The Marxist Left's Politics
of Alliances at the Beginning of the 21st Century
José Ramón Balaguer Cabrera, Member of the Political Bureau of the
Communist Party of Cuba
On the basis of their own experiences and of the analysis of the
victories and setbacks that make up the history of the popular struggles, the Communist
Party of Cuba considers that a series of premises exist for the formulation of the
politics of alliances, applicable not only to the communist parties, but to all
contemporary Marxist organizations as well: How we characterize the situation and
perspectives of the capitalist system of production at the beginning of the 21st century?
Based on that definition, what objectives do we propose for ourselves? What social class
sector or sectors make up the subject or fundamental block of the struggle for the
achievement of such objectives? What other sectors constitute the spectrum of their
potential allies? And, what are the conditions and foundations for the establishment of
alliances between the subject or fundamental block of the struggles, and the rest of the
sectors susceptible to participate in them?
Only the first two of these questions have a universal, categorical and unequivocal
answer, that being the characterization of capitalism as a moribund social system in an
advanced and irreversible state of decomposition, and the strategic objective of building
a socialist society, the only alternative to the barbarism Rosa Luxemburg referred to. As
for to the rest of the problems that present themselves, while it is possible and
necessary to make general considerations that would help to provide adequate solutions, it
is the conditions prevailing in each continent, region and nation and perhaps in each
context, that determine the content of such solutions.
Contemporary Imperialism and the Validity of the Struggle for Socialism
In virtue of the political and ideological impact of the disappearance of the Soviet
Union and the other countries of what was called the European Socialist Community, which
left the terrain open for the consolidation of the neo-liberal doctrine, together with the
broad gamut of pseudo theories associated with it, like the one about the "end of
history," two myths have played a decisive role in the theoretical and political
production since the beginning of the 1990's concerning contemporary capitalism: the first
is that "globalization" causes a drastic rupture in the historical development
of humanity, impeding the understanding and transformation of society; the second consists
in attributing to the so-called Scientific-technical Revolution the capacity to exorcise
or indefinitely postpone the explosion of the capitalist system's antagonistic
contradictions.
The fetishes of "globalization" and the "Scientific-technical
Revolution" constitute the fundamental basis of the different variants of today's
"third way." They no longer try to position themselves between the political and
ideological poles postdating the October Revolution of 1917, that is, between capitalism
and socialism. Instead, they place themselves openly within capitalism, saying they occupy
a "democratic" and "socially motivated" space between the starkest
neo-liberalism (symbolized by the governments of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher), and
the remnants of the so-called Welfare State that functioned in part of Western Europe
during the 20th century's post Second World War period.
Corresponding to this characterization of "historical rupture," and the
"permanent self renewal" capacity of the capitalist system of production, there
is: a) a strategy oriented toward limiting the most destabilizing effects of the process
of concentration of political and economic power, with absolutely no proposal to alter it
in its essence; b) a tactic based on concessions directed to win or maintain capital's
tolerance for the exercise of the function of government or the preservation of the ratio
of forces of institutional representation, deprived of the ability to exercise real
political power on central questions; c) a non-class definition of the subject of the
struggles which, in spite of the unprecedented process of concentration of wealth and
social polarization unfolding on the world scale, ignores the position of human beings
with respect to property relations; d) an imprecise definition of the "allies,"
derived first and foremost from the lack of a class conception of who forms the
fundamental subject of the struggles and; e) the playing of a subordinate and secondary
role in the politics of alliances.
Contrary to the image it projects of itself, contemporary imperialism is characterized
by the increasing concentration of property, production and political power to a
qualitatively higher level; in other words, by the escalation to a level of transnational
concentration of property, production and political power, whose nucleus is comprised of
the transnational monopolies,1 that are fused with the states of the main
imperialist powers, which also take on transnational functions. This process, which
constitutes the present stage of the development toward the universalization of human
relations analyzed by Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, is what is alluded to more and more
often by the term "globalization." Globalization is the historical continuation
of capitalism's tendency toward universalization, initiated with the formation of the
world market. It is based on political and economic conditions created in the course of
the 20th century and, in particular, during the post Second World War period. It began to
unfold in the 70's, that is, beginning with the end of two decades of expansive growth of
the world capitalist economy opened by the destruction of productive forces caused by the
Second World War and it received a decisive political and ideological impulse with the
sharpening of the Soviet Union's crisis and its collapse, reaching its maximum intensity
and violence.
Also contrary to the postulates of the apologists of capitalism, the so-called
Scientific-technical Revolution in no way resolves or allows indefinite postponement of
the capitalist system of production's antagonistic contradictions. The term
Scientific-technical Revolution is the one most used to refer to the development achieved
by the productive forces of capital during the postwar period, which among other things
was due to the stimulation of productive processes caused by European reconstruction and
the arms race. But the notion of an exorcism of the contradictions is false because,
precisely, it was this development which, at the end of the 60's, once the productive
capacity of Western Europe and Japan had been reconstructed, caused the return of the
crisis of overproduction of commodities, capital and population.
The reign of the transnational monopolies did not come about as claimed by those
imposing the unilateral opening and deregulation of the underdeveloped countries under the
signboard of universal expansion of productive investment, the "transfer" of the
advances of science and technology, access to the markets of the "First World,"
or the "trickle down" of wealth. On the contrary, in a world economy over
saturated with commodities, capital and labour power, in which the law of the most
powerful rules, the transnational monopoly corporations use, with an unprecedented
intensity, all their economic power and their control over the scientific-technical
innovations, together with the political and military power of the imperialist states of
their nations of origin, in order to penetrate the areas of greater relative development
of the so-called Third World, with the aim of absorbing or destroying local bodies of
capital, whose markets they need to capture in order to guarantee their own subsistence.
In the underdeveloped world, the empire of the transnational monopolies has enthroned
a vicious cycle of unrestricted opening to the import of commodities and capital,
bankruptcy of national industry, dollarization or monetary overvaluation guaranteeing
maximum value in the export of profits, growing unemployment and informalization of work,
decline in the living standards of the people and, consequently, decrease of the capacity
for solvency of the national market they have appropriated. The equilibrium of the balance
of payments is maintained in a temporary and precarious manner by means of increasing
interest rates to attract the flows of speculative capital that constitute imperialism's
main instrument of expropriation. How has this been demonstrated by the Argentine crisis
amongst other examples? Once all the blood had been sucked out, once all possibilities of
capturing the income and reducing the spending of the dependent national state so as to
maintain the spiral of external indebtedness had been exhausted, once the cadaver of the
national market that had been so diligently "restructured" and
"reformed" according to the neo-liberal recipes was abandoned by the vampires,
only the fear of a chain reaction of the economic and financial crisis solicits a
"rescue" package which then in turn only further compromises the future of the
nation.
The obsolescent nature of capitalism today is evident because a society which by
definition is based on wage labour and the sale of commodities increasingly depends on the
reduction of labour and wages and, as such, is forced to limit the horizon of the market
that constitutes its source of subsistence. The political, economic, social, moral and
environmental degradation of the present is the greatest indication that the world has
already entered the phase of barbarism. The fable about the "trickle down
effect" did not last long. According to this fable, the whole world was supposed to
reach the levels of economic development now monopolized by the United States, the
European Union and Japan. Fewer and fewer are those who refuse to recognize that the
program of unilateral opening and deregulation imposed by neo-liberalism is not the
stairway to the "First World" but that it is a wide open door to political,
economic, social and moral crisis. Those who think the big imperialist powers can take
refuge in a "Noah's Ark" that will save them from the "universal
flood," are deluding themselves.
The terrorist crimes of September 11, 2001, constitute a tragic and unjustifiable
reminder that the borders of the big imperialist powers are unable to contain the
universal effects of underdevelopment, poverty, unhealthy conditions, lack of culture,
illiteracy, drug trafficking, wars, terrorism, or the economic and financial crises that
originate, precisely, from capitalism's inability to orient production toward the
satisfaction of the material and spiritual needs of all the human beings inhabiting the
planet. This is the reality that is already knocking on our doors, which puts humanity
face to face with the alternative stated by Rosa: "socialism or barbarism." In
other words, this is the reality that reaffirms our conviction that the strategic
objective of the struggle of the peoples must be the construction of socialism.
The Development of Marxism: Key to Determining the Content of the Struggles and its
Potential Allies
The class struggle and the politics of alliances have been the object of basic Marxist
theoretical study and practical politics from the beginning of the classic writings. In
the Manifesto of the Communist Party, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels declare that
"of all the classes that stand face to face with the bourgeoisie today, the
proletariat alone is a genuinely revolutionary class."2 Starting from that
premise, they directed their analysis to the role of the "middle strata" which
plays an ambivalent role between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat and they derived
their conclusions about the conditions in which those who form the "middle
strata" keep their reactionary nature, that is they "try to roll back the wheel
of history," and about the conditions in which they can become participants in the
social revolution, "in view of their impending transfer into the proletariat."3
Marx and Engels also focus their attention on the lumpen proletariat which "may, here
and there, be swept into the movement by a proletarian revolution; its conditions of life,
however, prepare it far more for the part of a bribed tool of reactionary intrigue."4
After the publication of the Manifesto of the Communist Party, many authors,
some considered to be continuing the work of Marx, have glossed over the word today contained
in the statement made in that work that "the proletariat alone is a genuinely
revolutionary class" and, from this, multiple vulgarizations of Marxist thought are
derived, including the notion that in whatever historical circumstance the proletariat is
necessarily called upon to exercise that role, or that this character is reserved for it
exclusively. Those who fall into these errors loose sight of the fact it was Marx and
Engels themselves who first analyzed problems like the effect of the introduction of new
machinery on the increase of competition between workers, and of each worker for
her/himself; the effect of the increasing division of labour against the organization and
struggle of the proletariat, which effectively reaches its maximum expression with the
introduction of the transnational division of labour and the political and ideological
consequences of the appearance of the "labour aristocracy" which benefits from
the most straightforward exploitation of the colonies and other sectors of its own class.
This was to have a decisive impact on the success achieved by social democratic reformism
in the European labour movement during the course of the 20th century. In the other
direction, the vulgarizers of Marxism also loose sight of the fact that independent of the
changes that have occurred over the last one hundred and fifty years, the contradiction
between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat continues to be the fundamental antagonistic
contradiction of capitalism.
It is not the intention of this paper to go more deeply into the role of the
proletariat and within that, into the role of the proletariat of the imperialist powers in
the present phase of the historical development of the class struggle. However, just to
refute some of the principal pseudo theories in vogue, let us remember that: 1) the
working class continues to be the producer of almost the entire social wealth upon which
not only development, but also humanity's survival itself are based, and thus its role in
the class struggle continues to be decisive, and 2) contrary to what happened during the
expansive growth of the postwar world capitalist economy, the process of increasing the
value of capital within the main imperialist powers is no longer compatible with the
general increase of employment, wages and other forms of social redistribution. This
conspires against maintaining the so-called Welfare State, still today erroneously
considered by some to be the final and definitive stage toward which the capitalist system
of production is advancing.
Instead of going into details about the composition of European social classes at the
time when the Manifesto of the Communist Party or other works of Marx and Engels
were written, it is more appropriate to make use of their method of analysis in order to
apply it to today's world. In Czarist Russia, the weakest link in the imperialist chain at
the beginning of the 20th century, with three million workers and eighteen
million poor peasants, Lenin was aware of the revolutionary role the peasantry had to play
together with the working class and on that basis proclaimed the worker-peasant alliance.
The coherence of this contribution to the Marxist tradition is unquestionable: in the
second Russian edition of the Manifesto of the Communist Party published in 1882,
Engels was already analyzing the potential role of the poor peasantry in view of an
eventual outbreak of the socialist revolution in that country.5
A great deal has been written in recent years about the social struggles that do not
originate in class contradictions although every social struggle inevitably carries the
imprint of the class structure in which it unfolds. Without doubt, this element must be
incorporated into the Marxist analysis of contemporary capitalism. The point of view of
Marx is always that of the totality of the space in which capital circulates: if the space
broadens, it is necessary to broaden the theoretical outlook. As a consequence of the
universalization of the capitalist relations of production which has unfolded under the
effects of the law of unequal economic and political development formulated by Lenin, the
horizon that the material and spiritual production process of capitalism occupies is no
longer just or even eminently European, "western," christian, white, male, of
"pure" bourgeois and proletarians, ruled by the general parameters of bourgeois
liberal democracy, with a relatively homogeneous degree of economic, political and social
development, and beneficiary of a planet in which the devastating effects of capital on
the natural environment had not yet accumulated.
The creation of a single transnational space of capital circulation incorporating the
material and spiritual production process of bourgeois societies into nations with diverse
degrees of political, economic and social underdevelopment, with non-christian religions
and cultures like the Islamic, Hindu and African ones, with indigenous national majorities
and minorities, with black populations descendants of African slaves, with Asian
populations descendants of indentured labourers also in conditions of slavery, with
ancestral practices of discrimination against women, among other characteristics, means
that a broad and varied range of social class contradictions and subjects come to occupy
central places in the struggle against capital. All these factors must be incorporated
into the Marxist analysis concerning the composition of the fundamental block of the
popular struggles, the identification of their potential allies and the definition of the
foundations on which it is possible to establish such an alliance, both on the world scale
and in the indispensable reading of the particular and singular circumstances in which
each Marxist party or political movement develops its struggles.
As a logical consequence of the political and ideological intentions of its pseudo
theories about the omnipotence of contemporary capitalism, social democratic third way-ism
does a partial, fragmentary and one sided reading of the social class transformations
supposedly caused by "globalization" and the "Scientific-technical
Revolution." Among its principal "arguments" these stand out: the
"indefensible" situation in which governments, political parties and unions
supposedly find themselves as a consequence of the transnational mobility of capital that
allows it to migrate if it does not receive every kind of concessions and privileges, and
the fragmentation contemporary capitalism causes in the working class and other oppressed
social class sectors as an negative element for popular organization and struggle.
With respect to the supposed "indefensible" position into which nations and
peoples have sunk, it is worth saying that it is undeniable that capital and especially
speculative capital use their mobility as a mechanism of pressure and blackmail in order
to force governments, political parties and unions of different countries and regions to
compete among themselves, but it is also undeniable that 1) the over saturation of the
goods, services and capital markets, a characteristic of the present world capitalist
economy, forces capital to "anchor" itself in the increasingly reduced spaces on
the world scale where it can guarantee its extended reproduction; 2) that
"anchorage" must be maintained even if the governments, political parties and
unions of the country in question take up and hold to a posture of defense of the
legitimate national interests and; 3) such an "anchorage" would be even more
solid and effective if the governments, political parties and unions of the whole world or
at least of a region, like Latin America and the Caribbean, for example, managed to
harmonize and unite their positions in defense of sovereignty and national interests. We
insist that the issue is not so much the power the "objective" factors
attributed to "globalization" and the "Scientific-technical
Revolution" give to transnational finance capital for domination of governments,
parties and unions, as the ideological success they have harvested by convincing them of
the supposed invincibility of a social system in a state of decomposition, and of the
supposed weakness of the peoples to successfully fight against it.
With respect to the difficulties of organizing and mobilizing for popular struggle, it
is unquestionable that the metamorphosis of contemporary capitalism causes changes in the
social class structure with a tendency toward the fragmentation of the sectors composing
the popular block, but it also fragments and polarizes, perhaps to a greater extent, the
bourgeoisie itself, because the basic form of reproduction of capital is the expropriation
of some capitalists by others.
Given capital's tendency to concentrate and universalize, today we can state that the
"middle strata" of contemporary "global society" are not just
traditional small- and medium-size industry, but also enterprises considered large by the
standards of the so-called "third world," but incomparable to the power of the
great transnational monopolies that need to corner their markets in order to guarantee the
latter's own extended reproduction. Projected on the world scale today, this consists of a
situation analogous to the one analyzed in the Manifesto of the Communist Party
when it refers to the "middle strata" that "sink gradually into the
proletariat, partly because their diminutive capital does not suffice for the scale on
which Modern Industry is carried on, and is swamped in the competition with the large
capitalists, partly because their specialized skill is rendered worthless by new methods
of production."6 As such, the essence of Marxist analysis needs to be
recovered in order to evaluate when the "middle strata" of contemporary
capitalism are trying to "roll back the wheel of history" and when they become
potential allies of the popular block. To this central question there is no single and
immutable answer: it is necessary to conduct this political reading again and again in
each place and context.
The Cuban Revolution's Politics of Alliances
When he carried out an X-ray of mid 20th century Cuban society in
"History Shall Absolve Me," Fidel Castro Ruz followed the path of José Martí
and established the foundations for a policy of alliances which included, integrating and
unifying all the then oppressed and exploited social class sectors workers,
peasants, unemployed, small owners, professionals, intellectuals, illiterates, whites,
blacks, Chinese, mestizos, catholics, protestants, men, women, youth, elderly and others;
a policy of alliances that not only lead to the triumph of the Cuban Revolution, but which
also serves it to maintain the broadest and most solid unity of the whole people, the
indispensable condition for dealing with the multiple aggressions and dangers that have
intervened in the process of building socialism.
The inclusive, integrating and unifying approach of the Cuban Revolution was what
guided the process of transformation of the alliance into unity, and of unity into fusion
and synthesis of the organizations that fought against the tyranny of Fulgencio Batista,
the "26th of July" Movement, the People's Socialist Party and the
"13th of March" Student Directorate; allies first in the Integrated
Revolutionary Organizations, brought together in the United Party of the Socialist
Revolution, and fused and synthesized since 1967 in the Communist Party of Cuba, which is
the only party of the Cuban nation, not because of omission or exclusion of other
political forces, but as a result of the most profound and solid political and ideological
convergence.
The foreign policy of the Cuban Revolution since January 1, 1959 has also followed the
path of José Martí, aimed at promoting the convergence, unity and integration of the
nations, peoples, popular movements and political forces of the whole world, on the basis
of an anti-imperialist platform, of the defense of the sovereignty, self-determination and
independence that constitute the starting point for the conception and execution of any
strategy oriented to achieving sustainable economic and social development with a true
sense of justice and equity. With this objective in mind, the Cuban Revolution 1)
encouraged, in its time, the approach to and collaboration among the Soviet Union and the
other socialist countries and democratic, progressive and revolutionary forces of the
"Third World," for purposes of fostering the mutual benefit derived from the
interaction of two fundamental streams of the popular movement of the second half of the
20th century; 2) played an active role in the Movement of Non-Aligned Countries
and other organisms and conferences representative of the underdeveloped world, in which
the sharpening of contradictions as a result of the increasingly voracious political,
economic and military action of one imperialism was notable; 3) broadened and deepened its
relations with the most diverse popular political forces and movements world wide and; 4)
maintained an unshakable policy of internationalism, corresponding to the requirements of
each historical period.
Battles like the campaign for non-payment of the external debt, the fight against
neo-liberal globalization, and the promotion of the globalization of solidarity and, more
recently, the encouragement provided to the continental movement against the Free Trade
Area of the Americas (FTAA), are examples of the inclusive, integrating and unifying
vision of the Cuban Revolution, that starts from the identification of the national and
social class contradictions of the inter-centuries' world, sharpened to an extreme degree
by the exclusionary and polarizing nature of transnational monopoly capitalism. With this
same commitment, Cuba incorporates into its battle of ideas the struggle against the
growth of imperialism's aggressiveness, which, under the cover of the terrorist acts of
September 11, 2001, is unleashing a bellicose crusade against the nations, popular
political forces and movements that stand up to its domination. This is the commitment
that impels the Cuban Revolution to give priority attention to spaces like the Sao Paulo
Forum and the World Social Forum, which constitute laboratories for ideas and actions in
which the politics of alliances that shall bear fruit for the popular and political forces
of the world in the 21st century, are being designed and put to the test.
The formula the Communist Party of Cuba proposes for the success of the politics of
alliances of the Marxist left is the conception of the alliances as a first step toward
convergence, unity, fusion and synthesis of the demands, needs, aspirations and interests
of all the oppressed and exploited social class sectors; that is, not as a mere and
circumstantial electoral coalition in which the different factions "negotiate"
the exchange of reciprocal support for realizing their respective particular interests
something that leads to contradictions over the path to follow, eventually causing
the rupture of the alliance but as the beginning of a strategic process conceived
for the long term, of building consensus and elaborating a common programme of government
that not only confronts but also reverses the consequences of neo-liberalism. The
continuation and results of this programme would be guaranteed by the broadest and most
democratic participation and representation of all those sectors. The organizational forms
this process takes would be determined by the conditions in which the struggles of each
people unfold, be that of one or various parties, a movement, a front, a coalition or an
alliance with which the social revolutionary subject provides itself to undertake this
difficult but unavoidable road toward unity.
In Latin America at the beginning of the 21st century, the politics of
alliance of the communist parties and other Marxist organizations has a broad radius of
action on themes like defense of sovereignty, independence and national
self-determination, the promotion of a true regional integration and unity with respect to
the interests of the peoples, the reversal of the opening, deregulation, privatization and
foreignization process of the neo-liberal stamp, and opposition to war and the attempts to
criminalize the popular struggles. A good starting point for the building of our alliances
is the battle against the FTAA, which embodies the worst annexationist designs of U.S.
imperialism.
----
1. In the words of the First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba, Fidel Castro
Ruz, "the transnational monopolies represent the most perfect synthesis, the more
developed expression of monopoly capitalism in this phase of its general crisis," and
therefore "they are the international carriers of all the laws that govern the
capitalist mode of production in its present imperialistic phase, of all its
contradictions, and are the most efficient mechanism for the development and
intensification of the process of subordination of labour to capital on the world
scale." Fidel Castro Ruz. La Crisis económica y social del mundo, Ediciones
del Consejo de Estado, La Habana, 1983, p. 153.
2. Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, "Manifesto of the Communist Party," Selected
Works, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1968, p. 44.
3. "The lower middle class, the small manufacturer, the shopkeeper, the artisan,
the peasant, all these fight against the bourgeoisie, to save from extinction their
existence as fractions of the middle class. They are therefore not revolutionary, but
conservative. Nay, more, they are reactionary, for they try to roll back the wheel of
history. If, by chance, they are revolutionary, they are only so in view of their
impending transfer into the proletariat; they thus defend not their present, but their
future interests; they desert their own standpoint to place themselves at that of the
proletariat."
4. Ibid.
5. See "Preface to the Second Russian Edition (1882) of the Manifesto of the
Communist Party," Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Collected Works, Progress
Publishers, Moscow, 1976, vol. 6.
6. Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, "Manifesto of the Communist Party," Selected
Works, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1968, p. 42.
July/2003
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