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WSWS : Obituary
Jack Maginnis--lifelong socialist in Liverpool
By Barbara Slaughter
15 April 1999
The Socialist Equality Party, British section of the International
Committee of the Fourth International, was saddened to learn of
the death, on Tuesday March 23, of comrade Jack Maginnis in Walton,
Liverpool. Jack died of heart failure at the age of 70 years.
Jack, a long-standing supporter of the Fourth International,
keenly followed its press and publications, and regularly attended
public meetings and discussion forums in Liverpool. He was born
in 1928, into a family of Irish decent. There were nine children:
Jack was the eldest of three boys. His father and grandfather
were both socialists. His grandfather was a seaman on a ship that
broke the fascist blockade during the Spanish Civil War in the
1930s, bringing food and supplies to the Republican side. His
grandmother was described by the family as a "wicked Orange
woman"--a supporter of the British loyalists in Northern
Ireland. In a situation in Liverpool where everyone was defined
by their religion, his father became an atheist, hating the role
of religion in fermenting divisions in the working class.
Jack's family lived in an area close to the dock warehouses,
which were heavily bombed during the Second World War. His father
admired the Soviet Union and strongly supported the call for opening
the Second Front in Western Europe. Just after the end of the
war, there was a strike on a Canadian ship in the Liverpool docks.
The ship sailed with a scab crew and the strikers were left stranded.
Local families welcomed the striking Canadian seamen into their
houses. Six of them slept on the floor of the front room in Jack's
home. Such experiences of international solidarity made an indelible
impression on him.
From an early age, Jack was interested in politics and was
attracted by the 1917 Russian Revolution and the struggle of the
Soviet people against fascism during the Second World War. He
joined the Young Communist League at the age of fifteen and later
the Communist Party.
In 1952, after completing his national service in the Royal
Air Force, Jack became a docker and worked on the docks in Liverpool
and Birkenhead all his life. He became disillusioned with the
Communist Party, especially after meeting and discussing with
seamen from the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. He questioned
why, if this was supposed to be socialism, people wanted to escape
to the West? Khrushchev's speech in 1956, revealing Stalin's crimes,
confirmed his opinions, though he did not have any clear political
understanding of what had happened under Stalinism.
On the docks, Jack participated in all the major disputes,
supporting the rank-and-file Unofficial Portworkers Committee
against the Transport and General Workers Union (TGWU) bureaucracy.
In 1956, under the leadership of the Trotskyist movement, there
was a militant breakaway from the TGWU (the "White Union")
in the northern ports of Hull and Liverpool. Hundreds of dockers
left the TGWU and joined the National Amalgamated Stevedores and
Dockers Union (the "Blue Union", so called after the
colour of its membership cards). Jack stayed in the TGWU. He was
still influenced by the Communist Party, who argued that the Blue
Union was breaking trade union agreements by "poaching"
members. In reality, the only concern of the Communist Party leadership
was to keep the dockers under the control of the TGWU bureaucracy.
The Blue Union attracted many of the more militant workers, and
for a while it was led by the Trotskyists. The dock bosses stitched
up a deal with the TGWU bureaucracy to only employ TGWU members.
Jack, along with hundreds of other members of the White Union,
refused to work unless Blue Union members were also employed,
and went on strike for the recognition of the Blue Union.
Despite his growing hostility to the politics of Stalinism,
Jack never turned his back on politics. He became a Trotskyist
in 1970, after reading the Workers Press, the newspaper
of the Socialist Labour League (SLL), then the British Section
of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI).
For the first time he encountered a Marxist analysis of the degeneration
of the Stalinist bureaucracy and its betrayal of international
socialism.
In 1972, he took part in a mass strike against job losses on
the docks. "Containerisation" meant thousands of dockers'
jobs were destroyed. The Tory government used new legislation
to ban dockers from picketing-out container lorries coming into
the ports. This was a period of widespread militancy in the British
working class. With the support of the TGWU, its General Secretary
Jack Jones, and rank-and-file union representatives, many of whom
were Communist Party (CP) members, the government ended casual
employment on the docks. However, bringing in permanent employment
for some dockers meant accepting a redundancy scheme for the rest.
Jack would proudly explain how he and his comrade, Paul Kelly,
fought for the political line of the SLL, outlined in a leaflet
opposing the deal and the CP's betrayal. The Stalinists and their
supporters were able to throw them out of the dockers' mass meeting.
The hard conditions of working class life took their toll on
Jack's health. He had a heart attack in 1982, and had to retire
from the docks. He was seriously ill for 10 years, before having
open-heart surgery and a double bypass operation with two valve
implants in 1992.
In 1985-6 there was a split in the international Trotskyist
movement. From 1982 onwards a struggle had taken place within
the world movement against the abandonment of socialist internationalism
by the Workers Revolutionary Party, then the British Section of
the ICFI. The WRP leadership of Gerry Healy, Cliff Slaughter and
Mike Banda refused to reverse their opportunist adaptation to
bourgeois nationalist movements and regimes in the Middle East,
the Stalinist bureaucracy in the old USSR and various trade union
bureaucrats and Labour MPs. They had, over a protracted period,
rejected the perspective of building an independent world party
of the working class and in 1985-86 broke with the ICFI.
For a while, Jack was confused by what had happened. But in
1991, he and Paul Kelly met with the ICFI's British section and
began making a study of the history of the Fourth International.
Paul said that they would meet every day when Jack walked his
dog through a local cemetery, and would sit among the gravestones
discussing politics. They both read The Heritage We Defend,
a review of the post-1940 history of the Trotskyist movement written
by David North, and for the first time came to a real understanding
of the analysis of the ICFI , and what the betrayal of the WRP
represented. Both Jack and Paul became firm supporters of the
ICFI.
From then on, Jack participated regularly in party education
classes held in Liverpool. He was always extremely interested
in theoretical issues-questions of Marxist philosophy, history
and science. He often raised questions in the classes about physics
and the nature of the universe. His enthusiasm sprang from an
understanding of what could be achieved if science were harnessed
to the needs of the international working class. He said that
it was the power of Marxist ideas and the clarity of the analysis
that attracted him to the ICFI.
In the two-year-long Liverpool docks dispute that began in
1995, Jack worked with the Socialist Equality Party in exposing
the bankrupt role of the leadership of the strike. Whilst posing
as unofficial militant leaders, the TGWU shop stewards, many of
them the same Stalinists who pushed through the redundancy deal
in 1972, kept the dispute firmly under the union's control.
Despite his ill health, Jack attended meetings and discussions
whenever it was possible. He was enthusiastic about the launching
of the World Socialist Web Site. Without a computer, he
went with Paul Kelly to the local library in order to access the
Internet. He was pleased about the correspondence the site received
from workers all over the world.
Jack will be sadly missed by SEP members for his modesty, dry
sense of humour, and willingness to argue for a Marxist analysis,
particularly against the trade union syndicalism which had attracted
so many of the workers of his generation. We send our sincere
condolences to Jack's wife Margaret, his daughter Tracy and all
his family.
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