THE AFFILIATION DEBATE |
|
It may seem odd that supporters of the Third
International were debating whether or not to affiliate to the Labour
Party, when the International had stated that the correct attitude towards
the social democratic parties consisted of unrelenting struggle, unsparing
criticism and organisational separation. The Third International did not
require its supporters in Britain to transform the Labour Party into a
genuine socialist organisation -- as the WSF had aimed to do before 1920
-- but to form a separate communist party within which all revolutionaries
would be regrouped. This party would work to attract the working class,
including those who belonged to the Labour Party, into its ranks. However,
one of the tactics which was proposed to bring this about was that the
communist party should affiliate to the Labour Party. As was the case with
Revolutionary Parliamentarism, the tactic of affiliation to the Labour
Party was heatedly debated in the unity negotiations in Britain throughout
1920. |
|
The WSF Executive Committee’s instructions to
its delegates in June 1919, to stand fast on the principle of no
affiliation, remained the WSF’s position throughout. In March 1920, for
example, the Executive Committee repeated its view that ‘with regard to
the Unity Negotiations . . . we should not in any event compromise on the
question of Affiliation to the Labour Party’. [41]
Support for the WSF’s position arrived in May 1920, in the form of a
communiqué from the Third International’s Western European Sub-Bureau,
clarifying the decisions of the Amsterdam conference. Underlining the
conference’s opposition to affiliation, the communiqué stated that the
principle of non-affiliation was of such importance that it should take
precedence over the need for unity : ‘Much as we should like to see a
united Communist Party in England, it may be better to postpone this ideal
than to compromise on important issues.’ [42] |
41. Minutes
of WSF Executive Committee meeting 3 March 1920, Pankhurst Papers.
42. Workers' Dreadnought, 8 May
1920. |
This contribution to the affiliation debate
proved to be one of the Sub-Bureau’s final actions. The Sub-Bureau was
dominated by left communists, which was not to the liking of the Executive
Committee of the Communist International in Moscow. Consequently the ECCI
closed down the Sub-Bureau in May 1920 and transferred its
responsibilities to the German Communist Party, which by this time had
purged itself of the left communists in its ranks. |
|
Around the same time, Lenin published his
polemic against ‘Left-Wing’ Communism, An Infantile Disorder, in which
he argued that the British working class’s attachment to social
democratic organisations and ideas could only be broken if the Labour
Party actually took office and proved its uselessness: ‘If Henderson and
Snowden gain the victory over Lloyd George and Churchill, the majority
will in a brief space of time become disappointed in their leaders and
will begin to support Communism.’ [43]
Lenin advised communists in Britain to form an electoral alliance with the
Labour Party and help it to take power, so that the working class could
learn through its own experience that the Labour Party was an anti-working
class organisation. This was the meaning behind Lenin’s notorious remark
about communists supporting the Labour Party ‘in the same way as the
rope supports a hanged man’. [44] |
43. V.
Lenin, British Labour and British Imperialism (London: Lawrence
& Wishart, 1969), p. 85.
44. V. Lenin, British Labour and
British Imperialism (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1969), pp. 90-1. |
As we saw in Chapter 1, the WSF’s opposition
to affiliation was the greatest obstacle in the way of unity with other
groups in Britain. At the end of March 1920 the WSF Executive Committee
proposed that ‘if the BSP refuses to withdraw from the Labour Party, we
get on with [the] formation of [a] Communist Party’. [45]
This decision was put into practice in June 1920 when the WSF initiated
the formation of the CP(BSTI), which adopted non-affiliation as one of its
‘cardinal principles’. [46] At the same
time, although Guy Aldred and his comrades were not involved in the unity
negotiations, nor in the formation of the CP(BSTI), the Glasgow Communist
Group likewise declared its refusal to ‘identify itself with any Unity
Convention willing to recognise the Labour Party’. [47] |
45. Minutes
of WSF Executive Committee meeting 30 March 1920, Pankhurst Papers.
46. Workers' Dreadnought, 3 July
1920.
47. Spur, July 1920. |
At this stage the Dreadnought group put forward
three main arguments against affiliation. First, since the Labour Party’s
rise to power was ‘inevitable’, it would be a waste of time and effort
for communists to affiliate in order to assist Labour into office.
Instead, communists should devote all their energies to building an
organisation which would be ‘ready to attack’ Labour when it took
power. [48] |
48. Workers'
Dreadnought, 14 and 21 February 1920. |
Secondly, the Dreadnought group took issue with
Lenin’s argument that communists should affiliate to the Labour Party in
order to ‘keep in touch with the masses’, since revolutionary
propaganda could still influence Labour Party members without communists
actually having to be inside the Labour party. [49]
Thirdly, the Dreadnought argued that affiliation was incompatible with
other tactics advocated by the Third International. For example, Lenin
urged communists to work closely with the Labour Party, but he also hoped
to win the support of the British shop stewards’ movement and the
Industrial Workers of the World. These two objectives conflicted, since
the IWW and the shop stewards’ movement were both more or less hostile
to the existing trade unions, which formed the Labour Party’s backbone.
Affiliation would also hinder the application of Revolutionary
Parliamentarism, since communists inside the Labour Party would find it
harder to be selected as Parliamentary candidates than if they maintained
an independent existence. [50] |
49. Workers'
Dreadnought, 21 February 1920.
50. Workers' Dreadnought, 24
July 1920. |
In ‘Left-Wing’ Communism, An Infantile
Disorder Lenin had reserved judgement on the specific issue of
affiliation, since he had ‘too little material at my disposal on this
question, which is a particularly complex one’. [51]
In June 1920, however, Quilt and MacLaine, two delegates from the
pro-affiliation BSP, arrived in Russia for the Second Congress of the
Third International, and they persuaded the Comintern leaders that the
British Communist Party -- when it could finally be completed -- should be
affiliated with the Labour Party’. [52]
Consequently the ‘Theses On The Basic Tasks Of The Communist
International’ adopted by the Congress on 19 July 1920 came out |
51. V.
Lenin, 'Left-Wing' Communism, An Infantile Disorder (Peking:
Foreign Languages Press, 1975), p. 91.
52. J. Hulse, The Forming of the
Communist International (California: Stanford University Press, 1964),
p. 177. |
in favour of the affiliation of communist or sympathising groups and
organisations in England to the Labour Party . . . communists must do
everything they can, and even make certain organisational compromises,
to have the possibility of exercising influence on the broad working
masses, of exposing their opportunist leaders from a high tribune
visible to the masses, of accelerating the transference of political
power from the direct representatives of the bourgeoisie to the ‘labour
lieutenants of the capitalist class’, in order to cure the masses
quickly of their last illusions on this score. [53]
|
53. J.
Degras (ed.), The Communist International 1919-43: Documents, vol.
1 (London: Oxford University Press, 1956), p. 125. |
Lenin made two speeches at the Congress in
support of affiliation. On 23 July he stated: ‘Since it cannot be denied
that the British Labour Party is composed of workers, it is clear that
working in that party means co-operation of the vanguard of the working
class with the less advanced workers.’ [54]
On 6 August he admitted that ‘the Labour Party is not a political
workers’ party, but a thoroughly bourgeois party’, yet cited the BSP’s
experience of affiliation to support his argument that ‘a party
affiliated to the Labour Party is not only able to criticise sharply, but
is able openly and definitely to name the old leaders and to call them
social-traitors’. Finally he added: ‘If the British Communist Party
starts out by acting in a revolutionary manner in the Labour Party and if
Messrs Henderson are obliged to expel this Party, it will be a great
victory for the communist and labour movement in England’, because the
Labour Party would have exposed its counter-revolutionary nature before
its working-class supporters. [55] |
54.
Communist International, Publishing House, The Second Congress of the
Communist International (USA: Publishing House of the Communist
International, 1921), p. 74.
55. V. Lenin, British Labour and
British Imperialism (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1969), pp.
267-71. |
Sylvia Pankhurst attended the Second Congress
and spoke against affiliation in one of the debates about the tactics to
be adopted by the communist party in Britain. [56]
She also discussed the issue in private with Lenin, arguing that ‘the
disadvantages of affiliation outweighed the advantages’. However, Lenin
‘dismissed the subject as unimportant, saying that the Labour Party
would probably refuse to accept the Communist Party’s affiliation, and
that, in any case, the decision could be altered next year’. The issue
of affiliation was not a question of principle ‘but of tactics, which
may be employed advantageously in some phases of the changing situation
and discarded with advantage in others’. [57] |
56. See A.
Rosmer, Lenin's Moscow (London: Pluto Press, 1971)., pp. 76-7.
57. S. Pankhurst, Soviet Russia As I
Saw It (London: Dreadnought Publishers, 1921), pp. 45-6. |
While the Congress of the International was
taking place in Russia, the concluding communist unity convention, at
which the CPGB finally came into being, was held in London. On the eve of
the meeting the CP(BSTI) published an ‘Open Letter to the Delegates of
the Unity Convention’, urging them to reject any association with the
Labour Party. It argued that the Labour Party’s leaders were intent on
diverting the working class’s struggles into harmless Parliamentary and
reformist channels; that the trade unionists and parliamentarians who
controlled the Labour Party had a bourgeois mentality which led them to
support class collaboration and oppose class struggle : and that whereas
communists stood for the dictatorship of the workers councils, the Labour
Party based itself on bourgeois parliamentary democracy. [58]
Advice of a conflicting nature came in a message to the Unity Convention
from Lenin, criticising the CP(BSTI) and advocating ‘adhesion to the
Labour Party on condition of free and independent communist activity’. [59]
In the event Lenin’s arguments held sway, although the Convention’s
vote in favour of affiliation -- 100 to 85, with 20 abstentions -- could
hardly have been closer. |
58. Workers'
Dreadnought, 31 July 1920.
59. Letter dated 8 July 1920 in V.
Lenin, British Labour and British Imperialism (London: Lawrence
& Wishart, 1969), p. 261. |
Shortly after the Unity Convention the CPGB
wrote to the Labour Party asking to affiliate, but its application was
rejected on the grounds that ‘the objects of the Communist Party did not
appear to accord with the constitution, principles and programme of the
Labour Party'. [60] A lengthy series of
reapplications and refusals ensued. [61] The
initial rebuff was one factor which helped to ease the CP(BSTI)’s entry
into the CPGB at the Leeds Unity Convention in January 1921. The
Dreadnought’s account of the Leeds Convention noted with evident
satisfaction that the affiliation tactic had thus far remained a dead
letter. [62] |
60. L.
Macfarlane, The British Communist Party (London: MacGibbon and Kee,
1966), p. 94.
61. See J. Klugmann, History of the
Communist Party of Great Britain, vol. 1 (London: Lawrence &
Wishart, 1968)., pp. 230-4.
62. Workers' Dreadnought, 5
February 1921. |
After entering the CPGB the Dreadnought group
persisted in criticising the affiliation tactic. In July 1921, after the
Poplar Board of Guardians (whose Labour majority included Communist Party
members) had cut the rate of outdoor Poor Law relief, the Dreadnought
asked: |
|
Are we to exempt from criticism the Labour Party on a particular body,
because in that Labour Party are members of the Communist Party?
|
|
Or are we to criticise that Labour Party and ignore the fact that the
Communists are amongst the Labourists, sharing responsibility for the
actions we condemn, and even initiating them, as in the matter of
cutting down relief in Poplar?
|
|
Should we ignore the existence of such Communists, be sure the workers
would find them out. [63]
|
63. Workers'
Dreadnought, 30 July 1921. |
Criticism of the tactic was voiced again in
August 1921, after the CPGB and the Labour Party had both chosen to stand
candidates in the Caerphilly by-election. Once more the Dreadnought
attempted to expose the problems involved in applying the affiliation
tactic. If the CPGB had been affiliated to the Labour Party and none of
its members had been chosen as the candidate, would it have supported the
Labour candidate, even a right wing one, or would it have stood its own
candidate and risked expulsion? Was the CPGB candidate at Caerphilly a
ploy intended to force the Labour Party to accept the CPGB’s affiliation
as a lesser evil than seeing the working class vote split, or would the
CPGB stand candidates no matter what? In contrast to the confusions
surrounding affiliation the Dreadnought’s own position was clear : |
|
do not affiliate to the Labour Party or enter into compromising
alliances within it . . . Stand aside warning the workers that the
Labour Party cannot emancipate them, because it is merely reformist and
will not sweep away the capitalist system when it gets into power . . .
the best propaganda that Communists can do at this juncture is to let
the Labour Party continue with its effort to become ‘his Majesty’s
Government’, and to tell the workers that all such shams must pass;
that the way to emancipation is through Communism and the Soviets. [64]
|
64. Workers'
Dreadnought, 13 August 1921. |
Such forthright condemnation of CPGB policy was
one of the reasons why Pankhurst was expelled from the party in September
1921. However, the CPGB persisted with its attempts to affiliate to the
Labour Party, and it is important to examine these efforts briefly in
order to form a proper assessment of the affiliation debate. |
|
|
|
MISTAKEN ASSUMPTIONS |
|
On the sole occasion that representatives from
the Labour Party and the CPGB met face-to-face to discuss affiliation, the
contributions of the various participants revealed some of the ideas
behind the affiliation tactic as well as some of the problems involved in
trying to apply it. At certain moments during the meeting the CPGB frankly
admitted that its objective was ‘to be inside the Labour Party in order
to meet its enemies face to face, and to expose in front of the rank and
file of the Labour movement the political trickery of [list of names] and
other Labour lieutenants of the capitalist class’. Thus Arthur
Henderson, one of the Labour participants, truly grasped the purpose of
affiliation when he complained that the CPGB had ‘no intention of being
loyal . . . Mr Hodgson hopes that the present crisis will show the masses
the pernicious rule of the leaders of the Labour Party. It is for that
reason that they will enter the Labour Party; in order to denounce the
leaders.’ |
|
At other moments, however, the CPGB
representatives claimed very different intentions. When asked whether the
CPGB was hoping, as Fred Hodgson had been reported as saying, ‘to sever
the connection between the masses and the Labour Party’, Arthur MacManus
replied that this ‘does not represent Mr Hodgson’s opinion or the
Party’s opinion’. According to MacManus the CPGB believed that |
|
any political organisation that hopes to influence the mass of the
working class in this country in any particular direction in
dissociation or in a detached form from the existing Labour Party, would
simply be futile, and that consequently the effective way to do it was
to operate their opinions inside the Labour Party and gradually pursue
their opinions in such a way that if it did succeed in influencing
opinion, the reformation would be based upon the Labour Party
itself.
|
|
As MacManus put it later: ‘We hope to make
the Labour Party the Communist Party of Great Britain.’. [65]
These latter remarks support the view that many CPGB members sought to
turn the Labour Party into a revolutionary organisation and failed to
understand that the affiliation tactic was not intended to radicalise the
Labour Party but to expose, discredit and destroy it. [66] |
65. See
'Communist Party Affiliation to the Labour Party: Transcript of the
Meeting of 29 December 1921' (1974) in Society for the Study of Labour
History Bulletin, no. 29 (Autumn 1974), pp. 1034.
66. See L. Macfarlane, The British
Communist Party (London: MacGibbon and Kee, 1966), p. 109. |
The suggestion that supporters of affiliation
failed to grasp its proper aims and intentions is perhaps not surprising,
considering the convoluted and manipulative thinking which lay behind the
tactic. For example, Lenin advised communists to help the Labour Party
into office, so that the working class could learn from its own experience
that the Labour Party did not represent its interests and then join the
Communist Party. What Lenin failed to explain was why workers should
suddenly have wanted to join the Communist Party so soon after making the
painful discovery that what that Party had advocated (a Labour government)
was of no worth to them whatsoever ! |
|
The longer the Labour Party persisted in its
refusal to accept the CPGB’s advances, however, the more the whole
debate over affiliation tended to become academic, since hardly any of the
claims made on either side could actually be tested in practice. One of
the few claims on which a definite judgement could be passed was the Third
International’s contention that if the Labour Party took office it would
cure the masses of their last illusions in the labour lieutenants of the
capitalist class. This idea needs to be examined closely, since it was
shared by the anti-parliamentary communists. |
|
Guy Aldred’s description of Labour as ‘the
last hope of the capitalist system, the final bulwark of class-society’ [67]
suggested that only the Labour Party stood between the collapse of
capitalism and the victory of communism. This was a view also held by the
Dreadnought group. In August 1921, for example, Sylvia Pankhurst urged
communists to let the Labour Party ‘get into power and prove its
uselessness and powerlessness’. [68]
Pankhurst returned to this scenario in June 1923, when she predicted the
consequences of a Labour government taking office: ‘The workers,
expecting an improvement in their conditions, will turn to the Left. The
Labour Party, unable to alter the position of the workers without
overthrowing capitalism, will see its popularity departing and the growth
of Left influences.’ [69] Similarly, in
December 1923 Pankhurst predicted that if a Labour government failed to
satisfy its supporters’ aspirations ‘the ideals of the workers will
speedily advance beyond the Labour Party’. [70] |
67. Commune,
September 1923.
68. Workers' Dreadnought, 13
August 1921.
69. Workers' Dreadnought, 16
June 1923.
70. Workers' Dreadnought, 22
December 1923. |
After the announcement of the December 1923
general election results Sylvia Pankhurst commented that ‘the increase
in the Labour vote is pleasing to us, because we regard it as a sign that
popular opinion is on the move, and ere long will have left the Labour
Party far behind’. [71] Although the Labour
Party was not socialist, its opponents had portrayed it as such during the
election campaign; working-class Labour voters had therefore believed that
they were voting for socialism. When the Labour Party did not achieve
socialism its supporters would turn elsewhere to fulfil their aspirations
: ‘in the intention of the electors [Labour Party government] is an
evolutionary stage beyond government by the confessedly pro-capitalist
parties . . . The strength of the real Left movement . . . will develop as
all the Parliamentary parties fail in their turn’. [72] |
71. Workers'
Dreadnought, 15 December 1923.
72. Workers' Dreadnought, 17 May
1924. |
These expectations were put to the test in
January 1924 when the Labour leader Ramsay MacDonald was invited to form a
government. According to Harry Pollitt’s analysis, at the end of 1924
this first Labour government was ousted from power ‘because of the
disillusionment of the masses with the policy of the Labour leaders’.
The large majority with which the new government took office was ‘in
itself evidence of the workers’ disgust with their leaders’
pusillanimity’. [73] This sounds like the
scenario envisaged by Lenin and Pankhurst -- except that it was not to the
Communist Party that workers had turned in disgust and disillusionment
with Labour; the government which replaced Labour in office was formed by
the Conservative party ! Furthermore, the Labour Party received over a
million more votes in the 1924 general election than it had done before
taking office, while the CPGB’s total vote, and its average per
candidate, both fell. [74] |
73. H.
Pollitt, Serving My Time (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1940),
pp. 197 and 199.
74. See figures in W. Kendall, The
Revolutionary Movement in Britain 1900-21 (London: Weidenfeld &
Nicolson, 1969), pp. 118-31. |
Yet the greatest illusion of the whole
affiliation debate had little to do with what the CPGB could or could not
achieve once it had affiliated, nor with the consequences of the Labour
Party taking office. It was that the Labour Party would ever ‘submit to
being penetrated and manipulated by the Communists’ in the first place. [75]
The Labour leaders’ reluctance to submit themselves to criticism,
denunciation and exposure was evident at their meeting with
representatives of the CPGB, and probably accounts for the contradictory
interpretations of the affiliation tactic put forward by the CPGB members.
Lenin did not take this factor into account: ‘Communist infiltration
could be real and effective only if the non-Communist "partner"
consented to play the role that Lenin had written for him, that of victim
and dupe. But if the partner, here the Labour Party, refused to play
along, the tactic naturally failed.’ [76]
Lenin had sought to support the Labour Party as the rope supports a hanged
man; the Labour Party simply refused to put its head in the noose. |
75. B.
Lazitch and M. Drachkovitch, Lenin and the Comintern, vol. I
(California: Stanford University Press, 1972), 1972, p. 263.
76. B. Lazitch and M. Drachkovitch, Lenin
and the Comintern, vol. I (California: Stanford University Press,
1972), p. 364. |
|
|
ANTI-PARLIAMENTARY OPPOSITION TO THE LABOUR
PARTY AFTER 1921 |
|
After Sylvia Pankhurst’s expulsion from the
CPGB, every organisation associated with the Dreadnought included
opposition to affiliation among its principles. The position of the
Communist Workers’ Party was ‘to refuse affiliation or co-operation
with the Labour Party and all Reformist organisations’. [77]
The All-Workers’ Revolutionary Union stated that it was ‘opposed to
the Reformist and Counter-Revolutionary Labour Party, and rejects all
affiliations and co-operation with it and other Reformist Parties’. [78]
The manifesto of the Unemployed Workers’ Organisation announced: ‘We
are opposed to affiliation to a counter-revolutionary party [such] as the
Labour Party.’ [79] |
77. Workers'
Dreadnought, 11 February 1922.
78. Workers' Dreadnought, 23
September 1922.
79. Workers' Dreadnought, 7 July
1923. |
In November-December 1922 the Fourth Congress
of the Third International approved the tactic of the United Front between
the Communist and Social Democratic Parties in order to defend the working
class against the capitalist offensive which had been gathering force
since the end of 1920. The Dreadnought group completely opposed the United
Front. So too did Guy Aldred. In a debate with Alexander Ritchie in the
Glasgow Worker during 1922, Aldred explained his reasons for rejecting the
tactic. The Labour Party’s leaders were a collection of ‘traitors’
who had repeatedly betrayed the working class. Communists could not ‘achieve
their revolutionary purpose’ by uniting with ‘Mensheviks and petty
reformers’. Instead of allying with the Labour Party, communists should
be redoubling their efforts to ‘unite with themselves’. [80]
In 1923 Sidney Hanson (a London member of the APCF) added another argument
against the tactic: ‘the Communist Party, seeking affiliation to the
Labour Party, proposes a united front with it, and strengthens the
illusion that the Labour Party is the party of the working class, the
movement towards emancipation. But the Labour Party is really the
anti-working class movement, the last earthwork of reaction.’ [81] |
80. See Worker,
15 and 29 July, 19 and 26 August, and 9 and 16 September 1922.
81. Commune, November 1923. |
|
|
LABOUR IN OFFICE |
|
The acid test of the anti-parliamentarians’
view of the Labour Party as an anti-working class organisation came when
the Labour Party actually took power in Britain. The remainder of this
chapter therefore concentrates on the anti-parliamentary communists’
attitude towards the Labour Party in office, using the examples of local
government in the East London district of Poplar (1921-3) and the first
national Labour government (1924). |
|
During 1921 an ‘employers’ offensive’ got
under way in Britain. involving a widespread attack on working-class
living standards and working conditions. In its role as an employer of
wage labour the state joined in this offensive. In the summer of 1921, for
example. the Labour-controlled Poplar Board of Guardians reduced the rate
of outdoor Poor Law relief and cut municipal employees’ wages. At the
time of these actions the Dreadnought stated: ‘The Labour Party is
avowedly a Reformist Party; its effort is to work towards social
betterment within the capitalist system.’ [82]
The problem was that any party which sought to take over the
administration of capitalism in order to run the system in the workers’
interests would quickly discover that the initial step ruled out the
proposed objective, and would find itself having to run capitalism in the
only possible way: that is, against the interests of the working class. |
82. Workers'
Dreadnought, 30 June 1921. |
In January 1922 the Poplar Board was petitioned
by National Unemployed Workers’ Movement members demanding ‘work or
full maintenance’. Under this pressure the Board approved a scale of
relief in excess of the NUWM’s request. At its next meeting, however,
the Board found that its financial resources would not cover the promised
rate of relief. The imperatives of administering capitalism had reasserted
themselves. The Board cancelled its previous decision, causing hundreds of
angry unemployed workers to occupy the building where the Board was
meeting. Melvina Walker, a Dreadnought group member and ‘well-known
local activist’, told the Board: ‘You appear to be hopeless and are
merely the bulwark between us and the capitalist class to keep us in
subjection.’ [83] |
83. Quoted
in N. Branson, Poplarism 1919-25 (London: Lawrence & Wishart,
1979), p. 128. |
A similar case occurred in 1923 when dock
workers involved in an unofficial strike applied to the Poplar Board for
relief. Their application was granted, but this precipitated another
financial crisis. Faced with having to choose between taking the side of
the workers or continuing to administer a part of the capitalist system,
the Board opted for the latter and reduced its rates of relief. On 26
September a demonstration by the Unemployed Workers’ Organisation,
demanding that the Board should reverse its decision, ended in another
occupation of the Board’s premises. The police were summoned and with
the Board’s consent forced their way into the building, batoning
everyone in their path (the Dreadnought reported ‘Upwards Of Forty
People Badly Hurt, Hundreds Of Slightly Wounded’). ‘One thing stands
out clearly’, the Dreadnought commented : |
|
the result of working class representatives taking part in the
administration of capitalist machinery, is that the working class
representatives become responsible for maintaining capitalist law and
order and for enforcing the regulations of the capitalist system itself
. . . working class representatives who become councillors and guardians
assist in the maintenance of the capitalist system, and, sooner or
later, must inevitably find themselves in conflict with the workers . .
. The batoning of the Unemployed in Poplar is the first instance of the
Labour Party being brought into forcible conflict with the labouring
population in defence of the capitalist system . . . As the capitalist
system nears its end, the reformists who desire to prevent the
catastrophic breakdown of the system will inevitably find themselves in
a position of acute antagonism to the people who are striving to destroy
the system which oppresses them. [84]
|
84. Workers'
Dreadnought, 6 October 1923. |
When the Labour Party became the national
government in January 1924, the APCF changed the masthead motto of its
journal from ‘A Herald Of The Coming Storm’ to ‘An Organ Of His
Majesty’s Communist Opposition’, implying opposition to His Majesty’s
government, that is, the Labour Party. The same issue also contained a
lengthy article detailing the new Labour Ministers’ record of
anti-working class statements and actions. [85] |
85. Commune,
February 1924. |
A month later the APCF published an article
titled ‘The Two Programmes’. This outlined a twelve-point ‘Parliamentarian’
programme and opposed each of its points with ‘Anti-Parliamentarian’
positions. The ‘Parliamentarian’ programme amounted to ‘the
continuation of capitalism’; among its points were: |
|
2. Workers’ Interests subservient to capitalist expediency . . .
4. Parliament -- controlled by High Finance.
5. Nationalisation of some industries, yielding profits to state
investors and loan sharks.
6. Political administration of Capitalism by workers . . .
11. Power left to the bourgeoisie.
|
|
Alongside each of these points the ‘Anti-Parliamentarian’
programme for ‘the overthrow of capitalism’ as set out : |
|
2. Development of class conscious understanding. Undermining capitalist
interests . . .
4. The Soviet or Industrial Council, directly controlled by the
wealth-producers.
5. Socialisation of all industry.
6. No political administration of Capitalism . . .
11. All Power to the Workers. [86]
|
86. Commune,
March 1924. |
In context the ‘Parliamentarian’ programme
was obviously meant to describe the Labour Party’s policies. From the
outset, therefore, the APCF was unambiguous in its opposition to the new
Labour government. |
|
The comments the Dreadnought group had made
about the role of the Labour Party in the administration of the local
capitalist state in Poplar would lead one to expect the group to have
shared the APCF’s attitude. In fact, this was not so. When the Labour
government took office in the middle of a railway engineers’ strike the
Dreadnought stated : ‘A Capitalist Government has to prove to its makers
and clients -- the capitalists -- that it is able to ensure the best
possible conditions for the business of capitalism. A Labour Government
has no such duty.’ The Dreadnought proceeded to demand the use of the
Emergency Powers Act against the railway owners, and nationalisation of
the railways. [87] The railway strike was
followed by a dock workers’ strike in February. Again the Dreadnought
argued: ‘impartiality should not be expected of a Labour Government,
nor, indeed. tolerated from it . . . The duty of a Labour Government is to
act as a friend of the workers in all cases.’ [88] |
87. Workers'
Dreadnought, 26 January 1924.
88. Workers' Dreadnought, 23
February 1924. |
Comments such as these sowed dangerous
illusions. By drawing a distinction between what capitalist governments
had done and what a Labour government ought to do, the Dreadnought implied
that Labour was not a capitalist party and that workers should expect
Labour’s support in their struggles. However, the actions of the Labour
government soon dispelled some of these illusions. During the dock strike,
for example, the Labour Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald revealed that the
government planned to use strike-breakers against the dockers : ‘The
Government will not fail to take what steps are necessary to secure
transport of necessary food supplies, and has already set up the nucleus
of an organisation.’ [89] Similarly, when
London transport workers struck in March 1924 the government appointed a
Chief Civil Commissioner to administer the Emergency Powers Act and made
preparations to run bus and tram services with military and naval labour.
Consequently, in March-April 1924 the Dreadnought group began to adopt a
more critical attitude towards the Labour government : |
89. Quoted
in G. Aldred, Socialism And Parliament Part II Government By Labour: A
Record of Facts (Glasgow: Strickland Press, 1942), p. 31. |
The Labour Government has again shown that it cannot work Socialist
miracles with capitalist elements and by capitalist methods.
|
|
The more the Labour Government applies itself to an honest attempt to
ameliorate social conditions [sic] the more it is seen that the only
hope of real all-round improvement is to attack the system at the root. [90]
|
90. Workers'
Dreadnought, 8 March and 12 April 1924. |
The Labour government was defeated in the
Commons on 8 October 1924 and dissolved itself the following day. After
the ensuing general election Ramsay MacDonald resigned from office on 4
November. The Workers’ Dreadnought had ceased publication in June 1924,
so we lack its definitive assessment of the first Labour government’s
record. The APCF, on the other hand, continued to publish the Commune and
sniped at the Labour government throughout its term in office, but did not
publish a full-length appraisal of the Labour government until two years
later, with the article ‘Lest We Forget: The Record Of Labour
Parliamentarism’ in the October 1926 Commune. This article was also
published as a pamphlet titled ‘Labour’ In Office: A Record, first in
1926 and then in revised form in 1928 and 1942. These works, which belong
outside the 1917-24 period, are discussed in Chapter 5. For the time being
it will suffice to note that the APCF’s considered opinion of the 1924
Labour government was essentially that it had ‘functioned no differently
from any other Capitalist Government’ ; [91]
none of Labour’s actions in office had given the anti-parliamentarians
cause to revise their pre-1924 views. When we examine the
anti-parliamentarians’ continued propagation of their ideas in the late
1920s and early 1930s, we will see that opposition to the Labour Party as
an anti-working class organisation remained one of the
anti-parliamentarians’ basic tenets. Before that, however, this account
of the anti-parliamentarians’ basic principles can be completed by a
discussion of the labour movement’s industrial wing -- the trade unions. |
91. G.
Aldred, Government By Labour: A Record of Facts (Glasgow: Bakunin
Press, 1928), p. 6. |