868 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
868 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
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2 articles
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2nd is 'When the unemployed elected their own TD'
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********** Why Anarchists don't vote in Elections *********
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from Workers Solidarity No 32
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IT'S LOCAL ELECTION time and as usual
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politicians of all parties will be promising us
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wonderful things. It's probable that this election
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will also show an increased vote for the Labour
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Party. Yet it is fair enough to ask "what difference
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will it make".
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We are used to being promised the sun, moon and stars
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in elections only to receive cuts, cuts and cuts. Is this
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just because all politicians are liars or are there deeper
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reasons? Abstention from elections has been an
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anarchist tactic from the time of Bakunin. In this article
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we look at some of the reasons anarchists advocate
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abstention/spoilt votes.
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The right to the vote was part of the hard won struggles
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of workers (and suffragettes!) over the last couple of
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hundred years. Obviously it is preferable to live in a
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parliamentary democracy rather than a dictatorship.
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Even the most flawed democracies are forced to concede
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rights that dictatorships do not, such as relative
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independence for trade unions, the right to limited
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demonstrations, a certain amount of free speech, etc.
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However it is clear that none of these are absolutes, as
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anti-trade union legislation, Section 31 and the refusal
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to allow nationalist marches into Belfast city centre
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adequately demonstrate. The amount of freedom is set
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by how much the bosses need to give to keep the system
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flowing, plus the amount that is forced from them
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through the struggle of workers.
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The real purpose of parliament is not to ensure the
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country is run according to the wishes of all the people,
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cherishing all their views equally. Parliament instead
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provides a democratic facade beyond which the real
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business of managing capitalism goes on.
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The Goodman affair and the bailing out of Insurance
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Corporation of Ireland a few years back demonstrate
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how the real decisions are made in the boardrooms of
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the large industrial concerns. In the unlikely event of a
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government being elected which goes "too far" in the eyes
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of the bosses they are quick to use any means necessary
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to remove it.
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BEHIND THE FACADE
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The best known example of this is perhaps the removal
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of the democratically elected Allende government in Chile
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in 1972. They had attempted to bring in a limited
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package of reforms and nationalise some of the larger
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American industries. The result was a military coup
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backed by the CIA.
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The workers in Chile were politically disarmed by their
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reliance on a small group of elected deputies to liberate
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them. There was little organised resistance to the
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military and in the immediate aftermath over 30,000
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militants were executed and 1,000,000 fled into exile.
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In practise however capitalism seldom finds need for
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such methods, their complete control of the media and
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the reliance of the political parties on big business for
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funds is enough of a check. Organisations like the Irish
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and British Labour Parties spend most of their time
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trying to prove they can manage capitalism just as well
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as the Tories or Fianna F<>il.
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They argue their policies are a way of avoiding strikes
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and any other form of class strife. They say their politics
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of class collaboration are more efficient to capitalism
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then a hard headed class strife approach of lock-outs
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and union busting.
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To the bosses this is often a good argument, sometimes
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it is worth handing out a few crumbs in return for
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industrial peace. At other times when a serious crisis
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necessitates a driving down of wages or living standards
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they can always either force this government to
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implement the cuts, precipitate a general election or - in
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extreme cases - turn to a police states.
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P.E.S.P. LOGIC
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This sort of logic has nothing to do with socialism.
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Indeed the current Fianna F<>il/PD government has been
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successfully pursuing the same logic through the
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Programme for Economic and Social Progress and before
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that the PNR. These deals mean the union bureaucrats
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actively stopping and sabotaging strikes in return for
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pay increases below the rate of inflation. So in a
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comparative 'boom' period of the Irish economy when
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company profits doubled Irish workers made real losses
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with regards to wages and employment and lost ground
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as regards the social wage (health care, education, etc).
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The Labour and Workers Parties may have objected to
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parts of the PESP but they supported the idea of 'social
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partnership' as it is part of their strategy for government
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as well.
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There are times of course when more radical reformist
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governments are elected (in other countries if not as yet
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in Ireland). These included Spain in 1936 and the post
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war British Labour government. The function of these
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governments however was to lead the working class
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away from the road to social revolution, to suggest the
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same gains could be made through parliament.
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When put to the test however in the Spanish case by the
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fascist coup the government preferred negotiation with
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the fascists to arming the working class. In Spain the
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initial resistance to fascism was carried out by the
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militant workers of the anarchist C.N.T. who seized
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arms or attacked fascist barracks with dynamite and
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shotguns.
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A similar example is seen throughout Europe in the
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immediate aftermath of the Russian revolution as the
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reformists in one country after another stood on the
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basis that electing them would prevent revolution. Vote
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for us and save capitalism. Unfortunately at such times
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such parties often gain mass support, this is why it is
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vital anarchists take up the arguments around
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reformism rather than assuming such ideas will just
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fade away with the revolution.
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GOOD LEADERS?
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These arguments are common to most revolutionary
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socialists, but anarchists have another and more
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fundamental reason for opposing the parliamentary
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process. This process involves the mass of the working
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class relying on a few representatives to enter
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parliament and do battle on their behalf. Their sole
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involvement is one of voting every few years and perhaps
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canvassing and supporting the party through paper
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sales or whatever. A reliance on a physical leader or
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leaders from Neil Kinnock to Mary Robinson to sort out
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the situation for us.
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Anarchists do not belive any real socialist / anarchist
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society can come about through the good actions of a few
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individuals. From the beginnings of the anarchist
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movement around the International Working Mens' (sic)
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Association (better known as the 'First International')
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over a century ago, we have argued that the liberation of
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the working class can only be achieved through the
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action of the working class.
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At the time this argument was with the Marxists, now
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with the collapse of many major Marxist parties in the
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wake of the collapse of Eastern Europe it is mainly with
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reformists. The process of bringing about an anarchist
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society will either be carried through by the mass of the
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workers or it will not happen.
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This idea is obviously the complete opposite to the
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parliamentary idea. We do not seek a few leaders, good,
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bad or indifferent to sort out the mess that is
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capitalism. Indeed we argue constantly against any
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ideas that make it seem such elites are necessary.
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Parliamentary politics relies on voting for people because
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they are going to do the job (or some of it) for you. Even
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the best intentioned individual on receiving a position of
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power finds a divergence of interests with those she/he
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represents. This is as much true of revolutionaries and
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union bureaucrats as it is of ministers and prime
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ministers.
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MAKING THE ARGUMENTS
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This brings us to the question of how should anarchists
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tackle the parliamentary system. How do we convince
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everyone not to vote? Perhaps we should put all our
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energy into anti-election campaigns.
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In fact this is not seen as a major activity by most
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anarchists at all. Our aim is not to have elections where
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only 10% vote, for such a thing would be meaningless in
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itself. In the U.S.A. only about 30% vote in most
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elections and it is possible that up to 50% of the
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population is not even registered to vote. Only a fool
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however would claim this meant the U.S. was more
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anarchist then Ireland. If that 10% or 30% is still
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electing the government it might as well be 99%.
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Our aim is to change society by winning the working
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class to the ideas and tactics of anarchism. This will
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involve the overthrow of the economic system
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(capitalism) we live under and its replacement with
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socialism under workers' self-management. Not voting
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may just be a sign of despair ("What's the point"), we
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want workers actively struggling for the alternative.
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Our anti-electoralism is designed to say two things.
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Firstly that parliament is not the real seat of power in
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society. Secondly that the task of bringing in anarchism
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is for the working class, not some small group of TD's.
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We will gain support for anarchist ideas not just through
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abstract propaganda but also by our involvement as
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anarchists in workers' struggles and demonstrating
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how anarchism provides the best tools for winning day
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to day reforms.
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REFORMIST WORKERS
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Most of the active militants in the working class support
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reformist parties, this is an obvious fact. This has led
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many revolutionary groups to adopt slogans at election
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times telling workers to "vote Labour with no illusions"
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or "vote Labour but build a socialist alternative". We
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don't.
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The problems with both these slogans are they still
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reflect the idea that change should be brought about be
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the small elites. They are normally defended by saying
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this is putting the reformist parties to the test so that
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they can be exposed to their supporters. This is a
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nonsense, as a brief look at any of the Irish left reformist
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organisations shows.
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The reformist organisations have failed the 'test' on
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dozens of occasions. Workers vote for these
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organisations not because they believe they will
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introduce socialism but because they are seen to offer
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the best of the bad deal that is capitalism.
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This is also presented as an argument for voting for the
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reformist parties. Is it not ultra-left to refuse to support
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these parties while they may be slightly better than
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Fianna Fail or Fine Gael? Two answers exist to this.
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The first is that as the real decision making takes place
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in industry and not in parliament these organisations
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even in majority government can only do what
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capitalism allows them. Their only argument is to
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organise capitalism more "humanly". We want to
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smash capitalism, not give it a human face. The sight of
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a "socialist government" implementing cuts and
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breaking strikes damages the credibility of socialism in
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the eyes of workers, as did the existence of the "socialist"
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police states of eastern Europe.
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Secondly, it is a question of energy. The sort of effort
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that is spent supporting (critically or otherwise)
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reformist organisation is energy taken away from the
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struggles for improved working conditions, better wages
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etc. Elections do not take place in a vacuum in which
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nothing else takes place in society for a number of
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months.
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A strike or demonstration of thousands of workers has
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more chance of effecting real change then 20 Labour or
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Workers party TD's. In times of mass unrest energy
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pumped into reformist parties will be energy used to
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undermine the revolution. As so many Chilean socialists
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found, revolutionaries supporting such organisations are
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likely to find the are literally digging their own grave.
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EXCEPTIONS TO THE RULE
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There are occasions where anarchists might support
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individuals standing in elections. This is when such
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people stand on a single issue and abstensionist basis.
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At times this may be an effective way of showing mass
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support for something when faced with a massive hype
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against it from the capitalist press. Other forms of
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demonstrating support may be difficult due to large
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scale intimidation, victimisation of activists, etc.
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One example of such an occasion in the Irish context was
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the H-Block hunger strikes of 1981 for political status.
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The election of Bobby Sands as MP for
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Fermanagh/South Tyrone and the election of two more
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H-Block prisoners as TD's south of the border
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demonstrated a mass support for the hunger strikers. It
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undermined government and press claims that they had
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the support of only a tiny minority.
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Such support must be on the basis of giving workers the
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confidence to openly come out and demonstrate, strike,
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etc. It is a tactic towards such mobilisations not an end
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in itself.
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Problems exist with this, commonly the individual
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elected may take up her/his seat despite pre-election
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promises of abstention if elected. Even in the hunger
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strike case where those on hunger strikes could not take
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up their seats the danger of such tactics is obvious. The
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vote was seen by Sinn Fein as proof that a turn towards
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electoral politics was the correct direction for anti-
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imperialism to take.
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The potential of a mass campaign at the time of the
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hunger strikes based on strikes North and South of the
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border was thus lost. The decision to support a single
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issue candidate would have to involve hard arguments
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on the subsequent direction of the campaign and could
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not be taken lightly.
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Another instance where anarchists would not urge a
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abstention from the bosses electoral process is in the
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case of referendums. The WSM was involved (and
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indeed still is) in the Divorce Action Group. Despite the
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severe limitations of the 1986 referendum we still
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canvassed for a YES vote.
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In the 1983 anti-abortion referendum anarchists
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advocated a NO vote. Of course we don't accept the
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conclusions of either referendum as final. We still fight
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for the right to divorce and a woman's right to control her
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fertility up to and including free, safe abortion on
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demand. Such things are democratic rights in
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themselves, something no majority should have a veto
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over.
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What do we say to people in the reformist parties? They
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can not (and should not) be ignored. We say look at the
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record of your party in government or to the Workers
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Party when you supported the 1981 minority Fianna
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Fail government.
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Look at what your party stands for. Look at the record
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of your party in the trade union bureaucracy. Look at
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the historical role reformist parties have played in other
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countries. Reformism has had it's test and failed one
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hundred times. Leave it, find out more about
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anarchism and join the fight for working class self-
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emancipation.
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Andrew Flood
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Andrew Flood
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Conor McLoughlin
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Andrew Blackmore
|
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Alan MacSim<69>in
|
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Joe Black
|
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Joe King
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Aileen O'Carroll
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IT'S LOCAL ELECTION time and as usual politicians
|
|||
|
of all parties will be promising us wonderful things.
|
|||
|
It's probable that this election will also show an
|
|||
|
increased vote for the Labour Party. Yet it is fair
|
|||
|
enough to ask "what difference will it make".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We are used to being promised the sun, moon and stars in
|
|||
|
elections only to receive cuts, cuts and cuts. Is this just
|
|||
|
because all politicians are liars or are there deeper reasons?
|
|||
|
Abstention from elections has been an anarchist tactic from
|
|||
|
the time of Bakunin. In this article we look at some of the
|
|||
|
reasons anarchists advocate abstention/spoilt votes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The right to the vote was part of the hard won struggles of
|
|||
|
workers (and suffragettes!) over the last couple of hundred
|
|||
|
years. Obviously it is preferable to live in a parliamentary
|
|||
|
democracy rather than a dictatorship. Even the most
|
|||
|
flawed democracies are forced to concede rights that
|
|||
|
dictatorships do not, such as relative independence for
|
|||
|
trade unions, the right to limited demonstrations, a certain
|
|||
|
amount of free speech, etc.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
However it is clear that none of these are absolutes, as
|
|||
|
anti-trade union legislation, Section 31 and the refusal to
|
|||
|
allow nationalist marches into Belfast city centre
|
|||
|
adequately demonstrate. The amount of freedom is set by
|
|||
|
how much the bosses need to give to keep the system
|
|||
|
flowing, plus the amount that is forced from them through
|
|||
|
the struggle of workers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The real purpose of parliament is not to ensure the country
|
|||
|
is run according to the wishes of all the people, cherishing
|
|||
|
all their views equally. Parliament instead provides a
|
|||
|
democratic facade beyond which the real business of
|
|||
|
managing capitalism goes on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Goodman affair and the bailing out of Insurance
|
|||
|
Corporation of Ireland a few years back demonstrate how
|
|||
|
the real decisions are made in the boardrooms of the large
|
|||
|
industrial concerns. In the unlikely event of a government
|
|||
|
being elected which goes "too far" in the eyes of the bosses
|
|||
|
they are quick to use any means necessary to remove it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BEHIND THE FACADE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The best known example of this is perhaps the removal of
|
|||
|
the democratically elected Allende government in Chile in
|
|||
|
1972. They had attempted to bring in a limited package of
|
|||
|
reforms and nationalise some of the larger American
|
|||
|
industries. The result was a military coup backed by the
|
|||
|
CIA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The workers in Chile were politically disarmed by their
|
|||
|
reliance on a small group of elected deputies to liberate
|
|||
|
them. There was little organised resistance to the military
|
|||
|
and in the immediate aftermath over 30,000 militants were
|
|||
|
executed and 1,000,000 fled into exile.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In practise however capitalism seldom finds need for such
|
|||
|
methods, their complete control of the media and the
|
|||
|
reliance of the political parties on big business for funds is
|
|||
|
enough of a check. Organisations like the Irish and British
|
|||
|
Labour Parties spend most of their time trying to prove
|
|||
|
they can manage capitalism just as well as the Tories or
|
|||
|
Fianna F<>il.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
They argue their policies are a way of avoiding strikes and
|
|||
|
any other form of class strife. They say their politics of
|
|||
|
class collaboration are more efficient to capitalism then a
|
|||
|
hard headed class strife approach of lock-outs and union
|
|||
|
busting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To the bosses this is often a good argument, sometimes it is
|
|||
|
worth handing out a few crumbs in return for industrial
|
|||
|
peace. At other times when a serious crisis necessitates a
|
|||
|
driving down of wages or living standards they can always
|
|||
|
either force this government to implement the cuts,
|
|||
|
precipitate a general election or - in extreme cases - turn
|
|||
|
to a police states.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
P.E.S.P. LOGIC
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This sort of logic has nothing to do with socialism. Indeed
|
|||
|
the current Fianna F<>il/PD government has been
|
|||
|
successfully pursuing the same logic through the
|
|||
|
Programme for Economic and Social Progress and before
|
|||
|
that the PNR. These deals mean the union bureaucrats
|
|||
|
actively stopping and sabotaging strikes in return for pay
|
|||
|
increases below the rate of inflation. So in a comparative
|
|||
|
'boom' period of the Irish economy when company profits
|
|||
|
doubled Irish workers made real losses with regards to
|
|||
|
wages and employment and lost ground as regards the social
|
|||
|
wage (health care, education, etc).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Labour and Workers Parties may have objected to parts
|
|||
|
of the PESP but they supported the idea of 'social
|
|||
|
partnership' as it is part of their strategy for government as
|
|||
|
well.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are times of course when more radical reformist
|
|||
|
governments are elected (in other countries if not as yet in
|
|||
|
Ireland). These included Spain in 1936 and the post war
|
|||
|
British Labour government. The function of these
|
|||
|
governments however was to lead the working class away
|
|||
|
from the road to social revolution, to suggest the same
|
|||
|
gains could be made through parliament.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When put to the test however in the Spanish case by the
|
|||
|
fascist coup the government preferred negotiation with the
|
|||
|
fascists to arming the working class. In Spain the initial
|
|||
|
resistance to fascism was carried out by the militant workers
|
|||
|
of the anarchist C.N.T. who seized arms or attacked fascist
|
|||
|
barracks with dynamite and shotguns.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A similar example is seen throughout Europe in the
|
|||
|
immediate aftermath of the Russian revolution as the
|
|||
|
reformists in one country after another stood on the basis
|
|||
|
that electing them would prevent revolution. Vote for us
|
|||
|
and save capitalism. Unfortunately at such times such
|
|||
|
parties often gain mass support, this is why it is vital
|
|||
|
anarchists take up the arguments around reformism rather
|
|||
|
than assuming such ideas will just fade away with the
|
|||
|
revolution.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GOOD LEADERS?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
These arguments are common to most revolutionary
|
|||
|
socialists, but anarchists have another and more
|
|||
|
fundamental reason for opposing the parliamentary process.
|
|||
|
This process involves the mass of the working class relying
|
|||
|
on a few representatives to enter parliament and do battle
|
|||
|
on their behalf. Their sole involvement is one of voting
|
|||
|
every few years and perhaps canvassing and supporting the
|
|||
|
party through paper sales or whatever. A reliance on a
|
|||
|
physical leader or leaders from Neil Kinnock to Mary
|
|||
|
Robinson to sort out the situation for us.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Anarchists do not belive any real socialist / anarchist
|
|||
|
society can come about through the good actions of a few
|
|||
|
individuals. From the beginnings of the anarchist
|
|||
|
movement around the International Working Mens' (sic)
|
|||
|
Association (better known as the 'First International') over
|
|||
|
a century ago, we have argued that the liberation of the
|
|||
|
working class can only be achieved through the action of
|
|||
|
the working class.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the time this argument was with the Marxists, now with
|
|||
|
the collapse of many major Marxist parties in the wake of
|
|||
|
the collapse of Eastern Europe it is mainly with reformists.
|
|||
|
The process of bringing about an anarchist society will
|
|||
|
either be carried through by the mass of the workers or it
|
|||
|
will not happen.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This idea is obviously the complete opposite to the
|
|||
|
parliamentary idea. We do not seek a few leaders, good, bad
|
|||
|
or indifferent to sort out the mess that is capitalism.
|
|||
|
Indeed we argue constantly against any ideas that make it
|
|||
|
seem such elites are necessary.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Parliamentary politics relies on voting for people because
|
|||
|
they are going to do the job (or some of it) for you. Even
|
|||
|
the best intentioned individual on receiving a position of
|
|||
|
power finds a divergence of interests with those she/he
|
|||
|
represents. This is as much true of revolutionaries and
|
|||
|
union bureaucrats as it is of ministers and prime ministers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAKING THE ARGUMENTS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This brings us to the question of how should anarchists
|
|||
|
tackle the parliamentary system. How do we convince
|
|||
|
everyone not to vote? Perhaps we should put all our
|
|||
|
energy into anti-election campaigns.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In fact this is not seen as a major activity by most
|
|||
|
anarchists at all. Our aim is not to have elections where
|
|||
|
only 10% vote, for such a thing would be meaningless in
|
|||
|
itself. In the U.S.A. only about 30% vote in most elections
|
|||
|
and it is possible that up to 50% of the population is not
|
|||
|
even registered to vote. Only a fool however would claim
|
|||
|
this meant the U.S. was more anarchist then Ireland. If
|
|||
|
that 10% or 30% is still electing the government it might as
|
|||
|
well be 99%.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Our aim is to change society by winning the working class
|
|||
|
to the ideas and tactics of anarchism. This will involve the
|
|||
|
overthrow of the economic system (capitalism) we live under
|
|||
|
and its replacement with socialism under workers' self-
|
|||
|
management. Not voting may just be a sign of despair
|
|||
|
("What's the point"), we want workers actively struggling
|
|||
|
for the alternative.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Our anti-electoralism is designed to say two things. Firstly
|
|||
|
that parliament is not the real seat of power in society.
|
|||
|
Secondly that the task of bringing in anarchism is for the
|
|||
|
working class, not some small group of TD's.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We will gain support for anarchist ideas not just through
|
|||
|
abstract propaganda but also by our involvement as
|
|||
|
anarchists in workers' struggles and demonstrating how
|
|||
|
anarchism provides the best tools for winning day to day
|
|||
|
reforms.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
REFORMIST WORKERS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Most of the active militants in the working class support
|
|||
|
reformist parties, this is an obvious fact. This has led many
|
|||
|
revolutionary groups to adopt slogans at election times
|
|||
|
telling workers to "vote Labour with no illusions" or "vote
|
|||
|
Labour but build a socialist alternative". We don't.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The problems with both these slogans are they still reflect
|
|||
|
the idea that change should be brought about be the small
|
|||
|
elites. They are normally defended by saying this is putting
|
|||
|
the reformist parties to the test so that they can be exposed
|
|||
|
to their supporters. This is a nonsense, as a brief look at
|
|||
|
any of the Irish left reformist organisations shows.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The reformist organisations have failed the 'test' on dozens
|
|||
|
of occasions. Workers vote for these organisations not
|
|||
|
because they believe they will introduce socialism but
|
|||
|
because they are seen to offer the best of the bad deal that
|
|||
|
is capitalism.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is also presented as an argument for voting for the
|
|||
|
reformist parties. Is it not ultra-left to refuse to support
|
|||
|
these parties while they may be slightly better than Fianna
|
|||
|
Fail or Fine Gael? Two answers exist to this.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first is that as the real decision making takes place in
|
|||
|
industry and not in parliament these organisations even in
|
|||
|
majority government can only do what capitalism allows
|
|||
|
them. Their only argument is to organise capitalism more
|
|||
|
"humanly". We want to smash capitalism, not give it a
|
|||
|
human face. The sight of a "socialist government"
|
|||
|
implementing cuts and breaking strikes damages the
|
|||
|
credibility of socialism in the eyes of workers, as did the
|
|||
|
existence of the "socialist" police states of eastern Europe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Secondly, it is a question of energy. The sort of effort that
|
|||
|
is spent supporting (critically or otherwise) reformist
|
|||
|
organisation is energy taken away from the struggles for
|
|||
|
improved working conditions, better wages etc. Elections
|
|||
|
do not take place in a vacuum in which nothing else takes
|
|||
|
place in society for a number of months.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A strike or demonstration of thousands of workers has more
|
|||
|
chance of effecting real change then 20 Labour or Workers
|
|||
|
party TD's. In times of mass unrest energy pumped into
|
|||
|
reformist parties will be energy used to undermine the
|
|||
|
revolution. As so many Chilean socialists found,
|
|||
|
revolutionaries supporting such organisations are likely to
|
|||
|
find the are literally digging their own grave.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EXCEPTIONS TO THE RULE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are occasions where anarchists might support
|
|||
|
individuals standing in elections. This is when such people
|
|||
|
stand on a single issue and abstensionist basis. At times
|
|||
|
this may be an effective way of showing mass support for
|
|||
|
something when faced with a massive hype against it from
|
|||
|
the capitalist press. Other forms of demonstrating support
|
|||
|
may be difficult due to large scale intimidation,
|
|||
|
victimisation of activists, etc.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One example of such an occasion in the Irish context was
|
|||
|
the H-Block hunger strikes of 1981 for political status. The
|
|||
|
election of Bobby Sands as MP for Fermanagh/South
|
|||
|
Tyrone and the election of two more H-Block prisoners as
|
|||
|
TD's south of the border demonstrated a mass support for
|
|||
|
the hunger strikers. It undermined government and press
|
|||
|
claims that they had the support of only a tiny minority.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Such support must be on the basis of giving workers the
|
|||
|
confidence to openly come out and demonstrate, strike, etc.
|
|||
|
It is a tactic towards such mobilisations not an end in itself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Problems exist with this, commonly the individual elected
|
|||
|
may take up her/his seat despite pre-election promises of
|
|||
|
abstention if elected. Even in the hunger strike case
|
|||
|
where those on hunger strikes could not take up their seats
|
|||
|
the danger of such tactics is obvious. The vote was seen by
|
|||
|
Sinn Fein as proof that a turn towards electoral politics was
|
|||
|
the correct direction for anti-imperialism to take.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The potential of a mass campaign at the time of the hunger
|
|||
|
strikes based on strikes North and South of the border was
|
|||
|
thus lost. The decision to support a single issue candidate
|
|||
|
would have to involve hard arguments on the subsequent
|
|||
|
direction of the campaign and could not be taken lightly.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another instance where anarchists would not urge a
|
|||
|
abstention from the bosses electoral process is in the case of
|
|||
|
referendums. The WSM was involved (and indeed still is) in
|
|||
|
the Divorce Action Group. Despite the severe limitations of
|
|||
|
the 1986 referendum we still canvassed for a YES vote.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the 1983 anti-abortion referendum anarchists advocated
|
|||
|
a NO vote. Of course we don't accept the conclusions of
|
|||
|
either referendum as final. We still fight for the right to
|
|||
|
divorce and a woman's right to control her fertility up to
|
|||
|
and including free, safe abortion on demand. Such things
|
|||
|
are democratic rights in themselves, something no majority
|
|||
|
should have a veto over.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What do we say to people in the reformist parties? They
|
|||
|
can not (and should not) be ignored. We say look at the
|
|||
|
record of your party in government or to the Workers Party
|
|||
|
when you supported the 1981 minority Fianna Fail
|
|||
|
government.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Look at what your party stands for. Look at the record of
|
|||
|
your party in the trade union bureaucracy. Look at the
|
|||
|
historical role reformist parties have played in other
|
|||
|
countries. Reformism has had it's test and failed one
|
|||
|
hundred times. Leave it, find out more about anarchism
|
|||
|
and join the fight for working class self-emancipation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Andrew Flood
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
******* When the unemployed elected their own TD *******
|
|||
|
from Workers Solidarity No 33
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A SURVEY carried out by the Connolly
|
|||
|
Unemployed Centre at three labour exchanges
|
|||
|
in Dublin's South Inner City during the recent
|
|||
|
local elections showed that 90% of respondents
|
|||
|
would vote for an unemployed party if there
|
|||
|
was one running. Is this a way forward in the
|
|||
|
fight for decent jobs for all who want them? It
|
|||
|
is worth taking a look at what happened in
|
|||
|
1957 when an unemployed candidate made it
|
|||
|
into the D<>il.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ireland saw a massive rise in unemployment in the
|
|||
|
1950s, ironically at a time when the rest of the
|
|||
|
'western world' was booming. Emigration was to be
|
|||
|
the safety valve. However not all those out of work
|
|||
|
were prepared to uproot themselves and take the
|
|||
|
boat. Some stayed to fight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Unemployment meant poverty. A couple with two
|
|||
|
children on Unemployment Assistance were entitled
|
|||
|
to just <20>1.90 a week. This bought very little, e.g. a
|
|||
|
pound of butter cost 21p. People often lived on little
|
|||
|
more than bread, margarine and tea.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Unemployed Protest Committee was launched
|
|||
|
on January 12th 1957 when a chair was borrowed
|
|||
|
from a local shop and a public meeting held outside
|
|||
|
Dublin's Werburgh Street labour exchange. A
|
|||
|
committee of about 16 men (no women were
|
|||
|
involved nor does it appear that any serious attempt
|
|||
|
was made to involve them) began to meet. Among
|
|||
|
their number were Sam Nolan (today an official of
|
|||
|
the builders' union UCATT and a member of the
|
|||
|
Labour Party), Johnny Mooney, Jack Murphy and
|
|||
|
William McGuinness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Almost immediately McGuinness pulled out saying
|
|||
|
that the committee was dominated by the
|
|||
|
Communist Party (then named the Irish Workers
|
|||
|
League) and set up a rival Catholic Unemployed
|
|||
|
Association. With the seemingly obligatory split out
|
|||
|
of the way the UPC got down to business.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Use of a room was provided by the Dublin Trades
|
|||
|
Council and a march was arranged for January
|
|||
|
16th. About one hundred men and a solitary woman
|
|||
|
marched through the city under a banner inscribed
|
|||
|
with "support us in our demand for work". It was a
|
|||
|
tame beginning. Even the Catholic grouping was
|
|||
|
looking for a 50% increase in social welfare
|
|||
|
payments.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Agitation was stepped up and more joined the ranks
|
|||
|
of the UPC. Up to this point most had looked to the
|
|||
|
Labour TDs to fight on behalf of the unemployed.
|
|||
|
Sam Nolan summed it up at a UPC meeting at the
|
|||
|
end of January, "surely it was the responsibility of the
|
|||
|
Labour leaders and deputies to work out some
|
|||
|
organised plan. After all they were supposed to
|
|||
|
represent the working class".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Most members quickly saw that the Labour Party
|
|||
|
would contribute little more than empty platitudes.
|
|||
|
When the government fell in February after S<>an
|
|||
|
McBride's Clann na Poblachta withdrew their
|
|||
|
support Jack Murphy proposed that the UPC run a
|
|||
|
candidate in the coming general election. This was
|
|||
|
seen as a way of putting the need for jobs onto the
|
|||
|
political agenda.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Two names were put forward, Nolan and Murphy.
|
|||
|
Both were unemployed building workers. Nolan was
|
|||
|
a leading Communist. The Communists were divided
|
|||
|
on running him. Some, including Nolan himself, were
|
|||
|
unwilling to allow the UPC to be seen as a front for
|
|||
|
their party.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Murphy was a left republican who had been interned
|
|||
|
in the 1940s and had been a militant shop steward.
|
|||
|
He was selected to contest the election in Dublin
|
|||
|
South Central. The <20>100 deposit was raised from
|
|||
|
unlikely sources. <20>25 each came from Toddy
|
|||
|
O'Sullivan, manager of the Gresham Hotel; Fr.
|
|||
|
Counihane, a Jesuit priest; a Fianna F<>il senator
|
|||
|
called Mooney and Mr Digby, the owner of Pye Radio.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After a vigorous campaign Murphy gathered 3,036
|
|||
|
votes and was elected. His seat was gained at the
|
|||
|
expense of the Labour Party who had run James
|
|||
|
Connolly's son Roddy. Murphy's success was
|
|||
|
encouraging to unemployed activists and new
|
|||
|
organisations were set up in Waterford and Cork.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the unemployed thought that having one of their
|
|||
|
own in the D<>il would force the government to take
|
|||
|
their concerns more seriously they were in for a
|
|||
|
shock. Murphy could not even get an answer to a
|
|||
|
question about how much unemployment relief
|
|||
|
money would be spent in Dublin.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There was no problem, however, in providing an
|
|||
|
answer to Fine Gael's Belton when he asked about
|
|||
|
the "hardship imposed on cricket clubs because of the
|
|||
|
cost of cricket balls".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The new Fianna F<>il government's budget provided
|
|||
|
for the ending of food subsidies. This was going to hit
|
|||
|
the unemployed and low paid workers very hard.
|
|||
|
The response of the trade union leaders was
|
|||
|
pathetic. The Provisional United Trade Union
|
|||
|
Organisation (forerunner to the ICTU) had a lot in
|
|||
|
common with today's leaders - an overwhelming
|
|||
|
concern for industrial peace and the bosses' profits.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It pointed out "that the removal of food subsidies was
|
|||
|
neither necessary nor wise. While creating terrible
|
|||
|
hardships for the unemployed it also created a
|
|||
|
situation where claims for higher wages would be
|
|||
|
made with the threat of widespread instability or
|
|||
|
industrial strife".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jack Murphy and two other UPC members, Tommy
|
|||
|
Kavanagh and Jimmy Byrne, went on hunger strike.
|
|||
|
This was not a UPC stunt, in fact they learned of the
|
|||
|
hunger strike through the newspapers. Murphy, as
|
|||
|
'the elected representative of the unemployed', didn't
|
|||
|
see why he should have to consult with the
|
|||
|
committee.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The hunger strike lasted for four days. Each evening
|
|||
|
several thousand turned up to protest meetings at
|
|||
|
the corner of Abbey Street and O'Connell Street.
|
|||
|
Over 1,000 marched to Leinster House seeking a
|
|||
|
meeting with the Minister for Industry and
|
|||
|
Commerce, S<>an Lemass - who sneaked out the
|
|||
|
back gate.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Resolutions began to come from trades councils and
|
|||
|
union branches calling for a one day strike. There
|
|||
|
was now a possibility of building the sort of
|
|||
|
campaign that could force the government to back
|
|||
|
down.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This possibility quickly evaporated when Murphy fell
|
|||
|
sick and with Byrne and Kavanagh called off the
|
|||
|
hunger strike on day four. To save face the UPC
|
|||
|
arranged for trade union leaders to appeal for its end
|
|||
|
in order to save lives. It was wrong to rush into a
|
|||
|
hunger strike, and the way it was called off caused
|
|||
|
much confusion and demoralisation among the
|
|||
|
unemployed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All that followed was a few delegations to plead with
|
|||
|
Fianna F<>il TDs and a meeting between Murphy and
|
|||
|
Catholic Archbishop McQuaid. McQuaid made it
|
|||
|
clear he would not interfere in political decisions
|
|||
|
(which had not stopped him dictating to the previous
|
|||
|
government over the Mother and Child Scheme). He
|
|||
|
further warned Murphy of the danger of associating
|
|||
|
with Communists.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The last big demonstration was a 2,000 strong
|
|||
|
march from S<>an McDermott Street to the D<>il.
|
|||
|
Jack Murphy opposed the demonstration saying it
|
|||
|
conflicted with his D<>il work. In August he broke
|
|||
|
with the UPC and the next year he resigned his D<>il
|
|||
|
seat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The unemployed movement was dead. The biggest
|
|||
|
mistake they made was getting involved in
|
|||
|
parliamentary politics. Far from building active
|
|||
|
support for the UPC it made its supporters passive.
|
|||
|
Why bother marching, going to meetings and seeking
|
|||
|
trade union action if you have a TD to 'represent'
|
|||
|
you? The election of Murphy was seen by most as
|
|||
|
an end in itself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The key to winning on issues like extra jobs, higher
|
|||
|
payments and lower food prices is a mass, active
|
|||
|
movement. A movement that can and will fight
|
|||
|
alongside those in work. This is incompatible with
|
|||
|
electing figureheads to speak for us, to argue for us,
|
|||
|
to make decisions for us.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Real democracy is necessary. This means those
|
|||
|
affected by decisions having the power to make
|
|||
|
them. It does not mean handing that power over to
|
|||
|
a few individuals, that only makes people passive.
|
|||
|
No boss or government feels under pressure to make
|
|||
|
concessions to the passive.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Joe King
|
|||
|
|