The following article was first published in Proletarian
Revolution<http://www.marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/socialistvoice/PR63.html>No.
63 (Fall 2001).
------------------------------
Revolutionary vs. Reformist Methods in the Unions

For almost two decades the LRP has carried out a relentless exposure of New
Directions’ reformism in the TWU. In leaflets and electoral bulletins, in
the pages of *RTW* and
*PR*<http://www.marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/socialistvoice/Back_Issues.html>,
at countless meetings and demonstrations and on the job, we explained that
ND was no real alternative to the sellout bureaucrats who ran the TWU. Our
analysis nailed ND’s failure to build a strike movement over the course of
several contract struggles, which all ended with sellout deals. We attacked
New Directions’ approach, which replaced preparations for a strike and mass
action with the promise that if they were elected, all would be well. We
condemned ND’s use of the bourgeois courts against the union. We criticized
many of the positions ND took on nitty-gritty issues and always related
them to the big political picture.

In counterposing our revolutionary strategy for mass action, we rejected
the stagist method of first replacing the old bureaucrats with a reform
leadership and postponing mobilizing the ranks against the bosses. The
silent socialists within ND assert that in order to be able later to raise
revolutionary socialist demands, at first only seemingly acceptable reform
demands are possible. This “rank-and-filist” approach means that socialists
present themselves simply as militants and not as revolutionaries, telling
the workers only what they believe they want to hear—and avoiding saying
what they claim to believe about capitalism.

In contrast, authentic Marxists tell the truth as we see it. Fundamentally,
workers can defend their interests only through socialist revolution. We
have always said that in our opinion socialist revolution is the only way
to put a stop to economic exploitation, racism, national and sexual
chauvinism, profit-gouging, deteriorating health care and the like. And the
worst is yet to come unless capitalism is overthrown.

Truth and not masquerade is the way workers become aware that revolution is
the only way for us to attain a decent life. And only a working class
conscious of the truth can actually make that revolution.

Class consciousness means that workers come to see that united in action
they have enormous power—they can bring the entire economy to a halt and
stop profit-making in its tracks. Our class becomes conscious of its true
interests and the need for revolution not simply by reading textbooks but
through practical action. Mass action is the only way even to defend past
gains and to win new ones. Workers learn through experience, through
fighting the capitalists in the living class struggle. And whatever the
initial outlook of most of the participants, mass working-class action
always carries the threat of a revolutionary challenge to the system.
Revolutionary Work in Local 100

Over the years, we have presented our case in direct opposition to New
Directions at each critical point. In the ’80’s and ’90’s, our propaganda
was distributed broadly but was aimed chiefly at reaching a very narrow
layer of far-seeing workers who would be interested in revolutionary
socialism. Marxists describe such a layer as the “advanced workers,” those
who can become part of the initial cadres of the now-developing vanguard
party. Sometimes that layer is very big, sometimes it can be quite small,
depending on objective conditions and the level of class struggle. In those
years, we won respect as steadfast militants and Marxists, but given the
low level of struggle, our efforts to oppose the bureaucracy and expose ND
had little immediate impact.

Having seen their struggles constantly betrayed by their leaderships,
workers felt themselves weak and impotent, understandably fearful. Not only
was the idea of socialist revolution beyond the pale, even the word
“strike” had become anathema. Since struggles had subsided, so had our
ability to point out revolutionary lessons in practice, not just on paper.
We fought against the stream of negative consciousness and remained only a
small factor in the TWU.

In contrast, at the time of the near-strike in 1999, there was an
exhilarating mood of renewed militancy in Local 100. But despite our
re-invigorated exposure propaganda, it became clear when the Local’s
election approached that workers were looking to New Directions as the
alternative to the James gang’s betrayals. We had to re-evaluate our
tactics. If we stood opposed to both the James forces and ND, the
developing movement of militant workers would have seen us as a barrier to
getting rid of James. Yet it would have been treachery not to warn fellow
workers that Toussaint & Co. would betray them.
Bolshevik Tactics

In such situations, Lenin and Trotsky elaborated the tactic of “critical
support,” which the Bolsheviks used effectively to challenge the reformist
Menshevik and Social Revolutionary parties during the Russian Revolution of
1917. For example, in the months leading up to the revolution, the
Mensheviks and SR’s held a majority in the workers’ councils ("soviets").
At the same time the reformists were in a bloc with open capitalists in the
Provisional Government. The workers believed that the reformists wanted
state power in order to carry out their militant-sounding program. But the
Bolsheviks knew better and openly attacked these parties for being
unwilling to oust the capitalists from the government and take power
themselves, in the name of the working class. The Bolsheviks therefore
raised the demand, “Down with the Ten Capitalist Ministers!” to expose the
reformist parties, promising to support them in forming a government
without the capitalists.

As the Bolsheviks predicted, the Mensheviks and SR’s did not take state
power into their own hands, because they did not want to break with the
capitalists. Thus they stood exposed in practice. Words alone could not
have done the job; the tactical demand did. The Bolsheviks went on to win
the majority of workers to their banner.

A few years later, Lenin advised British communists to apply a similar
tactic to their parliamentary election. The workers were in motion, trying
to fight the bourgeoisie, but they still had illusions in the
pro-capitalist Labour Party. He argued for critical support to Labour in
the coming election, a party which he openly condemned as
“counterrevolutionary.” Lenin’s well-known formula, to support Labour “as a
rope supports a hanged man,” meant putting Labour in office where its
treachery could more readily be tested and thus exposed.

In 1935 Trotsky gave a particularly clear explanation of the method behind
the critical support tactic, when the leftish Independent Labour Party was
debating whether to vote for Labour. Trotsky argued that the decision did
not depend on whether this or that candidate raised particular policies
that revolutionaries might agree with. Instead:

The I.L.P. must say to the workers: “The Labour Party will deceive you and
betray you, but you do not believe us. Very well, we will go through the
experience with you but in no case do we identify ourselves with the Labour
Party program.” … It should above all, show in practice what
*true*critical support means. By accompanying support with the
sharpest and
widest criticism, by patiently explaining that such support is only for the
purpose of exposing the treachery of the Labour Party leadership … (Writings
1935-36, pp.70-71; emphasis in the original).

Trotsky often spoke of the “dialogue” which must go on in the class
struggle between the revolutionary layers of the proletariat and the less
advanced workers with illusions in reformist leaders. He pointed out that
there was a significant difference between the reformist views of the
leaders, who had a vested material interest in capitalist society, and
similar views held by their followers. The views of the ranks were more
transient, and their illusions could dissipate in the course of struggle
through lessons drawn by the advanced layer.

Critical Support in Local 100

In this tradition, our use of critical support in the Local 100 election
meant support for a militant mobilization of fighting workers, not for the
policies of New Directions. It was an open attempt to win fellow workers by
exposing ND in practice—a tactical change but not a fundamental shift in
our struggle to counterpose revolutionary leadership to that of the
reformists.

In using this tactic towards New Directions, we were fighting to prevent ND
from strangling the gains won from the strike movement. This approach can
be seen in *RTW* . In its first issue, Eric Josephson, running for union
office in the Track Division, summed up our use of critical support:

In voting for ND, I solidarized with the ranks’ desire to throw out the old
guard and clear the way for further struggles. In no way does this mean any
let-up in my hard and consistent opposition to ND’s opportunist leadership.
They are now on the hot seat. They can no longer excuse themselves from
working for a militant fightback by blaming the old guard’s obstruction.
Transit workers will expect results, and I intend to help keep the pressure
on ND. As Track Division Vice-Chair, I will be able to do so more
effectively.

Toussaint says he wants to mobilize the ranks. Fine! I support every real
step to fight the bosses. But I intend to oppose and expose any
backsliding, sellouts or betrayals. I’ll continue to warn my fellow workers
to trust their own power and mobilization, not the pro-capitalist ND
leadership.

We got rid of one bureaucratic obstacle. Now we have to prevent ND from
becoming a new, entrenched bureau cracy. By placing demands on ND to defend
the union and putting forward a strategy of mass action to fight the
bosses, I aim to show that the real alternative to bureaucratic betrayals
is to build a revolutionary leadership which puts workers’ interests before
the capitalist system and fights for socialism.

Post-Election Tactics

This article signaled our intention to continue after the election to help
break the illusions of the ranks in Toussaint and ND. We have been working
to draw the leadership into the open by supporting every step towards
fighting the bosses while criticizing the inadequacy of the leadership’s
actions, their hesitancy and vacillations. We have highlighted Toussaint’s
motion toward re-bureaucratization of the local. We have attacked his
political class collaborationism.

The same militancy that swept New Directions into power now threatens their
position. Unlike the old bureaucracy, ND is actually expected to produce
something. Workers’ illusions in ND is a double-edged sword which can help
expose the reformist leaders. Every time Toussaint talks about fighting the
bosses or building the struggle, we intend to be there challenging him to
lead a real fightback. He is still capable of zigzagging in a militant
direction for a moment or two; but even then workers must watch for his
inevitable capitulations. When he betrays the workers’ trust, advanced
workers will be in a better position to convince the ranks to sweep him out
of the way and build a revolutionary leadership.

The use of tactical weapons is not trickery. We are perfectly open about
what we are doing. We always stand for class solidarity in the course of
struggle. We do not drop out of the fight against the bosses because we do
not like the leaders and their wavering policies. At this time in Local
100, our policy is to support the leadership when it actually fights the
bosses but also to explain how it betrays that struggle. We are not
blocking Toussaint from leading a fight that the members want; it is
Toussaint who is already sabotaging that chance.

This tactical approach also comes out of Bolshevik experiences. Trotsky’s
famous dialectical dictum, “With the masses—always; with the vacillating
leaders—sometimes, but only so long as they stand at the head of the
masses.” He added that when they turn from their vacillating struggles
(made necessary by the pressure of the masses) to hostile acts, we must
relentlessly expose them. He referred to this as “the revolutionary
essence” guiding the united front tactic. We can add that it guides all
other tactical relationships with vacillating misleaders. These include
critical support instances and our present tactical situation; at this
juncture, revolutionaries simply do not have the power to force opportunist
reformists into united fronts. However, there is nothing they can do to
prevent us from giving them tactical support. However, the same
revolutionary essence which guides our conduct during united fronts, guides
us here too. We remain their unwanted “friends” and unceasing critics.

Tactics are an art as well as a science. Revolutionaries have to know when
to withdraw them as well as when to use them. There is a point where
circumstances change, when a particular tactic used as an attack on the
betrayals of the leaders can actually become a cover for those betrayals.
When that time approaches, we will openly abandon our present tactic and
consider others, above all those we have learned from the history of our
class in struggle.

Sectarian Abstention

A good way to illustrate the use of revolutionary tactics is to compare
them with the approach of another left group in Local 100. In its press,
the Spartacist League attacked our use of the critical support tactic
during the TWU election.

The numerous self-proclaimed socialist groups that support the pro-court,
pro-Democratic Party ND demonstrate their hostility to a class-struggle
perspective. … In a November 15 leaflet, a TWU supporter of the League for
the Revolutionary Party criticized ND for being “not very militant” and
even mentioned its anti-union suits, but called for support nonetheless,
proclaiming: “Put New Directions to the Test.” (*Workers Vanguard*, Feb.
16.)

This argument illustrates two things about the Spartacists. One, they
believe that critical support means political support, demanding some level
of political agreement with the reformist leaders rather than an attempt to
figuratively hang them, as with Lenin. Underneath their super-radical
rhetoric, the Spartacists are searching for the good reformists whom they
can support.

For authentic revolutionaries, it is the workers’ struggle that counts; for
the Spartacists it is the degree of affinity they have with the
opportunists. Trotsky pointed out that sectarians and opportunists are the
flip side of the same coin; often they end up side by side in the same
political bed. And that leads to our second point.

The Spartacists’ vaunted “class-struggle perspective” means little in
practice other than harsh invective in their newspaper. The SL has more
supporters inside Local 100 than we do. but, no one would ever know that
when struggle breaks out. At key points they could have made a difference
in preventing the bureaucrats from detouring the struggle. But for all the
blather in their paper, insides the union they have been silent.

When we fought for a strike during the tumultuous events at the end of
1999, where were they? Did they speak for our strike motion at the mass
membership meeting, let alone fight for it? No. Were they even present
among the thousands of members who unanimously and enthusiastically voted
for it? No one knows, because there wasn’t a peep out of them inside the
hall. In common with the ND-friendly opportunists on the left whom they
denounce, the sectarian Spartacists found a way to avoid fighting for a
strike the members demanded.

When the local election was being fought out, once again these armchair
warriors abstained; they refused to use the Leninist rope to hang the
opportunists. Instead they delivered yet another lecture to the working
class, giving it an ultimatum about what it must do in order to win
Spartacist blessings. Trotsky again got such sectarians right: “Active
intervention into the actual struggle of the masses of workers is
supplanted for [them] by propagandistic abstractions of a Marxist program."

We are particularly interested in outlining the method of revolutionaries
in practice because the level of class struggle around the world is rapidly
changing. The struggles in the U.S. in general and within the TWU will soon
accelerate beyond where they are now. We want to explain to advanced
workers what we are doing because revolutionary methods will be even more
important in the coming days.

There are times when little but a propagandistic approach can be used.
Various groups on the left—good, bad and indifferent—were forced into a
long period of an almost-pure propaganda existence, the necessity and
dangers of which both Lenin and Trotsky warned about. Now, although groups
remain small and must still concentrate on propaganda addressed to the
advanced workers, it is becoming possible to actively lead in struggles. No
revolutionary worthy of the name can refuse to intervene and fight. But for
many in the changing scene, their impulse toward opportunist abuse of such
chances is all-consuming. The turn to opportunism cannot be fought by
fearful sectarianism.
Return to LRP homepage <http://lrp-cofi.org/> | Write to the
LRP<[email protected]>
------------------------------

Back to the ETOL Periodical Page<http://www.marxists.org/history/etol/index.htm>

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