Elections, the state, reform and revolution

http://www.politicalaffairs.net/elections-the-state-reform-and-revolution/

by: John Bachtell
June 23 2014

tags: electoral arena, US history, democratic struggles, peaceful
transition, Communist Manifesto

A major electoral battle is shaping up in November that will determine
the political terrain of struggle for the next period. Some on the
left are less than enthusiastic about throwing themselves into this
battle, not seeing any difference between Democrats and Republicans
and the viability of change through elections dominated by the
two-party system.

This approach doesn't see the need for multi-class united front
electoral alliances and the strategic objective of a decisive defeat
of right wing extremism. But perhaps lying much deeper is the idea
that radical change and the revolutionary transition to socialism will
not occur via the electoral path.

In this view, socialism will be ushered in via a general strike during
a crisis of capitalism. The capitalist state will be smashed in one
blow and a socialist state established in its place. Some see change
only through force and violence based on their understanding of the
Russian or Cuban revolutions, or even our Civil War.

The CPUSA has long argued against this mischaracterization of history
and its implications for our path to US socialism because it has
nothing to do with contemporary realities and institutions, or with
the traditions and history of democratic struggles. In addition,
arguments that place violence as the principle - and only - means to a
socialist United States undermine mass democratic involvement. This
approach will never win majority support among the American people.
Such notions reinforce ruling class stereotypes of communists.

The CPUSA has long said the transition to US socialism will be much
more prolonged and complex. The left's challenge is to involve the
active participation of the overwhelming majority of Americans. Just
like the socialist society we envision - peaceful, humane and
democratic - so too must be the path as it will shape every aspect of
the new society.

Marx and Engels foresaw the possibility of peaceful transition
particularly under conditions of the democratic or bourgeois republic.
Engels wrote in Critique of the Erfurt Program: "One can conceive that
the old society may develop peacefully into the new one in countries
where representatives of the people concentrate all power in their
hands, where, if one has the support of the majority of the people,
one can do as one sees fit in a constitutional way; in democratic
republics such as France and the USA..."

Even Lenin initially thought a peaceful transition to workers' and
peasants' power in Russia would be possible as a result of the crisis
brought on by WWI, but the armed intervention of western imperialist
powers changed the course of history.

THE STATE

Such a process inevitably raises the question: Can the state in the
stage of monopoly capitalism, be an arena of class struggle? Can the
working class make inroads, gain power and even transform the state
for its own purpose?

The state is the form where a class asserts its common interests and
includes the legislature, the judiciary and the armed forces as well
as the executive. A revolutionary transition under conditions of
advanced monopoly capitalism is exceedingly complex where the
capitalist state is far more developed. Its institutions, the
ideological, bureaucratic and coercive apparatus have undergone
centuries of development. How a struggle is conducted against the most
heavily armed and powerful ruling class in history is no small matter.

The contest for power involves winning the ideological and political
battle in civil society and the institutions of state as well, chief
among them the democratic legislative arena. With the decisive
conquest of political power, the working class will use this power to
"wrest by degrees all capital from the bourgeoisie, to centralize all
instruments of production in the hands of the state..." wrote Marx and
Engels in the Communist Manifesto.

The state it seems is not smashed but "reshaped" (in the words of
Engels) in accordance with the balance of class and social forces from
an instrument of class oppression and repression, into one of
liberation. In the process the state is transformed, and the
foundations are laid for its eventual withering away.

In this view, power is attained through democratic means, through the
working class electing its representatives to legislative bodies and
through political action, including strikes and demonstrations.
Democratic institutions are transformed in the process - existing ones
become more democratic and new ones arise to extend and deepen
participation.

Political power is wielded to transform the state apparatus at every
level, even while the economy is dominated by monopoly capital.
Curbing monopoly power restricts their ability to resist, obstruct and
use violence against a revolutionary working class movement.

The working class can redirect social development by embarking on a
path of converting the economy from one dependent on fossil fuels to
one based on renewable resources, while retrofitting buildings and
homes and rebuilding and modernizing the infrastructure; from one
based on militarization to one used for peaceful purposes.

It can radically expand investment in the public sector, including
education and public health care systems, public parks and recreation
and the arts, establishing public banks, utilities and cooperatives;
redistribute wealth through progressive taxation; and expand
democratic rights and end discriminatory practices. It can also begin
the process of demobilizing the repressive apparatus of the state, by
instituting new policies that democratically control the police and
begin demobilizing the standing army, implementing a peaceful foreign
policy and dismantling or destroying weapons of mass destruction.

The ability to carry out such reforms, their scale and scope, depends
on the social and class balance of forces. The more favorable they are
for the working class, the more radical the reform and change.

EXPANDING ELECTORAL PARTICIPATION

Marx foresaw the possibility of achieving socialism through universal
suffrage. "A historical development can remain 'peaceful'" wrote Marx,
"only for so long as its progress is not forcibly obstructed by those
wielding social power at the time. If in England, for instance or the
United States, the working class were to gain a majority in Parliament
or Congress, they could, by lawful means, rid themselves of such laws
and institutions as impeded their development, through they could only
do so insofar as society had reached a sufficiently mature
development."

Given the development of democratic institutions and traditions in the
US, involvement in the electoral arena and political action is
essential and grows in importance. It entails building broad
anti-ultra right, reform and anti-monopoly coalitions that win
majorities and thus power in every democratic institution e.g., school
boards, planning boards, city council, county boards, state
legislature, federal office, in "red" and "blue" states.

The process underway in Central and South America, where socialist
oriented movements are in power and aim to lead a transition to
socialism (i.e., Venezuela, Brazil, Nicaragua, El Salvador, etc), is
particularly relevant to our reality. Revolutionary transformation is
proving infinitely more complex and protracted than many appreciated.
Victories are won by degrees, beginning with small reforms and leading
to more radical ones which gradually supplant market capitalism with
socialist oriented policies.

This type of transition is by and large peaceful, utilizing the
democratic structures and mobilizing millions, notwithstanding the
provocations and resistance of the domestic corporate class and US
imperialism.

There are important electoral victories that can be built upon in the
U.S., including the historic Obama victories and in New York City
where the new progressive reform mayor and city council are
challenging income inequality, school privatization and the city's
stop-and-frisk/racial profiling policies. Other progressive victories
including the election of Ras Baraka as mayor of Newark, the election
of socialist Kshama Sawant in Seattle and the sweep of labor
candidates in Lorain, Ohio, raise the possibility for initiating broad
reforms.

These advances, including the emergence of a labor led third party,
are possible through greater activism in the electoral arena. This
requires the expansion of voter rights, including restoring them for
those presently and previously incarcerated, building a grassroots
independent voter education and mobilization apparatus - and left
candidacies. Likewise expansion of the democratic process will ease
restrictions on third parties and limit the power of money. The "Move
to Amend" fight to repeal Citizen's United is essential.

All this underscores the key political task addressed by our 30th
national convention - an all out effort to build the broad labor led
democratic movement and build the Party in all directions. But this
can't be separate and apart from involving the Party and the mass
movements in the 2014 elections to defeat right wing extremism.

John Bachtell was elected national Chair of the Communist Party USA at
its recent convention in Chicago in June.

Photo: union rally, Harrisburg, PA May 2011      Ben Sears/PA
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