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Title: Hobsonâs Choice Author: Gregor Kerr Date: 1998 Language: en Topics: Ireland, the left, Irish Republican Army, Red & Black Revolution Source: Retrieved on 8th August 2021 from http://struggle.ws/rbr/rbr4_hobson.html Notes: This article was originally published in Red & Black Revolution No 4.
Until the Real IRA blasted the heart out of Omagh and its people, the
Northern âpeace processâ appeared to be close to achieving the
impossible. Loyalists and Republicans alike signing up to the âGood
Friday Agreementâ, its acceptance by large majorities on both sides of
the border, Gerry Adams and Ian Paisley sitting down in the same room as
part of the new Assembly â it seemed as if what had appeared for decades
to be impossible had been overtaken by the realpolitik of the pragmatic.
All sides in the âconflictâ â we were led to believe â were looking to a
new beginning. Countless column inches in the popular press had been
written eulogising the âstatesmanshipâ of David Trimble and Seamus
Mallon, the âpeacemaking skillsâ of Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern and the
âpragmatismâ of Gerry Adams and David Ervine.
At the time of writing it remains to be seen what the ramifications of
the massive carnage wreaked on the people of Omagh by the Real IRA will
be. What is already clear, however, is that the working-class people of
the 6-Counties are once again the people who suffer. Following on from
the sectarian murders of the 3 Quinn brothers in Ballymoney during the
Drumcree stand-off, another working class community was on the morning
of August 16^(th) counting their dead and injured. Jumping on the
bandwagon of populism, right wing politicians and commentators such as
Shane Ross (Senator and âSunday Independentâ columnist) and Michael
McDowell (former Progressive Democrats TD) were screaming for the
introduction of internment and even hinting that the extra-judicial
murder of those associated with the Real IRA and the 32-County
Sovereignty Committee should be considered.
While the reactions of the mainstream media commentators and political
parties North and South and on both sides of the Irish Sea and in the
United States to the âGood Fridayâ Agreement have been well commented
on, this article is a look at the reactions to this deal from left wing
parties and organisations in Ireland.
In the May 22^(nd) referendum on the deal the Workers Solidarity
Movement called for an abstention, stating that âNeither a âyesâ vote
nor a ânoâ vote will advance the cause of workers unity and socialismâ.
We noted in a statement issued before the referendum that the great
desire for peace was being
âĂ.used to pressurise us into choosing between two completely flawed
alternatives. The agreement, which was drawn up in secret by our
so-called ârepresentativesâ, does not challenge the sectarian divisions
which have bedevilled this country.â
Indeed our statement went on to note that the structures proposed in the
agreement actually institutionalise sectarian divisions. Politicians
elected to the proposed Assembly must declare themselves either
âunionistâ or ânationalistâ.
âThose who refuse,â we noted, âwill not have their votes counted in
measuring the cross community support necessary for passing
legislationĂ..As the agreement was drawn up in the interests of the
ruling class, the concept of working class interests is not even
consideredĂ..The division between rulers and ruled, between bosses and
workers, between rich and poor remains. The biggest change will be a few
nationalist faces sitting down with bigots like Trimble and Taylor, to
make laws which preserve the dominance of the rich over the poor.â
In relation to the aspect of the referendum which proposed changes to
Articles 2 and 3 of the Southern Constitution, the statement pointed out
that these amendments
âmean nothing to usĂ..Articles 2 & 3 have never made one whit of
difference to the real lives of anyone on this island.â
While rejecting the agreement as having nothing to offer the working
class North or South, we went on, however, to point out that
âThose urging rejection of the agreement have no alternative to offer,
just more of the same conflict that has ruined tens of thousands of
working class lives. The republican forces of the 32 County Sovereignty
Committee, RSF [Republican Sinn Fein] and IRSP [Irish Republican
Socialist Party â the political wing of the Irish National Liberation
Army] have nothing but increased communalism and sectarian tension to
offer. The loyalist opponents â whose rallies are attended by vocal
supporters of the Loyalist Volunteer Force death squads â want a return
to a time when Catholics lived on their knees and in fear.â
The WSM statement further criticised the undemocratic nature of the
referendum itself. The manner in which the deal was put to the people
was such that it was not possible to support or oppose the many
individual components of the agreement, allowing only one vote for or
against the entire complex package.
Having called for an abstention in the vote on the deal, our statement
went on to urge the continuation of the IRA and loyalist ceasefires,
stating that there must be no going back to the failed armed struggle
âwhich gave us nothing except repression, suffering and increased
sectarian hatred.â We then outlined the task facing anarchists,
socialists and trade unionists in the coming period:-
âWhen working class people begin to ask what kind of country they want
to live in, and what kind of country they want their children to grow up
in, the politics of anti-imperialism will start making sense to people
who up to now have been trapped in green and orange communalism.
Our struggle is for liberty, we are for the removal of the British
troops from Ireland â and the destruction of the sectarian Orange state
in the North and the Green conservative state in the South.
We remain committed to a united Irish Workers Republic, run by working
class people in their own interests, and democratically controlled
through a federated system of workers and community councils. Nobody has
the right to wage war on our behalf, working people themselves must
discuss the future they want and fight together for that future. Our
struggle is for liberty, and no minority can impose liberty on the
majority. The emancipation of the working class is the task of the
working class itself.â
Our analysis that the agreement had nothing to offer working class
people was shared by the majority of socialists and anarchists in both
Ireland and Britain â although all other organisations ended up by
coming down on either the âyesâ or ânoâ sides. Perhaps one of the most
realistic assessments of the realities of the deal was offered by the
British-based Solidarity Federation in the Summer 1998 edition of
âDirect Actionâ when they stated
âJust maybe the peace agreement will take the gun out of Northern Irish
politics, or at least limit its impact. A sectarian political scene
without guns will be preferable to one with guns. Perhaps this is the
best we can hope for from this agreement.â
This was an assessment shared in large part by Sol. Fed.âs sister
organisation in Ireland Organise!-IWA. In an interview with a
spokesperson for Organise! in the same edition of âDirect Actionâ, it
was stated that some members of the organisation had supported the WSM
position of abstention on the referendum. âOther members of Organise!.â
it was stated, âlike many working class people, voted âyesâ to the
âAgreementâ, not because they in any way support sectarianism, or want
anything to do with choosing the form of government which oppresses us,
but because of a simple desire to see the guns removed from the
sectarian politics in the north.
Sectarian politicians agreeing a format in which to argue is better than
the prospect of continued or worsening sectarian violence being counted
in the lives, maiming and imprisonment of working class peopleĂĂ Social
issues, the position of workers and the unemployed at the bottom of
society etc., will not and cannot be tackled through this agreement â
but surely at least a vast reduction in sectarian violence must be
welcomed. Beyond this, we may also see the development of an atmosphere
in which anti-sectarian working class politics may be given room to
develop.â
It was this hope that the agreement might lead to some ânormalisationâ
of the political scene which also appeared to be the primary factor
behind the Socialist Partyâs call for a âyesâ vote in the referendum. In
an article in the May 1998 edition of the SPâs newspaper âVoiceâ, Joe
Higgins the partyâs TD (Teachta Dala â member of the Irish Parliament)
wrote
âTragically, but inevitably, the terms drawn up are a reflection of the
stunted politics that have dominated Northern Ireland for generations,
the work of politicians and political parties, most of which are
hopelessly sectarian-based or right wing or both....Ă.It appears
inconceivable to those who have framed this agreement, that the ordinary
people of Northern Ireland might want to elect individuals or parties
which are not sectarian based but which represent working class people
equally from Protestant and Catholic backgrounds, and who would have a
vision utterly different to the narrow sectarian politics that have
dominated Northern Ireland for decades with disastrous consequences.â
According to Higginsâ article, the choice was a stark one. Rejection of
the deal would be seen as a victory by the most reactionary elements â
âBitter sectarian polarisation in the communities would be the
background to paramilitary outrages and open warfare on issues such as
parades.â If the deal was accepted âThis may at least see the main
political parties carry on their strategies within the framework agreed
even though they will stumble from one political crisis to the next. It
would allow the continuation of the peace process and could provide a
space for working class politics to emerge which could challenge the
grip of the sectarian based parties.â
In the same edition of âVoiceâ, Peter Hadden, Secretary of the SP in the
North wrote
âA yes vote is likely in the referendum, more because of the lack of an
alternative rather than any conviction that the Agreement will work.â
âOn offer,â he wrote, âis a choice of two roads towards sectarian
conflict. The immediate and direct route is via the No camp. A Yes
victory would mean a slightly longer road. There might be a limited
breathing space which would give more time to the working class to
challenge the sectarians. We believe the best option is to vote Yes, not
in support of the Agreement, but for a continuation of the peace process
and to allow more time for class politics to develop.
Hadden went on to offer what he saw as the challenge for socialists in
the post-referendum scenario:-
âThe real issue is not just to vote in the referendum but to use this
time to build a socialist alternative and campaign for a socialist
solutionĂĂOne advantage of the Assembly would be that the anti working
class policies of the major parties on issues such as Health, Education
and Economic development would be exposed to view â but this will only
happen if a socialist opposition is built. This is now the key task.â
This was a theme to which the SP returned in an editorial in the June
1998 issue of âVoiceâ:-
âIf the situation holds together over the summerâ, they wrote, âthen
there is a possibility that the agreement can hold, at least for a
period. This can open up a space for working class and socialist
politics.
Local politicians will lose the luxury of blaming London and the
Northern Ireland Office for cuts in services, hospital closures and
other unpopular decisions.
Their real nature will be exposed as they take the decisions in these
areas in the Assembly. The Assembly would provide a focal point in the
North for workersâ struggles and community campaigns.â
The Socialist Party decided to contest the elections to the Assembly on
the basis that
âIt is likely that small parties will make a breakthrough by winning
seats in the Assembly. All of this can open up an opportunity for
building a socialist alternative to the sectarian based partiesĂĂIf a
window of opportunity opens up for class based politics, we are
determined to go through it.â
In a lengthy article entitled âWill the Agreement bring peace?â in the
May 1998 issue of âSocialism 2000â, the political journal of the
Socialist Party, Peter Hadden expanded on how this âwindow of
opportunityâ might be represented:-
âThere is only one way out for the working class. It is not to imitate
the leaders of the trade unions and sit back and applaud the Agreement
and the politicians who produced it. Rather it is to begin to build an
alternative to sectarian politics, to unite working people, Catholic and
Protestant, around common class interests and in opposition to all who
attempt to maintain sectarian division ĂĂ From a working class point of
view the best scenario is that the Agreement would hold, that a new
local administration would form and that as many as possible of the
existing parties accept the ministerial reins they are offered. On the
one hand this would allow the working class movement the precious
ingredient of time to begin to put an alternative to these parties in
place. On the other hand the fact of these parties holding
responsibility for local services and for the low pay, contracting out
and privatisation which goes with them, would be a positive assistance
to the development of a class opposition ĂĂ. United class movements
directed against local politicians would open the way for political
conclusions to be drawn, for socialist ideas to begin to take on flesh
ĂĂ. Forces and obstacles which today appear unshakeable, the various
sectarian forces included, can be melted down in the furnace of
struggle. The building of a socialist organisation which can influence
and effect events can be a crucial factor in determining whether the
coming political and social upheaval leads towards a âcarnival of
reactionâ or towards united class action to bring about socialist
change.â
âThe way to solve the national question,â according to Haddenâs
analysis, âis to build unity between the working class in common
struggle against the present rotten system and for Ăa socialist society
ĂĂ We stand for the unity of the working class to achieve a socialist
Ireland as part of a democratic and voluntary socialist federation of
England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland.â
The Socialist Workers Party, on the other hand, called for a ânoâ vote
on May 22^(nd). The May 1^(st) â 14^(th) 1998 edition of their paper
âSocialist Workerâ stated that many hoped that the deal âĂbrings peace
to the working class areas that have suffered most during the conflict.â
Pointing out however that the Agreement âĂdoes nothing to dismantle the
sectarian structures of the NorthĂ..institutionalises sectarian
divisionĂ.doesnât even begin to tackle the poverty that affects both
Catholic and Protestant workersâ and that âHaving Gerry Adams in a
cabinet with David Trimble will only mean that both preside over student
fees, cutbacks and povertyâ the SWP called for a âNoâ vote in the
referendum.
âThe alternative,â the SWP stated, âis not civil war or armed
conflictĂ..The pressure for a settlement came from both the elite at the
top and workers at the bottom of society. Tens of thousands of workers
turned up to peace rallies to demand an end to the armed campaign. In
the unlikely event of the settlement being rejected that same pressure
for peace would continue and socialists would give it every support. The
real solution to sectarianism lies in common class struggleĂĂIt is time
to break from all the sectarian agendas and put class politics to the
fore. Voting No to this deal will mark a start.â
All in all then it can safely be said that the Good Friday Agreement
excited little positive support on the left. It must be stated however
that those who adopted a position which might best be described as
âcritical supportâ were much more honest than those who opposed the deal
without actually putting forward any credible alternative. The SWP view
that a âNoâ vote would have resulted in the coming to the fore of class
politics ignores completely the fact that the dealâs rejection would
have been hailed by the most reactionary elements on both sides of the
sectarian divide â from Paisley and the LVF through to the 32 County
Sovereignty Committee and RSF â as their victory. A more likely scenario
than the coming to the fore of working class politics would have been a
demoralisation of such tiny progressive forces as currently exist and
the filling of the subsequent political vacuum by the forces of
sectarian hatred. We would quite possibly have been facing into a
Lebanon/Balkan type situation with each community retreating into âits
ownâ area and the possibilities of cross class unity would at the very
least have been dealt a severe blow.
As Andrew Flood wrote in Workers Solidarity 54(Summer 1998) âFor
anarchists looking at the future the old saying âif I was going there I
wouldnât start from hereâ rings particularly true.â The challenge facing
all of us is to attempt to break down the sectarian barriers and to
build unity between Catholic and Protestant workers. The question is not
whether this is desirable â All sections of the left are agreed that it
is. How to do it is however the problem that remains. What is achievable
in the short to medium term? And â provided that the guns remain silent
â does the new situation make this task any easier?
The WSM has always drawn a distinction between the ceasefires and the
âpeace processâ. In a statement issued on September 7^(th) 1994,
following the first IRA ceasefire we welcomed the decision to end the
âarmed struggleâ but pointed out that
âThe âpeace processâ as it is called, will not deliver a united
socialist Ireland, or significant improvements apart from those
associated with âdemilitarisationâ. In addition it represents a
hardening of traditional nationalism, and the goal of getting an
alliance of all the nationalists, Fianna Fail, SDLP, Sinn Fein and the
Catholic Church.
Its appeal to Protestant workers is no greater than the military
campaign (i.e. none) and to date republican statements have focused on
the need for a De Klerk type figure to lead the Protestants to
compromiseĂĂ This approach should come as no surprise to us, it is the
underlying bedrock of nationalism. It is the reason we are
anti-imperialists rather than socialist republicansĂĂ..The ending of the
armed struggle cannot simply become part of history. The issue of
partition cannot be quietly dropped in the interests of winning over
Protestant workers. In the short term it would be possible to build
workers unity on day to day economic issues without mentioning partition
but it would be building on sand. In the past we have seen how
instances, some involving very large numbers, of working class unity
have been swept away on a tide of bigotry. What is needed is a
revolutionary movement, with consistent anti-imperialist policies that
is composed from both Protestant and Catholic backgrounds.â
Although 4 years have passed since the issuing of this statement, these
sentiments still stand as an accurate assessment of the challenge facing
revolutionaries today. The âGood Friday Agreementâ is a consequence of
the failure of republicanism and the left to win over any section of
northern Protestant workers to an anti-partitionist, anti-imperialist
stance. Right now, this failure is complete and it may even seem utopian
to put forward such a project as the principal challenge facing us. But
historically, most notably at the time of the Republican Congress of
1934, sections of the Protestant working class have proved open to such
a strategy and the idea of uniting âProtestant, Catholic and Dissenterâ
became more than a catchphrase.
At the Bodenstown Wolfe Tone commemoration of 1934, some 500 Belfast
Protestant workers marched to Toneâs graveside behind banners
proclaiming âWolfe Tone Commemoration 1934, Shankill Road Belfast
Branch. Break The Connection With Capitalismâ and âJames Connolly Club,
Belfast. United Irishmen of 1934â. Unfortunately the Belfast comrades
found themselves confronted by, and ultimately attacked by, a body of
IRA men with orders to prevent them marching unless they agreed to take
down their banners. The strategy of âbreaking the connection with
capitalismâ was one step too far for the Republican leadership whose
political project looked no further than the extension of the Southern
clerical state north of the border. Making the links with Protestant
workers would have involved breaking the links with the Catholic Church
and with the southern ruling class. The Republican leadership then were
unwilling to do so and, following in their footsteps â despite the
occasional left-wing rhetoric â the republican leadership of today see
their allies in the likes of Bertie Ahern, Bill Clinton and John Hume.
Republicanism will be forced to drop completely the remaining elements
of its socialist rhetoric in the coming years. Certainly an opportunity
has opened up for the development of class politics but this will not be
built successfully by ignoring partition. The challenge is to build a
movement of working class people involving people from all religious
backgrounds â a movement which will be anti-capitalist and
anti-imperialist. Northern workers have united across the sectarian
divide in the past to fight on economic issues, this will happen again
in the future. We must build an anarchist movement on this island which
will be big enough to be in a position to turn future battles into the
fight for an anarchist Ireland.