COLLECTIF PROMETHEE 76

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Lundi 31 décembre 2007

Lettre envoyée pour le Forum des lecteurs de Rouge.


"Comme de nombreux lecteurs de Rouge, non membres de la LCR, j'approuve le projet de création du Nouveau Parti Anticapitaliste. Comment le construire et sur quelles bases? S'il n'existe aucun « modèle » préétabli à copier, les expériences des pays voisins peuvent être éclairantes et utiles. C'est donc avec beaucoup d'intérêt que j'ai pris connaissance de l'article Italie : La gauche critique prend son envol (Rouge n° 2232  20/12/2007).

Et là, mauvaise surprise ! Parmi des informations, certes utiles et intéressantes, deux grosses failles, comment les appeler, « erreurs », omissions » ?

Sur la Grande-Bretagne on peut lire : « Une coalition de forces et de formes différentes de l’action politique, qui peuvent demeurer chacune dans son propre domaine et conserver leurs propres structures, tout en apportant leur pierre au projet commun. Nombre d’expériences européennes se sont renforcées en suivant ce schéma : le Bloc de gauche au Portugal, ou encore Respect en Grande-Bretagne ». Le lecteur de Rouge non informé continuera donc d'ignorer que cette « coalition de forces » vient d'éclater avec d'un côté le SWP, principal parti de l'extrème-gauche britannique, et de l'autre les principaux alliés musulmans, le député ex-labour George Galloway et l'ISG, organisation soeur de la LCR.

Sur l'Italie on apprend qu' «  Il faudra adopter un modèle d’organisation qui ne copie pas celui, au demeurant désastreux, du PRC » et que «  les autoproclamations ne suffisent pas, elles peuvent même être néfastes ». Cela mérite bien sûr réflexion mais ne serait-il pas utile d'être informés autrement que par une allusion compréhensible par les seuls « initiés » qu'un autre courant numériquement important se référant au trotskysme avait déjà tiré le bilan désastreux du PRC mais en faisant le choix, pour sa part, de construire un parti, le Partido comunista dei Lavoratori (PCL) ?

Je me suis cru un temps revenu à l'époque où, militant du PCF, je lisais dans l'Huma des nouvelles toujours positives mais en fait édulcorées des partis frères..."    Jean-Michel Edwin


par JM EDWIN publié dans : le.communiste.76
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Mardi 22 mai 2007
Election tactics

Comrade Jean-Michel Edwin argues that the left in France was correct to recommend - as it did in its overwhelming majority - a vote for the French ‘Blair’, Ségolène Royal, as the lesser evil, compared to the French ‘Thatcher’, Nicolas Sarkozy.

There is nothing unprincipled per se in choosing the lesser evil and exceptionally we may be forced to do just that because of the weakness of the independent forces of the working class. But I do not believe that the second round of France’s presidential elections was such an occasion.

Firstly, it never looked likely that Royal would be able to beat Sarkozy - the first round results clearly demonstrated that the right could count on far more support than the left, even if every vote of the defeated left candidates had been transferred to her. The likelihood of a Sarkozy victory was not in itself a reason to refuse to support Royal, but the left should have taken this probable outcome into account when drawing up its tactics. In other words, how would a recommendation to vote Royal advance the cause of the working class if she lost?

It was already known that the left’s unconditional support would allow her to move further right - the votes of the Parti Communiste Français and the far left were secure, so Royal was obviously going to concentrate her appeal for votes on the centre and soft right.

Furthermore, this rightwing momentum will now be carried forward into next month’s elections to the national assembly - Royal’s 47% is viewed by the Parti Socialiste leaders as a reasonable result and they will hardly be looking to reposition themselves further to the left. On the contrary, they will claim that a PS government is achievable - so long as workers ‘vote useful’ from the first round and forget about the PCF, Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire and Lutte Ouvrière … In short, the left’s misguided recommendation has helped strengthen the PS right and therefore the establishment as a whole.

Secondly, comrade Edwin’s argument that a Royal administration would be a “government elected ‘by default’, following the defeat of the hard right” does not stand up to examination. Exactly the same case was made for supporting Jacques Chirac against Jean-Marie Le Pen in 2002. It was said that an overwhelming vote “against Le Pen” would leave Chirac ‘without a mandate’ or even make him a ‘prisoner of the left’. What a joke! Because of the nature of bourgeois politics, every government elected relies on a large number of ‘negative’ votes - votes against other parties - but this does not stop them pushing through their own programme.

What can prevent them implementing anti-working class policies is mass mobilisation, and any government - of right or left - must take into account working class combativity. Comrade Edwin’s belief that Royal would be more susceptible than Sarkozy in this regard is simply wrong. The question the left should have asked was: ‘What tactic is most likely to encourage working class combativity?’ An unconditional vote for Royal was never going to achieve that.

What about a boycott, as advocated by one or two small groups? In 2002 an active boycott (not ‘abstention’) of the second round was definitely the most appropriate tactic. Hundreds of thousands had been mobilised onto the streets and could have been won not only to oppose Le Pen, but the whole, undemocratic Fifth Republic system, where the electorate was expected to choose between ‘a fascist and a thief’ who, between them, had only won the support of a quarter of all those entitled to vote. The left should have demanded the cancellation of the second round and sought to promote the fight for a democratic Sixth Republic led by the working class.

In 2007, however, there was no mass mobilisation and it would have been much more difficult to challenge the legitimacy of the first round - especially after the very high turnout. A call for a boycott could be nothing other than a recommendation for passive abstention.

In my opinion, the defeated left candidates should have offered conditional support to Royal. In other words, the PCF, LCR, LO, etc would urge their supporters to vote PS in the second round only if she agreed a set of minimum demands: for example, hands off the 35-hour week, stop the attack on pensions, no more privatisations, for genuine democratisation of French and EU institutions.

Of course, Royal would almost certainly have refused such conditions, in which case the left would have withheld its votes. True, Sarkozy could have won by a bigger majority, but the far left would have been strengthened prior to the legislative elections. More importantly, workers would have been encouraged to fight for their own independent interests and their combativity raised, irrespective of who won.

Peter Manson
South London

par JM EDWIN publié dans : le.communiste.76
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Mardi 22 mai 2007
‘Vote Blair’

“May 6: stop Sarkozy” - by voting for the Parti Socialiste candidate, Ségolène Royal. That is the recommendation of the militant French communist website, Prométhée (http://perso.orange.fr/gauchecomm/lettreprom5.htm).

Clearly Peter Manson does not agree with this position, since in his article, ‘Ghosts of 2002, poverty of 2007’, he criticises the different far-left and anti-neoliberal forces that have called for a vote for Royal against Nicolas Sarkozy (April 26). Taking up the ‘Blair against Thatcher’ formula of Le Figaro, Peter considers that the decision to ‘vote Blair’ shows a lamentable lack of imagination on the part of a French left which was not able to unite for the first round of the presidential election.

I agree with comrade Peter on one aspect of the question: the disunity of the French ‘left of the left’, which stood five candidates - without counting the Greens and those who preferred to vote PS from the first round - does indeed display a childish, suicidal attitude on the part of a political force which, united, could have attracted 15%-25% of voters and played a key role in these elections.

It could have given electoral voice to the successes enjoyed by the social movement of the working class and youth - forces which saw off Chirac and Sarkozy in the battle against the CPE (inferior contracts for young workers). The left, which also played a major role in defeating Chirac’s UMP and the PS at the time of the referendum on the so-called ‘European constitution’, has now burst apart, missing the opportunity to become the main opposition force in this country.

However, I completely disagree with Peter’s position on the second round of the presidential election. Yes, it is necessary to do everything to beat Sarkozy, including voting for ‘Blair’. Elections are not a strategic matter for communists, even less a matter of principle. They pose tactical problems. It is not at all certain that today it is possible to stop Sarkozy from entering the Elysée gates. But we have to try, and that is the best tactic.

This virulent representative of the right is for sure not a fascist, but a Bonapartist who wants to take his revenge for May 1968, to use an historic image, and is set on further consolidating the anti-democratic, presidential character of the ‘republican monarchy’ known as the French Fifth Republic. Sarkozy is a kind of political hybrid - a cross between Margaret Thatcher and George Bush. His programme is for the crushing of trade unionism, youth, what remains of the workers’ movement and social gains as vital as pensions and health insurance. Internationally it is that of the neo-cons, with the increased participation of French imperialism in the wars and adventures of the most powerful imperialist power. That is why we must stop Sarkozy if it is possible.

Whoever wins, we will have to fight. We will have to bring the scattered forces of the left back together in the battle to establish a genuine Communist Party, which is both a mass and vanguard party. We will have to take on a centre-left government, but it will be a less powerful adversary. What is more, it will be a government elected ‘by default’, following the defeat of the hard right.

Get rid of Sarkozy-Thatcher-Berlusconi in order to prepare better conditions for the fight against Blair-Prodi-Royal.

Jean-Michel Edwin
France

par JM EDWIN publié dans : le.communiste.76
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