Dandelion Salad

by Tyler James

Socialist Worker

March 2, 2017

WHAT DOES it mean to be a revolutionary? Ultimately, it means you believe that capitalism can’t be fixed, and that we need a qualitatively different kind of system that prioritizes freedom, democracy and human need rather than profit and power for the few.

What does it mean to organize as a revolutionary at a time when revolution is not on the immediate agenda?

One option would be to retreat to the sidelines and look with suspicion on every struggle for immediate reform as an obstacle to the maximum goal of revolution. The thinking here is that reforms of any kind simply prop up and stabilize the system rather than challenging it at its core.

Though it may sound radical, this perspective is, in practice, a recipe for suffocating passivity and conservatism–a sure-fire way to be irrelevant, aloof from the masses, and completely unthreatening to the powers that be. As the Russian Revolutionary Leon Trotsky wrote:

[T]he working masses sense the need for unity in action, for unity in resisting the onslaught of capitalism or unity in taking the offensive against it. Any party which mechanically counterposes itself to this need of the working class for unity in action will unfailingly be condemned in the minds of the workers.

The “ultra-left” approach is clearly a nonstarter for serious revolutionaries.

As a corrective to this sectarian approach, would it be better for revolutionaries, in the here and now, to dissolve themselves into whatever day-to-day struggles for reforms happen to exist at the moment?

At the most extreme, this approach would mean accepting the ideas, strategies, self-appointed leaders and organizations currently supported by workers and the oppressed. Whatever ideas remain in the heads of revolutionaries, in practice, they water down basic political principles, like opposing all forms of oppression, and avoid anything that might sound “too radical” for the current leaders of liberal organizations and unions.

This approach has the virtue of emphasizing the importance of being in direct contact with the masses of working people who must be the active agents of any revolutionary movement. But it wrongly supposes that the only way to be relevant and grow is by tacking toward the political center and passively “tailing” behind whatever status quo leaders happen to command. Socialists in the past have called this “opportunism.”

Is there an alternative to these two wrong approaches? Is there a way to steer between the reefs of ultra-leftism and the shoals of opportunism? The purpose of the “united front” strategy is to try to do just that.

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THE UNITED front strategy was developed in the era immediately after the Russian Revolution as a tool for revolutionaries to meet the challenges of the day. There are obviously huge differences between that time, when socialist revolution was a real, near-term possibility, and today, but the method at the heart of the united front is still relevant.

The idea is simple. It begins from the premise that in a non-revolutionary situation, revolutionaries must be deeply involved in the fight for immediate reforms that benefit the working class–both to improve the lives of workers in the here and now, and to increase the combativity, confidence and organizational strength of the working class as a whole, in preparation for future struggles.

But in a non-revolutionary situation where organized revolutionaries are in the minority, this can only be accomplished by working alongside others who may not yet share the goal of revolutionary change.

The question is: If revolutionaries must work with reformist organizations in the here and now in immediate struggles, on what terms should they seek united work?

We’ve already seen the faulty approach of opportunism, which recommends that revolutionaries accept junior-partner status with the reformist leaders of existing movements, unions, liberal organizations and so on.

The distinguishing feature of the united front is that revolutionaries must work alongside reformists to win immediate demands, but in a way that doesn’t force them into a passive, second-class position that cedes all leadership.

How should revolutionaries do that? First of all, by uniting solely on the basis of achieving unity in action in order to win specific, concrete demands.

In his book The Comintern–a history of the international alliance of Communist Parties in the early 20th century, which developed the united front tactic–Duncan Hallas emphasized that the goal was to “force the leaderships of the reformist and centrist organizations into limited cooperation on concrete issues by winning their followers for unity in action.”

Thus, the united front tactic is about building coalitions to fight for concrete demands, not on the basis of ideological unity, which would either mean waiting forever for reformists to accept revolutionary politics or else watering down revolutionary politics to reach an agreement.

In short: when we put the united front tactic into practice, we seek to unite with those on the left who are willing to organize in good faith to try to win immediate demands that benefit workers and increase their consciousness and confidence.

We don’t go into these temporary alliances expecting 100 percent agreement on all matters of political ideology, but expect there to be a variety of ideas about strategy and goals, which all sides are free to raise within the united front.

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THIS LEADS us to the next important aspect of the united front strategy: Once we’ve forged a united front to fight for a specific demand in the here and now, the goal for revolutionaries is to organize to achieve that demand–and, in the process, prove that we have the best strategies and ideas about how to carry the movement forward.

If the movement is internally democratic and permits discussion and debate, the goal of revolutionaries should be to try to argue for the most ambitious possible course of action that can win the movement’s demands, especially when–as is likely to happen–more conservative elements lack the resolve or strategy to do this.

Sometimes agreement on unity in action will be difficult to achieve. As Trotsky usefully points out in a document written for the Comintern:

[I]n many cases and perhaps even in the majority of cases, organizational agreements [between revolutionaries and reformists in united front coalitions] will be only half-attained or perhaps not at all. But it is necessary that the struggling masses should always be given the opportunity of convincing themselves that the non-achievement of unity in action was not due to our formalistic irreconcilability but to the real lack of will to struggle on the part of the reformists.

For the united front tactic to succeed, revolutionaries must encourage rank-and-file workers and movement participants to be as confident as possible, in order to pressure reluctant reformists leaders to either go along and fight, or else expose themselves to their own members as obstacles to struggle.

Either way, if carried out successfully, the united front achieves key objectives. If the reformist leaders are forced to go along and fight, the goals of revolutionaries–of winning reforms and building organizational fighting capacity among the working class–are achieved, importantly because of the contributions of revolutionaries.

If the united front fails take shape, revolutionaries want it to be clear that it wasn’t the fault of their side–and so reformists may lose influence over workers who want to see a united struggle.

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HISTORICALLY, THE failure to implement a united front strategy has been the result of veering in the direction of sectarian purism, on the one hand, or passive tailism on the other. Both mistakes have resulted in catastrophes for the socialist movement.

One infamous example that Trotsky railed against in the 1930s was the German communists, who, under the influence of Stalinism–which had come to dominate in the USSR over the genuine politics of international socialism–and in response to the rise of fascism, rejected a united front of working-class parties to confront the Nazis.

The German Communist Party (KPD) took the hyper-sectarian position that all reformist organizations of the working class were enemies of workers on a par with the fascists. The reformist Social Democratic Party (SPD) was even labeled “social fascist.”

By refusing to unite with other organizations of the working class to defeat fascism, the KPD contributed to the Nazis being able to divide and destroy the entire workers movement, revolutionary and reformist alike.

Not long after this disastrous turn of events, the Communist Parties were directed by Stalin in Moscow to discard this ultra-left approach in favor of a strategy of building a “popular front” against fascism. This complete U-turn veered away from extreme sectarianism only to arrive at the most extreme opportunism.

Under Stalin’s “popular front” strategy, revolutionaries should try to fight the right by blending into the political mainstream and following the lead of not merely reformists, but bourgeois political parties as well as the (so-called) “progressive” wing of the ruling class.

In practice, this committed revolutionaries to a subordinate, passive political role that failed both in fighting the right and in building a left-wing alternative to the status quo.

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THIS HISTORY contains vital lessons for today, particularly when it comes to how the left–if we understand it to include reformists and revolutionaries alike, though without the mass organizations from the time of the Comintern–ought to fight against an increasingly confident and powerful right wing.

The sectarian approach is a non-starter–at a time when the revolutionary left is tiny, to refuse to cooperate with any non-revolutionary organizations would be to abandon the fight against the right altogether.

But the approach embodied in the “popular front” is a dead end. In practice, this would mean lining up passively behind centrist NGOs, the Democratic Party and leaders of the trade union movement, all in the name of “anybody but Trump.”

As we saw last November, this empty lesser evilism is more likely to give a boost to the Trump phenomenon than to actually stop it. What’s more, as leading Democrats and some trade unions pledge to give Trump a chance and work with him, it’s obvious to millions of people that defeating Trump’s agenda requires a different, more independent approach.

Rather than sit on the sidelines or line up passively behind the Democrats, the united front encourages revolutionaries to seek out and build alliances with broad layers of radicalizing activists and organizations on the left, including reformists, unions, liberal organizations and so on.

But–and this is crucial–a united front is an alliance whose unity comes not from flattening out ideological differences and tacking to the center, but from a shared commitment to joint action to pursue concrete demands, such as stopping deportations, defeating the ban on refugees entering the U.S., challenging restrictions on abortion and right-wing attacks on clinics, and so forth.

The presence of organized revolutionaries will, as always, be key to the success of these coalitions. That is because revolutionaries, unlike reformists, bring a distinctive way of understanding the world and a distinctive method that is more likely to actually win reforms. As Marxist economist Robert Brenner wrote:

[T]he achievement of major reforms throughout the 20th century has…in virtually every instance, required strategies and tactics of which organized reformism did not approve…[including] high levels of militant mass action, large-scale defiance of the law, and the forging of increasingly large class-wide ties of active solidarity between unionized and un-unionized, employed and unemployed, and the like.

Revolutionaries, unlike the leaders of reformist organizations, understand that the system is organized in such a way that, as Frederick Douglass famously put it, “If there is no struggle, there is no progress.”

The mere presence of revolutionaries in a united front, however, doesn’t ensure that it wins. Sometimes a united front does succeed in winning a concrete demand, and this lays the groundwork for organizing to fight for more ambitious demands in the future. On the other hand, united fronts sometimes fail, due, for example, to missteps or betrayals by the more conservative, reformist elements in the coalition.

When this happens, it is key that revolutionaries encourage the movement to see this betrayal as a learning experience that can teach more moderate activists to break from reformist organizations and move to adopt more radical positions. This, too, can lay the groundwork for building a stronger radical left that can win concrete demands in the future.

There is plenty more to say about the history of the united front and the many challenges that inevitably arise when attempting to put it into practice. As Duncan Hallas wrote:

There are enormous practical difficulties in applying this approach in any actual appropriate situation. Each such situation is different; each has, inevitably, unique factors. There is no substitute for the “knowledge, experience and…political flair” of which Lenin wrote, in solving complex political problems. The simple reiteration of the formulae will not suffice.

But this much is clear: the united front is both the best way to actually win concrete demands and the only realistic strategy for making revolutionaries relevant in periods where revolution is not on the immediate agenda.

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From the archives:

Lessons of the Harvard Dining Hall Strike Victory by Ed Childs

The Anti-Trump Protests: Don’t Ask: Where Were You For The Last 8 Years? by Bill Dores

Emergence: Revolution Within and Without

Chris Hedges: Learn to Work With People That Think Differently From Us + Inaugurate the Resistance!

Socialism: Creating a World to Change Our Lives by Sam Friedman

Ralph Nader: The Biggest Divide And Rule Tactic Is The Constant Drumbeat That We Are Highly Polarized

Chris Hedges and Richard D. Wolff at the Left Forum 2016: Rosa Luxemburg: Reform or Revolution?