Volume 13, No. 41, 2 October 2014



In this Issue:

*        <http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4518#redpen> Deepen and advance
our second radical phase of our revolution

 


 

 


Red Alert:

 

Deepen and advance the second radical phase of our revolution



 

SACP Statement at SADTU National Congress

Delivered by 

General Secretary, Comrade Blade Nzimande

 

Thursday, 2 October 2014

 

National Office Bearers and leaders of SADTU from all levels present here
today;

Alliance leaders present here today;

Distinguished delegates;

Esteemed guests; 

 

Dear Comrades, 

 

Allow me for and on behalf of our Central Committee to convey revolutionary
greetings from the South African Communist Party. We would like to thank you
for your invitation to share our perspectives with you here today, on behalf
of the entire membership of our Party, guided by the theme of your Congress:

 

'Restore the character of SADTU as a union of revolutionary professionals,
agents of change and champions of people's education for people's power in
pursuit of socialism!'

 

Dear comrades, 

 

In the last 20 years of our democracy we have achieved major, and indeed
radical transformations and redistributive advances.

 

We dislodged the apartheid regime through the 1994 democratic breakthrough,
and laid down the foundations for the development of democracy and the
pursuit of economic and social transformation towards the achievement of the
goals of the Freedom Charter. To us as the SACP, and indeed to the entire
revolutionary working class movement, the successful completion of this
process of struggle must necessarily produce and lay the indispensable basis
for an advance to socialism. 

 

This is why we believe that the National Democratic Revolution is the
shortest, direct and most suited road to socialism in the historical context
and the specific conditions of our country. As the SACP we believe that by
advancing, deepening, intensifying and defending the struggle for socialism,
in the here and now, by systematically building its elements, momentum and
capacity for it, we are reinforcing and propelling the National Democratic
Revolution in the forward march to its logical, i.e. revolutionary,
conclusion.    

 

We are now 20 years into this journey, and our immediate task is to
eliminate the centuries and decades old damage caused by colonial conquests,
apartheid and imperialist exploitation; deepen democratic and advance social
and economic transformation; and raise the levels of the quality of life of
all our people, the majority of whom are the workers and the poor. This
requires us to complete the liberation of Africans in particular and Black
people in general from all the imbalances of the past, the chains and legacy
of class exploitation, national oppression and emancipate women from
patriarchy. All of those who enjoyed White supremacist domination, and still
react negatively towards the building of a united, democratic, non-racial,
non-sexist South Africa with prosperity for all, must also be liberated from
all forms of the racist false-consciousness.    

 

Since the early 1990s, our transition has tended to focused towards the
political and juridical terrain. It had as its critical moments: (1) the
1991-1994 multi-party negotiations that finally compelled agreement through
mass mobilisation and emphasised that a future constitution could only be
drawn up by a democratically elected Constituent Assembly; (2) the 1994
democratic electoral breakthrough itself; (3) and the consequent 1996
adoption of a new constitution. Through these processes we consolidated a
wide-range of laws, democratic institutions, and the de-racialisation of the
administrative apparatus of the state. This, constituting the core, but not
the only, elements of our first phase of transition, was itself radical - we
abolished white minority rule, i.e. politically, juridically and
constitutionally.  

 

Despite the many challenges that our revolution faced, this first phase of
our transition also served as a platform on which a massive socio-economic
redistributive programme was launched. Our achievements notably include:

 

*  More than 16 million (nearly one-third of all South Africans) are now
benefiting from a range of social grants - up from 3 million in 1994.

*  Over 7 million new household electricity connections have been made since
1996 - in the preceding century, successive white minority regimes only
electrified 5 million households on the basis of racist discrimination!

*  Over 3.3 million free houses have been built, benefiting more than 16
million people.

*  More than 1.4 million students have benefited from the National Student
Financial Aid Scheme in both public colleges and universities.

*  Over 9 million learners in 20 000 schools receive daily meals

*  Over 400 000 solar water heaters have been installed free on the rooftops
of poor households in the past 5 years - one of the largest such programmes
in the world.

 

There are many other major redistributive achievements in sanitation and
water connections, in adult basic education, in Grade R school enrolment, in
rolling antiretroviral HIV treatment, and much more.

 

Despite the advances we have achieved in the first phase of our transition,
and in many respects internationally unparalleled effort, we are faced with
a stubborn persistence of crisis levels of poverty, inequality and
unemployment, and, in class terms, the capitalist class has benefitted more
economically. There is more work that indeed needs to be done to take our
revolution forward, and to defend it. These two tasks are equally important.
Without one the other will not succeed.

 

In summary, dear Comrades, 

 

The first phase of our revolution marked a radical politico-juridical break
with the past; it abolished white minority state rule. The achievements of
this first phase need to be continuously advanced, deepened and defended.
However, the redistributive emphasis of this first phase was insufficiently
complemented by, or integrated into, a radical programme of transformation
of our productive economy and the systemic social, economic and spatial
features that support its colonially dependent growth path.  These are the
features that continue to reproduce crisis levels of unemployment,
inequality and poverty. This crisis is rooted primarily in the untransformed
character of our productive economy, which is characterised, among other
defining features, by:

 

*  High levels of private monopoly concentration, the domination of an
increasingly financialised mineral-energy-finance complex that reproduces a
weak manufacturing and SME sector; and 

*  Our economy's subordinate location in the global imperialist value chain
still as a producer of un-beneficiated mineral resources.

 

In addition, the emphasis on a top-down, state "delivery" of redistribution
has effectively demobilised the key popular bloc of forces, and has tended
to re-route energies into individualistic advancement, factionalism, or
anti-government protest. Some of these tendencies are manifested in the
challenges facing unity and cohesion in the progressive trade union movement
as led by COSATU.

 

What is the way forward? 

 

Let us advance the second, more radical phase of our transition!

 

The second, more radical phase of our transition must deepen the struggle
for a democratic non-racial society; the struggle for a democratic national
sovereignty - in other words the struggle to overcome our country's
semi-peripheral economic subordination within the global economy, and the
struggle for nation building - and in particular the struggle to forge the
social and economic material conditions for national unity - which means the
elimination of both the internal and external interacting dimensions of the
legacy of Colonialism of a Special Type.

 

This would require us to transform and expand production by industrialising
our economy through diversified manufacturing and by moving up the global
value chain through increased participation in high value added activities.
In this way we will be able to create the much needed jobs, reduce
unemployment and poverty, and enhance capacity for economic and social
transformation as well as for an inclusive, new growth path.

 

The industrialisation programme must be based on a state-led industrial
policy programme and with beneficiation of our mineral resources being a key
pillar, building on the platform of what remains our strategic advantages;
state local procurement policies are another key leverage. This programme
would require a decisive implementation of the major state-led strategic
infrastructure programme. As the Alliance we have agreed to the key elements
of this programme in the ANC's Manifesto for the Fifth General Election.
These were further streamlined in the State of the Nation Address by
President Jacob Zuma following our decisive victory. This includes an energy
mix as elaborated in the Manifesto. 

 

In order to support industrialisation, the key manufactured inputs for
infrastructure, including energy, must be manufactured locally.  And, in
order to support our strategic objective to transform our economy's basic
structure of production, we must use the infrastructure build programme to
radically transform the core-periphery internal and external dimensions of
the legacy of colonialism, apartheid imperialism. 

 

We must transform the mining sector, beneficiate our mineral resources and
breakaway with the excessive pit-to-port, export configuration of our basic
structure of production. In this regard the SACP reiterates its call for a
Multi-Stakeholder Mining Indaba on the transformation of the mining sector
and its alignment with our national development objectives for broader
economic and social transformation. 

 

We must also break the collusive conduct and market power of private
monopoly capital through a range of regulatory and other interventions, and
develop SMEs and Co-operatives around the industrialisation process. 

 

The second, more radical phase of our transition would require that we
transform our education and training system, including curriculum. Education
and training must be aligned with, and support, our developmental
imperatives and objective to develop, expand and diversify production, as
well as the entire vision of the Freedom Charter. This must contribute in
guiding our strategic goal to transform ownership and control in the
economy, to empower the people as a whole, as opposed to a narrow BEE which
only benefits a few. 

 

Critically, we also need to make inroads into the de-commodification of
productive work -  through a range of sustainable livelihood strategies,
and, in particular, through the massification and qualitative improvement in
the useful impact of public employment programmes such as the EPWP and CWP.
This must be guide by the strategic objective of progressively rolling out a
universal work guarantee scheme for the unemployed and under-employed.

 

A strategic approach to food security and food sovereignty - focussing on
breaking the market domination of agricultural, agro-processing and food
retail monopolies which are increasingly financialised and
transnationalised, is required. We need more effective regulation, through
re-building public sector support to farming, especially medium and
small-scale mixed farming, through research, veterinary services, market
support, localised storage and processing facilities, appropriate
infrastructure, etc. It is critical to align land reform programmes to a
sustainable productive perspective.

 

Further critical to all of this is the consolidation of a democratic
developmental state. Buttressed by popular people's power and constant
mobilisation, with the working class as the main motive force, this means a
state with strategic discipline and capacity. This is the key requirement to
lead a second radical phase of the NDR.  

 

The biggest threats to the consolidation of a democratic developmental state
are the inter-related challenges of fragmentation, bureaucratic inertia, the
loss of professional and technical capacity, corporate capture, corruption,
and the loss of a public service morality. All of these negative forces must
be combated! 

 

As a progressive trade union based in the public service, SADTU has a
critical role to play in this programme - and not only in basic education.
This would require the union to intensify the link between workplace and
community struggles, and encourage its members to be active in the
formations of our Alliance and Mass Democratic Movement. Being in a position
of strategic advantage as teachers, SADTU members can play a vital role
through activist involvement and by enhancing our capacity for political
education in our liberation movement. This would require, as Karl Marx once
put it, that the educators to be educated themselves. In this instance the
educators must be steeled in the revolutionary theory of our struggle. 

 

All of these strategic objectives considered, if we are to succeed:

 

We must rollback neoliberalism and transform the financial sector to serve
the people!

 

We must continue our struggle to roll back the neoliberal content of our
macrocosmic policy. Through liberalisation, deregulation and other
neoliberal measures, this contributed in the de-industrialisation that our
economy has suffered, dating back to the last years of apartheid during
which the privatisation of some of the important assets of the state such as
SASOL and Iscor was implemented. The 1996 Class Project's GEAR policy
worsened the process of de-industrialisation. 

 

This is partly why the SACP supports the last Alliance Summit declaration in
this and other respects, particularly the resolution to review the National
Development Plan based on the genuine concerns expressed by both the Party
and COSATU at that Summit. We will participate in the Task Team that has
been set up in terms of the declaration.                

 

Transforming the financial sector to serve the people would require a
strategic focus on, and re-orientation of, our Development Finance
Institutions whose mandates must be re-engineered. This programme must
include a further, decisive focus on industrial investment, prescribed
assets, trade union investment funds, and greater working class strategic
control over retirement funds. 

 

We must, as we do so, also pay attention on the possible influence and
corrupting effect of business unionism within the ranks of the trade union
movement in being unable to decisively take up issues on the developmental
use of union investment and workers retirement funds. Business unionism is
actually one of the major causes and drivers of the problems facing the
trade union movement today, and must be decisively tackled in all its
aspects.   

 

We must resolve the problems of exorbitant bank charges and irrational
interest rates. This must support investment in productive activity and
social transformation. 

 

We must eliminate the dichotomy of higher interest rates on credit and loans
for banks but less or nearly nothing, if anything at all, for consumers from
their savings and investments with such institutions. 

 

We must bring to an end the high cost of communication imposed mainly by the
major cell phone and broadband companies. 

 

The problems of housing evictions must be dealt with a decisive blow. 

 

Private monopoly and dominance must be finished off - currently the
financial sector in our country is dominated by a handful of players who
abuse their position. The sector must diversify - including through
socialised forms of ownership and control, such as, and most importantly,
co-operatives and public ownership through the state. This is why we must
move decisively in repositioning the Post Bank and leveraging the capacity
of the state to support its development as a fully-fledged bank with a
socially developmental mandate as opposed to the mainstream commercial banks
which are only interested in profiteering.

 

These are some of, i.e. not all, the measures that the SACP is taking
forward in its Financial Sector Campaign which is the focus of our Red
October Campaign for 2014-2015. 

 

In particular, the campaign also seeks to uproot the problems of unsecured
and reckless lending practices which are capable of causing a crisis as we
have seen with the ongoing global capitalist crisis that first erupted in
the USA. It is these same practices that have produced the implosion of
African Bank, followed by the hard-core, neoliberal "global" ratings agency,
Moody's downgrading all other South African Banks.   

 

The SACP has never regarded the views of ratings agencies as anything other
than self-interested advice to speculators. Moody's downgrading of banks in
the aftermath of the demise of African Bank had little to do with its
disapproval of speculative activity preying upon the poor, and everything to
do with its disappointment that the Reserve Bank's partial bail out and
restructuring of African Bank was not loaded entirely onto the South African
tax-payer, with major African Bank investors being forced to take a 10%
"haircut". 

 

As exposed by this downgrading, neoliberalism advocates for the state not to
intervene in the economy - but by this it is meant NO intervention for the
working class and the poor; in contrast, neoliberalism wants the state that
heavily intervenes in the economy on behalf of the capitalist class and the
rich. As the working class movement we must confront this head-on if we are
to safeguard our democracy and ultimately achieve a better life for all. 

 

Nevertheless, whatever Moody's reasoning, the fact is that the downgrade had
its origins in the reckless promotion of unaffordable lending to working
people and the poor. The SACP has noted that the involvement in one way or
another of so-called reputable banks (and retailers) in these practices, has
now emerged as a major threat to the reputation and credit-worthiness of the
country. Those commentators who have grown accustomed to blaming the
struggles of the working class for negative credit ratings must surely now
be obliged to acknowledge the role of speculative profit-seeking by
financial institutions.

 

The problem runs deeper than just the conventional financial institutions.
The symbiotic relationship between African Bank and Ellerines underlines the
degree to which wide swathes of our economy have become financialised.
Increasingly, major retailers in basic consumer lines like furniture,
clothing and food are gouging their profits not so much from what they sell
as from punitive interest on credit advanced.

 

Part of our struggle to transform the financial sector we must deal with the
problem and consequences of financialisation. 

 

Dear Comrades, 

 

Without discipline, unity and cohesion in each one of our organisations, and
in the entire progressive and revolutionary movement, let alone our struggle
to transform the financial sector, our second, more radical phase of
transition will not succeed. 

 

Let us defend the unity of all progressive and revolutionary forces of
change!

 

Let us defend the unity of SADTU and the unity of COSATU!

 

As the SACP we support the measures underway in our Alliance to defend the
unity of COSATU from disunity, fragmentation and a devastating disaster.

 

The SACP says: 'Workers of the World, Unite!'

 

Any behaviour to the contrary will only serve the interest of the enemies
and opponents of our revolution, the exploiters of the workers, and is
therefore counter-revolutionary! This is what the wedge drivers in the
ultimate analysis are serving, now on a full time basis.

 

The trade union movement in South Africa is facing an agenda to divide
workers and broader working class political organisation through
fragmentation and separatism which increasingly react negatively against our
Alliance. Progressives and revolutionaries have no option but to defend the
unity of the workers and to develop it further to become a formidable force
for change.

 

Dear Comrades,  

 

Ten years ago, on 9 October 2003, COSATU emerged from its 8th National
Congress with a programme titled 'Consolidating Working Class Power for
Quality Jobs - Towards 2015'. This became known as the 2015 Plan of the
federation. The programme, which is more relevant than ever before,
committed COSATU to the following:

 

1.     Systematic and rigorous implementation of an organisation building
programme, ensuring the recruitment of over four million members , by the
10th National Congress in 2009, with a united working class and depth of
organisation and militancy.

2.     Defending our political gains and space, in this regard the need for
strong ANC and SACP, rather than weakened Alliance partners.

3.     Deepening work to establish socialist forums as a platform where
debates on all major challenges facing the working class take place and at
the same time playing a major role in delivering membership education and
deepening the political consciousness of the working class on the ground.

4.     A large pool of cadres with organisational, political and ideological
depth.

5.     Working class leadership of the National Democratic Revolution,
including in the ANC and key organs of people's power.

6.     Stronger civil society, especially community-based organisations, and
stronger involvement of locals in local government and mobilisation.

7.     A stronger role for the working class and black women in the public
discourse, challenging the hegemony of capital on a larger scale.

8.     Clear measures to reverse rising unemployment, poverty and
inequality, ensuring that the share of the working class in national income
increases. In this context, increased capacity for affiliates to influence
sectoral and workplace restructuring policies.

9.     In that context, the need for a strong developmental and democratic
state to drive a growth and development strategy with a strong
redistributive thrust.

10.   Resurgence of the African trade union movement is essential and COSATU
must play a central role in developing the perspective of the international
trade union movement.

 

The programme clearly called for a worst case scenario, to be avoided, and
defined such as scenario as characterised by, in the main, the failure - to
systematically implement the 2015 Plan - entailing among others:

 

*  A rapid decline in membership to below 1 million by the 30th Anniversary
of COSATU in 2015.

*  The persistence of financial challenges, ultimately forcing a cutback in
our roles in the range of issues.

*  The coherence and unity of COSATU being undermined leading to splits.

*  The collapse of the Alliance and in that context the ANC and the SACP
also facing splits.

*  A full- blown "skorokoro" scenario as painted by the September Commission
Report.

 

The COSATU 2015 Plan clearly called for the unity of the trade union
movement. It set a tight timeframe of 2009 for unifying the three
federations in the country and for achieving the vision of
one-country-one-federation, one-industry-one-union. 

 

This year is the last year before 2015, we are looking forward to your
assessment of performance towards the achievement of the 2015 Plan. We are
equally interested in knowing the reasons why - where this is the case -
targets have not been achieved. 

 

There is new tendency, which is actually a factional line, suggesting that
COSATU is in the state of a "paralysis" and has as thus failed to implement
its last National Congress Resolutions. This factional line must be
confronted for what it is, a ploy to disunite the federation. Were the idea
objective, it would have went back to an objective assessment of the
implementation of COSATU's 2015 Plan given that 2015 is just around the
corner and tell us why the objectives and targets of the plan - where this
is the case - were not achieved during a decade and a year-long period since
2003!   

 

It is important to remark that by looking closely at the COSATU 2015 Plan
the major challenges facing the federation are revealed. The objectives we
have highlighted from the plan expose the fact that what COSATU is actually
facing is a hostile reaction towards this programme - the 2015 Plan. The
advocates of disunity are relentlessly attacking the objectives of the plan.
They are doing everything in their power to undermine and ensure that the
plan fails, now and beyond 2015.  

 

The COSATU 2015 Plan states in no uncertain terms that the federation must
avoid "The collapse of the Alliance and in that context the ANC and the SACP
also facing splits". In sharp contrast, the advocates of disunity are
driving COSATU to split both internally and from the Alliance. Historically,
this fits the mould of an external agenda. However, its external drivers
have found internal collaborators and expression within the ranks of our own
COSATU-led progressive trade union movement. 

 

The advocates of disunity are manoeuvring by all manner of tactics in order
to split the federation and split it from the Alliance. They displayed
determination to do everything that violates discipline to produce the
consequence of the disunity that they want. Revolutionaries must be careful
about this but be cautious to let loose of anarchy and destruction.
Revolutionary discipline must, however, remain essential. Without it there
cannot be unity and cohesion in a revolutionary movement! 

 

Let us defend our revolution from destruction by reactionary forces!

 

It is now open for all to see that that there is a co-ordinated agenda to
ferment destabilisation in our country, undermine democracy and dislodge the
ANC-led National Liberation Movement and Alliance. 

 

This is the context in which a right-wing parliamentary alliance led by the
party of apartheid, white privilege, the conservative-liberal DA, comprising
of a handful of other parties including the proto-fascist party led by the
most corrupt tenderpreneur, the plunderer of Limpopo, the so-called economic
freedom fighters, has been forged. The SACP has pointed it out long ago that
this, the EFF, was essentially a right-wing project masquerading as the
"left". Its alliance with the DA and other right-wing parliamentary parties
exposed character of its content.

 

This reactionary alliance of right-wing forces occurs in the backdrop of an
imperialist onslaught against our revolution and all progressive peoples of
the world, and must definitively be defeated. Its first programme has been
to turn parliament into theatre, disrupt its proceedings, and coalesce
around defending anarchy. This is coupled with efforts to seek to co-opt the
Public Protector's report into Nkandla to advance regime change. As an
attack not on an individual per se but on the ANC and our revolutionary
movement as a whole this agenda has expanded its activity. As we have seen
it is this very same agenda that displayed a middle finger to the Deputy
President in Parliament and advanced the failed "motion of no confidence"
against the Speaker. 

 

Our task against this regime change agenda must find profound expression in
all centres of power. Within the so-called civil society organisations and
the media this very same agenda is being entrenched rigorously - with the
childish disruption of Parliament projected as the so-called robust
engagement. We must go all out to ensure that this agenda fails with
distinction!

 

The SACP is looking forward to your decisive participation in this
programme, in the second, more radical phase of our struggle, in our
struggle for socialism. It is, fundamentally, against these struggles of our
people and the working class that the reactional DA-led right-wing
reactionary alliance has been forged. 

 

Let advance, deepen and defend our second, more radical phase of the
National Democratic Revolution!

 

Let us defend SADTU from the artilleries of destruction directed at it!

 

Let us defend COSATU from disunity, separatists and the forces of
fragmentation!

 

The SACP looks forward to SADTU as a reliant force in this struggle!

 

We wish your Congress all the success it needs! 

 

Thank you comrades! 

 

Issued by the SACP

 

http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4518

 

Contact 

Alex Mashilo - Spokesperson 

Mobile - 082 9200 308

Office - 011 339 3621/2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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