|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
France: Socialist Party, far left move towards
electoral alliance
By Alex Lantier
13 December 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Bourgeois democracy, as Karl Marx famously wrote in The
Civil War in France, is a mechanism for deciding which
member of the ruling class [is] to misrepresent the people in
Parliament. Recently, however, this mechanism has begun
to sputter in Francewith the discrediting of the Socialist
Party (PS) after its first-round elimination in the 2002 presidential
elections, and multimillion-strong strike waves against austerity
policies in 2003, 2006 and 2007. True to form, the pseudo-Trotskyist
far-left groups, Lutte Ouvrière (LO) and the
Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire (LCR), are stepping up
to try to repair it.
The strikes of October and November 2007 against pension cuts
planned by President Nicolas Sarkozy weredespite their defeatan
important turning point in class relations in France. Their reverberations
have shaken bourgeois political circles.
Sarkozys approval ratings have dipped below 50 percent
for the first time since his election in May. Though it is too
early to tell, the upcoming March 2008 municipal elections could
well deal Sarkozys right-wing UMP (Union for a Popular Majority)
party a tangible setback. Bourgeois political circles are worrying:
how will popular discontent be channeled?
The problem facing the French bourgeoisie is that its preferred
left party, the PS, cannot become a full-fledged governing party
on its own. Its current goal is to establish itself as a substantial
minority party. Henri Webera top PS official and former
co-founder of the LCR with Alain Krivinetold a December
7 meeting of top PS and LCR officials at the Théâtre
du Rond-Point in Paris: We must become, we can become a
party with 35 percent [of the popular vote], like in most countries
of Europe.
The PS has always relied on alliances with other parties to
ruleindeed, its formation at the 1971 Epinay Congress was
predicated on a strategy of allying itself with the Stalinist
French Communist Party (PCF). In the 1980s and 1990s, its preferred
partners were the Stalinists and the Greens, the so-called Plural
Left coalition.
The Stalinists and Greens collaboration with the
PS has so discredited them, however, that they are no longer useful.
In a December 6 article, The question of alliances is posed,
the center-left daily Le Monde noted: The PCF no
longer exists, electorally speaking (1.3 percent for [PCF chief
Marie-George] Buffet in 2007 versus 15.3 for Georges Marchais
in 1981). Its the same for the Greens.... The left can no
longer hope to return to power with the alliances of the Epinay
cycle.
There is every sign that the far left is being
felt out and weighed as a potential new PS ally in an attempt
to rebalance French bourgeois politics.
Former PS Presidential candidate Ségolène Royal
has given interviews in the television and press calling for a
coalition from [conservative bourgeois politician] François
Bayrou to [anti-globalisation protestor] José Bové.
In her interview with Le Monde, she claimed that she saw
herself in [LCR presidential candidate] Olivier Besancenot when
he demands radical measures on certain questions.
Besancenot in particular has been selected in the bourgeois
media for extensive coverage. A November BVA poll placed his approval
rating at 40 percent, and an October Ipsos poll for Le Point
placed his popularity above that of Royal. Certain PS politicians
have begun publicly praising him; Senator Jean-Luc Mélenchon
said: Mr. Besancenot is very popular. How could we criticise
him for it? He has won his epaulets!
The PS has also consulted LO, as LO spokeswoman Arlette Laguiller
admitted in a December 8 interview with the daily Libération.
Asked about the topic of her meetings with Royal, Laguiller answered:
[Royal] said that at one of her meetings, my call for voters
to vote for her had provoked much applause.
Attempts to feel out the far left are facilitated
by the social links between the far left leadership
and their ex-comrades now in top posts at the PS. The Théâtre
du Rond-Point meeting, attended by both Weber and LCR leader Krivine,
was one case in point.
Another, according to an amused October 2 report in Le Monde,
was Webers wedding to TV producer Fabienne Servan-Schreibera
gathering of 800 exclusive guests, including top banking and fashion
industry executives, former Prime Minister Laurent Fabius, and
current Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, as well as a number
of Trotskyists.
LO and the LCR are both acutely conscious of the radicalisation
taking place in the working class, as the trade unions negotiate
social cuts and block strikes in alliance with the government.
In an article titled Social situation and union tactics,
in the November 9 issue of Class Struggle, LO wrote: The
seriousness of the attacks against workers by the bosses and the
state is convincing a number of them that the policy of negotiations
pursued by the trade unions, without a power relationship, is
at best useless and, in reality, harmful.
In its December 6 open letter to LO, the LCR similarly noted:
The criticisms of [CGT union leader Bernard] Thibault by
[striking] transport workers and even within the CGT railway union
express in a certain way opposition to a politics of diagnosis
by the trade union leaderships. This growing consciousness also
expresses itself in political terms with regard to the PS, which
has not missed a single opportunity to stress its agreement with
the planned reforms.
LO and the LCR have both responded to this growing political
consciousness in the working class by ditching their pretenses
of loyalty to Marxism and vigorously promoting unprincipled political
coalitions. This has, however, taken somewhat different forms
in the two organisations.
Since its August summer school at Port-Leucate, the LCR has
been trying to form a unified left party into which it could liquidate
itself, while mounting a campaign to promote the South American
guerilla Che Guevara among French youth. The new party would no
longer claim association with Trotskyism. Precisely because it
is junking its former pretensions to Marxism, however, the LCR
has felt obliged to (altogether falsely) claim substantial political
independence from the PS.
In an August 24 interview in Le Parisien, titled The
LCR has no more reason to exist, Besancenot made clear that
he saw the new party as a potential ruling party of the French
bourgeois state: Lets be clear: were not afraid
of power. But it can also make us dizzy! We want no parliamentary
or ministerial accords with a social-liberal party like the PS.
This political independence is a sign of liberty. And its
been rather well rewarded in recent elections...it doesnt
prevent a common resistance faced with the right.
LO, on the other hand, recently announced that it would post
joint candidate lists with the PS and other Plural Left parties
in cities across Franceincluding Angers, Besançon,
Saint-Brieuc and Orléans. This is the first time LO has
ever run joint candidates with the PS. In her letter on LOs
December 1-2 Congress, Laguiller revealingly noted: This
attitude is doubtless new, but the possibility of considering
it is, for us, not new. Its just that, in previous municipal
elections, the Socialist Party and the Communist Party were in
government and were behaving just like the right is todayand
we didnt want to be seen as excusing it.
LO has refused to join the LCRs new catch-all party,
prompting a rather comical spat. LO improbably explained its refusal
to participate by claiming that it refused to abandon the perspective
of a Marxist, Leninist, and Trotskyist partya
point to which the December 6 edition of the LCRs Rouge
newspaper responded by ironically noting that LOs supposed
principles prevented it from allying with the LCR, but apparently
did not prevent it from running with the PS.
The same day, however, in an open letter to LO asking them
to reconsider their decision, the LCR admitted that its new, catch-all
party would be a chaotic, faction-ridden organism, where all sorts
of ex-Plural Left and pseudo-radical organisations would flourish.
Claiming that LO could join the LCRs new party without compromising
its independence, the LCR wrote: We hope to manage to regroup
organisations, militant groups, even former members of the PCF.
This means the right to freely organise tendencies or even factions.
In short, growing political disquiet in the working class is
pushing the pseudo-Trotskyists into an electoral alliance with
the ruling parties of the French left. This is not an accident
or a temporary miscalculation, but the reflection of an organic
fear and hostility towards independent working-class politics
arising directly from their political perspectivea demoralised
trade unionism that has as its main objective putting political
pressure on the bourgeoisie through militant strike action. Workers
growing hostility to negotiation with the bourgeoisie places the
viability of this strategy in question.
LO gave a concise summary of this perspective in its November
9 article: In the past, workers have been able to swamp
the union apparatuses in order to develop, reinforce and amplify
the movement. This is how the working class has won most of its
victories. This is the most promising perspective for the future.
It is, of course, true that a strike struggle cannot last long
unless it escapes the control of the trade union bureaucracy,
which inevitably seeks to stifle it. However, the political questions
that a struggle of the working class breaking free from the trade
unions would raise todaythat is to say, the question of
which class would ruleare completely passed over.
LO even admitted that the most politically advanced workers
have arrived at devastating political conclusions regarding the
CGT, writing: If the most radical rail workers have understood,
correctly, the CGTs attitude as reticence towards pursuing
the ongoing movement, or even by some as an abandonment of the
fight, this is because it did not propose a follow-up [for the
one-day movement of mid-October].
Instead of seeking to use these betrayals to politically expose
the trade union leadership, however, LO pressed for the CGT to
change the policies that are most immediately discrediting them
in the eyes of the workers: [The CGT] should have, even
before October 18, announced the date of another struggle, to
give workers another date.
This political incoherence is no accident: the entire pseudo-Trotskyist
fraternity ultimately bases its perspective for strike action
on reaching an agreement on reforms with the bourgeois state.
This was underscored by Alain Krivines comments at the
Rond-Point gathering with PS bigwigs Weber, François Rebsamen
and Manuel Valls. He began by stressing his fundamental political
agreement with the PS: [F]or me, the adversary is not the
PS but Sarkozy, the right, and the Medef [employers federation].
If today we have disagreements, they are on how to fight Sarkozy,
the right, and the Medef.
Krivine continued: The first question I ask you: can
we deal with [social inequality] by concrete measures that imply
a new redistribution of wealth? The second question is that of
means: all the great reforms in France, those of the [1936] Popular
Front, of the Liberation, of 1968, the [2006] victory against
the First Job Contract, never came directly from parliaments.
They came because millions of people went into the street, launched
a general strike, booted your buttocks.
It is difficult to imagine a more blinkered perspective than
one that views the titanic social struggles of the twentieth century
primarily as a means of pressing the French bourgeoisie for legislative
reforms. One cannot deal with all the historical issues raised
by Krivines claims in the current context. However, suffice
it to say that they do not in the least bear out Krivines
implicit claimthat it suffices to mobilise large numbers
of strikers to gain lasting reforms from the bourgeoisie. The
question of the political perspectives acted upon by the international
working class, in fact, essential.
The 1936 Popular Front is perhaps the clearest example. The
alliance between the Radical Party, the SFIO (the precursor to
the PS), and the PCF headed off a revolutionary struggle for power
on the part of the working class. By leaving the French bourgeoisies
foreign policy largely untouched, it sealed the isolation of the
Spanish workers movement that underpinned the struggle of
the Republic against Franco, helping lead to the fascist victory
in the Spanish Civil War. By further removing workers struggle
for power from the world-political agenda, it helped solidify
Hitlers rule in Nazi Germany. The reforms the Popular Front
granted were, in fact, soon nullified by World War II, the Nazi
Occupation of France, and the French bourgeoisies collaboration
with it.
To the extent that these reforms were revived under the Liberation
and in the post-war era, this was because of fear of revolutionespecially
during the 1945 Liberation, when state authority collapsed in
large parts of Franceand the immense ideological pressure
exerted by the heritage of the Bolshevik Revolution and the existence
of the USSR. It was also made possible by the national scale on
which much of industrial and financial life took place. These
conditions, however, have collapsed.
This is underscored by the last struggle Krivine mentioned,
against the 2006 First Job Contract. As a result of a deliberate
political collaboration between the trade union leadership and
then-Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, who aimed to unseat political
rivals in the French right, the struggles achievements were
limited to the temporary retraction of the First Job Contract
law. However, it only helped pave the way for the election of
Sarkozy as president, and thus for even more vigorous attacks
on the living standards of the working class
Sarkozys offensive cannot be successfully defeated with
simple strike militancy. The competitive pressures of capitalist
globalisation and the explosion of political tensions in world
geopolitics drive French imperialism towards cuts in the living
standards of the working class at home and military aggression
abroadfor instance, in Sarkozys alignment with the
Bush administration on Middle East policy. This calls for a political
response from the working class that exceeds by far the trade
union struggles envisaged by LO and the LCR, and poses the question
of workers power.
It is on the basis of this perspective that the International
Committee of the Fourth International bases its call for the development
of a section of the ICFI in France.
See Also:
Interview with a French Airbus worker
"All the parties, even the far left parties, are moving
to the right"
[6 December 2007]
French student mobilisation at an impasse
[3 December 2007]
The betrayal of the French
rail workers strike and the role of the LCR
[29 November 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |