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WSWS/SEP London meeting: The working class needs its
own international strategy
By our correspondent
26 June 2003
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On Sunday June 22, the World Socialist Web Site and
the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) of Britain held a public meeting
in London to discuss the lessons of the Iraq war and the tasks
of the European working class.
Opening his remarks, Peter Schwarz, member of the WSWS Editorial
Board and of the executive of the Partei fur Soziale Gleichheit
(Socialist Equality Party) of Germany, stressed that the Iraq
war constituted a turning point in international politics.
The basis of the old political mechanisms and institutions
of the postwar period has been stripped away by the new direction
of American foreign policy, Schwarz said. This applies
not only to international relations, but to national conditions
as well. There is barely a social or political structure in any
country that is not affected by this.
This was illustrated by recent events in France where millions
of workers went on strike and participated in demonstrations against
the pension reform plan of the right-wing government of Jean-Pierre
Raffarin.
There were two remarkable aspects of this movement,
Schwarz said. Its determination, size and tenacitythe
government, despite its large majority in parliament, was largely
isolatedand the complete absence of political perspective
and leadership, that would have been indispensable to make the
movement a success. All political tendencies of the left and all
trade unions were either openly opposing the movement, sabotaging
it or leading it into a dead end. In the end, the workers got
nothing.
After detailing the role played by the trade unions, the Socialist
and Communist parties, and the parties of the radical left, Schwarz
concluded:
A number of lessons must be drawn from the recent French
experience. The first is that the old forms of struggle and the
old reformist parties and trade unions have pretty much exhausted
themselves. The class struggle, that has taken a predominantly
trade union form over the last 50 years, must now take a political
form (i.e., it must directly challenge the rule of the bourgeoisie
and its control over society).
The second is that there exists not a single political
or social organisation in France that is ready to pose this task,
let alone to take responsibility for it. But there is absolutely
no way to defend the pensions or any other social achievement
without challenging the rule of the bourgeoisie and installing
a government that defends the interests of the working class.
This is not an easy task, nor can it be achieved overnight. It
demands the building of a new independent political party. Without
posing this question openly, it can never be resolved.
Such a partythis is the third conclusionneeds
a strategy that is fundamentally different from the existing political
organisations. The idea that the issue of pensions can be resolved
within the borders of France is absurd. Similar attacks are being
carried out all over Europe and the world. French workers are
not just facing Raffarin and Chirac; behind them are the employers
association Medef, the European Union and international finance
capital. Even if Raffarin were to retreat, France would immediately
be sanctioned by the international markets.
The globalisation of production has undermined the policy
of concessions and class compromise over a long period. The Iraq
war and the intense conflict between Europe and America have now
tremendously accelerated this process. US imperialism is seeking
to remodel the entire world economy on the basis of the most naked
and ruthless forms of the free market.
The French and German governments have capitulated to
the US war drive. They have belatedly sanctioned the Iraq war
and try now to compete with America: economically by introducing
American social conditions into Europe, militarily by building
their own capacities for colonial intervention.
Under these conditions, the defence of pensions and social
achievements coincides with the struggle against imperialism and
war. It is obvious that the working class cannot confront these
dangers by withdrawing into the national nutshell. It needs its
own international strategy.
A central element of this strategy is the struggle for
the United Socialist States of Europe. The Single Market, the
European Union and the euro single currency have economically
integrated the continent and removed many of its internal borders.
But the European bourgeoisie is neither able to harmoniously unite
the continent, nor to respond to the US challenge.
We aim at building a united Europe on the basis of equality,
democracy and socialism. We are for the social and political equality
of all peoplenatives and immigrants, regardless of nationality,
colour or religion. We are for the reorganisation of economic
life on a socialist basis.
A socialist Europe would be a powerful counterweight
to US imperialism. Our answer to war is not disarmament, but the
mobilisation of the international working class against US imperialism.
This is not anti-Americanism. In fact, such a policy would be
a powerful point of attraction for the US working class. We want
to assist American workers in the project of regime-change
in Washington.
A lively discussion followed on the strike movement in France
and the current efforts by the British press and the Blair Labour
government to scapegoat asylum-seekers for the growing social
crisis.
See accompanying remarks to the meeting by Chris Marsden,
WSWS Editorial Board member and national secretary of the Socialist
Equality Party in Britain.
See Also:
Chris Marsden addresses London meeting:
A turning point for class relations in Europe
[26 June 2003]
Berlin meeting on Iraq war: A turning
point in international politics
[9 June 2003]
WSWS/SEP meeting in Berlin:
The strength of the US government has been grossly exaggerated
in Europe
[6 June 2003]
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