|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
European Social Forum: French LCR seeks to channel popular
opposition to official left parties
By Chris Marsden and Peter Schwarz
17 November 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Over 40,000 delegates gathered in Paris between November 12
and 15 for the second European Social Forum (ESF). The majority
were in their teens and twenties, but others were veterans of
the protest movements of the 1960s and 1970s.
The presence of such large numbers at a four-day meeting professing
opposition to the neo-liberal capitalist agenda is an indication
of major political changes taking place throughout Europe. The
first European Social Forum was held last year in Florence and
was dominated by anti-war protests. But there was widespread confusion
due to the seemingly ambiguous stand taken by the old social democratic
and former Stalinist parties on the war in Iraq. Tony Blairs
Labour government was acting as the Bush administrations
number-one ally, but most of the official left partiesand
governments such as that of Gerhard Schröder in Germanywere
making a show of opposition to US militarism.
Today, things have changed dramatically. Europes official
left has occupied itself with mending relations with Washington,
including backing the occupation of Iraq within the United Nations.
They have done this while waging an offensive, where they hold
office, against the social gains of the working class, or stifling
all opposition to this offensive where it is being waged by conservative
governments.
Consequently, the membership and electoral support for the
former reformist parties are plummeting. In France, support for
the right-wing Gaullist government of Prime Minister Jean-Pierre
Raffarin has declined, but there has been no recovery in the electoral
fortunes of the Socialist Party (PS) and its allies in the Plural
Left.
This shift provided the context for the discussions at Paris.
Delegates participated in 300 meetings, many filled to overflowing,
and sat attentively for up to three hours at a time without a
break. The mainly young people have made their formative experiences
in the mass demonstrations against the Iraq war or anti-capitalist
protests against the exploitation of the oppressed nations by
the imperialist powers and the transnational corporations. From
these experiences, many have become bitterly hostile not only
to the neo-liberal right that has to this point been the bête
noire of the alternative globalisation movement, but
also to the social democrats who have adopted the agenda of the
political ideologues of the free market.
This development has thrown the groups leading the ESF into
disarray. Those like the French ATTAC group conceived of the forum
as a cross between a left think tank and a pressure group working
to convince Europes social democrats to readopt certain
limited forms of economic regulation to curb the worst excesses
of the market.
ATTAC, set up under the auspices of Le Monde Diplomatique,
is closely connected to the French Socialist Party and opposes
any political challenge to the PSs domination of the working
class. It saw the ESF as a convenient tool for its political project,
because it began as an adjunct of the World Social Forum (WSF),
which first met in Brazil in January 2001, under the auspices
of the Brazilian Workers Party.
The Workers Party had aims complementary to those of ATTAC
and a number of non-governmental organisations that wanted to
give themselves a measure of bargaining power by reaching out
to the anti-capitalist protests that had developed in opposition
to the impact of International Monetary Fund (IMF) restructuring
policies on the worlds poor.
The protests that took place against the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) beginning in Seattle in 1999 anticipated the far broader
social opposition that is developing to capitalism all over the
world. But the last thing the WSF and ESF leaders wanted was for
this social movement to get out of control and threaten the old
parties and governments with which they have sought to build relations.
To this end, the WSF leaders imposed a charter of principles
that barred political parties and military organisations from
participating in the forum. They used the disgust and alienation
felt by many towards the old parties to justify the position that
the WSF and ESF should stand above politics, deemed
by its very nature to be corrupt. The ban was justified as a means
of ensuring that power within the forum would be in the hands
of the social activists.
This was never more than a convenient fiction that allowed
the unelected and unaccountable leadership of the WSF and ESF
to politically dominate the movement and direct it along politically
harmless channels.
The ESF became a pole of attraction to a number of left radical
groups such as the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire (LCR)
in France, which claims to be Trotskyist, and the Socialist Workers
Party (SWP) in Britain. Both were happy to abide by the ESFs
no politics pretence. It meant they could participate
in the ESF through various front groups and build support without
conflicting with the old bureaucratic leaderships of the labour
movement to which they have historically oriented themselves.
At the Paris conference, this cosy political arrangement began
to come unstuck due to the growing recognition amongst working
people and those active within the ESF of the need to build an
alternative leadership to the old and degenerated workers
parties.
Immediately before the forum, the LCR formed a pact with Lutte
Ouvrière (LO) to stand in next years European elections
and French regional elections. They will stand against the candidates
of the PS, the Greens and the French Communist Party (PCF).
In a similar vein, the SWP has fielded candidates against Labour
in a coalition with other radical groups, called the Socialist
Alliance, and is now championing the creation of an anti-war
party with recently expelled Labour MP George Galloway at
its head.
But while they have been reluctantly forced to distance themselves
from their previous endorsement of the social democrats, the LCR,
SWP and company have no intention of politically mobilising workers
on a socialist program against the old parties. Their aim is to
fill the political vacuum created on the left by the rightward
lurch of the social democrats and Stalinists with an all-encompassing
protest party pledged to a minimum program of reforms, but which
reaches out to the old organisations in the name of left
unity. They hope this will enable them to continue to suppress
and discipline opposition within the working class, while strengthening
their hand in their ongoing political horse-trading with the old
labour bureaucracies, above all in the trade unions.
The PS and the Stalinists are also organised within the ESF,
and, together with ATTAC and other non-governmental organisations,
are hostile even to such a purely organisational show of independence.
They are being forced to accept that the political ban may have
to go, but are vehemently opposed to the ESF proclaiming its opposition
to either the social democrats or governments in general, even
when they are of an openly right-wing character.
In a recently published book, the founder of ATTAC, Bernard
Cassen, bitterly denounced elements within the forum that would
put the movement on the extreme left and outside of the
framework of the traditional parties or governmentthat is,
of institutional politics.
The resulting political manoeuvres were played out openly in
Paris in two meetings focussed on a discussion of the relationship
between social and citizens movements and political parties.
The leader of Italys Rifondazione Communista (RC), Fausto
Bertinotti, was the most high-profile speaker at the first meeting,
and his party was cited by Alex Callinicos of the British SWP
as the type of party that must be created everywhere. This speaks
volumes about the unprincipled character of the political manoeuvring
of radical groups such as the LCR and SWP within the ESF.
The attraction of the RC for them is that it emerged out of
the break-up of the Italian Communist Party. It continues to champion
an entirely reformist program, but has recognised that to give
itself any credibility it must formally distance itself from its
Stalinist heritage. It has done so by opening its doors to a number
of left groups claiming to be Trotskyist. Livio Maitan, an Italian
co-thinker of the LCR, has sat on the RCs central committee
for years and acts as an adviser to Bertinotti.
The radicals hold up the RC as proof that supposedly left sections
of the old labour bureaucracy can still provide a political alternative
to the right wing. But despite its left demagogy, the RC has acted
for more than a decade as the main political prop of the Italian
social democrats. There were numerous occasions in the 1990s when
the centre-left Olive Tree coalition government survived
due to the parliamentary support of the RC. It was the attacks
on the working class imposed by the centre-left, with the RCs
connivance, that paved the way for the victory of Silvio Berlusconis
right-wing Forza Italia.
At the Paris meeting, Kader Arif of the French PS and the Green
Partys Noël Mamère were invited speakers. They
sought to ensure that any acceptance of political parties was
conceived of as a general amnesty. They spoke of being part of
a left family, and maintained they were merely obliged to admit
to a few mistakes in order to secure the ESFs continued
support.
Things were made even clearer at a follow-up meeting the next
evening, which demonstrated that the radicals were concerned with
rehabilitating, rather than challenging, the social democrats,
Greens and Stalinists.
The LCRs 2002 presidential candidate, Olivier Besancenot,
shared the platform with Elio Di Rupo of the Belgian Socialist
Party and the leader of the French Communist Party, Marie-George
Buffet, amongst others. Buffet heads a party that has been massively
discredited by its years of propping up the PS government and
that has seen its share of the vote plummet to a historic low
of under 5 percentless than half the 10 percent won collectively
by the so-called far left partiesthe LCR, the
LO and the Parti des Travailleurs (PT)in the presidential
elections of May 2002.
In the second round of that election, Besancenot called for
a vote for Jacques Chirac, thereby joining the stampede of the
official left partiesthe Socialist Party, the Communist
Party and the Greensbehind the leader of the conservative
bloc and consensus candidate of the French bourgeois establishment.
This campaign of the left for Chirac was justified
on the grounds that Chiracs opponent in the second round
was Jean-Marie Le Pen, the head of the fascistic National Front.
At the Paris meeting, Besancenot made a demagogic speech that
sounded like an election address, but said remarkably little against
the Plural Left government that had preceded Raffarin and nothing
against the PCF. In their speeches, Di Rupo and Buffet again spoke
of mistakes made in the past and stressed the need
for left unity. Both had brought contingents of their
supporters who clapped dutifully, but the hostility of large sections
of the audience was palpable. There was booing, and a number of
speakers from the floor came forward to oppose any relations with
the social democrats or the PCF. Besancenots response was
to ignore criticisms from the audience and use his closing remarks
to again appeal for unity.
The LCR has been wooing the PCF for years, and there is a faction
within that Stalinist party that favours a merger between the
two groups along the lines of Rifondazione in Italy. As recently
as October 15, a joint meeting was held between the LCR and the
PCF to discuss a united campaign for a referendum against the
European constitution. The LCR issued a statement reaffirming
its desire to continue the public debate at all levels between
the two organisations.
The opportunist role of the ESF was demonstrated by the proceedings
at the conference as well as by the continuing efforts made to
cultivate the ESF not only by the PS, but also by the Gaullist
French president, Chirac.
There is an old saying that he who pays the piper calls the
tune, and behind the scenes the business of realpolitik
was proceding. The Paris city administration gave over many facilities
gratis to the ESF, and the PS mayor, Bertrand Delanoë, opened
the event by sounding a friendly warning to delegates: Yes,
lets be utopian, in order to arrive at concrete results.
But we should be clear about who our enemies are. If we are not
able to get together, liberal [capitalist free marketed.]
globalisation will have a bright future.
Former PS economics minister and possible candidate for the
2007 presidential elections, Laurent Fabius, breakfasted with
José Bové, the farmers leader, on the opening
day of the ESF.
Most revealing of all, Chirac made 500,000 available
to help fund the ESF. In his efforts to build bridges to the alternative
globalisation movement, he sent his special envoy, Jérôme
Bonnafont, to follow the proceedings.
Chiracs relations to the movement are of long standing.
This summer, he praised the work of the Evian counter-summit
to the G8 summit of major industrialised nations and invited the
non-governmental organisations that organised the counter-summit
to the presidential palace. He made use of these organisations
to provide an ideological cover for French imperialism in its
conflict with the United States, particularly in relation to Frances
interests in Africa.
See Also:
After the mass protests and
strikes: What way forward for working people in France?
[15 July 2003]
Communist Refoundation: Italian
Stalinisms new experiment with electoral opportunism
[21 June 2003]
The politics of tactical manoeuvre:
Interview with Paolo Ferrero of Italys Communist Refoundation
Party
[2 May 2003]
Interview with a member
of the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire of France, and
comment by David Walsh
[14 May 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |