Pannekoek, Anton - The Politics of Gorter
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The Politics of Gorter
Anton Pannekoek
- 1952
In an article in Revolution Proletarienne No 50 ( May 1951, page 171 ) in which S. Tas speaks of
Herman Gorter, he is described as having "a rather bad politics". It seems necessary to compensate
for this article with some remarks on the positive character of Gorter's politics.
Gorter became a member of the socialist party where he discovered and studied marxism. From this
he drew the conviction that the proletariat can only gain the management of society through class
struggle against the bourgeoisie, and that this is how it will destroy capitalism. He was then of the
opinion, like the whole of the radical wing of the party, that good parliamentary politics could be an
effective means to organize the working masses, to awaken their class consciousness and, by this
means, increase their power in respect of the dominant bourgeoisie. For him the socialists in
Parliament ought to have vigorously opposed the bourgeois politicians, the representatives of the
dominant class. It would be a misunderstanding to say that this politics sought to transform the world
through a single blow. The goal of this politics was to increase the strength of the proletariat so that
through a series of engagements it became capable of obtaining power. It was in the politics of the
German socialist party that one saw the most clear incarnation of this radical position.
This attitude was opposed by reformism, which sought to achieve reforms that would make
capitalism bearable, through compromises with the other parties. In the western countries, because of
the much longer and slower development of capitalism, class divisions were marked in a much less
acute way than they were in Germany, due to the feverish rise of its industrial capitalism. Thus
reformism generally dominated the practical activity of the socialist parties. The struggle of the
Dutch Marxists, in which Gorter distinguished himself, was directed against this practise because
they were of the opinion that reforms could not be obtained through the cunning of politicians, but
only through the power of the working class. Only once were they successful. However they were
finally expelled. In other Western countries, this was not even necessary; the reformism of the
members of parliament, « good politics », reigned in absolute mastery. If we now
consider the results of this politics, we see that after a half-century of reformism, capitalism is more
powerful than ever and society is threatened with annihilation, while the workers must continue to
fight for their crumbs of bread.
In Germany, reformism continued to gain influence in practise, although theoretically this was not
recognised in the face of the intensity of the class struggle. It was here that the conviction was born,
within the marxists and the most progressive circles of the proletariat, that one could not achieve
power by purely parliamentary means. For that one needed the action of the masses, of the workers
themselves. The Party passed resolutions on the general strike and we started demonstrations for the
right to vote. The extent and strength of these frightened the party chiefs even more than it did the
dominant class; they put an end to it for fear of the consequences and all forces were channelled into
the elections and parliamentary politics. Only, a minority, « the extreme left »,
continued propaganda in favour of mass action. The German bourgeoisie, its power unshaken, could
prepare to conquer world power without meeting any obstacles. Naturally, Gorter was at the side of
the extreme left, whose politics were as his own
After this the danger of war became ever more menacing. The socialists and pacifists of France and
Germany organised a Peace congress at Basle in 1912. Beautiful and solemn speeches were made
against the war. Gorter himself went there to provoke a discussion about the practical means of
fighting against war. Mandated by a certain number of elements of the left, he had proposed a
resolution according to which, in all countries, workers had to discuss the danger of war and consider
the possibility of mass action against it. But he was not allowed to speak. The leadership of the
congress refused any discussion about means or methods. It acted, supposedly, so as not to destroy
the impression of our imposing unity. Actually it feared the consequences of such mass struggles.
The governments, not misled by appearances, now knew that they had no serious resistance awaiting
them in the socialist parties. Gorters « bad politics » which wanted to prevent war by
all means, had been repulsed, the « good politics » of the party politicians remained
dominant, it imposed itself on the proletariat and soon led Europe into the first world war.
In this war the socialist politicians were revealed as being what they always had been
fundamentally : nationalist politicians, or in other words bourgeois politicians. In every country they
supported their own government, helped it to contain the workers and to stifle any resistance to the
war. All this was the good politics of skilful politicians. The « bad politics » of Gorter
consisted of attempting in his pamphlets on imperialism and on the world revolution, to inform the
workers of the reasons for the war and the need for a revolution after the war.
In 1918 when the war ended, revolution erupted in Germany. Or, to be more exact, on November 6th
it erupted in Kiel, and three days later the counter-revolution erupted in Berlin; Ebert, the leader of
the socialist party, came into government to repress the action of the revolutionary workers, in
association with the generals. Naturally Gorter was at the side of Karl Liebknecht, Rosa Luxemburg
and the spartakists... The workers action was cut down by the military, Liebknecht and Rosa were
assassinated. Ebert, the model of a socialist politician was victorious; through good politics he
brought the bourgeoisie back to power in Germany and was its first president.
In 1917, the Russian Revolution destroyed tsarism and brought the Bolcheviks into power. In every
country the workers were stirred up and communist groups were formed. Naturally Gorter was
immediately at their side with all his heart. He saw this as the beginning of the world revolution, and
in Lenin, its supreme leader; in the strike movements in Russia he saw the beginnings of a new form
of independent action by workers, and in the soviets the beginning of a new form of organisation of
the revolutionary proletariat. But divergences soon appeared. When the defeat of the spartakists in
Germany prevented a world revolution, Lenin sought to return to the tactics of parliamentarism to
win over the left wing of the socialist parties. The majority of German communists vigorously
opposed this. They were expelled, and it was against them that Lenin wrote his pamphlet on the
« infantile disorder ». Lenin's action meant the end of the Russian revolution as a
positive factor in the world proletarian revolution. Gorter, as spokesman of the opposition, replied
with his « Open letter to Lenin » [1]. Two fundamentally different conceptions were
opposed in these two works. Lenin was a great politician, much greater than his socialist
contemporaries, because he had greater tasks and objectives. His historical task, as leader of the
bolchevik party, was to raise Russia up from its primitive and agrarian form of production into
industrialization, by means of a social and political dictatorship which led to State socialism. And
because he only knew capitalism from the outside and not from the inside, he believed it was
possible to free the workers of the world by making some the disciplined troops of the
« Communist party ». From then on they only had to follow the Russian example.
Gorter replied that in Russia the revolution had only been able to conquer thanks to the aid of the
peasant masses, and that, precisely this aid was missing in the West, where the peasants themselves
were property owners. In Russia it was only necessary to get rid of a crumbling Asiatic despotism. In
the West the workers were opposed by the formidable power of capitalism. They would only free
themselves from it if they themselves raised the levels of revolutionary strength, of class unity, of
independence and of intelligence. Thereafter Lenin's politics have logically ended in Stalinism in
Russia, they have divided the proletariat in the West and been rendered impotent by the fanatic and
boastful quasi-revolutionism of the communist party. In the years after 1920, Gorter in contact with
the small groups of the extreme left, worked to clarify the idea of the organisation of workers
councils and thus collaborated in the future renewal of the class struggle of the proletariat. During
this time the socialist politicians of the second international, as members of parliament and ministers,
were occupied in bailing out a bankrupt capitalism for the bourgeoisie, but nonetheless without
halting the crisis or being able to blur class divisions. In this way they prepared the ground for the
accession of Hitler and the second world war.
If we take in at a glance the whole of the political history of the last century, we constantly see the
opposition of two political methods, which are themselves an expression of the class struggle. Why
is one called good and the other bad politics ? Politics is the art of dominating men. Skilful
politicians endeavour to reform, in other words patch up the old system of antiquated and shaky
domination, or, when its fall is inevitable, erect a new system of domination. This is what is called
good politics. Others endeavour to help the exploited masses acquire the strength to deliver
themselves from exploitation and domination. It is this which in parliamentary terms is called bad
politics.
Ant Pannekoek.
Notes
[1] It is an error of fact when Tas designates Lenin's pamphlet as « a formidable
response » to that of Gorter. The order of succession was precisely the reverse