Irish Republicanism collapsed, went into coalition with Ian Paisley and the British left didn’t bat an eyelid. Though to be fair its Irish franchises didn’t really think it was that important either. Socialist Resistance has organised a tour of Socialist Democracy’s top funster John McAnulty in July. All meetings start at 7.30.

The dates and venues are:

Manchester: Monday 16 July Friends Meeting House Mount St (behind the main Library)
Birmingham: Tuesday 17 July Bennetts Bar Bennetts Hill City Centre
London: Wednesday 18 July
Indian YMCA, 41 Fitzroy Square WC1, Warren St tube

Oxford: Thursday 19 July Panel room Oxford Town Hall.

Right click to download the flyer for the London meeting and below is a bit of Irish trot-speak to get you in the mood.

On May 8 the re-opening of the Stormont executive in the North of Ireland saw the installation of the sectarian bigot Ian Paisley as First Minister and veteran Republican Martin Mc Guinness as his powerless deputy. The British left has been virtually silent on this historic collapse of Irish Republicanism. Belfast socialist John McAnulty explains: The new Stormont rests on a tripod. The three legs are: The continuation of British rule in Ireland and the denial of democracy. The restructuring of sectarian privilege and the preservation in a modified form of the original basis of the Northern state – ‘a Protestant parliament for a Protestant people’. The new society is to be established by a reactionary social and economic offensive designed to smash the working class. Catholic workers will find that they remain second class citizens. Protestant workers will find that the authorities have handed over control of their areas to Loyalist ‘community representatives’ whom they have consistently rejected throughout the troubles. All will find themselves facing major economic cutbacks and the destruction of public services. Support for the new order will come under strain quite quickly. The danger is that the collapse in support will be to the right and that those who loose faith in the Sinn Fein pipedream will turn to sectarian rivalry, competing with the other community, and increasingly with migrants also for increasing scarce resources. Those who fight for a socialist alternative will have to begin now, keeping in mind a number of key principles: Target the British – the main purpose of Stormont is to make British rule invisible – we consistently aim demands at the real rulers and begin to reactivate a solidarity movement in Britain. Oppose sectarianism – The British are building sectarianism into every nook and cranny of the six counties, with the collaboration of the majority of forces in civic society. Our aim should never be so poor as to target the bigots alone – we must expose all, North and South, who are complicit. Build rank and file opposition to the economic offensive – the trade union leaderships are in partnership North and South of the border and collaborate both in the economic and political offensive. Build a 32 county movement. The Irish capitalists are the most enthusiastic supporters of partition and the neoliberal offensive. The only alternative to sectarian division is our common identity as members of the Irish working class.

5 responses to “The collapse of Irish Republicanism: speaking tour”

  1. It could be that the more substantial organisations on the Irish left “didn’t bat an eyelid” because they didn’t have Socialist Democracy’s illusions in Sinn Fein to start with.

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  2. “Irish Republicanism collapsed, went into coalition with Ian Paisley and the British left didn’t bat an eyelid…”Nor did I –here in Australia – because the deed was done with the Good Friday Agreement and it took people like Bernadette Devlin Mcaliskey to argue that. This recent pairing is merely par for the course. It was expected.It’s a bit late to feign surprize.

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  3. Liam Mac Uaid Avatar
    Liam Mac Uaid

    Mark if you can find anything produced by SD in the last 15 years that is anything but relentlessly critical of Sinn Fein’s trajectory I’d be surprised. The Irish franchises of the British groups simply prefer to pretend that imperialist domination is not an issue for Irish workers. That, for me explains their silence.Dave you are right. It’s been a long time coming and is no surprise at all to anyone but Republican supporters.

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  4. I’m quite aware that Socialist Democracy have been critical of Sinn Fein’s trajectory for well over a decade now. I was referring to the two decades plus before that. They and their predecessors were cheerleaders for the Provisionals for quite some time, as I’m sure you can recall.Other sections of the Irish left never had those delusions and so were rather less shocked and appalled by Sinn Fein’s evolution.

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  5. But even the GFA didn’t make inevitable the full degree to which British imperialism has triumphed. And the general critique of the Brit-left and their Irish franchises is correct, that they have hardly noticed the victory of imperialism and surrender of a national libertaion struggle on their doorstep.Having said that SD do over-egg their pudding a bit, I don’t think “smashing the working class” is the aim, it is more about confusing and diluting any opposition.

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