29 September 2007
Here is an article from the Socialist Workers Party and a very good one
at that! It makes some straight forward points about the nature of
democracy and workers democracy, drawing attention to recent references
to Trotsky by Chavez and his minister of
labour Jose
Ramon Rivero Gonzalez. For those of you who are confused by all the
"isms", this article is very clear, refering to four tendencies in the
Chavez administration.
Chavez is talking of 'permanent revolution' in Venezuela. But, argues
Chris Harman, there is a fight for the future of the revolution and for
change from below.
Venezuelan president Hugo
Chavez recently announced a shift to the left in his government.
"Trotsky said that the
revolution was permanent, it never finishes. Let's go with Trotsky," he
said.
Chavez
has already caused anger among the Venezuelan upper classes by using
some of the revenue from the state owned oil company to provide special
welfare provision in the poor areas.
Now he has announced the
re-nationalisation of the electricity network and the biggest
telecommunications company.
He
has reshuffled his government, getting rid of ministers from the two
small social democratic parties that are part of his electoral
alliance.
Among the new ministers is
one from the Communist Party and another – minister of labour Jose
Ramon Rivero Gonzalez – who warned Chavez, "I have Trotskyist ideas."
Chavez replied, "But I am a
Trotskyist too, I follow Trotsky's line of permanent revolution."
Chavez
has called for the replacement of his four party electoral coalition by
a "united revolutionary party" involving not just the parliamentarians,
but also the many thousands of activists not belonging to any party.
What
has brought about this radicalisation? The habit of the mainstream
media is always to see political changes as resulting from the actions
of political celebrities. It is a habit which easily infects the left.
But
the radicalisation in Venezuela has been driven from below – by the
reaction of the mass of the urban poor, the workers and the peasantry
to attempts to overthrow a government that started off backing only
very mild reforms.
Chavez has moved to
the left as he reacts to the feelings of the million or more people who
have played the key role in these movements from below.
The
latest example of the mood to the left was the presidential election at
the beginning of December, where Chavez got 62 percent of the vote.
The
result easily saw off the latest challenge from the right. But the
election campaign also brought to a head activists' discontent with the
Chavista electoral parties.
They were seen as cut off from
the movement, with repeated complaints of their "bureaucratism",
"clientalism" and "corruption".
Chavez is responding to these
feelings. But there are still limits to his radical actions.
Most
of Venezuelan big business remains untouched – and Chavez insisted in a
recent speech that there was still an important role for the "national
bourgeoisie".
Chavez's moves are not
going to stop the corruption and bureaucracy which affects not only the
parties of the electoral coalition, but the non-elected hierarchies of
the state machine.
The top ranks of the
civil service remain stacked with people appointed under the corrupt
pre-Chavez system. And the armed forces continue to be full of career
officers who share the values of the Chavez-hating upper-middle class.
Such
elements do not dare move against Chavez at present, but they find it
easy to sabotage government decisions they do not like.
So
serious left wing analysts talk not only of the corruption and
bureaucracy, but also of endless muddle, in which even a lot of money
for the welfare programmes goes astray.
Chavez's own references to
corruption show that he recognises some of these faults.
The
call for a new party is his attempt to pull together a structure that
can give some direction to the attempts to reform the state as well as
society.
But permanent revolution is
about more than trying to impose change from above.
Karl
Marx first conceived the idea analysing the revolutions of 1848-49.
Leon Trotsky took up the idea after the 1905 Revolution in Russia.
For
them it was about how movements that begin around demands for
democratic political changes mobilise the mass of workers to take
action and, in the process, to take the lead in the revolutionary
process.
Mass activity from below may
start with the democratic demands voiced by middle class leaders, but
it develops a momentum in which the mass of workers begin to take
control of their own destinies and fight for full blooded social
revolution.
Chavez merely decreeing from
above that all the political forces that have defended him should unite
into a single party will not make this happen.
There
are very different conceptions about the direction Venezuela should go
in among those who back Chavez – conceptions that mean that any
apparently united party would involve four distinct tendencies.
The
first, to be found among parliamentarians and some elected officials,
holds that the government should be more conciliatory towards big
business and the right wing.
The second
would be for moving towards what its adherents call socialism, but at a
very slow pace. For them, the aim of a single party would be to slow
down the revolutionary process.
A third tendency looks to
establishing a Cuban-type society.
In
Venezuela, the hostility to Cuba from the US has led many people to see
it as a model – a way of running society that can lead to socialism and
a better, freer life for the mass of people.
In
the 1960s and 1970s the Cuban leadership accepted a model of running
society strongly influenced by the old Soviet Union. That meant denying
the mass of workers and peasants the right to discuss and vote over the
direction of government policy or even to have independent trade unions.
Today, despite talk of
socialism, Cuba is marked by enormous disparities of wealth and income.
Supporters
of the Cuban model might try to use the movement from below to
establish state control of industry and control of the state by a
single party. But they would stop the movement in its tracks if the
mass of people took decisions into their own hands.
What
their approach means in practice was shown in the spring of last year.
The majority of delegates to the congress of the new UNT union
federation voted for proper elections for the officials of their union,
to make it into an organ of working class democracy.
A
minority of delegates walked out to prevent the elections, arguing in
effect that workers electing their own leaders was irrelevant to the
revolutionary process.
This is the
opposite to permanent revolution as meant by Marx and Trotsky. It is an
attitude which tries to stop the mass of workers democratically taking
their fate into their own hands and playing a leading role in the
revolutionary process.
Finally,
there is the genuinely revolutionary tendency – those groupings of
activists for who making the revolution permanent means organising the
mass of workers, the urban poor, the indigenous groups and the peasants
to fight for their own demands.
One
such grouping is the Class Struggle Tendency. It is the majority in the
UNT and is influenced by Trotskyism (of a very different variety to
that of the new minister of labour).
Another
is the organisation Por Nuestras Luchas ("By Our Struggles") that is
influenced by traditions of urban guerrillaism and autonomism and looks
to organising the poor, the peasants and the indigenous groups.
In
the great revolutionary movements of the 20th century, permanent
revolution meant workers throwing up their own democratic institutions
from below, workers' councils, and then drawing behind them the rest of
the exploited and the oppressed.
The
workers, bound together in the workplaces by a common battle against
exploitation, found it easier to develop an organic unity in struggle
than did the peasants or the urban poor.
Disillusion with the
parliamentarians means there is a great deal of talk about "popular
power" as an alternative in Venezuela.
But for the first three
tendencies it simply means councils elected to mediate between the
government and the mass of people.
For
the revolution to become truly permanent workers would have to go much
further than this. They need to establish their own democratic organs
so as to take control of the government, to replace the existing
corrupt state structure and to reorganise industry so as to end the
poverty and huge inequalities that still characterise Venezuela today.
The
fact that these things are being discussed is a sign of the degree to
which the movements from below have shaken up Venezuelan society.
But
the movements still have a way to go if revolution is really going to
turn society upside down, so that the exploited become the ruling class.