
Grant was the last of the three great gurus of the British Trotskyist
movement and the eminence grise of what became known as the Militant
Tendency. Along with his two main Trotskyist rivals, Gerry Healy (of
the Socialist Labour League/Workers' Revolutionary Party) and Tony
Cliff (of International Socialism/the Socialist Workers' Party) he had
a considerable input into what became - with the decline of the
Communist Party - the most significant political trend to the left of
the Labour Party.
Born Isaac Blank just outside Johannesburg, he changed his name
to Grant when he came to Britain during the turbulent mid-1930s with a
small band of other South African militants, convinced that it would be
more fertile political territory than his country of birth. Attracted
to the political ideas of the exiled Russian revolutionary Leon
Trotsky, this small group of South African émigrés had
already been influential in the founding of South Africa's first
Trotskyist organisation, the Workers' International League, and soon
made a mark on the fledgling British Trotskyist movement.
Of the two small British Trotskyist groupings of the time, the Balham
Group and the Revolutionary Socialist League (later to be called the
Militant Labour League, selling a newspaper called Militant), Grant and
his colleagues were attracted towards the latter.
In what became a tradition of the Trotskyist movement not only in
Britain but internationally, they soon split from it though to form
their own organisation, this time a British version of the Workers'
International League they had left behind in South Africa. Among those
joining them was the Scottish orator Jock Haston and a voluble Irish
militant, Gerry Healy.
Fourth International
In 1938 Leon Trotsky and his followers set up
an international organisation intended to rival the worldwide Communist
('Third') International. This 'Fourth International' cast around for a
British section, but the tiny group around Grant, Haston and Healy was
ignored and the franchise went instead to the larger Militant Labour
League. For this key event in Trotskyist history then, Grant and his
comrades were shunned and Grant himself never got to meet Trotsky
before the 'Old Man's' assassination by Soviet agents in Mexico in 1940.
During the Second World War, Grant's WIL was active on the industrial
front and soon began to eclipse its parent organisation in both
membership and influence - so much so, that by 1944 the Fourth
International persuaded the two organisations to merge, in what was
effectively a WIL takeover. The new organisation created was called the
Revolutionary Communist Party and was the first (and last) time the
British Trotskyist movement was united in the one organisation.
Grant became editor of the RCP's paper, Socialist Appeal, and Grant and
Haston were the organisation's first delegates to the Fourth
International. The RCP existed for three years and grew to 500-600
members, being a thorn in the side of the Communist Party before, in
true Trotskyist fashion, internal strife led to decline and a split.
Significantly, in the late 1940s three main factions had begun to
emerge which were to be the main tendencies within the Trotskyist
movement in Britain in the decades thereafter. Those around the
Palestinian émigré Tony Cliff developed a distinctive
version of the theory that what existed in the Soviet Union was a form
of state capitalism (though only after Stalin's accession to power in
1928) and therefore couldn't be supported by socialists, while the
groups around Grant and Healy held on to Trotsky's own belief that what
existed in Russia was a workers'state, albeit a degenerated one.
Indeed, the Grant and Healy factions had much in common politically,
and it was mainly the bitter personal hostility that developed between
the two men that kept their groupings separate.
Secret organisation
In the early 1950s, Grant and his small number
of followers started a magazine called International Socialist. Grant
lived in London and worked as a night-time telephone operator, which
left him free to pursue his political work as a Trotskyist during the
day. At this time he began to build up a close political relationship
with a Trotskyist from Birkenhead called Jimmy Dean, who was the
driving force behind Rally, a paper popular with the youth section of
the Labour Party in the North West of England (and soon edited from
Liverpool by a teenage Pat Wall, later one of the Militant supporting
Labour MPs).
By 1955 Grant and his supporters decided that the time was right to
found a new organisation. Harking back to the group Grant first joined
on his arrival from South Africa, it was called the Revolutionary
Socialist League and its first General Secretary was Jimmy Dean. It
effectively fused two small Trotskyist bases in London and Liverpool
where Grant had an influence, and was a tightly-knit organisation built
on the Leninist principles of the vanguard party, being hierarchical
and secretive in almost equal measure, operating like other Trotskyist
groups before it as a clandestine faction within the Labour Party.
Coincidentally, two years earlier the Trotskyist Fourth International
had split. Healy's faction had the UK franchise but went off with the
splitters, leaving a vacancy for a British Section which the leadership
of the FI allegedly tried to fill by placing an advertisement in
Tribune, which Grant answered. By 1957, the RSL was given the British
franchise by the FI but advanced only sporadically, starting a new
paper eclipsed by other Trotskyist groups, particularly Healy's.
At the time the Healy, Cliff and Grant factions were all building
up support by working inside the Labour Party as secret parties within
a party, focusing especially on the Labour League of Youth, but Grant's
faction was so unsuccessful that the FI forced it to merge with an
up-and-coming young group of Trotskyists in Nottingham around Ken
Coates called the International Group. When this marriage of
convenience led to the inevitable divorce within a year or so, the FI
took the opportunity to rescind Grant's franchise altogether, giving it
instead to the Nottingham faction which by then had turned itself into
the International Marxist Group (IMG), a current which went on to
develop a strong student base under the leadership of Tariq Ali.
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