May 27, 2011 -- Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal -- Below is the political perspectives document of the newly formed Egyptian Socialist Party -- one of a number of new pro-democracy parties formed in Egypt since the January 25, 2011, revolution that overthrew the dictator Hosni Mubarak. The party will be officially inaugurated on June 18, in Cairo.

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By the Egyptian Socialist Party

May 11, 2011 -- After the Egyptian Revolution broke out on January 25, 2011, and successfully achieved its first goal of ousting the president and continued in its demand of toppling the whole corrupt regime, it was clear there was an urgent need to bring together all those who had the conviction that our country really needed transformation into a socialist society. A transition that would help improve the social and economic conditions of the toiling masses, and reverse the trend of the old regime to subject the country to the dictates of the Imperialist led International Financial Institutions. This meant there was an urgent need to create the Egyptian Socialist Party to bring together all those who had taken part in the revolution on an individual basis so as to unite their efforts, and crystalise their political and social perspective into a coherent strategy that would guide the people in the right direction.

The ruling class that led the country for the last four decades has abandoned all the previous attempts at developing the agricultural and industrial possibilities, and instead, liquidated most of our past achievements through a program of mass privatisations to Egyptian and foreign “investors” whose only aim was to get rid of the workforce, gradually undermine the activity, and make huge profits out of speculation on the land property of the companies concerned.

After the industrial sector, privatisation moved on to the banks (one public bank was privatised and another promised), then serious steps were taken to privatise education and health services so as to relieve the government of all of its social responsibilities. Such policies were in complete compliance with the requirements of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, but were also in favour of the new tendencies of the ruling class that was intent on making money the easy way by speculation on the assets of the country.

For almost a decade before the [January 25] Revolution, the country suffered from the continued deterioration of all industrial and agricultural activities and the domination of all speculative activities, such as land speculation, creating tourist resorts instead of productive farming [that would have improved] the lot of 12 million slum dwellers. The number of unemployed stands at 6 millions (18% approx.), and the gap between rich and poor has reached unprecedented levels (the ratio of incomes among government employees is 500:1!!).

Such conditions led to continued protest movements between workers of both public and private sectors all through the decade, and creation of Kefaya and 6th April movements and others.

In the countryside the agricultural reform laws were abrogated and this resulted in land rent rising by 50 times (5000%!), and the rural cooperatives were marginalised and the peasants were victimised by the commercial banks and capitalist suppliers of all their needs, and the sole buyers of their products. Again such policies were in compliance with the instructions of the international [financial] nstitutions, but also for the benefit of the local capitalists whose sole interest became making money through speculation.

All citizens have suffered from the absence of democracy, ill treatment (amounting to torture) by the police and other government authorities. Their opinions were falsified by rigged elections, and fake political parties. They also suffered under government-sponsored religious riots to undermine the unity of the people.

All this led to a clear loss of status of Egypt that was before a beacon to the peoples of the region. Egypt became a docile executor of US and Zionist policies in the Middle East. The vital question was: Where are the Egyptian socialists in such a situation?

In answer, the undersigned declare to the toiling masses and all other patriotic sections of the Egyptian people our resolve to create the Egyptian Socialist Party that will fulfill its role, along with all other forces of the Egyptian Revolution, in promoting the aspirations of our people for liberty, dignity, social justice and progress. This party shall link its struggle for national freedom, democracy, an end of exploitation of man by man, with progress on all social and cultural and economic fronts.

This initiative comes at a time of great flourishing of the revolutionary capacities of our people, who developed their claims from simply toppling an autocratic regime to an all-out social movement for progress, democracy and social justice. The youth who played a prominent role in the January 25 revolution must find its due position within the ranks of the Socialist Party, and so must our women who have always been in the first ranks of our freedom fighters. Both categories shall occupy their due rank among the leadership of the Socialist Party.

Egyptian Socialists, all through their long struggles from the 1920s on, have been at the vanguard of Egyptian freedom fighters. Despite their continued status of illegality and defamation by the authorities, and campaigns of arrests and persecution by the police, Egyptian socialists have presented a progressive outlook in social, economic, political and cultural fields. They also made a point of standing apart from many so called leftist parties that were in collaboration with the old regime and gave it the semblance of democracy.

Socialism is not just a planned economy of state-owned companies, but is a system run by the workers and toiling masses for their own good, and developing with the latest achievements of science and technology.

Similarly, democracy is not just a system of free elections and multiple parties, but means the full participation of the citizens in running their social, political, economic and cultural life. Such a view extends from the local to the regional and global spheres, and should be a fully participatory continuous process.

Perspectives and goals of the Egyptian Socialist Party

1. The Egyptian Socialist Party adopts a view of human development that includes rebuilding of the industrial and agricultural structures, conservation of natural resources and redistribution of income in favour of the toiling masses. Such policies shall be implemented through full participatory democracy and popular control; 2. Education and scientific research is fundamental for development plans and must enjoy full academic freedom under authorities independent of administrative shackles. Social participation in planning and overseeing scientific research is a governing principle; 3. The party believes health care is not just an important human right, but is also essential for successful development efforts which should also enhance popular health care. Good health is also a guarantee of national security. The party thus supports a universal health insurance system to cover all citizens against all illnesses. The cost of this system for the needy shall be borne completely by government. The system shall be based on a comprehensive non-profit structure that may in case of need issue contracts, in full transparency, to private sector medical concerns. Popular control of this system is essential. 4. The party shall put an end to unequal development between the different governorates, and put emphasis on raising the levels of rural areas that were so far neglected, and that through democratic self-rule and democratic elections at all levels of local government; 5. The party encourages Egyptian capital as well as foreign investment as long as they participate in and comply with the national developmentp lans. Such participation must avoid any monopolistic measures and guarantee the rights of their workers, and accept democratic means of conflict resolution; 6. The party shall strive to maintain the ecology, and conserve and develop natural resources for the benefit of present and future generations; 7. The party considers democracy to be a goal and an instrument at the same time, and shall militate to draw up a new democratic constitution for a parliamentary republic based on full equality for all citizens regardless of ethnicity, colour, gender or religion. It shall promote democratic principles in all social institutions; 8. The party considers that democracy should be based on transparency, popular checks and participation in compliance with international human rights instruments ratified by Egypt; 9. The party considers safeguarding national unity against all kinds of religious or ethnic discrimination an essential duty. Thus the party rejects all propaganda in favour of sectarian religious regimes, as well as any foreign intervention on religious grounds. Such intervention aims at subverting national unity and shall be actively resisted by the party which fully respects religious freedoms for all citizens, and provides full protection for such freedoms; 10. The party militates for a comprehensive cultural revolution that promotes the values of science, equality, dialogue and implements the rights of all marginalised groups such as women, youth, the elderly and the disabled. It promotes cultural freedoms in thought, arts and the media, and encourages young artists, especially in the countryside; 11. The party does not claim itself as the only vanguard of the Egyptian people, but is intent on cooperating with all forces of true progress, whether political parties, trade unions and federations of the toiling masses of workers, peasants, government employees, professionals, the unemployed and the disabled, to build a free society of democracy and social justice and ultimately socialism. To this end it will form close alliances with all such movements; 12. The party believes in the true revolutionary capacities expressed by the Egyptian youth before, during and after the revolution, and shall strive to give a prominent role within its ranks. It shall provide the best opportunities for their political training to assume their due role in its leadership; 13. The party strongly militates against capitalist globalisation that tries to impose the neoliberal social, economic and political model that brought catastrophic results in Egypt and elsewhere. This model promotes the logic of profit over that of work, and speculation over production, selfish individualism over altruism and cooperation. It transforms government into an instrument for the accumulation of wealth for the corrupt minority, while shedding any responsibility for providing services to the people. This model also leads to loss of national sovereignty under the burden of foreign debts and the dictates of the IMF, the World Bank and World Trade Organization (WTO), which promote the interests of imperialist powers and transnational corporations against the peoples of the Third World; 14. The party stresses the Arab role of Egypt as both a choice and a necessity in view of the just rights of the Palestinian people in confronting Israeli colonialism that acts as the striking force for the imperialist powers in the region. The party shall promote the common struggle with other revolutionary Arab forces to regain the rights of the Palestinian and Iraqi peoples and other threatened minorities in the Arab world. Such a stand shall help regain Egypt’s leading role in the region; 15. The party shall strive to strengthen the ties of common interest and struggle with peoples of the Third World against all imperialist projects of domination of world capitalism as exemplified by the US, the European Union and Japan. The party shall strengthen solidarity with progressive forces all over the world, and follow the example of development and socialist experiences; 16. The party shall strive to build a fully democratic party structure in which the minority can exercise its full rights of expression and interaction. The party mechanisms must be resilient and reject any bureaucratic or dogmatic practices, so as to be able to interact with the mass movements.

Economic perspectives

The parasitic capitalism that ruled Egypt for the last four decades led the country to a position of full subordination to the dictates of the US and the international financial institutions, who own 86% of the foreign debts of Egypt and amount to 173 billion Egyptian pounds, while the internal debt amounts to 761 billion Egyptian pounds.

The share of the productive sectors of the economy (agriculture and industry) of the GDP fell in comparison with the services (commerce, transportation, communications, banking and finance, the Suez Canal revenues and the remittances of Egyptians abroad). Despite all the preferential policies, and the privatisation of half the public sector companies, the share of the public sector in exports is still equal to that of the private sector. The latter failed to provide employment opportunities for the youth who were driven to mass unemployment or risking their lives in clandestine attempts at emigration.

The capitalist model of development thus entered a dead alley, and submerged the country under the burden of subordination and stagnation of production forces. The need for more just production relations that favour the toiling masses has become primordial. Socialism has thus become the only alternative that can end the crisis of development, and provide the best model for the effective utilisation of our resources in order to be able to make use of the advanced technologies relying on a base of well-educated working class, and of local scientific and research structure.

The essential problem of Egypt is development in favour of the toiling masses and with their active participation. For years we were told that our problem was the increase in population, and millions of pounds were squandered on population-control projects, while humans were our main wealth, if only we gave them the proper education and health care and other services. We have the example of such countries as China, India ... where the huge population is a boon to profit from and not to fight.

Thus what we need is comprehensive social and economic transformation towards socialist production relations with the active participation of workers and peasants in planning, management and control. This can only be achieved through full participatory democracy for the people and not profit. Such development will suppress the longstanding crises we have suffered for decades. It shall promote public and cooperative ownership of means of production, foster private ownership and foreign investment in so far as they implement the national development social and economic plan.

The Egyptian Socialist Party therefore militates for:

1. The economic perspective

The party strives to achieve the following goals:

Transforming the economic structure from one based on services promoting speculation and rent, to one promoting agriculture and industry; Developing agriculture for the aim of providing the food needs of the people, enhancing productivity and land fertility and conserving irrigation water as a vital resource not to be squandered. Providing agricultural inputs at subsidised prices, and promoting cooperative marketing of crops; Reconstructing industry to provide all necessities of the people, and gradually develop heavy and communication industries. This should rely on a scientific base to promote egyptian research and development; Reassessing the past privatisation measures and renationalise the companies that suffered from corrupt practices, and punishing those responsible for such corruption. All major projects shall be subject to public ownership and popular checks, especially by their workers; Full control of foreign economic relations and exchange transactions, so as to prevent speculation on our currency. The economic plan shall prevent our economy becoming an appendage of transnational corporations, and shall promote national products; Take all measures to conserve our environment and natural resources including Nile water, oil and gas, mineral resources and the fertility of our soil.

2. For the workers

