Vladimir Vorobiev, Co-Chairman, Inter-Regional Alliance of Workers’ 
Unions “Defence of Labor”  
LET US CHOOSE THE ROYAL WAY! 
Speech in Florence 


Before I read my report, allow me to express my sincere gratitude 
to all activists of foreign labor organizations who provided 
financial and organizational assistance to Russian delegation.  Without 
their generous help, my comrades and I would not be 
here today.

LET US CHOOSE THE ROYAL WAY!

We have gathered in the city associated with one of the best moments 
in the history of world civilization.  500 years ago 
Florence was a center of European Renaissance –the great cultural 
movement whose goal was to emancipate human mind from 
the obscurantist ideology of the medieval ruling classes and to rediscover 
the beauty and dignity of man.  But European 
Renaissance was also the cradle of European capitalism, whose historical 
triumph rested to the large extent on the genocide, the 
enslavement, and the ruthless exploitation of non-European peoples.
The foundations of modern bourgeois civilization have not 
changed much since then.  I am going to speak to those who came to 
Florence with the dream of putting an end to this bloody 
triumph.  Let the day come when this beautiful city becomes again 
a center of a Renaissance, but this time the Renaissance of all 
the mankind, the Renaissance based not on the oppression and exploitation 
of man by man, nation by nation, but on their 
solidarity and brotherly unity.

Today, more and more members of Russian independent workers’ trade 
unions begin to realize that they need to fight the root 
causes rather that the consequences of social evils, of the ever 
increasing insecurity of existence of the working class people.  

Our workers begin coming to their senses and ask: “What is to be 
done?”  This puts special responsibility on us, labor activists. 

Will we direct the awakening energy of the masses along the right 
path against the root causes of evil or will we waste it to 
achieve false, illusory ends?  In the first case, even our defeat 
will be temporary and meaningful for those who will come after 
us.  In the second, even our victory will turn into a defeat and 
demoralization for the masses.  This may have catastrophic 
consequences because then the desperate masses can make a decisive 
turn to fascism.  This is why the choice of our 
objectives, the choice of the right path is a matter of such a grave 
importance for the antiglobalist movement, which is so far 
very amorphous and contradictory in regard to its objectives.

Let us not deceive ourselves.  No matter how many-voiced and multilingual 
our movement is, there are only two roads to 
choose from: the road of accommodation to capitalism, the road of 
reformism--and the road of going beyond capitalism, the 
road of revolution.  The third road is that of illusion, or even 
worse – an attempt to avoid the responsibility to make the real 
choice.  So the first thing we need to do is to posit the question 
of solidarity correctly:  Solidarity to what ends?  Only having 
answered this question we can answer the next: Solidarity with whom? 
I will now shortly outline my thoughts on these matters.

Those who want to go along with capitalism so far dominate our movement.
They just want capitalists to make certain 
concessions like allowing a degree of public control over financial 
flows, alienating of a miniscule part of speculative capital in 
favor of the Third World, and strengthening the national state against 
transnational capital and its organizations.  These are the 
goals of a very moderate reformism, most clearly and widely articulated 
by ATTAC and its leaders.  I believe that these are 
wrong goals.  These goals can only disorient the working people and 
waste their energy. These goals can only give a breathing 
space to capitalism.  The leaders of ATTAC are very much aware of 
this.  They are very much in favor of this.  As the founders 
of ATTAC Ignacio Ramonet and Bernard Cassen explained in one of their 
TV interviews, their intention was not to harm 
capitalism, but “to stabilize” it by struggling against free-trade 
policies.  Seconds Jurgen Borchert, one of the founders of 
ATTAC-Germany: “If ATTAC did not exist, big business should have 
invented it.” 

ATTAC and other reformist NGO’s and “social movements”--that push 
the antiglobalist movement toward the path of 
cosmetic reforms of capitalist system--also misidentify the main 
enemy of the working people.  To them, the root cause of evil is 

not the system of private property and exploitation, but only some 
of the more odious aspects of its latest phase.  Moreover, 
they see the global imperialist expansion of capitalism as on the 
whole a positive, even progressive development, which 
allegedly fosters and unifies the productive powers of mankind.  
They present the imperialist re-colonization as progressive 
overcoming of national isolation and parochialism, and almost as 
the withering away of the national state!  Well, in that case 
who needs revolutions if imperialism is a  highway towards progress?! 
No wonder that so many former Western radicals went 
over to the side of their own imperialists and supported their aggression 
against Yugoslavia, the expansion of NATO, and so 
on.  No wonder that the very word “imperialism” has gone out of fashion 
while those who recall it risk to be accused in being 
“nationalists.”  Today this false and pro-imperialistic “internationalism” 
pervades the West.  It has nothing in common with the 
internationalism of the oppressed. 

“Globalization” does not bring any progress to the majority of mankind,
because in reality it is a policy of neocolonialism and 
re-colonization, carried out by a group of imperialist states under 
the hegemony of the US, and with the help of corrupt national 
elites of oppressed nations.  By using military, political, and financial 
pressures, imperialists submit to their will the countries of 
the Third and the former Second Worlds and ruthlessly exploit their 
human and natural resources for the sake of super profits.  
We are seeing the economic re-colonization of the former colonial 
and oppressed nations, the destruction of their economies 
and their adaptation to the needs of the imperialist core.  We see 
this process in Argentine, Venezuela, Zimbabwe and many 
other countries, Russia among them.  Imperialism is the main and 
the most dangerous enemy of all working people, even those 
who temporarily benefit from it, like the workers of imperialist 
countries.  Anti-capitalist struggle is unthinkable without the 
struggle against imperialism.

The history of international labor movement testifies that the working 
class was able to get most significant economic and 
political concessions when workers raised most radical demands and 
created militant class organizations.  That’s how it was, 
for example, during the Great Depression, when the radicalism of 
American workers convinced the most powerful group of 
bourgeoisie in the world to carry out a serious reform of the entire 
capitalist system.  Why do I recall this experience today?  
After all I argue against reformism, against the path of ATTAC and 
similar “social movements” and in favor of the royal 
path—that of the revolutionary workers of Paris and Petrograd, the 
peasants of Cuba and Nepal.  I recall this experience, 
because I believe that even if our struggle for society built on 
solidarity rather than exploitation will not succeed this time around,

the radicalism of our struggle will compel capitalists to give much 
bigger concessions than if we follow the path of timid 
reformism, the path of ATTAC, and as the result we will be able to 
create a more solid foundation for the next generation of 
anti-capitalist fighters.  So let us be realists and strive for  
“impossible”!

I repeat: we need to fight against the root causes of social evil.
Social wealth must be expropriated from the hands of capitalists 

and become socialized.  We need not a pithy Tobin tax on the trillions 
squeezed by ruthless exploitation of hundreds of millions 
workers and peasants, but ALL the wealth so that it could be used 
for the satisfaction of needs and free development of ALL 
rather than the enrichment of the few.

And here everything depends on the international solidarity of the 
working people.  Two great problems face us in achieving it.  
These problems can be solved only by a reciprocal movement on the 
part of workers in imperialist and dependent countries.  In 
the latter, the organized working class must establish its leadership 
in the anti-imperialist struggle of the oppressed peoples over 
and against the nationalist bourgeoisie and reactionary forces.  
This is not that simple.  But the problem that faces us in 
imperialist countries is more formidable, because in these countries,
especially in settler-nations, there exists a massive layer of 
labor aristocracy--virtually indistinguishable from small bourgeoisie-
-that enjoys the privileges and standard of life incomparably 
higher than those of the rest of toilers around the world.  These 
imperialist workers and their bureaucracy tend to identify their 

interests with those of their bourgeoisie who is ever trying—and 
especially during economic crises like the current one—to 
keep the class peace at home by stepping up the exploitation of the 
workers in the Third World and Eastern Europe.  This class 
alliance between workers and capitalists of imperialist countries 
forms the material base for social-imperialist politics of the 
dense net of labor organizations and “social movements” in the West 
who give support to the militarist and chauvinist course of 
their ruling classes, as in the case NATO’s aggression against Yugoslavia,
the expansion of NATO, and terrorist course of the 
United States after 9-11.  This unholy class alliance must be broken 
and replaced by class solidarity of Western workers with 
the workers of oppressed countries against their imperialist governments.
Here lies the key to international solidarity.  This 
struggle will be the hardest. And we can hope to win it only if we 
clearly realize that it is going on right now in our movement.  

The new global phase of capitalist expansion had negative impact 
on labor aristocracy and the small bourgeois layers employed 
in the state sector and social services.  These layers suffer from 
the neoliberal course of their own imperialists.  They are 
compelled to mobilize, to seek new alliances so that they can put 
more pressure on their governments and get into a better 
negotiating position.  To this end, they have entered the antiglobalist 
movement—or rather they have formed it.  It is these 
forces--infected with social-chauvinism-- that promote imperialist 
reformism in this movement and use it to blunt the radicalism 
of labor organizations in oppressed countries.
 
One example of this is the activities of ATTAC and other social-imperialist 
organizations in Russia where they are trying to 
prevent the radicalization of our labor movement by promoting reformism 
and preventing it from taking part in anti-imperialist 
struggle.  Yet no revolutionary organization of the masses in the 
former Soviet Union, no solidarity with the peoples oppressed 
by imperialism, from Argentine to Afghanistan, nor firm and principled 
dialogue with the workers of imperialist countries are 
possible without raising anti-imperialist consciousness.  If class-
conscious workers fail to take up this task anti-imperialist 
energies will fall right into the hands of reactionary forces.  Yet 
some representatives of ATTAC try to portray the antiglobalist 
movement as being in opposition to anti-imperialists, as separated 
from them by the barricade.  This is not so.  In fact, the 
struggle between imperial reformists and anti-capitalists has been 
going on within this movement and we cannot win this struggle 
without a clear understanding of the imperialist nature of this reformism 
and without advancing the most consistent 
anti-imperialism against it.  

As a representative of the proletarian and anti-imperialist wing 
of Russian labor movement I appeal to all revolutionary forces in 

the antiglobalist movement to unite around the struggle for the right 
choice of our goals, for radicalization of this movement, for 
the victory of anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist course within 
it.  We have to make a decisive step towards overcoming the 
present hegemony of imperialist reformism in this movement.  Under 
the slogan of “pluralism,” the reformists will be imposing on 
us endless discussions.  They will be trying to impose on us the 
false goals of endless smoothing over of the class antagonisms 
and to lead the movement away from its royal road – that of the class 
struggle for the abolition of private property and 
exploitation.  To win, we need not the bourgeois “pluralism” of goals,
but democracy and solidarity on the basis of the common 
goal of ending the exploitation of man by man, nation by nation. 
If the proletarian and anti-imperialist forces in this movement 

unify under the banner of this great goal, if they take it along 
this royal road –then the working and oppressed people of the 
world will become aware that they have a real alternative to imperialist 
reformism and that there are international workers who 
are ready to struggle for equality and justice, for a truly other world.

Death to Imperialism!  Down with Bourgeois Governments and Bourgeois 
States!  Long Live the Dictatorship of the 
Proletariat!  Long Live Socialism!

Vladimir Vorobiev, 
Co-Chairman, Inter-Regional Alliance of Workers’ Unions “Defence 
of Labor,” 
Russia, 652490, Kemerovo, 
Anzhero-Sudzhensk,
Oktiabrskii proezd, dom 2, kv. 36
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Tel.: 38453-24176

http://www.left.ru/inter/november/vorobiev.html











_______________________________________________
Leninist-International mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international

Reply via email to