain also witnessed tendencies towards a
centralised and hierarchal exercise of power within the CNT and FAI
after 1936.
[66] James Bunyan and H. H. Fisher, The Bolshevik Revolution 1917â1918:
Documents and Materials, Stanford University Press, 1934, p 280.
[67] SR 2013, p 175.
[68] From Otto Ruhle, From the Bourgeois to the Proletarian Revolution,
London: Socialist Reproductions, n.d., pp 25â6; 28â9.
[69] Malatesta, âResponse to Nestor Makhno,â Le Reveil, Geneva, 14^(th)
December, 1929.
http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/platform/malatesta_reply.html
[70] Errico Malatesta, (Vernon Richards, Ed), The Anarchist Revolution,
London: Freedom Press, 1995, p 108.
[71] LâAdunata de Refrattari, 26.12.1931, from Malatesta, Richards ed.,
London: Freedom Press, 1965, p 179.
[72] Speaking of the atmosphere immediately after the revolution in
Spain in July 1936, quoted from: Ronald Fraser, Blood of Spain, New
York: Pantheon, 1979, pp 214â5.
[73] Bolshevik Party Programme, March 1919, in The ABC, 2007, p 5.
[74] One critical perspective is outlined by Sheila Rowbotham, see
especially a section on âWhere does Consciousness come from,â in Sheila
Rowbotham, Lynne Segal and Hilary Wainwright in Beyond the Fragments,
Merlin Press, 2013, p 201ff.
[75] Umanita Nova, 11^(th) April, 1920; in Errico Malatesta,
Anarchistes, Socialistes et Communistes, Annency: Groupe 1er Mai, 1982,
pp 118, 120â1.
[76] See arguments by Jo Freman, The Tyranny of Structurelessness; and
Sheila Rowbotham, Lynne Segal and Hilary Wainwright in Beyond the
Fragments.
[77] For example see Ralph Miliband, Marxism and Politics, London:
Merlin Press, p 142.
[78] Emile Pataud & Emile Pouget, How we shall bring about the
Revolution, London: Pluto Press, 1990; [First published in Paris, in
1909; English edition, 1913; Syndicalism and the Cooperative
Commonwealth.]
[79] Rudolf Rocker, Les Soviets trahis par les Bolsheviks, Paris:
Spartacus, 1973, p 92.
[80] For a discussion of subbotnik see âLooking Back: An Afterword,â in
Bukharin and Preobrazhensky, The ABC, 2007, p 342.
[81] Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. 31, Moscow: Progress Publishers, and
London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1974, p 123.
[82] Ibid., p 176, June 1920, emphasis added.
[83] Mervyn Matthews, Soviet Government: A Selection of Official
Documents on Internal Policies, London: Jonathan Cape, 1974, pp 134â5,
and 144.
[84] Third Session, July 24:
http://www.marxists.org/history/international/comintern/2^(nd)-congress/ch03a.htm
[85] Il Risveglio, (Geneva), October 15^(th), 1927.
[86] SR 2013, p 175.
[87] IS, 131, p 43.
[88] Oskar Anweiler: The Soviets, New York: Pantheon, 1974, p 241,
emphasis added. See also the text in Mervyn Matthews, Soviet Government:
A Selection of Official Documents on Internal Policies, London: Jonathan
Cape, 1974, p 135.
[89] Organization decree and Party statutes passed at the 8^(th) Party
Conference and 8^(th) Party Congress, March and December, 1919, in
Mervyn Matthews, Soviet Government, pp 134â5, and 144.
[90] Quoted in Robert Service, Lenin: A Political Life, Vol. 3, London:
Macmillan, 1985, p 142.
[91] âLeft-Wing Communism: an Infantile Disorderâ 1920, in Lenin,
Collected Works, Vol. 31, 1974, p 45
[92] Trotsky set out his appreciation of militarist relations in
Terrorism and Communism, London: New Park, 1975.
[93] Boris Souvarine, Stalin, London: Secker & Warburg, undated, pp
362â3.
[94] See note 30 above.
[95] Such patterns persist when Leninist vanguards in broad fronts
assume that they knew the way forward and the next step, and when they
insist on their leadership rights, undermining the solidarity of such
fronts.
[96] IS, 131, p 199.
[97] See comments by a leading SWP member, John Molyneux, on the British
Socialist Workerâs Party internal organisational practice. In this view
inner leaders hang together; SWP conferences deny dissidents the right
to reply whilst leaders are each given time to rebut criticisms from
outer party members, often making their criticisms âaggressively and
personally. The net effect of the practices has been (a) to load all
debates massively in the leadershipâs favour, (b) to make open
disagreement at national meetings (as opposed to in private
conversation) a highly disagreeable experience with little prospect of
success. In other words it has been to deter dissent.â Weekly Worker,
[London] No. 553, 18^(th) November, 2004, p 7.
[98] Ariane Mieville & Maurizio Antonioli, Eds., Anarchisme &
syndicalisme. Congres Anarchiste International dâAmsterdam (1907),
Paris: Monde Libertaire, 1997, pp 193â199.
[99] Malatesta, Richards ed., 1965, pp. 127â8.
[100] Anarchists also opposed national armed forces and imperialist
colonial interventions; but, in the First World War, a current, led by
Kropotkin, argued that German Imperialism was the greater danger and to
a degree supported the Allied war effort.
[101] The French CGT did not launch a general strike against war in
1914. A tendency sympathetic to French war effort was expelled from the
USI.
[102] The free trade unions were allied to the German Social Democratic
Party.
[103] There were of course a variety of syndicalisms, just as there are
varieties of Anarchism and Marxism.
[104] SR 2013, p 179.
[105] SR 2013, p 176.
[106] SR 2013, p 180.
[107] Postâs quintet passes over other if gures influential in the first
years of the Third International: Bela Kun, Bordiga, Levi, Pannekoek,
Radek and Zinoviev.
[108] Before her death Rosa Luxemburg wrote a critique: The Russian
Revolution, London: Carl Slienger, 1977.
www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg
[109] Gramsci defined LâOrdine Nuovo as âa translation into actual
Italian history of the conceptions developed by Comrade Lenin, in
selections of his published in this LâOrdine Nuovo, and of the ideas of
the American theoretician of the revolutionary syndicalist IWW
organisation: the Marxist Daniel De Leon.â http://www.nuovopci.
it/classic/gramsci/progordn.htm accessed 10.11.12. Only a few recent
texts of Lenin were known in Italy before 1920.
[110] Andre & Dori Prudhommeaux, Spartacus et la Commune de Berlin,
1918â1919, Paris: Spartacus, 1977, pp 51â55. (Rosa Luxemburg was one of
those who spoke in favour of this policy.)
[111] AAU: Industrial Unionists, somewhat akin to the IWW and allied, in
part, with the KAPD.
[112] The localists, who began organising in 1897, were precursors of
the syndicalist FAUD (German Free Workers Union), formed in 1919.
[113] Pierre Ramus, Generalstreik und direkte Aktion, Berlin: Verlag-
und SortimentsBuchandlung, 1910. See also
http://www.syndikalismusforschung.info/Ramus_(1910)_Generalstreik_&_direkte_Aktion.pdf
[114] FAUD and AAU, see notes above; KAPD: German Communist Workers
Partyâthe left of the KPD that had been expelled by Levi over the
priority of taking part in parliamentary election.
[115] The SPD aligned unions numbered their supporters in millions; the
supporters of the FAUD and AAU were numbered in hundreds of thousands.
[116] SR 2013, p 175.
[117] See Umanita Nova, 24^(th) April, 1920; in Malatesta, Anarchistes,
1982, pp 184â5.
[118] For one example, see Michael Albert, Parecon: Life After
Capitalism, London: Verso, 2003. Selected European organisations that
embody participatory norms are listed above, see note 4.