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From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dominic Tweedie
Sent: 27 July 2009 02:44 PM
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Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Dual Power, Blade Nzimande. Build it now!


Relevant to debate on local protests.


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Umsebenzi Online, Volume 6, No. 20, 7 November 2007 
<http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?include=pubs/umsebenzi/2007/vol6-20.html> 

 

 

Dual power - The living legacy of the Great October Revolution

 

 

Blade Nzimande, General Secretary, SACP

 

 

November 2007 marks the 90th anniversary of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. 
Beginning on November 7, 1917, in ten days that famously shook the world, 
workers and peasants, many of them in the threadbare uniforms of soldiers and 
sailors, organised by their soviets (organs of local popular power) poured out 
from their working class neighbourhoods, from their factories, battleships and 
garrisons, and marched upon the seats of power. 

 

They overthrew the bourgeois state that had been installed in February of that 
year. That state owed its existence to the popular revolt against the feudal 
autocracy and the imperialist war. Compromised by its class allegiances, the 
bourgeois government had been unable to even begin to deliver on the most basic 
demands of the popular masses. And so, on November 7th 90 years ago, under the 
banner of "Bread, Land, Peace!", and shouting the slogan "All Power to the 
Soviets!", workers and peasants, for the first time in world history, abolished 
bourgeois rule and embarked upon a socialist revolution.

 

It is impossible now in 2007 not to view those events, at least partly, through 
the lens of the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union and its East European 
bloc in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It is also imperative, not least for 
those of us who are communists, never to forget the epochal crimes committed in 
the name of "communism", particularly in the Stalin years - crimes amongst 
whose victims were numbered many hundreds of thousands of communists. As we 
commemorate the 90th Anniversary of the October Revolution, we should remember 
that a revolution can devour its own children. We need to draw the appropriate 
lessons, so that we, in our turn, are not condemned to repeat history.

 

But if gross distortions and eventual collapse are part of the story, they are 
very much only a part - and even that part owes a great deal to external 
factors, in particular, the unceasing hostility and destabilisation of the 
Soviet Union by the imperialist powers.

 

Contrary to the Hollywood version of the Second World War, the epicentre of 
that war was the Eastern Front. It was on the outskirts of Leningrad and 
Moscow, and street by street, building by building in Stalingrad, that the tide 
of Nazism was halted, turned and finally routed. 20 million Soviet citizens 
lost their lives in that war alone. Without the Soviet Union, the second half 
of the 20th century might have been a half century dominated by a real (and not 
fictional) axis of evil.

 

Let us also not forget the pioneering socialist measures introduced in the 
Soviet Union - an eight-hour working day, free health-care, free education, 
free crèches for workers' children. Without the defeat of Nazism in Europe, and 
without the example of Soviet social achievements that inspired working class 
movements in the West, it is doubtful the welfare states that flourished in 
parts of the developed capitalist north after 1945 would ever have existed. 
Without the counter-balancing global presence of the Soviet bloc, would India 
have been decolonised, would China and Vietnam have been liberated, would the 
Cuban revolution have survived its initial years? And without all of these 
advances, Southern Africa could still be in the grip of white minority regimes.

 

While acknowledging the huge impact the October Revolution has had on the past 
century, we need to ask: What are the key lessons we need to derive for the 
present?

 

We suggest that there are two key lessons:

 

One: It is possible (and imperative) to press ahead with socialist-oriented 
transformation right now in the present. 

 

The pessimists, those who lost their will to struggle with the collapse of the 
Berlin Wall, those who lost faith or who never had faith in the popular masses 
to begin with, those who were socialists when it was the flavour of the decade 
- they all keep telling us that "the global balance of forces is now 
unfavourable". Socialism is something to be deferred until capitalism has been 
"fully developed".

 

But when the Bolsheviks in November 1917 led the workers and peasants of 
Russia, along with dozens of oppressed nationalities, into battle for socialism 
- they, too, were plied with the same negative sermons. "Russia is too 
backward". "Wait for the advanced capitalist countries like Germany to make 
their socialist revolution". "Russian capitalism must first modernise". "Wait 
for the Russian working class to mature".

 

Lenin was portrayed in some "socialist" circles as a voluntarist, an 
ultra-leftist. But Lenin and the Bolsheviks understood that Russia would always 
remain backward within the imperialist world system, that the Russian working 
class and the democratic revolution (not least the national democratic 
liberation of dozens of oppressed nationalities) would always remain stunted 
unless a decisive break with a dependent and semi-peripheral capitalism was 
made. In fact, the impediments to Russia becoming a competitive capitalist 
power in 1917 were far greater than the (considerable) impediments to making a 
socialist revolution.

 

What about the global situation? Let us never forget that when the Russian 
workers and peasants of November 1917 rose up against bourgeois power, there 
was no external Soviet bloc to support them. This is not to say that the 
international balance of forces is irrelevant, but should we understand the 
construction of socialism as a "competition between two systems"?  Writing in a 
recent issue of Monthly Review, Claudio Katz ("Socialist Strategies in Latin 
America") critiques this position:

 

"This approach is a remnant of the theory of the 'socialist camp' proclaimed by 
supporters of the old Soviet model. They gambled on defeating the enemy by 
means of a series of economic successes and geopolitical achievements, 
forgetting that one cannot defeat capitalism at its own game. Peripheral - or 
less industrialised - economies in particular can never triumph in a 
competition with imperialist powers that have controlled the world market for 
centuries. The success of socialism requires a continuous sequence of processes 
that undermine global capitalism."

 

For a number of reasons, the "two camps" approach had a strong resonance for 
southern African liberation movements (and the SACP) in the 1960s, 70s and into 
the 1980s. With the collapse of the "socialist camp", demoralisation was a 
likely (if mistaken) outcome. In Latin America in that period, by contrast, 
many major left movements (all with their own strengths and weaknesses) were 
less inclined to base their strategies on the existence of an alternative 
socialist bloc. This is surely one of several reasons why an important (but, of 
course, complex and uneven) wave of popular, anti-capitalist socialist renewal 
is now welling up across Latin America, from Mexico through Bolivia to 
Argentina. 

 

The world of 2007 is not the world of 1917. But like 1917 it is not a world of 
one-way traffic for the imperialist powers. The world's "hyper-power", the 
United States, despite its massive military superiority, is bogged down in 
Afghanistan and especially Iraq. Its Middle East military adventures are 
rejected at home by a growing majority. Its triumphalist 1990s neo-liberal 
"solutions" are discredited in Eastern Europe, Latin America, and in many parts 
of Africa and Asia. Structural adjustment programmes have given rise to 
mass-based social movements, indigenous peoples' struggles, and electoral 
defeats for comprador elites across the developing world. In Latin America, in 
particular, the power of local elites ("national" bourgeoisies) have been 
hollowed out by trans-nationalisation and privatisation to multi-national 
corporates. In the face of rising popular mobilisation, the traditional 
recourse of the Latin American elites to military coups or one or another 
anti-democratic authoritarianism has been weakened (although it can never be 
entirely ruled out). It has been weakened by the earlier popular defeat of 
military regimes whether in Argentina, Chile, Brazil or Uruguay. The new 
popular mobilisation is frequently democratic and constitutional (see for 
instance the centrality of the Bolivarian constitution as a mass reference 
point in Venezuela), and no longer presents itself primarily as a rural or 
urban guerrilla. The popular, and increasingly anti-capitalist movement in 
Latin America, contests the class struggle on the terrain of electoral 
democracy, the constitution, human rights, media and social development, 
frustrating counter-revolutionary endeavours to locate the struggle back on the 
terrain of military contest. The Cold War, anti-communist "excuses" for 
repression have also evaporated.  This is especially the case in Latin America 
(with some exceptions like Colombia), but equally (although with its own 
specificities) here in post-1994 South Africa.

 

What are the key motive forces, or (to use Latin American terminology) what are 
the key subjects of this contemporary anti-capitalist struggle? This brings us 
to the second key legacy of 1917.

 

Two: Dual power re-visited

 

When Lenin and the Bolsheviks advanced the slogan of all power to the soviets 
in 1917 they saw in these spontaneously formed local councils of worker power 
the seeds of an alternative state. The bourgeois state, with its "façade of 
multi-party, parliamentary democracy" and a "liberal" constitution, was to be 
replaced by a different state, soviet power. The soviets of 1917, like the 
soviets that emerged in the 1905 Russian revolution, bore many resemblances to 
the spontaneous popular structures of the 19th century Paris Commune that Marx 
and Engels had studied and celebrated as harbingers of a different kind of 
proletarian state. They were characterised by various forms of direct and 
participatory democracy. Elected representatives and officials were revocable 
by popular assemblies and none was paid more than the average wage of a worker.

 

Between February and October 1917 in Russia a dual power situation increasingly 
developed - with the bourgeois "liberal" (in practice, not so liberal) parties 
controlling the Parliament/Duma and the key organs of state, with an 
alternative centre of power developing in the soviets/councils of workers and 
soldiers - in working class neighbourhoods, in factories, and barracks. It was 
these alternative self-organised centres of power, influenced largely (but not 
entirely) by the Bolsheviks that were a critical locus of power in the October 
Revolution.  

 

But although the state that emerged from the October revolution came to be 
described as "soviet", it increasingly bore less and less resemblance to the 
spontaneous organs of localised working class power on which it supposedly 
rested. This was the result of many realities, including the drastic depletion 
of the seasoned working class cadres in a bitter Civil War and the challenges 
of a massive industrialisation drive and the administration of a huge country. 
The "soviet" state became increasingly bureaucratic, hierarchical, 
centralising, authoritarian, and staffed by a self-reproducing elite of 
apparatchiks.

 

Marxists were not wrong to recognise in the organs of popular power that 
emerged spontaneously in the Paris Commune and in the Russian revolutions of 
1905 and 1917 a critical revolutionary reality and a key component of any 
future socialist state. But we tended to see these organs as the totality of 
socialist state power and as "alternatives" to, and abolishers of, the 
bourgeois state and "its" associated institutions - a separate standing army, 
courts, parliament, etc. In practice, in subsequent decades in the Soviet 
Union, bureaucratic state power displaced participatory and direct democracy.

 

What is beginning to emerge in, for instance, the Venezuelan revolution, what 
has always been at least an important residual reality in the Cuban revolution, 
and what is latently present in our own South African reality is a new 
conception of dual power. This is "dual power" not as a transitional reality, 
but as a permanent feature of an anti-capitalist revolution. Here organs of 
popular power co-exist with, buttress, check and balance other apparatuses of 
progressive democratic power (an army and police force, the administrative 
apparatus, a parliament). Organs of popular power need to act as a constant 
counterweight against the dangers of bureaucratisation, elitism, corruption and 
corporate capture that constantly beset the state apparatus, including a 
socialist state apparatus. These tendencies need to be constantly abolished. 
But localised organs of popular power, practising more direct and participatory 
forms of democracy, also have limited capacities to run a modern socialist 
economy, or, in isolation, defend the country against imperialist 
destabilisation.

 

The point is not that the one locus of progressive power should abolish the 
other, but that they should act to complement each other - as was seen, for 
instance, in the combination of armed forces, popular militias and mass 
mobilisation in the very rapid defeat of the 2005 imperialist-inspired 
attempted military coup against the democratically-elected Chavez government.

 

Here in South Africa, we developed strong "soviet" traditions, organs of 
popular power, a legacy of self-governance, in the midst of our struggle - 
particularly in the 1980s. These traditions have not evaporated, but post-1994 
we have not really mastered the art of combining democratic state power with 
organs of popular power.

 

To take one of countless current examples - faced with the imminent extinction 
of our abalone (perlemoen) shell-fish stocks, as a result of poaching 
activities by criminal syndicates with international links, the ANC Minister of 
Environment and Tourism last week announced a total ban on perlemoen fishing. 
In the face of popular concern, with the livelihoods of coastal communities 
threatened, the Minister has backed down for three months. The Minister, of 
course, has science on his side. Perlemoen, a food source for communities along 
our coastline, stretching back to the beginnings of modern human civilisation, 
is about to disappear forever unless poaching is stopped. "And we cannot put a 
policeman every twenty metres along the shore-line", the Minister has explained.

 

That is true enough. But with or without a ban on perlemoen catches, an 
overstretched police force and a very weak and under-resourced Sea Fisheries 
Inspectorate is not going stop the elimination of our stocks. Why have we not 
organised the local fishing communities themselves to form democratic vigilance 
units, to safe-guard (along with the organs of the state) their own local 
legacy passed down through many generations?

 

As we mark this 90th anniversary of the first socialist revolution in world 
history, let's honour it - not as a museum exhibit - but as a living legacy 
that has every relevance for our challenges in the present.   

 

Asikhulume!






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