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Title: Vote? What For?
Author: Errico Malatesta
Language: en
Topics: anti-voting, voting, elections, dialogue
Source: Retrieved on July 2nd, 2022 from https://libcom.org/library/malatesta-vote-what-libertarian-league-1959
Notes: 1959 English translation of Errico Malatesta's pamphlet "Vote. What For?" by the New York based Libertarian League. Scanned for libcom.org by New York/New Jersey Workers Solidarity Alliance archives.

Errico Malatesta

Vote? What For?

George: This beer’s not too bad, is it?

Jack: Yes, it’s alright, but what a price!

George: Shocking – especially when you remember what things used to

cost. Still, you can’t wonder with all these taxes. It costs you twice

as much to live as it used to. They put up the price of some things, and

say you can do without them. But you can’t do without bread, and food,

and clothes – you have to pay the rent all the same, and then there are

the taxes on this and the rates – on our wages too! What a life! And

it’s our own fault! If we wanted to we could alter things. The working

class has the remedy in its own hands.

Jack: Why, what’s your remedy?

George: Easy enough! You’ve got a vote?

Jack: What’s that got to do with it?

George: Have you, or haven’t you?

Jack: Well, I’m entitled to a vote – but I never make use of it.

George: There you are! You’ve got a vote, but you just won’t take the

trouble to use it, and then you wonder why things are so bad. You

deserve all you get, honestly! People like you are responsible for all

the trouble in the world!

Jack: Alright, alright, keep your hair on! Just tell me what’s the good

of voting?

George: It’s obvious. Who makes the laws? The M.P.’s. Elect good M.P.’s

and you get good laws.

Jack: Good councillors and good M.P.’s? We’ve heard that for a long

time. But you’d have to be deaf, dumb, and blind not to notice it’s the

same stooges that always get in. Oh, it’s wonderful to hear them when

they’re after votes at election time. They pat you on the back, ask

after the wife and kids, kiss the baby, promise you railways, bridges,

work, cheap bread, less taxes, higher wages, protection – absolutely

everything! And once they get in, they’re no better than anyone else.

Goodbye promises! The wife and kids may starve, there’s no more or less

work than before, the whole town can be falling to pieces for all they

care. They’ve other things to think about than your troubles! Then a few

years later they start the ballyhoo again. It doesn’t matter what colour

the party is: they’re all the same. As soon as they’re elected, they

forget all about you. They’re in their clubs and at their select

dinners, and they don’t even trouble to come and have a look at you

until the next election.

George: That’s correct! But why elect the rich? Don’t you know that the

rich only live on the work of the masses? So how do you expect them to

worry about the masses? All they think of is getting as much out of the

ordinary man as they can.

Jack: Now you’re talking! But it’s not only the rich. There’s the other

type, who want to get elected so they can become rich.

George: That’s true. So don’t let’s vote for them. Let’s elect workers,

experienced friends of ours, as you might say, and then we won’t be

fooled.

Jack: Oh, we’ve got some of your “experienced friends” in now, and

they’re no different from our acknowledged enemies! Anyhow, what do you

mean, “let’s elect – let’s elect.” As if we – you and me – could do as

we like!

George: But it’s not only us two. If each one of us tried to convert

other people and they would do the same, labour would have a majority,

and we could elect whoever we liked. And that’s when we could form a

government of the workers, and then . . .

Jack: And then it would be a paradise – I mean for those who were in

Parliament! You’re arranging things a bit too quickly! Those in command

always have the majority. The rich are always in power. Just imagine a

poor worker, perhaps with an ill wife and four hungry kids, and you tell

him to risk his job and get thrown out of his house to starve; just to

give his vote to a candidate his master doesn’t like. Just try and

convince those poor devils who can be thrown out of work by their boss

whenever he likes. They’re never free; if they want to be free, they

don’t want to waste their time voting – just take what they need.

George: But if we didn’t do that, no-one would vote. We couldn’t go to

the workers and ask them to vote for our party, and say at the same time

that votes were useless.

Jack: That’s just it! And on top of that you have to make election

promises you know you can’t keep. And then you have to stand in with the

Government, and mix with the well-to-do, and all the rest of it. As soon

as any of your men are elected they have to kow-tow to the people you

admit are the opponents of the workers. So why the hell talk about

propaganda when the first thing you do is to counteract propaganda?

George: But you must admit, it’s an advantage to have our own men with a

voice in affairs.

Jack: An advantage for themselves. And may be for some of their friends!

But for the mass of the people? Tell it to the marines! You can see what

happens as soon as the M.P.’s get elected. Socialists go over to the

Tories; they become Independents and other brands of opportunists.

It’s these rascals who hoodwink the whole of their followers – worse

even than the church can do. As soon as socialists, who have perhaps

been persecuted like criminals when they were out of office (like Ramsay

MacDonald was) get appreciated and estimated by the rich, and shake

hands with Royalty, they’re won over. When they do run foul of the

Government, it’s always with kid gloves – they know they’re all pals

together. They all sit together smugly in the smoking-room the best of

friends – you can’t imagine them getting too rough even in the debating

chamber – and you’re the devil of a long way from seeing them having

their heads bashed in by the police as they used to get in the old days.

George: Oh, you’re too severe. We know men are only men, and we have to

stand for some weaknesses. But the thing to do is to choose the best

men, not always the same ones.

Jack: At that rate you’ll be mass-producing racketeers, if you keep

changing the candidates! Haven’t we got enough traitors? All those who

pass through the mill are ground to flour! As soon as you send someone

to office they turn traitor. They mix with the rich, and want to keep up

with them. I’m willing to admit a man is a genuine socialist when he

gives up his time and his energy, his money and his ability, exposes

himself to imprisonment and victimisation, just to fight corruption and

capitalism. But these M.P.’s of yours are only professing socialists,

running with the hare and hunting with the hounds, on par with the

professing Christians, who preach loving kindness and are the worst

swindlers of the lot!

George: Now you’re going too far. Among the socialist leaders you

insult, are men who have known what it is to go hungry, who have worked

and suffered for the cause, who have given proof . . .

Jack: Get away with your proof! Even Hitler went hungry, and worked for

his cause – have we got to respect him now he’s become a scoundrel of

the lowest order? Why, every whore was a virgin once!

It’s this respect for leaders that has brought socialism down. Socialism

should have been the hope of the people, and your leaders have made it a

curse, as soon as you get Labour men in Government. Do you call that

propaganda?

George: Still, if you’re not satisfied with certain leaders, you can get

rid of them. The voters can choose whom they like.

Jack: Can they? What choice has anyone ever got? You can vote for

Tweedledum and if you don’t like him you can have Tweedledee! Instead of

throwing smoke in people’s eyes about this voting business, you ought to

destroy their confidence in the whole electoral set-up, whether for

Parliament or the councils.

The most important causes of misery are first, private ownership, which

prevents a man from working unless he submits to those who own the land

and tools, and accepts their conditions: and secondly, Government, which

protects the exploiters and takes part in exploitation.

George: Well, of course, you have to convince people that their

interests are in voting for their own candidate in order to defy their

bosses. We have to organise to prevent the exploiter from crushing the

liberties of the people. . . .

Jack: Just in order to vote for Mr. Jones or Mr. Brown? Of course, we

should organise, but not just to add one more member to Parliament. We

want to organise to convince the people that we’ve been robbed of all

the good things of the world; that we have the right to take the whole

of our own products, and we can do it without taking orders from anyone.

George: Yes, but you must always have someone in charge, to get things

organised.

Jack: Not at all!

George: But the people are too ignorant to run the whole affairs of life

themselves.

Jack: Ignorant! If they weren’t ignorant they would soon see through

these people who want to run the whole affairs of life for them! If you

only left them alone, and didn’t mislead them, you can be sure the

people would run affairs much better than these racketeers, who say they

want to govern us for our own good, and then treat us like cattle.

Besides – you say the people are too ignorant to have freedom. But you

think they are cleaver enough to elect M.P.’s – and if they vote for

your candidates you say they’re full of wisdom!

Isn’t it easier to look after your own business than get someone else to

do it? If the M.P.’s wanted to defend our interests, they’d ask what we

wanted, and how we wanted it, and not ask us to get them to act as they

like – and betray us if and when they like.

George: Still, people can’t do everything themselves. There must be

someone to look after the public interest and politics.

Jack: What do you mean, “politics”? If you mean the art of fooling the

people all the time, I can assure you that we don’t mind doing without

it. If you mean by “politics” the general interest and welfare of

everyone – we can look after that ourselves. We all know how to eat and

drink and to amuse ourselves. I’m damned if I’ll go to a specialist if I

want to blow my nose, and then give him the right to squeeze it if I

don’t blow it the way he likes it: the shoemaker makes the shoes and the

builders make the house; but nobody ever thought of giving shoemakers

and builders the right to order us around and starve us out!

These men who want to get into Parliament for the sake of the public

welfare – what do they do for the people? When were the Socialist M.P.’s

and borough councillors ever better than anyone else? No, they’re all

the same breed!

George: So you attack the socialists too! You forget that they are so

few in number. They have to have a majority. And besides, their hands

are tired.

Jack: Then why do they accept office when their hands are tied? There’s

only one reason – they want to look after their own interests!

George: You’re an anarchist, of course.

Jack: Yes, I am. So what?

George: Well, anarchism seems to me to be too advanced. I’m a socialist.

You’re right in a lot of things, but if I’d known you were an anarchist

at first, I wouldn’t have told you that we could get better conditions

through Parliament, because I know that so long as there are poor, the

laws will be made by the rich, and always to their own advantage.

Jack: Oh, I see – you know improvement won’t come through Parliament,

but you still tell people to vote. When you know I’m an anarchist, you

know I won’t believe that fairy-story about voting for progress, so you

admit that you know yourself you’re getting the people to vote for

certain candidates will never bring what you promise them. I know you’re

not being paid to lie and deceive the masses – so what makes you do it

then?

George: No, no! Hold your horses! If I tell the people to give their

votes it’s for the sake of propaganda. Don’t you see how good it is to

have some of our own men in Parliament? They can make propaganda better

than anyone else – they can say things that we’d be run in for, and when

they speak all the papers report it.

Jack: Oh, so it’s for propaganda you turn election agent, is it? Some

propaganda! Listen: First you tell the people to hope and expect

everything from Parliament, that revolution isn’t necessary, that all

the worker has to do is slip a piece of paper in a box and then you’ll

do the rest. Then you admit that this won’t really achieve anything,

it’s only propaganda. Isn’t this propaganda exactly opposite to your own

ideas?

The rich will always defend these two institutions desperately, whatever

the cost. Deceit and lies have always been used – and they don’t stop at

the jail, the gallows and machine-guns! Elections are no use against

that. We don’t want a change of masters, but a complete revolution,

making an absolute break with the past. We must have a genuine

commonwealth; where everyone is certain of food, clothing and shelter.

The landowners must be ejected by the farmworkers, so they can work the

land for themselves and everyone else. The workers must kick out their

bosses and organise production for the common good. They must get

together and refuse to tolerate any government whatever. Agreement must

be made in every district between everyone in the same job. The workers

must run the places of work, and every district must be linked up in a

common bond of industrial unity – and it will certainly succeed when

everyone’s interests depend on it. We won’t fight amongst ourselves any

longer or tolerate war between workers of different nations. War and

competition will disappear. Machinery won’t turn people out of work, but

will help work, make it more agreeable, and productive, and less

wearisome.

There’ll be no more untilled land, we won’t just produce a tenth of what

we need, as we do now. On the contrary, we shall employ all known

methods in order to increase the quantity of food, and the quality of

products. The whole of society will be one union of producers and

consumers.

George: All this is very well, but it’s very difficult to bring about.

Your ideal is magnificent, but there’s one drawback: how are you going

to put it into practice? I agree that revolution is the only salvation,

whatever we do, but as it’s impossible now we must make the best of what

we can – and that’s electioneering. It’s propaganda after all.

Jack: You’ve the nerve to call it propaganda? Haven’t you noticed what

your propaganda leads to? You’ve deserted our socialist programme,

joined the ranks of the worst exploiters of the workers, gone in with

the political imposters who make a noise to gain power! You bring

trouble within the socialist ranks, and your headquarters fights its own

rank-and-file while it fraternises with the Tories. You’ve forgotten all

about revolution – you’re only thinking of electing Jones and Brown and

when you talk about change, you’ve no intentions of doing anything

drastic. Oh, the road to Westminster doesn’t lead to the social

revolution! All you’ve done with your propaganda is to tempt some people

who might have been decent socialists to go to Parliament and turn

M.P.’s. You’ve created the parliamentary illusion that blinds any sight

of revolution. You’ve discredited socialism, as everyone looks on the

socialist party as a part of the government they suspect and despise.

It’s the end of everyone who looks to getting in power.

George: Well, what do you want us to do? Why don’t you come in and help

us, instead of remaining outside and criticising?

Jack: Now I haven’t yet spoken of what we anarchists are doing. But I’ll

tell you this; that you socialists are one of our big obstacles. Our

activities have been paralysed for years because of your propaganda for

parliamentarianism, and you're deluding the workers to trust those who

have betrayed them. We have to waste time counteracting your propaganda,

when we could be pushing forward to a social revolutionary change. I

hope more and more people get disgusted with trusting your party! It’s

only that way we’ll ever get a revolutionary feeling.

George: Well, hurry up and make your revolution! And you can be sure the

mass of our people will be on your side if it ever came to a revolution,

the rank-and-file, anyhow.

Jack: Oh, I see – “make the revolution and we’ll join you.” If you

believe in revolution, why not help us make it?

George: To tell you the truth, if I thought revolution was in any way

practicable now, I wouldn’t mind going over to you. I admit this

election business makes me sick, and I’d like to let some of our leaders

go to hell, but I honestly can’t see where we could do anything about

revolution to-day.

Jack: All you want to know is what you want, and put energy into it, and

you’ll soon find what could be done! First of all we have to propagate

real socialism, and instead of spinning yarns about trusting

politicians, and voting for people, getting people to despise the

parliamentary racket, and the whole political machine. Let the rich do

the electing by themselves – while the whole public despises them for

it. When the workers lose faith in the ballot-box swindle, they’ll see

the necessity for the social revolution.

Let’s go to the election meetings, if you like, and expose the lies and

pretences of the various candidates. Let’s make propaganda, not among

the rich in Westminster, but among the workers’ organisations and in the

factories, and create new groups, and explain to everyone how the

workers can emancipate themselves. Let’s take an active part in strikes

and create a gulf between the wageslaves and the bosses! Let’s be on the

spot whenever there’s a struggle between the people and their rulers,

and give the movement of struggle a conscience. Let’s get among the

masses suffering injustice, forced discipline, privations, no matter

where it is, and create a movement that’s going to struggle against the

ruling class.

Once we have the movement going, ideas come by themselves. Let’s always

be in the midst of the masses, and let them understand what they should

be after. They themselves must struggle for freedom: it can’t be done

for them, and we must be in their midst. And while we do all this, let’s

approach people who feel like we do, and who slowly and steadily begin

to understand and accept our ideas – with those we must unite, and

prepare the elements for general and decisive action, for the

emancipation of the working classes.

George: Let’s shake hands on that: They can go to hell with their

elections! I want to learn more of anarchism!