Lenin is rightly known for having stood for a
"centralised hierarchical vanguard party to lead the masses" Up until
the First World War Lenin was a left-wing Social Democrat who argued that,
under the autocratic political conditions of Tsarism, Social Democrats there
had to organise as a hierarchical centralised party in order to overthrow the
Tsarist regime, but that for Western Europe, he accepted the German party's model of an
open, democratic party pursing a maximum programme (of socialism) and a minimum
programme of reforms of capitalism, contesting elections, etc. The trouble is
that he changed his position after 1917. He now said that the organisational
form and tactics that he had advocated for the overthrow of Tsarism (which was
not in fact how Tsarism ended as it collapsed more or less of its own accord;
his tactics only worked to overthrow the weak government that emerged following
this) should also be applied in Western Europe for the overthrow of capitalism.
This is when he would have ceased to be a Social Democrat and became a
Bolshevik. The organisation of such groups of followers of Bolshevism are
certainly centralised, but has little to do with any democratic process. Leninists
imagine that workers are only capable of reaching a trade union consciousness
and flatter themselves that their consciousness as a vanguard is higher.
Actually, it’s the other way round. Most trade unions have democratic
constitutions, even if largely these days only on paper. The Leninist theory of
organisation is a throw-back to political conditions such as existed in Tsarist
Russia, and its introduction into more politically-developed Western Europe
following the coming to power of the Bolsheviks in Russia has been an
unmitigated disaster for the working class and socialism. As a theory of
leadership it is anti-socialist and to be rejected on political grounds. In
practice it can easily lead to such aberrations such as personality cults and
so is to be rejected on grounds of human dignity too.
Alex Callinicos of the present-day Socialist Workers Party,
a hierarchical organisation which is dominated by a self-perpetuating Central
Committee and which prides itself on ruthlessly banning all internal factions
and organised dissension, expressed the vanguard party`s creed:
"A revolutionary situation places a premium on
effective organisation and leadership. Events move very quickly, and on a snap
decision may hang the fate of the entire revolution. What is needed is a cool
and clear head, a firm sense of the ultimate objective, the ability to make
rapid tactical judgements, and an organisation capable not only of making
decisions, but of carrying them out." (The Revolutionary Road to
Socialism)
Under democratic centralism, the party leadership is nominally
elected by the members, but an outgoing leadership will propose to a conference
the new leadership and central committee by means of a "slate" (or
list) of candidates. Members do not vote for individuals but for such a slate
and it is rare indeed for an alternative slate to be proposed. This explains
the "remarkable continuity of the leaders of Leninist parties over the
years. It should also be noted that this process of a self-perpetuating
leadership explains the enormous power and prestige such a leadership has
relative to its own organisation.
The Socialist Party is against leadership, and yet we elect
an executive committee, stand candidates in elections, and have 'leading'
members, i.e some individuals who have more influence, though not more power,
than others. A crucial difference between that of electing delegates and
representatives is that delegates only
have as much power as is mandated to them and can be recalled. Representatives
have power abdicated to them wholesale. Writers or speakers are NOT leaders.
Their function is to spread knowledge and understanding, as teachers. Quite
different from that we must have leaders (great men) to direct their followers
(blind supporters) into a socialist society. Socialism is not the result of
blind faith, followers, or, by the same token, vanguard parties. Despite some
very charismatic writers and speakers in the past, no personality has held
undue influence over the Socialist Party. Simply check the two published
histories of the Party to see on just how many occasions and on how many issues
those so-called leaders have not gained a majority at conferences or in
referendums.
We actually have a
test for membership. This does not mean
that the Socialist Party has set itself up as an intellectual elite into which
only those well versed in Marxist scholarship may enter. One purpose of it is
to place all members on an even basis. The Socialist Party's reason is to
ensure that only conscious socialists enter its ranks, for, once admitted, all
members are equal and it would clearly not be in the interest of the Party to
offer equality of power to those who are not able to demonstrate equality of
basic socialist understanding. Once a member, s/he have the same rights as the
oldest member to sit on any committee, vote, speak, and have access to all
information. Thanks to this test all members are conscious socialists and there
is genuine internal democracy, and of that we are fiercely proud. Consider what
happens when people join other groups which don't have this test. The new
applicant has to be approved as being "all right". The individual is
therefore judged by the group according to a range of what might be called
"credential indicators". Hard work (often, paper selling) and
obedience by new members is the main criterion of trustworthiness in the
organisation. In these hierarchical, "top-down" groups the leaders
strive at all costs to remain as the leadership, and reward only those with
proven commitment to the "party line" with preferential treatment,
more responsibility and more say. New members who present the wrong indicators
remain peripheral to the party structure, and finding themselves unable to
influence decision-making at any level, eventually give up and leave, often
embittered by the hard work they put in and the hollowness of the party's
claims of equality and democracy.
The Socialist Party is a leader-free political party where
its executive committee is solely for housekeeping admin duties and cannot
determine policy. An EC that is not even permitted to submit resolutions to
conference. All conference decisions have to be ratified by a referendum of the
whole membership. The General Secretary has no position of power or authority
over any other member being simply a dogsbody. Mandating delegates, voting on
resolutions and membership referendums are democratic practices for ensuring
that the members of an organisation control that organisation – and as such key
procedures in any organisation genuinely seeking socialism. Socialism can only
be a fully democratic society in which everybody will have an equal say in the
ways things are run. This means that it can only come about democratically,
both in the sense of being the expressed will of the working class and in the
sense of the working class being organised democratically – without leaders,
but with mandated delegates – to achieve it. In rejecting these procedures what
is being declared is that the working class should not organise itself
democratically.
What is at stake here is not a question of tactics or
strategy but principle. We believe, to use Lenin's words but reverse their
meaning, that workers, exclusively by their own efforts, are capable of a
socialist consciousness. Workers are human beings and individuals in
themselves; they are not dumb masses to be tricked, led, deceived, and lied to,
for the greater good. That's why, actually, we are not sectarian and the left
are. We join workers struggles as workers. We take part in the democratic
process as equals with our fellows. We do not join for purposes of our own; we
have no programme of demands hidden up our sleeves to be produced at a later
date, nor a one-party dictatorship to produce as a nasty surprise at an even
later date. That's why, when we join workers struggles as individuals and not
as a leadership party, and reject the left, we are not being sectarian -- quite
the opposite. We are being principled socialists. Workers do not need any
advice or leadership from socialists when it comes to struggling to defend
their own interests within capitalism. They do it all by themselves all the
time. However, such struggles have their limits within capitalism: they cannot
go beyond the law of value, and the combined forces of the capitalists and the
state can almost always defeat them if they put their mind to it. Workers who
realise this tend to become socialists. As they become socialists, they see the
necessity for going beyond such day to day struggles (these unavoidable and
incessant guerrilla battles, as Marx put it) and the need for a political party
aimed solely for socialism. This political party must not advocate reforms, not
because it is against reforms (how on earth could a working class party be
against reforms in the working class interest?), but because it wants to build
support for socialism, and not for reforms.
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