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Source:
http://leftvoice.org/Debate-in-the-Frente-de-Izquierda-United-Front-and-electoral-front

*Debate in the Frente de Izquierda: United Front and electoral front*

The Partido Obrero (PO - Workers’ Party) continues to develop its confusion
around the concept of the United Front. First there was Jorge Altamira’s
speech at the June 5 rally at the Ferrocarril Oeste stadium where the
presidential formula of Altamira-Giordano was launched, where he put a
position that we have polemicized against previously
<http://leftvoice.org/The-United-Front-as-a-justification-for-fighting-candidacies-820>.
Now, Gabriel Solano deepens this confusion in his “response” to our new
proposal for a common list to take to the PASO (first round of elections).

*Real differences and excuses for refusing a united ticket *

Among his arguments, Solano suggests that the actual problem of why it is
necessary to go to the PASO is because the PTS wants to “arbitrarily”
discuss the possibility of a candidacy by “Perro” Santillán. Solano
considers this discussion “arbitrary” because the PO has “already signed an
agreement [with Santillán] that goes a long way towards the defence of
socialist principles”.

However, we have never considered simply swearing an oath to “socialist
principles” to be a method of political integration into the Frente de
Izquierda y Trabajadores (FIT - Left and Workers’ Front). Our stand on this
question has always been clear. We start by welcoming the fact that
currents such as that around “Perro” Santillán, Pueblo en Marcha [People on
the March] and other organizations propose to support the FIT in the
elections. But we also maintain that for their integration into the FIT it
is necessary to “start both a common practice and a profound and serious
debate around the program of the Front”.

According to the PO, this would be “arbitrary”. But for us it is called
seriousness, because in reality it has everything to do with real
programmatic disagreements - not just generic “socialist principles”. The
PO even goes so far to say that these organizations have complete agreement
with the program of the FIT, a position that these organizations themselves
know not to be the case.

For example, from its foundation the FIT has clearly differentiated itself
from the so-called “post-neoliberal” governments of Evo Morales in Bolivia
or the Chavista government in Venezuela who speak of socialism, and it has
pointed out the need to expose these governments.

“Perro” Santillan and his current have referred critically to these
governments, as we have pointed out elsewhere. Yet at the delegate sessions
of the Municipal Workers’ Union (SEOM) Santillan announced the launch of
his “people’s party” with the slogan “Hacer como el Evo” (“Do it like Evo”).

Pueblo en Marcha has also clearly raised this discussion. Starting with
their characterization of the “advanced experiences of struggle elsewhere,
such as the Bolivarian process, Podemos or SYRIZA”, they suggest that a
“differentiation” “with respect to the sectarian characterization on the
part of the various forces of the FIT” is necessary. According to them it
is “sectarian” to clearly point out the character of these governments.
They also argue that the FIT “tends to interpret [these experiences] as
being subjected to Bonapartist leaderships that hinder the
self-organisation of the working class and popular sectors, retard their
political maturation, generate confusion and create false expectations
around political alliances that are incapable, due to their class
composition, of moving to socialism”. Indeed, this is precisely what the
program of the FIT suggests.

At the same time, it is not by chance that the PO hides the fact that
members of Pueblo en Marcha support the “Cuidad Futura” (City of the
Future) list in Rosario (in Santa Fe province), a list that is competing
with the FIT and has a political profile that has nothing to do with
upholding working class political independence.

Not to mention the current of Comunismo Revolucionario (Revolutionary
Communism - a Maoist organisation) which explicitly says: “we adopt the
tactical position of supporting the FIT in these elections, not on the
basis of the founding program of the FIT - which logically is of a
Trotskyist character - but of its campaign program. . .”.

It does not seem very “arbitrary” to say that we have programmatic
differences which require both an in-depth discussion, as well as common
practice, before these organizations can be incorporated into the FIT. What
is truly arbitrary is PO’s desire to try to link this discussion with the
need to go to the PASO with separate lists. This is because what we have
advanced within the FIT over the last few days is exactly in accordance
with the common method that has been developed regarding possible
candidacies of groups or individuals that support the FIT.

According to Article Seven of the rules for the PASO, rules agreed to by
all the parties of the FIT long before the publication of Gabriel Solano’s
article: “no list may be submitted with candidates at the top of the lists
or in prominent positions who belong to political organizations that are
not members of the Frente de Izquierda y de los Trabajadores, except with
the agreement of all the parties that make up the alliance”.

Having won a common method on this matter, the arguments of the PO can only
be seen as a new excuse for their outright rejection of our proposal to
take a united list of the FIT to the PASO.

Another of their excuses is the attack on the magazine Ideas de Izquierda
(Ideas of the Left), the only ideological mass-circulation publication of
Marxist debate linked to the FIT, a fact publicly acknowledged by allies,
adversaries and enemies alike. According to Solano “the PTS facilitates a
United Front in the only field where it is impermissible: in the
theoretical and ideological field, where it is necessary to clarify
positions and not confuse them in alliances with sectors outside of the
class struggle and socialism”. Is not Ideas de Izquierda, in many cases, a
united ideological front with anyone from ‘democratizing’ intellectuals all
the way to liberals and socialists from the Chair of the Academy?”

We remind Solano that the editorial committee of Ideas de Izquierda is made
up of, in addition to members of the PTS, intellectuals who have subscribed
to the program of the Frente de Izquierda from its foundation. On the other
hand, he would do well to read the magazine in order to verify that it
contains important debates, and that writers from outside the editorial
committee, always write their articles in the name of an “open forum”,
which clearly does not imply any sort of “united front”.

*The United Front and the political-electoral front*

The Partido Obrero is sliding towards a more openly opportunistic
interpretation of the United Front tactic elaborated by the Third
International, which obliges us to clarify this question. Here, we are
going to focus on two fundamental errors that Solano has raised.

First mistake: The PO says that “according to the PTS, ‘United Fronts’ are
valid for the “class struggle”, but not for elections, thus announcing the
possibility of a socialist politics that are not based inthe class
struggle. This is a blunder, on the one hand, and a concession to
anarchism, on the other”.


The United Front is a tactic designed for intervention in the class
struggle. It is not an invention of the PTS. Its origins and significance
in the Third International were well understood by Trotsky, who pointed out
in regard to the United Front in Germany in the early 1930s: “election
agreements, parliamentary compromises concluded between the revolutionary
party and the Social Democracy serve, as a rule, to the advantage of the
Social Democracy. Practical agreements for mass action, for purposes of
struggle [our emphasis], are always useful to the revolutionary party”.

As if this was not enough, he went on to emphasize: “No common platform
with the Social Democracy, or with the leaders of the German trade unions,
no common publications, banners, placards! March separately, but strike
together! Agree only how to strike, whom to strike, and when to strike!”
(“For a Workers’ United Front Against Fascism”, 1931).

For Trotsky, the appropriate arena for the United Front is not in electoral
agreements but “mass action, for purposes of struggle”. Following in the
tradition of the Third International, Trotsky clearly differentiates
between the two: “strike together” and “march separately”, not as the PO
seems to suggest: “strike (or not strike) together” and “march together”.

Second error: According to the PO “Trotsky called for the development of
Committees of Actionof the United Front for the election campaign (Whither
France?). This is what socialist politics on the electoral field consist
of”. Here the confusion reaches its highest point. It is necessary to
clarify for the reader that the electoral campaign referred to by the PO is
the French Popular (or People’s) Front of 1936 where the Communist Party
joined with the reformists of the Socialist Party and part of the Radical
Party, a party which had historically been responsible for French colonial
oppression. The PO mentions this fact in the article but hardly notices its
significance.


What do the Committees of Action of the French Popular Front (which Trotsky
considered to be a “coalition of the proletariat with the imperialist
bourgeoisie, in the shape of the Radical Party and smaller tripe of the
same sort”) have to do with the Frente de Izquierda that is an alliance of
parties for working class independence? Trotsky said that the pronouncement
of the Stalinists in favour of the development of “elected Committees of
Action as the mass support for the People’s Front” was “the only
progressive idea in the entire resolution” on the Popular Front. He then
clarifies: “But precisely for this reason the Stalinists do nothing to
realize it. They dare not do so for fear of breaking off collaboration with
the bourgeoisie”. (“For Committees Of Action, Not the People’s Front” from
Whither France?, 1936).

As cited above, Trotsky was very precise on the contours of the United
Front in Germany in the 1930s (“March separately, but strike together”)
when he was fighting Stalinism which refused any sort of United Front. He
was just as precise when it came to France years later when Stalinism
fostered, in the name of the United Front, open collaboration with the
imperialist bourgeoisie. [1]

It is without doubt a discussion taken out of context by “chance”, which at
the very least demonstrates Solano’s inconsistency when it comes to
theoretical discussion.

Contrary to what Gabriel Solano says, Trotsky never spoke of the need to
“develop Committees of Action of the United Front for the election
campaign” as a way of intervening in the “electoral field”. Committees of
Action were precisely for breaking the paralysis of the class struggle that
the Popular Front imposed on it. The question is one of forming “Committees
of Action” that raise the United Front in the field of action in the class
struggle, and raise it against the orientation of the Popular Front which
leads workers to paralysis, subordinating them to the bourgeoisie and
raising their illusions in electoral developments. The question consists of
changing the field of intervention of the United Front from elections to
the class struggle, with the same logic that we have mentioned in the first
point, that is, by defeating the Popular Front.

Trotsky himself said: “However it would be a mistake to think that it is
possible at a set day and hour to call the proletarian and petty-bourgeois
masses to elect Committees of Action on the basis of a given statute. Such
an approach would be purely bureaucratic and consequently barren [. . .] In
question here is not the formal democratic representation of all and any
masses but the revolutionary representation of the struggling masses. The
Committee of Action is an apparatus of struggle”. (“For Committees Of
Action, Not the People’s Front” from Whither France?, 1936).

Faced with this Solano can only repeat that intervention in the elections
is a political struggle. Well OK, but when Trotsky (in the text quoted by
Solano) speaks of “Committees of Action” as an “apparatus of struggle”, he
does not refer to these “apparatus” as ones for electoral struggle, but of
ones for fighting fascism. And yes, although Solano does not like it,
Trotsky is speaking of “direct action”.

“Committees of Action” have nothing to do with mere committees for taking
part in the election campaign of 1936. What were the tasks of these
“Committees” according to Trotsky? “In any case the mass movement, that has
today run up against the barrier of the People’s Front, will be unable to
move forward without the Committees of Action. Such tasks as the creation
of workers’ militia, the arming of the workers, the preparation of a
general strike, will remain on paper if the struggling masses themselves,
through their authoritative organs, do not occupy themselves with these
tasks. Only Committees of Action born in the struggle can assure a real
militia numbering fighters not by the thousand but the tens of thousands”.
(“For Committees Of Action, Not the People’s Front” from Whither France?,
1936).
This is a long way from the ludicrous (and electoral) interpretation
suggested by Solano, who incidentally, would do well to actually read the
texts referred to above.

Having clarified these two errors, we need to ask: why is the arena of the
United Front in the action of the class struggle and not in electoral
campaigns? It is not because of some whim of Trotsky or the PTS. It is
because the United Front tactic (which is not a strategy as Altamira seems
to contend) directly poses the unity of the working class in its
confrontation with the bourgeoisie, overcomes and goes beyond the divisions
imposed by the bureaucracy (both political and union), is the form whereby
workers can gain experience in action alongside their reformist and
bureaucratic leaderships, and is where revolutionaries can demonstrate that
they are the most consistent and decisive, and so can advance their
influence as a product of this common experience. This is why Trotsky noted
that agreements in the electoral field favor the reformists and agreements
for action favor revolutionaries who have “everything to win”.

In the Frente de Izquierda there are no reformists; the Frente raises a
program of class independence, calls for a workers’ government and
differentiates itself from bourgeois currents such as those of Evo Morales
and Hugo Chavez. This makes the FIT a progressive front. The PTS defends
the program of the FIT tooth and nail against any attempt to dilute it,
while at the same time, it is willing to develop any and all agreements
that we can in the class struggle, that involve precise actions, with
sectors or leaderships that do not and are not required to agree with the
program of the FIT.

To confuse the United Front with a political-electoral bloc is to strip
away everything that is fundamental to the United Front, whose key is joint
action for precise objectives within the class struggle, from a
political-electoral bloc that is defined precisely by its program. The
consequence is to transform both in the direction of opportunistic politics.
*Notes*

[1] So much so that Perry Anderson, along with many of those who defend the
struggle of Trotsky in Germany, believe that in France (and in Spain)
Trotsky was sectarian and abandoned his defense of the United Front. These
views are based precisely on their misunderstanding of the United Front and
comparing it to political-electoral blocs. So Anderson says of Trotsky:
“whereas his essays on Germany emphasized the imperative need to win the
petty-bourgeoisie to an alliance with the working class (citing the example
of the bloc against Kornilov in Russia), his essays on the Popular Front in
France dismissed the traditional organization of the local
petty-bourgeoisie, the Radical Party, as merely a party of ’democratic
imperialism’ that must on principle be excluded from any anti-fascist
alliance”. (Considerations on Western Marxism)Translation: Sean Robertson
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