SACPblackStar.jpg

 

SACP Red October Rally, Saulsville Arena, Attridgeville, Tshwane, 2 November
2014

 

 

Message from the Central Committee delivered by

 

Comrade Thulas Nxesi

 

SACP Deputy National Chairperson

 

 

Dear Comrades and distinguished guests,

 

Allow me to convey revolutionary greetings on behalf of the Central
Committee of the SACP.

Through the Red October Campaign we are celebrating the Great October
Socialist Revolution that took place in Russia in 1917, 97 years ago.
Inspired by that great milestone in the history of humanity - in the history
of the struggle for economic justice; the struggle for social justice; the
struggle for democracy; the struggle for complete human liberation and full
social emancipation - we  are rallied here today as part of our Red October
Campaign 2014/5 under the theme:

 

Mobilise people's power to transform the financial sector and build a
People's Economy!

 

Together with our allies and other progressive organisations we have scored
important victories since the launch of our 'Make the banks serve the
people' campaign in 2000. This campaign has now developed into the broader
Financial Sector Campaign - which we are intensifying through the Red
October Campaign 2014/5 to transform the financial sector as a whole to
serve our broader developmental agenda.

 

Our campaign to make the banks serve the people notched up important
victories.

 

But the struggle continues, comrades - first and foremost to defend those
well-known victories which we listed when we launched the Red October
Campaign 2014/5 last month - and, equally importantly, to transform the
financial sector to serve all the people.

 

We cannot afford to have a private monopoly banking sector, and in addition,
which is dominated by four oligopolies - Barclays-ABSA, FirstRand-FNB,
Standard Bank and NedBank. These have now been joined by the likes of
Investec and Capitec Bank, and a number of other private financial
predators, including micro-lenders such as African Bank which has recently
imploded. In addition, we are facing a multitude of small, fly-by-night loan
sharks that only impoverish our people.

 

The SACP supports, and calls for decisive advance towards, the establishment
of co-operative banks, state bank and the transformation of the Post Bank to
offer full banking services; all of these must prioritise the people first
and foremost and all the time - rather than profit.

 

Let us continue the struggle against the ever-rising exorbitant bank charges
and high interest rates - let us prioritise production, economic and social
transformation and development.

 

Let us intensify our just fight against reckless and unsecured lending that
leads the workers and the poor into high levels of debt.

 

The credit bureau supports the super-exploitation and blacklisting of our
people. Earlier this year we were able to secure measures to expunge adverse
credit records from the system. It is clear that the credit bureau regime
must be further transformed.

 

The financial sector, including the private monopoly insurance industry, is
discriminating against people living with HIV. We must fight against this
and advance alternative, caring policies.

 

We also call upon workers to ensure that trade union investment companies
invest in a manner that advances transformation and our developmental goals.
Let us also defeat business unionism, including the use of monies from the
union investment companies for factional and even counter-revolutionary
purposes.

 

Through the Red October Campaign 2014/5, the SACP will intensify the
Financial Sector Campaign to:

 

.        Review and improve the National Development Plan in line with the
outcomes of our last Alliance Summit. We will in this regard participate
meaningfully in the Alliance Task Team that was set up to address the
essential concerns that were raised by the Party and COSATU relating to the
plan's economic epicentre. Instead to a paradigm maintenance offered by the
plan's economic policy epicentre we need rather a rupture with policies the
past that did not work - this is what is needed to pursue a second, more
radical phase of transition.  

 

.        Break the investment strike that the bosses have embarked upon, and
push for taxation of liquid capital above a defined ceiling coupled with
prescribed assets requirements to direct investment towards productive
activities, employment creation and the reduction of inequality and poverty.


 

.        Ensure consistent implementation of consumer and financial
education.

 

.        Bring to an end the bail-out of the banks that implode as a result
of reckless and unsecured lending.

 

.        Abolish the prohibitive cost of, and universalise access to
communication; and ensure the immediate implementation of drop call rates
reduction.

 

.        Push for an end to commoditisation and financialisation of basic
services, including healthcare; defend and ensure that the National Health
Insurance Scheme is successfully implemented.

 

All of these require that we build a working class-led financial sector
transformation and consumer activist movement. The SACP has made progress in
this regard will intensify the work.

 

The second more radical phase of our NDR

 

Last week, the Party launched its discussion document entitled "Going to the
Root: A radical second phase of the NDR: its content, context and our
strategic tasks".

 

This is a timely intervention, comrades, intended to contribute to deepening
our understanding of the current conjuncture, reflecting on where we are
coming from, and developing a solid class-based analysis to guide strategy
and tactics going forward.

 

The discussion document uncovers the underlying systemic causes of the
continuing triple crisis of unemployment, poverty and inequality in our
country. These include the fact that the productive economy remains
subordinated to the demands of the global capitalist system. Critical
features of this legacy include:

 

.        Dependence on commodity exports (minerals, coal, etc.) - and the
failure to use these resources to promote industrialisation and development.

 

.        High levels of monopoly concentration across all sectors - and the
growing influence of the finance sector - resulting in a massive flight of
capital overseas and an effective investment strike by capital.

 

.        Reliance on a 'cheap labour' dispensation - which continues to
reproduce South Africa's skewed racial pattern of spatial development - with
rich middle class suburbs - and the black workforce forced to commute from
far-flung townships and semi-rural areas.

 

At the political level, the discussion document acknowledges the massive
constitutional and political progress made in abolishing white minority
rule. This in turn allowed the ANC-led government to embark on a major
redistributive socio-economic programme - including the provision of social
grants, RDP houses, electrification, water, expansion of free education,
NSFAS, school feeding scheme, EPWP etc., - all of which brought relief to
the poorest of our people. But there were clearly severe limits to what
could be achieved - given the largely untransformed productive economy -
which is at the root of what is reproducing the triple crisis of
unemployment, poverty and inequality.

 

The discussion document does not shy away from self-criticism. Politically,
a major flaw was to conceive of the redistributive programme as a 'top-down'
exercise of government with the masses seen as passive beneficiaries. The
negative consequences of this included the following:

 

.        As government's massive redistributive effort is overwhelmed by the
scale of the problems, this sets up government as a sitting duck target for
anger and frustration - while monopoly capital disinvests and largely
escapes blame.

 

.        Treating people as individual 'clients' also tends to undermine the
potential cohesion of poor communities. Many "township delivery protests"
are fuelled by factional rivalries within communities - e.g. backyard
dwellers versus shack-dwellers for priority listing on the housing list etc.

 

.        The effective de-mobilisation of popular forces by the top-down,
state "delivery" model of redistribution has also deprived us of an
important means of transforming the state itself. The Freedom Charter calls
not just for one-person-one-vote representative democracy, but also for
"DEMOCRATIC ORGANS OF SELF-GOVERNMENT" - an ACTIVE PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY.
We have lost sight of this crucial aspect - as we increasingly looked to the
state to find technical solutions for our problems. This aspect of the
discussion document has already sparked debate:

 

o   Do we seek to recapture and democratise the official statutory
institutions - community police forums, school governing bodies, ward
committees, municipal participatory budgeting, etc. - as the discussion
document implies, or

 

o   Do we go back to the basics - "to continue with the popular
participatory democracy of the ANC and of other democratic mass structures.'
(VC, Communist University).

 

o   Or do we do both: go back to basics - to organise, mobilise and educate
- in order to then breathe new life into the official structures we have
created.

 

In summary, from this diagnostic, two key and related perspectives are
advanced in the discussion paper:

 

.        The problematic dependent nature of our PRODUCTIVE economy must be
radically transformed; and

 

.        We need an active citizenry and a transformed relationship between
the state and communities.

 

Hence the need for a second, more radical phase of our revolution. The
question then becomes, comrades, what is the form and content of this second
phase? What is our programme of action? This is where we are going to have
to focus our debate - in line with the words of Karl Marx, engraved on his
tombstone in Highgate Cemetery, London:

 

"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways, the
point is to change it."

 

At a strategic level, the discussion document points out the direction we
need to travel. It calls for:

 

.        South Africa to break out (what it calls 'relative delinking") from
its dependent position within the global imperialist system - by developing
alternative economic and trading alliances e.g., through sub-Saharan
regional development and BRICS;

 

.        Critical also is the challenge of re-industrialisation - including
the beneficiation of commodities - so that economically we move up the
global value chain. Indeed many of the key pillars of this strategy are
already cornerstones of government policy and programmes - including the New
Growth Path, the Industrial Policy Action Plan, and the National
Infrastructure Programme. However, there is still a long way to go.

 

.        Our deep-rooted productive economy distortions mean that high
levels of unemployment and under-employment are likely to be a long-term
reality, as the NDP recognises. In this situation the fostering of
sustainable (and productive) livelihoods, relatively de-linked from the
labour-market are absolutely essential. 

 

This points to the need for a fundamental re-conception and repositioning of
public employment programmes to provide the following:

 

.        an expansion of our social security net, dispensing of stipends to
unemployed and poor people and communities;

 

.        providing meaningful training, skills and work experience with
participants involved in productive work - providing services,
infrastructure and assets to poor communities;

 

.        along with cooperatives, micro-enterprises and various forms of
self-employment, the public employment programmes can develop into a
solidarity economy relatively de-linked from the capitalist market.

 

In the past, as the SACP, we have said that the second more radical phase
must also decisively address the land question and massively intensify the
struggle against corruption:

 

.        On the land question, as we put in place statutory frameworks and
structures to reopen land claims and to drive restitution and
redistribution, we must never lose sight of the centrality of rural
community development to promote food security and greater self-sufficiency.

 

.        On corruption - whilst the discussion document analyses the roots
of this scourge, we need to focus our energies on the development of a
holistic, effective and credible anti-corruption strategy.

 

Comrades, a key task of the second more radical phase of our revolution is
to replenish and reaffirm the integrity of both government (and officials)
and of our organisations. We need to empower and affirm honest comrades, and
we need to root out corrupt officials - and those who corrupt them in the
private sector. This is about compliance, enforcement, accountability and
consequences. It is about reasserting the traditional values and practices
of our movement - exemplified by the great leaders of the past - and it is
about leadership that does not take people for granted, and understands that
loyalty and respect is earned by service and delivering on commitments.

 

This brings us to the final part of our message here today:

 

The organisational challenges we face.

 

Today we would like to draw on the analysis contained in a document prepared
by the Limpopo ANC entitled: Organisational Renewal - Vision 2018.  We have
applied the lessons nationally and to our own situation as the SACP:

 

Starting with what the document calls "Our Competitive Strengths":

 

One of the ANC's key strength over the years has been its strategic
visionary outlook anchored on dynamic policies, progressive values and
principles, vibrant organic alliance and our mass based approach to
organisation.  Furthermore throughout our evolution we have remained
resilient, adaptive and innovative.  Clearly this is equally true - if not
more so - in the case of the SACP.

 

Secondly the overwhelming majority of our people have in successive
elections consistently demonstrated their confidence in our ability to
restore their dignity by delivering basic services and improving their
overall socio-economic status.  However in the recent elections, the
significant drop in voter turnout is a concern.  Clearly the internal strife
in the organisation has defocused our energies thus denting our
revolutionary zeal and sight of the strategic objectives. 

 

As the SACP - members of the revolutionary Alliance under the leadership of
the ANC - we recognise that when the ANC is weakened - the Alliance is
weakened. Our task becomes to strengthen the ANC - and the Alliance.

 

Thirdly our extensive organisational machinery - which reaches the length
and breadth of our country, far flung rural villages, townships and suburbs
- remains unmatched. Equally we have witnessed a dramatic quantitative
growth in membership, though much still needs to be done to buttress this
commendable effort with extensive political education.

 

Comrades, we can say the same of the SACP: we have grown dramatically in
numbers (now around 200,000) in recent years. Contrary to what our
detractors claim the Party continues to find resonance anchored in the
working class. But have we invested the necessary time and resources in the
political education of cadres?

 

Lastly as a country we are imbued with a rich progressive historical
heritage, which should serve as a source of pride and inspiration.
Throughout the various epochs of struggle our people have waged relentless
and heroic battles against the erstwhile repressive regime and produced
gallant and visionary leaders.

 

It is this history of national resistance and struggle against oppression -
led by the ANC in alliance with the SACP and the progressive labour movement
- supported by the masses - which defeated Apartheid. It is this very same
history that has sustained an ANC government for the last 20 years. We must
never betray that loyalty and trust that the people have given to this
movement.

 

Moving on to what the document refers to as "Our Fatal Organisational
Weaknesses"

 

Seven dangers are listed:

 

.        the danger of social distance and isolation of the party from the
mass base;

 

.        the danger of state bureaucratisation and demobilisation of the
masses;

 

.        the danger of corruption and patronage;

 

.        the danger of institutionalised factionalism, ill-discipline and
disunity fuelled and inspired by the battles over the control of state power
and resources;

 

.        the danger of using state institutions to settle internal party
differences;

 

.        the danger of neglecting cadre development;

 

.        the danger of lack of capacity and capability to implement policies
in order to rapidly improve the socio-economic conditions of our people.

 

We can go through each of these points - which were applied to the ANC - and
we can see how they are present or imminent dangers for our alliance as a
whole.

 

The 53rd National Conference of the ANC articulated similar - and additional
challenges:

 

.        Lacklustre attitude by the leadership and members towards mass
work;

 

.        Lack of institutionalised political education and failure to
produce an adequate pool of cadres post the democratic dispensation;

 

.        dysfunctional ANC branches save for elective meetings;

 

.        disunity, factional and sectarian practices mainly by the
leadership;

 

.        creating personal and political empires thus subverting the
authority of the organisation;

 

.        damaging of the public profile and image of the organisation due to
ongoing internal strife;

 

.        poor articulation and stricter application of Rule 25 to deal with
alien tendencies;

 

.        weak and dysfunctional Alliance with focus placed on periodic
meetings rather than focusing on a joint and coordinated Alliance Programme
of Action;

 

.        absence of a coherent and consistent stakeholder outreach
programme;

 

.        inadequate membership management system, gate keeping, ghost
members and lack of dedicated membership officers;

 

.        poor organisational design not aligned to key organisational
outputs;

 

.        non-alignment of ANC and leagues programmes;

 

.        poor application of ICT (Information Communication Technology) in
organisational management processes and as a tool for mass and internal
communication;

 

.        poor political management of governance;

 

.        Lastly, the ugly spectre and demon of tribalism and its narrow
ethnic chauvinism, mainly articulated by the leadership as a self-serving
and opportunistic adventure.

 

As we said, this analysis was done with the ANC in mind. But none of us can
be complacent. Factional and incorrect behaviour has permeated throughout
the Alliance - most seriously within COSATU. The SACP is not immune.

 

What do these organisational challenges mean to us the communists, who work
within the Alliance to strengthen the ANC and COSATU, and the mass
democratic movement?

 

We believe that the very real organisational dangers - these fatal
weaknesses - require true communists to stand up and be counted. What do we
mean by this on a practical level?

 

.        We have to be the first to expose and condemn corruption - in all
its forms. Corruption is killing us comrades. It diverts resources from the
poor; it sets comrades against comrades; and it demoralises the honest civil
servants. One of the causes of the divisions in the labour movement is what
we have called 'business unionism' - union leaders fighting over business
opportunities and perks. Comrades, step away from those tenders. If you hold
political office - you have no business being in business - especially where
there is conflict of interest.

 

.        As leadership - we must be in the forefront of mass work and the
tasks of political education. You can never be too busy - or too important -
to undertake these tasks. We have to reassert the strategy and tactics of
mass mobilisation and campaigns - which made our organisations strong in the
past

 

.        Above all comrades, we need to interrogate how we behave towards
other comrades. When we have differences - we deal with them through the
tradition of open and robust political debate. But as a movement once we
take a decision - then we work together - as one - to implement that
decision or programme. This, comrades - put simply - is the meaning of
democratic centralism.

 

.        Above all we have to nurture, protect, strengthen and defend the
unity of our organisations and the broader Alliance. Let us never forget
that it was this mighty Alliance which brought down the Apartheid regime. It
remains the only vehicle capable of defending the gains of our revolution
and taking us forward into a second, more radical phase of our transition.

 

Thank you so much, comrades!

 

Let us intensify our struggle for socialism!

 

Let us intensify the National Democratic Revolution by placing it onto a
second, more radical phase.

 

Released by the SACP

3 November 2014;12:15

 

 

 

 

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