{"id":2043,"date":"2014-11-01T00:00:47","date_gmt":"2014-11-01T05:00:47","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/?p=2043"},"modified":"2021-11-18T13:57:11","modified_gmt":"2021-11-18T18:57:11","slug":"what-is-political-party-for-marxism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/?p=2043","title":{"rendered":"What is political party for Marxism?"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Democratic revolution and the contradiction of capital<\/h2>\n<h3>On Mike Macnair\u2019s <em>Revolutionary Strategy <\/em>(London: November Publications, 2008)<\/h3>\n<h2>Chris Cutrone<\/h2>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\"><a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/category\/pr\/issue-71\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>Platypus Review <\/em>71<\/a> | November 2014<\/p>\n<p>Mike Macnair\u2019s <em>Revolutionary Strategy <\/em>is a wide-ranging, comprehensive and very thorough treatment of the problem of revolutionary politics and the struggle for socialism. His focus is the question of political party and it is perhaps the most substantial attempt recently to address this problem.<\/p>\n<p>Macnair\u2019s initial motivation was engagement with the debates in and around the French Fourth International Trotskyist Ligue Communiste R\u00e9volutionnaire prior to its forming the Nouveau Parti Anticapitaliste electoral party in 2009. The other major context for the discussion was the Iraq anti-war movement and the U.K. Respect electoral party, which was formed around this in 2004, with the Socialist Workers Party driving the process. This raised issues not only of political party, democracy and the state, but also united fronts among socially and politically heterogeneous groups and the issue of imperialism. One key contribution by Macnair to the latter discussion is to raise and call attention to the difference between Bukharin\u2019s and Lenin\u2019s writings on imperialism, in which the former attributed the failure of (metropolitan) workers\u2019 organization around imperialism to a specifically <em>political<\/em> compromise with the (national) state, whereas Lenin had, in his famous 1916 pamphlet, characterized this in terms of compromised \u201ceconomic\u201d interest. So with imperialism the question is the political party and the state.<\/p>\n<p>Macnair observes that there are at least two principal phases of the party question: from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries; and beginning in the middle of the 19th century. He relates these phases to the development of the problem of the state. He offers that constitutional government involves the development of the \u201cparty state\u201d and that revolutionary politics takes its leave of such a \u201cparty state\u201d (which includes multiple parties all supporting the constitutional regime). Furthermore, Macnair locates this problem properly as one of the nation-state within the greater economic and political system of capitalism. By conflating the issue of government with \u201crule of law,\u201d however, Macnair mistakes the contradiction of the modern state and its politics in capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>Elsewhere, Macnair has criticized sectarian \u201cMarxism\u201d for \u201ctheoretical overkill\u201d in a \u201cphilosophy trap.\u201d But he might thus mistake effect for cause: \u201cphilosophical\u201d questions might be the expression of a trap in which one is nonetheless caught; and Marxist \u201ctheory\u201d might go beyond today\u2019s practical political concerns. Philosophy may not be the trap in which we are caught but rather an expression of our attempts\u2014merely\u2014to think our way out of it. The mismatch of Marxism today at the level of \u201ctheoretical\u201d or \u201cphilosophical\u201d issues might point to a <em>historical<\/em> disparity or inadequacy: we may have fallen below past thresholds and horizons of Marxism. The issue of political party may be one that we would need to re-attain rather than immediately confront in the present. Hence, \u201cstrategy\u201d in terms of Marxism may not be the political issue now that it once was. This means that where past Marxists might appear to be in error it may actually be <em>our<\/em> fault, or, a fault in the present situation. How can the history of Marxism help us address this?<\/p>\n<h2>New politics<\/h2>\n<p>The key to this issue can be found in Macnair\u2019s own distinction of the new phenomenon of party politics in the late 19th century, after the revolutions of 1848 and in the era of what Marx called \u201cBonapartism,\u201d the pattern set by Louis Bonaparte, who became Napoleon III in the French Second Empire, with its emulation by Bismarck in the Prussian Empire, as well as Disraeli\u2019s Tories in the U.K., among other examples. While Macnair finds some precedent for this in the 18th century U.K. and its political crises as well as in the course of the Great French Revolution 1789-1815 especially regarding Napoleon Bonaparte, the difference of the late 19th century party-politics from prior historical precedence is important to specify. For Macnair it is the world system of capitalism and its undermining of democracy.<\/p>\n<p>It is important to recall Marx\u2019s formulation, in the <em>18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte<\/em>, that (neo-)Bonapartism was the historical condition in which the bourgeoisie could \u201cno longer\u201d and the proletariat \u201cnot yet\u201d rule politically the modern society of capitalism. Bonapartism was the symptom of this crisis of capitalism and hence of the need for socialism revealed by the unprecedented failure of revolution in 1848\u2014by contrast with 1830 as well as 1789 and 1776 and the Dutch Revolt and English Civil War of the 17th century. The bourgeoisie\u2019s \u201cruling\u201d character was not a legal-constitutional system of government descended from the 17th century political and social revolutions in Holland and England so much as it was a form of civil society, a revolutionary system of bourgeois social relations that was supposed to subordinate the state. What requires explanation is the 19th century slipping of the state from adequate social control, and its \u201crising above\u201d the contending political groups and social classes, as a power in itself. Even if Bonapartism in Marx\u2019s late 19th century sense was the expression of a potential inherent in the forms of bourgeois politics emerging much earlier, there is still the question of why it was not realized so until after 1848. There is also the matter of why Marx characterized Louis Napoleon as a \u201clesser\u201d and \u201cfarcical\u201d phenomenon of post-1848 history by contrast with Napoleon Bonaparte\u2019s \u201ctragedy\u201d in the Great Revolution. It was not the mere fact of repetition, but <em>why<\/em> and <em>how<\/em> history \u201crepeated itself,\u201d and repeated with a <em>difference<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>This was according to Marx the essential condition for politics after 1848, the condition for political parties in capitalism. That condition was not only or primarily a matter of politics due to constitutional legal forms of bourgeois property and its social relations, but rather was for Marx the expression of the crisis of those forms as a function of the Industrial Revolution. There was for Marx an important contradiction between the democratic revolution and the proletarianization of society in capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>Macnair addresses this by specifying the \u201cproletariat\u201d as all those in society \u201cdependent on the total wage fund\u201d\u2014as opposed to those (presumably) dependent upon \u201ccapital.\u201d This is clearly not a matter of economics, because distinguishing between those depending on wages as opposed to capital is a political matter of differentiation: all the intermediate strata depending on both the wage fund and capital would need to be compelled to take sides in any political dispute between the prerogatives of wages versus capital. Macnair addresses this through the struggle for democracy. But this does not pursue the contradiction far enough. For the wage fund according to Marx is a form of capital: it is \u201cvariable\u201d as opposed to \u201cconstant capital.\u201d So the proletarianization of society according to Marx is not addressed adequately as a matter of the condition of labor, but rather the social dependence on and domination by capital. And capital for Marx is not synonymous with the private property in the means of production belonging to the capitalists, but rather the relation of wages, or the resources for the reproduction of labor-power (including the \u201cmeans of consumption\u201d), to society as a whole. This is what makes it a <em>political<\/em> matter\u2014a matter of politics in <em>society<\/em>\u2014rather than merely the struggle of one group against another.<\/p>\n<p>Macnair characterizes the theory of Marxism specifically as one that recognizes the necessity of those dependent upon the wage fund <em>per se<\/em> to overcome capitalism; he characterizes the struggle for this as the struggle for democracy, with the adequate horizon of this as \u201ccommunism\u201d at a global scale, as opposed to \u201csocialism\u201d which may be confined to the internal politics of individual nation-states. Macnair points out that the working class is necessarily in the \u201cvanguard\u201d of such struggle for adequate social democratization insofar as it comes up against the condition of capitalism <em>negatively<\/em>, as a <em>problem<\/em> to be overcome. The working class is thus defined \u201cnegatively\u201d with respect to the social conditions to be overcome rather than \u201cpositively\u201d according to its activity, its concrete labor in society. The goal is to change the conditions for political participation as well as economic activity in society.<\/p>\n<h2>Class and history<\/h2>\n<p>Conventionally, Marxists have distinguished among political parties on their \u201cclass basis,\u201d regarding various parties as \u201crepresenting\u201d different class groups: \u201cbourgeois,\u201d \u201cpetit bourgeois\u201d and \u201cproletarian.\u201d This is complicated by classic characterizations such as that by Lenin of the U.K. Labour Party as a \u201cbourgeois workers\u2019 party.\u201d Furthermore, there has been the bedeviling question of what is included in the \u201cpetite bourgeoisie.\u201d But Marxists (such as Lenin) did not define politics \u201csociologically\u201d but rather <em>historically<\/em>: as representing not the interests of members of various groups but rather different \u201cideological\u201d horizons of politics and for the transformation of society. So, for instance, what made the Socialist Revolutionaries in the Russian Revolution of 1917 \u201crepresent\u201d the peasants was not so much their positions on agrarian matters as the \u201cpetit bourgeois\u201d horizon of politics they shared with the peasants as petty proprietors. SRs were not necessarily themselves petty proprietors\u2014they were like Lenin \u201cpetit bourgeois intellectuals\u201d \u2014but rather had in common with the peasants a form of <em>discontent<\/em> with capitalism, but one \u201cideologically\u201d hemmed in by what Marxism regarded a limited horizon.<\/p>\n<p>In Marx\u2019s (in)famous phrase from <em>The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte<\/em>, the peasants as a group, as a \u201cpetit bourgeois\u201d \u201csack of potatoes\u201d of smallholders, could not \u201crepresent themselves\u201d but must rather \u201cbe represented\u201d\u2014as they were, according to Marx, by Louis Bonaparte\u2019s Second Empire\u2019s succeeding the counterrevolutionary Party of Order in 1848. Marx called attention to the issue of <em>how<\/em> representation functioned in the politics of capitalism. Likewise, \u201cbourgeois\u201d parties were not so much pro-capitalist as much as they sought to manage the problems of capitalism from a certain historical perspective: that of \u201ccapital.\u201d This was the horizon of their politics; whereas \u201cpetit bourgeois\u201d parties were concerned with the perspective of smaller property holdings; and \u201cworkers parties\u201d that of wage-labor. To be a \u201cbourgeois workers\u2019 party\u201d such as Labour in the U.K. meant to represent the horizon of wage-labor in terms compatible with (especially but not exclusively U.K. \u201cnational\u201d) capital. This was the character of ideology and political action\u2014\u201cconsciousness\u201d\u2014which was not reducible to, let alone determined by, economic interest of a particular concrete social group.<\/p>\n<p>So, various political parties as well as different political forms represented different <em>historical<\/em> horizons for discontents within capitalism. For Marxists, only \u201cproletarian socialist\u201d politics could represent adequately the <em>problem<\/em>\u2014the crisis and contradiction\u2014of capitalism. Others ideologically obscured it. A \u201cbourgeois workers\u2019 party\u201d would be a phenomenon of \u201cBonapartism\u201d insofar as \u201cnature abhors a vacuum\u201d and it filled the space evacuated by the failure of bourgeois politics while also falling short of the true historical horizon of the political tasks of proletarian socialism. It was a phenomenon of the contradiction of <em>capitalism<\/em> in a particular way\u2014as were <em>all<\/em> political parties from a Marxist perspective.<\/p>\n<p>There are great merits and significant clarity to Macnair\u2019s approach to the problem of politics in capitalism and what it would require to transcend this.<\/p>\n<p>The issue, though, is his taking as a norm the parliamentary system of government in the European mode and thus neglecting the U.S. constitutional system. For at issue is the potential disparity and antagonism between legislative and executive authority, or between the law and its enforcement. The American system of \u201cchecks and balances\u201d was meant to uphold liberal democracy and prevent the tyranny of either the executive or the legislative (or the judicial) aspects of government. There is an important domain of political struggle already, between executive and legislative authority, and this would affect any struggle to transform politics. The question is the source of this antagonism. It is not merely formal. If the \u201cseparation of powers\u201d in the U.S. Constitutional system has served undemocratic ends, it is not essentially because it was <em>intended <\/em>to do so. The problem of adequate and proper democratic authority in society is not reducible to the issue of purported \u201cmob rule.\u201d Any form of government could be perverted to serve capitalism. So the issue is indeed one of <em>politics<\/em> as such, the social content of or what informs any form of political authority.<\/p>\n<h2>\u201cParty of the new type\u201d?<\/h2>\n<p>Macnair notes potential deficits and inadequacies in the Third Communist International\u2019s endorsement of \u201csoviet\u201d or \u201cworkers\u2019 council\u201d government, with its attempt to overcome the difference between legislative and executive authority, which seems to reproduce the problem Macnair finds in parliamentary government. For him, executive authority eludes responsibility in the same way that capitalist private property eludes the law constitutionally. This is the source of Macnair\u2019s conflation of liberalism and Bonapartism, as if the problem of capitalism merely played out in terms of liberalism rather than contradicting it. Liberal democracy should not be conceived as the constitutional limit on democracy demanded by capitalist private property. The \u201cdemocratic republic\u201d Macnair calls for by contrast should not be conceived as the opposite of liberal democracy. For capitalism does not only contradict the democratic republic but also liberal democracy, leading to Bonapartism, or, <em>illiberal<\/em> democracy.<\/p>\n<p>Dick Howard, in <em>The Specter of Democracy<\/em> has usefully investigated Marx\u2019s original formulations on the problem of politics and capitalism, tracing these back to the origins of modern democracy in the American and French Revolutions of the 18th century, specifying the problem in common between (American) \u201crepublican democracy\u201d and (French) \u201cdemocratic republicanism.\u201d Howard finds in both antinomical forms of modern democracy the danger of \u201canti-politics,\u201d or of society eluding adequate political expression and direction, to which either democratic authority or liberalism can lead. Howard looks to Marx as a specifically political thinker on this problem to suggest the direction that struggle against it must take. Socialism for Marx in Howard\u2019s view would fulfill the potential that has been otherwise limited by both republican democracy and democratic republicanism\u2014or by both liberalism and socialism.<\/p>\n<p>Macnair equates communism with democratic republicanism and thus treats it as a goal to be achieved and a norm to be realized. Moreover, he thinks that this goal can only be achieved by the practice of democratic republicanism in the present: the political party for communism must exemplify democratic republicanism in practice, as an alternative to the politics of the \u201cparty-state\u201d in capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>Marx, by contrast, addressed communism as merely the \u201cnext step\u201d and a \u201cone-sided negation\u201d of capitalism rather than as the end goal of emancipation: it is not the opposite of capitalism in the sense of an undialectical antithesis but rather an expression of it. Indeed, for Marx, communism would be the completion and fulfillment of capitalism, and not in terms of one or some aspects over others but rather in and through its central self-contradiction, which is political as well as economic, or, \u201cpolitical-economic.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>What this requires is recognizing the non-identity of various aspects of capitalism as bound up in and part and parcel of the process of capitalism\u2019s potential transformation into communism. For example, the non-identity of law (as legislated), its (judicial) interpretation, and (executive) enforcement, or, the non-identity of civil society and the state, as expressed by the specific phenomenon of modern political parties. States are compulsory; political parties are voluntary, civil society formations. And governments are not identical with legislatures. Politics as conditioned by capitalism could provide the <em>means<\/em> but cannot already embody the <em>ends<\/em> of transforming capitalism through communism. If communism is to be pursued, as Macnair argues, by the means of democratic republicanism, then we must recognize what has become of the democratic revolution in capitalism. It has not been merely corrupted and degraded but rather rendered self-contradictory, which is a different matter. The concrete manifestations of democracy in capitalism are not only opportunist compromises but also struggles to assert <em>politics<\/em>.<\/p>\n<h2>Symptomatic socialism<\/h2>\n<p>The history of the movement for socialism or communism generally and of Marxism in particular demonstrates the problem of capitalism through symptomatic phenomena of attempts to overcome it. This is not a history of trials and errors but rather of discontents and exemplary forms of politics, borne of the crisis of capitalism as it has been experienced through various phases, none of which have been superseded entirely.<\/p>\n<p>Lenin and Trotsky were careful to avoid, as Trotsky put it, in <em>The Lesson of October<\/em> (1924), the \u201cfetishizing\u201d of the soviet or workers\u2019 council form of politics and (revolutionary) government. Rather, Marxists addressed this as an emergent phenomenon of a specific phase of history, one which they sought to advance through the proletarian socialist revolution. But, according to Lenin, in <em>\u201cLeft-Wing\u201d Communism: An Infantile Disorder<\/em>, the soviet form did not mean that preceding historical forms of politics, for instance parliaments and trade unions, had been superseded in terms of being left behind. Indeed, it was precisely the failure of the world proletarian socialist\u2014communist\u2014revolution of 1917-19 that necessitated a \u201cretreat\u201d and reconsideration of perspectives and political prognoses. Certain forms and arenas of political struggle had come and gone. But, according to Lenin and Trotsky, the political <em>party<\/em> for communism remained indispensable. What did they mean by this?<\/p>\n<p>Lenin and Trotsky meant something other than what Rosa Luxemburg\u2019s biographer J.P. Nettl called the \u201cinheritor party\u201d or \u201cstate within the state\u201d exemplified by the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) as the flagship party of the Second International. The social-democratic party was not intended by Luxemburg, Lenin or Trotsky to be the democratic republican alternative to capitalism. They did not aim to replace one constitutional party-state with another. Or at least they did not intend so beyond the \u201cdictatorship of the proletariat,\u201d which was meant to rapidly transition out of capitalism to socialism. Beyond that, a qualitative development was envisioned, beyond \u201cbourgeois right\u201d and its forms of social relations\u2014and of politics. \u201cCommunism\u201d remained the essential horizon of potential transformation.<\/p>\n<p>One key distinction that Macnair elides in his account is the development of bourgeois social relations within pre-bourgeois civilization that will not be replicated by the struggle for socialism: socialism does not develop within capitalism so much as the proletariat represents the potential negation of bourgeois social relations that has developed within capitalism. The proletariat is a phenomenon of crisis in the existing society, not the exemplar of the new society. Socialism is not meant to be a proletarian society but rather its overcoming. Capitalism is already a proletarianized society. Hence, Bonapartism as the manifestation of the need for the proletariat to rule politically that has been abandoned by the bourgeoisie. Bonapartism is not a form of politics but rather an indication of the <em>failure of politics<\/em>. Marxism investigates that failure and its historical significance. The dictatorship of the proletariat will be the \u201chighest\u201d and most acute form of Bonapartism, but one that intends to immediately begin to overcome itself, or \u201cwither away.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The proletariat aims to abolish itself as a class not simply by abolishing the capitalist class as its complementary opposite expression of the self-contradiction and crisis of capitalism. This is why Marx recognized the persistence of \u201cbourgeois right\u201d in any \u201cdictatorship of the proletariat\u201d and down into the transition to socialism in its \u201cfirst stage.\u201d Bourgeois right would overcome itself through its crisis and self-contradiction, which the dictatorship of the proletariat would \u201cadvance\u201d and not immediately transcend. The dictatorship of the proletariat or \u201c(social-)democratic republic\u201d would be the form in which the struggle to overcome capitalism would first be able to take place politically.<\/p>\n<p>Macnair confuses the proletariat\u2019s struggle for self-abolition in socialism with the bourgeois\u2014that is, modern urban plebeian\u2014struggle for the democratic republic. He ignores the self-contradiction of this struggle in capitalism: that capitalism has reproduced itself in and through crisis, and indeed through revolution, through a process of \u201ccreative destruction\u201d (Schumpeter) in which the bourgeois revolution has re-posed itself, but resulting in the re-proletarianization of society, the reconstitution of wage labor under changed concrete conditions. This has taken place not only or perhaps even primarily through economic or political-economic crises and struggles, but through specifically <em>political<\/em> crises and struggles, through the recurrence of the democratic revolution. The proletariat cannot either make society in the image of itself or abolish itself immediately. It can only seek to lead the democratic revolution\u2014hopefully\u2014beyond itself.<\/p>\n<h2>Liberalism and socialism<\/h2>\n<p>The problem with liberal democracy is that it proceeds as if the democratic revolution has been achieved already, and ignores that capitalism has undermined it. Capitalism makes the democratic revolution both necessary and impossible, in that the democratic revolution constitutes bourgeois social relations &#8212; the relations of the exchange of labor\u2014but capitalism undermines those social relations. The democratic revolution reproduces not \u201ccapitalism\u201d as some stable system (which, by Marx\u2019s definition, it cannot be) but rather the <em>crisis<\/em> of bourgeois society in capitalism, in a <em>political<\/em>, and hence in a potentially <em>conscious<\/em> way. The democratic revolution reconstitutes the crisis of capitalism in a manifestly political way, and this is why it can possibly point beyond it, if it is recognized as such: if the struggle for democracy is recognized properly as a manifestation of the crisis of capitalism and hence the need to go beyond bourgeois social relations, to go beyond democracy. Bourgeois forms of politics will be overcome through advancing them to their limits\u2014in crisis.<\/p>\n<p>The crisis of capitalism means that the forms of bourgeois politics are differentiated: they express the crisis and disintegration of bourgeois social relations. They also manifest the accumulation of past attempts at mediating bourgeois social relations in and through the crisis of capitalism. This is why the formal problems of politics will not go away, even if they are transformed. The issue is one of recognizing this historical accumulation of political problems in capitalism, and of grasping adequately how these forms are symptomatic  of the development\u2014or lack thereof\u2014of the politics of the struggle for socialism in and through these forms. For example, Occupy, which took place after the writing of Macnair\u2019s book, clearly is not an advance in politically effective form. But it is symptomatic of our present historical moment, and so must be grappled with as such. It must be grasped as an endemic phenomenon, a \u201cnecessary form of appearance\u201d of the problem of capitalism in the present, and not treated merely as an accidental and hence avoidable error.<\/p>\n<p>Macnair\u2019s preferred target of critical investigation is the \u201cmass strike\u201d and related \u201cworkers\u2019 council\u201d or \u201csoviet\u201d form. But this did not exist in isolation: its limits were not its own but rather also an expression of the limits of labor unions and parliamentary government as well as of political parties in the early 20th century. For Macnair the early Third or Communist International become a blind alley, proven by its failure. But its problems cannot be thus settled and resolved so summarily or as easily as that.<\/p>\n<p>If Occupy has failed it has done so without manifesting the political problem of capitalism as acutely as the soviet or workers\u2019 council form of revolutionary politics did circa 1917, precisely because Occupy did not manifest, as the soviets did, a crisis of parliamentary democracy, labor union organization and political party formation, as the workers\u2019 council form did in the Russian Revolutions of 1905 and 1917 and the German Revolution of 1918-19 and the Hungarian Revolution of 1919 as well as the crisis in Italy beginning in 1919, and elsewhere in that historical moment and subsequently (e.g., in the British General Strike of 1926 and the Chinese Revolution of 1927). Indeed, Occupy might be regarded as an attempt to <em>avoid<\/em> certain problems, through what post-New Leftists such as Alain Badiou have affirmed as \u201cpolitics at a distance from the state,\u201d that nonetheless imposed themselves, and with a vengeance\u2014see Egypt as the highest expression of the \u201cArab Spring.\u201d Occupy evinced a mixture of liberal and anarchist discontents\u2014a mixture of labor union and \u201cdirect democracy\u201d popular-assembly politics. The problem of 20th century Third (and Fourth) International politics, regarding contemporaneous and inherited forms of the mass strike (and its councils), labor unions and political parties, expressed the interrelated problems accumulated from different prior historical moments of the preceding 19th century (in 1830, 1848, and 1871, etc.), all of which needed to be worked through and within, together, along with the fundamental bourgeois political form of (the struggle for) the democratic republic\u2014which Kant among others (liberals) already recognized in the 18th century as an issue of a necessary \u201cworld state\u201d (or at least a world \u201csystem of states\u201d)\u2014not achievable within national confines.<\/p>\n<h2>Redeeming history<\/h2>\n<p>Political forms are sustained practices; they are embodied history. Because none of the forms emerging in the capitalist era\u2014since the early to mid-19th century\u2014has existed without the others, they must all be considered together, as mediating (the crisis of) capitalism at various levels, rather than in opposition to one another. Furthermore, these forms do not merely instantiate the bourgeois society that must be overcome\u2014in a reified view\u2014but rather mediate its crisis in capitalism, and inevitably so.<\/p>\n<p>History cannot be regarded as a catalogue of errors to be avoided, but must be regarded, however critically, as a resource informing the present, whether or not adequately consciously. If past historical problems repeat themselves, they do not do so literally but with a difference. The question is the significance of that difference. It cannot be regarded as itself progressive. Indeed the difference often expresses the degradation of a problem. One cannot avoid either the repetition or the difference in capitalist history. An adequate \u201cproletarian socialist\u201d party would immediately push beyond prior historical limits. That is how it could both manifest and advance the contradiction in capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>History, according to Adorno (following Benjamin), is the \u201cdemand for redemption.\u201d This is because history is not an accumulation of facts but rather a form of past action continuing in the present. Historical action was transformative and is again to be transformed in the present: we transform past action through continuing to act on it in the present. No past action continues untransformed. The question is the (re-)direction and continuing transformation of that action. Thinking is a way, too, of transforming past action.<\/p>\n<p>Political party is not a dead form, but rather lives in ways dependent at least in part on how we think of it. The need for political party for the Left today is a demand to redeem past action in the present. We can do so more or less well, and not only as a function of quantity but also of quality. Can we receive the task of past politics revealed by Marxism as it is ramified down to the present? Can the Left sustain its action in time; can it be a form of <em>politics<\/em>?<\/p>\n<p>Marxism never offered a wholly new or distinct form of political action, but only sought to affect\u2014consciously\u2014forms of politics already underway. Examples of this include: Chartism; labor unions (whether according to trade or industry); Lassalle\u2019s political party of the \u201cpermanent campaign of the working class;\u201d the Paris Commune; the \u201cmass\u201d or \u201cgeneral strike;\u201d and \u201cworkers\u2019 councils.\u201d But not only these: also, the parliament or congress, as well as the sovereign executive with prerogative. These are all descended to us as forms not merely of political action and political struggle over that action, but also and especially of <em>revolution<\/em>, revolutionary change in society in the modern, bourgeois epoch.<\/p>\n<p>One thing is certain regarding the history of the 19th and 20th centuries as legacy, now in the 21st century: since the politics of the state has not gone away, neither has the question of political party. We must accept forms of revolutionary politics as they have come down to us historically. But that does not mean inheriting the forms of state and party as given but rather transforming them\u2014in revolution. Capitalism is a social crisis that calls forth political action. The only questions are how and why\u2014with what consciousness and with what goal?<\/p>\n<p>If social and political crisis\u2014revolution\u2014has up to now given us only more capitalism, then we need to accept that\u2014and think of how communism could be the result of revolutionary politics in capitalism. Again, as Marx and the best Marxism once did: we need to accept the task of <em>redeeming<\/em> history.<\/p>\n<p>The difference Macnair observes, between the political party formations of the early original bourgeois era of the 17th and 18th centuries and in the crisis of capitalism manifesting circa 1848 (including prior Chartism in Britain), is key to the fundamental political question of Marxism as well as of proletarian socialism more broadly (for instance in anarcho-syndicalism)\u2014as symptoms of <em>history<\/em>. There is not a static problem but rather a dynamic of the historical process that is moreover regressive in its repetition in difference. Marxism once sought to be conscious of the difference, and so should we. | <strong>\u00a7<\/strong><\/p>\n<h2>Postscript on party politics<\/h2>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\"> <em>Platypus Review<\/em> 72 | December 2014 &#8211; January 2015<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Originally published in abridged form as a letter in <\/em><strong>Weekly Worker<\/strong><em> 1035 (November 20, 2014).<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The Frankfurt School of the 1930s recognized that the two historic constituencies of revolutionary politics, the masses and the party, had failed: the masses had led to fascism; and the party had led to Stalinism.<\/p>\n<p>Trotsky had remarked, in his <a href=\"http:\/\/www.marxists.org\/archive\/trotsky\/1930\/hrr\/ch00.htm\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>History of the Russian Revolution<\/em><\/a> (1930), on the \u201cinterference of the masses in historical events:\u201d \u201cWhether this is good or bad we leave to the judgment of moralists.\u201d <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The most indubitable feature of a revolution is the direct interference of the masses in historical events. In ordinary times the state, be it monarchical or democratic, elevates itself above the nation, and history is made by specialists in that line of business &#8212; kings, ministers, bureaucrats, parliamentarians, journalists. But at those crucial moments when the old order becomes no longer endurable to the masses, they break over the barriers excluding them from the political arena, sweep aside their traditional representatives, and create by their own interference the initial groundwork for a new r\u00e9gime. Whether this is good or bad we leave to the judgment of moralists. We ourselves will take the facts as they are given by the objective course of development. The history of a revolution is for us first of all a history of the forcible entrance of the masses into the realm of rulership over their own destiny.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>But, as Lenin had written in <em>What is to be Done? <\/em>(1902), this was not a spontaneous development but rather such apparent \u201cspontaneity\u201d could be explained by the prior history of the workers\u2019 movement for socialism. The Russian Revolution had broken out on International Women\u2019s Day, a working class holiday invented by Marxists in the socialist parties of the Second International.<\/p>\n<p>Trotsky wrote, in <a href=\"http:\/\/www.marxists.org\/archive\/trotsky\/1937\/08\/stalinism.htm\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">\u201cStalinism and Bolshevism\u201d<\/a> (1937), that Bolshevism was \u201conly a political tendency closely fused with the working class but not identical with it\u201d and had \u201cnever identified itself with either the October Revolution or the Soviet state that issued from it.\u201d <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Bolshevism considered itself as one of the factors of history, its \u201cConscious\u201d factor &#8212; a very important but not decisive one. We never sinned on historical subjectivism. We saw the decisive factor &#8212; on the existing basis of productive forces &#8212; in the class struggle, not only on a national scale but on an international scale.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>So, what was political party for Marxists such as Trotsky, Lenin and Luxemburg? It was one part of a differentiated whole of society and its political struggles, a political form that allowed for conscious participation in all the variety of arenas for politics that had developed in capitalism: parliaments, labor unions, mass strikes and their councils, and popular assemblies including workers\u2019 councils for revolutionary governance. However, as a political <em>form<\/em> &#8212; as Andrew Feenberg has pointed out, in <em>The Philosophy of Praxis<\/em> (2014), about Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s account of the articulation of theory and practice in Bolshevism in <em>History and Class Consciousness <\/em>and related writings &#8212; the party was not only or even especially a <em>subject<\/em>, but also, and perhaps most importantly, an <em>object<\/em> of political action. It fell to Trotsky, in the aftermath of the failure of Bolshevism, to attempt to sustain this Marxist concept of political form, against Stalinism\u2019s liquidation of politics in the USSR and in the international Communist movement.<\/p>\n<p>In this, Trotsky followed Lenin and Luxemburg as well as Marx and Engels. Trotsky followed Marx in regarding both Stalinism and fascism &#8212; as well as FDR New Deal-ism &#8212; as forms of the Bonapartist state. The death of the Left as a political force is signaled by its shying away from and anathematizing the political party for social transformation &#8212; revolution &#8212; not only in anarchism and \u201cLeft communist\u201d notions of politics without parties, but most of all in the long and pervasive, if largely unrecognized, Stalinist inheritance that justifies the party only by identifying it with the people, which puts an end to politics, including political consciousness. What Dick Howard, following Marx, warns of the \u201canti-political\u201d crisis of politics in capitalism expressed by Bonapartism, is this unmediated identification of politics with society, whether through the subordination of society or the liquidation of the party in the state, all in the name of quieting the inherent instability of politics, which society in its crisis of capitalism cannot afford.<\/p>\n<p>For, as Marx recognized in the aftermath of failed revolution in 1848, Bonapartism was not only undemocratic liberalism, unbridled capitalism without political accountability to society, but was also the state run amok, dominating society, and with a great deal of popular support &#8212; for instance by what Marx called the \u201clumpenproletariat,\u201d an example of the reduction of society to a politically undifferentiated mass, the very opposite of what Marx considered the necessary \u201cclass consciousness\u201d of the proletariat. This is why Trotsky rightly regarded Stalinism as the \u201cantithesis\u201d of Bolshevism.<\/p>\n<p>Stalinism\u2019s suppression of politics in the Marxist sense was not only undemocratic but also popular, both in the USSR and internationally. It was borne of the same social and thus political crisis in capitalism. Stalinism was not the cause but was an effect of the failure of politics in capitalism. We still need to try to overcome this problem of capitalism by constituting it through the inherently dangerous game of party politics. | <strong>\u00a7<\/strong><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Originally published in <\/em><strong>The Platypus Review<\/strong><em> 71 and 72 (November and December 2014 &#8211; January 2015).<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>Bibliography: (<em>PR<\/em>=<em>Platypus Review<\/em>; <em>WW<\/em>=<em>Weekly Worker<\/em>)<\/h3>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cCapital in history\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 7 (October 2008) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2008\/10\/01\/capital-in-history-the-need-for-a-marxian-philosophy-of-history-of-the-left\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2008\/10\/01\/capital-in-history-the-need-for-a-marxian-philosophy-of-history-of-the-left\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris \u201c1917\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 17 (November 2009) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2009\/11\/18\/the-decline-of-the-left-in-the-20th-century-1917\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2009\/11\/18\/the-decline-of-the-left-in-the-20th-century-1917\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cThe Marxist hypothesis\u201d<em> PR<\/em> 29 (November 2010) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2010\/11\/06\/the-marxist-hypothesis-a-response-to-alain-badous-communist-hypothesis\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2010\/11\/06\/the-marxist-hypothesis-a-response-to-alain-badous-communist-hypothesis\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cEgypt, or, history\u2019s invidious comparisons: 1979, 1789, and 1848\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 33 (March 2011) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/03\/01\/egypt-or-historys-invidious-comparisons-1979-1789-and-1848\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/03\/01\/egypt-or-historys-invidious-comparisons-1979-1789-and-1848\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cLenin\u2019s liberalism\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 36 (June 2011) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/06\/01\/lenins-liberalism\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/06\/01\/lenins-liberalism\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cThe philosophy of history\u201d <em>WW<\/em> 869 (June 9, 2011) <a href=\"http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/869\/the-philosophy-of-history\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/869\/the-philosophy-of-history\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cDefending Marxist Hegelianism\u201d <em>WW<\/em> 878 (August 10, 2011) <a href=\"http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/878\/defending-marxist-hegelianism-against-a-marxist-cr\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/878\/defending-marxist-hegelianism-against-a-marxist-cr\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cLenin\u2019s politics\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 40 (October 2011) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/09\/25\/lenins-politics\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/09\/25\/lenins-politics\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cWhither Marxism?\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 41 (November 2011) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/11\/01\/whither-marxism\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2011\/11\/01\/whither-marxism\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201c1873-1973: The century of Marxism\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 47 (June 2012) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2012\/06\/07\/1873-1973-the-century-of-marxism\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2012\/06\/07\/1873-1973-the-century-of-marxism\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cThe relevance of Lenin today\u201d <em>WW<\/em> 922 (July 12, 2012) <a href=\"http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/922\/the-relevance-of-lenin-today\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/922\/the-relevance-of-lenin-today\/<\/a>; and <em>PR<\/em> 48 (July-August 2012) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2012\/07\/01\/the-relevance-of-lenin-today\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2012\/07\/01\/the-relevance-of-lenin-today\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cClass consciousness (from a Marxist perspective) today\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 51 (November 2012) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2012\/11\/01\/class-consciousness-from-a-marxist-perspective-today\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2012\/11\/01\/class-consciousness-from-a-marxist-perspective-today\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone, Chris. \u201cWhy still read Luk\u00e1cs?\u201d <em>WW<\/em> 994 (January 23, 2014) <a href=\"http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/994\/debate-why-still-read-lukacs\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/weeklyworker.co.uk\/worker\/994\/debate-why-still-read-lukacs\/<\/a>; unabridged version in <em>PR<\/em> 63 (February 2014) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2014\/02\/01\/why-still-read-lukacs-the-place-of-philosophical-questions-in-marxism\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2014\/02\/01\/why-still-read-lukacs-the-place-of-philosophical-questions-in-marxism\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Cutrone et al. \u201cRevolutionary politics and thought\u201d <em>PR<\/em> 69 (September 2014) <a href=\"http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2014\/09\/05\/revolutionary-politics-thought-2\/\">http:\/\/platypus1917.org\/2014\/09\/05\/revolutionary-politics-thought-2\/<\/a>. <\/p>\n<p>Adorno, Theodor. \u201cReflections on class theory\u201d [1942], in <em>Can One Live after Auschwitz?: A philosophical reader, <\/em>ed. Rolf Tiedemann (Palo Alto, CA.: Stanford University Press, 2003). <\/p>\n<p>Howard, Dick. <em>The Specter of Democracy, <\/em>(New York: Columbia University Press, 2002). <\/p>\n<p>Nettl, J.P. \u201cThe German Social Democratic Party 1890-1914 as a Political Model,\u201d <em>Past and Present<\/em> 30 (April 1965), 65-95. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Democratic revolution and the contradiction of capital On Mike Macnair\u2019s Revolutionary Strategy (London: November Publications, 2008) Chris Cutrone Platypus Review 71 | November 2014 Mike Macnair\u2019s Revolutionary Strategy is a wide-ranging, comprehensive and very thorough treatment of the problem of revolutionary politics and the struggle for socialism. His focus is the question of political party [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[36,18,30,28,32,35,16,15,6],"class_list":["post-2043","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-essays","tag-36","tag-adorno","tag-badiou","tag-benjamin","tag-cpgb","tag-lenin","tag-marxism","tag-obama-era","tag-the-platypus-review"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2043","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=2043"}],"version-history":[{"count":9,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2043\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3177,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2043\/revisions\/3177"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=2043"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=2043"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chriscutrone.platypus1917.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=2043"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}