Australia: Public meetings mark 70th anniversary of the Fourth
International

By our reporters
2 October 2008

The Socialist Equality Party (Australia) held lively and well-attended
public meetings in Sydney on Sunday and Melbourne on Wednesday night
to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Fourth
International (FI), established by Leon Trotsky in September 1938.

A wide cross-section of people participated—students, workers and
professional people—both young and old, and from many different
continents and countries. They included long-time supporters of the
SEP, members of the International Students for Social Equality and
appreciative readers of the WSWS, as well as many who were attending
their first SEP public meeting.

The audiences listened intently as speakers drew out the connection
between the history of the FI and the greatest global capitalist
crisis since the Great Depression. Some had travelled long distances
to hear the party’s analysis, reflecting an awareness that the
financial meltdown was raising fundamental political issues. There
were animated questions and discussion, generous collections for the
SEP’s monthly fund, and significant purchases of literature,
especially the works of Leon Trotsky.

Opening the Sydney meeting, Linda Levin said it commemorated one of
the major turning points in the history of the international working
class and the socialist movement: the founding, exactly 70 years
earlier, of the Fourth International, the world party of socialist
revolution. The SEP had been affiliated to the FI, led by the
International Committee, since the founding of the Australian section
in 1972.

“The very fact that we are holding this anniversary meeting—that we
regard it as vital to review the founding of our movement and the key
historical experiences through which it has passed, sets this party
apart from every other political tendency,” she said.

“Our attitude to history flows from the nature of our program and our
tasks. We are fighting to mobilise the working class, in Australia and
throughout the world, to take political power and undertake the
greatest and most progressive transformation of economic and social
life in world history. But it cannot take a single step forward unless
it understands the historical experiences out of which it has emerged,
and which have led to the situation it now confronts.”

Levin said the FI had been founded in a period of great crisis and
turbulence: the Great Depression, the victory of fascism in Germany,
and the defeat of mass revolutionary struggles in Europe. Capitalism
was about to lurch into the Second World War, just 20 years after the
so-called war to end all wars—World War I.

“Over the past decades we have been told by all those who disdain
historical perspective, and who regard as impossible any scientific
understanding of the historical process, that such events could never
happen again. And for millions of ordinary people the world over, that
appeared to be the case. War and revolution, the great social
upheavals of millions in the major centres of the world that
characterised the first half of the twentieth century, seemed to be
relics of a long distant past.”

Those illusions had been shattered by the staggering financial and
political turmoil that had begun in the United States. While virtually
every political pundit, journalist and economics commentator had been
taken totally by surprise, the International Committee of the Fourth
International (ICFI) had, during the past two decades, “subjected to
an ongoing and detailed analysis the deepening crisis of US and world
capitalism, and the resurfacing of fundamental contradictions that had
been preparing the way for just such a breakdown, and the eruption,
once again, of immense social struggles”.

Levin said the founding Congress of the Socialist Equality Party in
the US, from August 3-9, had marked the conscious preparation by the
Trotskyist movement for the re-entry of the working class onto the
scene of history. The SEP’s founding documents, The Historical and
International Foundations of the SEP and the Statement of Principles,
based on an assimilation of the historical experiences of the past
century, established the political, theoretical and practical
foundations for a new mass party of the working class.

Against all those who had written off the prospect of winning the
working class to socialism, especially in America, Levin said: “The
American working class is re-entering the historical stage. That is
one of the major reasons the Treasury and the Congress are finding it
so difficult to agree on the Wall Street bailout. A major factor in
the situation is the immense anger, hostility and resentment of tens
of millions of ordinary people to this enormous swindle, following the
mass opposition that has developed to the Iraq war and US militarism.”

The Fourth International
The first speaker at the Sydney meeting, WSWS writer James Cogan,
explained the historical circumstances in which the founding congress
of the Fourth International was held in the Paris suburb of Périgny on
September 3, 1938. Trotsky, the strategist and co-leader, alongside
Vladimir Lenin, of the 1917 Russian Revolution, had issued the call
for a new international after the betrayals of the Stalinist
bureaucracy in the Soviet Union had led to one of the greatest defeats
of the international working class: the coming to power of the Nazi
regime in 1933 and the crushing of the German working class.

Cogan explained that at the heart of the degeneration and death of the
Third International was Stalin’s repudiation of the perspective of
world socialist revolution. Stalin’s anti-Marxist theory of “socialism
in one country” expressed the interests of a privileged bureaucratic
caste that had developed under conditions in which the Soviet Union
was economically and politically isolated.

The speaker emphasised that the FI had been founded not only in a
struggle against Stalinism, but against centrist tendencies that
argued that the formation of the Fourth International would be
“premature,” because it was too small and had not emerged from “great
events”. In reality, as Trotsky wrote in its founding program, The
Death Agony of Capitalism and the Tasks of the Fourth International,
the FI had arisen out of great events: the greatest defeats of the
proletariat in history.

Cogan concluded: “Seven decades later, we are confident that the
Fourth International will provide this generation of the international
working class with the political weapons necessary to bring about the
completion of the world socialist revolution.”

Delivering the keynote address, SEP national secretary Nick Beams, a
member of the World Socialist Web Site international editorial board,
said the historical significance of the 70-year struggle to defend and
develop the program of Trotskyism, led since 1953 by the ICFI, was
being underscored by the tumultuous events unfolding in the world
economy.

Beams said the crisis was not unexpected for the Marxist movement. “It
is the outcome of deep-seated contradictions which, as our movement
has explained, lead inexorably to the breakdown of the capitalist
system.” He explained that such a breakdown was not a single event, in
which capitalism suddenly ceased to function, but signified “the
opening of a new period of history in which old structures, both
economic and political, as well as ideologies and ways of thinking,
give way and new forms of political struggle develop that will
determine the fate of society itself.”

Beams reviewed in considerable detail both the financial meltdown and
the huge Wall Street bailout efforts in the United States. He
emphasised that the crisis had shattered not only the ideological
foundations of the “free market” politics of the past three decades,
but also the economic foundations on which world capitalism had rested
since World War II, rooted in the strength of US capitalism.

Beams traced the protracted struggle of the FI against all forms of
impressionism and opportunism, which were based on impressionistic
evaluations of the post-World War II stabilisation of capitalism, the
role of the Stalinist bureaucracy in Eastern Europe and the victory of
the Chinese and Yugoslav revolutions, to the effect that there was no
longer any independent role for the working class and, consequently,
for the Fourth International.

Beams explained that we were once again entering a politically
tumultuous period. “The struggle waged by the revolutionary movement
against opportunism is going to assume decisive importance in the
development of the struggles of the working class, and it will become
clear to millions that the conflict between Marxism and opportunism is
one of revolution or counter-revolution,” he said.

A number of important questions were raised in response to the
reports. In Sydney, members of the audience asked about the tendency
of capitalism toward dictatorship, the support given by various “left”
groups for Islamic fundamentalism, the role of feminism and other
forms of “identity politics”, the level of class consciousness of
Chinese workers and the turn to financial speculation within the
capitalist economy. At the Melbourne meeting, questions mainly focused
on the unfolding economic crisis, with audience members voicing their
concerns about its implications. In particular, they wanted to know
whether the corporate elite operated on the basis of any economic
theories at all, and about the relationship between the US and China.

Historical lessons discussed
The WSWS interviewed participants after the meetings. In Sydney,
Joshua Cromarty, a Japanese-language and history student from
Newcastle, said he had been reading the WSWS for about four years.

“I’m studying history and have read about the Russian Revolution and
so I found the meeting very interesting. Nick Beams’s analysis of the
present crisis of world capitalism really hit home and made clear to
me that things are coming to a head. The working class is going to be
looking for a political alternative because obviously there is none to
be found in official politics. The SEP and the Fourth International is
the only organisation that can explain the social forces at work and
provide the working class with the education necessary to deal with
the present situation.”

Asked what had attracted him to the ideas and policies of the Fourth
International, Cromarty replied: “The Fourth International is the only
organisation that really has a Marxist history and program that tells
the truth. Other parties, currents and trends have no real political
integrity or a history like the Fourth International and simply
respond to the immediate issues of the day. For them, it is responding
to whatever the latest protest of the day is—nuclear power or climate
change—and they have no theoretical basis or proper analysis on which
to base themselves. And there are parties that can’t really discuss
history because of their own role and what transpired. They don’t want
the real political record brought up because of what they did at the
time.

“Capitalism is international. The only way workers can advance is if
they organise internationally, otherwise they get trapped in national
political systems like the one in North Korea. What keeps coming to my
mind is that the conditions today are so like those that led up to
World War I—the formation of empires and competing national blocs,
with governments in each country trying to get the working class to go
into war against each other. As someone once said, war is a
continuation of politics by other means, and that seems to be the
direction we’re coming to now.

“All this is worrying but I do have some confidence in the fact that
people are not swallowing what their governments tell them. There is
some consciousness of what is going on among a lot of people but it
needs to be developed. I know from reading the WSWS that this won’t
happen automatically—there is no such thing as an unconscious Marxist,
like a lot of so-called left groups claim. This is why the Fourth
International is important.”

Donna Clarke, a healthcare worker, originally from New Zealand, said:
“This is my first attendance at an SEP meeting. I liked the fact that
the SEP is not a party of ‘identity politics’. The question and the
answer on identity politics got my attention. Because I think it’s a
further divide-and-rule tactic formulated by the capitalist system. I
think it’s very healthy that the SEP allows a much broader and global
perspective. I like the idea of being able to lift up and out of one’s
worldview, and to move away from fractioning off into smaller groups,
as occurs in identity politics.

“I found the meeting really interesting because I like history, and
the meeting gave you an historical perspective, not only of US
capitalism but also what’s happened in different parts of the world.
That sort of global perspective you don’t get anywhere else.”

Stefan Kent, an IT worker from Parramatta, was also attending his
first SEP public meeting. “It was a real eye-opener as to what is
actually happening in the economic crisis and around the world. The
fairytales of capitalism are actually collapsing and there are people
who are moving to do something about it, rather than just watching,
which is really good. This is something I can see myself getting
behind, but I will need to do some reading.

“I was not aware of all the mistakes that were made in the past. All
the vital moments of history come together and are linked through an
underlying pattern leading to where we are now. You always see the
propaganda about evil Nazism, and this bad man and that bad man, but
things are kept hidden. Unless you remember what you’ve done in the
past you will repeat the same mistakes.

“I was pretty much ignorant about Trotsky and the struggle against
Stalinism, because it is not taught in school. Communism has been
painted as a big red bogeyman. What the Socialist Equality Party is
talking about is redistributing from the small minority to the people
who actually produce and add value to society. And that’s good.”

In Melbourne, Jenny, an administration officer, had met SEP members on
a street campaign. After the meeting she bought several books on the
Marxist analysis of the globalised economy.

“The meeting raised a whole lot of questions for me, and it struck
home for me that there is another way. The Wall Street bailout seems
such a huge injustice—not enough people here recognise that. The
meeting reinforced my way of thinking about it. There are two options.
People are told there has to be the bailout or the whole world economy
will be killed. They aren’t told the bigger solution—that there needs
to be a whole different system.

“Before this I had never heard of the SEP and I had little idea of
socialism. I feel it is a lot of information to take in. The history
of the Fourth International is a lot to understand, but I’m definitely
going to research these questions now.”

Donald Payne, a physicist and electrical engineer at the University of
Melbourne, commented:

“One thing that struck me was that there were just 30 people in a
house in Paris that formed the Fourth International. Small groups of
people can make big changes. That’s obviously been true in this case.
It was an element of the history that I wasn’t fully aware of. It’s
something that’s not learnt in mainstream historical education.

“History in the typical analysis is always thought of as a numbers
game. When you look more critically, it’s smaller movements that are
the seeds to much bigger things, and that are much more important than
any revision that was later entered into.

“The rapid day-to-day financial events, the collapses worldwide, the
domino effect that we’re seeing here, the ridiculous volatility—to put
it in the light of this movement, that’s what attracted me tonight.
It’s very timely. This analysis and discussion is something that will
attract more people too as they look toward an alternative paradigm,
because the current paradigm is undergoing great stress, and it may
well be the beginning of the end.”
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