Mainstream, VOL LIII No 20, May 9, 2015

WIDEN THE CIRCLE, BROADEN THE LEFT
Saturday 9 May 2015, by Badri Raina

The Communist Party of India-Marxist has a new helmsman. Sitaram
Yechury, a less forbidding man than his predecessor, carries with him
the sunny goodwill of many inside and outside the Party. Many among
the general middle classes, who view politics rather exclusively in
terms of "leadership", even those who are more familiar with the
structures of Left politics than most, sense some sort of a paradigm
shift in the offing with regard to both the substance and the style of
the Party's operations and intervention in the coming years. To the
best of my acquaintance and education, such a climate of anticipation
might flatter and forewarn, if not scare, the new General Secretary in
equal measure. Communist Parties, after all, subordinate individuals
to collective decisions (remember Jyoti Basu?) and any change of
leadership there does not carry the same probabilities as it may and
usually does in what are called bourgeois formations.

Which is not to say that times have not changed, even for the CPI-M,
even, indeed, for its leadership. Such transformations are, after all,
one legitimate function of that Marxian axiom which the new General
Secretary is often given to stating, namely, that any valid Left
praxis must proceed on the basis of a "concrete analysis of concrete
conditions". When, in fact, that does not happen, stasis and
stultification overtake. Such concrete analyses may, of course, vary
from predilection to predilection, and need not always be either bold
or in tune with the dynamics of history--a circumstance that draws
attention to the need for ruthless objectivity and self-criticism if
Marxist thought is ever to be successfully applied.

In this context, close watchers of the Party have noted with sanguine
approval the new General Secretary's publicly stated acknowledge-ment
ot the fact that some 40,000 ot its erstwhile cadre have deserted the
Party in West Bengal, having left for the greener pastures of the
Trinimul, and some heading even for the Rightwing Bharatiya Janata
Party, perish the thought. This acknowledgement may bear testimony to
a new openness, and thereby encourage a less cloistered and more
candid debate on the causes of such desertion. This may be one
pressing agenda because of which the Party has decided at its recent
Congrss to call an Organisational Plenum. Sooner the better, since two
sorts of expectation now bear upon its deliberations: one, embracing
the reconstitution of its membership in more open and democratic ways
in full cognisance of the challenges that await such membership, and,
two, the prevention and reversal of such desertions by allowing an
internal democracy less stifled and centralised than has been the
wont, so that the cadres of the Party have the assurance that they may
not be disciplined or discarded at the slightest hint of dissent from
the Party Line.

 That thought leads to another much larger debate--one that the new
General Secretary one trusts is quite seized of. Can the Party
continue to operate with any realistic hope of striking a happy new
mass departure if it holds on to the view that the Left essentially
must mean the Party, that class struggle must continue to bear only
one doctrinaire definition, that no historical transformation in the
Indian Republic is, ultimately, of any great meaning if it is not led
exclusively by a Left Party, leading to a state of a single-party
dominance, and that the present state of India's multi-party electoral
democracy must continue to be viewed as a transitional achievement
wholly inimical to the procurement of equity and justice? Needless to
say, such a view of the Indian state, and its possibilities must lead
to a specific set of conclusions about how a Communist Party must
continue to function therein. It would necessarily entail viewing the
final end of the capitalist system and of the political arrangements
that accompany it as the steadfast praxis that the organised Left must
pursue, avoiding associ-ation with political formations, however
preferable on a relative scale within the "concrete condition" to
other formations for fear of compromising the purity of the communist
project. It would also entail the prospect of a revolutionary
over-throw exclusively on the "scientific" principle of the demise of
alienation and expropriation from within its own womb. This option
would then continue to bring into question the tactical participation
of the organised Left in state power through the electoral route,
since experience would show that this course has been less than
friendly to the project of building a mass revolutionary movement
wholly inimical to such a tactical line. Any truthful and principled
adherence to this understanding would call upon the organised Left to
stay away from the contradictions that participation in state power
within a capitalist multi-party system inevi-tably unleashes,
rendering the Left, willy nilly, a victim to its class compulsions,
and to the claims of a frustrating conglomeration of local and
regional perceptions and social formations.

This, in brief, might be said to have constituted the career of the
organised Left in India since after the Telengana event of 1948.

An alternate view that offers itself might be the following: that
however real and deep the cyclical crises within the global capitalist
system, the prospects of its final demise seem remote, like those of
cancer; that postthe collapse of the Soviet system, as well as the
embracing of private entrepreneurship in both Russia and China, the
prospect of placing ownership wholly in shared public hands has, if
anything, receded; that the only instances of partial, although
considerable and pathbreaking, success in beating back the hegemony of
imperialism as the godfather of the capitalist system in recent times
have been those innovated in what used to be the doormat/backyard of
imperialism, namely, Latin America; and that, in the light of such
experience and of its acknowledgement, a revamped praxis awaits the
organised Left in India.

This would involve a full and unashamed embracement of the fact and
prospect that the capitalist order and its concomitant political
expressions are for a good while here to stay in the Republic of
India, and that the organised Left, equally unashamedly, must
undertake the task of reworking its onus and its procedures to
constantly and imaginatively furnish mass-political dynamics that
debilitate its more brutal and carnivorous aspirations, and advance
the clout of both the vox populi and its material interests in the
face of those rapacious aspirations.

Such a course will press on the Party-Left to accept the formulation
that within a capitalist, multi-party republic, the "Left" must be
accorded a definition that reaches beyond the Party, including social
groups and mass activities that may seem discrete and atomised, but
that together constitute a pool of politics competent to frustrate and
wound capitalist hegemony overall. In other words, this
reconceptualised Left must be allowed its legitimacy even when it
dissents in important ways from what the Party might consider classic
Marxism. And, in linking mass activities with this pool of progressive
social groups, the Party-Left, while offering its specific strengths
to enhance the quality of struggles, must remain content to share
hegemony with any and all whose leadership in such movements has
effective mass appeal and mass allegiance.

Such a course of reconceptualisation and mass work can be possible
only if the organised Left is also willing to see that the oppression
of the proles within the Indian republic does not always take place
only in classical class terms. This writer has suggested elsewhere
that the points of oppression in India are diverse both in spread and
quality, and that it has perhaps been one failure of the organised
Left to ignore this "concretge" reality in seeking to absorb such
diversity exclusively into a base/superstructure paradigm. (See "The
State of the Left", The Underside of Things: India and the Worrld
etc., Three Essays Collective, 2012, p. 710)

If the rather mind-boggling spread of these oppressions is admitted,
alongwith the limited reach of the organised Left, then it must follow
that the ameliorative cooperation of the reconceptualised Left cannot
exclude any social or political forces that might play or that have
played the role of an effective critic or of ground-level resitance,
wether from within or outside electoral bodies, in any arena of
opposition to such social/cultural oppression as help the capitalist
system to take focus away from the livelihood issues of the vast mass
of labouring people. That such forces may also include those who owe
allegiance to the capitalist order but are willing and able to make
distinctions between one form of capitalism and another--distinctions,
for example between a Puritan-American-Hindutva-Neo-Liberal variety
and a more humane and accommodating European-Nehruvain-Welfarist one,
distinctions that the purism of theory may reject but that an
imaginative Left politics might embrace till its own strengths become
a real factor in recasting the debate, the choices, and the historical
consequences thereof.

Clearly, before the organised Left hopes to play a lead role in
gathering the many forces of resistance into effective nationwide
pheno-mena, it would need to set an example by first striving to
achieve a credible unity/merger of the many Left organisations. The
new General Secretary of the CPI-M has said in response to a query
that such unity/merger can happen only when the reasons for the split
of 1964 are first understood. Logical take, but is there anybody today
in a Communist Party who has not understood why all that happened, and
is there today any persuasive reason to think that those
considerations still obtain? So, we say, nothing would put the new
General Secretary on so historic a footing as an honest endeavour
without loss of time and without prevarication to first obtain as a
task the reunification of the CPI-M and the CPI, leading to embracing
unity/merger with other major Left organisations like the CPI-ML.
Speaking of the projected Organisational Plenum, nothing would
electrify the Left in India generally as such unity/merger, because
the lack of effort in that direction leaves most to conclude that
other things are of greater importance to the organised Left than
advancing the fight against capitalist oppression. Indeed, some of us
have argued that, post-the ascendance of a qualitatively different
Rightwing in India, we may be facing a Dimitrov moment, calling upon
all sections and varieties of the Left to furnish first a United Front
and then an Indian Pople's Front to beat back the unprecedented
offensive.

Am I, therefore, offering a recipe for the emaciation of the
Party-Left? I do not think so; I am, however, pleading for a
metamorphosis from a clan of cloistered and unspoilt purity into an
open house where uninhibited conversations among the broadly
like-minded translate into consequential interventions and movements
in many fields, and on many streets. The pure of mind always have
labels ready-to-hand to designate that which seems laden with one
impurity or the other; mine may well be designated "revisionism".
Frankly, things in the republic have gone too far for that to be
worrisome. Call me by what name you like, but ponder the heresy: you
never know what wicked branch may bear life-saving fruit.

Here is wishing the new General Secretary of the country's largest
Communist Party--someone I find personally warm, witty, receptive, and
charming--the very best of the time to come. He is a Communist who
might even get the better of the country's raucously inattentive and
blody-mindedly red-necked corporate media, as he usually does and will
need to so long as our "concrete conditions" of the now prevail.

The author, who taught English literature at the University of Delhi
for over four decades and is now retired, is a prominent writer and
poet. A well-known commentator on politics, culture and society, he
wrote the much acclaimed Dickens and the Dialectic of Growth. His
latest book, The Underside of Things--India and the World: A Citizen's
Miscellany, 2006-2011, came out in August 2012.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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