OPINION: CIL rejects any coalition with right wing parties
Campaigning for a new left
The issue of of an Irish left wing alliance to counterpose the
current conservative political establishment and its grip on power, has been
discussed in An Phoblacht on several occasions. This week we continue that
debate. Here, COLM BREATHNACH, a member of the Irish Socialist Network, a
group affiliated to the Campaign for an Independent Left (CIL) writing in a
personal capacity, argues the need for a new left party which would oppose
coalition with conservative parties as a matter of principle.
Recently, the Sunday Independent declared dramatically that it had uncovered
an evil Sinn Féin plot to set up a Marxist dictatorship. The truth,
however, lay in the small print, if you had a strong enough stomach to read
through the garbage: the article quoted Sinn Féin documents outlining a
strategy of grassroots-based activism that would lead to radical change in
our society.
No socialist could disagree with a strategy that argues for such bottom up
change, although it is legitimate to point out the huge contradiction
between such a strategy and the entirely different notion of entering
coalition government and somehow reforming the system from above. These
issues, which have been a matter of intense debate by republicans, are also
being discussed by many others on the left, including those individuals and
groups involved in the newly established Campaign for an Independent Left
(CIL).
The CIL is an alliance of individuals and groups who are committed to the
struggle to build a society where working people democratically control all
aspects of their lives and where the gap between rich and poor has been
eliminated. The initial groups involved are the Community and Workers Action
Group, based in the Dublin areas of Crumlin, Walkinstown and Greenhills, the
Tipperary Workers and Unemployed Action Group, an organisation of community
and trade union activists represented in the Dáil by Seamus Healy TD and the
Irish Socialist Network, a participatory socialist group based in Dublin and
Belfast. A number of individual social justice, anti-racist and trade union
activists are also involved. What these groups and individuals have in
common is their proven commitment to democratic methods of organisation and
a track record of activism on the ground.
To achieve this radical transformation of Irish society, these groups share
the view that it is necessary to build a new, independent all-Ireland party
of working people. By independent we mean a party that will oppose the
pro-capitalist parties, north and south, and will under no circumstances
enter into government with them. Along with rejecting coalition with parties
of the right, the CIL argues for public ownership and democratic control of
the economy, universal health care and education as a right, equal rights
for all and opposition to imperialism.
The CIL is also opposed to the so-called 'social partnership' process,
arguing for trade-unions run democratically by their members, and fighting
for their interests rather than making deals with bosses.
It must be accepted that a new party of working people cannot be conjured up
out of thin air but will emerge out of struggles of working people and
realignments on the left. What form that party will eventually take, who
will be involved, its internal structures and detailed policies are matters
of evolution not prescription. Nor would the CIL argue that we alone have
all the answers. It is certain that in the struggle to build a socialist
society a number of different currents and forces will be involved including
without doubt republicans amongst others.
This again raises the question of how to bring about radical change and the
related issue of coalition with parties of the right. For socialists this is
not a question of tactics but of fundamental principle, for two reasons:
parties of the left that enter coalition invariably fail to deliver any
significant reforms for working people and any that they do are off-set by
the anti-working class measures that they must support as part of the deal
with the right. This in turn usually leads to electoral punishment, as
happened to Labour in 1997 or total elimination of a party (who remembers
Democratic Left?).
The second problem with coalition, or any political project based primarily
on electoral strategies, is that it confuses being in government with being
in power. Although some power lies in the hands of those elected to the
Dáil, real power is held in the hands of those that control the economic,
social and cultural power in a capitalist society. You cannot create a
socialist republic simply by electing a certain number of TD's and you
certainly won't create it by having a few ministers in a coalition
government.
Revolutionary change can only occur through a bottom up democratic
revolution in which ordinary people gain full control over all social,
economic and political structures. In this sense the CIL shares a strong
commitment with Sinn Féin members, a commitment to community based
campaigning. But it is impossible to work on the ground arguing for bottom
up change while your party is involved in a government which imposes
neo-liberal policies from above. It is impossible to offer a real
alternative to the system while sharing power with capitalist parties. It is
not simply a question of being a party of protest or of power, but
recognising that power does not solely or even primarily lie in Leinster
House or Stormont, and that the aim is to change the class that holds power
not just the parties.
Members of Sinn Féin will undoubtedly question the necessity of a new party
of the left. The need for such a party is not based on some disagreement
with existing parties over specific policies but on a key question of
principle: the necessity for a party that represents the interests of one
class only, the working class and which follows the logic of that class's
interests by remaining independent of the wealthy classes and their
representatives, the parties of the right.
Labour and the Greens have clearly shown that on both counts they have no
interest in such a project, but how does this relate to the role of Sinn
Féin? Clearly the current situation is quite fluid but some trends now seem
to be emerging. On the question of coalition with parties of the right, Sinn
Féin's current policy is for its members to make a final decision at a
special Ard Fheis after an election.
Despite the vigorous and welcome opposition to coalition by a substantial
minority at the party's last Ard Fheis, the contributions of members of Sinn
Féin's leadership indicate that they believe that there is nothing wrong in
principle with coalition, and it is fair to assume that the leadership view
would have a very strong influence on the members' decision.
This debate is not unique to Sinn Féin and the contradictions between an
electoralist strategy and a grassroots campaigning strategy have always
reared their head in left parties. Of course left republicans have a
decisive role to play in the attainment of a socialist republic but in what
form is now open to question. If Sinn Féin members reject coalition and the
idea that capitalism can be reformed out of existence, and build on their
already deep experience of grassroots campaigning then one can hope for an
increasing convergence of work between the radical left and republicans, all
of whom have a role to play in building the workers republic of the future.
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