Found this over at archive.org. It's the Program of the United Workers Party which later became the US Council Communists. Paul Mattick was a member of the UWP. It was a split from several locals of the Proletarian Party (US).
there is the text online over there, but it's poorly OCRed:
http://www.archive.org/details/World-wideFascismOrWorldRevolutionManifestoAndProgramOfTheUnited
Two more
Two more pamphlets:
http://www.archive.org/details/WhatNextForTheAmericanWorkers What next for the American workers?
and
Bolshevism or communism : on the question of a new communist party and the "Fourth" International (1934)
quite a find. an early u.s.
quite a find. an early u.s. left communist group?
yes, it's a split from the
yes, it's a split from the Proletarian Party, who were the SPGBers who supported the soviet union. Paul Mattick was party of the UWP and they morphed into the council communists who published "Living Marxism". So yeah, pretty important find, a transition.
From wikipedia: Quote: In
From wikipedia:
I recall reading, with babelfish, a pamplet Mattick wrote in German urging unity between left communists and the iww.
David, Do you know if Mattick
David, Do you know if Mattick was in the PPA or IWW? I've seen the pamphlet, wish I had thought of babelfish... But there was allot of intersection between the various libertarian marxist groups (including the IWW) during the 1930s.
Best of my recollection, and
Best of my recollection, and according to wikipedia, he was a wob.
I don't think it's exactly accurate to call PPA SPGB who supported the ussr by the way. Keracher and his comrades were anti-electoral. They believed in conducting mass education in Marxist theory
http://www.marxisthistory.org/subject/usa/eam/proletarianparty.html
David: The groupings which
David: The groupings which made up the PPA had been quite close to the SPGB and SPC prior to 1920 - to the point of some adopting the Declaration of Principles of the SPGB. There were a number of members of the SPGB and SPC in the US who were on the lam from military conscription in the Empire who organized what became the locals of the PPA. The PPA did diverge from the SPGB re soviets, etc. later (1920 on), but were a unified political bloc at the founding meeting of the Communist Party of America. I don't know if it's true that the PPA were anti-electoral.
We may both be right.
We may both be right. Wikipedia, citing "We Called Each Other Comrade": Charles H. Kerr & Co., Radical Publishers", states that the Michigan SP under Keracher's leadership actually called for expulsion for electoralists. I own the book but it's not close to hand, my library is getting a bit scattered. I'll check the citation. http://www.marxisthistory.org/subject/usa/eam/proletarianparty.html confirms your statement that the party, or at least the newspaper group, adopted SPGB principals.
The 'Letter to the Comintern
The 'Letter to the Comintern from the Representative of the Proletarian Party of America.
by Dennis E. Batt' on the link above is clearly electoral.
http://www.marxisthistory.org/history/usa/parties/ppa/1921/0000-batt-tocomintern.pdf
All 3 of those pamphlets are
All 3 of those pamphlets are in the library now
http://libcom.org/tags/united-workers-party-america
Hugo Oehler critizising the
Hugo Oehler critizising the UWP: https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/writers/oehler/1933/01/uwp.htm ... back then, he was still a pre-Oehlerite Trotskyist
The Antonie Pannekoek Archive
The Antonie Pannekoek Archive has an
almost complete run of International Council Correspondence