Marv:
Catching up to prior mails. I noted - but did not reply to - this following 
query from you on Jan 15th:
MG wrote:
"The CPUSA under the Comintern's direction elevated this organizing principle 
to political support for the Democrats through the New Deal and WWII until the 
postwar onset of the Cold War. It was strongly criticized by Trotsky and his 
supporters. Am I wrong to assume from what you have written that you would also 
have opposed this policy?"

HK response
I must assume that you are referring somehow to the incident known as the 
'Duclos letter". Am I correct? I am a little unclear of the relationship of 
this incident to Trotsky - since Trotsky's death was in August 1940. The 
'Duclos Letter' came in 1945.

On the assumption I am, until corrected or otherwise - I will reply with some 
views of this incident. We have not yet had the time needed to update this, 
although more information is now available since this fragment that follows was 
compiled. However. . .

The incident of the 'Duclos Letter' followed the dissolution of the Comintern.
Freed of the 'restraints' of the Comintern, some Communist Parties lapsed 
almost immediately into open revisionism.

The Formulation of Earl Browder (1944-45)
In 1944, the leader of the Communist Party of the United States of America, 
Earl Browder, initiated the adoption by the Party of a totally revisionist 
programme. He presented the agreement between the Soviet Union and the Western 
imperialist powers at Teheran as an indication that interclass antagonisms had 
been eliminated, and that American capitalism could be peacefully transformed 
into socialism by class collaboration through the institutions of "American 
democracy". Browder further put forward the view that:

" . . . the two-party system provides adequate channels for the basic 
democratic rights",
(Earl Browder, in: Philip J. Jaffe: 'The Rise and Fall of Earl Browder', in: 
'Survey', Volume 18, No, 2 (Spring 1972); p. 50).
so that the existence of the Communist Party had become an obstacle to national 
unity!

Under Browder's leadership, the 10th Convention of the CPUSA in May 1944 
dissolved the Party and reconstituted it as the 'Communist Political 
Association', the aim of which was to carry on 'political education' to make 
the public understand that the peaceful transition to 'socialism', through the 
nationalisation of monopolistic enterprises, was socially desirable. The CPA's 
constitution states:
"The Communist Political Association is a non-party organisation of Americans 
which . . . carries forward the tradition of Washington, Jefferson, Paine, 
Jackson and Lincoln. . . .
It looks to the family of free nations, led by the great coalition of 
democratic capitalist and socialist states, to inaugurate an era of world 
peace, expanding production and economic well-being".
(Communist Political Association: Constitution, in: Philip J. Jaffe: ibid.; p. 
51).

William Foster, who was opposed to Browder's Teheran theses (though not to the 
liquidation of the Communist Party), wrote to Dimitrov asking for his support 
in opposing Browder, but Dimitrov wrote back supporting Browder:
"Dimitrov transmitted a message to Foster, through Browder, strongly  urging 
him to withdraw his opposition. Dimitrov's reply was a severe blow to Foster, 
who did not attack Browder's Teheran theses again for more than a year".
(Philip J. Jaffe: ibid,; p. 47-48).

Foster was:
". . . so cowed by the almost unanimous opposition of his critics and by 
Dimitrov's reply that he asked for the honour of nominating Earl Browder as 
President of the new Communist Political Association. And he himself was 
elected as one of the Vice-Presidents".
(Phlip J. Jaffe: ibid.; p. 51).

In the April 1945 issue of 'Cahiers du Communisme' (Notebooks of Communism), 
the theoretical journal of the French Communist Party there appeared, under the 
title 'On the Dissolution of the Communist Party of the USA', an article 
attributed to the leading French communist Jacques Duclos and highly critical 
of Browderism. The main points of his criticism were:
"Earl Browder declared, in effect, that at Teheran capitalism and socialism had 
begun to find the means of peaceful . . . collaboration in the framework of one 
and the same world. . . . Earl Browder drew political conclusions . . . that 
the,principal problems of internal politics of the US must in future be solved 
exclusively by means of reforms, for the expectation of unlimited inner 
conflict threatens also the perspective of international unity held forth at 
Teheran". (Jacques Duclos: 'On the Dissolution of the Communist Party of the 
USA', in: Philip J. Jaffe: ibid.; p. 53).

Thus, charged the article, Browder had distorted the meaning of the Teheran 
declaration:
" . . . into a political platform for class peace in the United States".
(Jacques Duclos: ibid., p. 53).

The article dismissed Browder's claim that nationalisation of monopolies was 
equivalent to socialism:
"Nationalisation of monopolies actually in no sense constitutes a socialist 
achievement. . . . It is not simply a matter of reforms of a democratic 
character, achievement of socialism being impossible to imagine without a 
preliminary conquest of power".
(Jacques Duclos: ibid.; p. 54).

Finally, the article strongly criticised the dissolution of the Communist Party:
"Earl Browder proposed to name the new organisation 'Communist Political 
Association' which, in the traditional American two-party system, will not 
intervene as a 'party', that is, it will not propose candidates in the 
elections . . . but will work to assemble a broad progressive and democratic 
movement within all parties".
(Jacques Duclos: ibid.; p. 53).

Although the article bore Duclos's signature, it was in fact written in Moscow, 
almost certainly under the guidance of Andrey Zhdanov:
"It is . . . clearly evident that the so-called 'Duclos article'; could not 
have been written in France, but was written in Moscow, probably under the 
guidance of Andrey Zhdanov". (Philip A. Jaffe: op. cit; p. 59).

Following the circulation of the 'Duclos Letter', at a Special Emergency 
Convention of the CPA on 26-28 July 045, a resolution was adopted to 
reconstitute the CPUSA, headed by a temporary Secretariat. In February 1946 
Browder was expelled from the reconstituted party and in July 1946 Eugene 
Dennis* was elected General Secretary.

In a yet unfinished piece I follow the ramifications of this into the CP Canada 
with Tim Buck - and of course the far more well known thrust of this into the 
CPGB with Harry Pollitt.

I am sure Marv, you will let me know if I have not in fact, addressed your 
question.
Be Well,
H


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