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	<title>Emancipation &#38; Liberation &#187; UDA</title>
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		<title>A Reply to Nick Roger’s Workers Unity not Separatism</title>
		<link>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2010/04/26/a-reply-to-nick-roger%e2%80%99s-workers-unity-not-separatism/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2010 19:45:53 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A Reply to Nick Roger’s Workers Unity not Separatism (edited version in Weekly Worker, no. 211) Independent Action Required to Achieve Genuine Workers’ Unity First, I would like to thank Nick for the tenor of his contribution to the debate about communist strategy in the states of the UK and the 26 county Irish republic. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>A Reply to Nick Roger’s Workers Unity not Separatism (edited version in <cite>Weekly Worker</cite>, no. 211)</h2>
<h3>Independent Action Required to Achieve Genuine Workers’ Unity</h3>
<p>First, I would like to thank Nick for the tenor of his contribution to the debate about communist strategy in the states of the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> and the 26 county Irish republic. After our initial sparring in earlier issues of <cite>Weekly Worker</cite> and on the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> website Nick’s contribution develops further his own case for a British approach and a British party. (I am still not sure to what extent the alternative and logically more consistent one state/one party stance of having an all-<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> party is supported in the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>.) Nick also usefully clears up some points himself (e.g. over his attitude to Luxemburgism) and asks a question which is designed to advance the debate. Before going on to the other issues Nick raises, I will therefore answer this question on whether I support breakaway unions in Scotland.</p>
<h3>How to win effective union solidarity </h3>
<p>I have consistently argued that the struggle to attain effective union organisation can not be reduced to which national flag flies over a union HQ. Most of the Left, in practice, uphold the sovereignty of the union officials located in their existing union HQs, hoping to replace these some day. This is why many of their union campaigns amount to electoral attempts to replace existing union leaderships with Broad Left leaderships. In more and more cases, the latest Broad Left challenges are being mounted against old Broad Left leaderships, suggesting a serious flaw in this strategy! </p>
<p>Of course, many on the Left would say &#8211; ‘No’, we champion the sovereignty of the union conference. However, the relationship between most union conferences and their union bureaucracies is very similar to that between Westminster and the government of the day.  In both cases, executives only implement what they wish to, whilst systematically undermining any conference/election policies they, or the employers/ruling class, oppose.  In the case of unions, this division is accentuated by elected-for-life and appointed officials, who enjoy pay and perks way beyond those of their members &#8211; a bit like Cabinet ministers.</p>
<p>Therefore, I uphold the sovereignty of the membership in their workplaces &#8211; a republican rank and file industrial strategy, if you like. From this viewpoint ‘unofficial’ action, the term used by bureaucrats to undermine members and to reassert their control, is rejected in favour of the term independent action. Action undertaken by branches can be extended by picketing, and by wider delegate or mass meetings.  Certainly, this places a considerable responsibility upon the membership in the branches concerned, necessitating their active involvement in strategic and tactical discussion over the possibilities for extending effective action.  Furthermore, instead of politics being largely confined to the select few &#8211; union bureaucrats and conference attenders &#8211; as when unions are affiliated to the Labour Party &#8211; politics becomes a vital necessity in workplace branches.</p>
<p>Nick asks, how can the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> effectively support action by, for example, civil servants who are organised on an all-British union basis, when we are organised on a Scottish political basis? Actually, it is quite easy. The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> has members on the executives of all-Britain trade unions, and we seek wider unity for effective action with officers and delegates from England and Wales. Indeed, we can go further and state that we would seek cooperation with union members in Northern Ireland, when action involves all-<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> unions, such as the <acronym title="Fire Brigades Union">FBU</acronym>. Yet, in the latter case, support for joint action over economic issues should not prevent socialists raising the political issue of Ireland’s breakaway from the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state.  There is an obvious analogy here for the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>.</p>
<p>Indeed, there are three other territorial union forms in these islands, &#8211; Northern Irish unions (e.g. Northern Ireland Public Services Alliance), Irish unions which organise in the North (e.g. Irish National Teachers Union and the Independent Workers Union) and all-islands unions (e.g. <acronym title="Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians">UCATT</acronym>). Nick’s attempt to equate more effective action with all-Britain unions would in no way help socialists to bring about unity in such varied circumstances. Championing the sovereignty of the union branch, and the forging of unity from below in expanding action, offer the best way of achieving this.</p>
<p>Nick mentions the Educational Institute of Scotland (<acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym>) &#8211; the major teaching union in Scotland, and one of the last unions organised on a Scottish basis. The <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym> is affiliated, not only to the <acronym title="Scottish Trades Union Congress">STUC</acronym>, but to the <acronym title="Trades Union Congress">TUC</acronym> and, although not affiliated to the Labour Party, its leadership has, since the mid 1970’s, been as loyal to Labour as any. The <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym> is one of the strongest adherents of ‘social partnership’, with large chunks of its official journal indistinguishable from government/management spin &#8211; especially its articles on governmental education initiatives.</p>
<p>Until I retired, I was a member of the <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym>, a union rep (shop steward) for 34 years, and served on the union’s Edinburgh Local Executive and National Council. I was also a member of Scottish Rank &amp; File Teachers (until they were sabotaged by the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>) and later the Scottish Federation of Socialist Teachers. I always upheld the sovereignty of the membership in their branches.  Furthermore, I was also centrally involved in the largest campaign that rocked the Scottish educational world and the <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym>, in 1973. Here, for the first time, I came up against the sort of arguments Nick raises. </p>
<p>The 1973 strike action was organised unofficially/independently. It took place over more than three months, with huge weekly, school delegate-based meetings. We also argued within the official structures of the <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym> (whilst even drawing in some members of the two other small unions).  It was here that the old <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, Labour Party and Militant supporters told us we should end our independent action and confine ourselves to getting motions passed calling on the union leadership to take a national lead. </p>
<p>If we had done this, it is likely there would have been no industrial action at all. As it was, the massive independent action forced the official leadership to move. And it was the independent rank and file movement, which sent delegates to schools in England to try and widen the challenge to the Tory government over pay. Labour Party and <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> union officers, all stalwart Left British unionists, confined official union activity to Scotland!</p>
<p>There is a definite parallel between Nick’s advocacy that the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> should abandon its own independent organisation and join with the British Left, planning for the ‘big bang’ British/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> revolution they hope for in the future, and those old <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, Left Labour and Militant arguments I first faced back in 1973.</p>
<h3>The anti-poll tax campaign &#8211; ‘internationalism from below’ in action</h3>
<p>Some years later, in 1988, I became chair of the first Anti-Poll Tax Federation (Lothians) and co-chair of the conference of the Scottish Anti-Poll Tax Federation. The campaign against the poll tax started a year earlier in Scotland, due to Thatcher’s propensity to impose her own form of devolution here &#8211; testing out reactionary legislation in Scotland first. </p>
<p>Militant emerged as the largest political organisation in the Federations. Militant became torn between those who wanted to maintain an all-Britain Labour Party orientation, continuing to prioritise activities inside the party’s official structures, and those who saw the necessity to become involved in independent action through the anti-poll tax unions. Fortunately, it was the latter view that won out.  </p>
<p>The negative effect of pursuing a tacitly British unionist strategy was demonstrated by the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>. Their slogan was &#8211; <q>Kinnock and Willis {then <acronym title="Trades Union Congress">TUC</acronym> General Secretary}- get off your knees and fight</q> (i.e. pushing for others to lead).  They argued that only a Britain-wide campaign backed by the official trade union movement could win. When a special Labour Party conference in Glasgow voted against non-payment, the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> declared the game was over, and some Scottish members went on to pay their poll tax. </p>
<p>The majority in the Federations stuck to their guns and built the independent action first in Scotland, e.g. through non-payment, confronting sheriff officers (bailiffs), etc, and by sending delegations to England and Wales, to prepare people for widened action the following year. Spreading such action from below contributed to the Trafalgar Square riots of March 31st 1990, which put finally paid to the poll tax and to Thatcher. </p>
<p>‘Internationalism from below’, which the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> International Committee has advocated at the two Republican Socialist Conventions, represents a wider and more politicised development of such actions by our class. Any reading of our documents will show that our ‘internationalism from below’ stance flows from an analysis the concrete political situation, and unlike Nick’s and the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s stance, does not stem from some abstract attempt to extend a ‘one state/one party’ (or trade union) organisational form over all British/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> socialists; or from a belief in the efficacy of the top-down bureaucratic ‘internationalism’, which is intrinsic to such attempts.</p>
<p>Although rather belated in its formation, the Scottish Socialist Alliance, set up in 1996, directly stemmed from the lessons learned in the anti-poll tax campaign. (Socialist republicans in the Scottish Federation had argued for the setting up of such organisations from 1990.)  Furthermore, contrary to what Nick maintains, far from having a purely Scottish orientation, <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Alliance">SSA</acronym>/<acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> members took an active part, providing speakers, to help set up the Socialist Alliances in England, Wales and the Irish Socialist Network. The main obstacles we faced in helping to form new democratic united front organisations came from the British Left!  </p>
<p>Perhaps it is also significant that, after addressing large meetings in Scotland, some of the striking Liverpool dockers (1995-8) and their partners said that support here was often wider than in England. The response received from the <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym> trade union group in Dundee was compared very favourably with the coolness of many Labour Party members closer to home! The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Alliance">SSA</acronym> was particularly prominent in trying to win solidarity for the dockers in Scotland.</p>
<h3>Comparing records in trying to build socialist/communist unity</h3>
<p>Now, Nick goes on to make some valid criticisms of the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Alliance">SSA</acronym>’s successor organisation, the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>, particularly over its handling of the Tommy Sheridan affair. However, here it is necessary to compare like with like. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> is only a small political organisation with very few connections to the wider working class. In reality it is a socialist/communist propaganda organisation. The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>, at its height in 2003, united the vast majority of the Left in Scotland, had over a thousand members, won 128,026 votes in the Holyrood election, gained six <acronym title="Members of the Scottish Parliament">MSPs</acronym> and had 2 councillors. It was a party of socialist unity, unlike today when it is an organisation for socialist unity.</p>
<p>When you attempt to organise amongst the wider working class you come under all the immediate political pressures, as well as having to face up to the legacies of past Left traditions. We live in a <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state with a deep-seated imperialist legacy, and where our class has been in retreat in the face of a Capitalist Offensive since 1975. </p>
<p>So, if we are to engage meaningfully amongst the wider class, we have to acknowledge this, and develop a strategy to prevent socialists/communists being dragged back, and to find new openings that enable us to advance both the case and the struggle for a genuine socialist/communist alternative.  This means forming definite political platforms. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> is a platform in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>; the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> was part of a platform (Workers Unity) in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. So let’s compare our roles in trying to build wider principled socialist unity.</p>
<p>Now, just as Nick points out that the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> has already made many of the criticisms of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and Socialist Party that I raised in my critique, so I will point out that the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> publicly raised criticisms of the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Executive’s handling of the Tommy Sheridan affair, which he quite rightly criticises. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> was the only political organisation to oppose, in principle, socialists’ resort to the bourgeois courts to get legal rulings on how they conduct themselves. </p>
<p>The split, which eventually emerged on the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Executive, was about the tactical advisability of a resort to the courts, not against the principle. The Executive, having unanimously warned against such a course of action in this particular case, came to an agreement with Sheridan, who insisted on ignoring this advice. In this agreement, he was allowed to stand down as <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Convenor in order to pursue his court case as an individual. The Executive hoped this would remove the pressure upon the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> itself. </p>
<p>This was extremely naïve, showing little understanding of how the state operates. In the case of the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/<acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>, they still haven’t learned this lesson, as their misguided resort to the courts to defend four victimised activists in UNISON has recently highlighted. Back in 2006, the Scottish courts made it quite clear that they made no distinction between the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> and the activities of its most prominent member. It jailed Alan McCombes for refusing to hand over party minutes covering the Executive decisions on the handling of the Sheridan affair. </p>
<p>This led to a public split on the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>’s Executive Committee, between those who wanted to continue with Sheridan’s case in the bourgeois courts, and those who could now see that the state held the whip hand. Sheridan was asked to abandon this particularly flawed and potentially disastrous course of action. Unfortunately, with the encouragement of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/IS &#8211; Sheridan went on regardless, resulting in a split in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. They refused to attend the post-trial Conference organised to address the deep-seated differences, which had emerged in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>.  Solidarity has been little more than a political ‘marriage of convenience’. You only have to look at the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>’s continued organisational separation in England, Wales (and Ireland/Northern Ireland) to understand this. </p>
<p>Certainly, mistakes had also been be made by the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Executive majority, but these could have been rectified. Indeed, the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> initiated motion to condemn the resort to bourgeois courts and newspapers to deal with differences amongst socialists was passed at the post-split <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Conference in 2006.</p>
<p>Ironically, the one issue, which played no part in the split, was the territorial organisational basis of the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. The left nationalist Sheridanistas (now the Democratic Green Socialist platform) joined with the Left unionist <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/IS in Solidarity. The Left nationalist influenced (now former) <acronym title="International Socialist Movement">ISM</acronym>, along with the Left unionist and carelessly named Solidarity platform (!)  (<acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym>), and the republican socialist <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> stayed with the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. The left nationalist Scottish Republican Socialist Movement left the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> to urge support for the <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym>, whilst the Left unionist <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> ended up telling people to vote New Labour in the recent Euro-elections. Yes, a sorry mess!</p>
<p>Now, if ever there was an opportunity for the British Left to make some headway in Scotland, the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> split this should have been it. However, the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/<acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> had already sabotaged the Socialist Alliances in England and Wales, whilst the final coup-de-grace was administered by the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>, when it decided to move over to pastures green in Respect. Losing support there to Galloway and his allies (the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> seemed to have learned nothing about cultivating celebrity politics in Solidarity) they then sabotaged Respect. Perhaps, the one thing Nick and I could agree on, is that a particular organisational form &#8211; Scottish or British &#8211; provides no guarantee of principled socialist unity!  That has to be fought out on the basis of principled politics and democratic methods.</p>
<p>Now, some time after the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s advocacy of giving no support to either the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> or Solidarity (to my knowledge it no longer had any members involved at this stage), it came up with its own Campaign for a Marxist Party (<acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym>). Here surely, given the balance of political forces (much more favourable to the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, than say to the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> or <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> in the old Socialist Alliance, the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> in Respect, or the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> in No2EU) it should have been able to make some real headway in advancing its own brand of socialist/communist unity politics &#8211; the organisational unity of self-declared Marxists in an all-Britain (<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym>?) party. </p>
<p>However, as every non-<acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> report on the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> has shown (see <cite>New Interventions</cite>), the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> played an analogous role to the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> in its front organisations. And, just as in the case of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>, there has been no honest attempt to account politically for the demise of the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> project in this respect. Instead, we have been given personalised attacks &#8211; once again shades of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>.  From the outside, it looks as if the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> was just attempting a new recruiting manoeuvre &#8211; much like the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>.</p>
<p>Now the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> certainly organised on an all-Britain basis, including the Critique/Marxist Forum group in Glasgow. Yet, far from bringing about greater unity, the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> experience has only resulted in greater disunity!  Nick I’m sure witnessed much of this, and I would think it unlikely that he was entirely happy with the way the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> conducted itself. However, this wasn’t an accidental one-off. </p>
<p>Before Nick became involved in the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, there had been an all-Britain <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym>, which included the Red Republicans (including myself), the Campaign for a Federal Republic, the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and the <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym>. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, in alliance with the <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym>, decided to marginalise those who disagreed with their own ‘federal British republican’ position.  In Scotland, federal British republicans were a minority in the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym>, but were still well represented on our Scottish Committee. In England, federal republicans were in a majority, but the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> acted to ensure there were no non-federal republicans on the ‘organising committee’ there (in reality very little organising had gone on).  </p>
<p>Their idea was to refashion the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> into an organisation, which would intervene with the ‘federal British republican’ line in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> had no wider role for the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> in England. They saw their job as conducting Left British unionist ‘missionary work’ in Scotland only.</p>
<p>A rather unpleasant all-Britain <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> meeting was held in London, and through the votes of <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> members, the majority of whom had never lifted a finger for the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym>, they won the day. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> in Scotland decided it had had enough of the bureaucratic manoeuvring and withdrew. Even the Scottish members of the Campaign for a Federal Republic members joined with the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> majority in Scotland, and together we constituted ourselves as the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> (Scotland).</p>
<p>It is not even necessary to accept my interpretation of these particular events to make a political assessment of the consequences of the split. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> now only existed in Scotland. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> were attempting to link up with the very Left unionist (and social imperialist) <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym>, and the Glasgow Critique group which still had members in Scotland, to build a new Left unionist platform within the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. An additional advantage was the support they had in England (and Wales). </p>
<p>So, which of the two platforms was able to advance in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>? Using Nick’s argument about the obvious superiority of all-Britain political organisations it should have been the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and its allies. Yet this wasn’t the case, despite the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s hope of also winning the support of other Left unionist organisations in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>, such as the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> (<cite>Weekly Worker</cite> assiduously tried to court Neil Davidson, the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>’s leading theoretician in Scotland, then advancing a strong Left unionist politics.)  </p>
<p>Now, it could possibly be argued, from a <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> viewpoint, that the task of winning over the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> to ‘principled’ British Left organisational unity was just too big a task in the face of the opposition. However, then the fight conducted by the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and its allies should have at least solidified a more united pro-British tendency in Scotland. However, the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> soon fell out with the <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym> and, after the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> debacle, with the <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym>, also leaving members of the Glasgow Critique/Marxist Forum split! And Nick wonders why I think supporters of British Left unity tend to mirror the bureaucratic methods utilised by the British state!</p>
<h3>The historical basis for ‘internationalism from below’</h3>
<p>The <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> is not just any old state. It was once at the centre of the world’s largest empire <q>upon which the sun never set</q>. Today, it forms the principle ally of <acronym title="United States">US</acronym> imperialism, the dominant power in the world. Today, the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> is ‘Hapsburg Austria’ to the <acronym title="United States of America">USA</acronym>’s ‘Tsarist Russia’. </p>
<p>For the greater part of their political lives, Marx and Engels argued that socialists should make opposition to the Romanov/Hapsburg counter-revolutionary alliance fundamental to their revolutionary project. Support for the Polish struggle to gain political independence, particularly from the Russian and Austrian Empires, was central to Marx and Engels’ strategy. Engels held on to this perspective until the end of his life, opposing the young Rosa Luxemburg on Polish independence, in the process. Socialists need to adopt a similar strategy today towards the <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperial alliance.</p>
<p>It took some time before Marx and Engels came to an understanding of the best method needed to unite socialists organisationally to promote revolution and struggle against reaction and counter-revolution. However, they outlined their most developed position within the First International, when, significantly, they had to confront the British Left of their day. This tendency tried to uphold a ‘one-state/one-party’ stance, when they denied the Irish the right to form their own national organisation within the International. In arguing against a prominent British First International member, Engels argued that:-</p>
<blockquote><p>The position of Ireland with regard to England was not that of an equal, but that of Poland with regard to Russia&#8230; What would be said if the Council called upon Polish sections to acknowledge the supremacy of a Council sitting in Petersburg, or upon Prussian Polish, North Schleswig {Danish} and Alsatian sections to submit to a Federal Council in Berlin&#8230; that was not Internationalism, but simply preaching to them submission to the yoke&#8230; and attempting to justify and perpetuate the dominion of the conqueror under the cloak of Internationalism.  It was sanctioning the belief, only too common amongst English {British} working men, that they were superior beings compared to the Irish, and as much an aristocracy as the mean whites of the Slave States considered themselves to be with regard to the Negroes.</p></blockquote>
<p>The Second International was formed as the High Imperialism of European dominant-nationality states (German, French and Russian) and top-down imperial national identity sates (British and Belgian) were in the ascendancy. The Second International abandoned Marx and Engels’ ‘internationalism from below’ principle. They adopted a ‘one state/one party’ organisational principle instead, which soon became the conduit for social chauvinist and social imperialist thinking within the social democratic movement. </p>
<p>Luxemburg and Lenin both accepted this new organisational principle. Luxemburg thought, though, that dominant nation chauvinism, which she still recognised, could be combatted by pushing for all-round democratic reforms, without regard to the specific nationalities in any particular state (albeit, as Lenin noticed, with the inconsistent qualification that, after the revolution, Poles should enjoy political autonomy). </p>
<p>Lenin also recognised the dominant nation social chauvinism and social imperialism found in the Second International, but thought this could best be combated through the 1896, Second International Congress decision to uphold ‘the right of nations to self determination’. Lenin thought, though, that any need to actually fight to implement this right was constantly being undermined by ongoing capitalist development, which he thought led to greater working class unity. Furthermore, after any future revolution, national self-determination would not be required, since workers would then want to unite together, initially within the existing state territorial frameworks, after these had been suitably transformed. </p>
<p>However, mainstream Second International figures, as well as Lenin, went on to consider various exceptions to both these organisational and political principles.  In the case of some of the major constituent Second International parties, support was sometimes given to non-state parties in other states (often ones in competition with their own imperial bourgeoisies!). In this way the <acronym title="Polish Socialist Party">PPS</acronym> (Poland) and <acronym title="Irish Republican Socialist Party">IRSP</acronym> (Ireland) were able to gain official recognition as Second International Congress delegates.  </p>
<p>Lenin, in contrast, tended to support the exercise of self-determination retrospectively, only after he had recognised its political significance, e.g. Norway in 1905, Ireland in 1916.  Lenin’s refusal to recognise the real political significance of Left-led national movements within the Russian Empire from 1917 (e.g. Finland and Ukraine), contributed to the isolation of the Revolution, and also to the burgeoning Great Russian bureaucratic character of the new <acronym title="Union of Soviet Socialist Republics">USSR</acronym>.  </p>
<p>Luxemburg’s refusal to get socialists to fight for the leadership of national democratic movements contributed even more to the particular political marginalisation of socialists in Poland, compared say to those ostensibly less revolutionary Finnish socialists. They had been much more brutally crushed in the 1918 White counter-revolution in Finland, than the Polish socialists had been in the imperial backed nationalist revolution there. One reason why Finnish socialists and communists were able to rise from the ashes, is that were still remembered as leaders in the national struggle against Tsarist Russian and German occupation.</p>
<h3>The role of an ‘internationalism from below’ strategy in combating the current <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperial alliance</h3>
<p>Fast forward to today, and we can see the leading role of <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperialism in the world, promoting the interests of the global corporations. The <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state has been awarded the North Atlantic franchise by the <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>. Here it operates as spoiler within the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> to prevent it emerging as an imperial competitor to the <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>. It can even designate Iceland a terrorist state! Through the Peace (or more accurately pacification) Process, <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> governments, in alliance with their own junior partners, successive Irish governments, have rolled back the challenge represented by the revolutionary nationalist challenge of the Republican Movement. </p>
<p>Sinn Fein is now a major partner in upholding British rule in ‘the Six Counties’ through their coalition with the reactionary unionist <acronym title="Democratic Unionist Party">DUP</acronym>. The ‘Peace Process’ was designed to create the best political environment to ensure that the global corporations can maximise their profits in Ireland.  This political strategy has been extended throughout these islands, by the policy of ‘Devolution-all-round’ &#8211; Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. </p>
<p>This strategy has easily tamed such constitutional nationalist parties as the <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym> and Plaid Cymru. The <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym>, for example, is pursuing a Devolution-Max policy to uphold Scottish business interests in an accepted global corporate dominated world. The <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state strategy has the full support of the <acronym title="United States of America">USA</acronym>, the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym>, and trade union leaderships locked in ‘social partnerships’ with their governments and the employers.</p>
<p>The constitutionally unionist form of the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state places the National Question at the heart of the democratic struggle.  Middle class nationalism is continually forced into compromises with unionism and imperialism. (At the height of British imperial world domination, the overwhelming majority of the Scottish and Welsh, and a significant section of the Irish middle classes, could be won over to acceptance of various hyphenated British identities &#8211; Scottish-British, Welsh-British and Irish-British &#8211; in their shared pursuit of imperial spoils). However, today’s <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym> support for the monarchy, and for Scottish regiments in the British imperial army, show that unionist/imperialist pressure can still have an impact.  Even the ‘independent’ Irish state has given Shannon Airport over to <acronym title="United States">US</acronym> imperial forces, particularly for ‘rendition’ flights. </p>
<p>Unfortunately, the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> has only the most abstract understanding of the British unionist state. As yet, it doesn’t even fully comprehend the difference between a nation and a nationality. During the 1997 Devolution Referendum campaign, <cite>Weekly Worker</cite>denied there was such a thing as a Scottish nation, claiming there was only a British nation, in which there lives a Scottish nationality. The existence of a wider Scottish nation, and not just a narrower ethnic Scots nationality, can easily be demonstrated in the well-known Scottish names of Sean Connery, Tom Conti, Shireen Nanjiani and Omar Saeed. </p>
<p>The logic of the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s position, if it had upheld its own particular version of national self-determination, should have been to argue for the 1997 referendum ballot to be confined to (ethnic) Scots.  This would of course brought it into line with the far right nationalist, Siol nan Gaidheal! The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> also got itself into so many knots through promoting its own particular sect-front, ‘The Campaign for Genuine Self Determination’, that it buried any report of its end-of-campaign public meeting and rally in Glasgow.  This meeting was certainly entertaining, but hardly a triumph for <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> politics! </p>
<p>Indeed the beginnings of the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s political decline in Scotland can be identified with this particular meeting, which it was so reluctant to report on. I made an extended political assessment, which was sent to <cite>Weekly Worker</cite> to review. It declined to do so.</p>
<p>However, the confusion between nation and nationality has been taken to greater lengths in ‘the Six Counties’. Here Jack Conrad has identified a 75% Irish-British nation (!), scoring somewhat higher in the nation stakes than Scotland. The fact that Irish-British nationality identification went into rapid retreat after the Irish War of Independence is just ignored. </p>
<p>What undoubtedly exists in the ‘Six Counties’ today is an Ulster-British identity, buttressed by official Unionism and unofficial Loyalism alike. However, this relatively new nationality identification isn’t fixed either. There are a minority of Ulster-British who would happily become fully integrated into the British unionist and imperial state. The majority in the <acronym title="Ulster Unionist Party">UUP</acronym>, <acronym title="Democratic Unionist Party">DUP</acronym> and <acronym title="Traditional Unionist Voice">TUV</acronym>, still want to maintain Stormont and other Northern Irish statelet institutions to hopefully ensure continued Protestant Unionist ascendancy. An ultra-reactionary minority has contemplated declaring <acronym title="unilateral declaration of independence">UDI</acronym>  (Rhodesia style) to form an independent Ulster state, through ethnic cleansing (or, as the relevant <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> document puts it &#8211; ‘nullification’). They all, of course, proudly champion the British imperial legacy.</p>
<p>Ironically, there has been a limited rise of British-Irishness in ‘the 26 counties’, particularly in ‘Dublin 4’, amongst former Official Republicans and a new wave if ‘revisionist historians’. Significantly, this usually goes along with support for the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> and the <acronym title="United States of America">USA</acronym> in its current ‘anti-terrorist’ (i.e. imperial) adventures. These people represent a similar phenomenon to the Euston Manifesto group, formed in 2006 along with others, by former <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym> member, Alan Johnson. The <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym>, of course, has gone further even than the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym> in its apologetics for working class Loyalist organisations (anticipating its similar attitude to Zionist Labour organisations), so it is not surprising that it has given birth to strong social unionist and imperialist tendencies.  Therefore, as long as the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> champions the ‘nation’ rights of this particularly reactionary nationality, it is in danger of following the path of the <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym> and the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>.</p>
<p>Now, the majority of the real Irish-British in ‘the 26 counties’ did eventually become Irish themselves, despite the undoubted barriers posed by the Catholic confessional nature of the state there. This development shows the possibilities of creating Irish national unity, especially if full nationality and religious equality is promoted. </p>
<p>The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> appreciates the real nature of the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state, and the strategy being pursued by its ruling class to contain potentially threatening national democratic movements. These can take on a republican form in their opposition to the anti-democratic Crown Powers soon wielded against any effective opposition. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> also recognises the need to supplement this by engagement with major social issues. This social republicanism (which needs to be developed by communists into conscious socialist republicanism) isn’t just an added-on extra. The fight against jobs and housing discrimination in the Civil Right Movement, and against the poll tax in Scotland, soon became linked with the national and (latent) republican movements in their respective countries.</p>
<p>When the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> argues for a challenge to the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state and to its anti-democratic Crown Powers in Scotland, this stems from a recognition that republican political consciousness is currently higher here (itself a reflection of the importance of the National Question). By way of analogy, in the 1980’s, the wider working class appreciated the more advanced class consciousness of the <acronym title="National Union of Mineworkers">NUM</acronym> and recognised they were in the vanguard of the fight, not just to save pits, but against the Thatcher government. The Great Miners’ Strike was itself triggered off by independent action. The job of socialists soon became to organise effective wider solidarity, and generalise this into a wider political struggle against Thatcher. </p>
<p>If socialist republicans in Scotland can take the lead in the political struggle against the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state, the task of socialists in these islands becomes something similar &#8211; to build solidarity and to extend the challenge by breaking each link in the unionist chain. Whether we end up with independent democratic republics (and only weaken imperialism &#8211; nevertheless a better basis for future progress than the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperial state which exists at present), or are able to move forward to a federation of European socialist republics, depends on the ability of socialists/communists to build ever widening independent class organisation, culminating in workers’ councils. </p>
<p>Abstention from the democratic struggle on the grounds it isn’t specifically ‘socialist’ would be equivalent to abstention in supporting workers fighting for increased wages, on the grounds that they weren’t fighting against the wages system.  Socialists/communists can only gain a wider audience by participating in all the economic, social, cultural and political (democratic) struggles facing our class.  To do this effectively, socialists throughout these islands need to build on the basis of ‘internationalism from below’</p>
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		<title>Inside Ulster Loyalism</title>
		<link>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2009/03/20/inside-ulster-loyalism/</link>
		<comments>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2009/03/20/inside-ulster-loyalism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2009 14:24:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>RCN</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Emancipation & Liberation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issue 17]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Publications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Author: Ed Walsh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Billy Hutchison]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bosnia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cyprus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Ervine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gusty Spence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Henry McDonald]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IRA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jim Cusack]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PUP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[RUC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Six Counties]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Turkey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UDA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UDR]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ulster Loyalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UVF]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UVF: The Endgame]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://republicancommunist.org/blog/?p=1366</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by Ed Walsh – Irish Socialist Network (first published in Resistance no. 8) UVF: The Endgame (Poolbeg, 2008) by Jim Cusack &#38; Henry McDonald Jim Cusack and Henry McDonald are well placed to tell the story of the UVF, having spent decades building up contacts inside the loyalist scene. If you want to know what [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>by Ed Walsh – Irish Socialist Network (first published in <cite>Resistance</cite> no. 8)</h2>
<h3><cite><acronym title="Ulster Volunteer Force">UVF</acronym>: The Endgame</cite> (Poolbeg, 2008) by Jim Cusack &amp; Henry McDonald</h3>
<p>Jim Cusack and Henry McDonald are well placed to tell the story of the <acronym title="Ulster Volunteer Force">UVF</acronym>, having spent decades building up contacts inside the loyalist scene. If you want to know what happened over the last forty years in the North, this is a very useful book. If you want to know why it happened you may need to take the authors’ political analysis with a pinch of salt.</p>
<p>The two writers are keen to downplay evidence of collusion between the British state and loyalist paramilitaries. While they acknowledge that members of the <acronym title="Royal Ulster Constabulary">RUC</acronym> and <acronym title="Ulster Defence Regiment">UDR</acronym> gave assistance to the loyalist groups, the authors deny that collusion was systematic. Cusack and McDonald give us a stark choice – either the loyalist paramilitaries were sock-puppets of the British state, or else they must have been completely autonomous. But there’s another way of looking at things which is far more convincing: the <acronym title="Ulster Volunteer Force">UVF</acronym> and the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> may have a life of their own, but their effectiveness during the Troubles would have been limited if the state forces had dealt with them as they dealt with the Provos. The spectrum of collusion could range from active support (of which there was plenty) to helpful neglect.</p>
<p>The authors also stress their view that loyalist opposition to a united Ireland would have been strong enough to block its realisation, even if the London authorities had been keen to withdraw. There is no way of proving this claim right or wrong, since London never had any intention of withdrawing and was prepared to commit vast resources to contain and defeat the <acronym title="Irish Republican Army">IRA</acronym>. Again, Cusack and McDonald are trying to lead us back to the false notion that Britain was a neutral player in the conflict. That said there can be no question that the strength of unionist belief in the North (often intensified by IRA attacks on Protestant civilians) is the most important prop for what remains of British rule in Ireland.</p>
<p>At one point the authors accuse Sinn Fein of taking a Jesuitical approach to the <q>consent principle</q>. But you need a bit of mental gymnastics to pick your way around the issue of partition. In principle, it’s wrong to suggest that partition of Ireland has a democratic basis (it was imposed by the crudest form of military aggression and based on sectarian gerrymandering – the Northern state has a unionist majority because it was designed that way, just like the <q>Serb Republic</q> in Bosnia or the Turkish enclave in northern Cyprus). In practice, however, its hard to imagine an end to partition before a large number of Ulster Protestants are convinced they have nothing to fear if British rule ends.</p>
<p>Some left-wingers would rather kick the national question into touch and concentrate on other matters. The experience of the <acronym title="Ulster Volunteer Force">UVF</acronym> itself suggests why this approach is likely to founder. Cusack and McDonald describe the post-ceasefire attempt to build a working-class unionist force with a progressive line on social and economic issues that was spearheaded by David Ervine and Gusty Spence. They don’t spend much time, however, asking why that attempt failed. The majority of working-class Protestants have continued to vote for the DUP, despite its right-wing economic policies, while the Progressive Unionist Party {linked to the <acronym title="Ulster Volunteer Force">UVF</acronym>} has failed.</p>
<p>The authors note that Ervine, Spence and Billy Hutchison never convinced the <acronym title="Ulster Volunteer Force">UVF</acronym> rank-and-file to adopt their left-of-centre agenda. But talk of socialism and class politics was hardly going to blend with loyalty to a capitalist, imperialist state and its institutions. The British Labour Party has always been crippled by its submission to a political order shaped by ruling class interests. The <acronym title="Progressive Unionist Party">PUP</acronym>’s support for British nationalism is an even greater hindrance to any progressive ideas its leaders may have wanted to advance. You can cheer the troops returning home from the colonial occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, as so many Protestant workers did before Christmas – but ultimately you are cheering a system that inflicts 40% unemployment on the people of West Belfast, regardless of their communal identity</p>
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		<title>Working class opposition to UDA murder</title>
		<link>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2002/03/24/working-class-opposition-to-uda-murder/</link>
		<comments>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2002/03/24/working-class-opposition-to-uda-murder/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 24 Mar 2002 20:07:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>RCN</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Emancipation & Liberation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issue 01]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Publications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Author: John McAnulty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Danny McColgan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IRA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Congress of Trade Unions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Republican Army]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Police Service Nothern Ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PSNI]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal Ulster Constabulary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[RUC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UDA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ulster Defence Association]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://republicancommunist.org/blog/?p=1141</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[John McAnulty reports on the wave of working class opposition to Danny McColgan’s killing On the rare occasions that the Irish trade union leadership organise a demonstration against sectarianism in the North the standard left-wing leaflet calls for it to be the beginning of a new movement. Yet the lessons of the last thirty years [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>John McAnulty reports on the wave of working class opposition to Danny McColgan’s killing</h2>
<p>On the rare occasions that the Irish trade union leadership organise a demonstration against sectarianism in the North the standard left-wing leaflet calls for it to be the beginning of a new movement. Yet the lessons of the last thirty years is that the role of the trade union leadership is to make sure that such demonstrations bring closure to any nascent movement that might give an independent voice to the working class.</p>
<h3>Working class opposition to <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> murder</h3>
<p>So it proved following the murder of postal worker, Danny McColgan. A movement that began with strike action to proclaim working class opposition to sectarian murder by the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym>, ended with a series of rallies that no longer involved strike action and, indeed, were no longer in the hands of the working class. By working flat-out in a whole series of secret meetings the trade union bureaucracy had managed to construct a <q>unity</q> with the British government and the local employers.</p>
<p>There was of course a price to be paid for such unity &#8211; a price most clearly seen at the Belfast demonstration.</p>
<p>The demonstration was to be non-political &#8211; that is, only politics that maintained the status quo would be presented. There was no longer any room for workers on the platform. Postal workers, teachers, representatives of the nationalist community in North Belfast – all under threats of death from the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> &#8211; they were to be represented by the bureaucracy. The new unity had to respect the sensitivities of the unionist employers &#8211; so it became impossible to mention the Red Hand Defenders, the Ulster Freedom Fighters or even the Ulster Defence Association itself &#8211; the source of the murder campaign and the fake organisations supposed to disguise its involvement.</p>
<p>Not only could the platform not mention the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> &#8211; it had to balance the silent, implied criticism with a trawl through history to condemn sectarian murders by the <acronym title="Irish Republican Army">IRA</acronym>. In doing so it changed the presentation of Danny McColgan’s murder from a purely sectarian killing to a ‘titfor- tat’ killing. This tendency to condemn sectarianism in general rather than the carefully planned and orchestrated campaign in front of them was, unfortunately, a tendency shared by some of the left organisations at the rally. Even though the bureaucracy’s attempt to present the killing as ‘tit-for-tat’ in practice offered a partial condoning of the murder, it was necessary because it led to the required solution – support for the British state and for the <acronym title="Royal Ulster Constabulary">RUC</acronym>/<acronym title="Police Service Nothern Ireland">PSNI</acronym>.</p>
<p>There are all sorts of difficulty with this position but the bureaucracy was able to resolve them &#8211; it thanked the workers forcoming and sent them home. If the workers had remained they may have asked some awkward questions.</p>
<h3>Tit-for-tat</h3>
<p>What does <q>tit-for-tat</q> mean after years of <acronym title="Irish Republican Army">IRA</acronym> ceasefire? Aren’t the bureaucracy providing cover for the loyalist killers? Should the trade unions support the <acronym title="Royal Ulster Constabulary">RUC</acronym>/<acronym title="Police Service Nothern Ireland">PSNI</acronym>? Their clear-up rate for sectarian killings since the <acronym title="Irish Republican Army">IRA</acronym> ceasefire began is 2%. In case after case they are charged with collusion.</p>
<p>Should the trade unions support the British state? Secretary of State, John Reid, has spent two years covering for the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> and claiming the loyalist ceasefire held as they waged systematic sectarian war. No arrests were made despite the British having heavily penetrated the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> – in fact they initially set it up and their agents ran major sections of the death squads. The day before the Trade Union rally Reid again claimed that a ‘minority’ of the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> were involved in the attacks. His response to the intimidation of schoolchildren at Holy Cross Primary School was to announce that the government would listen to loyalist <q>pain</q>.</p>
<p>In fact a lot of these questions were answered by Peter Bunting of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions in an interview following the rally. The bureaucracy, he said, were actively involved with social partners in the government and employers’ bodies in a strategy to resolve the issue. They were involved in negotiations and what the trade unions had to offer was training in negotiation skills and conflict resolution processes. So the trade unions are to support the British and employers in a strategy, not to face down and defeat sectarian hatred and bigotry, but help to incorporate it into state structures and to give the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> a stronger voice! It is hardly accidental that the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> shortly afterwards announced they were forming a new political research body to smash the Good Friday Agreement from the right. At the same time a new group emerged in North Belfast with renewed death threats against Catholic teachers. The Loyalist Reaction Force is yet another cover for the <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> and yet another sign that placating reaction will not end sectarian killings.</p>
<h3><q>Social partnership</q> equals social servitude</h3>
<p>Perhaps the strangest thing that Peter Bunting said was his reference to <q>social partners</q>. The bureaucracy can at least claim to have <q>social partners</q> in the 26 county state where they have a written agreement with employers and the government. No such agreement exists in the North. <q>Social Partnership</q>,where the employers and government agree to nothing and the trade unions agree to everything could more simply be called social servitude.</p>
<h3>The sectarian murder of Danny McColgan led to working class mobilisation. That mobilisation was shortlived.</h3>
<p>It was defeated by the social servitude of the trade union bureaucracy. All the same, the bureaucracy should beware of having to tell workers too often that supporting British appeasement of Loyalist sectarianism is a proper role for the movement founded by Connolly and Larkin.</p>
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