The Socialist Party is the political expression of the
interests of the workers in this country. For the existing ills of the wage-workers
there is but one remedy. It is embraced in a single word — socialism — the common
ownership of all the means of production and distribution; and these can be
secured by conquering the political power and seizing the reins of government
through a united, class-conscious socialist ballot. To the working class we
say, the Socialist Party is pledged to your complete emancipation. It promises
no shortcuts and no quack remedies. It is a class-conscious, revolutionary
party committed to the overthrow of capitalism and its wage-slavery and the
establishment of the cooperative commonwealth and economic equality, and every
wage-worker should rally to its standard and hasten the day of its triumph and
their own deliverance. The Industrial Revolution created the two inherently
adversarial key components of modern capitalism engaged in a monumental battle
— the capitalist class and the working class in formation. A united socialist
movement may now make clear to all the people the lines of conflict between
capitalism and socialism; between despotism and liberty. These lines of
conflict may be made so definite that no party of compromise or tinkering can
enter the political field. Nothing outside of socialism can defeat capitalism.
Socialism points out the economic basis upon which democracy must stand in
order to achieve liberty. It proclaims all liberty to rest back upon economic
liberty, and all individuality to be rooted in economic unity. It affirms that
there can be no liberty save through association and a cooperative
commonwealth. It makes clear that democracy in the State is but a fiction,
unless it be realised through democracy in production and distribution.
Socialism declares that liberty to be a mockery if it means merely the survival
of the strong and the cunning devouring the weak. If we are to stand together,
we must act like brothers and sisters. Not until slave and master have both
disappeared can we lay any proper claim to civilisation.
We do not denounce capitalists as individuals. Men and women
are the product of conditions, circumstances, environments, and these are
favourable or unfavourable, become useful or useless, noble or ignoble, good or
bad. It is, therefore, not with the individual that we have an issue with, but
with the system of society that produces him and protects him. The Socialist
Party’s purpose is to discuss conditions and point out the means to our
fellow-workers who maintain that there can be no relief while any part of the
wage system remains, insisting that the present competitive system must be
completely overthrown and not a vestige of it left before permanent relief to
the suffering masses can be provided. Socialism is the science of human
association.
The economic basis of present-day society is the private
ownership and control of socially necessary means of production, and the
exploitation of the workers, who operate these means of production for the
profit of those who own them. The capitalist system of production, under which
we live, is the production of commodities for profit instead of for use for the
private gain of those who own and control the tools and means of production and
distribution. Out of this system of production and sale for profit spring all the
evils, and problems of misery, want, and poverty that menace and confronts
civilisation. The Socialist Party teaches that the only way to attain the just
distribution of wealth to those who produce it is through the common ownership,
democratic control and operation of the means of production and distribution,
such as lands, mines, factories, transport, communications, etc., etc. It
asserts that this production should be for use and not for sale or profit, thus
doing away with all private ownership of the means of subsistence in every
sphere of society, and with which a vast amount of unproductive labour and an
immense number of useless and harmful occupations wastes resources. Socialism
would conserve and not abolish the private ownership of wealth as distinguished
from capital. Thus, homes and all personal belongings not used to produce more
wealth would be individually and not collectively owned.
It is the interest of the capitalist class to maintain the
present system and to obtain for themselves the largest possible share of the
product of labour. It is the interest of the working class to improve their
conditions of life and get the largest possible share of their own product so
long as the present system prevails. Each class strives to advance its own
interests as against the other. It is what we describe as the class struggle.
The capitalists, by controlling the political parties and in control of the State
secures and entrenches its position. Without such control of the State its
position of economic power would be untenable. The workers must wrest the
control of the government machinery from the hands of the masters and use its
powers in the building of the cooperative commonwealth. The Socialist Party
seeks to organise the working class for independent action on the political
field, not just for the betterment of their conditions, but above all to end the
class rule of out exploiters. Such political action is absolutely necessary to
the emancipation of the working class. To accomplish this aim of the Socialist
Party is to bring about the common ownership and democratic control of all the
necessary means of production — to eliminate profit, rent, and interest, and
make it impossible for any to share the product without sharing the burden of
labour — to change our class society into a society of equals, in which the
interest of one will be the interest of all. Subordinate to this fundamental aim,
it supports every measure which betters the conditions of the working class,
and which increases the fighting power of that class within the present system.