A letter to all members of the SWP (Britain)

Dear comrades,

Your comrades in the International Socialist Tendency in Socialist Worker – New Zealand, have watched what appears to be the unfolding disengagement of the Socialist Workers Party (Britain) from RESPECT – the Unity Coalition with gradually mounting concern, anxiety and frustration.

SW-NZ’s perspective since 2002 has been that building new broad forces to the left of the social liberal (formerly social democratic) parties is an essential step towards the rebirth of a serious anti-capitalist worker’s movement. The work carried out by the SWP and its allies to build a broad coalition of the left which could compete with Blairite/Brownite New Labour on equal terms has been an inspiration to us, and, we believe, to all serious socialists throughout the world.

In the last two months, to our distress, all the good work that has been carried out in England and Wales seems on the verge of going down the tubes. Whatever the rights and wrongs of the specific organizational proposals put to the Respect National Council by George Galloway MP in August, an outright civil war has broken out between the SWP leadership and other forces in Respect. This, as far as we can see, could – and should – have been avoided.

It seems to us that your party’s leadership has decided to draw “battle lines” between itself and the rest of Respect – a stance, we believe, guaranteed to destroy the trust and working relationships on which any broad political coalition stands. Of particular concern to us is the expulsion of three respected cadre from the SWP – Kevin Ovenden, Rob Hoveman and Nick Wrack – for refusing to cut working relationships with those seen as being opposed to the SWP. To draw hard lines against other forces within a united front (even of a “special type”) and to expel members who refuse to accept those hard lines is behaviour you would usually see from a sectarian organization, not a party of serious socialists looking to build a new left alternative. It is perhaps in this context that Galloway’s reported comments about “Leninists” should be understood, rather than as an attempt to exclude revolutionary politics from Respect.

What distresses us particularly is that the above mentioned comrades were expelled after submitting what seem to us to be thoughtful and critical contributions to your pre-conference Internal Bulletin. If these three comrades are not being victimized for raising a political alternative to the line of the Central Committee, it certainly gives the appearance of such victimization – or even, to use a word which has become common currency recently, witch-hunting.

The opening contribution of the SWP CC to the Internal Bulletin makes a couple of points which seem to us to be particularly problematic in this context. Firstly, the CC state that:

The critics of the SWP’s position have organised themselves under the slogan “firm in principles, flexible in tactics”. But separating principles and tactics in this way is completely un-Marxist. Tactics derive from principles. Indeed the only way that principles can become effective is if they are embodied in day-to-day tactics.

It seems to us an uncontroversial statement that tactics must be based on much more than principles – a lesson which Lenin himself explained clearly in his famous “Left-Wing” Communism. Revolutionary tactics must be based on the objective realities of the time – the level of class consciousness, the balance of forces in society at any given moment, the resources and cadre available to a revolutionary organization. To derive tactics from principles is not the method of scientific socialism, but of a dogmatic or even sectarian approach, that the party is “schoolteacher to the class”.

As we see it, the disaster overtaking Respect has been exacerbated by the SWP deriving tactics from principles. The principle is that “the revolutionary party” embodies the correct programme, that it must work as a disciplined unit to win its position, and that there is nothing to learn from reformist or other forces. This feeds into a tactical approach that any threat to the organizational leadership of “the revolutionary party” must be fought using all means at the party’s disposal, and those forces who oppose the strategy of the party must be eliminated if they do not accept defeat.

According to the information we have, your party chose not to debate Galloway’s proposals openly within Respect first, and tease out the politics behind them. Rather, the SWP leadership first moved to neutralize internal dissent, before coming out fighting in Respect with accusations of “witch-hunting”. Instead of leading with the political arguments and winning leadership among the broad left forces in Respect, your leadership seems to have mobilized the party for a civil war waged primarily by organizational or administrative means. Inherent in this drive to defeat Galloway and his allies appears a “for us or against us” approach which seems to leave no room for any possible reconciliation – in effect, ensuring the death of Respect in its current form as a coalition of the broad left and a nascent transitional formation of working-class politics.

An attempt by the SWP to establish dominance by sheer force of numbers at the upcoming Respect conference would, it seems to us, result in a Pyrrhic victory at best. Such a course of action, even if successful, would simply drive out those forces who are opposed to your party’s current line and leadership, and reconstitute Respect as a front for SWP electoral activities. We can not see this as encouraging class consciousness or political consciousness, among the SWP, Respect or broader left forces. On the contrary, it seems almost designed to harden the boundaries of organizational loyalty and the divisions between “the revolutionary party” and other forces – almost the definition of sectarianism. Again, if these stories are true, then Galloway’s comments about “Russian dolls” would seem to us – as revolutionary Leninists ourselves – to be fair comment.

Another quotation from your Central Committee’s IB contribution which struck us runs as follows:

Of all the claims made against the SWP’s position the argument that Respect must be our “over-arching strategic priority” must be the most ill considered. Firstly, it ignores the fact that the building of a revolutionary party is the over-arching priority for any revolutionary Marxist. All other strategic decisions are subordinate to this goal.

Six years ago, the American International Socialist Organisation was criticized by the SWP (Britain) for a sectarian refusal to engage with the anti-capitalist movement. Alex Callinicos’ own article on the split with the ISO-US includes the following statement:

In an extraordinary speech at the ISO’s convention in December 2000, the group’s National Organizer, Sharon Smith, attacked the idea that the ISO could, by systematically focusing on this minority, “leapfrog” over the rest of the left, and insisted that methods of party-building forged in the downturn were necessary irrespective of the changing objective conditions. “Branches are now and will always be the measure of the size of the organization,” she said.

The ISO-US was criticized for failing to see to that the gains from a revolutionary organization engaging properly in a broad movement, for both the organization and the class struggle, could not be simply quantified by how many members the organization gained. A sect with many members is of far less consequence in the class struggle than a smaller group of revolutionaries playing an organic leadership role in promoting political consciousness among the working classes and oppressed layers. We feel that the SWP may repeat the ISO-US’s mistakes – with the much greater consequences, this time, of the wreck of the biggest advance for the British left-of-Labour since the Second World War – if it lets Respect, as “only or primarily an electoral project” crumble at this point.

In contrast, Socialist Worker – New Zealand sees Respect – and other “broad left” formations, such as Die Linke in Germany, the Left Bloc in Portugal, the PSUV in Venezuela and RAM in New Zealand – as transitional formations, in the sense that Trotsky would have understood. In programme and organization, they must “meet the class half-way” – to provide a dialectical unity between revolutionary principle and reformist mass consciousness. If they have an electoral orientation, we must face the fact that this cannot be avoided at this historical point. Lenin said in “Left-Wing” Communism that parliamentary politics are not yet obsolete as far as the mass of the class are concerned – this is not less true in 2007 than it was in 1921. The question is not whether Respect should go in a “socialist” or “electoralist” direction, but in how Respect’s electoral programme and strategy can embody a set of transitional demands which intersect with the existing electoralist consciousness of the working class.

The personality of George Galloway MP and the links with Muslim communities in London and Birmingham, seen in this light, are surely assets to be worked with, not embarrassments to be minimized. When Galloway came to New Zealand in July to support our campaign against Islamophobia, he electrified audiences with frankly some of the best political oratory that we have ever heard. No-one is claiming that he is a saint, or that he has not made some questionable political choices, but we refuse to believe that somehow over the space of a few months he has become a “communalist, electoralist” devil.

The latest news that comes to us is that John Rees, a SWP CC member and the National Secretary of Respect, has publicly supported the four Respect councilors in Tower Hamlets who have resigned the Respect whip. If this is true, then the “civil war” in Respect has escalated to the point where the two factions are virtually functioning as separate parties – a “de facto” split much more harmful in practice than a clean divorce. This course of action is not only causing a serious haemorraging of cadre, but destroying the credibility which your party has built up as the most consistent and hard-working advocate of a new broad left in England and Wales. If the SWP appears to be attempting to permanently factionalise Respect, then it will be no wonder that other forces are trying to exclude them – not because of a “witch-hunt against socialists” (are you seriously claiming that Alan Thornett and Jerry Hicks are witch-hunting socialists?) but for reasons of simple self-preservation.

Socialist Worker – New Zealand comrades see this course of action from our IST comrades in the SWP as potentially suicidal. We see uncomfortable parallels with the self-destruction of the Alliance in New Zealand in 2001-2, where one faction deliberately escalated an inner-party conflict to the point where a peaceable resolution became impossible. Both sides of that struggle were permanently crippled in the aftermath. If you comrades are serious about trying to salvage the potential of Respect, I would urge your party to adopt the following measures:

· Lower the temperature of the internal struggle in Respect, by agreeing to a postponement of the Respect conference until at least after the SWP conference in January;

· recommit to building Respect as an active, campaigning organization in the unions and the movements, rather than a formation solely concerned with fighting elections, and to combining the SWP’s work as an independent revolutionary organization with this goal;

· put up proposals for more comprehensive institutions of democratic debate and political education within Respect;

· retreat from the current course of factionalist brinkmanship in the current debate, and take whatever steps are necessary to repair the working relationship between yourselves and other leaders and tendencies within Respect; and

· retract the expulsions of Kevin Ovenden, Nick Wrack and Rob Hoveman, at least pending debate at your party conference.

If, on the other hand, Respect is finished as a united political force, it would surely be better for the two sides in this debate to approach the question of “divorce” amicably and calmly, rather than forcing the issue to a final conflict in the next few weeks and destroying the trust between the SWP and other forces on the left for perhaps a long time.

I would also encourage your party to, as a matter of urgency, write a report for the information of your fellow members of the International Socialist Tendency, giving your analysis of the crisis within Respect and your long-term strategy for building a broad-left political alternative in Britain.

In solidarity,

Daphne Lawless

Editor, UNITY magazine

Socialist Worker – New Zealand

43 responses to “Open letter from Socialist Worker New Zealand to the British SWP”

  1. These compañeros keep on getting it right! This is an excellent contribution from them. Quite seriously, it needs to be designed as an A4 pdf for distribution to SWP meetings.

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  2. Is Socialist Worker New Zealand part of the SWP’s International? I know that it has been in a lot of difficulties lately. Has this group already left, or is about to? Well, seems they are not long for it now anyhow.

    Simon K

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  3. Hi Simon:

    As I think I said in the letter, SW-NZ and the British SWP are both members of the International Socialist Tendency. We are certainly not intending to leave the Tendency, although as those who have read our material on Venezuela know, this is not the first time this year we have had differences with our SWP comrades.

    As a side note, I was kind of hoping that this letter wouldn’t make its way into the public arena for a couple of days, to let the SWP leadership distribute it to their membership and the other IST parties, but that was possibly a forlorn hope in the Internet era.

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  4. Hopefully this analysis will help some comrades in the SWP understand what is happening, but it was more of a forlorn hope that the SWP CC would share your very helpful contribution this debate with the membership,
    They’re battening down the hatches to any outside infulences reaching the members, there set in this very destructive dynamic and its very hard to see how they’re going to pull back and explain why they went down this route. You’re right about Pyrric victories.

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  5. Daphne that’s the great thing about politics in the 21st century. It is possible to have the debates out in the open and increasingly difficult to put limits on discussion. Let everyone have equal access to information, not just leaderships. My earlier that the SWP in Britain is retreating into a more narrow conception of building parties.
    http://liammacuaid.wordpress.com/2007/10/28/are-there-any-politics-behind-the-respect-split/

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  6. This is an excellent contribution, but I’m afraid a bit naive. The comrades from SW-NZ are assuming that the SWP leadership is interested in left unity. Unfortunately, very recent history points to the opposite direction. The SWP is only interested in left unity projects only in the extent to which they help them recruit members (their view of building the party!). It had no qualms about wrecking both the Socialist Alliance and the Scottish Socialist Party when it decided that its purposes were no longer being served.

    Of course, it might just be the case that Daphne Lawless is just maintaining a basic level of politeness (they are after all in the same international) by not calling the SWP Central Committee a bunch of sectarian chumpos instead of actually believing that this is the case.

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  7. Is there any possibility of SW-NZ doing some kind of a house swap with their British cousins? We’d make them very welcome

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  8. Oh come on Piers, what did New Zealand do to deserve that?

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  9. Korakious

    I don’t think Daphne is naive at all. The importance of her contribution to the debate is a reaffirmation of the serious commitment of SW-NZ to the left regroupment project.

    Whether the SWP take note is up to them, but daphne has helped to raise the political level of the debate.

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  10. Of course she has, I am just commenting on her addressing it to the SWP and hoping that it wouldn’t be leaked to the public domain so fast, as if there was any chance that her excellent contribution would change the minds of the SWP Holy Synod.

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  11. This is possibly the best analysis of the situation I have seen so far. I wish I had this before the car crash of a branch meeting I have just attended

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  12. At the risk of distracting from the politics she is a bit of a renaissance woman, this is her web-site.

    http://www.daphnelawless.com

    Not only a singer, but one of the best selling esperanto recording artists in the world.

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  13. And here she is on YouTube

    All in her spare time when not editing “Unity”, the SW-NZ paper.

    I look forward to a video of Chris bambury singing.

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  14. Hi Andy:

    The lastmentioned is not precisely difficult. 🙂

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  15. “Where we are going we don’t need guitars” ?

    BLASPHEMY!

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  16. Hi Squirrel:

    If you want to be a revolutionary without being a blasphemer, you’re doing it wrong. 🙂

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  17. This is not revolution, this is revisionism, blasphemy I tell you. There will be zero tolerance for the enemies of Metal >:)

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  18. Being the best seller esperanto singer may not be hottly contested, but learning esperanto is impressive.

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  19. Not in my Name perhaps you’d be willing to share the details of your “car crash of a branch meeting.”

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  20. Esperanto estas burga revisionista lengvo! Laborantoj de ciu landoj, lerni Volapuko!

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  21. Liam, I will post something a bit later. I have a headache and have hardly slept.
    All I can say is that the SWP members refused to take anything on board and hadn’t read most of the available material. Some didn;t even know about the resignation of the councillors and the press conference.
    There were disingenuous calls for unity, terms such as witchunt used, when asked for evidence of course they could produce none. I was asked to substaniate what I was saying ie that there was a press conference, the articles did appear in the Independent and Observer etc yet ‘they asked JR to resign’ and the term McCarthyism was used freely
    . One member bizarrely said that she has had to defend Galloway on the doorstep before but not Rees. I did point out that was because GG is our only MP, a well known figure and consistently attacked for his anti-war stance. Most people on the doorstep would never have heard of Rees.
    A line from National Office was clearly being blindly followed. The Conference delegation was voted on, and the SWP have each delegate post, scotching their claims of pluralism and unity. This was achieved by ensuring that they had enough people at the meeting to swing the vote. Now some of the non-SWP members are refusing to work with them again and have left/are leaving both Respect and Stop the War.

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  22. Andy Newman wrote: “I look forward to a video of Chris bambury singing.” Didn’t someone once say “Be careful what you wish for”?!? This is easily the scariest suggestion I’ve seen during the whole Respect debate…..

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  23. Daphne

    In my opinion, the days before Socialist Worker New Zealand are expelled from the British SWP’s International Socialist Tendency are numbered. The ISO in the United States were expelled a few years ago for having the temerity to develop the power of independent thought. And what happened to the ISO has been replicated on mumerous occasions throughout the world. Not to mention the countless bureaucratic purges the SWP has carried out within its own membership over the years. Rob Hoveman, Kevin Ovenden and Matt Wrack are simply the latest of many. It is clear to me that you and other New Zealand comrades have shown far greater temerity and independence in your thinking now than the ISO did then. If I were you I would start thinking about a life outside the International Socialist Tendency. I believe that Rees, Callinicos et al are retreating into a highly sectarian form of political solipsism. They are all so far gone that they might even think the the working class exists solely in order for them to lead it. They have certainly lost the ability to separate fantasy from reality. But of course you might have arrived similar conclusions to mine already.

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  24. All hot air comrades, until and unless we begin to address rather more fundamental ussues.

    http://homepage.ntlworld.com/rosa.l/page%2009_02.htm

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  25. Scariest thing?

    No the scariest thing aready happened. Tommy’s mum:

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  26. For someone so materialist, isn’t it a bit idealist to blame adherence to dialectics for the root cause of the far left’s woes?

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  27. Well, ‘Very Public Non-Sociologist’, like other comrades who have attempted to respond to my intervention, you need to get my claims right before you wade in.

    I do not claim that this is *the* cause, only *a* cause, and a significant one at that.

    Even a brief perusal of the opening page of my site would have told you this!

    And mine is no less materialist an explanation than that offered by Lenin for the reason why certain comrades became ‘god-seekers’ after 1905.

    The idea that the core theory of the vast majority of revolutionary socialists (dialectics) and the long-term failure of dialectical Marxism are not connected is, frankly, quite ludicrous.

    In a world where we are ‘told’ that everything is ‘interconnected’, apparently the only two things in the entire universe that are not inter-linked are this core theory and our lack of success!

    Pull the other one!

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  28. Damned good letter, but she might as well have yodelled it up a drainpipe in Antarctica for all the good it’s going to do.

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  29. My, my, Rosa, a bit tetchy this morning aren’t we?

    I have had a quick look at your site, and if I have the time I’d probably take a deeper look, though as you may have guessed I don’t find your thesis particularly convincing. But I remain to be persuaded. Just one question, in your material do you take a sustained look at Athusser’s attempt to put dialectics on what he saw as a materialist footing?

    Apols to Liam for hijacking his blog.

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  30. the sw-nz obviously misunderstand the nature of the ist! they are supposed to do what they are told by callinicos and co, not write them open letters and ask for an internal bulletin! i bet this letter has gone down really well with the swp! the damn cheek of the kiwis to even challenge the swp master marxists!

    “long-term strategy for building a broad-left political alternative in Britain”! ha! i don’t think the swp have a long term strategy for this or anything else.

    anyway best of luck to sw-nz with their letter. i’m sure it wont be long till they are outside the ist now.

    best wishes,

    ks

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  31. Public::

    “My, my, Rosa, a bit tetchy this morning aren’t we?”

    When I have had to field the same comment (like yours) for the best part of 25 years (and when I have gone out of my way to say very carefully what I mean), yes, one does tend to get rather tetchy. 🙂

    “I have had a quick look at your site, and if I have the time I’d probably take a deeper look, though as you may have guessed I don’t find your thesis particularly convincing. But I remain to be persuaded. Just one question, in your material do you take a sustained look at Athusser’s attempt to put dialectics on what he saw as a materialist footing?

    Hate Althusser, and so he is totally absent from my Essays.

    Hume’s bonfire for his work, I think.

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  32. Hi Patrick:

    Thanks for your friendly advice. The American ISO were expelled from the Tendency following a unanimous vote of the other affiliates, not on the grounds of their political disagreement with the rest of the Tendency, but of their alleged role in fomenting a split in the Greek SEK. On the other hand, I wrote a letter. No matter how much certain members of the SWP are (regrettably) mad at me at the moment, they would have to convince not only their own leadership, but the leadership of more than a dozen other independent parties, that SW-NZ need anathematisation because I wrote a letter.

    I should also point out that people were betting on us to be expelled this July because of our statement on Venezuela, but that didn’t happen. I think the people who think that the IST parties are incapable of thought independent from the SWP CC have been proven wrong by our own intervention, so the question of what other IST organisations think of the disaster in Respect is far from settled – which is, of course, why I wrote the letter. The SWP has led in our Tendency partly because of their political vision. If their vision is called into question then it’s the duty of their Tendency comrades to initiate a serious debate.

    As to MPB: I did actually yodel it up a drainpipe in Invercargill, which is as close to Antarctica as makes no odds. 😉

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  33. PS. I should note that someone called “Tom” on the Socialist Unity blog has declared that I will be expelled from the IST on an individual basis. I don’t know if that’s even possible, or who “Tom” speaks for, but one thing’s for sure – threats like that are certainly serious business.

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  34. Daphne, if ‘Tom’ is who I think he is, he does not speak for anyone but himself. He is not an SWP sympathiser, let alone member. It would be a mistake to treat his outrageous rant as a threat from the SWP in any way.

    I don’t speak for the SWP either – I’m not a member or a sympathiser – but I would urge you, if you haven’t already, to discuss this personally with our mutual friend at the Tomb.

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  35. Daphne

    Tom Delargy is a frothing at the mouth personification of all that is bad in left politics.

    He was expelled from the SWP himself many years ago, and no-one on the planet should take him seriously.

    I have no doubt that you are firmly crossed off the SWP’s Christmas card list. But SW-NZ have done nothing outside the protocols of the IST, and you are probably still less of a headache to them than the Zimbabweans.

    One very good thing about your intervention is that Callinicos will be obliged to write a serious and considered response to it.

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  36. Thanks for the advice, Ken – I’m not sure whether Richard (who I assume you mean) is still speaking to me, since his response on Marxmail was not only dismissive and made dark hints about a supposed true hidden agenda, but ignored the substantive political issues. He has my email if he thinks there’s anything I missed and he’s welcome to write.

    I should repeat that SW-NZ was sent all the SWP documents surrounding this issue, so we actually have seen the evidence on both sides and had a good internal debate around this.

    I do hope that Alex writes a serious and considered response, Andy. The problem with the premature publication, though, is now they have an excuse to ignore it and concentrate on casting aspersions about our motives.

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  37. I have to say, RS has been very helpful with my queries, perhaps because I sought to ask him personally first, and refused to believe the sort of stuff we see paraded about on the internet *before* talking to official or semi-offical SWP sources — as our NZ comrades should have done.

    A few e-mails cost nothing.

    No wonder then that he was ‘suspicious’ of those who adopted the converse strategy.

    But, I think Andy, above, has judged the situation aright. I will be very surprised if the NZ IST franchise is withdrawn from the SWP-NZ.

    http://homepage.ntlworld.com/rosa.l/Why%20I%20Oppose%20DM.htm

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  38. Daphne, please stop basing your politics on what you read in the blogosphere! Because an acronym ‘Tom’ on a blog says that you will be expelled from the IS tendency ‘on a personal basis’, you seem to believe it? What I find peculiar in this case, is that you (presumably the leadership of your small group) actually spends time discussing these matters, ie a nasty conflict in the UK, involving the SWP and others. Shouldn’t you be concentrating on the NZ?

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  39. splinteredsunrise Avatar
    splinteredsunrise

    Does Norwegian have a problem with the leadership of the Irish SWP sending a letter to the Brits pre-emptively agreeing with whatever they may decide to do?

    Or is that all right because they didn’t waste the members’ time having a discussion?

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  40. to be fair, Daph has been central with other SW activists in Auckland in setting up http://www.civilrightsdefence.org.nz , organising against the paramilitary Terror Radis against Maori, anarchist and environmentalist activists. Maybe our wooden friend from Oslo could take an internationalist interest in his socialism.

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  41. Norwegian – you are priceless “What I find peculiar in this case, is that you (presumably the leadership of your small group) actually spends time discussing these matters, ie a nasty conflict in the UK, involving the SWP and others.”

    There is not much point in being in the IST if you don’t discuss what goes on in it.

    As Daphne herslef has pointed out, the authority of London is based upon the political capital the leadership of the SWP have built up.

    It is therefore perfectly understandable for the behaviouf of the SWP CC to be discussed.

    And Alex callinicos had no qualms with interfering in the affairs of the Zimbabwean ISO (and don’t take this the wrong way – but I never felt it appropriate for a white Rhodesian man to be wading in to question the judgement of the leadership in Zimbabwe)

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  42. Daphne

    The ISO may well have tried to forment a split in the Greek section of the IST. But so what. The British SWP have formented any number of splits from in other IST sections. Why hasn’t the British SWP been expelled from the IST? The point is that the SWP treats other IST sections as foreign subsidiaries of a British franchise so obviously there was no room for those uppity yanks from across the Atlantic. No doubt the pretext for the expulsion of the New Zealand section from the IST may well be that they tried to forment a split in the British SWP in the form of their open letter. You have been warned.

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  43. This letter is so hilarious I almost fell off my chair. The sheer hypocrisy of the SW-NZ with their history! Some people have such short memories they forget that they have used these very same tactics themselves – swamped meetings/created front organisations and tried to exclude the rest of the left from them/expelled members who didn’t toe the party line at all times in public (and private).
    This is very much pot calling kettle black and I just find it all very amusing.

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