Many detractors of the socialist case criticise Marx and
Engels and their early followers as being advocates of violent revolution and
are wont to cite statements they made in support of this claim. And it is not
uncommon for these same critics to claim that socialist/communists (the words
means the same) of today still hold out for violent insurrection as a means to
an end. Whilst it may be true that the first communist revolutionaries did
advocate violent overthrow of the then existing order, it has to be remembered
that it was at a time when they were barred from the ballot box, when they saw
violence as the only tool of change, before the Reform Acts of 1867 and 1884
and which enfranchised many workers.*
With the 1867 Act Marx and his associates began to see a
chink in the armour of the master class. The franchise was being widened and
they knew it would widen more and, as the capitalist class ruled via their
executive in parliament, it was possible for revolution to be brought about
peacefully and democratically and via the ballot box.
Thus, Resolution IX of the London Conference of the
International in September 1871, headed Political Action of the Working Class
stated:
“Considering, that against this collective power of the
propertied classes the working class cannot act, as a class, except by constituting
itself into a political party, distinct from, and opposed to, all old parties
formed by the propertied classes;
“That this constitution of the working class into a
political party is indispensable in order to ensure the triumph of the social revolution
and its ultimate end — the abolition of classes…”
In 1880, in the Introduction to the Programme of the French
Workers’ Party, Marx wrote:
Considering,
That the emancipation of the productive class is that of all
human beings without distinction of sex or race;
That the producers can be free only when they are in
possession of the means of production;
That there are only two forms under which the means of
production can belong to them
The individual form which has never existed in a general state
and which is increasingly eliminated by industrial progress;
The collective form the material and intellectual elements
of which are constituted by the very development of capitalist society;
Considering,
That this collective appropriation can arise only from the
revolutionary action of the productive class – or proletariat - organized in a
distinct political party;
That such an organization must be pursued by all the means
the proletariat has at its disposal including universal suffrage which will
thus be transformed from the instrument of deception that it has been until now
into an instrument of emancipation.
In insisting that the working class had to constitute itself
into a political party “, distinct from, and opposed to, all old parties formed
by the propertied classes”, Marx not only infuriated the anarchists, alienated
himself from those who hankered after the spilled blood of the master class, he
was stating quite clearly that capitalism could only be defeated in the
political arena and on the battlefield of ideas.
Whilst the capitalist class derive some power from their
ownership and control of the means for producing and distributing wealth, their
real power lies in their control over the machinery of state. This power is
derived by the mandate the voters give them at election time, voters who can
seen no fault in the existing system and will readily support whichever bunch
of brigands can hoodwink them the best, via promises and pledges at election
time, convincing the workers that they can best run the capitalist system.
Our detractors faced now with the argument that it is
possible for the workers to create a mass party capable of challenging the
master class in the arena in which they have hitherto been so successful, and
taking over the machinery of state, counter that faced with an impending defeat
at the polls, they (the masters) would suspend the democratic process and
establish a dictatorship. The democratic process, which the workers are ready
to use to oust the master class, can now be declared obsolete by bunch of
gangsters in high office!
The problem here is that our detractors fail to realise that
a mass party, about to take power, would assume that a worldwide socialist
consciousness already existed and, moreover, that there had been a change in
the general mindset of parliament, with socialist delegates already having been
elected. It would assume that the big clashes had already been won by the
workers on the battlefield of ideas. The character of government across the
world would already have changed as a result of these victories, so there would
be no chance of a suspension of democratic procedures, the establishment of a
dictatorship or a coup on behalf of those wishing to maintain the profit
system.
The majority of governments around the world today rule by
the consent of the governed as previously mentioned. And they rule, in truth,
because the majority of workers have that false consciousness that prevents
them seeing what is in their real interests, not least because of the
propaganda churned out daily by the state, the media (press, TV, radio etc), by
the education system and via religious institutions. A growing socialist
consciousness assumes that in all of these areas the workers have at last begun
to reject the lies, the false promises, the state’s version of history, the
belief in supernatural beings, the concept of leadership. A growing class
consciousness suggests here is a majority that will no longer be bribed with
reforms, although it can be imagined that many news ones will have been
introduced to win the workers back over to the capitalist cause.
If by some act of desperation and stupidity there was an
attempt to suspend democratic procedures and install a dictatorship by force of
arms, one would imagine that this class conscious majority would not tolerate
it one second. The workers would have no option but to resort to violent
methods to defend their interests. But having said this, even this act of
desperation on behalf of the master class would be counterproductive, revealing
to the last doubters of the socialist case, the true nature of the beast that
has exploited their class for so long, revealing that they hold the wishes of
the workers in utter contempt and are more than prepared to suspend workers’
hard fought rights and maintain power at gun point.
Socialists, though doubtful such a scenario would be enacted
by the capitalist class, would be the first to defend the hard won gains of the
workers against any violent backlash by the defenders of capitalism, though
quickly restoring the democratic apparatus as soon as the threat had vanished.
Make no mistake, socialists, whilst defenders of the parliamentary road to
socialism and hateful of violence for political ends, are not died in the wool
pacifists. If the master class wanted to fight it out bloodily, we are more
than ready to accommodate them.
All said, genuine socialists insist the revolution will be
bloodless and brought about by a class conscious majority, aware of exactly
what socialism means, and via the ballot box.
* The 1884 Act and the 1885 Redistribution Act tripled the
electorate, giving the vote to most agricultural labourers. By this time,
voting was becoming a right rather than the property of the privileged.
However, women were not granted voting rights until the Act of 1918, which
enfranchised all men over 21 and women over thirty. This last bit of
discrimination was eliminated 10 years later (in 1928) by the Equal Franchise
Act
John Bisset
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