This piece by Phil Hearse and I is our judgement on how we have reached a point where there is a split inside Respect. A split that could have been avoided.

No one who supports left unity could be anything other than deeply disheartened by the turn of events inside Respect, which has created a crisis that threatens the future of the organisation. The current crisis is unnecessary and the product of the political line and methods of organisation of the Socialist Workers Party. The real meaning of the crisis, its roots and underlying dynamics are however being obscured by the SWP’s propaganda offensive, an attempt to whip its own members into line and throw up a smokescreen to fool the left in Britain and internationally. How so?

The crisis was started by a letter from Respect MP George Galloway to members of the National Council on August 23, a time it should be remembered that a general election seemed a short-term possibility. In his letter Galloway drew attention to organisational weaknesses of Respect, the decline of its membership and political life in general, but also to the (not unrelated) lack of accountability of the National Officers, including the Respect national Secretary John Rees. These criticisms reflected those that had been made for several years by supporters of Socialist Resistance. Galloway also made a series of proposals for breathing life back into Respect’s campaigning, including an election campaign committee and a National Organiser.

A sensible response by the SWP leadership to these proposals would have been to say “OK, we don’t agree with everything you say, but maybe we took our eye off the ball and need to get things going again. Let’s discuss this, let’s reach a compromise”. This was obviously the intelligent way to deal with the crisis and one that could have led to a positive outcome. But it would have meant the SWP sharing some of the decision-making power it wields within the organisation.

Instead the SWP went into battle mode and declared war on Galloway and those who agreed with him. In order to justify this the SWP has thrown up an extraordinary smokescreen to obscure the real nature of the dispute. This reads as follows: George Galloway and those who support him are witch-hunting the left and SWP in particular. This witch-hunt is being led in the name of “communalist” politics (read “Islamism”). The democracy of Respect is being undermined by National Council members who are critical of the SWP. To defend democracy and the left means to support the SWP’s position.

The SWP leadership has adopted a classic strategy of unprincipled faction fighters: change the subject. In fact the story they tell – of the mother of all conspiracies, an attack on socialism and the left – is highly implausible to anyone who knows the basic facts. Why should just about everyone of the National Council who is not an SWP member of close sympathiser – including some of their own (now expelled) members in addition to well known socialists like Alan Thornett, Ken Loach, Linda Smith, Victoria Brittain and John Lister – suddenly launch an unprincipled attack on socialism and the left in the name of Islamist ‘communalism’? The story may play well at internal SWP meetings, but it is a fantasy. The Rees-German-Callinicos leadership have evidently decided that those who control the terms of the debate, win it. Hence the Big Lie.

Real roots of the crisis

As is normal in these situations there is an accumulation of fractious meetings, especially leading up the Respect conference and the election of delegates, each of which gives rise to organisational charge and counter-charge. But the roots of the crisis do not lie in what happened at this or that meeting. They lie in the whole approach that the SWP have had to Respect.

While Socialist Resistance and other put forward the objective of building a broad left party, the SWP rejected this in the name of building a “united front of a special kind”. In effect this would be an electoral front, a political bloc to the left of Labour to be deployed mainly during elections. It would go alongside a series of other ‘united fronts’ the SWP wanted to build.

Socialist Resistance pointed out two things: first, an organisation mainly deployed at election time would suffer major disadvantages as against parties and party-type formations that had a permanent existence. Political bases in localities are mainly built through long-term campaigning work, which can then be exploited to create an electoral presence.

But this was anathema to the SWP, because the SWP wanted to have simultaneously the existence of Respect and for the SWP to continue most of its campaigning and propaganda in the name of the SWP itself. The SWP, as easily the largest force in Respect, was able to enforce this orientation. But it meant that Respect was robbed of long-term campaigning work and its own propaganda instruments. For example, the SWP bitterly resisted the proposal that Respect should have its own newspaper – because it would get in the way of selling Socialist Worker. De facto the SWP wanted Socialist Worker to be the paper of Respect.

The “united front of a special kind” was not a united front at all, but a political bloc with a comprehensive programme for British society. The SWP’s way of organising it however deprived it of any real internal life of its own and any campaigning dynamic outside elections. Thus it was very difficult to raise the profile of Respect in the national political arena in any systematic way. And it is extremely difficult to keep non-SWP members in this kind of formation, in which they can only – occasionally – give out leaflets and act as meeting fodder.

This was a disaster. As the three major parties cleave more and more together in a neoliberal consensus (a project now near completion in the Liberal Democrats), the political space obviously exists to form a party or party-type formation to the left of Labour. It is not at all obvious that there is less space for this in Britain than in other European countries, where relatively successful broad left formations have existed.

The name or the exact form doesn’t matter – you don’t have to call it a party. But it has to act like one. This cannot be a revolutionary party, for which at the moment a broad political base does not exist, but revolutionaries can play a central role within it. Such a formation does however have to have a systematic anti-neoliberal and anti-capitalist campaigning stance on all the key questions of the day. Because of the central role of electoral politics in advanced capitalist countries, the left appearing there is vitally important, although made much more difficult in Britain by the undemocratic “first past the post” electoral system, which marginalises the extremes.

In the light of the way that the SWP chose to run Respect it was inevitable that it would see a decline of its membership and a drift away of independents. Any progressive dynamic for Respect was asphyxiated by the dead hand of the SWP and the strict a priori limits they put on its development. It was thus always highly likely that this would lead to a sharp political discussion about the way ahead; this could have been highly productive and strengthened Respect’s role and unity. But the SWP interpreted it as a challenge to their authority and control. In effect they said to the others in Respect – you can have respect on our terms, otherwise forget it.

SWP’s role on the left

It’s a basic law of politics that influence and opinion count for nothing if they not organised, given coherent expression and deployed effectively in society. In Britain there is massive opposition to the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, to privatisation, to the growing gap between rich and poor, to the assault on public services, to the massive enrichment of the City, asset strippers and supermarket capitalists – to neoliberalism as a whole. But this is crying out for political expression at a national level. The fiasco of the failed attempt by the Labour left to get a candidate nominated by MPs in the Labour leadership (non)-contest, illustrates the blocking of any road to the left inside the Labour Party.

Unfortunately the consensus of the three main parties is today more effectively challenged from the right, by the UK Independence party and the fascist BNP; and it was only ever given very partial expression from the left by Respect. Regrettably a more effective attempt to organise left wing opinion, the Scottish Socialist Party, has for the moment been shipwrecked by the Sheridan crisis – in which, it must be added, the SWP played a terrible role.

Respect is the third major attempt to build a united left formation in the last 15 years – preceded by the Socialist Labour Party (SLP) launched by Arthur Scargill in 1994 and the Socialist Alliance refounded at the beginning of this decade. The SLP foundered on Scargill’s insistence on his own bureaucratic control and the Socialist Alliance’s potential was far from maximised: indeed the SWP’s decision to sideline the SA during the height of the anti-war movement effectively sealed its fate.

If Respect now crashes this will have extremely negative effects. It will create deep scepticism about the possibility of greater left unity and the potential for a broad left party. It will set back and complicate the whole process of politically and organisationally refounding the British left. Although the SWP leadership clearly don’t see this, it will have major negative consequences for the SWP itself and confirm the suspicions of all those who see the SWP as a deeply sectarian and factional formation.

It will confirm those suspicions because they are, sadly, correct. The SWP has shown itself in successive experiences – the Socialist Alliance, the SSP and Respect – to be incapable of fruitful long-term co-operation with other socialists in building a national political alternative. The leopard hasn’t changed its spots.


Technorati : ,
Del.icio.us : ,

20 responses to “The Big Lie: How the SWP’s bureaucratic factionalism is wrecking Respect”

  1. Excellant piece of good, calm analysis here. Just what we need to explain why things are going pear shape, and why we should, to quote The Who ‘ Don’t get fooled again’

    Like

  2. Again I gotta say it: this particular copyrighted political POV & stand by the SWP reprises the line up of the far left affiliates (led by the SWP’s local franchise — the ISO)in the Socialist Alliance here in Australia before they exited the project. Our great advantage — was that we were able to weather that attempt to undermine and warp the SA’s trajectory. while trying to keep them ‘in’.(Which we did for another 3 years after they threatened to walk.)

    Now, as we approach the federal election in November* which may see a change in gov’t, several state trade union branches are donating to the SA’s election campaign. This heralds a major break from Laborism here and along with trade union support for the Greens, a slow break is unfolding in Australian left politics from the hegemony of the ALP.

    So the future role of the SA may be interesting….

    While we’re hampered by our very limited electoral role, our campaign credentials have not been skewed by the containment that was allowed to be engineered for Respect. We do campaign work day to day and in our own name ; we use Green Left Weekly as our newspaper and elections are just one aspect of our political activity.

    All these elements were fought for in the SA as the affiliates opposed each and every one of them being employed as part of the Alliance project. And whereas the engineered smokescreen in Respect is “left vs right” and “communalism” here the preferred big lie was that the Socialist Alliance was being done over by the bogeyman DSP.

    *The ISO have called for a first preference vote for the Greens while totally ignoring the continuing existence of the SA (of which it was affiliated 10 months previously). Read the rationale here:The Greens, preferences and the spectre of (socialist)left regroupment not.

    Like

  3. I am sorry Liam but I can’t accept any of this.

    If Respect was suffering under the dead hand of the SWP for so long how to explain its unprecedented electoral successes?

    Galloway’s election agent in 2005 was a SWP member – he didn’t complain about the SWP when it helped to get him elected – once he was elected his profile was high enough for him to calculate he could try and ditch the SWP and go it alone.

    But the problem is that the democratic structures of Respect stand in his way. Why should Rees resign as national secretary of Respect after one letter from Galloway, when he was elected to that position?

    It is up to the membership of Respect through national conference to vote to replace Rees if they want – not Stalinistesque bureaucratic manouvering and smears behind the scenes to oust him and the SWP from Respect.

    Quite why so many so-called ‘democratic socialists’ are apparently opposed to letting the membership of Respect at conference decide on these and other questions relating to the future of Respect is a mystery – unless that is they are happy to talk about a ‘pluralistic’ Respect while making sure ‘pluralism’ means ‘without the SWP’.

    Like

  4. I find the arguement Liam and Phil make to be convincing. I also know that SR supporters have very little faith in George Galloway and made their criticisms repeatedly when the SWP was silent. If there is a split, and this seems probable,what future will either fragment have? I understand the logic of establishing a broad socialist party with multi tendencies and even that the time for such formations is “objectively” present, at least at the level that the orthodox “left” mass parties have gone over to neo liberalism and present virtually no chance of generating left currents inside them. But the record of the formation of actually existing broad socialist parties is almost uniformly depressing. So are the subjective conditions of a sufficient hinterland of advanced class consciousness present? And if not ,what sort of campaigning and implantations are necessary to produce those conditions? In other words we need to peer beyond the present Respect car crash and the innevitable withdrawal of the SWP into party building to sketch out plans for the future.

    Like

  5. Snowball is right, it is difficult for any rational individual to understand why the SWP has embarked on this course.

    It seems so utterly stupid and misjudged – going to war over Rees’ national position, and thus breaking up all the alliances they have made; shedding members en route; losing what periphery they have. Really hard to see why. There are two answers: one, everyone in Respect has united in an anti socialist witchhunt, or two, the logic of authoritarian bureaucratic group survival has struck again. Which is more likely?

    Have to say though, I though Pier’s comment the other day was better judged than this polemic of Phil’s, making many of the same points. I don’t see why the non-SWP side have to raise the temperature like this: they stand to gain everything (such as there is an “everything”). Just let the pieces fall. No need to call the other side liars.

    Despite what snowball is saying now, there’s no way on earth the SWP are going to pursue the fight to a conference. This is just rhetoric for the membership base, the same as happened before the SSP conference. Their rank and file aren’t interested and their middle cadre is apparently already creaking at the seams. And they have nothing to win.

    Simon K

    Like

  6. “And they have nothing to win”… unless there is are asome

    Like

  7. Sorry, that should have said:

    “And they have nothing to win”… unless there is are some barrels of oil hidden in the Respect basement that Phil knows about.

    Like

  8. “This piece by Phil Hearse and I”

    FFS Phil Hearse and me!

    Like

  9. For those interested in statistics. The SWP petition, currently, standing at 825, includes 107 who define themselves as supporters or who doesn’t specify that they are members. I know of one example of the latter (which I therefore haven’t included) who is a member but listed himself in a trade union capacity. Nonetheless this is likely to be broadly accurate. I saw one wild reference on a blog to the “900 odd” Respect members supporting the petition. The true figure is a lot nearer 700, barely 1/3 of the national membership.

    Also of interest: 57 define themselves as student members of Respect. This may be an underestimate as others who are described as branch members may also be students.

    But this time last year when Respect Party Platform and Socialist Resistance delegates to national conference tried to raise the decline in national membership they were told that 10,000 new students had joined and therefore there was absolutely nothing to worry about. Well apparently barely 1/2 a per cent of those 10,000 are opposed to the “witchunt”.

    In any even this is an interesting indicator, if there is a conference. On a rough, pro rata basis, one would expect no more than 6 student delegates voting with the SWP. Of course this isn’t going to be exactly representative given the delegating process. But very considerably more than this and, even if all credentials are in order, eye brows might be raised.

    Finally there are 72 names on the petition from people who don’t seem to define their membership of a particular branch or region. This could be laziness. They could be “members at large”. They might have forgotten where they live. Or they might not want to be open to challenge by anyone who doesn’t have access to a full up to date membership list. I’m not suggesting there is anything wrong with all this. People are entitled to sign petitions as they wish. But at the very least it indicates they are unlikely to be Respect activists in any meaningful sense or they would be pointing out which section of the organisation they are active through.

    Further analysis of the statistics might well prove that a disproportionate number come from areas where there are not regularly meeting branches – in other words where people cannot be active in Respect – or that a disprortionately high number do not come from the central metropolitan areas (in which any party such as Respect would have to be strong were it to be successful). But I’ll leave that to some other person to work out.

    Piers

    Like

  10. To follow on from Piers. My branch, Islington Respect has 34 members of which so far 24 (mainly SWPers) have signed the SWP petition. But what does this mean? Islington Repect which is controlled by the SWP has hardly met or carried out any political activities as Respect over the last two years. In reality there is no Islington Respect branch, more a virtual branch. Two years ago Islington Respect elected nine delegates to Respect’s annual conference and therefore had about 90 members (ie one delegate per 10 members). This year it elected only four, in other words around fifty Respect members in Islington have vanished into the ether over a period of two years or so. This situation has been replicated in many parts of the country, almost all all invariably happen to be Respect branches controlled by the SWP. Draw your own conclusions.

    Like

  11. It is worth recounting the story of one SWP comrade I know who was asked to increase his subs in January, and he explained he couldn’t afford to becasue he has commitments, and is already paying subs to both SWOP and Respect.

    He was told by the SW national office to leave Respect so he could pay the money to them. He didn’t by the way.

    Like

  12. Nice to see the SWP fraud of listing Respect ‘supporters’ fully exposed. To my certain knowledge many of those so listed in one region long ago abandoned political activity.

    But despicable fraud though this tactic maight be it is far more despicable to pretend that Respect was or is a way forward for the socialist left. Rather it is a barier to the development of a new Mass Workers Party.

    Like

  13. […] How the SWP’s bureaucratic factionalism is wrecking Respect […]

    Like

  14. A plague on both your houses is my view!
    As a dyed in the wool Labour left reformist, I think that one can only say told you so!
    It is extremely sad that the left, and people who i still have a great deal of time and admiration for (really) whatever our differences should have evolved so far so fast.
    The facts are that the SWP are not the left face of Respect, and that Galloway does not hold the future key for the ISG and others to unlock the relevant door that will give it mass resonance.
    It is so sad. Why do normally highly intelligent people who once upon a time in a galaxy far far away, not see how far to the right they and the SWPies have moved?

    You cannot fake into existence favourable poliical conditions. You have to be in the labour movement as it really is, warts and all.
    We are in a bad period and need to assess things cooly, not imagine we are in a pre-revolutionary age!

    Mike

    Like

  15. Second comment:

    Phil and others in and around the ISG such as Alan and John are people I really admire.
    And Liam of course.

    But the truth is that the Respect project with or without the guiding hand of John Rees, callinicos and co, is dead in the water.

    Many years ago the ISG and others were in the Labour party, hailing the rise of Bennism.
    The time will come again when the Labour left will rise. Militant were inside the LP for close on 25 years before they grew to be the organisation with mass influence that they became.

    It is an absolute tragedy, very very sad.

    Left wing organisations like Militant dropped from almost 10,000 to virtually a hundred or so overnight–all because they misunderstood the nature of the period we are in.

    Mikey

    Like

  16. Mike

    Perhaps you would like to tell us all about the marvellous progress of the John McDonnell leadership campaign!!!

    Like

  17. Once more on the members of the SWP signing up to the appeal. Jerry Hicks in his resignation letter quotes from the SW Pre-Conference Bulletin a figure of 5900. This figure will include registered and unregistered members, ie the subs have lapsed for over 3 months.
    I know I’ve sat in SWP conference and had it explained to me, it was never quite convincing
    The unregistered members are included to boost the total figure but its false accountancy.

    Its these people who may now be rung up by some chirpy full-timers, and asked to sign a loyalty pledge when they’ve not been active, or been involved, have probally left the SWP and wonder what this is all about. They will probally exposed themselves fibbing about the membership figures to the err.. membership.

    Like

  18. “Mike

    Perhaps you would like to tell us all about the marvellous progress of the John McDonnell leadership campaign!!!”

    Errr, Patrick, change the record mate. That’s all you say.. What ever happened to John McD…Yada Yada Yada..
    Well, I have to say damn sight healthier than Respect. And it was well orchestrated and didn’t fall victim to factionalism and implosion.

    Oh, and if you want to see John McD. then go to the picket of the Saudi embassy tomorrow.

    Like

  19. I am not and never have been a supporter of Respect. To me it was unprincipled from the beginning and the idea behind it, in a nutshell, to use votes gained from the Muslim community on the back of the war in order to propel the left into positions of power, at least locally, seemed suspect to say the least and inevitably meant you had to make compromises over things like abortion, homosexuality etc.

    But I also take no pleasure in what is happening because it can only damage the left overall. What is certainly needed is a broad left alliance to the left of New Labour. Revolutionaries alone do not have the weight and circumstances politically are not favourable enough for formations only consisting of the far-left. But the essential prerequisite is democracy. Without a democratic organisation, without one group pulling the strings, then there is no hope.

    I agree with Phill Hearse and Liam’s article. The SWP have clearly made a disaster out of a crisis. Galloway found it difficult to work with Rees but was happy with other SWP members. The solution was obvious, assuming Rees was not irreplaceable. But of course he was also complaining about the surreptitious bureaucratic control of the Respect office. People appearing from god knows where. Day to day matters like membership being under the control of those from one group etc. It happened in the Socialist Alliance, which was a dry run for Respect.

    The fact is that you cannot build a party within a party. You have to prioritise one or other and that is what the SWP leadership have done. The only model is the or was the SSP one whereby political groups dissolve into political factions inside a larger party. The break up of the latter, as a result of Tommy Sheridan’s libel ac tion, does not negate that. The SSP was the most successful political formation in Britain, not Respect.

    Now I don’t think that Socialist Resistance has covered themselves with glory either. At the last but one Socialist Alliance National Council, when the prototype of Respect was in the offing (some form of Peace & Justice formation) John Rees compared what the SWP was doing in the Muslim community to what the CP did in the 1930’s in the Jewish community. I pointed out in reply that the CP in the 1930’s had not gone into alliance with the rabbis but rather with working class Jewish fighters AGAINST the rabbis and clerics. In the lunch break a furious Alan Thornett confronted me and chose to attack my right to speak and vote rather than the content of what I said, as if he had no answer (which he hadn’t).

    So what is the resolution to this crisis?

    Firstly Respect is almost certainly dead. There is no way it can seriously survive what has happened. Only Gordon Brown could have saved Respect temporarily with a general election. However he didn’t oblige and now Respect is the second casualty of the decision not to hold a general election (Ming Cambell being the first!).

    There is therefore a need to try and bring together the left which was around the SA and much of which would have been around Respect together again and that is what socialists should be thinking about. How can something be salvaged from Respect.

    Like

  20. […] in der Hand zu haben scheint) zu verzeichnen. Anderswo wird zuweilen korrekt dargestellt, dass die SWP eine gehörigen Anteil der Schuld am Zerfall des prinzipienlosen Blockes RESPECT trägt, was wiederum die Frage aufwirft, warum und […]

    Like

Leave a reply to Tony Greenstein Cancel reply

Trending