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Spain: United Left splits as it lurches further right
By Vicky Short
6 March 2008
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The United Left (Izquierda UnidaIU) coalition is splitting
apart, with warring factions of the Spanish Communist Party (PCE)
competing for supremacy.
The infighting has been accompanied by public insults, expulsions,
walk-outs, court cases and splits in the coalitions local
organisations. A full-blown national split is predicted soon between
the two factions, the largest led by the present coordinator of
the IU, Gaspar Llamazares, and the other led by the so-called
critics, including many long-serving Stalinist hacks
such as former IU coordinator Julio Anguita. Although most of
the leaders of both factions are longstanding PCE members, Llamazaress
supporters denounce the critics as Communists
or The Communist Party.
The bitter struggle within the IU is a political response to
the problems facing the Spanish political establishment. At a
time of growing economic crisis and the discrediting of the old
bureaucratic reformist and Stalinist parties, a key requirement
of the ruling elite is the formation of a mechanism with which
to prevent growing social opposition from developing into a political
movement that might threaten the fundamental interests of big
business. Once again, the PCE is being called upon to fulfill
this role by heading off a leftward movement amongst Spanish workers
and the middle class and diverting it back behind the Spanish
Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) government.
Since it came to power, the PSOE led by José Luis Zapatero
has defended the interests of Spains ruling elites at the
expense of the working population. It has pandered to the right-wing
Popular Party (PP) and has sought to block any movement by the
Spanish working class to defend its economic and political interests.
The PSOE was brought to power in 2004 by a popular revolt against
the PPs neo-liberal economic and social policies and its
support for the invasion of Iraq. Since then, the PSOE has pursued
a pro-business economic policy, while the living standards of
Spanish workers have deteriorated dramatically. The worldwide
credit crunch has led to a major fall in house prices, while Spains
indebtedness has grown. The PSOEs response to repeated provocations
by the PP, the Catholic Church and the military on the issues
of regional autonomy, negotiations with the Basque separatist
ETA, secularism, abortion and measures to acknowledge the crimes
of the Franco dictatorship has been conciliatory.
The party remains slightly ahead in opinion polls for the March
9 election thanks to the entrenched hostility of working people
towards the PP, and it is expected to win. But there is the real
possibility that it may not be able to form a majority government.
Even if it gains a second term in office, moreover, it faces severe
difficulties. It must impose the growing crisis facing Spanish
capital onto the backs of a politically restive and combative
working class.
Writing in the March 2 Financial Times, Wolfgang Münchau
stated that the winner will spend the next four years cleaning
up an economic mess of a scale not witnessed in Spain in modern
times.
The twin engines of the coming Spanish economic crisis
are a collapsing housing market and a current account deficit,
now at 10 percent of gross domestic product. The two are related,
of course, as the property bubble has been a driving force behind
a credit-financed spending boom.
He continues, Between 1995 and last year, Spanish house
prices tripled in nominal terms, and doubled in real terms....
I would expect real Spanish house prices to fall by almost as
much as they have risen over the past 10 years....
The economic impact of this downturn in the housing cycle
is going to be worse for Spain than for other countries. A truly
staggering statistic about Spain is the fact that construction
investment constitutes 18 percent of the Spanish gross domestic
product, according to the European Unions Ameco database.
In France and Germany, that proportion is about 10 percent.
Münchau predicts a half-decade of zero growthperhaps
longer, perhaps worse, perhaps both.
Both factions within the IU are responding to the immediate
electoral difficulties facing the Socialist Party as well as to
the mounting threat that Spains economic problems will trigger
an eruption of social and political struggles.
The main thrust of statements by the Llamazares faction centres
on integrating into a future PSOE government and accepting ministerial
portfolios should Zapatero win the election with a reduced majority
and be forced to form a coalition government. After a recent meeting
with Zapatero, Llamazares declared, Lets not set ourselves
any limits. We dont have any stigmas that prevent us from
participating in the government. It will depend on pragmatic agreements.
In their pursuit of electoral seats and a government role,
Llamazares and his supporters are shedding any pretence of representing
a left-wing independent alternative to the PSOE.
This is why Llamazares has acted with such ruthlessness against
factional opponents within his party. According to Spanish newspaper
reports, a political bloodbath took place at a meeting of the
IU executive on December 18. A resolution of the IU presidency
led by Llamazares was passed, expelling the three most prominent
PCE members, all of whom had helped create the IU in 1986. Those
ousted were Felipe Alcaraz (president of the PCE in Andalucia
for the last 21 years and president of the national organisation
since 2005), Euro-MP Willy Meyer and Manuel Monereo, a PCE political
committee member and one of the partys main ideologues.
The meeting also passed other resolutions directed at the critics.
One called for revision of the membership lists, particularly
in Andalucia, in preparation for the 2008 IU Conference. This
will be held after the March 9 election, and commentators say
the split will be finalised there. Another resolution ordered
the IU in Valencia to hold new primaries to select another general
election candidate. This would give Llamazaress faction
time to mobilise its supporters. The Valencia organisation has
now split, giving rise to bitter arguments over which faction
keeps the IU name. Two candidates are standing in
the election under its banner.
Following this political bloodbath, the critics
and their supporters condemned Llamazares for embarking on a war,
saying it will destroy the IU. Alcaraz declared, Llamazares
has placed a bomb at the heart of the United Left. They
warn that Llamazares open capitulation to Zapatero will
expose the IUs claim to be a political alternative to the
establishment parties.
The IU executive stated that its actions were necessary to
improve the IUs capacity for collective leadership
and to ensure a coherent political line. Llamazares said
the vote gave him the authority to re-found the IU and open it
up to the new emerging sectors (of society): ecologists,
pacifists, feminists....
We are inviting other forces on the alternative left
and the nationalist left to collaborate in the elaboration of
our programme, he added.
The bitter struggle to break the IU from its past associations
with the Communist Party and orient to other tendencies is supported
by other leading PCE members. Concha Caballero, spokesperson for
the IU in the Andalucia autonomous parliament, has joined the
Llamazares faction, declaring that IU had gone backwards
since the PCE took control of it.
[The purpose of the] United Left, she said, is
to unite a lot of people who place themselves to the left of the
PSOE, that was its fundamental principle, plurality was inherent.
The Communist Party has acted against those founding principles
of the IU and against many others, creating little pressure groups,
without allowing the IU to breathe.
Cabellero has only recently been expelled from the PCE she
now denounces (for alleged arrears in membership dues) after nearly
30 years as an activist. Caballero and Llamazaress faction
is looking to build a broader coalition that is even less identified
with socialism.
Another former PCE member has been more explicit. Isaura Navarro,
a lawyer and member of Greenpeace, who represents the PCE-led
trade union Workers Commissions (Comisiones Obreras, CC.OO) and
held one of the IUs seats in parliament, quit the PCE to
form a new electoral coalition in Valencia, Bloc-Iniciativa-Verds.
She described the Valencia IU as the monocolor
of the PCEi.e., no longer pluralist. Whereas she had joined
a project where there was room for people who were not in
the Communist Party, now This is no longer that project.
The PCE wants to impose its communist version on the
IU, and I am no communist.
Both PCE factions have the same essential political orientation,
but differ sharply on tactics. The present-day critics
in fact created the IU to bloc a leftward movement in the working
class and also groomed Llamazares for leadership. Their main concern
is that the IU is being so uncritically associated with the government
that it will no longer be able to maintain the support amongst
more left-leaning workers that has made it such a useful apologist
for the PSOE historically. These concerns surfaced back in 2005
when 70 members of Corriente Roja (Red Current) resigned
from the PCE. They wrote that it was necessary to abandon IU because,
In a situation like the present, in which the membership
is witnessing how the IU is sinking and...dragging the CP down
with it, debates could open up that are difficult to control.
Izquierda Unida was founded by the PCE in 1986, some 10 years
after the death of the dictator General Francisco Franco in November
1975 and the so-called peaceful transition to democracy
(1975-1978). During the transition, the PSOE and PCE worked to
preserve capitalism in Spain and limit opposition to the Franco
dictatorship to the demand for a democratic constitution. They
thwarted widespread expectations of real change as well as the
demand for bringing to justice those who had participated in the
Falangist regime. The collaboration between the PSOE and PCE reached
its height when all the major parties signed the 1978 Moncloa
Pact paving the way for a new constitution.
The PSOE came to power in 1982 under the leadership of Felipe
Gonzalez after several years of tumultuous struggles. However,
disillusionment quickly set in. Rebellions broke out over Gonzalezs
decision to join NATO, while industrial action against the closing
of uneconomic steel plants and shipyards built up to a general
strike against the growing social crisis, which saw unemployment
reaching 24 percent.
In the midst of this crisis, the PCE created the IU as a coalition
of PSOE dissidents, liberals, left nationalists, radicals and
Greens. It diverted the mounting rebellion into a movement to
push the PSOE to implement a more left-reformist policy.
The fact that today the IU project has collapsed is an indication
of a vastly changed political situation in which the formation
of a genuine socialist party is not only necessary, but possible.
The break-up of the PCE and its appendage, the IU, is not simply
a Spanish phenomenon. Elsewhere, similar projects formed by combinations
of Stalinists and middle class radicals are undergoing the same
lurch to the right. In Italy, Communist Refoundation (Rifondazione
ComunistaRC), was formed under the leadership of a wing
of the former Italian Communist Party, and was for many years
hailed as a model for a refurbished left. The RC played a key
role in supporting the formation of the coalition government headed
by Romani Prodi, which replaced the right-wing alliance led by
media magnate Silvio Berlusconi in May 2006. The party sacrificed
everything to secure the existence of the government: pensions,
social welfare assistance, health care, job security and democratic
rights.
Less than two years after coming to power, Prodis government,
an alliance of no fewer than nine separate parties, including
RC and the Left Democrats (which also emerged from the Italian
Communist Party), has collapsed, with new elections called for
mid-April. Both parties remained loyal to Prodi as popular opposition
to his government intensified. Long-time RC leader Fausto Bertinotti
acted as a vital prop for the Prodi government in his function
as president of the Chamber of Deputies.
Prodis popularity plummeted after he ensured the expansion
of a US military base in northern Italy and the participation
of Italian troops in Afghanistan and Lebanon. These measures were
taken in the teeth of massive opposition by a population that
is also now beginning to feel the consequences of Prodis
harsh budgetary policy. RC, which had formerly opposed an Italian
military presence in Afghanistan, voted with the government on
this. The IU would not act any differently if it achieved its
ambition of joining the government.
RC is now seeking to establish a new alliance with the name
La Sinistra Arcobaleno (the Left Rainbow), which follows
almost exactly the template advocated by Llamazares in Spain.
At a time when vast layers in the working class are finally
abandoning social democracy, the Stalinists and their radical
allies have seized on what they see as openings to make new alliances
with big names among the social democratic and trade
union lefts and in this way integrate themselves more directly
into the structures of official politics.
Nothing progressive, let alone left-wing, can come out of any
such new formations. The net result of every one of the recent
regroupment projects has been a disaster. The split in the IU
proves once again that the working class cannot rely on any representative
of the labour bureaucracies or their apologists to provide an
alternative leadership. There is no substitute for the building
of a new and genuinely socialist party through an irreconcilable
struggle against these forces.
See Also:
France: LCR congress decides to found
new party
[5 March 2008]
Spain: Socialist Party capitulates
to right wing anti-abortionists
[5 January 2008]
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