Luke Ivory puts
the CWI (Committee for a Workers International) position.
Luke is a member of Dundee Solidarity and Scottish Spokesperson
of Youth Fight for Jobs.
Some on the left today
dont see the point in discussing the history and theories
that exist within the labour movement, preferring to concentrate
on activism. While this may be ok for some
individuals, for organisations or parties serious about changing
society, being active in politics is about putting theory into
practice. An education in the history and theories of the labour
and socialist movement is as important to anybody who wishes to
fight for a redistribution of power and wealth as an education in
medicine is for somebody wishing to be able to heal the sick. For
these reasons the 20th anniversary of the fall of the
Berlin Wall and the subsequent demise of the Stalinist regimes of
Eastern Europe is a crucial time for socialists to discuss the
nature of the USSR, why the regimes fell, the subsequent
consequences this had for the labour and socialist movement in
Europe and internationally, and crucially what lessons can we
learn to arm us in the campaign for socialism today.
In the early 20th
century the capitalist system had already outlived any usefulness
that it had previously served for humanity. The working class and
poor had already ceased to reap any further benefits which
capitalism had provided such as advances in areas like science,
technology, education, medicine etc. The main feature of
capitalism was now the era of imperialism, culminating in the
Great War.
Just as the sweeping
away of the old feudal regimes and the heralding in of capitalism
had achieved great advancements for humanity, the greatest issue
of the day for the poor and oppressed was the need to rise up
again in order to fight for and win a new political and economic
system which distributed power and wealth to the masses. This
would then as it would now lead humanity to being
able to pull together its resources in order to achieve the needs
and aspirations of humanity as a whole.
It was the downtrodden
Russian masses the most exploited, oppressed, and
ruthlessly sacrificed of all during the Great War that
achieved this heroic feat. Socialists could see that this opened
the door for a wave of revolution to sweep away capitalism right
across Europe. Socialists were however divided - around the
question of reform or revolution - on whether this would be a
good thing.
Many on the
soft or reformist left have always
opposed the events of October 1917, often on the grounds that
revolution, or Marxist theory itself, is violent and / or can
lead to greater harm. Such analyses are weak in a number of ways.
Marxists believe in the attainment of power for the working class
to be achieved in the most peaceful way possible. The difference
between Marxists and other socialists, lefts or progressives is
that we have a fully rounded out analysis rather than a naïve
and confused understanding of exactly how the capitalist state
functions, and how the ruling class use the power of the state in
order to use any methods they feel they possibly can in order to
hold onto their power and wealth. This means the working class
must always be prepared and organised in order to protect
themselves from the full force of the state. Most of the October
revolution certainly in the capital Petrograd from where
the most accurate accounts exist was actually very
peaceful. Due to the sheer volume of the masses involved in the
uprising the ruling class were left helpless and put up little
resistance.
The best example of
why workers need to be armed during turbulent periods of class
struggle is the period of the Russian Revolution and subsequent
Civil War, when the ruling class was backed by invading
imperialist armies from over 20 countries. Reformists have
normally argued including in Russia at the time
that the main priority pre October was the defence of the
democratic gains made during the February Revolution where powers
were transferred to the Duma (Russian Parliament), arguing that
the October Revolution was excessive, unnecessary and counter
productive. However the ruling classes do not allow power to be
wrestled from them without a fight and there always remains a
likelihood that they will revert to counter revolution and
military coup when their material interests are threatened
especially if they sense a weakness in their opponents. This has
been witnessed on countless occasions in Latin America - as well
as other areas - most famously during Salvador Allendes
Socialist / Liberal coalition in Chile, where the revolutionary
movement of the masses alongside the government was drowned in
blood; an event made possible precisely because the masses were
not armed by their reformist leadership.
This was likewise the
case in Russia between the 1917 revolutions when reaction, with
General Kornilov as figurehead, attempted one coup and were
mobilising for another, in order to crush the gains made by the
February Revolution. The emerging bourgeois class were still too
weak to establish and maintain a liberal capitalist system. They
could not rely on their class counterparts in Western Europe
because the interests of Western capital were intertwined with
the Tsarist regime. Kerenskys coalition of a Liberal
government supported by reformist Socialists was also rapidly
losing most of their support from the working class, who were
increasingly being pushed to breaking point and alienated by the
coalitions further cuts to living conditions and insistence
on the continuation of the war. The advanced workers were joining
the Bolsheviks in their thousands. Bolshevik membership in
Petrograd between February and April grew from between 2000
3000 to 16 000, and nationally membership between April
and July membership grew from 79 000 to 200 000. The most
advanced workers were even growing impatient with the Bolsheviks
and were threatening to revolt during the turbulent July
Days. However the astute leadership of Lenin and Trotsky
managed to persuade them to wait until further support could be
gained, especially from the peasantry, because analysing events
from the revolution of 1906 showed a premature uprising would
have been fatal.
Helplessly outflanked
to the left and right there was no chance of the Kerensky
Government lasting in power for any period of time. The reformist
Socialists had made the mistake of lagging behind the more
militant workers, largely because they fail to understand the
nature of the consciousness of the working class and how quickly
this can change. It was apparent just to the Bolsheviks that the
only way of preserving the gains of the February Revolution was
to lead the now revolutionary workers, who were conscious that
the one single way to prevent the Kornilov counter revolution
from brutally crushing the movement was to go all the way and
take power into the hands of the working class and peasantry.
Despite the incorrect
assertions of right wing historians, further revolutionary
uprising from the masses were inevitable because of their abysmal
living conditions. The militancy of the most advanced workers was
often ahead of even the moderate Bolsheviks based around Stalin,
who originally agreed with the Mensheviks and never called for a
socialist revolution, settling for the protection of the February
gains. In light of a correct assessment of the July
Days and the already established counter revolutionary
forces, the Bolsheviks cannot be blamed for bloodshed. They only
played the role of the tactical and theoretical leadership of the
already revolutionary masses. The finger of blame must point
solely at the forces of reaction that were already planning a
bloody revenge just because the creation of a liberal style
democracy threatened their own material class interests. The
October Revolution must instead be seen in the same light as any
other popular uprising of the masses that rise up to overthrow a
despotic regime.
The choice was between
socialist revolution or the bloody reaction of counter
revolution. However, during the Civil War, the liberals in the
Cadet party and reformist socialists of the
Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries were to unite with the
counter revolutionary forces of Kornilov, despite the fact that
Kornilovs army were originally launched to crush the
Kerensky led coalition.
Many of the opponents
of Marxism have also argued that the degeneration of the
revolution into a totalitarian dictatorship was inevitable; if
not that the new regime was a dictatorship from the outset. These
slanders whether deliberate or formulated through confused
analysis usually coalesce around a critique of the system of
democratic centralism. Democratic centralism in basic
terms is a flexible system of democracy which varies depending on
the current conditions. Decisions are always taken
democratically, before the whole membership is asked to maintain
party discipline and abide by majority rule. The numbers involved
in the democratic process vary depending on the conditions of the
period. During periods where the party can freely operate then as
wide an amount of the membership as necessary should participate
in the decision making process.
If on the other hand
if we are in a revolutionary era and the party has been driven
underground by an autocratic or authoritarian regime, like was
often the case for the Bolsheviks, then naturally more decisions
will have to be taken by a small but still democratically elected
central committee. Because comrades lives are at threat
people are strongly expected to remain disciplined. Merely
because during the Bolshevik era decision making had to be more
centralised does not therefore lead to an inevitable slide
towards totalitarianism. Im sure the opponents of Marxism
would love it if when membership was proscribed they advertised
and held all member conferences in city centres but unfortunately
Marxists are not so stupid.
The socialist and
labour movement have always contained strong traditions of
democratic centralism. This is especially striking in the Trade
Unions where due to the crucial importance of unity and
solidarity when trying to win industrial disputes all members are
expected to support a majority vote to withdraw their labour. It
would be a fatal mistake if anybody voting against strike action
was encouraged to carry through their own personal decision.
The mistake most
critics make is to confuse democratic centralism with bureaucratic
centralism, the Stalinist gross deformation of democratic
centralism which was the decision making process in the
Communist Party after the Stalinist bureaucracy
completely dissolved most of the democratic structures that
existed within the Bolshevik Party and the early years of the
Communist Party.
The rise of the
Stalinist bureaucracy was by no means inevitable but arose out of
a number of factors. One crucial factor being that many of the
most politically aware and class conscious Bolsheviks were killed
during the Civil War. The same war also created many shortages
meaning a number of party officials in charge of distributing
rations succumbed to siphoning off extra portions to feed their
hungry families, thus becoming a privalaged hierarchy. The fact
that the masses were completely exhausted after nearly a decade
of World War I, two revolutions and a civil war, thus unable to
keep a proper check on all party officials was also vital.
Possibly the biggest factor however was the defeat of the German
Revolution of 1918 when the reformist socialist
government of the Social Democrats united with the Christian
Democrats and the armed militia proto-fascist Friekorps to crush
the socialist uprising. If successful then revolution would have
spread throughout Europe as there were already revolutionary
waves in many countries, including 'Red Clydeside', but the
defeat left Russia as a completely isolated, underdeveloped
state.
One of the most
fundamental features of Marxism is that for socialism to succeed
it must be international because you cannot build islands
of socialism in a sea of capitalism, as the old adage goes.
This isolation eventually led Stalin to break with any
recognisable form of genuine Marxism when he developed the theory
of building Socialism in one country. This alongside
the previous erosions of workers democracy meant that
genuine Marxists could no longer consider the USSR as a genuine
Socialist state and subsequently Leon Trotsky created his
characterisation of the USSR as a degenerated workers
state.
The reason why Trotsky
still believed the USSR to be a workers state,
albeit a degenerated one, was twofold. Firstly, while power had
been heavily centralised, the main organs of workers democracy -
the Soviets -still remained intact. This meant that if the
working class could regain its previous levels of class
consciousness and vitality they could re-enter the Soviets - and
also Trade Unions - on mass and from below, and due to strength
of numbers they could oust the bureaucratic caste at the top of
the system.
Also, whilst some of
the gains of the revolution had now been lost, such as workers
democracy, womens rights, national autonomy etc, there were
still many gains of the revolution that were still intact, most
important being the planned economy. The reason why the theory of
state capitalism - held by some
Trotskyists - is so flawed is because there was no
element of capitalisms most important feature the free
market within the USSR. Trotsky correctly outlined state
capitalism to be a system with part nationalisation of some key
sectors of the economy alongside a free market basically a
mixed economy along a traditional Old Labour ideology
where there has been a partial negation with capitalism.
The fact that the USSR
retained a planned economy meant it was largely immune from some
of the inherent contradictions of capitalism such as the
crises of overproduction and subsequently were pretty
much unscathed by the Wall Street crash and the proceeding
depression. The rapid growth in the economy of the USSR led to a
rise from being a backward, underdeveloped country to being
comfortably the second largest economy in the world. Between 1913
and 1963 industrial output rocketed by 53 fold in the USSR
compared to USA by 6 and UK by 2.
This rise of the USSR
was accompanied by a raising of living standards for many Soviet
people. An highly skilled and educated workforce was needed to
build and sustain this rapid growth. Eventually one third of
Soviet people acquired a university degree and the USSR could
boast to have in its ranks a quarter of the planets scientists,
pointing towards the USSR having had the best education system in
the world. Whilst the human rights abuses and mass oppression of
dissent obviously tarnished the reputation of socialism around
the globe, the amazing successes of the planned economy - without
the extensive waste of the free market - proved
beyond reasonable doubt that socialism was a superior economic
system to capitalism. This would have attracted many millions to
the ideas of socialism around the globe. For these reasons, as
well as the results a restoration of capitalism would have for
the Russian masses, Trotsky was correct to call for the
protection of the USSR against imperialism and capitalist
restoration.
Despite the initial
meteoric rise however, Trotsky was also correct when he claimed
that socialism needs democracy like a body needs
oxygen. The Stalinists dream of ruling for a thousand
years was always just a dream and the outcome of Trotskys
analysis that the Stalinist regime would either be toppled by a
political revolution establishing workers democracy, or
otherwise by reverting back to capitalist rule was soon to be
visible on the horizon. The Stalinist bureaucracy grew
increasingly detached from the masses and unable to sustain
economic growth. A small amount of people from a ruling
bureaucracy eventually cannot successfully plan an economy for
people they are so detached from. The workers need to be united
in a coherent democratic system and then they can simply work out
through basic arithmetic how much of each product needs to be
produced for everyone. Massive inefficiencies grew in the
Stalinist system.
From the late 1960s
economic growth started to decline. The planned economys
advantages were being eroded as waste in the form of massive
corruption from a caste that seemed to think they were
invincible, and were more obsessed with lining their own pockets
than doing their jobs was beginning to take its toll. Economic
output collapsed to 60% of that of the USA, and agricultural
output fell to 75% of the USA despite the fact the USSR had
double the amount of tractors. A lack of foresight from an
incapable ruling caste meant the Soviet economy was not well
suited to modern technology and so everything was becoming
outmoded. Waste in both material and human terms was encapsulated
in some of the worlds best scientists careers being
squandered working in the creation of a massive nuclear arsenal.
It eventually only
became a matter of time before the planned economy would either
be given the kiss of life by the carrying through of a political
revolution to overthrow the bureaucracy and establish
workers democracy, or whether the counter revolution which
began with the Stalinist usurping of the revolution in the mid
1920s would be completed with the restoration of capitalism.
Throughout the 1980s active opposition to the bureaucracy began
to rapidly grow as the lack of economic growth inevitably led to
a decline in the living standards of the workers.
Hitherto the
bureaucracy had always relied on either maintaining a passive
working class made possible through a rise in living
standards arising from the long period of rapid economic growth
and with the workers being in fear of the return of imperialism,
or through divide and rule tactics such as when the uprisings in
Budapest in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968 were suppressed by
troops from the Eastern USSR who were told they were suppressing
a Fascist uprising. The masses can only be relied upon for
acquiescence during times of growth and decent living conditions.
Now with the inept Stalinist bureaucrats presiding over rusting
factories and decaying machinery the means of production were
beginning to grind to a halt and often did as strikes and
demonstrations became far more commonplace across the USSR and
the deformed workers states (deformed meaning unlike the
USSR they were never genuine socialist states but deformed
Stalinist caricatures from birth) of Eastern Europe.
The question of
political revolution was now firmly on the agenda with workers
across the Eastern bloc searching for an alternative to the
oppressive Stalinist regimes whilst still opposing capitalism and
desiring to remain in some kind of socialist system. The surest
sign that the ruling elite are feeling the heat in a crisis is
when they become publicly divided. If this is accompanied by a
united, militant working class with its own independent
organisations and a politically advanced leadership then
democratic socialist change can become not just possible but
likely. This appeared to be the case in the mid to late 1980s
when the ruling elite divided into two factions. In such
turbulent periods these two factions invariable become one which
wishes to suppress dissent with increased force, which became the
dominant faction in the Chinese Communist Party at the time of
the Tiananmen Square massacre; the other wishing to quell unrest
by granting limited reforms. The latter became the dominant
faction amongst the USSR's elite and the reforms were
encapsulated in the form of Gorbachevs Glasnost (openness)
and Perestroika (restructuring).
These reforms were
ultimately incapable of rescuing the Stalinist system from
irreversible decline as the economy continued to stagnate.
Glasnost predictably never went as far as allowing the
rehabilitation of the ideas of Leon Trotsky and genuine
democratic socialism. It was increasingly clear from a Trotskyist
perspective that the regime was on its last legs and at some
stage be replaced with either of the two possibilities of
poltical revolution and workers' democracy or the counter
revolution of capitalist restoration.
Unfortunately
differing levels of consciousness were becoming apparent. There
were many sympathisers of Trotsky and support for maintaining a
socialist system alongside opposition to the establishment was
evident on demonstrations and marches with banners demanding
Peoples Perestroika and Real Socialism
not Stalinism. On the other hand there were others,
including many intellectuals who began to make democratic demands
of a more liberal nature, essentially a return to capitalism.
This grouping would eventually find its leadership amongst a new
faction of the bureaucracy based around Boris Yeltsin.
Despite a mass
workers movement involving widespread strikes and
demonstrations, often in their tens or even hundreds of
thousands, a key ingredient for the successful political
revolution, an organised independent party of the working class,
did not exist and could not be created soon enough. A lack of
understanding as to where to go next, alongside the spectacular
80s boom of global capitalism coinciding with the rapid nosedive
of the Soviet economy, allowed Yeltsin to gain support. The
momentum Yeltsin was now gaining ultimately allowed him to come
to power as large sections of workers began to look towards him
on the basis of his image as being the most radical reformer.
Gorbachev had now become squeezed with Yeltsin on the reform wing
and Ligachev on the Conservative wing. Yeltsin however never
actually spoke of a restoration of capitalism in the run up to
his election victory aware this would be met with
hostility from many workers who still opposed capitalism while
neither having much faith left in socialism.
Nevertheless a return
to capitalism was essentially what his programme offered and he
duly set about a ruthless programme of 'shock therapy'
privatisation and a complete overhaul of the state. In his
classic 1936 work The Revolution Betrayed, Trotsky
predicted that if a return to capitalism was to materialise it
would be a barbarous and authoritarian version rather than
something similar to the liberal democracies in the West. This
was borne out with the gangster capitalism subsequently witnessed
in Russia after the oligarchs battled it out for their share of
the new private industries stolen from the Russian working class,
and also in the highly centralised, autocratic regime of Putin
and now his new sidekick Medvedev.
The Committee for a
Workers International correctly predicted that these events
would have a devastating effect on the lives of ordinary
Russians. Between 1989-98 the already faltering economy lost 45%
of its economic output resulting in some being plunged into
levels of poverty akin to the undeveloped world, life expectancy
falling below what it was at the turn of the previous century,
suicides doubling and the third highest murder and crime rate in
the world below only South Africa and Colombia at least
fifteen times higher than Western Europe. Russia has actuallt
still not reached, in manufacturing production at least, the
levels of 1989.
Others claiming the
Trotskyist mantle while proposing the alternative theory of
state capitalism, saw the USSR in much the same light
as they saw the capitalist powers and so analysed the restoration
of capitalism as a sideways step. They failed to
support the planned economy and subsequently never even opposed
Yeltsins privatisation measures. This led them to believe
that the 90s would be a favourable period for Marxists, failing
to recognise that the defeat of the planned economy would be a
blow to the belief of many workers worldwide that socialism and
the planned economy was a viable and indeed superior system.
Events in the former
USSR and Eastern Europe, as well as the rest of the world have
emphatically proven Trotsky correct to have declared that
socialists internationally should have supported the USSR against
imperialism and capitalist restoration. Francis Fukuyamas
famous (perhaps now infamous!) quote about human civilisation now
reaching the end of history with the triumph of
capitalism, and the Wall Street Journals front page
headline We Won! are just two examples of how the
global capitalist propaganda machine went into overdrive in
declaring socialism to be dead for ever. This facilitated a lurch
to the right in the labour movement with the traditional
workers parties adopting neo-liberalism as their holy grail
and the trade union leaders capitulating to the market economy,
limiting themselves to politely asking the bosses if there were
any scraps from their table left for the workers.
The resultant lowering
of class consciousness and support for socialism internationally
then had a knock on effect on even the state
capitalist Trotskyists, who subsequently lurched to the
right after they realised that the time wasnt going to be
as great a period for growth as they had expected. Devoid of
faith in the working class for the best part of a decade, they
held a position of abandoning socialist campaigning, even
suggesting that socialists should not even mention the word
socialism - because it would scare people
away from getting involved in progressive politics - before
finally being pulled back to the left by the force of events in
the shape of the biggest global recession since the thirties.
What they did not
realise was that the opening up of new markets and cheap labour
for capitalism in the Stalinist states of Eastern Europe &
the former USSR, China and then India an area containing
over a third the worlds population allowed for a
prolonged upturn for global capitalism. This further compounded
the difficulties for the left to grow and subsequently the
working class have been left without a political home for around
20 years. This has led to record low turnouts in elections right
across Europe which is clear evidence that while support for
socialism may well have declined over the last two decades, the
working class have certainly never embraced capitalism in the
Western Europe and its popularity in Eastern Europe has continued
to decline as people have realised that promises of a standard of
living equal to Western Europe were an outright lie.
The coverage of the 20th
anniversary of the fall of the Berlin was a blatant attempt of
the bourgeoisie to gloss over the inadequacies of capitalism by
trying to force upon the masses a notion of how free we are
compared to the horrors of the Socialist/Communist East. It has
failed miserably. Polls broadcast by the BBC during the brief
periods when they shed a light on how people in the East actually
feel revealed that only 11% of people in the former East Germany
think that capitalism is working well, and 2/3 of people want a
fairer system with a more equal distribution of wealth. In
Ukraine, over the last twenty years those who support capitalism
have dropped in number from 72% down to 30%.
These numbers will
dwindle further as more and more people realise that there is not
going to be a quick way out of capitalisms crisis. The
overriding task of socialists and Marxists today is the creation
of new workers parties and the building of them into mass
parties of the working class, containing a strong Marxist trend
capable of leading the struggle to overthrow capitalism. Failure
to do so will enable the continued growth of the far right whose
advance is never going to be halted by the meek neo-liberal
parties whose policies, by alienating the working class, are
responsible for their rise in the first place. The workers of
Eastern Europe still have a memory of how the planned economy
allowed greater security for them financially. A new generation
of workers in the West are realising that it is not inevitable
that there is a linear improvement in living conditions from
generation to generation under capitalism, because many cannot
appear to dream of getting jobs on the same pay and conditions as
their parents enjoyed.
The history of the
working class none more so than in Russia in 1917
shows that its consciousness can, and does, change very rapidly.
We are undoubtedly entering such a period today. People are
looking for alternatives and the potential for the growth of left
wing or socialist parties exists. In the coming period tens of
millions of people across Europe are going to be moved to fight
cuts in living standards and they will be looking for a political
home. Building movements and parties from a small and weak
position is never easy. But not for at least a couple of decades
has the ground been so fertile for the ideas of socialism to
grow. It is therefore up to socialists to grasp the nettle.