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Militant
The loss of the Fourth International franchise was an understandable
blow to Grant, but around the same time his group had begun to take
steps which were to prove more fruitful, the most significant of which
was the creation of a new publication to be called Militant - for
Labour and Youth. It's editor was a young Liverpudlian with strong
organisatiuonal abilities called Peter Taaffe, who became Grant's
lieutenant-in-chief, while Grant himself was political editor.
The striking design of the paper was created by Roger Protz, later of
the Campaign For
Real Ale, but who was a notable activist at various times in each of
the three main
Trotskyist factions in British politics (later, in Cliff's
International Socialists, he became
editor of Socialist Worker). It was to be growing sales of Militant,
combined with systematic, organised activity in the Labour Party, which
was eventually to bear fruit for
Grant's faction.
By 1966 they were the only one of the three main Trotskyist factions
still inside the Labour Party. Healy's group had, by the early 1960s,
almost completely taken over the (now renamed) Labour Party Young
Socialists and after several attempts they were eventually expelled,
with Grant personally refusing at one stage to vote to keep Healy-ites
in the Party. Cliff's faction disengaged from Labour in the mid-1960s,
seeing propaganda opportunities in disassociating itself from Wilson's
Labour government, leaving the field free for Grant. By 1970 Grant's
RSL had a majority on the Labour Party Young Socialists Executive and
from 1972 onwards always had one of its members on the Labour NEC as
the LPYS representative.
Throughout the 1970s, the influence of what by this time was becoming
known as the 'Militant Tendency' grew apace, both in the Labour Party
and trade unions. Grant's organisation moved from being the least
well-known of the major Trotskyists sects to becoming the most
well-known, with something of a 'workerist' face, placing less emphasis
on building up student support than most Trotskyist groups and more on
recruiting the skilled and semi-skilled working class, especially local
government workers.
By the 1980s Militant's growth and influence was such that it could
claimscores of Labour councillors across Britain as 'supporters' (when
in reality they were RSL members who couldn't publicly admit to being a
'party within a party'). In addition, they could claim several Labour
Parliamentary candidates - three of whom (Dave Nellist, Terry Fields
and Pat Wall) eventually became MPs, and - most controversially of all
- they took effective control of Liverpool City Council, with Derek
Hatton as the council's Deputy Leader and Tony Mulhearn (a long-time
RSL member more trusted by Grant) as his aide de camp.
The mid-1980s, when the Tendency claimed over 8,000 'supporters', was
the peak of Militant's influence on British politics and the nearest
Grant came to fulfilling his dream of creating a mass Trotskyist base
within the Labour Party. But its size, influence and the notoriety
attached to it by the mainstream press led to the first systematic
attempt to deal with Trotskyist infiltration in the Labour Party since
the expulsion of theHealy-ites.
Earlier, in 1975, Lord Underhill had written a report on
Militant's activities in the Labour Party for a left-wing dominated
Labour NEC that chose at the time to do nothing about it. But in the
1980s the Labour leadership acted, first under Michael Foot and then
under Neil Kinnock, with his famous attack on the Militants on
Liverpool City Council at the 1985 Labour Party conference, after they
had deployed the tactic of refusing to set a rate, issuing 30,000
council workers with redundancy notices.
Labour initially started by picking on the most obvious candidates for
expulsion, the five members of Militant's Editorial Board, including
Grant and Taaffe, who were expelled in 1983. After this, large and
increasing numbers of their comrades were systematically put outside
the Party they claimed was 'the mass party of the working class'.
Political positions
Throughout the lifetime of the RSL, 'entryism'
into the Labour Party was one of its defining characteristics as a
Trotskyist current. Others used entryism as a tactic, including Cliff
and Healy, but for Grant's group it appeared to amount to more than
this - it was a defining political position.
Sometimes called 'deep entryism' it was not simply about a Trotskyist
organisation going into the Labour Party, building up support and
effectively raiding it for new members before emerging into the outside
world stronger and fitter. For Grant, as Militant's main theoretician,
the task of his tendency was to 'win the Labour Party to socialism' on
the grounds that a united Labour and trade union movement under a
Trotskyist leadership was unstoppable.
The means for achieving this goal was deep entryism plus a particular
variety of Trotsky's 'transitional demands' programme,a strategy
developed from Lenin's premise that the working class in capitalism was
not capable through its own efforts of developing a socialist
consciousness. This transitional programme was a carefully calculated
list of demands - such as massive public works programmes, the
nationalisation of the top 200 monopolies, and an implausibly generous
minimum wage - which would be superficially attractive to supporters of
reforms in the wider Labour and trade union movement, and which
Militant thought contained the seeds of a future socialist society.
The intention was a dishonest one, for Grant and Militant's other
leaders knew that these
demands were not generally capable of realisation within the normal
politics of capitalism
- indeed, that was the very point of advocating them. The resultant
anger they expected within the working class when these demands were
unmet would lead, they hoped, to a lurch towards the left under the
leadership of the Trotskyist vanguard itself - the RSL.
The desire to stay in the Labour Party at all costs coupled with
distinctive transitional
demands that could lead to a Trotskyist leadership introducing
'socialism' (really state-run capitalism based on nationalisation) via
an Enabling Act in parliament - and supported by workers' councils in
the industrial field - was what really defined Militant in relation to
the other Trotskyist sects. Also, and uniquely, the RSL quickly
identified the arena of local government as a means for criticising
traditional, piecemeal reformist politics (saying they would
alwaysoppose rent and rates increases), raising its programme of more
radical transitionaldemands instead as the 'bridge to socialism':
"To lift the horizon of the local parish pump politicians on to the
broader national and international field - this is the first task of
the revolutionary Councillor . . . It is necessary
within the Labour Groups and in open council to point out the
limitations of particular struggles and reforms and show how (in theory
and practice) reformism (nationally and locally) cannot resolve the
contradictions of capitalism." (RSL 'Notes on Council Work', by Ellis
Hillman, 1961.)
These socialist-sounding phrases, in reality masking the advocacy of
what were, in effect, just more radical reforms of capitalism, was
typical of their entryist tactic, as later exemplified in Liverpool.
Combined with their relentless workerism and disdain for non-economic
issues, this constituted their 'Unique Selling Point' within the
Trotskyist
milieu (unlike others, Militant had relatively little interest in
sexual or student politics, or supporting Third World nationalist
movements).
These were the key perspectives handed down by Grant himself,
consistently over decades. Indeed,
it was often said by his supporters and opponents alike that Grant was
saying the same things in the 1980s as he had been saying in the 1940s,
and his book, "The Unbroken Thread: the Development of Trotskyism Over
40 Years", is testament
to this. This would have to include his oft-repeated claim (following
Trotsky, and like his rival Gerry Healy of the WRP) that capitalist
collapse leading to a Trotskyist leadership of a revolutionary working
class was imminent in 'the coming period' of the next 10-15 years,
somewhat in the perpetual manner of 'tomorrow never comes'.
Post-Militant
In the eventually, capitalism outlived Grant
himself. Indeed, Grant's end appears to have
been a rather sad one, in an old people's home, years after having been
kicked out of the Labour party and then, rather more remarkably, the
RSL itself. The campaign of the Labour leadership in the 1980s against
Militant had been so successful that by 1992 the majority of the RSL,
led by Taaffe, came to the conclusion that continuing with entryism was
pointless and stood 'Militant Labour' candidates against the official
Labour Party, with mixed success. A group around Grant and one of his
protégés, Alan Woods, refused to accept this reversal of
what the Tendency had always stood for,and were expelled.
Just as Grant had borrowed from early Trotskyist groups when founding
the Revolutionary
Socialist League and its paper, Militant, so this expelled rump from
the RSL started a new paper called Socialist Appeal, the name of the
journal Grant edited while one of the leaders of the RCP just after the
war. Never more than a couple of hundred at most, this group made
little impact, while after a period of serious decline the slightly
larger Militant Labour eventually voted in 1997 to dishonestly turn
itself into the 'Socialist Party' (of England and Wales - SPEW to its
enemies), effectively trying to usurp the name of the
SPGB. This grouping has since declined further, though its leading
elements in Scotland, such as Tommy Sheridan, were instrumental in
forming the rather more successful but equally reformist Scottish
Socialist Party.
The modern legacy of Ted Grant is an interesting one, for in many
respects he was the most successful of the three main British
Trotskyist leaders, while still falling well short of his ultimate
goal. From a socialist perspective, the Militant Tendency (like the
other Trotskyist groups) did much to muddy the waters of revolutionary
politics in the UK, posing as socialist while supporting the usual
Trotskyist stew of radical reformist demands with the long-term aim of
state-run capitalism organised by a Leninist vanguard party, another
classic 'dictatorship over the proletariat', with Grant as
leader-in-waiting.
Grant knew full well of the real socialist alternative promoted by the
Socialist Party of Great Britain and our companion parties overseas (he
debated Socialist Party speaker Tony Turner in 1945 and was wont to
deride us as 'ultra left' sectarians) but he rejected real socialism
for the type of politics that cast him in the role of leader,
manipulating the mass of the proletariat towards a 'revolutionary
situation'. But, as history proved, the working class were not so
easily manipulated by Grant's particular mix of Trotskyist tactics, and
his lifetime was effectively wasted on an ultimately dishonest
political cause.
This was a shame, because like Tony Cliff, Grant had much energy and
some talent as a writer and speaker. He was an obsessive analyst of -
and collector of information about - the capitalist economy, though
arguably (because of his unsupported belief in capitalist collapse) his
best works were not in this field. His political tract Against the
Theory of State Capitalism in 1949, for instance, was a relentlessly
logical attack on the irrationality of the Cliff (SWP) position from an
orthodox Trotskyist perspective, implying that the only coherent state
capitalist theory applied to the Soviet bloc, etc came from those, like
the Socialist Party, who rejected Leninist and Trotskyist politics
altogether. And in more recent times, he collaborated with Alan Woods
to write an excellent book called," Reason and Revolt: Marxist
Philosophy and Modern Science", a history of science and scientific
methods from a general Marxist standpoint.Grant will be remembered,
above all else though, for founding a political tendency which hit the
headlines and gained public notoriety but which otherwise did the
socialist movement huge amounts of damage.
His political heirs in Socialist Appeal and SPEW fittingly continue to
peddle the same kind of elitist and outdated reformist nonsense now as
Grant did when he first became a Trotskyist in the 1930s. Indeed, for
years Grant was derided by many for sounding rather like an old, broken
record - and today, his surviving political heirs most certainly stand
out as badly scratched vinyl in what is a transparently digital age.
DAP
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