Editorial
A century for socialism
Welcome to this special edition of the Socialist Standard,
a commemorative issue marking one
hundred years in the political life of the Socialist Party of Great
Britain. When our Party was
formed on 12th June 1904, in a hall in a little alley off Fetter Lane,
Fleet Street, London, the founder members would rightly have viewed the
possibility of our existence a century later in something of a negative
light. The aim of the Socialist Party has always been ‘socialism and
nothing but’ and the founder members conceived the Party as a mechanism
through which socialist ideas could be rapidly spread and, potentially,
through which the working class of wage and salary earners could come
to political power. The subsequent creation of socialism would render
the need for a socialist party redundant and so, one hundred years on,
the very continued existence of the Socialist Party of Great Britain is
indicative of the fact that the system of society the founder members
were dedicated to overthrowing – capitalism – is still with us.
To this effect, today, ownership of the means of living (the factories,
farms, offices, communication systems and so on) is still in the hands
of a minority social class that can live a luxurious existence without
having to work.Virtually all the useful work in society is being done
by the
majority, a class of people forced by economic compulsion to sell their
working energies for a wage or a salary that is less in value than what
they produce. It is a society characterised by extremes of wealth and
poverty, by wars and chaos and by a meanness of spirit that undermines
much that is decent about human beings. For the last hundred years the
Socialist Party has been
waging a war of our own – against capitalism and for socialism.
We have waged a war too against all the political parties who have
supported capitalism, including those that have done so while paying
lip-service to socialism. The achievement of socialism has been our
sole objective,
because our understanding of capitalist society and its working has
told us that it is a system capable of change over time but not change
that can abolish its fundamental defects. Capitalism has altered over
the last century, but not fundamentally so and all the problems
associated with
it in 1904 are still present today, with some new and unforeseen ones
too.
Technological powers
In one sense, capitalism is the most successful social system that has
ever existed in that the working class, through its collective efforts,
has been able to develop the powers of production to previously
undreamed-of heights, from putting a man on the moon to mapping the
human
genome. But these powers of production are wasted and distorted by a
system that puts profit before needs as a matter of course and where
collective effort is destabilised by competition and division. A
society that can now send spaceships to Mars but which cannot
adequately feed, clothe and house the world’s population despite the
massive technological resources at its disposal is a society that is
seriously and fundamentally flawed. One hundred years ago the men and
women who founded the Socialist Party came to a significant political
conclusion, which is just as important now as it was then. This was
that capitalism, through creating an interconnected
world-wide division of labour and unparalleled leaps in productivity
(whereby ten years in its lifespan is equal to one hundred years and
more of previous systems like feudalism), has created the conditions of
potential abundance necessary for its own replacement and also a social
class of wage and salary earners with the incentive to organise for
this. What pioneers of the socialist
movement like Marx, Engels and Morris envisaged as socialism or
communism, had become a practical possibility and tinkering with an
inherently defective system like capitalism a waste of time and energy
in the light of it. The founders of the Socialist Party recognised that
the
time was ripe for the working class to organise itself consciously and
politically to democratically take control of the state machine in
countries across the world, dispossessing the owning class of
capitalists and socialising production on an international basis. In
doing so the working class would consciously create a system where
human activity would be carried out solely and directly to
meet the needs and desires of the population, and where all the
defining categories of capitalism had been abolished: production for
profit, money, national frontiers, the class system and – as a result –
the enforcer of class society itself, the state
Reformism
At the time of our Party’s foundation other politicalactivists agreed
that this type of society was possible and desirable, but disagreed
about how it could be created. Due to what they took to be the backward
intellectual development of the working class, they thought that
capitalism would need to be gradually transformed into socialism by a
series of reform measures. They labelled the
founder members of the Socialist Party and others who thought on
similar lines ‘impossibilists’, people who were demanding the
impossible when piecemeal and gradual reform was all that was
realistic. This was the substance of our break in 1904 with our parent
body, the Social
Democratic Federation, and the basis for our criticism of other
organisations of the time like the Independent Labour Party and the
Fabian Society. Organisations like the SDF that had a paper
commitment to socialism were in practice swamped by people who were
attracted by their reform programmes rather than their supposed
commitment to abolishing capitalism. In these circumstances, those who
viewed reforms as a stepping-stone to socialism were themselves
swamped by people for whom reforms were simply an end in themselves,
palliating the worst excesses of the system. The history of the Labour
Party – formed out of the Labour Representation Committee in 1906 – is
a case in point. More than any other organisation in Britain, the
Labour Party developed as a body hoping to reform capitalism into
something vaguely humane. Today, in 2004, the modern Labour Party
stands as an organisation which
has instead been turned by capitalism into something rather more than
vaguely inhumane. From Keir Hardie and Ramsay MacDonald onwards
it has steadily drifted towards where it is today – a party which has
abandoned any hope of seriously changing society for the better but
which now markets itself as the most efficient managerial team for
British Capitalism PLC instead.
Over decades, millions of workers the world over have invested their
hopes in so-called ‘practical’, ‘possibilist’ organisations like the
Labour Party, hoping against hope that they would be able to neuter the
market economy when, in reality, the market economy has successfully
neutered them. As such, the damage these organisations have done the
socialist movement is colossal. That they turned out to be the real
‘impossibilists’ – demanding an unattainable humanised capitalism – is
one of the greatest tragedies of the last century, made all the greater
because it was so utterly predictable.
Vanguard politics
Unfortunately for the socialist movement, the reformist distraction has
not been the only one, however. Another political tendency emerged,
principally out of the Bolshevik seizure of power in Russia in 1917,
claiming that they had found another route to socialism. However
sincere some of their number may have been at the outset – and whatever
their laudable success at curtailing Russia’s part in the First World
War – Lenin’s Bolsheviks proved to be a political tendency that set the
clock back for socialism at least as much as reformism did. In claiming
that socialism could be created by a political minority without the
will and participation of the majority of the population, and through
their wilful confusion of socialism with nationalisation and state-run
capitalism generally (a type of opportunism also shared – over time –
by the reformists), they shamelessly distorted the socialist political
programme. The Socialist Party was the first organisation in Britain
(and possibly the world) to foresee the disastrous state capitalist
outcome of the Bolshevik takeover but we gained no satisfaction in
doing so. Even now, years after the
collapse of the Kremlin’s empire, the association of socialist and
communist ideas with state capitalism, minority action and political
dictatorship is one of the greatest barriers to socialist
understanding. Today, both reformism and Bolshevik-style vanguardism
stand discredited. As ostensible attempts to create socialism they
didn’t just fail, they were positively injurious
to the one strategy that could have brought about a better society
during the last century. The modern far left – by combining the two
elements together in an unfortunate
mix – have opted for the worst of both worlds and rightly are
politically marginalized because of it.
Looking forwards
From our standpoint in 2004, the Socialist Party of Great
Britain and our companion parties abroad in the World Socialist
Movement regard our situation with both pride and sadness. Sadness
because two political currents we warned against most vehemently –
reformism and
vanguardism – succeeded in derailing the socialist project so
spectacularly, but pride because of the part we have played in keeping
the alternative vision alive. The political positions of the Socialist
Party were not handed down on tablets of stone in 1904. With the Object
and Declaration of Principles as our guide we have developed our own
analysis and political viewpoints as the last hundred years have worn
on. Occasionally we may have made mistakes, but we are confident that
our record over the last century stands for itself – of propagating the
case for real socialism, in exposing the promises and trickery of the
reformists and the vanguardists, in opposing the senseless butchery of
the working class in two world wars and countless others, and in
presenting a clear analysis of capitalism in language
readilyunderstandable
to those whose interest lies in socialism. In the pages of this special
issue you will read about the
remarkable men and women who have been members of our Party over the
last hundred years and about the political input they have had to make.
Without doubt, their contribution has been an immense one and we pay
public tribute to them for it, but there is a lot more work still to be
done.
Capitalism today stands as a social system that bears with it little by
way of a positive perspective for humanity. In the major industrial
centres of the system, significant rises in productivity coupled with
trade union action by workers to win a half-decent share of the gains,
have led to rising purchasing power for many. But capitalism and
insecurity continue to go hand in hand and in the so-called ‘Third
World’ millions starve every year while literally billions now live in
disgusting conditions with no hope in sight for them. Everywhere on the
planet capitalism has
spread its malignant influence: creating a society where everything
(and everyone) can be bought and sold, where an ‘every man for himself’
culture leads to escalating brutality, crime and violence and where the
social codes built up during the system’s formative years have been
undermined by a rampant drive to commercialisation, fostered by a
distorted and ruthless individualism. In 2004,
nationalism, political gangsterism, religious fundamentalism and
terrorist atrocities are the order of the day in a system that neither
knows or cares where it is heading. In the first edition of the
Socialist Standard we called upon our readership to “help speed the
time when we
shall herald in for ourselves and for our children, a brighter, a
happier, and a nobler society than any the world has yet witnessed”.
One hundred years later we are still here, and make the same plea, with
the same force and urgency. No matter how inconvenient it may be for
our political opponents, we are not going away until our job is done.
That day will come when the working class has seen through the lies and
false promises that have proved such a distraction this last one
hundred years. And it will come when the supposedly incredible idea of
creating a world
without wars and worries, money and markets is accepted as not only
necessary for the sake of humanity, but recognised for being just as
realisable as other once ‘impossible’ projects are today . . . like a
man on the moon,or a spaceship to Mars.
Socialist Standard June 2004 6
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