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India: Stalinist CPMs triennial meeting to reiterate
support for Congress Party-led government
By Nanda Wickremasinghe and K. Ratnayake
29 March 2008
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The Communist Party of India (Marxist), Indias most important
Stalinist party and the dominant partner in the Left Front, is
holding its 19th congress in Coimbatore, in the south Indian state
of Tamil Nadu, from March 29 to April 3.
Since May 2004, the Left Front has supported from the
outside a Congress Party-led coalition government that has
pursued a socially incendiary program of neo-liberal reforms that
have produced acute distress in rural India and growing poverty
and economic insecurity in Indias urban centers.
Without the votes of the MPs from the Communist Party of India
(Marxist) or CPM and its Left Front partners, the Congress Party-led
United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government would fall.
In the three states where the Left Front forms the governmentWest
Bengal, Kerala, and Tripurait is implementing pro-investor
policies akin to those of the UPA in the name of economic growth
and industrialization.
In the run-up to the CPMs triennial congress, the party
leadership has attempted to put some rhetorical distance between
itself and the UPA government. CPM General-Secretary Prakash Karat
has said that henceforth his party will place greater emphasis
on the development of a third alternative to the Congress,
the Indian bourgeoisies traditional party of government,
and the Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Indias
other major party. Karat has also announced that the CPM will
demand the UPA government scrap the Indo-US Defence Framework
Agreement signed in June 2005.
But the CPM leadership, as attested both by its statements
in public and the political resolution to be adopted at the 19th
congress, has also reiterated its continued support for the UPA
government and for the business friendly policies
being pursued by the three Left Front state governments.
The UPA government, said Karat in an interview published in
the March 14 issue of the magazine Outlook, is
stable because were supporting it. It will last its full
term. If it falls, it wont be because of us.
Yet the CPM leadership concedes in its congress resolution
that the UPA governments overall direction has been
to push through policies, which are to the benefit of big business
and foreign capital.
The CPM and the peasant massacres at Nandigram
The CPM leadership points to its influence in the corridors
of power in New Delhi and to the Lefts election victories
in Kerala and West Bengal in May 2006 and in tiny Tripura this
February to claim that the party is going from strength to strength.
In reality, the Stalinists are holding their congress under
conditions of mounting crisis. This crisis is rooted in the ever-more
glaring incongruity between the CPMs claims to speak for
Indias toilers and to champion Marxism and its pivotal role
in assisting the bourgeoisie in implementing its neo-liberal agenda
and pursuing its ambition of making India a cheap-labor haven
for world capitalism.
Last years events in Nandigram, West Bengalwhich
saw the CPM organize the bloody suppression of a peasant rebellion
against the state expropriation of land for a Special Economic
Zone to be run by the Salim Group, an Indonesian-based multinationalprovoked
indignation, anger, and revulsion among workers, farmers and intellectuals
across India. Prominent left-wing writers and academics, many
of them long associated with the CPM, condemned the atrocity.
Sumit Sarkar, arguably the foremost historian of modern India,
the novelist Arundathi Roy, and other prominent left-wing intellectuals
issued an open letter condemning the CPM which read in part, To
share similar values with the [CPM] today is to stand
for unbridled capitalist development, nuclear energy at the cost
of both ecological concerns and mass displacement of people ...
Over the last decade, the policies of the Left Front
government in West Bengal have become virtually indistinguishable
from those of other parties committed to the neoliberal agenda.
Indeed, the important experiments undertaken in the Statethe
land reforms [the Left Front government enacted in the late 1970s
and early 1980s] ...are being rapidly reversed. According
to figures provided by the West Bengal state secretary for land
reforms, over the past five years there has been a massive increase
of landless peasants in the state due to government acquisition
of land cheaply for handing over to corporations and developing
posh upper class neighbourhoods.
Even the CPMs partners in West Bengals Left Front
governmentthe Forward Block, the Revolutionary Socialist
Party (RSP), and the CPMs Stalinist sister party, the Communist
Party of India (CPI)found it politic to disassociate themselves
from the CPMs actions in Nandigram.
The CPMs congress resolution dismisses the Nandigram
events with a few brief lines near the end, which insinuate that
they were an anti-CPM provocation. According to the resolution,
right-wing and ultra-left (Naxalite) forces enlisted the peasants
of Nandigram in a campaign against the CPM, because
of the prominent role the party has played ...
in national politics in opposing a strategic alliance with US
imperialism and waging a determined struggle to check the UPA
governments neo-liberal inclinations...
No amount of Stalinist lies can wipe away the fact that the
CPM orchestrated two peasant massacres in Nandigram and that it
did so directly on behalf of Indian and foreign capital, which
has pressed the West Bengal Left Front government to create Special
Economic Zones, where normal taxes and labor standards do not
apply. Acting on the orders of West Bengals CPM-led Left
Front government more than 4,000 thousand heavily-armed state
security forces stormed Nandigram on March 14, 2007 and opened
fire on peasants who sought to block their way, killing 14. Then
in early November 2007, the CPM unleashed its own goon squads
on Nandigram, in an operation that restored government authority
in the area, by killing another eight people, razing houses to
the ground, and forcing upwards of 18,000 Nandigram residents
to flee the area.
Certainly the right-wing Trinumul Congress and other enemies
of the working class have sought to exploit the Nandigram events
so as to push Indian politics to the right, but it is the Stalinists
who made this possible by acting as bloody enforcers for big business.
Moreover, the Stalinists themselves cravenly capitulated to
the rights campaign. While the CPM dismissed the protests
of workers and socialist-minded intellectuals over Nandigram,
it felt politically vulnerable following last Novembers
goon attack, and so the CPM prevailed on the Left Front to cede
to the UPA governments demand that it be allowed to initiate
negotiations with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The IAEA negotiations are a key step toward implementing the Indo-US
civilian nuclear cooperation treaty.
Two further points need be made. The Left Front was reelected
in West Bengal in May 2006 with the explicit support of big business,
which had become convinced that the Stalinists were the best vehicle
for implementing neo-liberal reform in the state. And both Indian
and foreign capital have welcomed the ruthlessness with which
the CPM has met opposition to its industrialization program at
Nandigram and before that at Singur, site of a new Tata car plant.
Last April, only weeks after he had ordered the state police to
storm Nandigram, West Bengal Chief Minister and CPM Politburo
member Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee received approval from Washington
for his longstanding request for an official invitation to visit
the US, so as to meet with government officials and potential
investors.
Second and even more importantly, far from leading the struggle
against the Congress and the Indian bourgeoisies neo-liberal
agenda, the CPM and the Left Front have played an indispensable
role in its implementation. In addition to implementing capitalist
restructuring in those states where the CPM-led Left Front holds
office, the Stalinists have helped sustain a succession of right-wing
Union governments in power, and worked might and main to confine
the mass opposition of the toilers to impotent protests aimed
at pressuring the bourgeoisie to slow the pace of neo-liberal
reform.
The CPM-led Left Front helped sustain in office the minority
Congress Party government that in 1991 initiated a sea-change
in the Indian bourgeoisies class strategy by abandoning
national economic regulation and state-led development in favor
of full integration into the world capitalist economy, Although
the Stalinists didnt formally join the subsequent United
Front government of 1996-98, which pressed forward with
neo-liberal reform, they played a major role in both the formulation
of government policy and keeping the ramshackle coalition of regional
and caste-based bourgeois parties together.
The current Congress-led government has been utterly dependent
on the Staliniststo provide its parliamentary majority,
but just as importantly to defuse social anger.
The Stalinists and the trade unions have mounted a series of
one-day general strikes, but these have been directed not at mobilizing
the working class as an independent political force advancing
its own program to meet the social crisis. Rather their aim has
been to ensure the continued political subordination of the working
class to the Congress-led UPA.
And the Stalinists have been at pains to ensure that these
protests do not cut across their own efforts to court capital.
After a one-day nationwide strike in West Bengal disrupted the
states IT sector, despite the Left Front government having
passed legislation all but outlawing work stoppages at IT companies,
Left Front Chief Minister Battacharjee declared, This menace
[of strikes] is known to me. I can assure you that the strongest
action will be taken against such perpetrators in the future.
Invariably the central message of the CPMs agitations
are that the working class must pressure the UPA to implement
the Common Minimum Programme, which is ostensibly both the governments
agenda and the basis for the Left Fronts support for the
government.
The Common Minimum Program, which was largely authored by the
Stalinists themselves, is a political fraud. It combines promises
of increased social spending, many of them vague, with pledges
to carry forward economic restructuring. It is based on the lie
that it is possible to reconcile the bourgeoisies program
to use Indias vast reserves of cheap to make it a center
of production for the world capitalist market with the needs of
the masses.
Socialism is a far cry
The CPM congress resolution is full of half-truths and outright
lies as the Stalinists seek to justify their support for the UPA
government and the Left Front state governments pro-investor
policies, while maintaining the pretense theirs is a party of
the working class and toilers and force for socialism.
Thus the resolution criticizes the UPA government for recklessly
promot[ing] an unbridled proliferation of SEZs, while omitting
to mention that the CPM voted for the governments SEZ legislation
in May 2005 in both houses of parliament
At a press conference last January 4, Jyoti Basu, the CPMs
elder statesman and former West Bengal chief minister, spelled
out unabashedly the partys subservience to and support for
capitalism. Said Basu, Socialism is not achievable at this
point of time. We have been working within the capitalist system
and as such private capital has to be used while social welfare
programmes by the state government would continue. He then
added: Socialism is a far cry. Socialism is our political
agenda and it was mentioned in our party document but capitalism
will continue to be the compulsion for the future.
No less blunt was Basus successor, Battacharjee, in justifying
the West Bengal governments efforts to woo capital in competition
with the political representatives of other regional bourgeois
cliques. Our stand is clear, Battacharjee told Frontline
last in February 2007. For the development of the state,
we need capital. ... To me capital has no color ... We could not
say no to such a project, otherwise it would have gone to Uttarakhand
(state).
The Congress Party and the most far-sighted sections of the
bourgeoisie recognize the critical role that the CPM and the Left
Front play in containing popular discontent. Prime Minster Manmohan
Singh has repeatedly explained the need to obtain the Lefts
support when carrying through contentious changes. Nevertheless,
important sections of the bourgeoisie are growing increasingly
frustrated with the accommodations the government has had to make
to ensure the Left Fronts support. In particular, they want
the government to gut restrictions on the contracting out of work,
layoffs and plant closures and to move forward with the implementation
of the Indo-US nuclear treaty in defiance of the CPM and the Left
Front.
In the nearly eight months since Prime Manmohan Singh first
publicly raised the possibility that he might dare the Left Front
to bring his government down over the nuclear treaty, CPM leaders
have repeatedly said that they will not precipitate the UPA governments
demise and intend to sustain it in office until the government
reaches the end of its mandate in early 2009. At the same time,
they have said that they cannot allow the treaty to be enacted,
because it is aimed at harnessing India to the USs predatory
foreign policy.
In other words, the Stalinists have made it clear that they
will leave the initiative with the Congress and the bourgeoisie,
allowing it to decide if and when it will break the current alliance
with the Left.
At the same time, because of the growing popular disaffection
with the government and so as to position themselves for electionsthe
electoral base of the CPM is in states where the BJP is a negligible
factor and the Congress a major rivalthe CPM has revived
discussion of an third alternative. By this it means an electoral
bloc with various regional and caste-based bourgeois parties,
parties which have implemented the bourgeoisies neo-liberal
agenda when in office and many of which, like the Andhra Pradesh-based
Telugu Desam Party, have previously allied with the BJP.
The Stalinists justify their propping up of the Congress-led
UPA on the grounds that it is amenable to pressure and that this
is the only means of blocking the return to power of the Hindu
supremacist BJP. This is a traditional Stalinist canardthat
the only way to counter reaction is by aligning with the reputedly
more progressive sections of the bourgeoisie.
The growing power of the extreme right is itself a sign of
the crisis of bourgeois rule and malignancy of capitalism.
Indeed, it is the Stalinists who by subordinating the working
class to the Indian bourgeoisie for decades, paved the way for
the transformation of the Hindu right from a marginal force into
Indias second largest party. In the early and mid-1970s,
when India, like the rest of the world, was convulsed by economic
crisis and social struggles, the CPMs sister party, the
CPI entered into a coalition with the Congress, going so far as
to defend Indira Gandhis Emergency. The CPM, meanwhile,
subordinated the working class to the bourgeois opposition to
Gandhi, supporting the Janata Party, an ad hoc party formed to
fight the 1977 election and one of whose principal components
was the BJPs forerunner, the Jana Sangh.
It was the Stalinists betrayal of the working class and
peasant upsurge of the late 1960s and 1970s, that subsequently
enabled the Hindu right and all manner of regionalist and casteist
parties to benefit from the increasing popular disaffection with
the Congress in the last two decades of the twentieth centuryfirst
as a result of the manifest failure of the post-independence national
project to address any of the fundamental problems of the masses,
and then as the neo-liberal reforms initiated by Congress in 1991
led to increased poverty and economic insecurity.
In defending its support for the UPA government, the CPM congress
resolution says that it would be a mistake to underestimate
their [Hindu supremacists] latent strength. Later it adds,
given the growing discontent and the economic difficulties
of the people, the potential exists for the discontent to be canalized
into divisive communal politics.
But in so far is this true it is because the working class,
thanks to the CPM and the Left Front, has been tied to the Congressthe
bourgeoisies traditional party of government, and the initiator
of the program of deregulation, privatization, and marketization.
The Stalinist claims of the Congress Partys commitment to
secularism notwithstanding, this party has also repeatedly connived
with the Hindu right and abetted communalism, since at least as
far back as the 1947 communal partition of the subcontinent. In
last Decembers Gujarat elections, the Congress formed an
electoral alliance with a group of BJP dissidents whose leaders
had been directly implicated in the 2002 anti-Muslim pogrom in
Gujarat.
The CPMs phony anti-imperialism
The CPM is opposing the Indo-US nuclear treaty, correctly warning
that Washington views it as a means of pulling India into its
military-geo-political orbit, and the congress resolution is chock
full of denunciations of the crimes of US imperialism including
the invasion and occupation of Iraq and Washingtons steadfast
support for the dispossession of the Palestinian people.
But the Stalinists anti-US rhetoric has nothing to do
with a genuine anti-imperialist policy, based on the independent
political mobilization of the international working class against
all the rival bourgeois cliques and their nation states.
The CPM lauds the traditional non-aligned policy
of the Indian bourgeoisie and opposes to US imperialism the call
for a multi-polar world, and for an alliance between India, Russia
and China. The latter it hails as a socialist country although
the Beijing regime presides over the ruthless exploitation of
the Chinese working class by indigenous capital and by US, European
and Japanese multinationals. There are major trends,
enthuses the CPM resolution, which are promoting multi-polarity
and countering the unilateralism of the US and its hegemonic methods.
Russia has been asserting its independent role and sovereign rights.
While the CPM criticizes the UPA governments military
build-up, it fully support the Indian bourgeoisies goal
of obtaining a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council,
claims that the Indian state can play a progressive role on the
world stage, and in Nepal played a pivotal role in helping the
Indian government broker an agreement aimed at ending the Maoist
insurgency there and restabilizing bourgeois rule.
For decades the CPM and the CPI, from which it split-off in
the 1964, justified their subordination of the working class to
the Congress or one or another bourgeois political formation on
the basis of the Stalinist-Menshevik two-stage theory of revolution.
They argued that it was necessary to support the reputedly progressive
wing of the national bourgeoisie in opposing imperialism, first
in obtaining independence from Britain and then in developing
a national economy and eliminating landlordism, caste oppression
and other legacies of colonialism and feudal backwardness. Only
when the democratic revolution was completed in alliance with
the bourgeoisie, could there be, insisted the Stalinists, any
struggle for socialism,
Today under conditions where the Indian bourgeoisie has abandoned
any pretense of opposing imperialism, supports Indias full
integration in the world capitalist economy and is angling for
a strategic partnership with US imperialism, the Stalinists are
even more emphatic that the working class must not challenge the
political domination of the bourgeoisie. The Congress must be
supported against the BJP and the working class and peasantry
must accept the profit-driven compulsions of capitalism and the
gifting of their lands to foreign investors, because capitalist
industrialization will provide the material basis for socialism.
The CPM is an integral part of the Indian political establishment,
having administered the countrys third largest state for
the past 30 years, and a vital prop of the Indian bourgeois. A
new revolutionary party of the Indian working class must be built
based on the Trotskyist program of permanent revolution. In opposition
to the bourgeoisie and all it parties, the Indian working class
must advance a program of democratic and socialist demands aimed
at mobilizing Indias toiling masses in the struggle for
a workers and peasants government and at fusing the
struggle of Indias toilers with the international working
class struggle against imperialism and global capital and
for socialism.
See Also:
West Bengal: Left
Front government rattled by popular outrage over Nandigram massacre
[10 December 2007]
Indian Stalinists
reverse course, allow Indo-US nuclear deal go to IAEA
[21 November 2007]
West Bengals
Stalinist government mounts terror campaign to quash peasant unrest
[15 November 2007]
In wake of West Bengal
massacre: Indian workers must advance an independent socialist
programme
[23 March 2007]
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