The Relevance of Lenin Today
Posted by Jason Schulman on 1/04/10 • Categorized as Exogenous Views, Theory


http://theactivist.org/blog/the-relevance-of-lenin-today



SAMUEL FARBER

The left has been experiencing a situation somewhat similar to the
World War I years. At that time, the abject failure of social
democracy to oppose the imperialist war produced a major crisis on the
left. This crisis was eventually “resolved” by the October Revolution
and the development of a new revolutionary politics in the form of the
young Soviet state and the Communist International. Meanwhile, social
democracy reconstituted itself as more openly and frankly reformist,
and reduced the revolutionary phraseology particularly common in the
May Day strikes at the turn of the century.

We now live in a period of a collapsed Communism that, with the
partial exception of Poland, was not overthrown by a mass movement
from below. Instead, Communism fell as a result of the disintegration
produced by the systemic contradictions of this new form of class
society different from both capitalism and genuine socialism (i.e.,
the democratic rule of the polity and the economy by the working class
and its allies). Social democracy continues to live on as the
increasingly ineffective regulator and rationalizer of capitalism
without even the pretense of a serious class-based reformism. It is
hardly surprising that the left is disoriented and in disarray since
there are no signs of the emergence of a new socialist paradigm to
take the place of these two bankrupt political schools. Such a new
paradigm cannot be hothoused as an understandably desperate Leon
Trotsky attempted to do in 1938 with the creation of a Fourth
International lacking mass support. The experiences of the current
struggles for racial and gender equality and national
self-determination will undoutedly become part of the new paradigm. So
will the lessons learned from working-class struggles, now beginning
to emerge from the long slump that began, in the United States, with
concessionary unionism at the end of the 1970s and Reagan’s
suppression of PATCO in 1980.

The dramatic new realities of the coming century will require a
revolutionary synthesis that will have to start from scratch. It no
longer suffices, if it ever did, to counterpose any of a number of
narrow perspectives, be they Anarchism, Trotskyism or Luxemburgism, to
the heretofore hegemonic social democracy and Communism. Nevertheless,
starting from scratch does not mean that the new will not carry within
it elements of the old, aside from the fact that it is often desirable
to borrow explicitly from some of the previously established
perspectives.

What are likely to be the useful elements of Lenin’s politics for a
democratic revolutionary socialism of the 21st century? I believe that
Lenin’s most important contribution to Marxism and revolutionary
politics was his ability to take the pulse of the historical moment
and define the political situation in conjunctural terms. What I have
in mind here was Lenin’s ability to “go for the jugular,” that is, to
disentangle an often complex situation and seize the main element or
trend within that situation. Closely related to this was his ability
to understand the changes in working-class and popular consciousness
and the direction in which it was headed at a particular moment. Lenin
was a consummate politician (in the non-corrupt sense of the term)
within a Marxist tradition that has often attracted people who care
about many things other than politics. Marxism offers a philosophy of
history, a body of economic theory and a class-based sociology. But
while necessary to Marxism, these are not sufficient as a guide to
action. For this one also requires the development of politics as an
art or skill. Otherwise Marxism becomes an abstract and schematic body
of knowledge quite unsuited to political action. Thus, for example,
the decision to participate in elections to the Tsarist-controlled
Duma could not and should not have been made, according to Lenin, on a
once for all basis without regard for the particular set of
circumstances prevailing in each election.

Along the same lines, the decision to actually move to overthrow the
Provisional Government in the Fall of 1917 was necessarily affected by
almost daily conjunctural changes. Lenin was correct in insisting that
once the political decision was made to organize an insurrection,
tactical considerations of a military type moved to the foreground and
could not be downgraded as secondary matters. While Lenin’s emphasis
on the working class as the principal agent of social transformation
more than matched that of any other majorfigure in the classical
Marxist tradition, he did not interpret this commitment in a narrow
“workerist” fashion. It was Lenin who emphasized that a true social
democrat had to be a “Tribune of the People” to whom no social
conflict fell outside the sphere of socialist politics. That the
working class may not have been directly involved in a struggle did
not mean that there was not a working-class interest in or perspective
on that struggle. In this, as Arthur Rosenberg insisted in Democracy
and Socialism, Lenin sharply differed from the prevailing “workerist”
traditions of the Second International. In the German case, this
narrow focus helped to neglect other sectors of the population, and
even to abandon them into the hands of the right, with truly
disastrous consequences. Even Rosa Luxemburg, an authentically
revolutionary leader of the social democracy, was not exempt from this
“workerist” tendency, as shown by her utter inability to comprehend
the agrarian reform carried out by the October Revolution or the
critical importance of the national question.

We must combine the revolutionary struggle against capitalism with a
revolutionary program and tactics on all democratic demands: a
republic, a militia, the popular election of officials, equal rights
for women, the self-determination of nations, etc. While capitalism
exists, these demands — all of them — can only be accomplished as an
exception, and even then in an incomplete and distorted form. Basing
ourselves on the democracy already achieved, and exposing its
incompleteness under capitalism, we demand the overthrow of
capitalism, the expropriation of the bourgeoisie, as a necessary basis
both for the abolition of the poverty of the masses and for the
complete and all-around institution of all democratic reforms. Some of
these reforms will be started before the overthrow of the bourgeoisie,
others in the course of that overthrow, and still others after it…. It
is quite conceivable that the workers of some particular country will
overthrow the bourgeoisie before even a single fundamental democratic
reform has been fully achieved. It is, however, quite inconceivable
that the proletariat, as a historical class, will be able to defeat
the bourgeoisie, unless it is prepared for that by being educated in
the most consistent and resolutely revolutionary democracy. (Lenin,
1964, 408-09.)

Compared to other socialist leaders of his time, Lenin was uniquely
aware of the nature and importance of democratic struggles and demands
for revolutionary strategy. This emphasis was closely connected to his
conception of socialists as “Tribunes of the People” and to his
special qualities as a revolutionary politician. While a great deal
has been written criticizing Lenin’s model of internal party
organization, the fact remains that until the Civil War, any
comparison between the Bolsheviks and other political parties would
show the Bolsheviks in a favorable light on matters pertaining to
internal democracy, such as the right of dissidents and factions to
organize inside the party, let alone on such questions as the richness
of internal political life, a clear ideology and program, and a firm
class commitment.

Yet, here we find one of the more striking paradoxes in the Marxist
tradition. While the struggle for democracy was central to Lenin’s
politics, his conception of the nature of democracy was flawed even
while he was in opposition, let alone when he was the head of the
Soviet state. As I have argued at length elsewhere (Farber, 1990),
there was a quasi-Jacobinism in Lenin’s politics that led him, for
example, to give more importance to the politically more advanced
elements organized in the party than to broader class institutions
such as the soviets. Yet an elementary sense of proportion and
perspective demands that we distinguish between Lenin’s flawed
conception of democracy, which he mostly upheld until at least the
Spring of 1918, and the clearly anti-democratic perspective that, with
his associates, he began to adopt shortly before and especially during
the course of the Civil War. These anti-democratic views and practices
fully crystallized after the Civil War, in the period 1921-1923, even
as Lenin reacted in genuine horror against the practical outcomes of
those very views and actions. It was particularly during and after the
Civil War that many undemocratic practices that may have indeed been
justified as necessary came to be seen and defended by Lenin and other
mainstream party leaders as intrinsically virtuous. The existence of
this attitude is also demonstrated by the virtual absence of
statements by Lenin attesting to the temporary or conjunctural nature
of his repressive and anti-democratic measures, except in a few
isolated instances, such as when the 1921 ban on party factions was
originally declared to be temporary.

The stressful years of Civil War and famine also negatively affected
Lenin’s tried and tested political flexibility and his uncanny ability
to grasp the main thrust of the political moment. Thus, Lenin
insisted, against the advice of Trotsky and of Dzerzhinsky and Radek —
both of whom had much greater experience than Lenin in Polish affairs
and who could not have been accused of being “soft” on Polish
nationalism — on carrying out the disastrous 1920 Red Army attempted
military takeover of Poland that succeeded in making a national hero
of Jozef Pilsudski. Similarly, Lenin continued to defend the highly
unpopular economic policies of War Communism, even after the end of
the Civil War in late 1920. In the end, Lenin changed his mind only
when confronted, in the early Spring of 1921, with the ever-mounting
catastrophes of large workers’ strikes in the major cities, the
Kronstadt Rebellion, and continuing peasant revolts. When Lenin wrote
about “professional revolutionaries” in the context of the underground
struggle against Tsarist despotism he was not referring to “bourgeois
intellectuals,” as some ignorant critics have asserted. Rather, he was
speaking about the development of cadres — preferably workingclass —
who would make politics rather than other concerns such as work and
family the center of their lives. These cadres would be available for
political assignments whenever and wherever the party directed them. I
don’t think that this conception is likely to be particularly relevant
to revolutionary socialist politics in the 21st century, at least in
the Western capitalist democracies. However, there is another sense in
which “professionalism” has become a necessary element of a new
socialist politics. This “professionalism” means, among other things,
finally getting away from the widespread attitude that political
activity is primarily a matter of self expression and fun, and that it
can be treated with less seriousness, responsibility and care for
boring yet necessary details than even the humdrum jobs that most of
us perform in order to earn a living. Similarly, the political process
of getting things done has to be consistent with and should not
contradict the stated goals of a political organization, as it often
did in the anti-democratic organizations of the Old and New Lefts.
This is necessary for a number of reasons, including the fact that the
goals themselves would otherwise be subverted. Nevertheless, the
process should not be made more important than the goal, as has often
been the case in organizations influenced by New Left traditions.

We need a corrective to the hegemony that the remnants of New Left
values and assumptions continue to have over a good part of the left.
There is no doubt that the New Left achieved enormous victories. It
played a major role in helping to bring a criminal war to an end. It
made a considerable contribution to the democratization of American
society in a large number of areas, ranging from racial and gender
relations to the reduction of authoritarian behavior in schools and
workplaces. In its day, the New Left constituted a welcome antithesis
to the political decay and moral corruption of the Old Left. The Old
Left — dominated by the hegemonic traditions of Communism and social
democracy — had become bureaucratic, dogmatic, dishonest,
manipulative, callous and often sectarian. In response, the New Left
stressed subjectivity, spontaneity, structurelessness and
expressiveness. Yet as the various social movements that inspired and
supported the New Left declined, what had been a fresh and even naive
reaction to the many sins of the Old Left hardened into an unexamined
and frozen cultural and political posture glorifying irrationalism,
knownothingism, non-responsive individualism (“do your own thing”) and
a hopelessly romantic populism that assumed that exploitation and
oppression always ennobled its victims and never brutalized them. If
the New Left’s original stress on “the personal is political” was a
healthy corrective to the Old Left’s callousness, hypocrisy and
machismo, many sections of the New Left later converted this into the
politically suicidal notion that there is no such thing as political
priorities and that anything is as important as everything else.

The remnants of New Left ideas have recently converged with some newer
intellectual trends, including postmodernism, and continue to exercise
significant influence over contemporary movements such as ecology and
feminism. As a result, it has now become fashionable to indulge in
extreme forms of cultural and other forms of relativism and
consequently excoriate the traditions of “Western rationalism,”
including of course Marx and Engels. The supreme irony is that this is
done, knowingly or unknowingly, from the standpoint of a variety of
eminently Western traditions of irrationalism. As far as I know,
nobody has yet argued that Friedrich Nietzsche was a Third World
intellectual, or stated that a German philosopher who lived from 1844
to 1900 is a social or language construction rather than a historical
fact.

If a new socialist political paradigm is necessary, such a paradigm
should attempt to synthesize what was best of the Old and New Lefts.
Thus, democratic structures would emerge as the alternative to
bureaucracy and the cult of spontaneity, human rationality as the
alternative to dogmatism and irrationality, honest and candid
accountability of leaders to manipulation and the obsession with
process.

But what does all of this have to do with the relevance of Lenin
today? If we take Lenin’s politics, especially before the Civil War,
and dispense with its all too often polemically vitriolic form, then
we find a content which has a great deal to contribute to this new
socialist paradigm. This is particularly true of Lenin’s approach to
liberalism. One need not agree with all of Lenin’s views and actions
concerning internal organizational politics to extract very valuable
lessons in regard to Lenin’s clear distinction between internal
democracy and liberalism. In the context of today’s left, this means
for example that we should create an internal political climate where
the less articulate and vocal are not intimidated. This is most
relevant to women, the young and the less formally educated
working-class activists. But this goal should not be accomplished at
the expense of political clarity, particularly on major questions of
principle. Nor should this translate into the relativistic attitude
that there is no such thing as a mistaken opinion or view. Being
tactful and respectful of the views of others should not be confused
with condescension, mushheadedness and political cowardice.

Lenin’s approach to liberalism is perhaps even more relevant to the
political arena as a whole than to internal organizational matters.
Under the impact of a massive right-wing offensive and the need to
defend the social gains of the 1960s and even of the 1930s, the left
runs the risk of accommodating itself to liberalism. The ultra-left
notion that revolutionaries do not bother themselves with the struggle
for reforms has had the perverse effect of convincing some people that
since reforms are worth preserving, there is therefore no point in
being any longer a revolutionary. But revolutionaries do not differ
from reformists in the need to defend past reforms and fight for new
ones. Revolutionaries differ from reformists in why and how they
struggle for reforms. In particular, revolutionaries refuse to accept
the limits of what the power holders claim the system “can afford.” No
less important is the preservation of the reform movement’s
organizational and political independence from the state and from
politicians, even the most liberal. The underlying idea here is to
maintain the movement’s ability to continue the process of waging
further and more advanced struggles without being encumbered by those
obligations and compromises that would restrict the movement’s
political freedom of action.

REFERENCES

Farber, Samuel. 1990. Before Stalinism: The Rise and Fall of Soviet
Democracy. London: Verso.

Lenin, V. 1. 1964. “The Revolutionary Proletariat and the Right of
Nations to Self Determination.” In Collected Works, Vol. 21. Moscow:
Progress Publishers.

This article first appeared in Science & Society, Vol. 60. No. 1
(Spring 1996). Copyright Guilford Publications, Inc. Reprinted with
permission.

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