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Weekly Worker 728 Thursday July 3 2008 Subscribe to the Weekly Worker

Ivan the terrible

Lawrence Parker discerns a threat that could further dissipate the CPB’s fading influence

Summer Offensive
Short back and sides

Howard Roak reports on the progress of the CPGB’s annual two-month fundraising drive

We are almost two weeks into this year’s Summer Offensive and a steady pace is being maintained. Over the last seven days Ł2,194 came in, bringing the total so far to Ł4,734. A figure that is roughly comparable to where we were at the same stage in 2007. Pride of place this week goes to comrades MM with a chunky Ł250, JS for his useful Ł75.77 and MF for his Ł200.

Also encouraging is the fact that CPGB members and supporters around the country have started to take some political initiatives for the campaign. Regular party stalls are being arranged in south Wales, Manchester, Leeds and London. CPGB comrades will also have a good opportunity to sell papers, pamphlets, books and badges at the SWP’s Marxism event this coming weekend. This may not be so easy following the hostile atmosphere of last year, when SWP national organiser Martin Smith attacked one of our comrades, but we are determined to ensure that the voice of Marxism is heard in the face of crassly sectarian intimidation and violence. CPGB comrades have also taken the initiative in designing some materials for the forthcoming public sector workers’ strikes on July 16-17.

As usual, this year’s campaign has produced slightly less orthodox means of raising money. Communist Students member and CPGB supporter Dani, a music student, is going to be gracing the streets of south Wales with his guitar - busking and distributing leaflets. Another CS member and regular Weekly Worker columnist, James Turley, is putting his body on the line for the campaign - well, his hair at least. He will be shaving off his long, Cousin It-style locks in aid of the Offensive, something he describes as “a once in a lifetime opportunity to see seven and a half years’ worth of hirsutary accretions wiped out!” He hopes to raise “at least” 200 quid (as well as quite a few eyebrows) for his troubles. A PayPal account is currently being set up, and comrades can show their support for James’s quest to find his long lost ears by joining the Facebook group: www.facebook.com/group.php?gid =18181979929.

Some comrades newer to the organisation seem to be slightly overwhelmed by the prospect of meeting their SO targets - something that has prompted them to look to cut down costs either by staying at home, working extra hours or living off bread and water in an attempt to get somewhere near their pledges. Whilst such dedication and self-sacrifice is encouraging, it does not grasp the essence of the Summer Offensive as a way of increasing our political presence and expanding on our interventions. We would rather comrades spent money to attend and help out at SO actions and events - expenses which can, of course, be added to comrades’ SO totals. Every contact made, every paper sold helps to expand our audience and influence in the coming period - and will usually see a return in terms of income.

Within the context of a left in terminal crisis and decline, and its shattering into halfway house projects like Respect, Left List and the CNWP, the Weekly Worker has an indispensable role to play. And the proof is in the pudding - thousands read us and appreciate our open and honest press. Take this week’s issue for example - where else on the left are you going to find such a thorough analysis of the political developments on the left such as in the Left List, Campaign for a New Workers’ Party, the National Shop Stewards Network and the latest sectarian turn of the International Socialist Group? Or a critical engagement with some of the positive developments from the Permanent Revolution weekend school? That is why the Weekly Worker must continue to play the role it does and why that role should be expanded - both in terms of its existing format and online.

All this requires hard cash. But by stepping up our work and imaginatively thinking up ways of raising funds, we can be confident that we will not only attain our target of Ł30,000, but can actually go that little bit further. So please, comrades, dig deep!

Following the CPGB aggregate on July 12, there will be a joint Summer Offensive/Hands Off the People of Iran barbeque and social where all comrades, supporters and friends of the organisation will be welcome. Tickets are priced at Ł5 unwaged/students; Ł10 waged; Ł20 solidarity price. Rumours abound that hair clippers may also be making an appearance, so make sure you’re there!

Click here to download a standing order form - regular income is particular important in order to plan ahead. Even £5/month can help!
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Ivan Beavis, a member of the Communist Party of Britain’s executive committee, spoke at the final plenary session of the Socialist Resistance event (see 'Licence to liquidate'), and also spoke on the ‘CPB approach’ to a much smaller (single figures in terms of audience) workshop.

Presumably, the CPB executive had hoped that comrade Beavis would have managed to at least give a clear picture of its current political priorities. Instead, he gave his audience just about the dullest and misleading contribution I have ever heard from a CPB speaker. This could have been an indication of the lack of seriousness with which many London CPB members have regarded this ‘Trot’ gathering and a more general antipathy to a dying Respect project (Renewal or otherwise). Only Steve Johnson, CPB London district secretary, bothered to turn up to support comrade Beavis.

The CPB’s recent congress agreed a twin-track strategy, which, as Dave Lynch put it, “has not written off ‘reclaiming’ the Labour Party to carry out its CPB-anointed role of implementing socialism through parliament … alongside a commitment to a ‘mass party of labour’ - ie, a Labour Party mark two that can guide us toward the promised land under the ‘comradely’ advice of the CPB” (Weekly Worker May 29). Comrade Lynch also noted that so far this strategy, rather than positioning the organisation to make a decisive political intervention, has maintained a fragile truce between the CPB Labourites and those, like general secretary Robert Griffiths, who see the need for a new Labourite party.

Griffiths’s inability to fight to commit his organisation to what he sees as a correct strategy threatens to dissipate the CPB’s fading influence even further, as Beavis’s speech demonstrated. I am all for people being open about their differences and weaknesses, but Beavis simply failed to tell the reasonably large audience at the plenary session what the CPB’s current policy actually is. Instead, he told us what the CPB’s policy toward the Labour Party was about 10 years ago, presenting it as an up-to-date analysis - a ‘traditionalist’ account from someone who was, along with Griffiths and John Haylett, Morning Star editor, keen to ally the CPB with George Galloway not so long ago.

Beavis told his audience that Lenin had advised the CPGB to join the Labour Party in the 1920s and that it was not the role of the CPB “to supplant that of the Labour Party”. It was wrong for organisations such as the RMT to disaffiliate from Labour and it was still possible for the party to be “reclaimed” by the trade union movement. The CPB was for strengthening the Labour Representation Committee as a force for change in the Labour Party, although it also recognised that other people on the left had different opinions and it was prepared to work with them for the common good. Comrade Beavis added that the trade unions are currently undemocratic, ‘New Labour’ leaders were “vultures”, we need a referendum on the EU and we should support the public sector workers. That was about it - on being told he had another five minutes, Beavis quickly wound up.

In a brief question at the end, Beavis was challenged on his ahistorical use of Lenin, to which he cryptically replied that our analysis must change daily and even by the hour (unless you are comrade Beavis, in which case once a century is seemingly enough). No mention of comrade Griffiths’s new “mass party of labour”, no acknowledgement of the CPB’s twin-track strategy; just the good old-fashioned homely verities of the British road to socialism.

At this point I must admit to being quite amazed that Beavis had the nerve to be quite so mendacious. He was challenged on this by Socialist Resistance supporters at the poorly attended workshop session that followed the plenary - surely the CPB, not least general secretary Griffiths, had been evolving its thought on the Labour Party issue? In another painful contribution, Beavis told us that CPB members operated under democratic centralism; what this had to do with the debate I do not know. Does the CPB’s ‘democratic centralism’ stop members telling others what its policy actually is?

He added that the CPB had significant internal differences: some thought that the Labour Party could be reclaimed for the working class, while others were prepared to be more flexible towards new organisational formations. Beavis thus admitted that his one-sided plenary speech had been “cautious”. He never spoke against his “dear leader, comrade Griffiths”, which was obviously a joke, because that is exactly what Beavis had done in the plenary session.

Beavis went on to say that the CPB’s internal differences could be explained on a regional basis. In some areas - Scotland, for example - the CPB was much more heavily embedded in the traditional labour movement and so was highly reluctant to move away from a perspective of changing the Labour Party. Steve Johnson seemingly added his support to the ‘traditionalist’ line of his comrade, stating Britain’s unitary labour movement was unique and it might not be feasible to duplicate some of the alliances taking place in other European countries.

It is clear that for the coming period, different sections and individuals from the CPB are going to be putting across their own takes on the twin-track strategy agreed at this year’s congress. With both sides determined to pursue one particular track at the expense of the other, the CPB will simply be unable to have any kind of strategic impact. The group is simply not united around its current strategy, which is nothing but an uneasy truce to deter further organisational splits.

Beavis came out with a wonderful line. He urged comrades to “be patient with an organisation recovering from 25 years of trauma”. Judging by his performance in front of the ‘Trots’, there’s plenty more tears to come.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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