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WSWS : Obituary
Ted Grant: A political appraisal of the former leader of the
British Militant Tendency
Part 1
By Ann Talbot
27 September 2006
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This is the first of a two-part obituary.
Opponents and supporters alike have joined in hailing Ted Grant,
the founder of the Militant Tendency who died in July at the age
of 93, as a lifelong proponent of the ideas of Leon Trotsky. The
Times obituary declared him [a]n unreconstructed
Trotskyite revolutionary of the old school. The Financial
Times announced the death of a leading Trotskyist for
more than 70 years. This view accorded with Grants
own estimation of himself.
The week before he died, Grant, already disabled by a stroke,
was helped to the podium at a meeting of his International Marxist
Tendency, which he declared stood firmly on the ideas of
Trotsky. It was a remarkable performance for one already
close to death and testified to both the mans physical stamina
and his single-minded political commitment. Grant was one of the
last surviving representatives of a generation who became politically
aware as Trotskys struggle against the bureaucracy that
had usurped political power in the Soviet Union reached a climax.
Of all the young people who looked to the Russian Revolution
as a model and an inspiration for the future of mankind in the
decades after 1917, few were able to maintain a principled commitment
to revolutionary politics throughout their lives under the impact
of the shocks and upheavals of the twentieth century. All those
who recognised that Trotsky represented the continuity of Marxism
and the revolutionary tradition of Bolshevism deserve our respect.
But the greatest tribute we can pay to their youthful commitment
to revolution is to subject their subsequent political career
to an objective historical analysis.
It must be said at the outset that Grant was not a Trotskyist
when he died and had not been for a long time, if by the term
Trotskyist we are to understand a revolutionary Marxist who defends
the principles of socialist internationalism expressed in the
Russian Revolution of October 1917. It might seem churlish to
deny an old man in death the epithet he so much craved in life,
but Grants politics were not a personal matter. They were
characteristic of an epoch in which bureaucratic apparatuses dominated
the working class and in large part came to be identified as the
legitimate leadership of the working class.
In Britain, the organisation Grant led, which was known as
the Revolutionary Socialist League in private and the Militant
Tendency in public, trained young people in the reformist political
outlook of the Labour Party. Militants claims to revolutionary
socialism were always reserved for speeches and historical articles.
This outlook insisted that socialism would come about as a result
of a Labour government passing an enabling act through Parliament
to nationalise the top 200 or so monopolies as the basis for a
planned and publicly controlled economy.
Militant was characterised by a type of tactical opportunism
that always adapted to the spontaneous protest movements in the
British working class and kept such movements safely within the
confines of the official workers movementthe Labour
Party and the trade unions.
This was the case in Liverpool in the 1980s, when Militant
came to dominate the Labour-controlled city council. It notoriously
made an opportunistic deal with the Conservative government that
headed off a struggle by Liverpools council workers over
attacks on local services and helped contribute to the isolation
of the 1984-1985 miners strike that was imposed by the Trades
Union Congress and the Labour Party under Neil Kinnock. In this
way, Grant contributed to one of the most serious defeats that
the British working class has suffered in recent decades.
During the campaign against the poll tax early in the 1990s,
and with its support for Scottish separatism that resulted in
the formation of the Scottish Socialist Party from a split with
Militant, the organisation misdirected the revolutionary aspirations
of many young people and workers into reformist channels during
a period of intense class conflict.
During the 1980s, Militant claimed to be the biggest self-professed
Trotskyist party in Britain. This was the period of Grants
greatest public success, but it proved to be the prelude to his
downfall. The young people that joined Militant were being radicalised
by their experience of the Thatcher government, which was characterised
by mass unemployment, cuts in public services and a return to
imperialist wars. Many looked initially to the Labour Party where
they encountered Militant, but the political trajectory of these
young workers was to the left, while Grants organisation
was moving to the right. They met in passing as they travelled
in opposite directions.
Grants rhetoric could not keep them in the Labour Party
because the objective basis for his kind of politics was being
undermined by the dynamics of the international political situation.
The period when it was possible for Labour to offer a programme
of reforms and welfare measures was rapidly coming to an end.
In the Soviet Union, the Stalinist bureaucracy, which had provided
the model and inspiration for so many other bureaucratic apparatuses,
was reaching a crisis from which it was never to recover.
Grants entire political perspective since the end of
World War II had been based on the assumption that the Kremlin
bureaucracy, the social democratic parties and trade unions in
the West and the national movements in the former colonial and
semi-colonial countries would maintain their political hegemony.
But by 1992, when he was expelled from Militant, what Grant had
taken to be permanent features of the political landscape had
proved to be relatively ephemeral products of the arrangements
that the major powers put in place after World War II to prevent
a revolutionary upheaval such as that of 1917.
Grant, along with Alan Woods, formed another group known as
Socialist Appeal, from the name of its paper, while the majority
led by Peter Taaffe formed Militant Labour, which later became
the Socialist Party. Grants International Marxist Tendency
is one of the most enthusiastic of scores of similar radical cheerleaders
for President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela. It presents him as a revolutionary
leader who has dared to confront the might of America and is in
the process of transforming Venezuelan society in a socialist
direction.
Even though the repressive apparatus of the Venezuelan state
remains in place and transnational corporations continue to make
a profit there, Grants supporters claim that the capitalist
class is no longer in power. In doing so, they only prepare the
way for a defeat on an even greater scale than that suffered by
the British working class. Experience has shown that in Latin
America, left-wing movements that come to power without destroying
the existing state apparatus and leaving capitalism intact can
be the prelude to a bloody repression such as that carried out
by Pinochet in Chile. [1]
Grants reputation as a Marxist and lifelong proponent
of the ideas of Leon Trotsky continues to play an important part
in the ability of these organisations to attract support among
workers and youth. His followers assiduously cultivate the image
that he was an original Marxist thinker and major political figure
in the Trotskyist movement. Alan Woods, writing on the anniversary
of the launch of the Grant groups paper Socialist Appeal,
explained, In the person of Comrade Ted Grant, we stand
for the continuation of the ideas of Trotsky. This year is also
the seventy-fifth anniversary of the expulsion of Leon Trotsky
and the Left Opposition from the Russian Communist Party. Comrade
Grant was a member of Trotskys International Left Opposition
from the very beginning. He represents an unbroken thread that
connects us to the finest traditions of Bolshevism-Leninism and
the October revolution.
Hostility to the Fourth International
The more closely one looks at his record the more difficult
it is to identify any period when Grant had a firm grasp of the
principles of Marxism, or any clear understanding of the significance
of Trotskys political struggle.
The central political lesson that can be drawn from Trotskys
writings and the fight he waged against the Stalinist bureaucracy
is the importance of internationalism. Grants political
career may have begun in the Left Opposition, but he remained
resolutely national in his outlook throughout his life. For Grant,
Trotskys political programme was a means to win a political
hearing among the most advanced workers, but he neither understood
nor accepted the international perspective that underlay it.
Grant migrated to Britain from South Africa in 1934. During
World War II, the group to which Grant belongedthe Workers
International League (WIL)gained new members as the Labour
Party, the Communist Party of Great Britain and the trade union
leaders associated with those parties suppressed strike action
and stifled workers grievances in the interests of maintaining
the war effort. The WIL published the founding programme of the
Fourth International and modelled itself on the example of the
Socialist Workers Party in America, which had developed under
the influence of Trotsky himself. But the WIL refused steadfastly
to join the Fourth International, which was founded in 1938.
Grant was extremely proud of this fact. In his memoir, A
History of British Trotskyism, he recounted how the WIL members
rejected the proposal that the different Trotskyist groups in
Britain should unite in preparation for the founding conference
of the Fourth International. Grant recalled how he shouted, Even
if Comrade Trotsky himself had come here we would have acted no
differently.
Grants outburst was an example of the mulish devotion
to nationalism that was to be his political hallmark. The WIL
refused to unite with the other groups because they could not
agree on whether to work in the Labour Party. Trotsky had advised
his co-thinkers in Britain to work in the Independent Labour Party
and later in the Labour Party, but this was never more than a
tactic. The WIL elevated it, however, to a strategic principle
that took precedence over the fundamental question of founding
a new international to replace the Third International that had
betrayed the interests of workers all over the world when it failed
to resist the rise of Hitler.
Questions such as entry into the Labour Party could have been
discussed in the unified British section of the new International
where they would have assumed their appropriate place in an international
perspective. The WILs refusal to join the Fourth International
reflected the immense political pressure that was exerted on the
British workers movement in the oldest capitalist country
in the world.
Trotsky would not compromise with the group, since to do so
would have undermined the most fundamental principle of the International.
He warned the comrades of the WIL that they are being led
on a path of unprincipled clique politics which can only land
them in the mire. It is possible to maintain and develop a revolutionary
political grouping of serious importance only on the basis of
great principles. It is possible for a national group to maintain
a constant revolutionary course only if it is firmly connected
in one organisation with co-thinkers throughout the world and
maintains a constant political and theoretical collaboration with
them. The Fourth International alone is such an organisation.
All purely national groupings, all those who reject international
organisation, control, and discipline, are in their essence reactionary.
[2]
The WIL eventually became part of a unified British section
of the Fourth International after World War II through the efforts
of an internationalist faction led by Gerry Healy and the intervention
of the Socialist Workers Party in the US. Unification was achieved
against the bitter opposition of the WILs leader Jock Haston,
whom Grant served as a loyal lieutenant. Even after unification
and the formation of the Revolutionary Communist Party as the
British section of the Fourth International, Haston and Grant
remained deeply hostile to the International and aligned themselves
with a rightward-moving opposition tendency that was grouped around
Albert Goldman and Felix Morrow, who condemned the unchanging
programme of the Fourth International. [3]
Grants followers continue to maintain that the programme
of Trotskyism was proved wrong by events after the war when revolutionary
movements were strangled by the Stalinists. The fact that capitalism
was not overthrown and Stalinism remained in control of the Soviet
Union and extended its rule over Eastern Europe, Grant wrote,
served to falsify the original war-time perspective of the
movement of either a restoration of capitalism in the USSR or
a political revolution, and a revolutionary crisis that would
undermine the old parties and prepare the way for the creation
of mass Trotskyist parties. In the words of Trotsky, not
one stone upon another would be left of the old organisations,
and the Fourth International would become the dominant force on
the planet. But the Trotskyists were far too weak to take
advantage of the revolutionary situation that followed the war.
Power fell into the hands of the Stalinist and reformist leaders,
who, as in 1918, betrayed the movement and handed the power over
to the bourgeoisie. [4]
The idea that Trotsky had promised that there would be a revolutionary
overthrow of capitalism and a political revolution in the Soviet
Union is entirely incorrect. No Marxist would pretend that it
is possible to predict the outcome of complex political processes
with complete accuracy or suppose that Marxism can offer a precise
timetable of revolution. Grant and many others clearly believed
that Trotsky had let them down, demonstrating that they had never
understood the character of scientific Marxist political analysis.
[5]
According to his followers, Grant alone in the Trotskyist movement
was capable of developing an analysis of the new political realities
of Stalinist expansion and imperialist stabilisation. The leadership
of the RCP were in fact far from alone. As early as 1939, Max
Shachtman and James Burnham had opposed Trotskys analysis
of the Soviet Union, as had the Johnson-Forrest tendency. Goldman
and Morrow subsequently emerged as an opposition. After initially
opposing these tendencies, Michel Pablo and Ernest Mandel, who
were then leaders of the Fourth International, began to argue
that the Stalinist bureaucracy could play a progressive role and
bureaucratically create workers states by military force
and nationalisations without a revolutionary transformation of
society.
Grants distinction is not that he was alone in making
this shift to the right, but that he was among the first to make
it in the postwar period. Jimmy Deane, Grants co-thinker
in the RCP, acknowledged the identity between their ideas and
those of Pablo when he wrote to Grant in June 1950. Pablo
has made the transition! What a development. He conducts a struggle
against us, Deane complained, and then ends up with
our position more or less. It is only a matter of time before
he argues that you have workers states throughout Eastern Europe.
[6]
As struggles developed in the colonial and semi-colonial countries,
Pablo and Mandel went on to maintain that petty bourgeois national
movements could create workers states without the necessity
for the conscious participation of the working class, the existence
of a Marxist party, or the revolutionary overthrow of the existing
state and property relations. There was therefore no need to construct
revolutionary parties in these countries, where the role of Marxists
was to act as advisors to nationalist leaders such as Ben Bella
in Algeria or Castro in Cuba.
In 1953, James Cannon, the leader of the US Socialist Workers
Party, issued an Open Letter in which he summed up the central
political questions involved in the fight against Pabloism. The
faction centred on Pablo, Cannon wrote, is now working consciously
and deliberately to disrupt, split, and break up the historically
created cadres of Trotskyism in the various countries and to liquidate
the Fourth International. [7]
Cannon restated the fundamental principles on which the Fourth
International was founded, and the Open Letter became a rallying
point for all those that still adhered to them and rejected Pablos
liquidationism and capitulation to Stalinism. Later that year,
the International Committee of the Fourth International was formed
on the basis of a resolution that affirmed its solidarity with
Cannons Open Letter.
Pablo responded to the Open Letter by expelling all those who
agreed with it. When his representative in Britain, John Lawrence,
took his line to its logical conclusion and joined the Communist
Party, Pablo was left without an organisation in the UK. Grant
took the opportunity to team up with Pablo, whose organisation
became known as the United Secretariat. One will look long and
hard at Grants collected works and find no reference to
the Open Letter. He answered it with his actions when he joined
Pablo, but he never felt obliged to make any other response to
this historic statement of proletarian internationalist principles.
Grant split from the Pabloite United Secretariat in 1964. But
in every essential respect his political perspective coincided
with that of Pablo and Mandel. Grants politics could be
characterised as Pabloism sans Pablo. His group has even
mimicked the Pabloite Fair Play for Cuba Committee by forming
an organisation called Hands Off Venezuela to act as a front organisation
for its campaign in support of Chavez.
To be continued
Notes:
1. See http://wsws.org/articles/2006/mar2006/van2-m20.shtml.
2. Documents of the Fourth International, New York: Pathfinder
Press, 1973, p. 270.
3. SWP Internal Bulletin, vol. 8, no. 8, July 1946, pp.
28-29; quoted in David North, The Heritage We Defend: A Contribution
to the History of the Fourth International, Detroit, Michigan:
Labor Publications, 1988, p. 100.
4. Ted Grant, A History of British Trotskyism, Introduction.
www.marxist.com/hbt/
5. See http://wsws.org/articles/2005/sep2005/le41-s14.shtml.
6. Letter from Deane to Grant, Jimmy Deane archive 24 June 1950.
7. Quoted in The Heritage We Defend, p. 231. www.wsws.org/articles/2003/nov2003/her2-n15.shtml.
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