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The politics of opportunism: the radical left
in France
Part one: the LO-LCR electoral alliance
By Peter Schwarz
15 May 2004
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The following is the first of a seven-part series on the
politics of the so-called far-leftparties in France.
Part two will be published on Monday, May 17.
At the end of last year, the LO and LCR decided to participate
in the elections in 2004the regional elections in March
and the European elections in Junewith a joint slate.
This is not the first time that the two organisations have
stood on a common platform. Their sporadic cooperation goes back
to the 1970s. In 1999, they stood a joint slate in the European
elections, and for the first time exceeded the 5 percent vote
requirement necessary to place representatives in the European
Parliament. Since then, they have had five deputies in the Parliament.
In the 2002 presidential elections, Arlette Laguiller stood separately
as a candidate for LO and Olivier Besancenot for the LCR, each
receiving around 5 percent, considerably more than the Communist
Party (PCF) candidate Robert Hue, who received 3 percent.
One might have expected that the new electoral alliance would
be preceded by a careful discussion of the experiences of recent
years, the changed political situation, and the aims of the joint
campaign. However, that did not happen. The letters that were
exchanged between the governing bodies of the two organisations
resemble the haggling in a bazaar. (2) They know each other, they
distrust each other, and each tries to gain the advantage over
the other. But neither makes any effort to clarify questions or
convince the other, let alone develop broad political concepts.
Long passages in the letters read like the bickering of an
aging married couple who fight from noon till nightonly
to remain together in the end. Thus, LO accuses the LCR of supporting
the conservative bourgeois Jacques Chirac in the second round
of the last presidential election. The LCR writes back indignantly,
You call us Chirac traitors, revealing your
total inconsistency, for how, as a communist proletarian tendency,
can you discuss possible common actions with Chirac supporters?
Of course, this was meant to be rhetorical, but it hit the
nail on the head. LO has never answered the question. Elsewhere,
LO complains, We would like to note, nevertheless, that
we never expressed even the smallest criticism of the LCR or their
candidate during the presidential election campaign. The same
cannot be said of you.
This tone, which continues throughout the entire exchange of
letters, throws a characteristic light on the morbid character
of the entire enterprise. There is no serious attempt to clarify
fundamental questions of political orientation. LO criticises
the LCR for joining the republican front and calling
for Chiracs election in 2002, and at the same time stresses
that it never expressed even the slightest criticism of
the LCR. It draws no conclusions from the conduct of the
LCR, and immediately lets the issue dropas if the fact that
an allegedly revolutionary organisation supported a right-wing
bourgeois politician were a mere trifle.
Anyone who has ever read Trotskys writingsthe care
with which he discussed matters of political principle, his untiring
fight against the Popular Front in France and Spainwould
see immediately that this has nothing to do with the traditions
of the Trotskyist movement.
The 2002 presidential elections
The actions of the LCR were far more than a trifle. The true
character of a political tendency always comes most clearly to
light in situations of crisis. The conduct of the LCR during the
2002 presidential elections leaves no doubt about the real orientation
of this organisation.
The result of the first ballot on April 21, 2002, revealed
the crisis in bourgeois rule. The two partiesthe Parti Socialiste
(PS) and the Parti Communiste Français (PCF)that
had formed the government and occupied the presidents office
for the majority of time since 1981 proved to be largely discredited.
PS leader Lionel Jospin, supposedly a left-winger, who had taken
over the government just a year after the massive strike movement
in the autumn of 1996, but who soon proved to be a reliable executor
of bourgeois interests, received only 16 percent of the vote,
less than the right-wing extremist NF candidate Jean Marie Le
Pen. Robert Hue polled just 3 percent, the worst result in the
history of the PCF. Moreover, the vote for the conservative bourgeois
candidate Jacques Chirac was miserable. With just 19 percent,
his was the worst result ever for an incumbent president.
The French elite could have easily come to terms with the candidacy
of Le Pen, who entered the second ballot as the challenger to
the Gaullist incumbent. For decades, this right-wing demagogue
has been a component part of the political establishment, enjoying
close relations with the mainstream right-wing bourgeois camp.
Since 1999, the FN has officially supported conservative regional
governments in several parts of France. It was also clear that
Chirac could not be seriously threatened by Le Pen as long as
the latter received no real support from big-business circles,
the media or the conservative establishment.
What worried the French elite far more than the 17 percent
vote for Le Pen in the first round were the reactions to the election
result. The initial computer forecasts had hardly been made when
the first demonstrations began. In the ensuing days, millions
took to the streets throughout the entire country. In large cities
and small provincial towns, members of all social classes demonstrated.
Countless school pupils, who were not yet old enough to vote,
marched for hours in the capital, expressing their anger at the
racism of the FN. It rapidly became clear that any further accommodation
to Le Pen could unleash civil war conditions, shaking the foundations
of the Fifth Republic.
Under these circumstances, the political establishment depended
upon the support of the radical left to bring the
situation under control. The LCR and LO, which had obtained a
combined total of 10 percent of the vote, were placed under tremendous
pressure. While the official left (PS and PCF) called for a vote
for Chirac in the second round, praising the incumbent president,
who was up to his neck in corruption scandals, as the guarantor
of republican values, the pressabove all Le
Monde and Libérationdenounced any deviation
from this line as sectarianism and support for Le Pen.
It did not take much to draw the LCR into the bourgeois camp.
It tried to cover up its surrender to Chirac with the slogan Stop
Le Pen on the Streets and at the Ballot Box. But under the
existing conditions, the call to stop Le Pen at the ballot
box could only mean voting for Chiracsomething the
leading LCR representatives openly admitted.
At a time of deep crisis in bourgeois institutions and parties,
when an independent movement of the working masses was within
reach, the LCR placed itself on the side of the Fifth Republic
and thereby contributed to consolidating the grip of the bourgeois
camp. Three weeks after the first round, Chirac, largely unchallenged,
won the second, deciding ballot with a record result of 82 percent.
This right-wing politician, whose future had been in doubt a few
weeks earlier, sat firmly in the saddle once again, and the mechanisms
of bourgeois rule remained, for the time being, intact.
The LCR never considered the possibility of fighting for an
independent orientation of the mass movement that had developed
in reaction to the first round. In an open letter to the three
radical left parties, the World Socialist Web Site
proposed advancing the policy of an election boycott. (3)
An organised election boycott would have denied any legitimacy
to the election, which offered as the only alternative a choice
between two right-wing candidates. Such an active boycott would
have provided the working class with an independent political
line and prepared it for future struggles.
The LCR did not even think this proposal worthy of consideration.
Instead, it functioned as the left wing of the bourgeois regime.
As we will see, this was neither a coincidence nor an aberration.
LOs role was no better. It remained completely passive.
Although 1.6 million votes were cast for Arlette Laguiller, LO
did not advance any initiatives that would have enabled the working
class to intervene actively and independently in the crisis. It
rejected the call by the WSWS for an organised working class boycott.
For several days it avoided making a clear statement, only to
call in the end for voters to cast a blank ballot. This was nothing
more than a political gesture, as LO admitted at the
time.
Both the LCR and LO shared essentially the same position: they
accepted the bourgeois constitutional framework. They considered
the authoritarian constitution adopted by de Gaulle in 1958 to
be sacrosanct.
A joint election platform
In view of the conduct of the LCR and LO during the presidential
elections, it is no wonder that there was no serious dispute concerning
the content of their current election alliance, apart from some
superficial exchanges. Neither the LCR nor LO can afford to draw
an honest balance sheet of the previous years. After three months
of bickering, they finally agreed on a joint election platform
that excludes all important political questions. The agreement
was recorded in a protocol and an election statement. (4)
Both documents are characterised by their superficiality and
meagre content. Neither is much longer than two sides of a single
sheet of paper. They provide an evaluation of neither the present
situation nor the most important political experiences of recent
years.
There is not a single mention of the Iraq war, the most important
international event of the new century. There is not even a rudimentary
attempt to draw the political lessons of the presidential elections
and the decline of the official left (PS and PCF).
One searches in vain for any serious rationale or political objective
in their joint intervention in the elections.
The joint election declaration starts by listing a number of
social and political evilssackings, unemployment, falling
wages, cuts in welfare and social provisions. Accusations follow
against the capitalist social order: Those responsible in
the state and economy are plundering and ruining society in favour
of the profits of big business. The capitalist organisation of
the world economy condemns millions of humans to misery, so that
a minority can accumulate fantastic wealth.
Finally, a number of emergency measures are demandeda
ban on sackings in profitable large-scale enterprises; higher
tax contributions from the wealthy to create public sector jobs;
a halt to privatisation and an expansion of the public sector;
the construction of subsidised low-rent public housing, kindergartens
and other social amenities; higher taxes on profits from speculation
and a lowering of indirect taxes, which hit the poor the hardest;
and the opening up of the books of large enterprises and banks.
It is obvious that the implementation of these or similar measures
requires a revolutionary transformation of society. No bourgeois
governmentwhether of the left or rightwould undertake
such measures. The experiences of recent years have clearly shown
this throughout the world.
In France, the last significant social reforms occurred in
1981, when the Socialist Party won the presidency for the first
time in the Fifth Republic. These reforms did not threaten the
framework of the capitalist economic system in any way. Nevertheless,
one year later, under the pressure of the international financial
establishment, President Mitterrand carried out an abrupt about-face.
Since then, in France as in all other Western industrialised countries,
the broad mass of the population has experienced a continuous
fall in living standards. Hopes for a revival of social reforms,
which awoke following the election success of the PS and PCF in
1998, were soon dashed. Despite efforts to lend itself a left-wing
image, the Jospin government continued the policy of social cuts.
The reason for the bankruptcy of social reformism is to be
found in fundamental changes in world economy. The reforms of
the 1960s and 1970s were possible because the national market
was regulated and could be shielded, to a certain degree, from
the turbulence of the world economy. The globalisation of production
and finance has made this impossible. The strike weapon is blunted
in the face of transnational corporations that can shift production
and investment to other countries. High taxes to pay for comprehensive
social reforms lead to an outflow of finance, without which no
national economy can survive.
The social democratic parties reacted to these changes by bending
themselves to the requirements of finance capital in an endless
cycle of social cuts. The trade unions have also adapted to this
development. Robbed of the possibility of social compromise, they
became the enforcers of capital. They collaborate closely with
the governing elite and knife every labour struggle in the backwhen
they are unable to prevent it breaking out in the first place.
The working class cannot take a step forward without freeing
itself from the paralysing effect of these bureaucratic apparatuses.
This understanding must form the starting point of every revolutionary
orientation. The French working class has repeatedly proved its
readiness and ability to fight for its democratic and social rights
in the past. But an independent political orientation cannot develop
spontaneously out of these struggles. This is why political life
remains caught in the interplay between the right and the left
bourgeois camps. At one point, the right wing seizes the rudder,
because the left has been discredited by its anti-working class
policies. At the next point, the right wing is punished and the
left comes back into powerwithout having changed its anti-working
class policies.
It is the task of Marxists to break through this cycle. Participating
in elections offers a Marxist organisation the possibility of
explaining its programme to a broad public and raising the general
level of the political discussion, thereby creating the conditions
for the building of a broad, independent and politically conscious
movement of the working class, without which all talk of socialism
and revolution remains empty twaddle.
There is no hint of such tasks being set out by the LCR and
LO. They state in all seriousness that the emergency measures
they demand can be forced through by union action. Specifically,
their election statement reads, These emergency social measures
will be forced though by collective struggle. Those who went on
strike and demonstrated last spring have shown the way.
More than 70 years ago, Leon Trotsky warned about such attempts
to limit the class struggle to trade union action in his book
Whither France. He wrote, However, every worker knows
that with two millions of partially or wholly unemployed, the
ordinary trade union struggle for collective bargaining is utopian.
Under present conditions, in order to force the capitalists to
make important concessions, we must break their will. This
can be done only by a revolutionary offensive. But a revolutionary
offensive, which opposes one class to another, cannot be developed
solely under slogans of partial economic demands. We have here
a vicious circle.... The general Marxist thesis, Social
reforms are only the by-products of the revolutionary struggle,
has in the epoch of the decline of capitalism the most immediate
and burning importance. The capitalists are able to cede something
to the workers only if they are threatened with the danger of
losing everything. (5)
The reference by LO and the LCR to the spring 2003 strike movement
is characteristic. This movement ended in a defeat. Despite weeks
of strikes and demonstrations against the governments pension
plans, the National Assembly (parliament) passed the relevant
laws without any amendments. It was able to rely upon the trade
unions, which held the movement in check and ensured that it did
not endanger the government.
The minister responsible, François Fillon, expressed
his appreciation of the conscientious attitude of
the CGT union, which led the protests against the laws outside
the National Assembly. The employment minister owes his
thanks to the trade union for endeavouring to prevent a general
expansion of the movement, which ran the risk of getting out of
control, commented Le Monde. (6)
The LCR and LO undertook the task of covering up the CGTs
treachery by recasting the defeat as a moral victory. Those
in government know that they lost the battle for consciousness,
announced the LCR. According to LO, the failed protest wave represents
a dreadful disavowal of the government. Their joint
election platform does not contain a single word of criticism
of the trade unions.
However, the LCR and LO cannot avoid making some acknowledgment
of the highly visible right-wing turn of the reformist parties.
The election statement reads, The will to put a stop to
current policies cannot be expressed by casting votes for those
parties that supported the Jospin government, since they want
to continue the same policies they carried out while in power.
Gifts for the employers multiply, sackings are accepted, public
services are denationalised.
But these radical left parties do not develop any
initiatives that would enable the working class to intervene independently
in political events. They present their election candidacy not
as a step towards building a new, independent party of the working
class, but merely as a gesture aimed at encouraging
union action. The election statement reads, By voting for
our slate, you can make your ballot a political gesture, to encourage
the struggles and all those who stand for workers rights
and want to prepare an end to the tyranny of the large shareholders
and the stock exchange.
The glorification of the union struggle forms the lowest common
denominator upon which the two organisations can agree. Both reject,
from different standpoints, any independent political perspective
for the working class. LO thinks any challenge to the reformist
organisations offers no prospect for success, since it believes
that the working class is completely demoralised. The LCR orients
itself not to the working class, but to the scattered groups within
the petty-bourgeois protest movementthe anti-globalisation
movement, the environmental movement, the womens movement,
etc.which it seeks to fuse with the ruins of the old reformist
organisations to create a new centrist formation.
This will be dealt with in greater depth in ensuing parts of
this series.
To be continued.
Notes
2) This exchange of letters is documented in the theoretical magazine
of Lutte Ouvrière, Lutte de Classe No. 75, Octobre
2003 (http://www.union-communiste.org/?FR-archp-show-2003-1-505-2626-x.html).
3) No to Chirac and Le Pen! For a working class boycott
of the French election: An open letter to Lutte Ouvrière,
Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire, and Parti des Travailleurs
(http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/apr2002/open-a29.shtml).
4) Protocole daccord Lutte Ouvrière Ligue Communiste
Révolutionnaire pour la présentation de listes communes
aux élections régionales et européennes
(http://www.union-communiste.org/?FR-archd-show-2003-1-515-2747-x.html);
Profession de foi commune Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
- Lutte Ouvrière pour les élections régionales
(http://www.union-communiste.org/?FR-archd-show-2003-1-515-2746-x.html).
5) Leon Trotsky, Whither France, Marxists Internet Archive
(http://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/works/1936/witherfrance/01.htm).
6) A detailed analysis of the strike movement can be found in
After the mass protests and strikes: What way forward for
working people in France? (http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/jul2003/fra-j15.shtml).
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