I've been reading a bit of An Anarchist FAQ and I have some critiques of what it says about our current capitalist representative democracies.
The FAQ says that representative democracies like Britain or Germany are in fact capitalist dictatorships. There are three reasons for why this is the case.
1) It's expensive to run for office. Getting financial support from capitalists tend to be the easiest way to collect money for running. These capitalists expect to get something in return. Also, politicans are in many cases capitalists themselves.
2) Every state has a bureacracy that does not dissappear after a change in government. They can manipulate the elected members of the state, for example by witholding important information.
3) If a government wants to do something that is not in the interest of the capitalist class, the capitalists can take their economic assets away from the country (capital flight). This means that governments can't make revolutionary changes in the economy.
Therefore, the state remains an instrument of the capitalist class. Thus the state machine remains a tool by which the few can enrich themselves at the expense of the many. This does not mean that the state is immune to popular pressure and that positive changes can't occur. The key is that such changes are not the natural function of the state.
I'm not sure if I completely agree with the FAQ on this issue. I will talk about each argument individually, one by one. Some of the things I will bring up are not arguments but just questions.
1) While this argument does make a valid point about how capitalists or people or parties supported by capitalists have an easier time campaigning for an election than others, I don't think it's a relevant argument for the thesis the FAQ tries to make. It's still possible for anti-capitalist parties or people to get money for campaigning (the FAQ even says this).
Furthermore, the argument merely says that it's easier for pro-capitalists to persuade people to vote for them. What people tend to mean with the expression "representative democracy" is a system in which the population votes on representatives to represent them. Nobody is forcing the population to vote on a conservative or a social democrat etc.
I don't think that the fact that revolutionaries have a more difficult time getting seen or heard or liked (due to indoctrination) by the population means that it's actually a dictatorship. Most people on this forum appear to come from liberal democracies where the education has been pro-capitalist, but that didn't prevent them from becoming anarchists.
2) Let's say an a revolutionary party wins in a landslide election. What can the bureacracy do to manipulate them?
3) Is there no way of preventing capital flight?
The Bolshevik regime took the economic assets of the capitalist class, didn't they? I do not mean to say that I think that the Bolsheviks created a non-capitalist society, but as far as I know they did manage to take the means of production from the capitalist class. In that sense they were anti-(private)
capitalists. Doesn't this refute the idea that governments can't take very anti-capitalist decisions?
explainthingstome wrote: I've
explainthingstome
I don't know if this is covered in the FAQ, but I think perhaps a more powerful argument is that most people spend much of their waking lives in the workplace, which genuinely is a capitalist dictatorship. How democratic can any country be when most of its citizens have to walk through the doors of a dictatorship most days?
Therefore, the state remains an instrument of the capitalist class. Thus the state machine remains a tool by which the few can enrich themselves at the expense of the many. This does not mean that the state is immune to popular pressure and that positive changes can't occur. The key is that such changes are not the natural function of the state.
To answer questions 2 and 3 together, I'd say that ideally you want to elect a Corbyn or Sanders government, and then you can watch it play out in practice... Actually, just watching Corbyn and McDonnell trying to advance the cause of socialism while running a party that's filled with very un-socialist bureaucrats and local councils implementing austerity is kind of a lesson in itself. Anyway, on the specific question of the Bolsheviks, whatever else you can say about them, they certainly aren't a party that took power peacefully by standing in elections under a democratic system, so I don't think they disprove the claim that you can't stop capital flight without breaking with the bounds of capitalist legality.
More generally, I think it's worth reviewing the record of left reformist governments that got into power - Spain (answered by military coup, civil war and then actual dictatorship), Chile (military coup and actual dictatorship), 60s-70s UK Labour (brought to its knees by capital flight and forced to accept an IMF loan, which meant letting the IMF write their economic policies, while the bureaucracy debated whether or not a military coup would be needed), Mitterrand in 1980s France (brought to his knees by capital flight and forced to implement austerity), and then Syriza (also did not end well).
For more on that, I'd really recommend reading this 2015 article from Andrew Flood on the prospects for what was then the brand-shiny-new Syriza government - I think that article has stood the test of time really well.
Quote: I don't know if this
It might also be worth noting that "democratized" workplaces, where production for exchange and profit are still the objectives, are not in any way more desirable, as people like Wolff and others who foreground the "undemocratic" aspect of capitalist workplaces tend to think. "Democratized" workplaces, worker coops etc., face the same pressures as any other top-down business and are forced to make similar decisions.
As Luxemburg noted:
To answer the question ‘Are
To answer the question ‘Are capitalist democracies just dictatorships?’ - I’d suggest the best way to find an answer is to examine in what ways do democracies and dictatorships differ.
The most obvious difference I think is that dictatorships are more authoritarian and have little pretence to a rule based system (unless we can count gangsters as having ‘rules’). Capitalism flourishes in a rule based system as the competitive nature of capitalism needs rules to establish trust and protection of property/contracts etc. To accomplish this it needs a state and a legal system to arbitrate disputes. All dictatorships find it harder to attract internal investment as it cannot be protected long term. One of the reasons China is having trade problems is its disregard of international and internal rules - such as copy right law, etc. This is obviously not lost on the people of Hong Kong.
Trump’s hypocrisy regarding international agreements marks an important division in the American ruling class as the Democrats support his line on China and deplore his withdrawal from the Iranian treaty, etc.
I’m in general agreement with zugzwang #3 post.
None of this stuff is simple. Working for Amazon may be a hell-hole, though the wage slave may prefer this to being a no-wage slave. The recently made ex-employees of Thomas Cook did not appear to be overjoyed by being freed from the yoke of ‘dictatorship’.
EDIT: for a typo
Thanks for the reply R
Thanks for the reply R Totale.
"I don't know if this is covered in the FAQ, but I think perhaps a more powerful argument is that most people spend much of their waking lives in the workplace, which genuinely is a capitalist dictatorship. How democratic can any country be when most of its citizens have to walk through the doors of a dictatorship most days?"
I think it's worth talking about the undemocratic nature of the workplace under capitalism, but I don't know if it's a good argument for the idea that all capitalist countries are dictatorships. Most voters of our democracies have voted for political parties that make no secret of keeping the workplace like it is, atleast that's my impression.
"Actually, just watching Corbyn and McDonnell trying to advance the cause of socialism while running a party that's filled with very un-socialist bureaucrats and local councils implementing austerity is kind of a lesson in itself."
I could be wrong about Corbyn or Sanders but I view them as social democrats. When anarchists talk about socialism, they're talking about creating a non-capitalist system. When Corbyn and Sanders talk about socialism, aren't they just talking about creating a "softer" capitalist society with better access to healthcare, higher wages etc? Isn't the problem that they try to make capitalism better than it could actually be, rather than that they're prevented by bureaucrats or local councils?
"I don't think they disprove the claim that you can't stop capital flight without breaking with the bounds of capitalist legality."
Isn't it possible for a parliamentarian majority to just change the laws and make socialist seizure of private property and other stuff legal?
Quote: Isn't it possible for
"socialist" seizure, like recently on a larger scale in venezuela, is with compensation and it exists in every capitalist state too, no laws need to be changed. Usually the state needs it for large infrastructure projects to override local private interests.
'"socialist" seizure, like
'"socialist" seizure, like recently on a larger scale in venezuela, is with compensation and it exists in every capitalist state too'
Is non-compensatory seizure legal? Also, when I wrote "socialist seizure of private property" I didn't mean to suggest that all that happens is that the state becomes the new owner, what I meant was that private property becomes public property in the anarchist sense of the word.
zugzwang wrote: Quote: I
zugzwang
Broadly agreed, although to be precise I'd say more "are not fundamentally different" - if given the choice I reckon I'd probably prefer a democratized workplace, in much the same way as a workplace where you get flexitime is more desirable than one with really strict shift times, a workplace where you get £10 an hour is more desirable than one where you get £9, and so on. I was just saying that if wanted to make the argument mentioned in the OP, looking at that aspect seems like a much stronger line of argument.
Auld-bod
Yeah, I suppose the accurate way to describe it would be something like "capitalist democracies and dictatorships are similar in some ways, different in others, and both of them are bad", but that doesn't make for too much of a snappy slogan.
explainthingstome
Yeah, kind of, but there's a few replies to that: one is that, if electoral politics isn't suited to achieving a relatively simple and limited goal (higher wages, better social security, etc), then it seems a stretch to think it can be used for something far more ambitious like the creation of a non-capitalist system. A second would be to take a detailed look at the history of the Second International, and ask why it is that electoralism has been so good at taking parties that started off as being in some sense genuinely Marxist and anticapitalist (I think Labour was always a moderate outlier in this respect) and turning them into bodies that can offer moderate social democracy at best.
And also: if you or I were in Corbyn's shoes, what would you do differently? Would you push for full communism, knowing that doing so would cause a massive split in the Parliamentary Labour Party, drive most of your existing MPs out, and so end up ensuring that you're in no position to become Prime Minister and legislate for communism? Or would you prioritise getting into power, which means holding the party together, which means making whatever compromises it takes to keep right-wing Labour MPs on board?
I don't know how much you follow UK electoral politics, but I do also think that the story of Chuka Umunna and pals, while funny, is also a very good illustration of the limitations of representative democracy: at the last election, the majority of voters in Streatham voted for the Labour Party. Since then, they've had a Labour MP, a The Independent Group MP, a Change UK MP, and now they have a Liberal Democrat one. That, to me, suggests some real limitations to how far "the people" are represented by their representatives.
Hah, I think you might have just independently invented the SPGB there. :P Theoretically, yes, in practice I'll believe it when I see it. Although I am aware of the difficulty of arguing from historical experience too much, because a reformist could just as well reply with "well, I'll believe in an anarchist revolution that doesn't end with you all getting shot when I see it." But anyway, if a party with such a manifesto got into power, and actually tried living up to its manifesto commitments, I think we'd pretty quickly start seeing military chiefs holding emergency meetings about how best to protect democracy from the extremists who've seized power, UN sanctions and resolutions against the regime that was refusing to respect property rights, US troops arriving to liberate us, and so on.
Quote: R Totale:[I]f
Well I mean stuff like higher wages and better social security isn't necessarily simple, especially during bad economic times. My impression is that it's economically impossible to do certain "good reforms" under certain times or all times. Reformism is trying to make capitalism good, whereas what I'm talking about is replacing capitalism with something else. I don't see how one can deduce that the latter is impossible just because the former is impossible.
Actually I've read a lot from them, so they've influenced me to a good degree.
Well, I remember reading an SPGB article that suggested that the reason for the "degeneration" of the social-democratic movement was that they wanted to attract a lot of people from the working class. And since the working class thought of higher wages and better living conditions etc, the socialist parties put a lot of their time on talking about such reforms. That "lured" non-communists into their ranks, which created a bunch of mainly non-communist parties. Thus, it wasn'telectoralism that "softened" the anti-capitalist parties but rather their tactic of attracting workers through reformist bait. I personally think that sounds pretty likely. Can you find any holes in the reasoning?
The reason for a massive split after I, Jeremy Corbyn, would push for full communism is that most people who voted for the party and most people within the party would be non-communists. The voters aren't expecting a revolution, they're expecting some good reforms within a capitalist framework. Trying to establish communism somewhere were most people don't want it seems like an impossible task.
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I agree that floor crossers (can't think of a better term) are a problem in representative democracies, but at the same time most people in, say, the British parliament haven't switched alliances.
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The scenario that you paint up in the last section of your reply doesn't seem to be limited to a situation in which communists take control of the state through a democratic election. To me, it seems as though you would have to apply it to any situation where communism is being established or has been established. What is your idea of the establishment of communism, and why would it not collapse due to military coups, capitalist invasion etc? How are these threats eliminated?
I had been meaning to write a
I had been meaning to write a proper reply to this when I get time, but I've not had time for a few days now, so in case I still don't get a chance soon, then my very short answer, without meaning to be too cryptic, would be that I think there's a question about what does it mean for people to want communism, and most importantly what kind of experiences make people want communism. I think electoral politics as a form is pretty bad for making people want communism compared to other forms of activity.
Also, I'm sure that there's a Malatesta quote somewhere where he gives a better answer to why genuinely anticapitalist politicians become reformist, can't for the life of me think where it's from though - can anyone else remember what I'm thinking of? If not, I can try to explain my thinking when I get a chance, Malatesta would've phrased it better than I could though.
'explainthingstome' if you
'explainthingstome' if you have some time to spare you might find this older discussion between the spgb and some anarchist and left/council communists of use in clarifying your thoughts. See here:
https://libcom.org/forums/announcements/midlands-discussion-forum-workers-councils-or-parliament-27012014
explainthingstome
explainthingstome
OK, I don't fully 100% know where I stand on that - I don't think we'll be able to reform capitalism to be nice or whatever, but it does seem to be an impressively flexible and adaptable social system in some ways, so I'm not totally convinced by claims that x or y reform is impossible. But anyway, as I understand it, you sort of seem to be saying "the examples of Syriza/Mitterand/Labour aren't that relevant because a hypothetical communist government would want to do different things", and I think that the tools used to stop Syriza/Mitterand/Labour from doing what they want would still be relevant.
I mean, bearing in mind what I was saying earlier about the limits of arguing from history, I don't think the history of non-reformist electoral parties is great either. I suppose my critique of that line of argument would be that it doesn't distinguish between ordinary party members and politicians - if the voters in a certain constituency elected the SPGB, or the Full Communism Now Party or whatever, the lives of most members of that party wouldn't change that much, but the day-to-day life of the one person who became an elected representative would be very dramatically altered, they would by definition stop doing what they were doing before and start spending all their time around politicians instead. I think that presents a pretty powerful incentive for that person to change their ideas, and I don't think "we'd elect better representatives with better ideas" gets around that. But again, I'm sure Malatesta said this better than me.
Again, this is somewhere where there's no real record of SPGB-style parties actually doing anything, so I have to look at the record of really existing left electoral parties instead. In Labour over the last few years, most people within the party are supporters of Corbyn's vision of doing social democracy differently, and most of the elected representatives have been bitterly opposed to that. If we leave aside all the caveats that these people aren't communists, I think that still shows up something about how bad representative electoral democracy is as a tool. That, plus the slightly cryptic stuff I said above about what does it mean for people to want communism and what makes people want it - I still don't really have the energy to expand on that right now, but I think it's worth considering.
Not formally, but as I mention above, the likes of Chuka Umuna are only a particularly stark example of a much broader problem, the total lack of control that either voters or local parties have over representatives once elected. Not everyone goes so far as to formally change parties, but lots and lots of them do things that would horrify the local activists who campaigned for them, or the local voters who elected them.
Uh, mostly a combination of organising on an international scale - ultimately you really can't have socialism in one country - and trying to subvert and break down discipline in the armed forces as much as possible. Perhaps an "impossibilist" campaign would be doing that, once again there's no real examples to cite, but certainly most examples of incoming left reformist governments don't. It's not something to fetishise, but I think it's pretty much inarguable that any complete break with this social system will involve some moments of violent confrontation, and I think anti-state traditions have been much better at preparing for this than electoral ones - think of how well prepared the CNT were to fight against a fascist coup in 36 compared to how unprepared the official Republic itself was, or again the example of Allende.
Perhaps this old Socialist
Perhaps this old Socialist Party of Canada article on a elected member of the Alberta Province Parliament might be of interest.
https://www.worldsocialism.org/canada/proletarian.in.politics.htm
I guess it's arguable that
I guess it's arguable that dictatorship is too strong a word, but still, it's clear that in a so-called "representative democracy," the capitalist class has the overwhelming power. Even if that power is not absolute, it's enough power that any attempt to use the government to smash capitalism is bound to fail.
@ explainthingstome Based on
@ explainthingstome
Based on your summary (in post #1) of the arguments provided by An Anarchist FAQ into why capitalist democracies are 'in fact capitalist dictatorships', we can see that the author(s) of that publication are not offering their readers an anarchist communist analysis of the state. Rather, those views of the state are shared by leftists in general, and by even many liberals. I mean, who would disagree that capitalists exercise a disproportionate influence on the making of state policies? That is not what communists mean when they employ the term 'capitalist state'. If you haven't already, you should read libcom's introduction to the state.
Quote: R Totale: But anyway,
Okay, but I don't think I agree with you that their inability to do what they want is mostly a product of bureaucratic conspiracy.
But did the non-reformist electoral parties suffer from the same issue?
I don't think that being surrounded by people who are not like you is necessarily going to turn you into them to any great degree. After all, the Nazi party wasn't less radical after the general election of 1930 despite being mostly surrounded by leftists and more traditional rightwingers.
My perception of the current Labour situation is that the membership (who elects the party leader) doesn't have the same political makeup as the Labour voters (who elects the MPs). Is this perception wrong? If so, why are people voting on anti-Corbyn candidates, don't they have a pro-Corbyn Labour alternative?
I guess this has a connection to the other thing that you say about how representatives often do things that their voters don't like. If the person I'm supporting isn't doing what I like, why can't I just vote on someone else?
I agree, but why is working on an international scale a hindrance to engaging in electoral politics? There have been talks about certain political ideologies gaining ground in several countries at roughly the same time, for example in 1968, or the rise of far-right populist parties in modern Europe.
What are the potential things one could do to subvert and break down discipline in the armed forces?
Most leftists (if we're talking social democrats) and liberals do not consider Britain and France to be dictatorships.
explainthingstome
explainthingstome
Perhaps I wasn't clear enough in my post above, but I meant to say that leftists and many liberals espouse those same arguments, and others similar to those, without necessarily concluding that so called representative democracies such as the USA, Britain and France are dictatorships. You can definitely find many liberals every now and then putting up those arguments to prove that the representative democracy they live under isn't democratic enough, and then proceed to propose remedies that will 'fix' the system to closely match their preferred ideal.
By the way, sorry if my post
By the way, sorry if my post was repetitive of what some others had already said; I wrote my post before I got around to reading the thread.
Agent of the International
Agent of the International
Oh yes absolutely I agree, a lot of people talk about the three things that the FAQ uses as arguments. I'm not arguing that our representative democracies don't suffer from issues, I'm saying that I'm not convinced that 1) all of the three issues that the FAQ lists are always significant or undefeatable under a system of representative democracy and 2) these issues mean that we're living in a dictatorship.
explainthingstome
explainthingstome
R Totale specifies that this is within the confines of electoral politics, in which case it is perfectly logical to assume that if limited left-wing goals have been unsuccessful then much wider (hence more expensive, will face more resistance etc) demands are less likely to be successsful.
The fact that we can't achieve meaningful reforms under capitalism doesn't mean that revolution is impossible at all. But I think achieving such reforms is a sign of fear in the capitalists. They won't even throw us the crumbs unless they are afraid we will take more.
The membership of the party votes in an internal party election for the leader of the party.Currently 485,000 (making it the largest party in Western Europe, wikipedia reckons that makes it the richest, but that doesn't seem too credible, they were mortgaging their headquarters not too many years ago). The party won almost 12.9M votes at the last election from the general public. Local Labour parties have control over which candidates they field in an election (unless the central party intervenes, which is possible)
This is usual in most parliamentary democracies, parties choose candidates to 'present' to the voters. In the UK to run in a by-election to become an MP the candidate must pay a deposit of £500 which is returned if they win at least 5% of the vote.
As I see it the dictatorship question is interesting. It depends on how you view power. In a dictatorship, you have a dictator, but you also have backers and a security apparatus. These both require rewards to help maintain the leader's power. Fear and coercion can also be an element once the leader has a certain level of power. A democracy is different in that the government is largely trying to win votes while trying to deliver to its backers (who may be the voters). I think this is the key difference. Democracies are willing to use violence and coercion against 'their own people' when they can get away with it. The tactics used by dictatorships don't work as well when you might lose power. You then must rely on your successor not to use your dirty laundry to cement their position (even though they rarely do).
So a democratic government is caught between two masters, one of which it serves and one it has to dupe/placate, so the former gets rewards to a greater of lesser extent and the latter gets repression and coercion and rewards only if it is absolutely unavoidable. A dictatorship merely needs to maintain its power and does so using repression, coercion and rewards which vary depending on how available the three mechanisms are, how effective the system thinks they will be and how important it thinks you are.
explainthingstome
explainthingstome
I mean, I should be clear that the whole concept of a non-reformist electoral party is one that comes from the SPGB's line of thinking - from my perspective, if I'm right, then a non-reformist electoral party is just an electoral party that hasn't managed to successfully do electoralism yet. But assuming there is such a thing, if we agree to define it as the SPGB and their international companion parties, then I'm pretty sure I'm right that none of them have ever actually reached the stage of having a representative elected. So at best, we can say that there's no proof SPGB MPs, once elected, would behave any differently to other politicians.
Beyond that, when I try to think what a rupture with capitalism would look like... I don't have a blueprint, and you should be suspicious of anyone who says that they do, but generally speaking I think it's likely that we'll continue to see more insurrections along the lines of Egypt and Tunisia 2011, and Haiti, Hong Kong and Puerto Rico more recently, and even the most advanced capitalist economies will see more things along the lines of the August 2011 riots in the UK, the anti-police uprisings in places like Ferguson and Baltimore, the Gillets Jaunes in France and so on. Other stuff that might be relevant includes the defence of territory from the police and state for an extended period of time (e.g. in various ways Chiapas, the French ZAD and Exarchia) and climate change-related disasters where the state doesn't respond adequately and self-organised responses look like a form of "disaster communism", as in the various Mutual Aid Disaster Relief projects. Obviously, none of those things have been sufficient to overthrow capitalism so far, but they are all things that exist to some extent and I can imagine continuing in the future, and perhaps potentially extending in a communist direction. On the other hand, I can't imagine how on earth the SPGB would go from winning a total of 145 votes in the 2017 general election to forming a majority in Parliament.
I don't think that being surrounded by people who are not like you is necessarily going to turn you into them to any great degree. After all, the Nazi party wasn't less radical after the general election of 1930 despite being mostly surrounded by leftists and more traditional rightwingers.[/quote]
I mean, I don't want to play down how radical the Nazi party was, but its record in the 1930s was definitely disappointing to those like Ernst Röhm and Gregor Strasser who wanted to see the national socialist revolution sweep the establishment away. And, importantly, even at their most radical their programme was still ultimately compatible enough with the maintenance of the old order for establishment conservatives like von Hindenburg to see them as a lesser evil. I don't think that could ever be true of any sort of non-reformist communist/socialist party.
Theoretically, the Labour candidates have to be chosen by their local parties before they become MPs. In practice, once an MP has won their seat, they are very difficult to displace. Say you're a pro-Corbyn Labour member, and you live in a seat with a very right-wing Labour MP, and there's a general election on the way. Do you put all your energy into trying to get your MP deselected, while the other parties are concentrating on campaigning and trying to win the seat, and so risk losing altogether to an even worse candidate? Or do you put up with it and campaign for your anti-Corbyn candidate who's at least in the same party as you?
I mean, good luck with that, but US elections happen on a four-year cycle, the UK election system is messy but there's supposed to be a fixed five-year interval between elections, so once someone has got into power there's a whole lot of time for them to do a whole lot of things you don't like before the next election. But OK, let's say that, for instance, you voted Labour in 2001 but don't like wars - who do you vote for in 2005? Or you voted Lib Dem in 2010 because you don't like tuition fees - who do you vote for in 2015?
I mean, electoral politics is kind of tied to the nation-state as a system, and to electoral cycles that don't really sync up - so, let's say there's an election in the UK in 2021, and the SPGB win a majority and form a government, but then the newly-re-elected President Trump threatens to invade us. In that situation, being told "don't worry, the US left has a really good candidate lined up for the 2024 elections" wouldn't be much comfort. Beyond that, yeah, I accept that there can be international electoral trends, but I think this line of argument is a bit different to the SPGB's "democratically capturing the state through parliamentary elections is the safest, surest method for the working class to enable itself to establish socialism" line, which (to bring things back to the question in the OP) seems to just go beyond saying that capitalist democracies aren't dictatorships, and cross over into denying the tendency for them to become dictatorships.
Again, I should stress that I don't have a blueprint here, but generally I'd say stuff like the activity that was carried on in the armies of all the European powers during WWI, the GI resistance to Vietnam, IDF refuseniks, even the mass defections from the Syrian army in 2011, and so on. You may spot that all these relate to conscript armies - it's true that there isn't much of a history of mutinies in volunteer armies. I still suspect that we won't be able to get to communism without them, though.
Someone once said that in a
Someone once said that in a dictatorship or a democracy, you need 30 percent of the people to support what you are doing and make sure people who oppose it aren't all united. That somebody might have been Goebbels though, so its perhaps best to take with a pinch of salt.
I guess the core difference is that in theory in a liberal democracy, power is more fluid and reactive to change,, thus the alliances that support the ruling factions are subject to demographic and social change. In a dictatorship on the other hand these power relationships are fixed, and remain so until they potentially crack. An example would be how the USA rebounded economically and culturally after the oil crisis and vietnam, whereas the USSR retreated into stagnation and gerontocracy in the Brezhnev era.
There are of course a considerable number of shades of grey between a ''liberal democracy'' and a ''dictatorship'' though.
Quote: So at best, we can say
I refer you to my post #13
For the record, from our rule-book
“27. Candidates elected to a Political office shall be pledged to act on the instructions of their Branches locally, and by the Executive Committee nationally...Members of the Party shall not stand for any Political office except as official candidates of the Party.”
How such a rule is complied with can be legitimately questioned. Perhaps a pre-signed undated application for the Chiltern 100s?
Well, can you imagine any revolutionary working class movement developing from the insignificant presence we possess presently? The political invisibility the SPGB has is shared by every group represented on Libcom.
It is a situation we have to debate and discuss on how we are on the verge of the abyss and there is little manifestation of a mass movement of our tradition of liberatory politics. I keep telling my comrades that it is time to for some reflection on why we are failing. I'm sure others here think it is time for re-assessing their positions in light of a very clear lack of progress over a hundred -odd years.
I know you acknowledged "international electoral trends" but do we really envision a basically conservative-minded British worker to be so different from all his or her counterparts around the developed world in that this upsurge in political consciousness is not replicated elsewhere, probably with more earnest determination. (Okay, that's a personal view, some may wish to argue the average Brit is more radical than some other nationalities.) The premise also assumes that a similar rise in class struggle does not arise in the equally conservative-minded USA.
Such scenario seems dependent on the theory of “uneven development” and that a “workers' state” would temporarily be put in place to fend off foreign intervention. Surely we agree that ideas are social and therefore cross borders, in much the same time-line.
How important is the date of all the various elections? I don't believe when the time comes we will be too legalistic. The expression of the popular will be evident by all manner of political and economic action. I have on earlier threads argued the SPGB is not committed to mere number-counting of the bums on the benches in the House of Commons.
The importance is that while we currently remain a minority, constitutional political action and electoral activity continues to be the most fitting strategy to pursue, is the SPGB's opinion which is based on today's realities. Conjecture and speculating about the events in the future we leave to the crystal ball readers.
But breaking that rule, we can see some generalized shift in political resistance such as the increasing leader-free and political party independent movements such as taking place today in Hong Kong and Iraq as well as within the environmentalist campaigns. We also see the risks when a similar protest process in Syria's Arab Spring was diverted into a militarized resistance resulting in foreign powers intervening and suffocating any chance of change.
ajj's post 13 proves what?
ajj's post 13 proves what? Maybe that it is possible for an individual SPC/SPGB candidate to get elected to a capitalist legislature in some rare circumstances on their personal credentials and without the electorate fully signing up to the party's political platform - irrelevant. 'Uneven development' of the class struggle and class consciousness is a fact of modern history and cannot be wished away. Most capitalist countries are 'democracies' in formal terms but the reality offers no effective means of political parties exercising any real influence or power. In terms of ''shifts in political resistance' and how that might be practically expressed Post #21 stands hands above ajj's wishful thinking in response, as does the history of the independent assembly and workers council form.
If I am guilty of wishful
If I am guilty of wishful thinking, Spikey, then do you think I am the only one from the libertarian communism tradition. You will have no doubt seen my pessimistic prognosis on the SPGB forum, and I think it equally applies to the organized anarcho-left communist groups. What growth has there been? I can only judge by this forum and its slow decline does not fill me with any confidence. Its main importance is not debate and discussion but as the depository for valuable texts.
No-one disputes that workers councils have appeared on occasions when circumstances arose to permit it. But did they have any lasting influence that still prevails today? I fear not and when they still do arise they seem to be re-inventing the wheel and repeating the same old weaknesses, just as cooperatives do.
Post #13 was about how a socialist MP or group of them would behave as a minority within Parliament.
As for uneven development, I still maintain it is not the obstacle it is made out to be in the hypothetical scenario that was presented. Would the rural countryside of interior of China reflect the consciousness of the industrialised sea-board. Doubtful, but would it thwart the progress and advance of the implementation of socialism, not in my view.
Regards democracy, for power to be lodged in the hands of the people does not mean merely that they are to have the widest possible franchise and equal voting power. It implies that the people are to have control of all social institutions, a say in all social activities, the self-management social life. Such a condition of affairs presupposes at the very outset the common ownership by the people of all the means of life. Political freedom offers the best means to make that change, and the tools are to hand were the workers to take them up.
Our time and our energy should be spent in educating, agitating, organizing our co-workers in the workplace, in the neighborhood, in the schools. For socialists, it eventually comes down to the need to take sides. Whose side are you on? The upside of an almost total disenchantment on the part of the electorate with politics-and business-as-usual or an authentic message for real change that will make a difference
Elections is focused on political candidates, parties, and alternative policies around issues which are all related to how the capitalist system is organised and run but never on a discussion regarding the differences between capitalism and alternative economic systems or even the possibility of a totally different and truly democratic system. That is why supporters of capitalism appreciate elections. Well-controlled elections do not question, let alone threaten, capitalism. In a nutshell, capitalism is NOT democratic, capitalists are NOT interested in democracy, capitalism's politicians are there to protect the interests of capital and there is NO nice way to conduct capitalism in the interests of the majority. Politicians and the media insist that we have democracy, that we have free elections which allow us to choose whatever form of government we wish, unlike countries where a single-party dictatorship exists. Ritualised elections now offer a choice between heavily marketed political brands rather than competing aspirational visions.
The SPGB indeed hold it essential that the transformation to a new society be started by formal democratic methods—that is, by persuasion and the secret ballot. For there is no other way of ascertaining accurately the views of the population. While elections may seem to be irrelevant, people should not turn their back on the electoral system as such. The result of a properly conducted ballot will make it clear, in the event of an overwhelming socialist vote, to any minority that they are the minority and that any attempt to oppose the desires of the majority by violence would be futile. The formal establishment of the socialist majority's control of the state avoids the possibility of effective use of its forces against the revolutionary movement. An attempt to establish a socialist society by ignoring the democratic process gives any recalcitrant minority, the excuse for possibly violent anti-socialist action justified by the claim that the alleged majority did not in fact exist or that the assumed majority was not likely to be a consistent or decisive one. The electoral system can be used to effect the revolutionary act of abolishing capitalism by signaling that a majority of ordinary people fully understand and want to effect that change.
Despite their shortcomings, elections to a parliament based on universal suffrage are still the best method available for workers to express a majority desire for socialism. The ruling class who monopolise the ownership of wealth do so through their control of parliament by capitalist parties elected by workers. Control of parliament by representatives of a conscious revolutionary movement will enable the bureaucratic-military apparatus to be dismantled and the oppressive forces of the state to be neutralised, so that socialism may be introduced with the least possible violence and disruption.
Well I've argued that some
Well I've argued that some forms of class struggle have proved themselves superior to others and the most likely means in the beginning of any attempt by the working class to undermine and then replace capitalist social relations in the future, but I suppose ajj and I might agree that communist content is more important than the particular forms used and we understand that communism is about 'human community' and not simply a better or more perfect 'democracy'. Dauve puts it so much better than me in this longer tract here:
https://libcom.org/library/a-contribution-critique-political-autonomy-gilles-dauve-2008 or here
https://troploin.fr/node/17
Substance is always superior
Substance is always superior to slogans, Spikey.
And I have always been one for letting a 1000 flowers bloom. Our fellow-workers can pick the most appealing posy, always the choice is theirs to make, rightly or wrongly, according to ones political position. But the bouquet we've been offering appears to be getting neglected and rejected
But just to add, there is now an interesting development within SPGB which appears to be relaxing our notorious "hostility clause" regards "fellow-travelers", although I prefer the term "the thin red line" from John Crump. Moves are afoot to reverse the conference decision and its Party poll endorsement.
But I don't wish to derail what I found an interesting topic by making it about the SPGB. We've been here too many times before. Since it was mentioned I thought I would take the liberty in clarifying its claims.
ajjohnstone wrote: If I am
ajjohnstone
First of all, it is not widely accepted that the Socialist Party of Great Britain is in the tradition of libertarian communism. There is no such thing as the parliamentary wing of anarchism. Second, your justifying wishful thinking on the basis of others being guilty of the same. Isn't that what you are doing here? Do you honestly think that is right?
As for the rest of your post, it sounds like your making a sales pitch to a potential recruit. I can't believe anyone reading this thread will find the arguments there convincing. Some passages in particular are emblematic of the SPGB's poorly thought out schema of a socialist revolution. Why would a socialist majority need to establish that they are a legitimate majority in the eyes of a reactionary minority before carrying out a social revolution?
ajjohnstone
Inequality in wealth isn't the product of capitalism, but the control of parliament by the ruling class?
EDIT:
ajjohnstone
FWIW, I agree with this. For those who want to see past discussions of the politics of the SPGB, see this post.
Quote: R Totale: So at best,
I personally don't see any proof that you're right. But I guess I don't have any proof either.
This might be a question that everyone here think has already been answered but I'll ask it anyway. To me, you seem to basically be saying "we don't know whether or not electoralism would corrupt MPs, so we shouldn't be wasting time on electoralism." But what concrete activity is it that an electoral party (like the SPGB) is engaging in that's a huge waste of time? And what is the alternative thing to spend this time on?
Also: do you believe that a stable anarchist society (that won't vanish after invasions etc) requires an anarchist world majority?
I'm not sure if I understand the situation that you're talking about but if the Labour voters are very pro-Corbyn I think I would try to get them to vote on a more pro-Corbyn Labour candidate.
If I was a social democrat I might've voted on the liberal democrats as they all voted against the war. Or create a new party (like the USPD in Germany).
explainthingstome wrote: And
explainthingstome
I recommend you read Phil Dickens' excellent Electoralism or Class Struggle? blog series. It's a quick read. Not only does it destroy every pro-electoral argument anarchists often encounter, but it has a section addressing the question often posed to them, that you are asking us right now: what is the alternative? I'd also recommend libcom's introduction to direct action.
I am still confused on
I am still confused on exactly what tradition that the SPGB comes from, they quote Marx but reject Lenin and the Second International, but it's own formulations seem very vague. I am going to quote from the linked thread,
Why do they have a "syndicalist"(anti-political?) approach to union organizing? What does the party do if it is its "own activity"? Is this counter to what Marx and Engels thought that the social-democratic parties should do?
Doesn't Marx and Engels themselves say this in the 1872 introduction to the manifesto?
Do they reject both Bernstien and Kautsky, do they reject Bebel as well or does he get a pass since he was the only one to reject the notion that socialists should hold minister posts?
" what tradition that the
" what tradition that the SPGB comes from"
Impossibilist
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impossibilism
And that is all I am going to say, so to not derail this topic with arguments that have been repeated ad nauseum on Libcom...use the search facility....oops that doesn't work, does it?
I think that I've gotten
I think that I've gotten everything that I wanted from this thread. I give my thanks to R Totale in particular.
Ultimately, while the replies I've gotten have made some points that may be correct , I'd still say that Britain, France etc are democracies. I don't believe that the failures of left-wing governments are a product of capitalist conspiracy, but rather the product of them trying to do something that isn't yet possible. I consider Britain to not be a dictatorship as the population are allowed to create and consume political thought (in general at least) that challenges the present system and they're allowed to vote on and create political parties. Also, I believe that most people support the capitalist basis of our society, even though they might oppose some of the things that they do not realize is the inevitable result of capitalism (like wars). That being said, I think that opinions, like the anarchist ones, that are against the current order do have a harder time getting heard, so I'm not saying that our democracies are great.
These threads can get very complicated. I think that I'm mainly responsible for this. For future threads I will try to talk about just one issue and not three different ones.
explainthingstome wrote: I
explainthingstome
With all due respect, it seems to me that you've got things a bit backwards there - we over a century of evidence showing how "socialist" political representatives behave once in power. The hypothesis that's unproven is is "perhaps socialist MPs elected on precisely the right platform would behave differently to all other elected representatives".
Again, I don't want to be harsh, but this "oh, just stand for election, it doesn't take that much effort" line is one that can only come from someone who's never come anywhere close to actually being involved in an electoral campaign. The average UK constituency has over 70,000 voters - are you aiming to try and speak to each one of them? 90%? 75%? At least put a leaflet through their front doors? Maybe leaflet their houses more than once, since the opposition certainly will?
As for the alternative... at the risk of cliche, I'll refer you to that classic section from "As We See It":
"Meaningful action, for revolutionaries, is whatever increases the confidence, the autonomy, the initiative, the participation, the solidarity, the equalitarian tendencies and the self-activity of the masses and whatever assists in their demystification. Sterile and harmful action is whatever reinforces the passivity of the masses, their apathy, their cynicism, their differentiation through hierarchy, their alienation, their reliance on others to do things for them and the degree to which they can therefore be manipulated by others - even by those allegedly acting on their behalf."
I'm unconvinced that there can ever be an electoral campaign which doesn't encourage people's reliance on others to do things for them. This also comes back to the question of what it is that makes people want socialism/communism/anarchism/whatever - I don't think that getting a leaflet through your door, or having a brief chat with someone on your doorstep asking for your vote, makes it much easier for people to really imagine being part of a world where they played an active part in the running of their own lives, I think there are other forms of activity that are much better at increasing people's confidence, initiative, participation and so on.
Dunno. It's a big question. I suppose I'd say it requires a plurality of people to find the proposals being put forward by the insurgents, the "party of anarchy" or whoever, more attractive than the proposals being put forward by any other actor. But if, say, 30% of the population side with the anarchists, 25% with some form of state socialism, 25% with some form of liberal capitalism, and 20% with the fascists, what then?
Ah, but the liberal democrats had economic policies that a good social democrat wouldn't like, as became very clear in 2010-15. So do you use your vote to support a party who want a further extension of the market into all areas of human life, just because they're against the war? And as it happens, there was an attempt to create a new party, it's one of those things I keep meaning to bring up on this thread but don't really have the time and energy to make my replies even longer than they already are... it did not go well. And, crucially, I think that you can't blame him pretending to be a cat on Big Brother on Respect's platform - do the SPGB have contingency plans in place on how they would stop any of their prospective MPs from doing a cat impression on a reality TV show?
explainthingstome wrote: I
explainthingstome
Ooops, crossposted there - yeah, I think I'd pretty much agree with most of that, with the exception that I'd probably stress more how capitalist democracies have the potential to turn into dictatorships at any point if the conditions are right.
I feel like I want to reply
I feel like I want to reply to what you wrote prior to seeing my latest post.
What about a scenario where a majority of socialist MP's abolish parliament and replace it with councils or something else? Would the socialist MP's be corrupt on the very first day in office?
I never said it was easy. Lots of things aren't easy, that doesn't mean that it's meaningless to do anything. Furthermore, the electoral campaign wouldn't be about convincing Labour voters to like Corbyn, it would rather be about informing them that they can actually vote on a Labour member that doesn't dislike him.
What would you say is a really good activity to do?
I'd side with all non-dictatorical forces against the pro-dictatorship forces. The alternative is to kill or imprison most people for having opinions contrary to mine, and I wouldn't even support that even if it did led to an anarchist victory.
OK, catching up with
OK, catching up with this:
explainthingstome
No, but I find it hard to believe in a scenario where this hypothetical socialist party goes from 0-51% of the vote share overnight, without first passing through an extended period of socialist MPs being a smaller or larger minority in a capitalist-dominated parliament, which is where I think you would see the problems come in.
Ah, I might have misread you there - I read "But what concrete activity is it that an electoral party... is engaging in that's a huge waste of time?" as you saying that it isn't that timeconsuming, and that is a line of argument that sometimes gets made. If that wasn't what you were saying, then ignore that bit of my response. I still think that Solidarity quote explains why it's a waste of time, anyway.
Ah, there's the big question, going to try not to write an essay here - I think the libcom introduction to direct action probably covers this, along with stuff like the prole.info texts. Anyway, broadly speaking I'd say stuff that's rooted in people's lives, where everyone involved has a say in making decisions - the classic example is workplace organising, and there's various stuff from AngryWorkers, Recomposition, Organizing Work and so on that explains why this is so vital. Other things that can have a similar potential are tenants' organisations - I think Parkdale Organize in Canada are a good example of this - student movements like the 2010 one in the UK or the Quebec one a few years back, claimants or disabled people's movements and so on. Obviously all of these forms of activity can be approached in sterile, alienating and hierarchical ways, but they don't necessarily have to be, whereas I think electoralism is always inherently hierarchical, involves an appeal to placing our trust in leaders to sort things out on our behalf, and so on.
Quote: R Totale: No, but I
Do you personally think it's likely that most of the 51% (I would personally prefer a higher percentage) would be "newbie" MP's on the day of a socailist electoral victory? That is to say, do you think that the growth of either SPGB ideas or anarchist ideas would be a straight line or an exponential function or whatever one calls it?
Well I kind of meant, how much time does the SPGB spend on electoralism? I mean from what I can tell most of their time goes to writing articles, letters or blog posts that talks about socialism or ideologies or history. I don't see how that's connected to their electoralism, other than the fact that they're trying to convince people of their ideology, just like any political current does.
Thanks. Is it correct to say that you believe that direct action results in more people embracing an anarchist mindset?
explainthingstome wrote: Do
explainthingstome
Right, I see where you're coming from here... but the difficulty is that this is asking me to say which of two different versions of a strategy I don't believe in sounds more plausible.
Yeah, but again, without wanting to spend too much time dunking on the SPGB here, I think that's down to them being a pro-electoral party that's not very good at electoralism. Like, in the 2017 general election they stood in 3 seats out of 650, which is not exactly ideal for an electoral party.
Kind of, or that's a bit straightforward and mechanistic, but I suppose I'd say that it's very difficult for people to embrace an anarchist mindset if they have no experience of direct action (not saying that it's impossible, but pretty rare), and considerably easier if they do. The last big upsurge in interest in UK anarchism coming after the 2010 student movement sort of supports this, I think. Thinking about your original post, the AFAQ section on direct action is probably also relevant here - not sure if that's one of the ones you'd been reading?
Quote: R Totale: but the
But do you think that, if the anarchist movement grows, that the development will look like a straight line or will the line look different? Is it more likely that it will be like a curve?
The question I'm about to ask may require a very long text, so I understand if you don't want to answer it or just link me a relevant article, but: how would the state power "turn into" the kind of democracy that you want for society during a revolution? The way that I've kind of described my example is that socialist MP's move power from parliament to local councils or whatnot.
I think that they knew that they would never win in the present political climate. First you get the hearts of the people and then you get their votes. Right now, SPGB activity seems focused on spreading socialist ideas.
I'm going to eventually make a thread related to this and ask people about how they (or people they know) became anarchists. I haven't seen such a thread on here.
No, I don't think I have yet.
explainthingstome wrote: I'm
explainthingstome
Will try and get back to your longer question but just to say that this could be really interesting. In the meantime, you may like these:
https://libcom.org/blog/right-wing-revolutionary-left-tom-wetzel-02052015
https://libcom.org/blog/growing-during-%E2%80%98war-terror%E2%80%99-15052015
https://libcom.org/blog/making-politicized-prisoner-22052015
Although I suppose there's always the problem that any such attempt can only hear from people who are already anarchists, when in some ways the really interesting question is "for people who aren't already anarchists, what would it take to make them interested?"
explainthingstome
explainthingstome
Yeah, I think it'll be a curve, or some more complicated shape, but again that's another reason why I don't think the development of revolutionary movements matches up neatly with the kind of quantitative measurement associated with elections. I think that what people want, and the ways that they want things, are quite complex and can change easily depending on circumstances, whereas liberal electoral representation is based on the idea that individuals have fairly simple and easily measurable fixed preferences. Obviously I'm not trying to justify dictatorship by saying that, more thinking of Marty Glaberman's ideas about consciousness:
"At the beginning of the war, the UAW bureaucracy, like that of most other unions, had committed itself not to strike for the duration. Prices, however, rose steadily, and the rank and file brought to the national union convention a demand to abandon the no-strike pledge. The union hierarchy sought to sidestep that pressure by arranging to mail to each member of the union a form asking recipients to say whether they wished the pledge to continue. Marty conceded that most of those who returned a form voted Yes. But, Marty countered, records demonstrated that more than half of the workers in Detroit automotive plants had taken part in wildcat strikes!
...Marty believed strongly that, as Marx set forth in his Theses on Feuerbach, action precedes and supersedes theory. A favorite anecdote imagined a worker at his machine. He observes a group of fellow workers coming down the aisle. There are too many of them to be going to the storeroom for material. It is too early for them to be going to lunch. So the worker turns off his machine and joins the others heading for the parking lot. Once there, he turns to a fellow worker and asks: “What the hell is this all about?”
Similarly Marty disputed the idea that workers must be converted to socialism before a socialist revolution is possible. Rather, he thought, they become socialists in the process of making a revolution. In Russia, for example, workers who abused their wives, were frequently drunk, were anti-Semitic and often illiterate, nevertheless became revolutionaries as they combated the powers that be."
Broadly speaking, alternative institutions and forms develop first independently from the state (you could say the Occupy movement was one microscopic embryonic example of what that could look like in contemporary Western conditions, alongside stuff like the local councils in Syria), come to be seen as more legitimate than the state, take and hold territory (again, without wanting to be uncritical of either, I think Chiapas and the ZAD are both examples worth bearing in mind here), and then hopefully expand and don't get massacred. If I knew more about the situations in Puerto Rico, Haiti, Hong Kong, Lebanon etc I'd probably be able to offer more helpful examples from there.
Amusing article here which
Amusing article here which might have some relevance to the discussion on this thread.
So as we are in the throws of
So as we are in the throws of another UK General election (and with the spgb putting forward it's usual token candidates, along with a few others on the Left) thought I would offer up these '26 Thesis' on the problems with democracy as ideology and practice in the modern capitalist world to keep the doubters busy for a while:
www.ruthlesscriticism.com/democraticlifeindex.htm
I was interested to see that
I was interested to see that the glowing embers of an old controversy within the spgb around the general theme of workers/socialist democracy versus capitalist/parliamentary 'democracy', always an area of confusion for them, had recently resurfaced on their website as here:
https://worldsocialism.org/spgb/forum/topic/socialist-standard-no-1385-january-2020/page/2/#post-192836
Best to ignore the rather crude/simplified representation of a supposed 'left communist' view thrown in to confuse things.
Perhaps you also read this
Perhaps you also read this comment in regards to the perennial confusion in "anarchist" politics.
In response to the creation of a "libertarian socialist" presence in the Labour Party, ALB remarks
https://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/forum/topic/another-new-labour-left-organisation/#post-192791
ajj, Yes of course I read
ajj, Yes of course I read that but then that group is hardly representative of either UK based or other anarchist groups and the spgb (as well as some anarchists) still finds it difficult to distinguish defensive class struggle beyond simple trade unionism from promotion of a reform agenda.
1: I think you just didn't
1: I think you just didn't consider the full ramifications of what the AFAQ is saying. If politics are controlled by the power of capital then only a few options are presented for the population regardless of whether they can choose between those options. Even if radical, or progressive parties can raise funds, the very act of raising funds is dependent on the operations of the capitalist economic order.
2: Pretty much everything. On the extreme end there are coups and on the mild end there is political pressure. Just recently a bunch of republican politicians stormed a secure white house room to impede the investigations on Trump's Ukraine conduct.
3: There isn't, no state policies that I know of at least. A state could make up for capital flight by accumulating capital on it's own, but this leads the state toward increasing military and dictatorial natures. So this option wouldn't preserve democracy against dictatorship. If you admit that the Bolsheviks didn't create a non-capitalist society then I don't see how they are proof that the state can subvert the power of capital.
Quote: Ivysyn: Even if
But what does that tell us?
It's interesting to think about how the army would react. Historically there are many examples of coups and stuff but I wonder if that's as likely to happen in countries that has had a long history of democracy. Would ordinary French soldiers for example take part in establishing a dictatorship where the people are obviously opposed to the government?
I have a hard time imagining a concrete situation where anarchism being prevented by political pressure.
They're proof that it's possible for the state to prevent capital flight. I don't find it to be relevant that the Bolsheviks themselves became capitalists, as that fact didn't make Russian capitalists any less concerned about their assets.