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The Communist Party, no.59, 2024
The Communist Party, no.59, 2024
Paper of the
International Communist Party
All issues
Issue 59
September 2024
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Last update Sept 7, 2024
WHAT DISTINGUISHES OUR PARTY – The line
running from
Marx to Lenin to the foundation of the Third International and the birth of the Communist Party of Italy in Leghorn
(Livorno)1921, and from there to the struggle
of the Italian Communist Left
against the degeneration in Moscow
and to the rejection of popular fronts
and coalition of resistance groups
– The tough work of restoring the revolutionary
doctrine and the party organ, in contact
with the working class, outside the realm
of personal politics and electoralist manoevrings
Contents:
1.
- England - The General Election Is not in the Interests of the Working Class
2.
- Bangladesh - A new social upheaval comes to shake a young capitalism
3.
- Italy: Voting is Not an Effective Tool of Struggle Worse if together with the Bosses
4.
- France: The Specter of Fascism Versus the Myth of Democratic Freedoms
5.
- Global Crash
6.
- Kenya of Today: The Current and ongoing Anti‑government Protests
7.
- Venezuela: The bourgeoisie has its president - Winners and losers both represent the interests of the bourgeoisie and imperialism!
– Third (Communist) International:
8.
- 1st Congres, 1919 - Theses on Bourgeois Democracy and the Dictatorship of the Proletariat
9.
- 2nd Congres, 1920 Theses on Parliamentarism presented by the Communist Abstensionist Fraction
England
The General Election Is not in the Interests of the Working Class
The date announced for the General Election of the Parliament of the United
Kingdom, on 4 July, 2024, was unexpected. It had been thought that the
Conservative government would wait until autumn, or even later, in the hope of
better economic news, or at least less bad news regarding growth and inflation
affecting the cost of living for most of the population. The indications were
that this was unlikely to happen, so an election was called with little notice.
The growing political crisis in the Tory hierarchy was obvious, with a large
number of MPs abandoning the sinking ship. It is now increasingly clear that
taxes will increase, and cuts will be made to public spending, no matter what
the politicians promise, and whichever party forms the next Government.
As in all elections, the various openly capitalist parties are competing for
votes on the basis that their policies will make people better off, while being
“costed” responsibly. Yet, no matter which party is involved in the next
Government, an economic crisis is coming – and attacks will be made on the
living standards of the working class, in the interests of the capitalist class
as a whole. No matter which gang wins in any general election, the government
will be called upon to implement measures to protect the national economy, such
as the nationalization of industries that are vital to the national economy but
are unprofitable or inefficient in private hands. The interests of capitalism
come first, last and always. The working class has no champion in this fight.
The Labour Party has been historically projected to be the political wing of the
labor movement, in part financed by the political levy of trade union funding.
But it has always distanced itself from its origins as a representative of
organized labor, defending the fiction of the “national interest”, which merely
disguises the reality of conflicting class interests. There may be the
occasional hint at state control or public ownership, but this is never in the
interests of the working class, but in this “national interest”, i.e., the
interest of the capitalist system as a whole and the UK’s capitalist national
interests in particular. There is not a shred of socialism in any of it, and
never has been. The Labour Party as a whole has never wanted to do anything
which undermines capitalist society. There may be the occasional rebels who make
a lot of noise. They serve to give the party some credibility but always end up
being pulled back into line, or quietly sidelined.
Indeed, the Labour Party is certainly capable of sounding more or less radical
depending on the political climate. Under the leadership of Sir Keir Starmer, it
looks and sounds almost identical to the Tories. It has no program for reform
and has purged itself of any left-leaning “unreliable elements” such as the
Corbynites. It has even refused to consider reversing some of the worst welfare
benefit cuts implemented by the original coalition Government of 2010-5 when the
Conservatives went into partnership with the Liberal Democrats to attack the
poorest sectors of society. Ever since the Blair leadership, the Labour Party
has increasingly marketed itself as the party of business, openly courting – and
being courted by – various large capitalist enterprises.
Many trade union leaders and Labour Party activists get misty eyed harking back
to the 1945 Labour Government, which brought in measures that were needed to
rebuild society after the Second World War. The National Health Service and
welfare reforms were an improvement on the Poor Law Provisions, which were not
formally abolished until 1948. But they were essentially put in place to ensure
that the working class was just about healthy enough to get back to work, and to
bring up the next generations of wage slaves. There was nothing remotely
socialist about any of this, and nothing which could lead to the emancipation of
the working class. The reality is that, in contrast to 1945, or, for that
matter, subsequent electoral victories for the Labour Party, very few people are
now taken in by promises of reform. Consequently, the pressure is on, from all
quarters, to get people involved in, and engaged with, the election debates.
Just vote for somebody, even without illusions, or while holding your noses,
because the future of the country may be at stake. The entire spectrum of the
bourgeois media leveraged the D-Day anniversary on 6 June, for example, to
persuade the public that thousands had died to protect democracy, to protect
“your right” to vote (after all, nothing guilts workers into voting like
patriotism). So much so that when Prime Minister Sunak left the D-Day
celebrations early, the opposition parties all kicked up a fuss and the PM
himself offered a groveling apology for his “error of judgment”.
Elections Settle Nothing!
An election cannot change the course of the
capitalist economy (other than in the most superficial and short-term movements
of economic indicators, based on investor confidence in the incoming
administration’s ability to steer the ship that is the State in the interests of
the capitalist class). The attacks that the working class will face because of
the growing crisis of capitalism will be implemented by whatever government is
elected, regardless of the promises made and regardless of party affiliation.
Members of Parliament are employed by the State to look after the interests of
capitalism. In return, they are allowed to feather their own nests, insofar as
this is not perceived as outright corruption that brings the system into
disrepute. Meanwhile the exploitation of the working class, the great majority
of society, will continue whoever occupies Number 10 Downing Street.
The
working class instinctively knows this but is yet to take the next step towards
taking power for itself.
The working class makes and remakes this world every single day. Because of
this, the working class can look forward to a better world to come, without
exploitation, poverty, insane economic crises and wars. In this election, which
is dominated by the issue of immigration, the working class can also look
forward to a world without national borders and without the compulsion for
millions of workers to migrate in search of work. But this can only be brought
about by the overthrowing of capitalism and its replacement with a communist
society in which people give according to ability and take according to need.
Communism will end the worldwide regime of insane overproduction, waste and
perpetual threats to the ecology of the planet. Rational production to meet
humanity’s true needs will be well within the resources of the planet, without
capitalism’s current “greenwashing” babble about sustainability. Communism will
end poverty and war. But this can never be achieved, in whole or in part, by
voting for any party – especially those which falsely claim to be communist or
socialist. It can only be achieved through the seizure of power by the only
force that can transform society – the working class, led by the International
Communist Party.
Bangladesh
A new social upheaval comes to shake a young capitalism
But the student and popular movements prove powerless in the face of Capitalism and can only delude themselves into thinking they are reforming it. Only the working class - organised in powerful class unions and led by the communist party - can fulfil the historic task of overthrowing it
After the social uprisings that have shaken Tunisia, Egypt, Chile, Colombia,
Ecuador, Kazakhstan, Sri Lanka and, a few weeks ago, Kenya over the past 15
years, in Bangladesh a new eruption emanates from the social underground.
In our article last January, “Bangladesh: Factories grow – Conflicts between
bourgeois marauders erupt – Class struggle flares up”, we described the scenario
from which emerged the powerful struggle of the textile workers, more than 4
million across the country, with demands for 200% wage increases. At the end of
the strike they only got 56%, a breath of fresh air. A struggle therefore only
momentarily appeased, an example for all workers, destined to flare up again in
a short time.
The picture of the social crisis
Bangladesh is the eighth most populous country in the world, after Nigeria; the
largest in terms of density, considering states with a population of at least 10
million. Its 173 million and growing inhabitants live in an area slightly larger
than Greece, which has about 10 million inhabitants. More than 30% of the
inhabitants are under 15 years of age. 17% of the population is illiterate.
For several years, statistics have been pointing to a continuous growth of
capitalist accumulation in Bangladesh. The country attracts more and more
capital thirsty for surplus value, which is mainly realised in the textile
industry, which accounts for 85% of exports.
But almost 3/4 of the population still lives in the countryside and half of the
working population is employed in agriculture. The exploitative conditions of
the working class, with low wages, unemployment and rising inflation, are thus
compounded by the social contradictions of a young capitalism, with the ruin and
urbanisation of hundreds of thousands of poor peasants and just as many taking
the path of emigration.
In 2019, there were 23 million Bengalis considered to be in “extreme poverty”.
In 2022, 500,000 were added, while the “moderately poor” increased by 800,000.
According to World Bank criteria, “extreme poverty” is defined as those with an
income of less than USD 2.15 per day, rising to USD 3.65 for “moderate poverty”.
According to forecasts by the previous Bengali government, this will increase in
the coming years.
The structure of the territory makes it, in the world of capital, vulnerable. It
is the great delta of the Ganges-Brahmaputra river system, spread over more than
700 arms. In the last twenty years, there have been over 200 extreme weather
events, often cyclones followed by floods. Parts of the land are flooded. The
advancing salinity erodes riverbanks and reduces the fertility of the land.
According to data from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), it
was the country with the highest number of people displaced by natural disasters
in 2022. In 2023, there were 1.8 million internally displaced persons.
Every year, around three hundred thousand internal migrants move into the slums
of the capital Dhaka. They have no choice, having lost everything to the weather
or small farmers choked by debt. They seek wages to survive, usually women in
textile factories, men in construction.
Bangladesh is also sixth in the world in the number of emigrants. On average
400,000 leave the country every year. Today, about 15 million Bengalis have
emigrated. While the temporary ones look for a salary in Middle Eastern and
South-East Asian countries, the permanent ones would like to make a new life in
Great Britain, which has always been the main destination, and in other
countries. In recent decades, Italy has also become a popular destination. Many
are employed in shipbuilding and heavy-duty activities.
Finally, Bangladesh hosts about one million refugees of the Rohingya ethnic
group in the refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar, a city on the eastern coast near the
border with Myanmar, from which they fled following the atrocious persecution
perpetrated by the army under the government of Aung San Suu Kyi, another
champion of non-violence and democracy, nominated in 1991 as Nobel Peace Prize
winner. Now it is about to be the turn of the Bengali proletarians to test the
worth of politicians deserving of such bourgeois honours!
From student movement to popular movement
It was against this backdrop of social crisis, 10 months after the textile
workers all-out strike, that the student protests triggered a mass movement
that ended with the fall of the government. Until 2018, 56% of the available
posts in the civil service were reserved for specific categories: 10% for those
from less economically developed areas, 10% for women, 5% for indigenous
communities, 1% for the disabled and, the most contested quota, 30% for the
descendants of the “freedom fighters”, those who fell during the 1971 war of
independence that led the then East Bengal to separation from Pakistan. The
system, which favoured the grandchildren of the 300,000 or so soldiers of that
war, was an important patronage tool for the bourgeois parties administering the
interests of the ruling class, for the Awami League, born out of a split of the
All Pakistan Muslim League, which has been in government continuously since
January 2009.
A ruling in 2020 had reduced the guaranteed quotas for civil service
recruitment. When the High Court reintroduced the previous quotas on 6 June,
protests began, called by some student organisations in the capital’s
universities, demanding the complete abolition of all quotas, excluding those
for the disabled and indigenous communities.
The movement thus began with a demand that, in the social framework described
above, appears to affect a limited and privileged stratum of the population,
those who can aspire to secure state employment, thus with a petit-bourgeois
nature. After weeks of rising tensions, the demonstrations escalated from Monday
15 July, partly due to the government’s clear refusal to go along with the
demands of the students, defined by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina as “razakar”,
the term used in 1971 to refer to paramilitary collaborators of the Pakistani
army.
The student movement, which began with a particular claim, acted as a catalyst
for the general social discontent, generating a popular movement that, due to
its nature, kept the student organisations in charge.
Clashes in the streets gradually escalated. Dhaka burst into flames. For days,
the government blocked all internet services to prevent protesters from
organising and imposed a curfew. Police and army switched from tear gas to stun
grenades and then to shooting. The death count began. The notorious paramilitary
corps RAB, Rapid Action Battalion, already well known to the Bengali working
class, also intervened. Violence was also carried out by the Chhatra League, the
youth wing of the ruling Awami League party.
Demonstrations even took place in the United Arab Emirates, where there are
almost one million Bengali emigrants, the third largest immigrant community in
the country. Fifty-seven were arrested: 53 were sentenced to 10 years in prison,
one to 11 years and 3 to life imprisonment!
After a few days of harsh clashes, 200 people were already dead. Undeterred, the
demonstrators stormed dozens of police stations, prisons, set fire to Awami
League offices, state television and government buildings.
Faced with the strength of the movement, on 21 July the Supreme Court reduced
the quota for veterans’ descendants to 5%. But by then it was too late, as that
was not the issue that was setting such large masses in motion. The
demonstrations spread beyond the capital, to Bogura, Pabna, Rangpur, Magura,
touching dozens of districts in the country.
With the waves of violence, the demands of the movement, led by student
organisations, changed. A list of nine points has been drawn up: the obligation
for leading members of the Awami League to resign; dismissal of all police
forces in the areas where students were attacked; trial of the police forces
involved in the murders; resignation of the vice-chancellors of the universities
where the violence took place; ban on the Chhatra League from educational
institutions; a public apology by the prime minister; compensation for the
families of the victims; reopening of educational institutions.
These demands are devoid of any economic-social content that could affect the
working class, they only target the ruling party and not the entire ruling class
regime, for whose defence, on the contrary, they call for measures against a
section of the police in order to restore a climate of trust and social peace.
On Monday, 5 August, twenty days after the protests broke out, Prime Minister
Hasina, who had won a fourth term in January in an election round boycotted by
the opposition, while her residence was under attack by protesters, resigned by
fleeing to India in a military helicopter. The news was greeted with jubilation
on the streets.
At the end of the demonstrations, various sources reported over four hundred
dead, thousands injured and arrests. It is certain that much of the blood shed
is that of the proletariat. As reported by one of the textile workers’ union
federations, the National Garment Workers Federation (NGWF), some of the victims
were workers, including 11 textile workers and 5 members and organisers of this
union. Certainly many others were young proletarians. The working class,
however, with its organisations and demands, did not participate in the
movement.
The workers did so individually, following a student leadership of a popular,
hence interclass movement. Strikes were neither called nor broke out
spontaneously. The bosses prudently held lock-outs to prevent the working class
from going on strike.
One of the reasons for Prime Minister Hasina’s capitulation may have been to avoid this which is the real terror of any bourgeois regime. In Egypt, in 2010, after weeks of oceanic popular demonstrations, three days of strikes, which had by then infected the whole country, were enough for the ruling class to unseat Mubarak and implement a ferocious repression.
After the former Prime Ministe fled, schools, shops and factories were reopened
within days. Demonstrations and protests ceased.
The bourgeoisie changes uniform
On 6 August, President Mohammed Shahabuddin dissolved parliament. As always,
when the fiction of legislative power falls, the bourgeois regime shows the true
backbone of its rule and it is the army that takes over the reins of government,
waiting for the conditions to mature to restore the fiction that can interpose a
levee between the bourgeois state, the machine of class rule, and the
proletariat. The army thus held a series of talks with various political parties
and some student associations. An interim government was formed headed by
Mohammad Yunus, Nobel Peace Prize winner in 2006, known for the Grameen Bank
“the micro-credit bank”, clamoured for by the students.
In its inception, its composition, its ideology, its outcome, the Bengali
movement thus appeared to express essentially the dead-end struggle of the
petty-bourgeoisie, ruined by the development of a young national capitalism
within the framework of a senescent global imperialist capitalism.
The new Bengali executive put a useful puppet at its head to give the
petty-bourgeoisie “hope”. It has also included two leaders of the “Students
Against Discrimination” movement, both from Dhaka University, sons of the
bourgeoisie, and assigned them petty-bourgeois posts.
To the Interior went Army Chief of Staff General M. Sakhawat Hossain, while
former Central Bank Governor Salahuddin Ahmed will occupy the Ministry of
Finance and Economic Planning.
The “ethical banker” – supported in the past by US presidents and the
International Monetary Fund – has now been placed at the head of the government,
with the blessing of the Bengali military, to appease the petty-bourgeois strata
that spearheaded the uprising. The new government will pretend to defend the
petty-bourgeoisie no less than “left-wing” governments pretend to defend the
working class.
As for the theories on ethical banking and “micro-credit”, suffice it to recall
that the Nobel Prize winner Prime Minister’s bank, with over 2500 branches,
offers one of its main loan packages at a “subsidised” interest rate of 20%.
In 2007, the banker tried, unsuccessfully, to launch a party, the Nagorik Shakti
(“Power of the Citizens”), which vaguely called for the nationalisation of all
banks which, finally in the hands of the “citizens’ state”, would have to meet
the needs of the community by creating “a new model of development”.
After taking the oath of office, Yunus reiterated some unequivocal concepts:
“Anarchy is our enemy and must be defeated ... A return to full democracy will
restore the honour and past glories of the armed and security forces ... The
first task of my government and the government that emerges from the elections
will be to rebuild the institutions and make Bangladesh a true democracy ... We
will not tolerate any attempt to disrupt the global garment supply chain, in
which we are a key player”.
International capital can rest assured: the “ethical” banker will ensure the
continuation of the oppression and exploitation of the working class, drawing on
the democratic ideological repertoire.
The role of imperialisms
Bangladesh, like all mid- and small-scale national capitalisms, is a terrain of
contention between the big imperialist powers, above all: the USA, China and
India.
Over the last few decades, the Bengali bourgeoisie has taken advantage, with
some success, of the rivalry between Beijing and New Delhi, juggling between the
two powers. China has for years consolidated and strengthened relations with
Dhaka by allocating huge sums to a country that is in a crucial geographical
position for its capitalist interests. About 80% of the energy reserves needed
by the Chinese giant cross the Indian Ocean and come from the Bay of Bengal.
Large Chinese investments are being made in the infrastructure of the coastal
countries in the area – Bangladesh and Burma – and in the construction of new
pipelines. Last year, the first integrated sea-land oil storage and transport
system was inaugurated in the Bengali port of Chittagong, a project executed by
the China Petroleum Pipeline Bureau (CPP). An alternative, albeit partial, route
to the transport of crude oil through the Strait of Malacca. In July, during the
protests, the former premier visited Beijing and signed several agreements in
the fields of trade, digital economy and infrastructure development. It is also
worth mentioning that China is Dhaka’s leading arms supplier and the first joint
military exercise called Golden Friendship 2024 was announced on 25 April.
Even more obvious is the link with India, which has invested hundreds of
millions of dollars in Bangladesh’s energy sector and infrastructure, and which
with its fleet effectively guards the Bay of Bengal. Indian influence, economic
and political, is a fact. It is no coincidence that the premier has taken refuge
precisely in Delhi. There is also military cooperation between the two
neighbouring countries to counter fundamentalist groups in the region.
Bangladesh includes the former Indian province of East Bengal. West Bengal has
remained part of India and the border between the two countries still remains
rather porous due to shared ethnic and linguistic ties.
US imperialism has always had a support base in the Bengali army. One of the
first statements by the refugee Hasina was: “I could have remained in power if I
had surrendered the island of Saint Martin, thus allowing the Americans to
control the Bay of Bengal”. The former Prime Minister was referring to the coral
atoll, currently a marine protected area, which would be denied to the US who
wanted to build a military base there.
Bangladesh did not want to join the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (QUAD), a
strategic alliance between Australia, Japan, India and the United States,
essentially in an anti-Chinese perspective. Also along these lines, the Awami
party in power until 5 August had – like India – refused to take sides in the
conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and has long maintained fruitful relations
with Russia. It is also true that Dhaka cannot afford to give up its relations
with the United States, now India’s ally and the leading importer of
Bangladeshi-made garments.
A complex scenario, as always, that of inter-imperialist contrasts, which will
have its first test in the forthcoming elections.
But it is to be ruled out that a movement of hundreds of thousands of men was
set in motion by “agents” of some power, an explanation to which the ousted
bourgeois factions or the bourgeoisie as a whole always resort when it sees its
class domination threatened, and to which even the political wreckage of
Stalinism draws, for whom history is not the product of the struggle between
classes but of the manoeuvres of powerful puppeteers.
The only revolutionary programme is Communism
The Bengali uprising had a popular, i.e. inter-class character, which, by now
throughout the world, can no longer confer any progressive, revolutionary
function on social movements, but only perpetuate the illusion of reforming
capitalism. The petty-bourgeoisie has been the revolutionary wing of the
bourgeoisie for as long as there have been pre-bourgeois regimes to overthrow,
such as the exterminated mass of poor peasants in tsarist Russia.
Once the society and regime of capital is established, this function of the
petty-bourgeoisie comes to an end and it can, at the height of its radicalism,
in order to oppose the historical tendency that necessarily leads it to end up
in the proletariat, nurture movements that are extremist in their practical
action, even to the point of individual terrorism, but conservative or openly
reactionary in their political programme.
The social force that alone opposes Capital is that of the proletarian class,
which in its movement to defend the living conditions of its members clashes
with the laws of Profit. The political destiny of the proletarian economic class
struggle is the destruction of the bourgeois state and its replacement by the
state of the dictatorship of the proletariat, not a change of tunic of the
bourgeois regime, keeping intact its machinery of state domination, which is
what a popular movement can at best aspire to. Already in last October’s textile
strike movement, the bourgeois opposition parties, in particular the Bangladesh
National Party, had tried to break into the workers’ demonstrations and divert
the class demands (more wages, less hours, better living and working conditions)
towards generic demands for more democracy. A banner, that of democracy, which,
passed off as being above class divisions, in fact was not taken up by the
working class to be taken up instead, a few months later, by the students.
Instead, the popular, petit-bourgeois character of the social movement made it
far more permeable to the influences of the bourgeois parties. Islamists,
liberals and fake radical parties intervened in force in the squares to vie for
control of the movement. On 5 August, the same day PM Hasina fled to India,
former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, a former BNP member and under arrest since
2018 for corruption, was freed by President Mohammed Shahabuddin.
The path of the wage-earning class is to defend their living conditions with
ever more extensive, united and powerful strikes, for which strong class-based
trade union organisations are needed. In this struggle, which springs naturally
from the economic undergrowth of capitalism, the proletariat will meet, out of
an objective practical necessity, the authentic communist party, overcoming
decades of bewilderment generated by the course of the Stalinist
counter-revolution, whose nefarious effects we see wearing off and, finally,
coming to an end in these years, with their historical inertia, despite the
collapse of the USSR’s false socialism. The Bengali workers will soon gauge the
bourgeois nature of the new government and continue their generous trade union
struggle.
The historical programme that their most advanced section, adhering to the
Communist Party, will take up will be that of the drastic reduction of working
hours, the abolition of wage labour, up to the struggle for power and the
establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
When the mighty movement of struggle has risen from the economic-union level to
the political level, with the Communist Party taking the lead in the struggle
and the trade union organisations, a part of the petty-bourgeois strata will
join the movement, following the working class.
The popular uprising movements we have witnessed in the last 15 years are thus
the present expression of the crisis of world capitalism, but the future is far
more threatening and unmanageable for the international bourgeoisie, because it
will lead to proletarian movements, therefore finally, truly revolutionary,
which will open up the historical outlet of Communism.
Italy:
Voting is Not an Effective Tool of Struggle
Worse if together
with the Bosses
On April 25, the CGIL launched a new referendum campaign, promoting the
collection of signatures for 4 repeals. 3 of these repeals concern parts of a
law passed by a center-left government in December 2014, against which the CGIL
promoted a general strike--nine days after the law was passed! These repeals, if
passed, would go a long way toward alleviating the blackmail-ability of the
working class, a fact that is ineradicable in capitalism, susceptible to
variation depending on the power relations between classes, and which in recent
decades has been exacerbated with the spread of precarious employment. However,
it is very difficult to assess how much such changes would really benefit wage
earners in the legislative and contractual quagmire. We communists do not
naively deny the importance of even small gains for workers forced into
increasingly harsh living conditions by the society of capital. The problem
should not be framed according to a superficial scheme that promotes that any
improvement is to be pursued by any means. The Problem should be measured with
the yardstick of whether an achievement, small or large, is a harbinger of
future (greater or lesser) achievements. That is, whether it is an ephemeral and
illusory improvement or a step forward in strengthening the movement of the
workers’ union struggle.
Included in this evaluation is necessarily the method one uses to pursue the
goal. Indeed, within certain limits, the method is even more important than the
goal. It is on this level that one appreciates the full contrast between the
method of class unionism and that promoted by the CGIL, which is an expression
of collaborationism between classes. One must also appreciate the difference
between the trade union orientation of our party-which is class-based-and that
of the leading groups of the trade union currents that more or less clearly
refer to class unionism.
The referendum method of obtaining improvements in favor of workers must be
rejected because it is the denial, in practice and in principle, of the class
struggle. As always, this directive of ours is not the pre constituted,
ideological, one that the hypocritical pro-unionists who run CGIL, CISL, UIL
would have us believe. It is historically indisputable that the really important
conquests of the working class, in all countries, has been achieved through
greater, more extensive and radical struggle.
Trade union collaborationism, which limits the strike as much as possible in
time and space and – avowedly – as a last resort, flourishes in periods of
regression in working class conditions, leading, far from progressive small
improvements, to a gradual retreat, as the last 4 decades very clearly
demonstrate. Any improvements gained through a referendum would once again offer
workers a miseducation in regard to struggle: that simply going to the polls
would suffice, which is quite different from going on strike. By doing so, they
would not create the conditions for greater workers’ fighting strength; rather,
they would shore up the current passivity, offering the bosses guarantees of the
continuation of the conditions of social peace that have ensured years of
backwardness in working-class living conditions.
The referendum method is characteristic of collaborationist trade unionism for
at least two reasons: 1) members of all social classes are called upon to vote
on issues affecting the working class. Therefore, the principle of interclassism,
the subjugation of the working class to other classes, is affirmed by this
route; 2) by the method of the secret ballot, the opinion of the backward,
unorganized, individualistic worker, even the scab, is placed on the same level
as the vote of the fighting workers, who by consciousness, generosity and
selflessness sacrifice themselves for the collective interests of their class.
For the second of these two reasons, the referendum to ratify contractual
agreements should also be rejected, insofar as it involves only workers, and it
is certainly no coincidence that it has always been a workhorse of the Fiom-CGIL
leadership, and not only it, but a very useful tool with which the regime unions
have been sanctioning and justifying national contract renewals for decades,
always to no avail.
It follows from these considerations how the democratic principle is against the
class struggle, which is based instead on a relationship of forces, not on the
counting of opinions. What counts in the struggle are the organized workers who,
with varying degrees of commitment, are involved in it. From the membership
base, to those who attend assemblies and meetings, to those who are consistently
active in union life, to workers who take more or less determined sides during
the strike. Of course, you vote in workers’ assemblies. But it is done by open
voting, not in private, in the secrecy of the ballot box. Those who do not
engage and those who don’t give a damn about the union struggle already, and do
not attend the assemblies and meetings are thus excluded from decision making.
Taking a public stand in front of one’s fellow workers motivates one another.
Evidently, this is not about obsequious compliance with an abstract, democratic
principle of justice, which when dropped into the real world of capitalism turns
into a formidable weapon for perpetuating the injustice of the privileged class
to the detriment of workers. It is about positing as the sovereign principle the
interests of the exploited class, and thus its strength and struggle.
That the pro-bourgeois leaders of the CGIL promote referendums, in order to
continue their undying work of miseducating the workers and to cover with this
diversion their willingness not to organize any struggle, is as obvious and
logical as ever. We are interested in criticizing those trade union currents
that want to be class-based, and therefore against collaborationist trade
unionism, but respond to the maneuvers of the CGIL leadership in an inadequate
way, and this because of the original vice of subservience to democratic, that
is, bourgeois, ideology.
For the spokeswoman of the alternative area in CGIL, Le Radici del Sindacato
(roughly translated: The Roots of the Trade Union), It is necessary to know
that neither one nor two nor four referendums will suffice, but they are
certainly a step to open a reflection and, I hope, a mobilization (Progetto
lavoro”, May ’24). The referendum itself, then, is not denounced as a tool
peculiar to collaborationist, anti-struggle unionism. The referendum campaign of
the CGIL leadership would be a step in the direction of reflection and –
hopefully [!] – mobilization, not the worn-out diversionary method against the
struggle of the CGIL leadership!
CUB’s national leadership (an italian conflictual trade union born in 1992)
follows a similar score in its May 21 communiqué: It is not enough to vote and
win the referendum, which represents a piece of a more general battle that CUB
has been waging all along. It is necessary to continue the mobilizations
(Referendum CGIL). Only the national leader of CUB SUR (School, University,
Research) and the secretary of the Milan Cub, at least as far as we are aware,
has taken the correct position in this grassroots union, noting the miseducting
nature of the referendum instrument.
Voting is not an effective tool of struggle, and even worse if in collaboration
with the bosses: this is the lesson that those who support class unionism must
give workers.
France:
The Specter of Fascism Versus the Myth of Democratic Freedoms
In the face of the global economic crisis, right-wing and far-right parties are
making headway in the democratic countries of the West. And in France, the
electoral victory in the European elections of Ms. Lepen’s so-called far-right
party, the rassemblement national, has prompted a lightning decision by the
fast-losing Macron clan to dissolve the assembly and call new elections in the
coming weeks. It’s another poker game, but one that has the petit bourgeois
shaking in their boots, as they wave the black rag of fascism in front of the
media!
Where will voters go to lose themselves between the fascism of the Lepen clan,
backed by Mr. Bolloré’s multinational corporation, which is buying up TV and
radio channels and famous publishing houses; in the middle, the Macron clan, now
worn down by its accelerated attacks on public institutions (education, health)
and its motley foreign policy; and on the left side, a hodgepodge of so-called
leftist parties under the Popular Front label, with Mr. Mélenchon’s party
accused of anti-Semitism because of its anti-Zionism and authoritarianism marked
by vigorous cleansing of troublesome militants. And above all, which camp will
the financiers choose? Ms. Binet’s CGT is also getting involved, calling above
all not to vote for the RN, knowing that some of its militants are in favor of
it! As for the instability of the French government, it is not in itself an
impossibility of governing. The example of Belgium, which remained without a
government for two years, is indisputable proof of this.
In response to this troubled and troubling situation orchestrated from all
sides, we quote the text of our current which, in June 1926, presented a
platform to the 5th Congress of the PCF, a party in the process of
Stalinization, which addressed French questions in its third part. The year was
1926, and France was facing an upsurge of right-wing and extreme right-wing
forces. History doesn’t repeat itself, but the means used by the ruling classes
are the same!
The parliamentary political system is a perfectly capitalist system,
corresponding more closely to the interests of the big bourgeoisie than to those
of any other class or social stratum (...) The schema representing the
parliamentary struggle between the Bloc National and the Cartel des Gauches [an
electoral coalition] as the conflict for power between the big bourgeoisie and
the middle classes is false, since the latter are incapable of possessing an
independent political regime, and Parliament is not, for Marxist critics, the
place where different classes lose or gain power, but on the contrary the proper
organ for the exercise and defense of the power of the capitalist bourgeoisie.
The political phenomenon of the parliamentary free play of democratic and
radical parties does not correspond to a kind of political abdication by the
capitalist class, but rather to a particular phase and pace of its action
against the proletarian class and the revolutionary danger. In this phase, the
main weapon of this struggle is the subordination of working-class ideology to
formulas and organizations that are the original product of petty-bourgeois
circles, but in reality correspond to the aims and maneuvering of the ruling
capitalist class, firmly installed not only in a parliamentary majority, but at
the head of the entire state machine. This method is not the bourgeoisie’s only
method of struggle, and it is very possible that as the economic crisis deepens,
and an employers’ offensive takes shape, there will be a complete change of
program in the political sphere.
And on the subject of fascism: What is essential is to understand that the
fascist plan is first and foremost a plan against the proletariat and socialist
revolution, and that it is therefore up to the workers to pre-empt or repel its
attack. It’s a misconception to see fascism as a crusade against bourgeois
democracy, the parliamentary state, the petty-bourgeois strata and their
politicians and parties at the helm of power. The false schema of the French
situation and its perspective consists in the ‘holy war’ that would be unleashed
against the fascist ‘danger’ by ‘democracy’ and its latest dummy, the Bloc des
Gauches, by mobilizing the forces of the state against the first ‘illegal’
fascist forces. According to this idea, the proletariat should only sound the
alarm, take the ‘initiative’ – there’s a buzzword for it – in this anti-fascist
struggle, fight with others to defend the advantages of a ‘left’ government,
considering the bankruptcy of fascism in France as its victorious goal,
reserving other actions and conquests for himself only as a second act of the
struggle, as the effect of a supposed strategy that would make him reveal to his
anti-fascist allies – but let’s be clear, only after the fact – the ulterior
motive of conquering power for himself, the claim to his dictatorship.
Things are very different. If fascism threatens us closely in France, it will
be because the proletarian revolution will threaten bourgeois France, which is
right-wing and democratic at the same time. At that moment, the middle classes
will undoubtedly play a role, but in the sense that they will side with
whichever of the two enemy classes proves stronger and more capable of defeating
and reorganizing social life according to its historical program. Defending the
status quo, or expressing negative anti-fascism instead of positive
anti-capitalism, on the pretext of popularizing the proletarian party before –
before what? – the proletarian party, are simply reactionary in such a decisive
situation.
And again: Both the democratic and fascist tactics of capitalism have a common
goal: to avoid by any means the general, unique action of the working class on
all the questions raised by the situation: for in this case, the defensive
weapons of the bourgeois state may prove insufficient. Single action by the
working class means not the commonplace of a bloc of different political
organizations and movements with a mixed and fictitious central leadership, but
the entry into struggle of the proletariat in all towns and villages, without
exceptions of categories and trades: this movement can win only if we succeed in
animating it with a single, precise program under the leadership of a true
revolutionary party.
To achieve this capitalist result, the Bloc des Gauches is making legislative
arrangements to attenuate the impression produced on the masses by the episodes
and sharp turns of the crisis, and with the help of the Socialist Party and the
reformist C.G.T. it is doing what it can to localize and isolate the conflicts
raised by proletarian demands.
Nothing more to say!
Global Crash
On Friday, July 19 the middle class in all countries had to deal with the “Blue
Screen of Death”. All companies using the Microsoft Azure system, the most
widely used system in businesses, were denied access to the computer system, and
on all computers at startup the words appeared: Blue Screen of Death! The freeze
paralyzed activities in airports, railways, hospitals, banks, etc. all over the
world.
Microsoft immediately tried to reassure customers, reporting that it was working
to solve the problem. However, this led to a series of chain delays, even by a
few days, in restoring the whole IT shack that basically holds up the fortunes
of world capital.
We communists rejoice at these general disruptions; the Blue Screen of Death is
our wish for capitalism. Let it be proven once again how fragile, inadequate and
always precariously balanced it is, to which all it takes is a “breath of wind,”
to jam, and how the fate of proletarians at the mercy of the predatory
bourgeoisie is always in danger.
This time the global damage was caused by a misreporting of a virus, which in
fact did not exist. The permanent war between bourgeoisies, between their
gigantic computer companies and between their state agencies of mutual sabotage
makes all their apparatuses extremely vulnerable. Everything progressive that
capitalism produces is invalidated and made fragile by the struggle for profit.
To put an end to the contradictions, ugliness and irrationalities of the
capitalist mode of production, let us return to the words Engels writes in The
Evolution of Socialism from Utopia to Science.
“Solution of the contradictions: the proletariat conquers public power by whose
power it mutates the means of social production into public property, removing
them from bourgeois control.”
By such an act, the proletariat liberates the means of production from the
capital character which they hitherto had and gives their social character full
freedom to actualize itself. Planned social production becomes possible. “The
development of production makes the further existence of distinct social classes
anachronistic. As the anarchy of social production disappears, so does the
political authority of the state. Men, finally masters of their form of social
organization, become masters of nature and masters of themselves, free”.
“It is the historical mission of the modern proletariat to carry out such
liberating action. It is the mission of scientific socialism, the theoretical
expression of the proletarian movement, to study thoroughly the historical
conditions and nature of liberatory action thus giving the class now oppressed
but called to action the consciousness of the conditions and nature of its due
action.
” The mission of the Communist Party is to lead and guide the proletariat toward
social revolution in order to overthrow the infamous capitalism!
Kenya of Today
The Current and ongoing Anti‑government Protests
spectre is haunting Kenya. The government of President William Ruto –
a staunch puppet of the IMF and the World Bank – is attempting to
force punitive taxes onto the masses. Youth protests have erupted in
every central town and city, signalling a radical undercurrent.
Kenyan workers are now demanding a general strike.
President
Ruto called in the army after millions engulfed the streets against
his severe austerity measures. In a previous televised address, he
labelled the protesters as “treasonous” and “dangerous
criminals,” vowing to treat every threat as an existential danger
to the republic.
In the early hours of Wednesday, June 26th, anti-Finance Bill protestors
surrounded the parliament building in Nairobi, attempting to paralyse
the economy and force Ruto to abandon his plans to extract over $2
billion in new taxes from workers and rural poor, a puppet for the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). The bill follows a period of
economic instability where Kenya teetered on the brink of default –
another in a long line of poor and “emerging” economies on the
edge of a financial abyss. A $1.5 billion bond sale in February
temporarily saved the government, allowing it to pay off another
maturing bond.
Kenya’s
situation has become so dire that new debt is being rolled on to pay
old debt at ever-increasing interest rates. 30% of the government’s
budget is spent on debt servicing. Enter the IMF and World Bank, with
their “aid” in the form of loans, ostensibly to help Kenya repay
its parasitic creditors – the catch: these debts are to be repaid
by propping up ordinary Kenyans as blood bags.
Following the IMF’s dictates, the parliament has proposed the Finance Bill
2024, a package of brutal austerity measures that triggered the
protests. This bill aims to raise $2.7 billion in additional taxes to
reduce the budget deficit and state borrowing, as Kenya’s public
debt stands at 68% of GDP. Facing economic challenges and uncertainty
about accessing capital markets, Kenya turned to the IMF, which
demanded that the government meet revenue targets to secure more
funding. The bill includes new levies on essential commodities like
bread, vegetable oil, and sugar. Most infuriatingly, it introduces
the villainously named “eco-taxes,” including an “eco-levy”
on sanitary diapers and menstrual pads, sparking outrage among young
Kenyan women. Additionally, it proposes higher taxes on financial
transactions.
Faced with these new taxes that further strain their already stretched
finances, Kenyan workers have taken to the streets. Social media
quickly became a platform for them to share their plight. Without a
central leader or a dominant revolutionary party, young people across
the country have risen on pure instinct – praxis without theory but
naturally spontaneous. The government responded with threats of
police violence, internet shutdowns, and the arrests of hundreds over
the past weeks, attempting to crush the movement. Ruto and his goons
have abducted several bloggers, activists, and social media
influencers, hoping to intimidate the largely youthful protesters,
with little success.
What began as small protests in Nairobi last Tuesday escalated into a
nationwide movement by Thursday, as demonstrations spread to major
cities and towns following the second reading of the Finance Bill.
The day ended tragically with the police killing a 29-year-old
protester, fueling calls for a national shutdown on Wednesday. People
now call for a general strike, alongside planned demonstrations and
potential spontaneous actions.
Initially, the government responded with repression, deploying water cannons,
tear gas, and arresting hundreds of people. However, these tactics
failed to suppress the masses. Protest numbers grew throughout the
evening despite the violence. Videos circulated showing defiant
prisoners singing in their cells. Many slogans expressed the
deep-seated hatred for the ruling elite. Placards read, “Ruto is a
thief!” “Ruto must go!” “Wake up, we are being robbed!” The
masses are acutely aware that Kenya is pivotal to U.S. imperialism’s
strategic interests in East Africa and that their leaders are merely
puppets of imperialism and the agents of capital.
Most Kenyans are incredibly young, and this youthful energy is the driving
force behind the protests. While this generation may not have direct
memories of the IMF-imposed austerity of the 1980s and ‘90s,
there’s a palpable feeling that they will not allow history to
repeat itself.
The IMF, a dragon hoarding its blood treasure – calling international
capital to rush in once it has picked a new victim. This story is all
too familiar. Some readers might remember the fate of Yugoslavia
after the passing of our dear General Secretary Tito.
Initially, many arrogant MPs dismissed the protests, earning themselves the
moniker “MPigs.” One MP even claimed that the images of
demonstrations circulating on social media were merely Photoshop
creations.
As panic set in, the government attempted to make concessions,
introducing a series of amendments. They dropped taxes on bread and
vegetable oil and assured the public that “eco-taxes” would only
apply to finished imports. As the nation produces many of these items
domestically, this ruling is silly. But this was too little, too
late. The millions, having tasted their power, are now more confident
than ever. Both repression and concessions only served to fuel the
movement further.
The government’s tactics were futile against the youthful protestors.
Kenyan politicians had assumed the youth were apathetic and unlikely
to mobilise. In the 2022 elections that brought Ruto to power, less
than 40% of registered voters were youth, despite the median age in
Kenya being below 20 and 65% of the population under 35.
These vibrant actions by the Kenyan youth and working class, though perhaps
lacking the revolutionary education of past generations, echo the
spirit of Lenin in
Differences
in the European Labour Movement
«But, needless to say, the masses learn from life
and not from books, and therefore certain individuals or groups constantly exaggerate,
elevate to a one-sided theory, to a one-sided system of tactics, now one and now another
feature of capitalist development, now one and now another ‘lesson’ of this development».
This “interaction between all classes” manifests as the Kenyan working
class turns against a modern-day Goliath. However, the conscious
workers will always have a hill to fight up against. Marx stating in
the
German
Ideology
«The
ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas: i.e.,
the class which is the ruling material force of society is at the
same time its ruling intellectual force. The class which has the
means of material production at its disposal, consequently, also
controls the means of mental production, so that the ideas of those
who lack the means of mental production are on the whole subject to
it… for instance, that during the time the aristocracy was
dominant, the concepts honour loyalty, etc., were dominant, During
the dominance of the bourgeoisie the concepts of freedom, equality,
etc.»
The
ruling class made a fatal mistake, confusing detachment for apathy.
With unemployment reaching as high as 35% for those aged 18-35, many
young Kenyans have little hope for the future. The message from the
Kenyan protesters is clear: with little to lose, they realise they
have the world to win.
Last
year, Odinga, an influential Kenyan oligarch, called off mass
opposition to Ruto over the Finance Bill for the year prior, 2023,
when the movement threatened to intersect with calls for strike
action by civil servants. Odinga belongs to the wealthiest 0.1% of
the Kenyan population, who owns more wealth than the bottom 99.9%
(more than 48 million Kenyans). The government claims the new tax
measures are necessary to fund development programs and reduce public
debt. However, across the country, hundreds of thousands of teachers
and healthcare workers, who have repeatedly struck over the past five
years against low wages and precarious job contracts, vehemently
disagree.
The
Party previously discussed the 2012 Kenyan healthcare workers’
strikes in
il
Partito Comunista, n. 352
(translated
from Italian)
: «The
general struggle called by the Kenya Health Professionals Society
union [had] workers of the Moi Teaching Hospital immediately go down
into a fight, and march along the streets of the city protesting
against the poor working conditions and for the enforcement of the
agreement. Every time, all the workers in the other city hospitals
fraternise and continue the fight. The strike extends to the province
on the coast and again to the whole country, outside of union
control. The workers, mostly women, denounce the betrayal of the
trade union management. These
direct statements of theirs: “We have not been consulted and no
questions have been put on the table: they have only been able to
make promises. We don’t go back without the security of eating at
the table. We don’t even believe that the deal actually is there;
the negotiations have not earned us anything and we feel deceived.
For this, we will continue with the strike until all our requests are
met. We no longer want promises; we want immediate and tangible
results”».
In
the port of Mombasa, six thousand workers could halt Ruto’s
overarching privatisation plans, bringing the region to a standstill.
Thousands of aviation workers, including those at Kenya Airways,
could block Kenya’s airspace. Millions of tea, coffee, and other
agricultural workers in rural areas could paralyse the countryside in
a country where 60% of revenue comes from the agriculture sector.
Despite
the ongoing movement, trade unions are becoming the foremost
restraining hand for workers joining the anti-austerity protests with
their demands. The unions refuse to mobilise the tens of thousands
employed in manufacturing, food processing, chemical production,
plastics, and metal works in Nairobi’s industrial area. The Central
Organization of Trade Unions (COTU), which consists of 36 trade
unions and represents more than 1.5 million workers, has a sordid
history of suppressing strikes and protests, including that by 4,000
doctors earlier this year.
Similarly,
Francis Atwoli, the secretary general of the COTU, has defended the
Finance Bill, stating that “people are being taxed everywhere and,
indeed, if we pay tax and the money is used properly we will evade
the issue of borrowing money.”
The
“Let them eat cake!” attitude from the supposed labour
representatives of the government couldn’t be more on the nose.
President
Ruto is preparing to impose more police state measures, such as the
Assembly and Demonstration Bill, 2024, restricting where protests can
occur and imposing draconian fines for “violations” of up to
$770, equivalent to half a year’s average wage.
However,
following last week’s demonstrations, the government softened its
position, with Ruto endorsing recommendations to scrap some new
levies, including car ownership, bread, and the eco-levy on locally
manufactured goods. The finance ministry has said such concessions
would blow a 200 billion Kenyan shilling ($1.56 billion) hole in the
2024/25 budget and necessitate spending cuts.
Protesters
and opposition parties have said the concessions are insufficient and
want the bill abandoned. And with the recent national uproar, as
graciously as they gunned down workers, the bourgeois government is
now beginning to listen.
«Having reflected on the continuing conversation
regarding the content of the Finance Bill 2024 and listening keenly to
the people of Kenya who have thundered that they want nothing to do with
this Finance Bill 2024, I concede, and therefore, I will not sign the 2024
Finance Bill,” President Ruto said during a television address Wednesday.
“The people have spoken,” Ruto said. “Following the passage of the bill,
the country experienced widespread expression of dissatisfaction with
the bill as passed, regrettably resulting in the loss of life, the destruction
of property, and desecration of constitutional institutions».
This
rollback comes after Ruto championed the controversial tax reforms in
the face of public opposition. However, Rotu seems to have forgotten,
or at least not acknowledged, that this comes after mass protests
turned violent the day earlier, leaving 23 people dead.
Now,
the eyes of the world are on Kenya, where the struggle between the
working class and the ruling elite unfolds in real time. As
revolutionary fervour grows, Kenyan workers, particularly the youth,
stand at a critical juncture. The message from the streets is clear:
with nothing left to lose, they are prepared to fight for a future
free from the chains of austerity and debt.
The
battle for Kenya’s future is far from over, and as history unfolds,
the courage and determination of its workers will undoubtedly inspire
proletarian movements across the globe. The spectre haunting Kenya is
a clarion call to the international working class:
the
proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains; they have a world
to win.
Kenya - Here and now
Kenya
today represents one of the most advanced in capitalist development
in Africa. Following the global financial crisis 2008, which saw
Kenya’s GDP growth drop to 1.6%, the country has since experienced
a robust economic recovery, averaging an annual GDP growth rate of
5.4% from 2015 to 2023. Inflation, which soared to 14% in 2011, has
stabilised in recent years, averaging around 6% in 2023. Both
domestic and international factors drive this stability.
Kenya’s
export economy is focused on agricultural output. In 2023, the main
export items included tea (19%), agricultural products (18%),
manufactured goods (16%), and coffee (5%). The value of tea exports,
a traditional mainstay, continues to grow, though at a more moderate
pace of 12% annually. Additionally, the rise in flowers and fresh
produce exports has bolstered the agricultural sector, contributing
to Kenya’s economic resilience and development.
The
Kenyan government’s focus on infrastructure development,
technology, and renewable energy has also driven economic growth.
Investments in the Standard Gauge Railway and the expansion of the
port of Mombasa have improved logistics and trade efficiency. At the
same time, the burgeoning tech hub in Nairobi, dubbed ‘Silicon
Savannah,’ has positioned Kenya as a leader in digital innovation
in Africa.
Chinese
development initiatives, particularly under the Belt and Road
Initiative, have profoundly impacted Kenya’s infrastructure.
Significant projects include the construction of the Standard Gauge
Railway, which connects Nairobi to the port city of Mombasa,
significantly enhancing trade efficiency. Additionally, Chinese firms
are developing critical road networks and energy projects, providing
much-needed capital and expertise to propel Kenya’s infrastructural
advancements.
The
United States has also been a crucial partner in Kenya’s
development. The U.S. has contributed to various sectors, including
healthcare, education, and energy, through programs such as the U.S.
Agency for International Development and the Power Africa initiative.
American investment has been pivotal in promoting renewable energy
projects, particularly geothermal and wind power, aligning with
Kenya’s goal of achieving universal energy access by 2030.
Domestically,
Kenya has seen the rise of a robust class of local capitalists
driving economic growth. Prominent Kenyan entrepreneurs and
businesses, particularly in the banking, telecommunications, and
agriculture sectors, have significantly contributed to the country’s
development. Companies like Safaricom, Equity Bank, and KCB Group are
significant employers and pivotal players in enhancing financial
inclusion and technological innovation. These domestic capitalists
have been instrumental in shaping Kenya’s economic trajectory,
fostering a private sector that complements foreign investments and
drives the ~5% economic growth yearly.
However,
the Kenyan proletariat does not share in the dividends of capital.
Instead, they face a reduction in the purchasing power of wages due
to the rising prices of necessities. Between 2020 and 2022, actual
earnings saw a steady decline, averaging a decrease of 2.7%. This
trend has persisted as inflation rates surged in 2022, with average
inflation reaching 8.7% between June 2022 and June 2023, peaking at
9.6% in October 2022 – the highest level since 2017. A staggering
77% of workers earn below the minimum wage, with median earners
spending 60% of their income on food alone.
Workers
are forced to engage in a tight struggle for economic survival,
gaining valuable experience in the anti-capitalist struggle. This
struggle, which starts locally and within specific sectors, must
evolve into a united front for the working class.
The
current wave of protests and strikes is a testament to the growing
class consciousness among Kenyan workers. They are rising against the
oppressive policies of austerity and exploitation imposed by local
and international capitalists. This movement is not just about
opposing specific policies but broad issues: international movements
are moving ever closer to challenging the foundations of a system
that prioritises profit over people.
Do
not trust them!
This
capitalist government, like all its predecessors and all its
offspring, shamelessly ignores the interests of the working class,
instead thrusting the burdens of capitalism back onto them. It steals
their labour and then blames them for the system’s inevitable
failures. The colossal weight of national and international capital
rests on workers’ shoulders, which will not change, no matter who
is in power. Short-term economic shifts are reactions to investor
confidence in how well the administration serves the capitalist
elite.
The
relentless crisis of capitalism fuels continuous assaults on the
working class, which will persist regardless of hollow government
promises or party affiliations. Members of Parliament are nothing
more than guardians of capitalist interests, enriching themselves as
long as they don’t tarnish the system’s facade too blatantly.
Meanwhile, the exploitation of the working class – the vast
majority of society – remains unchallenged.
The
working class knows this truth but has yet to take decisive action to
seize power. Workers build and rebuild the world daily, wielding
immense power that holds the potential to envision and create a world
free from exploitation, poverty, economic crises, and wars. However,
achieving this vision demands the overthrow of capitalism and the
establishment of a communist society, where contributions are based
on ability and needs are met accordingly. Communism will eradicate
the rampant overproduction, waste, and ecological devastation caused
by capitalism, replacing them with rational production that genuinely
serves humanity without the empty rhetoric of “green”
sustainability.
Communism
will end poverty and war, but this cannot be achieved through voting
for any party, especially those masquerading as communist or
socialist. Actual change will only come when the working class, led
by the
International Communist Party,
seizes power.
Venezuela
The bourgeoisie has its president
Winners and losers both represent the interests of the bourgeoisie and imperialism!
Voting in presidential elections was not and will not be the way out of the capitalist crisis!
The working class struggles for its interests regardless of national, regional and parliamentary elections
The new government will give continuity to anti‑worker policies!
Background
As in many countries in today’s capitalist world, albeit with its specificities,
in Venezuela the bourgeoisie and its regime respect electoral processes for the election
of presidents, governors, mayors and deputies. In Venezuela, indefinite re-election is allowed.
It is also possible by referendum to remove the national president from office mid-term. The 1999
Constitution established the "coexistence" of five powers, one of which is the Electoral Power,
represented by the National Electoral Council (CNE).
In the 1990s, the two-party model, through which the bourgeoisie had resolved political control
of the masses, entered a crisis. Traditional parties, in a context of economic and social crisis,
had lost their ability to stifle the discontent of the masses and keep them subservient to capital.
In this context, Chavismo emerged as a bourgeois movement with a populist and "leftist" discourse
that succeeded in solving the problem of governability, displacing the old parties and winning
their social and electoral base. With widespread popularity, chavismo became the ideal administrator
of the interests of the bourgeoisie, strengthening and expanding capitalist profits, increasing
the rate of exploitation of workers, destroying and controlling the various mass organizations,
and especially trade unions, ensuring the social peace demanded by national and multinational
corporations, mainly linked to oil revenues.
The program of Chavismo, which proclaimed itself "socialist" and gained the support of various
movements and parties of the opportunist left, both parliamentary and "guerrilla", was fully capitalist,
like that of its opponents, with a high dose of populism and the traditional phenomenon of corruption.
While proclaiming itself "socialist", Chavismo proposed from the beginning the defense of private
property and the market, the fight against latifundia (read growth of agro-industrial capitalism in the countryside),
accompanied by the demagogic offer of the "democratization of capital" (read redistribution of monopoly
control of the means of production), the defense of the national economy (i.e., support for local,
non-monopoly entrepreneurs in the face of the penetration of transnational capital).
It promoted a scheme similar to the "New Deal" with which Roosevelt dealt with the Great
Depression in the United States, relying, among other strategies, on so-called "Missions" and "Great Missions", centered on using oil revenues to stimulate demand for goods.
Chavismo claimed to move in a "multipolar" world, on the basis of which it formed alliances with China, Russia,
Cuba, countries of the Arab world, etc., while being in the "backyard" of the United States.
It has also joined the São Paulo Forum, an organization in which the international opportunist left converges,
and has promoted the weakening of North American influence in Central and South America,
fostering the sharpening of inter-imperialist contradictions on the continent.
The political model promoted by chavismo has paved the way for multiple electoral appointments under
the so-called "protagonist and participatory democracy", which, more than in the past, has alienated
workers from the class struggle and made the working class raise the reactionary banners of homeland,
sovereignty and defense of the national economy, waved demagogically, given the huge commitments
to multinational corporations. In this context, chavismo won the majority of presidential,
parliamentary and regional elections for about 20 years.
However, since 2012, when Hugo Chávez won the presidential election by a small margin only to die of cancer,
Chavismo has begun to wear down and in each electoral process has won with increasing difficulty,
despite the extensive use of the resources of state institutions and the intervention of both other
pro-government parties and various tame opposition parties.
By 2024 Chavismo was widely rejected by the population, including its own social base.
Although none of the opposition candidates succeeded in capturing the sympathies of the masses,
discontent eventually funneled to the candidate who had the most economic and porpagandist support,
creating expectations of a change in government.
Throughout this period, workers were distanced from the class struggle and their real demands
through the drugs of electoralism, legalism and parliamentarianism. This was also joined by sectors
of the Stalinist and Trotskist left, which always defended the electoral institution and promoted
a plan of nationalist reforms that a so-called "workers’ government", capitalist like all others, was supposed to implement.
The electoral system has been automated and provides for multiple stages of verification, touted as sheltered from attempts at fraud.
Both the parties supporting the government and those supporting opposition candidates agree on this.
With the highest oil and gas reserves, after a process of declining production, Venezuela ranks sixth among U.S. oil suppliers in 2024,
and it is predictable that the struggle for government in Venezuela will be associated with strategies for control of this energy commodity,
the subject of inter-imperialist clashes. Electoral and nonelectoral contentions between local political and business groups
are part of the inter-imperialist clashes, which see Venezuela, its natural wealth and geographic location as factors to be used to their advantage.
Venezuela is not experiencing a confrontation between capitalism and socialism, as the media and social networks want to present it,
but a confrontation between capitalists, in the face of which the working class must maintain its independence, with its own program and historical north.
With the sanctions imposed by the U.S. on Venezuela, a model of high profitability has been established for both multinational
corporations and mafias associated with the local government, as Venezuelan oil is sold cheaply on the black market,
opening up space for various businesses that funnel capital into corruption networks and increase the profits of international consortiums.
This
year’s elections with the different bourgeois factions in struggle
Elections for a new president were held on July 28. In the early hours of the 29th the CNE announced
the prevailing and re-election as president of Nicolás Maduro, who will govern until 2031. But on the same day
the CNE declared that it had not counted all the votes and had not submitted the minutes of every polling station.
The main opposition candidate denounced fraud and did not acknowledge the results, sparking street protests,
some spontaneous, some linked to underclass thuggery paid for by some parties.
Internationally, many governments have questioned the election result, which has become a terrain
for inter-imperialist confrontation. On Aug. 2, the CNE published its second bulletin, with 96.87 percent of votes registered,
confirming Maduro’s victory, but it did not present results by polling station and by endorsement of ballots.
Maduro, that is, the parties, mafias and multinational corporations that support him, will continue to administer
the interests of the bourgeoisie and imperialist groups and will continue to press for the super-exploitation of the wage-earners.
In a sense, Maduro’s victory expresses the prevalence of interests, primarily U.S. interests,
although this seems to contradict U.S. sanctions announcements. But the other nine candidates,
had they won, would also have represented the same interests.
Moreover, if movements and parties such as the Stalinists of the Venezuelan "Communist" party
and the Trotskists had been allowed to present a "workers’ candidate" or a "truly Chavista candidate,
" they would still have embraced the bourgeois program and protected the business of big business.
Democracy is the bourgeoisie’s form of government, which allows the exploited to elect the representatives
of the exploiters in public institutions, based on the illusion that the state, which remains bourgeois,
and the laws, which are also bourgeois, represent everyone equally. The proletariat has the task, the necessity.
the duty, the challenge to break with these illusions and the manipulations of the various politicians that lead
it to hope that its situation will change and improve by electing new presidents, governors or parliamentarians.
Never through voting will the proletariat find a way out of capitalist exploitation.
Chavismo’s continued control of the government implies the use of repression that is increasingly evident.
It is to be expected that the loss of its social base will continue to advance and that this
will be reflected in the upcoming regional and parliamentary elections.
What matters is that the proletariat, through its defensive trade union organizations,
manages to break with electoralism, assume its class independence and advance in the unity of action of its claim struggles.
The Venezuelan government will have to deal with the international climate,
with a group of states contesting the election results. Sooner or later, however,
Europe and the United States will eventually recognize its legitimacy, because there are
many business and geopolitical alignments at stake. The allegations of fraud will remain as such,
soon dissolving to avoid interference in the oil and gas business of U.S. and European companies,
such as Chevron, Eni and Repsol, but also of China and the BRICS countries, which already have chavismo support in the Venezuelan government.
The "international isolation" will not go so far as to paralyze business and will leave room for multiple negotiations,
more secret than public, as no multinational will want to be without some of the oil,
gas and other riches available in Venezuela.
The U.S., which sees Venezuela as part of its strategy to control the oil market,
knows that it must graduate its pressure on the Venezuelan government,
since the latter’s relations with the BRICS group would be strengthened and provide a counterweight to its imperialist claims.
On the other hand, a surrender of the Chavistas with handing over the government to the opposition does not seem possible,
as it would clash with the interests of the adverse imperialist bloc led by China.
The governments of Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico are conducting negotiations with the Venezuelan government,
and that of the United States has expressed approval for these efforts,
which confirms a willingness to reach a conciliatory agreement that does not disrupt business,
even if this agreement contemplated the scenario of a repeat presidential election.
Allegations of electoral fraud brought inter‑bourgeois confrontation to the streets
After the elections, pro-government and opposition parties insisted on distancing workers from the struggles for their demands,
leading to a clash between those who supported Maduro and those who denounced electoral fraud that would have prevented the opposition candidate’s victory.
The working class must not allow itself to be manipulated in this way.
The only struggle that interests it is the class struggle, between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie.
Workers must unite, organize and fight independently for their economic and social demands.
While international organizations and opposition parties demanded verification of the election results,
the government immediately activated the repression of demonstrations,
using both military and police forces and so-called "colectivos", composed of underclassmen and thugs, raising the banner of fighting terrorism and fascism.
The statistics of dead, wounded and detained emerged immediately.
The next step was the persecution and arrest of opposition party leaders,
accused of paying criminals to provoke violence in the streets. In fact,
both bourgeois fronts recruited among criminals to pilot these clashes.
The government, in addition to "anti-terrorist" actions, defended the election results.
Maduro appealed to the Electoral Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice to verify the votes in the face of prolonged silence from the CNE,
street mobilizations called by the opposition, and pressure from international organizations and governments.
A week after the elections neither the opposition presented evidence of fraud nor the CNE of Maduro’s victory.
There has only been in the social networks the "virtual" clash between the government’s opinion and that of the oppositions,
which, with foreign support, allegedly promoted a coup d’état and terror, foiled by the government.
And in this media brawl any possibility of independent political response by the working class was prevented.
"No to fraud, respect for the will of the people expressed in the vote", this was the slogan of Trotskist opportunism,
which made clear its commitment to bourgeois democracy and interclassism.
The Stalinist "Communist" Party of Venezuela called for "the establishment of a popular-democratic front for the defense of the constitution and sovereignty".
The opportunists, who claim to present themselves as a left opposed to the right,
actually converge with all agents of the bourgeoisie to promote the defense of democracy, parliamentarism and the constitution.
The cries against rigging and in defense of the right to vote allow the bourgeoisie to draw workers away from the struggles for their demands,
the class struggle and the anti-capitalist revolutionary path.
Meanwhile, the government has announced the construction of two prisons where those arrested during the protests and those associated with "terrorist plans" will be locked up.
Military and police actions have already brought more than 2,000 detainees there.
Chavismo spokesmen have denounced that the right-wing’s destabilizing plans include strikes and work stoppages,
thus laying the groundwork for repressing workers’ struggles by presenting them as part of terrorist plans.
All this repressive apparatus, used today against the masses dragged by bourgeois factions,
is actually ready to confront the proletariat with the violence of the bourgeois state when wage earners regain their class independence
and unite in mobilization and strike against capitalist exploitation.
Nothing new under the sun
The new government will keep wage earners burdened with low wages, unemployment and poor health and public service conditions.
The government, pro-government and opposition parties and union cliques will continue in their false propaganda
to prevent workers from understanding the causes of the economic and social crisis and the class and geopolitical interests at stake.
The various cliques of trade unionists have invited people to vote for different presidential candidates, pro-government or pro-opposition.
With this action, the union leaderships once again showed their role as supporters of the capitalist regime and allies of the bosses.
The only way out of the crisis will emerge from the workers’ mobilization and strike, freed from electoralism and parliamentarianism.
The new president will lead a government that will continue to administer the interests of the bourgeoisie and imperialism,
which will assume the defense of the national economy.
The vaunted economic recovery will only be possible on the basis of low wages, long working hours, unsafe working conditions,
and curtailed health care and public services. The new government will continue to shift the burden of the crisis onto the workers,
and announcements of economic growth will be accompanied by hunger, misery and unemployment for the majority.
Considering that right now a family of five needs at least the equivalent of $1,200 a month to access all basic goods and services,
workers must unite and resume the strike, without notice, without minimum services and indefinitely,
with demands for a significant increase in wages and pensions and safe workplace conditions and environments.
This will require workers to move beyond the treacherous union, confederation and federation directions that keep them divided and demobilized.
It is necessary for real class unions to emerge in the thick of the struggle.
On this road it is important to promote assemblies, grassroots organizing, in companies and workplaces.
But above all, workers must organize locally, integrating active, retired and unemployed workers outside the companies and forming a regional and national network.
All of these grassroots organizations must come together in a Unified Class Union Front,
in which workers unite regardless of which union they are affiliated with and regardless of their political or party preference, nationality or occupation.
While opportunist parties and trade unionists call on workers to unite in defense of the homeland and the national economy,
this Single Trade Union Front must promote unity for winning higher wages and pensions and for paying full wages to the unemployed.
While opportunists and trade unionists promote unity between the exploited and the exploiters,
this Trade Union Single Front must promote the unity of the working class against its domestic or foreign, public or private, national or multinational exploiters.
All these tragedies suffered by wage-workers and the oppressed masses,
resulting from capitalist exploitation, can only be overcome by the overthrow of capitalism and its replacement by a communist society.
Only communism will end the regime of insane overproduction, waste and perpetual threats to the planet’s ecology.
But this can never be achieved through the methods of democracy, voting and parliamentarianism.
It can only be achieved through the seizure of power by the only force that can transform society: the working class, led by the International Communist Party.
The seizure of political power and the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat is the political goal to be pursued by the workers’
movement worldwide in opposition to bourgeois democracy. All immediate claim struggles must converge in this political direction.
Third (Communist) International
1st Congres - 4 March 1919
Theses on Bourgeois Democracy and the of the Proletariat
here
Third (Communist) International
Second Congress, 1920
Theses on Parliamentarism presented by the Communist Abstensionist Fraction
here