From The American Left History Blog Archives (2006)
- On American Political Discourse
Markin comment:
HOLD THEIR FEET TO THE FIRE
FORGET DONKEYS, ELEPHANTS AND GREENS- BUILD A WORKERS
PARTY
The election cycle of
2006-2008 has started, a time for all militants to run for cover. It will not
be pretty and certainly is not for the faint-hearted. The Democrats smell blood
in the water. The Greens smell that the Democrats smell blood. Various
parliamentary leftists and some ostensibly socialists smell that the Greens
smell blood. You get the drift. Before we go to ground let me make a point.
The central issue in the 2006
elections is the Iraq quagmire. As we enter the fourth year in the bloody war
in Iraq many liberals, and some not so liberal, in Congress and elsewhere are
looking to rehabilitate their sorry records on Iraq and are having a cheap
field day. As militants we know that the
only serious call is- Immediate Withdrawal of all U.S. and Allied Forces Now
(or rather yesterday). Many politicians have supported a pale imitation of this
slogan-now that it safe to do so. These courageous positions range from
immediate withdrawal in six months, one year, six years, etc. My personal
favorite is withdrawal when the situation in Iraq stabilizes. Compared to that
position, Mr. Bush’s statement in May, 2003 that the mission in Iraq was
accomplished seems the height of political realism. Hold on though.
After the last slogan has
faded from the last mass anti-war demonstration, after the last e-mail has been
sent to the last unresponsive Congressman, after the last petition signed on
behalf of the fellowship of humankind has been signed where we stand in 2006.
When the vast majority of Americans (and the world) are against the Iraq war
and it still goes on and yet the “masses” are not ready for more drastic action
we need some immediate leverage.
The only material way to end
the war on the parliamentary level is opposition to the continued funding for
the occupation. For that, however, you need votes in Congress. Here is my
proposal. Make a N0 vote on the war budget a condition for your vote. When the
Democrats, Republicans, Greens, or whoever, come to your door, your mailbox ,
your computer or call you on the telephone or cell phone ask this simple
question- YES or NO on the war budget.
Now, lest I be accused of being an ultra-left let me make this clear. I am talking about the supplementary budget for Iraq. Heaven forbid that I mean the real war budget, you know, the 400 billion plus one. No, we are reasonable people and until we get universal health care we do not want these “leaders” to suffer heart attacks. And being reasonable people we can be proper parliamentarians when the occasion requires it. If the answer is YES, then we ask YES or NO on the appropriations for bombs in the war budget. And if the answer is still YES, then we ask YES or NO on the appropriations for gold-plated kitchen sinks in the war budget. If to your utter surprise any politician says NO here’s your comeback- Since you have approximated the beginning of wisdom, get the hell out of the party you represent. You are in the wrong place. Come down here in the mud and fight for a party workers can call their own. Then, maybe, just maybe, I can support you.
I do not believe that there
has been a decline in physical courage. What has declined is political courage,
and this seems an irreversible decline on the part of parliamentary
politicians. That said, I want to finish up with a woefully inadequate
political appreciation of Karl Liebknecht, member of the German Social
Democratic faction in the Reichstag in the early 1900’s. Karl was also a son of
Wilhelm Liebknecht, friend of Karl Marx and founder of the German Social
Democratic Party in the 1860’s. On August 4, 1914, at the start of World War I
the German Social Democratic Party voted YES on the war budget of the Kaiser
against all its previous historic positions on German militarism. This vote was
rightly seen as a betrayal of socialist principles. Due to a policy of
parliamentary solidarity Karl Liebknecht also voted for this budget, or at
least felt he had to go along with his faction. Shortly thereafter, he broke
ranks and voted NO against the war appropriations. As pointed out below Karl Liebknecht
did much more than that to oppose the German side in the First World War. THAT,
MY FRIENDS, IS THE KIND OF POLITICAN I COULD HAVE SUPPORTED. TODAY, AS FOR THE
REST- HOLD THEIR FEET TO THE FIRE!
EVERY JANUARY WE HONOR, LENIN OF
RUSSIA, ROSA LUXEMBURG OF POLAND AND KARL LIEBKNECHT OF GERMANY AS THREE
LEADERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL WORKING CLASS MOVEMENT. HERE’S WHY WE HONOR
LIEBKNECHT.
In honor of the 3 Ls. The authority of Lenin, leader of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia in 1917, and Luxemburg, the Rose of the Revolution, need no special commendation. I would however like to comment on Karl Liebknecht who has received less historical recognition and has had less written about him. Nevertheless, Karl Liebknecht apparently had the capacity to lead the German Revolution. A man whose actions inspired 50,000 Berlin workers, under penalty of being drafted to the front, to strike against his imprisonment in the middle of a World War is self- evidently a man with the authority to lead a revolution. His tragic personal fate in the aftermath of the Spartacus Uprising of 1919, being killed by counterrevolutionaries aided by his former comrades in the German Social Democratic Party, helped condition the later dismal fate of the German Revolution in1923.
History has posed certain questions
concerning the establishment of socialism that remains unresolved primarily to
due the crisis of leadership of the international labor movement. Although
Liebknecht admittedly was not a theoretician I do not believe that someone of Lenin's
or Trotsky's theoretical level was necessary after the Russian experience. What was necessary was a leadership that
assimilated those lessons. Liebknecht, given enough time to study those
lessons, seems to have been capable of that. A corollary to that view is that
one must protect leading cadre when the state starts bearing down. Especially
small propaganda groups like the Spartacus with fewer resources for protection
of leadership.
This was not done. If you do not protect your leadership you wind up with a
Levi, Brander or Thalheimer (successively leaders of the German Communist Party
in the early 1920’s) who seemed organically incapable of learning those lessons
One of the problems with being the son of a
famous politician is that as founder of the early German Social Democratic
Party Wilhelm Liebknecht's son much was expected of Karl, especially on the question
of leading the German working class against German militarism. Wilhelm had done
a prison term (with August Bebel) for opposition to the Franco-Prussian War. As
for Karl I have always admired that famous picture of him walking across the
Potsdam Plaza in uniform, subject to imprisonment after lost of his
parliamentary immunity, with briefcase under arm ready to go in and do battle with
the parliamentary cretins of the Social Democratic Party over support for the war budget.
(THIS PICTURE CAN BE GOOGLED) That is
the kind of leadership cadre we desperately need now. REMEMBER LIEBKNECHT’S
FAMOUS SLOGANS- ‘THE MAIN ENEMY IS AT HOME’-‘NOT ONE PENNY, NOT ONE PERSON
(updated) FOR THE WAR’. Wilhelm would have been proud.
No comments:
Post a Comment