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France: LCR congress decides to found new party
By Peter Schwarz
5 March 2008
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At its 17th congress held in January, the French Ligue Communiste
Révolutionnaire (Revolutionary Communist LeagueLCR)
decided to found a new anti-capitalist party by the
end of the year. The 40-year-old LCR will then dissolve itself
into the new party.
The congress failed to decide on either a name or a programme
for the new party. This process is to take place in the course
of the year. What is clear, however, is that the organisation
will not be based on distinct historical traditions or theoretical
principles. In contrast to the outgoing LCR, which nominally associated
itself with Trotskyism, no specific history, that of Trotskyism,
will be imposed as a brand name on the new party, chief
LCR spokesman Olivier Besancenot writes on the organisations
website.
The new organisation is to combine anti-capitalism with
the ecological struggle and the advocacy of every form of emancipation,
beginning with women and be open for young people,
ex-members of political parties who are disgusted by the direction
taken by the leadership of their old party, trade union activists
in the factories, feminists of all generations, opponents of liberalism
[i.e., the free market] who do not want to sacrifice their convictions
in alliances with social liberalism, and individuals becoming
active for the first time.
Other political currents are also invited to take part in the
project, and Besancenot lists as examples Lutte Ouvrière
(Workers StruggleLO), anarchists, communists
or anti-liberals.
The setting up of a party whose programme is completely amorphous
and eclectic and that rejects any sort of theoretical commitment
corresponds to a fundamental need of the French ruling class.
At a time when the old, bureaucratic-reformist and Stalinist organisations
(Socialist Party, Communist Party) are deeply discredited, such
a new party is needed to disorient and derail the increasing number
of workers and young people who are being radicalised and have
lost faith in a reformist solution of the social crisis.
The LCR calls the new party anti-capitalist. But
only firm programmatic principles and a solid foundation in the
historical tradition of the Marxist movement enable a party to
conduct a consistent struggle against capitalism and resist the
pressure of bourgeois public opinion. The LCR rejects any such
adherence to programmatic and theoretical principles. It prefers
a party that floats in the air, is not bound by principles and
can adapt to the prevailing wind at any time. Such a party can
be easily manipulated and adapted to the requirements of the powers
that be.
Besancenot sought to portray the renunciation of any definite
programme as a sign of rank-and-file democracy. Not the LCR, but
future members must determine the programme and form of the party,
he declared. Whoever wants to take part in its construction can
democratically control the process from A to Z. But
this is all hogwash. Without clear principles, which apply in
equal measure to the leadership and members, there can be no democratic
control of the party leadership. In a party in which everyone
can do and say whatever he or she pleases, the leadership cannot
be controlled either.
The German Green Party is an instructive example in this regard.
When the Greens came into being 30 years ago (with the enthusiastic
backing at the time of the German supporters of the LCR), the
organisation stressed its commitment to rank-and-file democracy.
Everyone was welcome if he or she supported the vaguely defined
goals of the new partymembers of the SPD (Social Democratic
Party), Maoists, environmentalists, pacifists, citizens
rights activists and even diehard blood and soil ideologues.
To prevent the leadership from detaching itself from the rank
and file, the Greens drew up special rules, such as the rotation
principle for leadership positions and the prohibition of double
mandates. The whole business, however, was a charade. The absence
of any sort of binding programmatic basis made it possible for
a few appointed leaders to manipulate the party as they wished.
Joschka Fischer, who was never elected to a party post, was able
to use the party as a launching pad for a career that was to catapult
him into the post of German Foreign Minister and led the Greens
to take their place at the heart of the bourgeois political establishment.
A new chapter in the history of the LCR
Since its foundation 40 years ago, the LCR has continuously
played the role of a left figleaf for the reformist and Stalinist
parties and the trade unions, which subordinate the historical
interests of the working class to the maintenance of capitalist
society. The LCR leadership always justified this role by claiming
that these organisations, or sections of them, could be pressured
from below to carry out policies in the interests of workers and
be won to a socialist perspective. Now, for the first time, the
LCR is seizing the initiative to develop a party on its own aimed
at preventing forthcoming class conflicts from assuming a revolutionary
dimension.
Just two years ago, at its 16th Congress, the LCR decided by
a large majority to build a broad movement embracing all the parties
and organisations that had opposed the European Union constitution
in the 2005 referendum. This included, alongside the LCR, first
of all the Communist Party (PCF), but also a wing of the Socialist
Party (PS), sections of the trade union bureaucracy, anti-globalisation
activists and a motley mix of social initiatives and movements.
At the time, the LCR and the PCF worked closely together and met
regularly to consult at a leadership level. At a local level,
various anti-EU activists cooperated in so-called collectives,
which were to be the base of the new movement.
But in the second half of 2006, the project collapsed due to
the growing gulf between the working class and the allies of the
LCR. It was no longer possible to maintain the fiction that one
could develop an anti-capitalist movement extending
deep into the ranks of the plural left, which comprised
the government led by Lionel Jospin from 1997 to 2002.
With the nomination of Ségolène Royal as its
presidential candidate, the Socialist Party moved visibly to the
right. For the first time since the early 1970s, when François
Mitterrand initiated the unity of the left, Royal
no longer sought to establish a left alliance with
the Communist Party and the Greens, but instead favoured a centre-left
coalition with the Democratic Movement (MoDem) led by François
Bayrou.
Once the countrys biggest party, the Communist Party
had shrunk to the point of insignificance. It participated in
the collectives but was not prepared to break with
the Socialist Partyits ally for the past three decades.
The PCF had filled ministerial posts in all of the Socialist Party-led
governments and remains dependent on the latter to retain its
deputies and local government mandates.
The LCR eventually withdrew from the collectives, and the attempt
to select common left candidates for the 2007 presidential
and parliamentary elections failed. A leading member of the LCR,
François Sabado, justified this as follows: the social-liberalisation
of social-democracy and the incapacity of the PCF, Greens and
alternatives to represent a truly independent social force now
open up a situation where the formula of unity of the anti-liberal
left including the leadership of the PCF and the Bové current
[anti-globalisation activists] is obsolete (International
Viewpoint, July August 2007).
Similar broad left movements in other countries, which had
served as role models for the LCR, also collapsed ignominiously.
The entry into the government of Romano Prodi in Italy by Communist
Refoundation (Rifondazione Comunista) was widely seen as
the organisations final step towards bourgeois respectability,
while the Brazilian Workers Party led by Lula has been regarded
as a prized customer by international financial circles for some
time. In both countries, the co-thinkers of the LCR felt obliged
to withdraw from these parties after many years of loyal cooperation.
In undertaking its initiative for a new party, the LCR is reacting
to the profound gulf that has opened up between the working class
and its old organisations. The reformist bureaucracies are increasingly
unable to contain the massive strike and protest movements that
have periodically testified to the rebellious mood of broad layers
of workers and youth in France. In particular amongst youth, who
took to the streets in massive numbers to protest against the
First Job Contract (CPE) and revolted in the suburbs in 2006,
the Socialist Party, the PCF and the trade unions have hardly
any influence. A political vacuum has opened up, in which revolutionary
ideas can spreadif it is not filled by something else.
It is precisely to counter such a revolutionary development
that the LCR is founding its new party. It is fully aware of the
crisis affecting the old organisations. According to the Political
Theses adopted at the 17th Congress, the national and international
situation is characterised by two fundamental tendencies:
the free market capitalist offensive and the decline/transformation
of the traditional parties of the workers movement.
The capitalist offensive provokes social resistance and the
adaptation by the leaders of the traditional workers movement
to free market priorities leads to an increasing gulf
between left wing parties and the people, the Theses state.
Meanwhile, the entire French political system is in deep crisis.
While the former plural left is deeply divided and
has never recovered from its defeats at the last elections, President
Nicolas Sarkozy, celebrated after his election victory as a new
powerful leader, has hit a new low in popularity, with a part
of his UMP (Union for a Popular Movement) refusing to follow him.
Should the class struggle escalate, the French ruling class
needs a new left party in order to keep the situation
under control. It has assembled considerable historical experience
in this regard. In 1936, it suffocated the general strike, which
threatened capitalist rule, with the help of the Popular Front
government led by Leon Blum. In 1968, its trusted representative
François Mitterrand reacted to the general strike by assuming
the leadership of the Socialist Party, integrating a number of
left-wing movements and forming an alliance with the PCF Stalinists.
In this way, he created an instrument capable of re-stabilising
the bourgeois order.
Already at that time, an important role was played by a party
that, like the LCR, wrongly declared its fealty to Trotskyism:
the Organisation Communiste Internationaliste (OCI) led by Pierre
Lambert. The OCI sent many of its members into Mitterrands
party in order to support him. One of these members, Lionel Jospin,
finally went on to become French prime minister.
In view of the tense political and social situation, it is
quite feasible that the LCRs anti-capitalist partyshould
it come to lifecould rapidly assume political responsibility
or even play a role in a coalition government. The organisations
insistence that it would never take part in a government
or parliamentary coalition with the social democrats should
not be taken too literally.
If such an opportunity should arise, then another argument
will be fielded: Unity against the right. On this
basis, the LCR went so far in 2002 as to call for a vote for the
Gaullist Jacques Chirac, supposedly to stop the presidential candidate
of the extreme right National Front, Jean-Marie Le Pen. Based
on the same argument, future LCR deputies would be quite prepared
to support a Socialist-led administration and prevent a UMP government.
And from this sort of support to actual participation in government
is a small step.
An established opportunist tendency
The French ruling class is quite able to distinguish between
hollow left rhetoric and revolutionary politics. It
will not lose sleep over the anti-capitalist clichés reiterated
by Besancenot or party leader Alain Krivine. Both men have received
extremely favourable treatment in the media. The media is well
acquainted with the LCR, and the organisation has been tried and
fitted out for its appointed role.
The LCR is linked to the bourgeois elite by a dense web of
connections. In the 40 years of its existence, thousands have
gone through the opportunist school of the LCR and then gone on
to assume prominent posts in politics, media, economics and academia.
The connections are fluid, and many former members never severed
their relations with their erstwhile comrades of the LCR.
The LCR was founded at the end of the 1960s through the fusion
of a Communist student federation led by Krivine, which had been
expelled from the PCF, and the French section of the Pabloite
United Secretariat led by Pierre Frank.
Already by the beginning of the 1950s, the United Secretariat
had abandoned Trotskys perspective of building independent
Marxist parties of the working class and specialised in ascribing
a revolutionary role to all sort of non-proletarian tendencies
that inevitably betrayed the masses. The list of Stalinists, petty
bourgeois nationalists, left Social Democrats and trade union
bureaucrats feted by the Pabloites at one time or another is virtually
endless. It includes the Algerian National Liberation Front, Mao
Zedong, Fidel Castro, the Nicaraguan Sandinistas, former Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev, right up to the current president of
Venezuela, Hugo Chavezto name but a few.
Krivine, who established a certain reputation for himself as
a student leader in 1968, states in his recently published autobiography
that despite his ultra-revolutionary posturing at the time, he
never saw the possibility of revolution. We did not know
how far the movement [in May-June 1968] would go, he writes.
However, we knew exactly where it would not go. It was a
revolt of unparalleled dimensions, but it was not a revolution:
there was neither a programme nor credible organisations that
were ready to seize power. For its part, the LCR glorified
the students as the new revolutionary avant-garde and sang the
praises of guerrilla struggles in backward countries, but it was
not prepared to challenge the Stalinist PCF, which finally sold
out the general strike and saved the regime headed by General
Charles de Gaulle.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the LCR courted a variety of oppositional
tendencies turning away from the PCFwithout success, as
the various renewers always turned rapidly to the
right and disappeared without a trace. Like all Pabloite organisations,
the LCR was then thrown into deep crisis when the Soviet Union
collapsed.
It was only at the end of the 1990s that radical organisations
in France started to win support again because of the decline
of the Socialist and Communist parties. The first to profit was
Arlette Laguiller of Lutte Ouvrière who won a considerable
number of votes in presidential elections. The LCR reacted by
cultivating Olivier Besancenot as its new mouthpiece. This verbose
history student from a middle class background was able to score
in particular with young voters. At the last presidential election,
he obtained by far the best result of all the left candidates1.5
million votes. Half of those who supported him were under the
age of 34.
The LCR exploits the political inexperience of young people
attracted to the organisation by Besancenot. Instead of training
them politically, the LCR encourages contempt for the historical
traditions of the workers movement and educates them to
be mindless opportunists. Besancenot publicly boasts he was never
a Trotskyist. Instead, his role model is Che Guevara. Besancenot
recently published a biography of the Argentine-born political
adventurer, who on the basis of his perspective of rural-based
guerrilla struggle encouraged countless young people to turn their
backs on the working class in the cities and embark on hopeless
political adventuresoften with deadly consequences.
Taking all these facts into account, it was predictable that
none of the 313 delegates who assembled at the 17th LCR congress
from January 24 to 26 would object to the dissolution of the LCR
into a formless anti-capitalist party and to the ditching
of even a nominal attachment to Trotskyism.
The only opposition at the congress came from the right. For
the minority current Unitaire, the liquidation process
does not go far enough. It wants to maintain the orientation to
the PCF and a wing of the Socialist Party and complains that the
new party is only a party of the extreme left with a new
look. Unitaire spokesman Christian Picquet accused
the majority led by Krivine and Besancenot of chasing an illusion
because it relied only on the existing base of the LCR, which
turns exclusively to revolutionaries, while ignoring
the anti-neo-liberal sensitivities which exist elsewhere,
from the PCF through the left in the PS up to the alternatives....
In reality we only have small groupings as partners, Picquet
said. We are a long way from the figures which would be
necessary to challenge the hegemony of the PS on the left.
At the congress, the minority received 14 percent of delegates
votes and the majority 83 percent. The congress adopted a timetable
that envisages the creation of local initiative committees
in the coming weeks and months, which are to discuss the basis
for the new party and hold meetings on a regional level. In June,
they are due to assemble for an initial national meeting, which
will elect a pluralist control committee to prepare
the founding documents for the new party. The dissolution of the
LCR and the founding congress of the new party are planned for
the end of the year.
See Also:
France: the politics of the
National Student Coordinating Committee and the role of the LCR
[22 January 2008]
The betrayal of the
French rail workers strike and the role of the LCR
[29 November 2007]
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