Crap Comrades
Mark Thomas | 16.05.2003 11:15
Crap Comrades
by Mark Thomas
A friend of mine claims that he and his wife are in the biggest and probably fastest growing political party in Britain - they are both ex members of the Socialist Workers Party. They, like many, found being in the SWP not unlike being in a cult. They too had directives from a central committee or leader, they too had to strictly follow an ideology and they too had to perform daily tasks and rituals, namely selling the paper. If the SWP had the flair of the Hare Krishna's they would be dancing up and down Oxford St banging drums and chanting "Marx and Trotsky, Marx and Trotsky, Trotsky and Marx." Unfortunately "flair" is just one of a number of qualities the SWP doesn't possess - popularity being another that just happens to spring to mind.
The SWP has been criticised for its involvement in the anti war movement. Mainly from the pro war camp, who condemn the SWP for being a "far left" group and therefore by implication too radical. For some the problem with the SWP is the polar opposite - they are too conservative.
The SWP domination of the Stop The War Coalition was unsurprising; they are old hands at controlling "popular fronts". They have to be. Without fronts like Globalise Resistance (commonly known by activists as Monopolise Resistance) they would have shrivelled into political oblivion long ago. What should be surprising is their treatment of the coalition partners. For a group that hates the competitive pressures of capitalism and believes in our ability to co-operate with each other, the SWP are totally incapable of co-operation. Coalition partners found themselves presented with decisions as a fait accompli, the SWP would call a demonstration then inform its partners after the press release had gone out. Not content with dominating the STW they actively undermined protests and demonstrations that were independent of them.
Not only are the SWP incapable of treating individuals from other groups as equals, for many activists the SWP aren't that "active". For a bunch of revolutionaries they do seem to spend an inordinate amount of time in shopping centres selling the paper and recruiting. Which just doesn't seem that revolutionary. I don't recall Che Guevara uttering the words "You can pay the monthly subs by direct debit if you like."
On the London demonstration on the 22nd of March it was the SWP stewards who tried to stop protestors taking part in a spontaneous sit down protest outside Downing Street. They have a problem with direct action or civil disobedience, as do some Labour MP's who have conveniently forgotten that they have their jobs as a result of direct action. One senior member of the SWP and STW steering committee was quoted as saying in full-blown Pravda style "direct action is elitist". How can protest actions that anyone can organise and commit be elitist? It is natural for the SWP to dislike people organising independently. What use are people who spend the day chaining themselves to the gates of a nuclear base to the SWP. Chained to a fence you can't even hold a pen to sign the membership form?
The SWP's main priority is recruitment. Why else did they continually call demonstrations week after week during the conflict? This was a massive tactical error for the anti war movement. When the bombing started many felt dispirited and tired, many were organising and carrying out other actions and protests. More importantly the SWP had not registered with the fact that many people on the massive February demonstration where there because they felt they had been denied a democratic voice. These demonstrations were bound to result in diminishing numbers and to be judged by many as the collapse of the anti war movement. However, if recruitment to your party is the priority the demos were a success. Even if you get only 20,000 people out, they are what market researchers might term a pure market group. They are prime targets for recruitment and who cares if the peace movement breaks in the process.
For many in the anti war and anti globalisation movement the act of creative dissent is a cornerstone to their moral and political philosophy. They want to empower and inspire themselves as well as others. Over a million people marching in London against the war was inspiring. However, on a day to day scale isn't a group of Quakers spiking the bombers support vehicle at Fairford or a carnival of dissent at RAF Menwith Hill or stopping a bomb convoy by locking on to the vehicle more inspiring then hearing the words "copy of this weeks Socialist Worker comrade?"
We don't know exactly what country Bush will attack next but there is no doubt that he will. The peace movement could do a lot worse than start to organise a coalition free from SWP domination, one that regards peace as the goal and co-operation as a method to get there.
Mark Thomas
Homepage:
http://www.mtcp.co.uk/article.php?id=40
Comments
Hide the following 18 comments
Never forget:
16.05.2003 12:44
Actual revolutionaries and activists know that they have to keep engaging with the broader population and winning the argument, and winning suport.
Some members of this broader population have wound up in the SWP, and probably for well intentioned reasons.
That means the actual revs and activists need to engage with SWP in a firm, friendly way.
Many of their members can be saved! Haven't you noticed how many ex-SWP there are?
scholasticus
great, that's just what we need
16.05.2003 12:55
Perhaps next you could do a piece for the Telegraph having a go at George Galloway?
Seriously, I'm really fucking disappointed. Whatever any of us think of the SWP, this is stupid tactics. The pro-war lobby will be thrilled.
kurious
Crap Mark
16.05.2003 12:57
Mark Thomas says the SWP are not revolutionary enough for him because they are too busy writing, printing and selling a socialist newspaper. He writes this in the New Statesman, a magazine which contains some very good writing from the left (Thomas himself, John Pilger - Francis Beckett even) - but also has a fair amount of pro-war, pro-Blair articles. Not surprising as the Statesman is a Labour party oriented mag owned by Geoffrey Robinson MP, the man who put the PFI into New Labour and bought Peter Mandelson's house for him. Err, perhaps the SWP think a socialist newspaper is important becuase they don't want to rely on little corners of small magazines whose main readership is found in University Senior Common Rooms: Nothing wrong with a column in the Statesman (I'd love one myself), but not a very convincing platform from which to launch a criticims of Socialsit Worker, I think
Solomon Hughes
Crappier Mark
16.05.2003 13:37
Whats the betting that fellow New Statesman (and pro-war) writer Nick Cohen is the first to pick up on Mark's piece -
".......As the murdered bodies from Saddam's necropolis unearthed at Babylon lie in mute reproach at the folly of the British lefts backing for the Baghdad butcher, the Anti War gang are reduced to shouting at eachother. Charismatic comedian Mark thomas is forced to admit that his one time co-marchers in the SWP are a "Cult" who talk like 'Pravda'..."
something like that
Tarquin Thomas
Top stuff Tarquin T
16.05.2003 14:29
That is an excellent Nick Cohen pastiche. You've captured perfectly his style of "useful idiot" rantings.
Seriously though, it IS sad when the likes of Mr Thomas feel the need to wash their dirty linen in public (or through tiny circulation Blair pamphlets like 'The Soaraway Stoadsperson', as Steve Bell refers to the Statesman).
As someone who has praised Mark Thomas to the rafters over the years I've had the uneasy feeling ever since his last series that he's turning into another one of these fevered little egos who are nominally on the left, like Cohen, Aaronovitch, Burchill, Short etc etc.
His last shows seemed to be a little too much about "Look at me aren't I a brave little cheeky chappy and all the Establishment is scared of me don't you wish you had an ounce of my creativity and genius."
A pox on all bigheads!
MM
Mad Monk
Our time honored tradition of cannibilism
16.05.2003 15:39
into a sharp wit with a stupid slag
we've gone and dug our own hole cause everybody knows
we eat our own so busy fighting each other while the real bastards fun for cover
we shoot our own leaders down before those in power get the chance
so they sit back and laugh while we destroy ourselves
wakeup and shut up we've become our worst enemy
turning inward to our own detriment
forgetting the message we were to end
we've lost count up victims roll call
they're all our own look back at what we've done
drove out the wrong side kicked sand in our own eyes
with every heroes welcome is another group on the side
ready to fire if they step out of line
just one mistake
and jealous hands claw away hope for a better way you bought it forget it goodbye
so saints be on your does and heroes be not proud
because as soon as the people rise someone will tear you down wake up and shut up we've become our worst enemy
-Boy Sets Fire
Dave
Crappiest Mark
16.05.2003 17:25
Jack Cheshire
a few points
16.05.2003 17:34
actually quite serious points. Instead we are told not to "wash our dirty linen
in public." This seems a tad hyprocritical. How are we to build a social movement
based on mass participation if people cannot discuss issues in front of the masses?
And good for Mark. Criticism is good. Wasn't it Marx who argued for a radical criticism
of all that exists? I hadn't released he added "except the SWP" in a footnote.
anarcho
e-mail: anarcho@geocities.com
Homepage: www.anarchistfaq.org
Mark Thomas is still cool!
16.05.2003 18:36
He also gives his voice and his resources away to activists who share his political beliefs rather than their party book.
The above ctitisisms are, as usually, not reflective nor objective responses, but the party booklet seems to have the effect that the SWP does behave more like a sect, with Thommy Sheridan walking like Jesus above the rest of us, making no mistakes, having his followers gathered around him and jumping into every assembly of people bigger than an average enflish-speaking tourist group with his megaphone shouting out his holly unmistakably message.
SWP members,just get a grip on reality!
edinburgh rrriotgrrl
always a good respons
16.05.2003 21:50
dh
this is it
17.05.2003 00:25
dh
from hero to zero
17.05.2003 09:48
Also the Coalition did call and push for the biggest concerted direct actions that have happened in this country to date.
This article seems like petulance because a coalition that tried to bring together wide social forces didnt adopt the agenda of your particular political strand.
My experience of the SWP is that they spent their time building anti war activity at the expence of selling papers and building there own organisation.
the irony...
Doug Wiseman
comment
17.05.2003 11:02
I even had a phone call from the "central committee" asking me if we were supporting their call for the London demonstration when our support for the Fairford demo was announced months beforehand. As far as I am aware, we were not consulted before the London demo was announced.
I agree with Mark and am pleased that he's made his remarks - let's learn from our mistakes.
Bristol STW activist
comment correction
17.05.2003 11:05
Bristol STW activist
To 'Bristol STW' spokesperson
17.05.2003 12:49
John B
Response to John B
17.05.2003 13:34
I never claimed to be a Bristol STW spokesperson.
You seem to have conveniently missed many issues that I raised with your simplistic response.
What about consulting STW coalition groups?
What about not only failing to support STW coalition events, but actively opposing them? Of course its ridiculous to call a demonstration on the same day that two have been planned months earlier.
What about the 'central committee' imposing central control?
If you're going to slag me off, slag me off on the issues and not infantile abuse.
Bristol STW activist
stewards??????
17.05.2003 14:18
the SWP don't have stewards
rob
Sigh...
19.05.2003 23:25
Hey - the SWP always sticks by people who get arrested, at least in my part of the world.
When Bill Clinton was in Belfast 2 years ago getting an honourary degree for his "services to peace", I was at the protest along with the SWP, the Anarchists, the Greens and all sorts of other people. When four of us got arrested, the SWP started phoning round the police stations trying to find out where we were, getting on the line to Madden and Finucane [solicitors] to represent us, and when they found out where we were, they came down to the station and stayed there ready with chocolate and cold drinks until about half one in the morning when we were all released.
And that's certainly the pattern all over Ireland. We look out for the lefties and the people who come on demos with us and all that, 'cause if we don't, no-one else will.
So don't generalise.
Caroline