|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Alan Thornetts denunciation of Trotskyism
Part two
By Chris Marsden
21 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
This is the second and concluding part of a two-part article
analysing the role of Alan Thornetts International Socialist
Group in British Member of Parliament George Galloways Respect
Renewal project. The first part was
posted March 20.
Alan Thornetts diatribe against Trotskyism provides an
occasion for a re-examination of his own political evolution.
It is instructive in that it demonstrates how a false political
conception regarding the development of socialism became the starting
point for a pronounced shift to the right by a layer of workers
and middle-class people who were once attracted to revolutionary
politics. This political shift was bound up with profound experiences
made by the working class with Labourism in Britain.
In his denunciation of Trotskyist groups in Britain
for ultra-leftism, Thornett makes particular mention of the Socialist
Labour League (SLL) and its successor organisation, the Workers
Revolutionary Party (WRP). The SLL/WRP was formerly the British
section of the International Committee of the Fourth International
(ICFI), which publishes the World Socialist Web Site. Thornetts
tendency originated from a split in the WRP in 1974.
Thornett was part of a substantial layer of militant workers
won to the Socialist Labour League in the 1960s as a result of
its political struggle against the Labour and trade union bureaucracy.
A leading shop steward at the massive British Leyland car plant
in Cowley, Thornett quit the Communist Party and joined the SLL.
He led many struggles in the plant, becoming chairman of the Transport
and General Workers Union 5/55 branch and of the Joint Shop
Stewards Committee at Cowley. He was also the leader of
the SLLs industrial wing, the All Trades Union Alliance.
Thornett joined the SLL at a time when it was understood that
the development of the revolutionary party would necessarily involve
a substantial leftward movement developing within the Labour Party
and the trade unions that had the allegiance of millions of workers,
who believed these organisations to be socialist. The task was
to carry out systematic work to expose the socialist pretensions
of the Labour and trade union bureaucracy in order to win the
most politically advanced workers to the revolutionary party by
breaking them from illusions in Labour. In this struggle, the
unions, which represented more than 10 million members and had
a very active rank-and-file, were vital arenas of political struggle.
The tendency that Thornett came to lead emerged as an opportunist
orientation towards the very bureaucratic leaderships and organisations
the SLL had sought to oppose. In opposition to the waging of a
political struggle to win workers away from the leadership of
the Labour Party and the trade unions, he was to develop the conception
that a left tendency would emerge from within the bureaucracy
itself that would be won to socialism.
In a period of sharp political shifts in the late 1960s and
early 1970s, which in Britain took the form of major struggles
against the Conservative (Tory) Party government of Edward Heath,
this became the starting point for Thornetts organisational
and political break with Trotskyism.
Thornett had remained very much a trade union militant in his
outlook and came to view the struggle waged by the SLL as running
contrary to his own work as a shop steward in Cowley, which focused
on efforts to work with various left Labourites, Stalinists and
left radicals in defence of jobs and working conditions. Thornett
wrote later that Trotskyism, for usand being a Trotskyist
then tended to mean being a member of the SLL because of its size
and influenceprovided an analysis not only of capitalism
but also of the trade union leaders, their role in society and
relationship to the employers.
However, he continued, The SLL took this to the sectarian
extreme. It saw the role the officials played in general as applying
equally to them all. It failed to see the different strands within
them and that some could play progressive roles. It was, therefore,
unable to construct alliances with those who did stand on principle
[Emphasis added].
Thornetts adaptation to the Labour and trade union bureaucracy
developed under conditions of a growing political disorientation
within the central SLL leadership of Gerry Healy, Cliff Slaughter
and Michael Banda.
As is explained in How the Workers Revolutionary Party
Betrayed Trotskyism, the split with Thornett unfolded in
the aftermath of the unclarified break with the French Organisation
Communiste Internationaliste (Internationalist Communist OrganisationOCI)
in 1971.
As early as 1966, the OCI had insisted that the Fourth International
had been destroyed and had to be reconstructed. Denying that the
ICFI represented the continuity of Trotskyism, it rejected the
significance of the struggle that had been waged against the Pabloite
movements political liquidationism and wholesale adaptation
to the Stalinist, social democratic and bourgeois nationalist
parties, which it proclaimed to be blunt instruments
through which socialism would be achieved.
In the tumultuous social and political struggles that wracked
Europe following the French General Strike of May 1968, the OCI
began to build a substantial youth movement, but on the basis
of adaptations to various centrist tendencies in France and internationally.
It subsequently formed the Committee for the Reconstruction of
the Fourth International and the Workers Party (PT) in France
as centrist vehicles, through which it established a leading position
within the Force Ouvriere trade union. The OCI was responsible
for placing Lionel Jospin in the Socialist Party in 1971. Jospin
went on to become a key ally of Socialist Party leader Francois
Mitterand, who served as president of France from 1981 to 1995.
Jospin later became prime minister of France.
The SLL failed to conduct a thorough-going political struggle
against the OCI, declaring instead a public split on November
24, 1971, before any real attempt had been made to clarify the
cadre of the then-French section of the ICFI and win them away
from the centrist perspective of the partys leadership.
This meant that the SLL was politically disarmed and weakened
when Thornetts tendency emerged as a result of a similar
centrist deviation and became a direct conduit for a political
counterattack by the OCI.
In 1973, the SLL took the decision to launch a campaign to
become the Workers Revolutionary Party. The founding documents
of the new party represented a major shift away from the SLLs
Trotskyist moorings, under conditions in which a militant anti-Tory
movement was at its height. The new partys declared aim
was to undertake a specific political task: to unite the
working class behind a socialist programme to throw out the Tory
government and replace it with a Labour government.
Thus the new party was largely defined in terms of an electoral,
tactical policy, rather than as an instrument for achieving the
strategic goal of mobilising the working class, on the basis of
the historic legacy and international socialist programme of Trotskyism,
of overthrowing capitalism, establishing workers power and
constructing socialism in Britain and internationally.
The demand for the return of a Labour government pledged to
socialist policies was, in itself, correct, and provided the possibility
of taking workers through the experience of a political struggle
against the Labour and trade union bureaucracy. The SLL/WRP anticipated
that, with Labour having been brought to power due to an offensive
by the working class against the Heath Tory government, millions
of working people would expect Harold Wilsons new Labour
government to implement major social reforms. This, in turn, would
bring them into conflict with Labour and create the best possible
conditions for a political reckoning with social democracy and
the building of the revolutionary party.
The WRPs founding document stated that the subsequent
struggle for socialist policies under a Labour government
would enable the party to win many thousands to Marxism
and throw out the reformist leaders of the trade unions and labour
movement.
However, the SLL/WRP made impermissible adaptations to reformist
illusions in the working class. The WRP advanced an essentially
electoral programme that made the most minimal reference to the
partys Trotskyist character and the international perspective
and political authority of the ICFI. The programme of demands
it outlined were framed as a series of basic rightsfor
employment, a higher standard of living, social benefits and better
housing, and to change the system in an unspecified
way. The launching of a mass recruitment campaign requiring only
agreement on this programme meant that workers who had not politically
broken from reformism and begun their political education as Marxists
could flood into the party.
Subsequent events were to develop in a more complex and protracted
manner than was anticipated by the WRP. The party was not wrong
to predict that the working class would come in to conflict with
the Labour government. (Strike action throughout the public and
private sector against Labours enforced wage restraint resulted
in the loss of 30 million working days in the Winter of
Discontent of 1978-1979.) But it was wrong to assume that
a movement against Labour would develop as an uninterrupted extension
of the militant movement against the Tories.
Heath had called a general election on May 3, 1974, under the
slogan, Who rules the country, the government or the unions?
Labour won power just four months after the founding of the WRP,
but as a minority administration. Its victory had the initial
effect of strengthening illusions in the Labour Party and in reformism,
not weakening them, including amongst workers recruited to the
WRP.
The working class was not politically prepared to immediately
wage a struggle against the Wilson government, which it had placed
in office, especially after Wilson made significant wage concessions
to the coal miners. The reticence to challenge the government
was compounded by Labours minority status and concerns that
the Tories might return to power. Wilson was forced to call a
second election on October 11 of that year, in which Labours
vote actually increased and secured it a parliamentary majority.
The WRP had clearly underestimated the strength of the illusions
in Labour in the working class. It was forced by these developments
to place renewed emphasis on its Trotskyist identity and its historic
opposition to the Labour and trade union bureaucracy. But this
met with ferocious opposition from Thornett, who articulated a
right-wing reaction to the WRPs efforts to deepen its struggle
against the Labour and trade union bureaucracy.
As the ICFI later explained, Thornett had developed a
close relation with sections of workers on the basis of the centrist
basic rights deviations of the 1973-74 period and now
resisted the return by the WRP leadership to sharp attacks on
the Labour government, especially under conditions where it retained
a precarious hold on power and was faced with the imminent necessity
of calling new elections.
An additional factor in shaping Thornetts view that the
WRP leadership was being sectarian towards Labour
was the fact that British Leylands future was in jeopardy
and depended on the support of the Wilson government. In 1974,
British Leyland announced projected losses of £16.6 million.
It sought an overdraft facility of £150 million and began
talks with Labours Department of Trade and Industry. Labours
Tony Benn spoke in Parliament in December to urge that, because
British Leyland was a leading exporter and a huge
employer, it was essential that government money be used to assist
it. This was agreed.
The role of the OCI
Thornetts general discontent with the party and hostility
to its leftward turn made him receptive to political advances
made by OCI supporters in Britain, organised in the Marxist Bulletin
Group and led by two middle-class renegades from the SLL, Robin
Blick and Mark Jenkins. The aim of the two, who were later to
pass into the camp of open anti-communism, was to create a faction
inside the WRP with the initial aim of removing Gerry Healy from
leadership. This, in turn, was considered only a step towards
shifting the WRP to the OCIs position that the ICFI should
be liquidated.
Blick wrote in 1980 of how the Bulletin Group contacted Thornett
through the WRPs Western Region Central Committee member
Kate Blakeney, who was met in August. Blakeney had told them there
existed an unofficial and rather secret opposition grouped
around Thornett that had no clear platform or understanding
where the WRP had gone wrong, but was rather a coming together
of people who for various reasons were dissatisfied with the national
performance of the WRP [Emphasis added].
Blick states that he wrote substantial sections
of Alan Thornetts first oppositional document, including
the section on the Transitional Programme, the section on
workers control, the section on corporatism, the section
on Social Democracy. He also collaborated with Thornett
on an almost daily basis, preparing his reports up to and
during the expulsion of the opposition.
The sections cited focus in large measure on opposing the WRP
for its position that the entire leadership of the trade
unions and the Labour Party have been designated as corporatist.
Thornetts faction platform stated that this was tantamount
to calling them social fascists, as the Stalinists had called
the Social Democrats in the Third Period.
The WRPs political critique of Thornetts right-centrist
positions was correct, but Healy repeated and thus compounded
the mistake made with the OCI of moving to an organisational settlement
before fully clarifying both the party and the working class as
to the political issues at stake.
Thornetts provocative and disloyal behaviour no doubt
played a part in Healys decision to do so, and he was soon
proved right in his supposition that Thornett was working with
the OCI. But this well-founded suspicion did not obviate the need
to probe the essential theoretical issues raised by Thornetts
platform, which would have meant revisiting the conflict with
the OCI and thus taking to a higher level the ICFIs struggle
against revisionism.
As a result of the confusion the split engendered, Thornett
was initially able to take several hundred members with him when
he was expelled, and the party lost its most important industrial
base.
The split with the WRP liberated Thornett and his supporters
to pursue entry work within the Labour Party, while
he continued his trade union career at branch and national level
until the late 1980s. Now in his seventies, Thornett has spent
more than three decades trading off of the political confusion
created by the WRP, while establishing a niche for himself as
an advisor to whichever reformist or Stalinist bureaucrat desires
his services.
His group was particularly active in the Chesterfield Socialist
Movement, grouped around Tony Benn. For several years, he specialised
in seeking to regroup various dissidents and splinters from the
International Committee. But this was only a step towards ditching
his pretensions to Trotskyist orthodoxy and making his way into
his natural political home in the Pabloite USec. His International
Socialist Group was recognised as a sympathising section of the
USec in 1991 and became its British section at the 1995 World
Congress.
With his latest writings, Thornett makes clear that his joining
the Pabloites was only a step towards the repudiation of Trotskyism
that he has now carried out, a development echoed amongst a substantial
number of former radicals who have traded in their tattered credentials
for well-paid positions in the higher echelons of the Labour and
trade union bureaucracy.
In an additional polemic with the British SWP, Thornett writes
a political paean to Galloway, describing him as still the
only left Labour MP to make a break with Labour, the
best public speaker on the left, and a central leader
of the anti-war movement with the biggest electoral
base of anyone on the left outside of the Labour Party.
He adds that Galloway is left Labour in his politics....
But it was this which he brought into Respect from the outseta
genuine component of left-Labour politics.
Ultimately, this is what Thornett is concerned with: Ensuring
that any new party must be a vehicle for various dissident Labourites
and Stalinists that is implacably opposed to genuine socialism.
The strength of Respect Renewal, he declares, is
that it is serious about approaching other sections of the left,
such as the trade union left and the [Communist Party of Britain],
about a wider regroupment of forces to tackle the crisis of working
class representation.
Concluded
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |