This
piece by Alan Thornett was written for International Viewpoint and
the French language magazine Inprecor. It should be read alongside
Chris Harman’s article.
Downlaod as WORD or PDF
A
Reply to Chris Harman on Respect
by Alan Thornett - 4th January 2008
Chris
Harman claims that his article The Crisis in Respect (ISJ) is an
attempt to locate the politics behind crisis in Respect. It is nothing
of the sort. It is a continuation of the method the Socialist Workers’
Party (SWP) had employed in the debate around the issue from the
outset, which has been to bury the politics behind an ever-increasing
welter of allegations and distortions mostly, but not only, about
George Galloway and Salma Yaqoob. To the extent that he does deal
with the politics it is an attempt to defend the indefensible i.e.
the ‘loose coalition’ model of organisation which the
SWP insisted on for Respect and the way the SWP leadership reacted
to George Galloway’s letter at the end of last August.
Harman
claims that the crisis was precipitated by a series of attacks on
the SWP. It was not. It was precipitated by the astonishing over-reaction
of the SWP leadership to George Galloway’s letter, which called
for some rather modest changes in the way Respect was organised
and run. The letter did not imply a crisis or a split in Respect.
It did, it is true, add up to a critique of the SWP and the way
it ran Respect. But it was impossible to criticise any aspect of
Respect without this being the case since the SWP were running it
from top to bottom. Respect was, in effect, by then, a wholly owed
subsidiary of the SWP. That was in fact the nub of the problem the
letter was trying to address.
Harman
also claims that the letter was designed to shift Respect to the
right. It was not. There was absolutely nothing in the letter to
suggest such a shift. The issues Harman singles out in an attempt
to establish this is the questioning (in the context of financial
administration) of the decision to spend £2,000 on the hiring
of an expensive float for the 2007 Gay Pride at a time when Respect
had no money, and the recourses put into the Organising Fighting
Unions conference (OFU) and the subsequent £5,000 loss. There
can be different views on these issues but they were both legitimate
questions to raise and neither of them held any water at all as
examples of a move to the right.
In fact
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trangender (LGBT) rights are an unfortunate
subject for Harman to pick to attack the letter given the SWP’s
dubious record on the subject inside Respect. There have indeed
been clashes with George Galloway over this issue in Respect. Whilst
Galloway supports LGBT rights, and has a record of doing so, he
has controversially argued on several occasions for the issue to
be given a lower profile in Respect material. The problem for Harman,
however, is that the SWP have, on each occasion, supported Galloway
over such proposals against Socialist Resistance (SR) supporters,
and others, who have argued for a higher profile.
This
was the case at the first two conferences of Respect where SR supporters
were denounced by SWP leaders for raising resolutions highlighting
LGBT rights. It was also the case with the first draft of the Respect
manifesto, which I wrote, where George Galloway was also supported
by SWP leaders when he argued for reducing the profile of this issue.
Whether it was right or wrong to suddenly spend a lot of money on
an intervention into the 2007 Gay Pride parade, when previously
SR supporters had to campaign to get a leaflet produced for Pride,
can be discussed. But it was not a shift to the right. It was what
it was the questioning of particular expenditure at a time when
Respect had no money for an election campaign or anything else.
There
was always a legitimate question to be asked about the way the OFU
conference was build and resourced through the Respect office and
full-time staff. I was opposed to the way it was built from the
start, and declined to be a part of the organising committee as
a result. I had argued for a conference organised jointly with sections
of the trade union left, and if possible with the Communist Party
of Britain (CPB), with the aim of strengthening the links between
Respect and the trade union left and other partners in the project.
This approach was rejected on the Respect officers committee in
favour of a conference called and organised by Respect itself -
with the main aim of getting the maximum attendance. In the event
the conference although quite big did nothing what-so-ever to strengthen
the relationship between Respect and the trade union left. It was
perfectly legitimate for George Galloway to criticise the resources
put in by the Respect office and the £5,000 loss incurred.
Gay
Pride and OFU, however, were side issues in the Galloway letter.
In any case Harman himself argues elsewhere in his article that
the shift to the right is an intention behind the letter rather
than in the text of the letter itself. What Harman fails to take
up are the central issues of the Galloway letter the state that
Respect was in. The stark reality was that the membership of Respect
had declined from 5,500 two years earlier to 2,200 by August 2007,
something which would normally be seen as a crisis. Not only were
many of Respect’s branches moribund or inactive but Respect
was politically narrower, since the bulk of those who had left had
been independent activists. It had financial problems and it was
in no position to face a general election. There were problems with
its decision making process, the functioning of its elected committees,
and the undemocratic top-down control exercised by the SWP. These
were the real issues which provoked the letter.
None
of these were new problems. Some of us had been raising them for
several years. The Respect Party Platform (RPP) - had tried to raise
them at the Respect conference in October 2006 and had been roundly
slapped down by John Rees (Respect National Secretary and a leading
SWP member) with the support at that time of George Galloway. The
declining membership was blatantly covered up. In fact falsified
membership figures were presented to the conference by John Rees
which were designed to give the impression that Respect had grown
when in fact it has declined. All protests about this manipulation
were ignored.
The
conference was told that, in any case, membership figures were not
the best way to measure of the strength of Respect, that there were
a lot of Respect supporters who were not prepared to join but could
be called upon in important campaigns like elections. This was an
oblique but revealing reference to SWP members and the way the SWP
saw Respect. This was that it did not need to be a real organisation,
with real members, because there were plenty of SWP members who
could be drafted in as foot-soldiers as necessary. It meant that
Respect was not a real organisation at all but a front for the SWP!
It did not have any internal political life of its own because it
did not need an internal life. It was an extension of the SWP a
device to be used at election time. SWP member after SWP member
went to the rostrum to denounce us and to claim that their Respect
branch was vibrant and expanding, that there was no crisis and that
it was malicious to suggest otherwise. The following is an extract
from the RPP assessment of the conference published soon after:
“The
real situation inside Respect was the elephant in the room which
must not be mentioned. How, following major electoral gains winning
a seat in Westminster and then 16 councillors in the local elections
was Respect smaller and politically narrower at the time of the
conference than at any time since it was founded despite the gains
in East London.
“According
to the annual report, as discussed at the National Council prior
to the conference, Respect had lost a third of its members over
the past year, down from just over three thousand to just over two
thousand, and many of its branches are in bad shape. Yet far from
using the conference to discuss this problem and how to tackle it,
the whole thing was covered up. The version of the annual report
given to the delegates had even been altered, and all the membership
figures removed. A carefully worded formula was inserted in place
of the figures which gave the impression that the membership had
gone up. It was smoke and mirrors. A declining Respect becomes an
expanding one. George Galloway in his opening speech not only claimed
that everything in the garden was absolutely rosy but that Respect
had just recruited 10,000 students! Respect was, said Galloway “the
fastest growing party in Britain”. John Rees insisted that
Respect was “bigger this year than last year”.
All
proposals we put forward at the conference to address this disastrous
situation were also slapped down by an SWP majority. The implication
was that since there was no crisis - other than in the heads of
a disgruntled minority - there was no need for any solutions either.
We were successfully isolated and defeated.
This
was the real background to George Galloway’s letter. What
was new was that they had now been reflected in a poor result in
the Southall Parliamentary by-election, there was a general election
in the offing, and George Galloway had now raised them. The letter
was an attempt to tackle this situation. It made proposals for a
much-needed membership and fund drive and a modest reorganisation
of the leadership structures of Respect to bring a bit of plurality
in at the top. If the SWP had been prepared to discuss the issues
politically and make some compromises to show that they were prepared
to take other people’s views into account there could have
been a positive outcome. John Lister (the other SR member on the
Respect NC) and I issued a statement welcoming George Galloway’s
letter as far as it went, but calling on him to go further particularly
over the democratisation of Respect internal procedures and structures
and on accountability.
Harman
says rather patronisingly that those from the left like me, John
Lister (and Ken Loach and others) who supported the letter and eventually
supported Respect Renewal were confused! But there was never any
doubt where we would stand on the letter. It was pointing to problems
we had been raising and changes we had been proposing for a long
time. Nor was there any chance from the outset that we would support
the SWP leadership once it was clear that they were opposing the
letter in favour of an unacceptable status-quo. If the fiction of
a left/right divide was calculated to draw us into the SWP camp
it was never going to work.
This
was the reaction of almost all the non-SWP members of the NC. It
was a remarkable situation. The SWP leadership managed to alienate
themselves, within a few weeks, from virtually all of the active
non-SWP members of the NC people they had been working with for
three and a half years. There were 50 members of the NC of which
about 44 were actively involved. At the time of the letter the SWP
had 19 members of the NC. By the time of the split 19 NC members
supported Respect Renewal and 21 supported the SWP of which 17 were
SWP members (several others declined to take sides).
Among
those supporting Respect Renewal are Linda Smith (the National Chair
of Respect and leading member of the Fire Brigades Union), Salma
Yaqoob (National Vice-Chair and elected councillor in Birmingham),
Victoria Brittain (a well known writer and playwright), Jerry Hicks
(leading industrial militant and member of the SWP at he start of
this crisis). There was also film maker Ken Loach, Abjol Miah (the
leader of Respect on Tower Hamlets Council), Yvonne Ridley (also
a journalist), and Nick Wrack - the first national chair of Respect
and a member of the SWP when the crisis broke.
One
feature of the SWP Respect after the split is that the ratio of
SWP members to independent activists on its National Council elected
on October 9th is even greater. SWP members are seventy percent
of the incoming NC. It will be difficult to have much of a coalition
on that basis.
Harman
claims that the SWP did its “utmost’ to reach a compromise
to prevent a split. It did not. In fact it was the SWP’s total
refusal to compromise which set a split dynamic in train. Far from
making concessions the SWP went totally in the opposite direction.
They took the letter as a frontal attack on the SWP and launched
a nation-wide tour of SWP districts vilifying George Galloway and
scandalously calling him and Salma Yaqoob (amongst many other things)
communalists with its divisive connotations for those from the Sub-Continent
of brutal colonial pogroms and imperialist divide and rule - and
characterising his letter as a part of a right wing attack on the
left in Respect.
The
charge of communalism was particularly outrageous in the case of
Salma Yaqoob, who far from being a communalist had a high profile
and exemplary record in combating it in Birmingham - which she convincingly
outlined in her reply to the SWP Challenges for Respect.
There
may well have been examples where Respect focussed to much on building
in one single community or working to much through community networks
in a particular area. The SWP are seriously wrong, however, in describing
this as communalism and Harman continues with this dangerous line.
Of course the task is to resist relying on such networks and especially
where, which is often the case, they are male dominated. Unlike
The Labour Party, however, we need to fight for transparent processes
as has been the case over postal voting. If there have been concessions
to these practices the SWP have to show what they did about it at
the time not just claim, without any evidence that it was all down
to George Galloway. Salma Yaqoob covers some of these things a lot
more adequately in her excellent reply to Harman - A Spectre is
Haunting Respect?
At each
of the SWP’s internal meetings the attacks on George Galloway
became more frenzied. A minority which emerged inside the SWP in
opposition to all this, and which argued for the SWP to make compromises
before it was too late, was brushed aside and some were later expelled.
In hindsight is it probable that once the SWP leadership had gone
down the road of whipping up their members against Galloway in this
way it was already impossible to prevent a split. It was very difficult
to pull back from the kind of allegations which were being made
and the bitterness engendered. So SWP leaders, finding themselves
in a hole, kept digging. In fact the kind of language used then
continues in Harman’s letter. In it he not only claims that
there was a witch hunt against the SWP but that it reflected the
tone of the Cold War of the 1950s and the purges of Trotskyists
in the Labour Party in the 1980s! At another point it compares us
with the leadership of Rifondazione joining the Prodi coalition.
It is
worth noting that the George Galloway the SWP were now vilifying
was the same George Galloway that the SWP had repeatedly shielded
from criticism from ourselves and others ever since Respect was
founded not just on the profile of LGBT rights but other issues
as well. They now denounced him for unaccountability yet at the
time of the Celebrity Big Brother debacle they fought might and
main to protect him against any degree of accountability at all.
They successfully blocked any of criticism of his decision to go
on the programme being expressed by Respect. Harman repeats the
crassest arguments deployed by the SWP at the time to defend their
actions. For example that George Galloway’s appearance on
Big Brother was not as bad as invading Iraq as Blair and new Labour
had done! So that’s alright then! On that criterion he had
a completely free hand!
Harman’s
answer to the charge that the SWP undemocratically dominated Respect
something which was so recognisable to non-SWP members - is to claim
that it cannot be true because the SWP has a good reputation in
campaigns such as the Anti-Nazi League and the Stop the War Coalition!
Whether this claim holds water or not his answer reflects the scale
of the problem. The SWP has indeed always treated Respect as a single
issue campaign and sought to build it as such the infamous united
front of a special kind - when it needs to be something much more
akin to a political party if it is to succeed. The level of democracy,
of involvement of members, and of common political experience and
development is something very different in an organisation (whether
you call it a party or not) which fights for political office than
a single issue campaign which is confined to a limited objective.
Again this was the nub of the issue.
Harman
claims that George Galloway and others have attacked democratic
centralism and Leninist organisation. What has been challenged,
however, it not democratic centralism as such but the way the SWP
operated democratic centralism inside Respect, and the effect this
had on the democracy of the organisation. In other words the SWP’s
bureaucratic conception of ‘democratic’ centralism and
the way they applied it to Respect.
The
objection was not that the SWP had meetings as the SWP the objection
was the relationship between its decision making processes and those
of Respect itself. Many in Respect, who were not in the SWP, were
becoming painfully aware as to what this involved. It meant the
huge SWP delegations on the leading bodies Respect acting under
democratic centralist discipline as normal practice with no attempt
to limit the impact of this or allow a genuine process of discussion
to take place. This made it a waste of time for others to attend
since all the important decisions were determined in advance. I
had declined nomination for the officers group (the executive committee)
after the 2006 conference for exactly this reason because my attendance
was pointless. The elected committees were not the real decision
making bodies at all. They were token meetings controlled by the
parallel decision making structures of the SWP. Decisions which
were taken were only carried out if they corresponded to the SWP
agenda.
It was
this dubious mode of operation which required a top-down structure
with the ‘important leader’ at the top running both
Respect and the SWP. And it was this which was challenged by George
Galloway’s proposal to establish a national organiser alongside
the national secretary with equal authority. This also explains
why this proposal was resisted so strongly by the SWP. It was seen
as a direct challenge to John Rees and his ability to run things
this way.
It was
this issue rather than events in Tower Hamlets in East London which
was the driving force of the split on the NC. After several hours
of debate at two NC meetings - during which SWP delegates came close
to driving George Galloway out of Respect an agreement was reached
on the appointment of a national organiser with equal status to
John Rees. It was seen as a breakthrough by the none-SWP members
of the NC. An officer’s meeting then set this decision aside
and referred the issue to the Respect conference. That decision
took the crisis to a new level. It sent a message loud and clear
that the SWP was going to defend their top down conception to the
bitter end, and that it was probably to late to save Respect in
its original form. It was also this which brought the crisis in
Tower Hamlets to a head and triggered a battle over conference delegates.
If everything was going to be decided by a vote-out at conference
delegates became crucial.
There
had been wider problems and conflicts in Tower Hamlets Respect it
is true. Many of them reflected genuine problems arising out of
Respect’s electoral success, however, for which nobody should
apologise. Respect made a major breakthrough unprecedented on the
left into impoverished working class minority communities in East
London and Birmingham, amongst people who were outraged by the war.
A large number of new members, many of whom had little experience
of the labour movement or the traditional left, with different traditions
of political organisation, came into Respect. But how those gains
could be consolidated and built, and how the problems which would
inevitably arise could be tackled (whatever new community was involved)
was another matter.
It is
true that Respect’s appeal as an anti-war party had an impact
right across the Muslim communities in a way which would not be
the case in a white working class area for example. There were and
are Restaurant owners who strongly support Respect again in a way
that would not be the case in a white working class area. But this
is a product both of the position such people find themselves as
migrants in British society, their political experience back home,
and the nature of the so-called war against terror with its demonisation
of Muslim people.
It would
be a big mistake, however, to conclude that several Restaurant owners
who support Respect Renewal determine the class character of that
support they absolutely do not. The bulk of Respects Muslim supporters
are amongst the most impoverished sections of the working class
in Britain. It casts shame on the SWP that they are now resorting
to arguments which previously came either from the right wing or
the ultra left.
The
problems arising from all this, of course, were never discussed
in Respect at the level of the NC or the even the officers group.
Harman makes a series of allegations about Tower Hamlets Respect
about none-left interlopers and the like. But why was none of this
brought to the elected committees at the time? The fact is a conscious
decision was taken by SWP leaders to keep them internal to Tower
Hamlets and the SWP, since the elected bodies were not seen as the
real leadership that was the SWP. Instead of collective discussion
the problems, where they existed, were internalised and compounded.
It was a big mistake. It was impossible for the elected leadership
to take responsibility for such problems when they were not informed
of the existence of them. Instead of discussion and debate around
issues as they have arisen, the SWP’s answer was lowest-common-denominator
politics. It avoided conflict but nothing was resolved.
The
political framework behind all this was the ‘loose coalition’
conception - which the SWP had insisted on imposing on Respect -
rather than building it as an all-round political party. With a
loose coalition the priorities were not political development and
the establishment of collective political experience. These were
seen as the preserve of the SWP itself which is a logical approach
with a united front campaign. For such a campaign or a loose coalition
the priority was to be able to be able to deliver votes when they
were needed. How the organisation itself developed was a secondary
matter.
There
were also implications for internal democracy. A loose coalition
does not imply the same level of democracy or accountability as
a party. Nor does it imply the detailed rules needed for standing
for political office policy making, membership status, selection
procedures and accountability. Harman alleges irregularities in
Tower Hamlets, specifically of large numbers of members joining
at the unemployed rate - when some of them, he argues, must have
been employed. It is hard to know whether there was substance in
this allegation or not. But what is clear is that the SWP has an
appalling record of overlooking such irregularities when it has
suited them which raises questions as to how such a situation, if
it existed, was allowed to develop in the first place. Both the
2006 Respect conference and the SWP organised 2007 Respect conference
featured large numbers of student delegates who had no legitimate
status at all. They were ‘elected’ from the lists of
students who simply expressed an interest in Respect on a Freshers
Fair but never joined and in most cases were never seen again. It
was one of the factors making the conference an undemocratic and
unacceptable event which was no longer viable as a united conference.
It would have been unlikely ever to get past the item ‘endorsement
of delegates’ with breaking up which would have done no one
any good.
Harman
makes no serious attempt to explain the SWP’s dramatic switch
as far as George Galloway is concerned from unquestioned leader
to number one enemy of the left. It’s true that Galloway is
a maverick and is a controversial politician. But he was both of
these things the day Respect was formed and he remained so the day
it split. At the time Respect was formed the SWP saw it as important
to include someone like Galloway in a project like Respect if it
was to have a broad appeal. And they were right, at least in principle,
even if they got it wrong in practice. You can’t have a broad
party including both revolutionary socialists and left reformists
without any left reformists of any weight and influence. And Galloway
is still the only left Labour MP to make a break with Labour having
been expelled from Labour over the war - and put his weight behind
building an alternative. He is the best public speaker on the left,
not an unimportant attribute, and was and remains a central leader
of the anti-war movement. It is largely from these two factors that
he has the biggest electoral base of anyone on the left outside
of the Labour Party. He is left Labour in his politics as he made
very clear at the Respect Renewal conference. But it was this which
he brought into Respect from the outset - a genuine component of
left-Labour politics.
Nor
is Harman right to draw a parallel between the Big Brother episode
and Galloway’s other media appearances in particular his twice
weekly Talk Sport show. This is a left-wing show and is a service
to the left. It is used by GG to promote left-wing causes and left-wing
ideas in front of an audience of half a million. It is hard to see
and objection to that.
The
degree of success achieved by Respect Renewal since the split is
both an indication that the political conditions for such a party
remain as strong as ever. Respect Renewal remains fragile and will
only develop successfully to the extent that it is able to turn
outwards towards the rest of the left. The strength of Respect Renewal,
however which was never the case with the original Respect under
the SWP is that it is serious about approaching other sections of
the left such as the trade union left and the CPB about a wider
regroupment of forces to tackle the crisis of working class representation.
It is serious when it says that it does not see itself as the answer
but only one component of the answer. It means it when it says that
if it is possible to move towards a wider regroupment that it would
put no organisational preconditions in the way. Its only precondition
would be that it would represent a step forwards in building the
kind of new party the working class needs in order to respond to
the betrayals of social democracy.
All
these issues could have been discussed in the framework of the old
Respect had the SWP leadership acted differently. Unfortunately
that was not the case. In reality there was resistance to this kind
of approach. The task now, therefore, is to make Respect Renewal
the success it has the possibility of being. It has made a very
encouraging start; the task now is to build of this initial success.
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