Pannekoek, Anton - Party and class
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Party and Class
Anton Pannekoek
http://kurasje.tripod.com/index.html
The old labor movement is organized in parties. The belief in parties is the main reason for the
impotence of the working class; therefore we avoid forming a new party - not because we are too
few, but because a party is an organization that aims to lead and control the working class. In
opposition to this, we maintain that the working class can rise to victory only when it independently
attacks its problems and decides its own fate. The workers should not blindly accept the slogans of
others, nor of our own groups but must think, act, and decide for themselves. This conception is on
sharp contradiction to the tradition of the party as the most important means of educating the
proletariat. Therefore many, though repudiating the Socialist and Communist parties, resist and
oppose us. This is partly due to their traditional concepts; after viewing the class struggle as a
struggle of parties, it becomes difficult to consider it as purely the struggle of the working class, as a
class struggle. But partly this concept is based on the idea that the party nevertheless plays an
essential and important part in the struggle of the proletariat. Let us investigate this latter idea more
closely.
Essentially the party is a grouping according to views, conceptions; the classes are groupings
according to economic interests. Class membership is determined by one's part in the process of
production; party membership is the joining of persons who agree in their conceptions of the social
problems. Formerly it was thought that this contradiction would disappear in the class party, the
"workers" party. During the rise of Social Democracy it seemed that it would gradually embrace the
whole working class, partly as members, partly as supporters. because Marxian theory declared that
similar interests beget similar viewpoints and aims, the contradiction between party and class was
expected gradually to disappear. History proved otherwise. Social Democracy remained a minority,
other working class groups organized against it, sections split away from it, and its own character
changed. Its own program was revised or reinterpreted. The evolution of society does not proceed
along a smooth, even line, but in conflicts and contradictions.
With the intensification of the workers' struggle, the might of the enemy also increases and besets the
workers with renewed doubts and fears as to which road is best. And every doubt brings on splits,
contradictions, and fractional battles within the labor movement. It is futile to bewail these conflicts
and splits as harmful in dividing and weakening the working class. The working class is not weak
because it is split up -it is split up because it is weak. Because the enemy is powerful and the old
methods of warfare prove unavailing, the working class must seek new methods. Its task will not
become clear as the result of enlightenment from above; it must discover its tasks through hard work,
through thought and conflict of opinions. It must find its own way; therefore, the internal struggle. It
must relinquish old ideas and illusions and adopt new ones, and because this is difficult, therefore the
magnitude and severity of the splits.
Nor can we delude ourselves into believing that this period of party and ideological strife is only
temporary and will make way to renewed harmony. True, in the course of the class struggle there are
occasions when all forces unite in a great achievable objective and the revolution is carried on with
the might of a united working class. But after that, as after every victory, come differences on the
question: what next? And even if the working class is victorious, it is always confronted by the most
difficult task of subduing the enemy further, of reorganizing production, creating new order. It is
impossible that all workers, all strata and groups, with their often still diverse interests should, at this
stage, agree on all matters and be ready for united and decisive further action. They will find the true
course only after the sharpest controversies and conflicts and only thus achieve clarity.
If, in this situation, persons with the same fundamental conceptions unite for the discussion of
practical steps and seek clarification through discussions and propagandize their conclusions, such
groups might be called parties, but they would be parties in an entirely different sense from those of
today. Action, the actual class struggle, is the task of the working masses themselves, in their
entirety, in their real groupings as factory and millhands, or other productive groups, because history
and economy have placed them in the position where they must and can fight the working class
struggle. It would be insane if the supporters of one party were to go on strike while those of another
continue to work. But both tendencies will defend their positions on strike or no strike in the factory
meetings, thus affording an opportunity to arrive at a well founded decision. The struggle is so great,
the enemy so powerful that only the masses as a whole can achieve a victory - the result of the
material and moral power of action, unity and enthusiasm, but also the result of the mental force of
thought, of clarity. In this lies the great importance of such parties or groups based on opinions: that
they bring clarity in their conflicts, discussions and propaganda. They are the organs of the selfenlightenment
of the working class by means of which the workers find their way to freedom.
Of course such parties are not static and unchangeable. Every new situation, every new problem will
find minds diverging and uniting in new groups with new programs. They have a fluctuating
character and constantly readjust themselves to new situations.
Compared to such groups, the present workers' parties have an entirely different character, for they
have a different objective: they want to seize power for themselves. They aim not at being an aid to
the working class in its struggle for emancipation but to rule it themselves and proclaim that this
constitutes the emancipation of the proletariat. The Social- Democracy which arose in the era of
parliamentarism conceived of this rule as a parliamentary government. The Communist Party carried
the idea of part rule through to its fullest extreme in the party dictatorship.
Such parties, in distinction to the groups described above, must be rigid structures with clear lines of
demarcation through membership cards, statues, party discipline and admission and expulsion
procedures. For they are instruments of power - they fight for power, bridle their members by force
and constantly seek to extend the scope of their power. It is not their task to develop the initiative of
the workers; rather do they aim at training loyal and unquestioning members of their faith. While the
working class in its struggle for power and victory needs unlimited intellectual freedom, the party
rule must suppress all opinions except its own. In "democratic" parties, the suppression is veiled; in
the dictatorship parties, it is open, brutal suppression.
Many workers already realize that the rule of the Socialist or Communist party will be only the
concealed form of the rule of the bourgeois class in which the exploitation and suppression of the
working class remains. Instead of these parties, they urge the formation of a "revolutionary party"
that will really aim at the rule of the workers and the realization of communism. Not a party in the
new sense as described above, but a party like those of today, that fight for power as the "vanguard"
of the class, as the organization of conscious, revolutionary minorities, that seize power in order to
use it for the emancipation of the class.
We claim that there is an internal contradiction in the term: "revolutionary party." Such a party
cannot be revolutionary. It is no more revolutionary than were the creators of the Third Reich. When
we speak of revolution, we speak of the proletarian revolution, the seizure of power by the working
class itself.
The "revolutionary party" is based on the idea that the working class needs a new group of leaders
who vanquish the bourgeoisie for the workers and construct a new government - (note that the
working class is not yet considered fit to reorganize and regulate production.) But is not this as it
should be? As the working class does not seem capable of revolution, is it not necessary that the
revolutionary vanguard, the party, make the revolution for it? And is this not true as long as the
masses willingly endure capitalism?
Against this, we raise the question: what force can such a party raise for the revolution? How is it
able to defeat the capitalist class? Only if the masses stand behind it. Only if the masses rise and
through mass attacks, mass struggle, and mass strikes, overthrow the old regime. Without the action
of the masses, there can be no revolution.
Two things can follow. The masses remain in action: they do not go home and leave the government
to the new party. They organize their power in factory and workshop and prepare for further conflict
in order to defeat capital; through the workers' councils they establish a form union to take over the
complete direction of all society - in other words, they prove, they are not as incapable of revolution
as it seemed. Of necessity then, conflict will arise with the party which itself wants to take control
and which sees only disorder and anarchy in the self-action of the working class. Possibly the
workers will develop their movement and sweep out the party. Or, the party, with the help of
bourgeois elements defeats the workers. In either case, the part is an obstacle to the revolution
because it wants to be more than a means of propaganda and enlightenment; because it feels itself
called upon to lead and rule as a party.
On the other hand the masses may follow the party faith and leave it to the full direction of affairs.
They follow the slogans from above, have confidence in the new government (as in Germany and
Russia) that is to realize communism - and go back home and to work. Immediately the bourgeoisie
exerts its whole class power the roots of which are unbroken; its financial forces, its great intellectual
resources, and its economic power in factories and great enterprises. Against this the government
party is too weak. Only through moderation, concessions and yielding can it maintain that it is
insanity for the workers to try to force impossible demands. Thus the party deprived of class power
becomes the instrument for maintaining bourgeois power.
We said before that the term "revolutionary party" was contradictory from a proletarian point of
view. We can state it otherwise: in the term "revolutionary party," "revolutionary" always means a
bourgeois revolution. Always, when the masses overthrow a government and then allow a new party
to take power, we have a bourgeois revolution - the substitution of a ruling caste by a new ruling
caste. it was so in Paris in 1830 when the finance bourgeoisie supplanted the landed proprietors, in
1848 when the industrial bourgeoisie took over the reins.
In the Russian revolution the party bureaucracy came to power as the ruling caste. But in Western
Europe and America the bourgeoisie is much more powerfully entrenched in plants and banks, so
that a party bureaucracy cannot push them aside as easily. The bourgeoisie in these countries can be
vanquished only by repeated and united action of the masses in which they seize the mills and
factories and build up their council organizations.
Those who speak of "revolutionary parties" draw incomplete, limited conclusions from history.
When the Socialist and Communist parties became organs of bourgeois rule for the perpetuation of
exploitation, these well-meaning people merely concluded that they would have to do better. They
cannot realize that the failure of these parties is due to the fundamental conflict between the selfemancipation
of the working class through its own power and the pacifying of the revolution through
a new sympathetic ruling clique. They think they are the revolutionary vanguard because they see the
masses indifferent and inactive. But the masses are inactive only because they cannot yet
comprehend the course of the struggle and the unity of class interests, although they instinctively
sense the great power of the enemy and the immenseness of their task. Once conditions force them
into action they will attack the task of self-organization and the conquest of the economic power of
capital.