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France: the politics of the National Student Coordinating
Committee and the role of the LCR
By Alex Lantier
22 January 2008
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The National Student Coordinating Committee (NSCC) has led
the political struggle against the university autonomy law (LRU)
passed in August 2007 by the government of President Nicolas Sarkozy.
Its statements offer a valuable insight into the views of students
who blockaded university buildings and marched against the LRU,
and into the political issues students must face as they continue
their struggles.
The NSCC has, to its credit, consistently called for an orientation
to the workers and shown a keen awareness of the broader goals
of Sarkozys reforms. It sought links with rail workers,
who launched national strikes in mid-October and mid-November
2007 against planned cuts in their special regime (régime
spéciaux) pensions.
In its October 29 statement, the NSCC added the following demands
to its call for the abrogation of the LRU: retraction of public
sector job cuts, opposition to medical fees, the defense of the
régime spéciaux, the abrogation of anti-immigrant
laws, and legal amnesty for those arrested during protests. It
wrote: To the government steamroller, we oppose the convergence
of all the targeted sectors, which alone will be able to make
it retreat. On November 8, students in Paris and Rennes
blockaded train stations in solidarity with workers.
On November 12, the NSCC called for further train station blockades
to coincide with the resumption of rail workers strikes
on November 14, and to last at least until the one-day November
20 mass strike by public sector workers against job and pension
cuts.
The trade unions, which sought to limit the rail workers to
a few isolated one-day strikes while negotiating with the government,
gave no aid to students. Force Ouvrière head Jean-Claude
Mailly gave a November 12 TV interview, saying, I dont
think that blockading, as some have announced, the stations tomorrow,
would be a good idea. CGT-Rail chief Didier Le Reste also
opposed station blockades, citing the risk of security excesses.
Bruno Julliard, head of the National Union of French Students
(UNEF), the main French students union, also opposed station
blockades.
Police soon smashed station blockades. The rail strike, in
the face of the trade unions widely announced intent to
negotiate a deal with Sarkozy, largely petered out by November
24. The unions held the mass public sector strike to one day.
As the movement was being thus rolled up and defeated piecemeal,
the NSCC became disoriented, writing on November 25: It
is possible to win and make the government retreat on our demands....
Sarkozy can try as much as he likes to say he wont retreat
in the face of us, he and his government have been weakened by
the strikes.... The rail workers in particular showed that fighting
Sarkozy and his policy was possible.
In fact, amid the security hysteria whipped up after the Villiers-le-Bel
riots started on November 25, the university blockades were progressively
dismantled. Relieved of concern that brutality against students
would lead to a shutdown of rail transport, the state marched
riot police into the universities. In the face of studious media
silence, videos circulated online showing university officials
striking blockading students. Reports reached the WSWS of students
injured by point-blank flash ball fire from police, including
reports of a student who risks losing an eye.
The NSCC subsequently called for political clarification, noting
in its December 20 statement: Our movement is continuing
in a phase of long-term struggle but also in a phase of reflection.
Political conclusions
The WSWS salutes students struggles and sets as a major
goal clarifying the tasks of the student movement, in solidarity
with all interested members of the anti-LRU movement. It offers
the following observations.
The students isolation and defeat was made possible by
the ending of the rail strikes and followed on the heels of students
failure to truly unite their struggle with that of the rail workers.
Though the NSCC set such unity as its goal, carrying it out would
have required a broad political campaign, making a direct appeal
to the workers over the heads of the trade union tops. However,
the full implications of the trade unions strangling of
the strikes were not understood in the NSCC.
The NSCC had a somewhat vague conception of how to force the
withdrawal of the law. Sarkozy has no intention or room to compromise,
being committed to turning universities into research aids for
French business in an attempt to maintain a technological edge
over rising cheap-labor manufacturing powers like China and India.
A real retreat by Sarkozy would soon pose the question of his
replacement by the French bourgeoisie with someone else who could
carry out this agenda. Anti-LRU protests thus directly pose the
question: which class will rule?
In the subsequent police repression, the corporate media suppressed
reports that would have put public opinion on the side of students
and workers. This was part of a broader political strategy, abetted
by the politics of the trade unions during the strike struggles:
confusing public opinion by presenting the anti-reform movement
as selfishly defending sectoral interests, divorced from the broader
working masses.
What the NSCC lacked was a political party armed with a merciless
critique of the trade union leaderships, an analysis of the international
and revolutionary implications of the struggle, and the ability
to present this perspective to the entire working class. In other
words, the political situation objectively raises the need for
a mass Trotskyist party.
The role of the LCR
This political reality is obscured, however, by the opportunist
political line of the parties who have claimed in one way or another
to represent the heritage of Trotskyism in France. The most prominent
is the Ligue communiste révolutionnaire (LCR), which has
acquired a following among students at the same time as the corporate
press has begun to promote its 2007 presidential candidate, Olivier
Besancenot.
The line of the LCRs main publication, Rouge,
has been to incite false confidence in the ability of simple protest
militancy to force a favorable deal with the government, while
always evading the central political problems posed by the development
of the social struggles. It thus played a critical role in preventing
students from orienting themselves in the complex struggles of
late 2007.
As the LRU law was first announced in summer 2007, Rouge
denounced it in an article titled Not on the sly.
Rouge called for large demonstrations against the law,
referring to the experience of the 2006 struggle against the First
Job Contract (CPE) reform proposed by then-Prime Minister Dominique
de Villepin: The CPE showed the way: a law, even if passed,
can be taken down by the street.
This is simply false. In 2006 the trade unions worked with
then-Interior Minister Sarkozy to force the withdrawal of the
CPE, discrediting Villepin before the bourgeoisie and paving the
way for Sarkozy to win the 2007 presidential elections. Sarkozy
is now reforming the labor code so that the anti-worker provisions
of the CPEnotably longer trial periods with no job securitywill
be written into labor law. The proper conclusion is not the power
of protest militancy, but the utter futility of opportunist deals
with the bourgeoisie.
On November 8weeks after the trade unions had, with difficulty,
managed to call off the October rail strikesRouge
titled its article on the universities The strike begins.
Though the LCR was doubtless aware of the sentiment in the NSCC
in favor of linking workers and students struggles,
it did not join calls for students to blockade train stations.
Nor did it warn of the trade union bureaucracys plans to
politically strangle the November strikes. It wrote: With
the call for indefinite strikes at the SNCF [railroads], the first
major confrontation will begin. Its a chance to make the
government give in. A maximum number of universities must strike
in coming days.
The silence on the role of the trade unions continued, even
as the latter met with the government and prepared to cut off
the strikes. On November 22, Rouge wrote: The mobilized
students know they need solidarity with workers to win against
the government. The CPE experience is there. We must develop direct
meetings between student and salaried strikers, publish joint
statements to popularize the strikes. Two days later, the
rail strikes had largely ended and the police began to seriously
take on the university blockades.
Rouges December 6 statement on the student movement,
Despite obstacles, the struggle continues, drew no
lessons from the defeat of the rail strike. It wrote that the
student movement would either radicalize and lose itself
in useless minority actions, or show its strength and further
massify itself. The student and high-school student demonstration
of December 6 ... should be central to ensuring the visibility
of the movement and opening a path towards the workers. Education
workers strikes are the other essential lever for reinforcing
the movement.
This persistent refusal to learn from or exercise foresight
in these struggles is not incidental, or attributable to inexperienced
writers at Rouge. It comes from a party whose leadership
is hostile to Marxism and hopes to create a large, formless party
to the left of the Socialist Party (PS) based on unprincipled
centrist politics. This was perhaps most crudely shown by Besancenots
statement at a March 13, 2007 Amiens meeting: I have never
called myself a Trotskyist activist.
The LCRs leader, Alain Krivine, made explicit his strategy
of pressure politics at a December 3 meeting in Paris with PS
heavyweights Henri Weber and Manuel Valls: [F]or me, the
adversary is not the PS but Sarkozy, the right, and the Medef
[employers federation]. If today we have disagreements,
they are on how to fight Sarkozy. He improbably told Weber,
Valls, and company that the great reforms in France
came because millions of people went into the street, launched
a general strike, booted your buttocks.
The various far left tendencies in France differ
from one another in the particular manner in which each avoids
the responsibility of providing revolutionary socialist leadership.
The LCR specializes in this sort of bluster and radical phrasemongering,
while in practice it slavishly maintains its ties to the various
discredited bureaucracies and attempts to steer wide layers of
the population in the same direction.
Its perspective ultimately involves the demobilization of the
insurgent masses and letting frightened legislators and trade
union bureaucrats work out some sort of legal deal. Students who
have fought and sacrificed over the last year must ask themselves:
what good is a huge movement, if ultimately it is the same old
traitors who determine its outcome? Despite Besancenots
media-driven popularity, the LCR leaderships perspective
is nothing but a second-rate trap for students seeking a turn
to the working class.
The WSWS insists that the tactic of pressuring the state must
be abandoned and replaced with the strategy of political struggle
against the government, based on the full heritage of revolutionary
Marxism. It is confident that the LCR leaderships betrayal
of its political responsibilities will lead students to look elsewhere
for analyses and perspectives. We seek discussion, collaboration,
and solidarity with all those trying to draw the political lessons
of the recent struggles.
See Also:
France: Students need a socialist perspective
and a turn to the working class
[7 January 2008]
France: One-day rail
strikes in defence of pensions called off
[14 December 2007]
Discussion on the
lessons of the French strikes
Workers must have a way of acting politically on a global
scale
[10 December 2007]
French student mobilisation
at an impasse
[3 December 2007]
The betrayal of the
French rail workers strike and the role of the LCR
[29 November 2007]
French railway strike
betrayed
[24 November 2007]
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