We have been forewarned. It is going to get worse; worse
than it was – and for most it was never good; worse than it is now. A deep
unease haunts the land; a sense of foreboding as politicians, the media and the
man next door talk of The Cuts and the impending cuts. Something is drastically
wrong. Tens of thousands of people who thought they had secure employment have
been made redundant and more going every day. The houses that people have on
hire-purchase from building societies are in many cases worth less than what is
owed on them. The state ‘benefits’ that guaranteed a mean living are being
eroded, and the authoritative voices solemnly proclaim that it is going to get progressively
worse. For the working class that means that generally we will be expected to
do without more than we were doing without previously; a more restricted
standard of living, a financially crippled health service and the ending of
access to second-rate education. Whereas, in the past, politics was about
politicians and their parties telling us how they were going to improve our
living standards, today politics is about the pace and duration of the cuts
that are going to bite into our lives in the future: the political Right,
abetted by the craven Centre, thinks the pain of economic retrenchment should
be fully applied now; the Left argues that less pain over an extended period is
preferable. But the common watchword is that it is going to be painful! The
cuts are not the result of any change in our potential to produce wealth and
there is plainly urgent human need for vibrant wealth production. That such
wealth production in any form of society is the result of human mental and
physical labour power being applied to nature-given resources is clearly
obvious and both these factors remain as they were before the advent of the
present crisis. Unfortunately capitalism adds another predominating factor into
the simple wealth-producing equation: capital investment on the promise of
profit.
We have to recognise that it is the working class that
politically endorses capitalism in elections and it is only the working class
that can abolish that system in conditions that will allow for the
establishment of socialism. That statement requires recognition of the
limitations of bourgeois democracy but such limitations do not alter the fact
that without the conscious democratic consent of the working class real social
democracy is out of the question. The workers, the producers of wealth, are
poor because they are robbed; they are robbed because they may not use the
machinery of wealth production except on terms dictated by the owners, the
propertied class. The remedy for working class poverty and other social ills is
the transfer of ownership of these means of production from the capitalist
class to society. That, in a few words, is the case for socialism. The work of
rebuilding society on this new basis cannot be started until power is in the
hands of a socialist working class, and that cannot be until many millions have
been convinced of the need for change and are broadly agreed on the way to set
to work to bring it about. It is just here that the Socialist Party meets with
an objection which is in appearance reasonable enough. Many who would accept
the foregoing remarks can go with us no further.
The Left might protest that immediate organising for socialism
does nothing to alleviate the current problems of capitalism. Is it not better,
they say, in view of the certainty that socialism cannot be introduced at once,
to devote much, if not all, our energy to making the best of capitalism, and
getting "something now"? By "something now" they mean a
minimum wage, increased State protection against destitution through illness or
unemployment, and other like proposals. But if they accept that these problems
are an effect of capitalism they must surely accept that the logical way to
remove an effect is to remove its cause. It may then come as a surprise to them
that we also believe in getting something now. We differ in that we are not
willing to subordinate socialist principles to the demand for reforms of
capitalism, and in that we strongly hold that the best way to get these things
is by the revolutionary activity of an organisation of revolutionaries. In
other words, the quickest and easiest method of getting reforms from the ruling
class is to let them see that it will endanger their position to refuse.
While we recognise that socialism is the only permanent
solution, we are not among those who consider that the capitalists are simply
unable to afford better conditions for the workers. If workers ceased to
struggle they would soon find a worsening of their conditions but on the other
hand were they free from the mental blindness which prevents them from striking
a blow when and where it would be most damaging, they might, even within
capitalism, raise their standard of living and diminish their insecurity.
Unfortunately they do not yet see the facts of the class struggle, and too
often allow themselves to be paralysed in inaction. Employers will not give up
any part of what they hold except under pressure one kind of pressure is fear;
the fear that refusal to spend part of their ill-gotten gains on reforms will
encourage revolutionary agitation for the seizure of the whole kaboodle.
There's nothing wrong with contesting elections, but it
should be done on a sound basis: getting elected on a straight socialist
programme of common ownership, democratic control and production for use not
profit, with a view to using parliament or the council chamber as a platform
from which to spread socialist ideas (while still a minority) and to usher in
socialism (when a majority, acting on instructions from a mass
democratically-organised and socialist-minded movement outside). This is quite
different from trying to get elected by non-socialist votes on a programme of
attractive-sounding reforms to capitalism. It's a bad tactic that can only
encourage illusions about what can be achieved under capitalism. It glosses
over the fact that capitalism is not a system that can be humanised or reformed
or transformed into something better. It is a profit system subject to economic
laws which can only work in one way: as a system of profit-making and
accumulation of capital in the interest of a tiny minority of profit-takers. What
those who want a better society should be doing is to campaign to change
people's minds, to get them to realise that they are living in an exploitative,
class-divided society and that the only way out is to end capitalism and
replace it by a new and different system based on the common ownership and
democratic control of the means of production, with production to satisfy
people's needs, and distribution on the basis of “from each according to their
ability, to each according to their needs”. Once a majority have come to this
realisation, they will know what to do: organise themselves into a socialist
party to democratically win political control and use it to bring about a socialist
society.
That's what socialist politics should be about.
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