SACP with Red.png

 

South African Communist Party, 95th Anniversary Statement, 30 July 2016

 

SACP General Secretary

 

Cde Blade Nzimande

 

Speech to Rally at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality

 

 

Build a larger, activist, but quality SACP to drive the second, more radical
phase of our transition:

 

Towards an ANC electoral victory on our 95th Anniversary!

 

Honour the legacy and heroes of the SACP


 

It is fitting that the SACP celebrates its 95th anniversary here in Nelson
Mandela Bay on the eve of local government elections. It is fitting because,
in many ways, Nelson Mandela Bay is the place in which our revolutionary
alliance was truly forged into an unstoppable fighting force. It was here,
in the 1950s, in this vanguard city, that the ANC, the underground SACP, and
progressive trade unions under the umbrella of the South African Congress of
Trade Unions (SACTU) - the Congress of South African Trade Unions'
(COSATU's) predecessor, decisively advanced the cause of people's power.

 

There are many heroes that we honour from that period. Let me recall just
one - Vuyisile Mini, communist, ANC leader, trade unionist, founder MK
member, song-writer and martyr. It was in these neighbourhoods that the
17-year Mini campaigned against bus fare hikes and forced removals. It was
here that he worked as a labourer. It was here that he was a founder member
of the Stevedoring and Dockworkers Union. It was from here that he went on
to be a leader of the Metal Workers' Union.  It was here that he composed
and sang in his deep baritone voice his immortal songs: "Pasopa nansi
'ndondemnyama we Verwoerd".

 

On this 95th anniversary of the Communist Party in South Africa, we dip our
communist flag in your honour, Comrade Vuyisile Mini, in tribute to all our
heroes and martyrs from Port Elizabeth, from the Eastern Cape, from all over
our country.

 

Capitalists want us to forget history. Henry Ford, the American capitalist
once said: "History is Bunk". More recently the leading neo-liberal preacher
Francis Fukuyama declared "The end of History". Capitalists don't like
history. When they sell you a car, or a bag of mealie-meal, or a pair of
trousers, they want you just to see a commodity and a price tag. They don't
want you to see the history behind the making of that car, or the
mealie-meal, or those pants. Whose land was dispossessed to grow the
mealies? How many miners lost their health and even their lives to extract
the minerals that went into making the car? In what sweat-shops were your
clothes produced?

 

History lives on in the present. Past dispossession, genocide of indigenous
peoples, starvation wages all led to the accumulation of great wealth that
still remains and grows daily in the hands of monopolies. And that wealth is
used in the present to fund the election campaigns of parties like the DA.
That wealth is used to fund media outlets that pour scorn on progressive
movements. Newspapers that tell us we must forget history, that we must not
"play the race card", as they call it. But that wealth continues to support
the sons and daughters of the past beneficiaries of white minority rule and
colonialism. The weight of history in the present continues to reproduce
racialised inequality, poverty and unemployment.

 

That is why as the SACP on this, our 95th anniversary we remember history.
That is why we refuse to allow reactionaries, like the DA, to expropriate
and white-wash our memory of Tata Nelson Rohlihlahla Mandela. Yes, Madiba
rightly belongs to all South Africans, and to all of humanity. But Madiba is
not a tradable commodity, a Madiba-lite stripped of his revolutionary
history, stripped of his proud, inclusive African nationalism, stripped of
his solidarity with Cuba and the peoples of Palestine, stripped of his
hatred of oppression, stripped of his status as a founder member and leader
of Mkhonto we Sizwe, stripped of the people's movement that forged him.  

 

Let us remind those expropriators in the DA that it was Madiba himself in
2000 at a COSATU rally who described the DA as [we quote]: "a party of white
bosses and black stooges" [unquote]. Why doesn't the DA put that quote in
their TV adverts?

 

In remembering the SACP's history of 95 years, in remembering the colonial
and apartheid past of expropriation, oppression and exploitation, in
remembering the historic struggles - we are not being sentimental. Nor are
we resting on our past achievements.

 

Every single day, the SACP and its cadres have the duty to honour and to
live up to our 95 unbroken years of revolutionary struggle. Our vanguard
responsibility to lead the workers and poor of our country against the
ravages of monopoly capital is not a responsibility simply proclaimed, nor
is it pre-ordained and written in stone. Our vanguard role is not like
private wealth automatically passed down from one generation of Trollips to
the next generation of little Trollips. The vanguard role of the SACP is
something that has to be earned daily in struggle.

 

And this is why, amongst other things, over the past recent period the SACP
has been in the forefront of the struggle against the corporate capture of
the state. This is why the SACP has consistently spoken out against the
abuses occurring in the SABC. This is why the SACP has condemned the role of
Multi-Choice in subverting ANC and government policy. (Multi Choice, by the
way, is the direct off-spring of apartheid's leading propaganda organ,
Naspers). And this is why the SACP has fearlessly, and consistently, spoken
out against corruption and factionalism within our own movement, against
business-unionism in the labour movement, against money politics.

 

Advancing People's Power in our Communities

 

There are some who tell us that, in raising these matters, we are "rocking
the boat". They say: let us keep quiet until after the 3 August elections.
But we are not rocking the boat. We are steadying the ship. We firmly
believe that the electorate will show tremendous support for an ANC-led
alliance that speaks up without fear or favour against corruption, against
money politics, against factionalism, against corporate capture.

 

And this means that when we go to the polls on 3 August, let us do so with a
firm resolve to honour and build upon the wonderful slogan on our ANC
posters and pamphlets:  "Together, Advancing People's Power in Every
Community!"

 

Ensuring that we achieve overwhelming support for our ANC councillor
candidates on 3 August is an important step in taking forward the struggle
to advance and defend people's power in the communities of the working class
and the poor, in Metros, towns and villages. But popular power is not
advanced, consolidated and defended on one day. A vote for the ANC must not
be a blank cheque for this or that comrade councillor.

 

Let us rebuild shop-steward councils so that we forge once more the unity in
struggle of the work-place and the community. Let us participate actively in
school governing bodies. Let us support our local councillors, social
workers and the police in dealing with the scourge of crime and drugs. We
can do this through activism in street committees, neighbourhood watches, in
community policing forums. An ANC ward councillor who does not have the
support of popular power, through democratic ward committees, through social
movement activism, through our branch structures - is an ANC councillor who
will be isolated and who will inevitably fail or even be liable to give way
to the temptations of personal enrichment.

 

Let us build co-ops, let us create social conditions in which our stokvels
help to consolidate neighbourhood solidarity and protect poor communities
from the ravages of loan-sharks and unscrupulous debt collectors. Let us
expose the way in which Cash Paymaster and its network of blood-sucking
money-lenders are unscrupulously exploiting the beneficiaries of social
grants. Let us build a network of community food gardens, co-ops, and small
businesses in which community development and solidarity are the priorities
- not the accumulation of mega profits for the few. Let us build what we in
the SACP call local solidarity economies as part and parcel of "Together,
Advancing People's Power in Every Community!"

 

A heroic history of the SACP: The foundations and evolution of our
revolutionary alliance

 

The SACP, the oldest and largest Communist Party on the African continent,
the second largest political organisation in South Africa by audited
membership and the oldest political movement after the African National
Congress (ANC), is today reaching 95 years of age. The Central Committee of
the SACP on behalf of our ever growing membership, now well over 250
thousand, is saying happy birthday SACP happy birthday!

 

Today as the SACP we are officially launching our celebration of this
important milestone, our 95 years of unbroken struggle against colonial
oppression, inclusive of apartheid; the struggle against capitalist
exploitation; the struggle against imperialist domination; the struggle for
liberation and social emancipation of the working class; the struggle to end
patriarchal domination of women; the struggle for socialism, on the eve of
the fifth democratic local government elections since our April 1994
democratic breakthrough.

The SACP has fought for democracy in our country as an independent political
party. It was the first political organisation to be banned in our country,
in 1950, immediately after the introduction of the apartheid regime
following the victory of the National Party in a racist election on 26 May
1948.

 

Other political organisations were banned ten years later, from 1960. At
that time our Party, which amended its name in 1953 from the founding name
of the Communist Party of South African (CPSA) to the current name of the
SACP in the face of the Suppression of Communism Act under which it was
banned altogether with its literature and the Young Communist League, had
already built underground and clandestine organisational experience as a new
pillar of our struggle. This capacity became an important resource for the
rest of our ANC-led national liberation movement.

 

Also, with our entire liberation movement banned after 1960, the SACP both
as an independent political organisation and the South African component of
the world Communist Movement, played a pivotal role when the whole of our
national liberation movement was forced to go to and organise the struggle
in exile. At that time, imperialist Western powers, the United States and
its Western European allies, listed not only the SACP but also the ANC and
branded all of us the so-called terrorist organisations, in addition
prohibiting any assistance towards our just struggle. Resources in waging
our struggle came from the world socialist bloc with the SACP facilitating
access and the Soviet Union playing a central role.   

 

As Communists, we did not form the SACP as a separate party opposed to other
revolutionary and progressive organisations of our people. We have fought
for democracy in our country both as an independent political party of the
working class and in alliance with the ANC and the progressive trade union
movement. We have dedicated our time and expended our energy and resources
to build both ANC and the progressive trade union movement and fostered our
historical alliance with them.

 

No other political party in this country parallels the outstanding work of
the SACP in building and defending the ANC and the progressive trade union
movement initially as led by the SACTU and then the COSATU. We have worked
together with both of these mass organisations of our people to build other
mass democratic formations and weld them together in our country's mass
democratic movement that dealt a blow to the apartheid regime.

 

Let us use this august occasion, the 95th anniversary of our Party, the SACP
to celebrate our outstanding contribution in the history of the struggle of
our people to overthrow colonial oppression!

 

Let us underline the importance of, and celebrate the role played by the
1928 Communist International resolution on the South African question.

 

This year marks the 88th anniversary of that resolution that commonly became
known as the Black or Native Republic Thesis. Many things have changed since
that resolution was adopted. The development of our current theory of the
National Democratic Revolution (NDR) - but also with its own foundations in
that resolution -further elaborated several changes. However, there are
fundamental tenets that remain relevant.

 

It was that resolution that first and foremost introduced the principle of a
republic based on a democratic majority rule with equal rights for all races
as the immediate way forward for South Africa. Equally important, the
resolution laid the foundation for the establishment and development of our
alliance as we know it today - this based on transforming the ANC to become
a fighting national revolutionary organisation against both the domestic and
imperialist exploiter and oppressor classes, as well as based on the
progressive trade union movement and peasant organisations.

 

Our current political programme, the South African Road to Socialism,
essentially has its fundamental tenets also laid out in that resolution to
make South Africa a republic based on a democratic majority rule with equal
rights for all races. It is this resolution - based on the alliance as it
established it - that tasked the SACP to systematically develop working
class and Communist leadership working together with and in the democratic
mass movement of our people while remaining and deepening its independence.


 

The independence of the SACP as a working class party is the basic condition
for engaging in alliances. No alliance can ever serve as a substitute for
the independent existence, political programme and expression of the Party.
By their very nature alliances are established to pursue common objectives.
They do not represent the totality of the objectives and the historical
missions of each partner respectively.

 

Therefore without its independence, the SACP as a working class party will
not engage effectively both inside and outside of any single alliance for
that matter. This is why both the present and the future of the Party depend
on its own independence to start with, above all else. The Communist Party
cannot therefore take a single decision relying on other class forces or
organisations for a successful implementation of that resolution. Similarly,
both our present and the future depend on our own independent capacity to
push forward the struggle towards the ultimate goal of working class
emancipation through a socialist transition to communism. There is just no
other class force that can be entrusted with this historical mission!

 

Let us build a larger but quality SACP and develop its vanguard role!

 

The NDR still remains our most direct route to socialism. It still requires
a multi-class political front lead, capable of uniting revolutionary and the
most progressive forces, with the working class at the head.

 

For the SACP to continue developing and to play its vanguard role in the
current period it must be bigger, so that it is able to have its presence
felt in all key sites of power and influence in our society. It is therefore
important that as we celebrate our 95th anniversary we commit to
intensifying recruitment and political education with a particular focus on
organised workers but as well as unorganised workers who we must
furtherrecruit for COSATU affiliates. However, it is important that the SACP
recruits and build its structures in all the key sites of struggle and power
in society, in the economy, the community, the workplace, the ideological
terrainand other spheres of societal activity.

 

It is also important that the SACP must pre-occupy itself with the building
of strong and progressive civic movement, through residents associations
that must help to strengthen and revitalise the South African National
Civics Organisation (SANCO). The working class must concern itself with the
building of a vibrant civic movement that is capable of advancing the
interests of the working class in its own residential areas. It is also in
this sphere that we must seek to expand the membership of the SACP, and be
able to elaborate its positions and programmes.

 

If the task of the ANC today is to unite the broadest range of progressive
forces that have the deepest interest in the most thorough transformation of
our society, it is the task of the SACP to seek to unite all working class
forces, formations and centres of working class struggles, into a
progressive front for socialism, whose most immediate interests is to drive
a second, more radical phase of our transition.

 

So let us commit to build an even more stronger and formidable SACP as part
of driving a second, more radical phase of our transition!

 

Thatha ANC, thatha!

 

Towards a decisive ANC victory in the local government elections

 

The victory of the ANC in the forthcoming local government elections will be
the best 95th anniversary present for the SACP. The ANC was not only at the
head of the national liberation struggle, but it has also led an important
struggle and policies to change the lives of our people for the better after
1994. The ANC has led what is perhaps the largest housing project for the
poor in the late 20th into the 21st century. It is the ANC that has
electrified South Africa in 20 years more than the connections made by the
successive white minority regimes in the 100 years prior to 1994!

 

The ANC has undertaken one of the most progressive labour reforms in favour
of the working class since 1994. It is still only the ANC in alliance with
the Communist Party and the progressive trade union movement supported by
mass democratic formations that, as a governing party, is best placed to
create the most favourable environment to advance the most immediate
interests of the working class in our country.

 

At the same time, the best way of celebrating our 95th anniversary as the
SACP is not to be in denial about, but to recognise the persisting and new
challenges facing our movement and society as at large. Inextricably linked
with this, the best way of celebrating our 95th anniversary as the SACP will
be to decisively push for radical action for our people, the majority of
whom is the working class and poor, to overcome both of the old and new
challenges.

 

We must intensify the struggle to deal a blow to corporate capture in our
movement, in state owned enterprises and in the state broadly. Our five-day
national alliance summit held mid-last year was very clear in this regard.
It in fact declared corporate capture as a threat to our movement, the
national democratic revolution and the democratic developmental state that
we seek to build. The alliance summit further said that the failure of the
SABC to deliver on its public broadcasting mandate was among others due to
corporate capture.

 

Other harmful tendencies we must deal a blow are the parasitic bourgeoisie,
corruption, factionalism, patronage, manipulation of membership, distortion
of internal democratic processes and social distance from the membership and
mass base. These reactionary, regressive and destructive tendencies do not
exist in isolation from the advancement of private interests and corporate
capture.

 

The parasitic bourgeoisie for instance need networks of political
connections with factionalists in order to pursue their private accumulation
interests. In turn, factionalists depend on networks of business connections
with, and funding from the parasitic bourgeoisie in order to pursue their
factional interests. They are also dependent on members who have not
received adequate or sufficient political education as voting fodder linked
with dispensing patronage in order to ascend to positions of power.

 

Build a campaigning SACP to lead a militant, fighting working class

 

As we celebrate 95 years of our fighting Communist Party, we must commit
ourselves to advance important struggles that are an essential component of
driving a second, more radical phase of our democratic transition. An
independent Communist Party can only be such if it is capable of leading its
historical mission, programme and important campaigns aimed at creating
conditions for deepening the NDR as the most direct route to a socialist
South Africa.

 

It is important for the SACP to play a leading and vanguard role in the
struggle for land and agrarian transformation. The SACP needs to lead
struggles on the land question both in its urban and rural aspects.

 

The SACP needs to intensify its campaign for the most thorough
transformation of the financial sector. Whilst our country is facing an
economic stagnation, funds in the hands of the financial sector are either
not re-invested in our economy or are being divested away from the
productive sectors that have the potential of creating millions of jobs.

 

The SACP commits to fight, working together with COSATU, in the struggle for
a minimum wage and a comprehensive social security system that aims to
address some of the most glaring aspects of working class lives in our
country. This includes meaningful assistance to acquire affordable housing,
access to higher education, the creation of a working class friendly
national health insurance scheme.

 

The SACP firmly believes that one of the most crucial dimensions of the
working class struggle in the current period is that of the battle of ideas.
At the heart of this struggle must be the most thorough transformation of
the media space, with a particular focus on de-monopolisation and rolling
back the temptation of using the public broadcaster as a milking cow for
sections of the parasitic bourgeoisie. The public broadcaster for instance,
has been moving from one crisis to another. Every crisis at the SABC has
become the basis for a new, more destructive crisis. And at the centre of
all this is an administrative and governance decay, as well as the now
proven incapacity of the SABC board to hold the despotic management that has
established itself at the public broadcaster to account.

 

The SACP will, in the coming months, also be launching a campaign on the
right to work!

Late 20th and early 21st century capitalism has seriously eroded jobs and
work, principally through the radical restructuring of the workplace through
neo-liberal measures such as outsourcing, casualisation and labour
brokering. It is therefore important to wage a class struggle on the right
to work as an important means of livelihood for the working class.

The SACP, working closely with its Young Communist League and other
Progressive Youth Alliance formations, will continue to campaign for access
to decent and affordable education, especially for the children and youth
from the workers and the poor. At the heart of this must be access to free
basic and higher education for the working class and the poor. The SACP
needs to support and strengthen the Young Communist League to play a leading
and more prominent role in this regard. For instance both the SACP and Young
Communist League must build strong structures at colleges and universities.

 

The struggle for accelerated implementation of the national health insurance
scheme (NHI) is a matter of immediate priority. Private capitalist interests
backed by sections of imperialism are working very hard to undermine the
implementation of the NHI, including upping the volume on the propaganda
that the NHI is not affordable or feasible. The SACP needs to work closely
with progressive health unions, as well as mobilise communities towards the
achievements of the goals of the NHI.

 

In order to achieve a success in these campaigns and its programme, it is
important that as the SACP we firmlyintegrate gender struggles and
dimensions and also use them to build a progressive women's movement at the
head of these.

 

In addition we need to ensure that after the local government elections we
do not demobilise but continue with ongoing implementation of our 'Know Your
Neighbourhood Campaign'. It is important that we ensure that local
councillors do indeed convene quarterly meetings to report back. We must
mobilise communities to ensure this. We must ensure that our people do not
simply go and cast their vote and thereafter sit back and not participate or
seek the convening of community meetings.

 

This is why, as the SACP, we are saying:

 

"Communist cadres to the front: Let us unite the working class, our
communities and our movement!"

 

Deepening international solidarity

 

We dedicate our 95th anniversary to all the African people who are facing
different forms of oppression in their respective countries. We express our
solidarity with the peoples of Swaziland and Western Sahara in their quest
for self-determination, freedom and democracy. We also call upon our
brothers and sisters in South Sudan to end the civil war, unite to build
their new country and embark on a path of using their natural resources for
the development of that country.

 

We are equally expressing our revolutionary solidarity among others with the
people Cuba, who for more than half a century have been living under United
States imperialist aggression and attempts at regime change. Whilst we
welcome the improvement of relations between the Cuba and US governments, we
call for the immediate lifting of the illegal US blockade against Cuba.

 

We continue to extend our solidarity with the people of Palestine, who have
been dispossessed of their land and are stateless because the Zionist and
apartheid Israel has continuously been expanding itself on their
dispossessed land.

 

The SACP will continue to be part of the international workers and Communist
Parties as part of deepening working class internationalist solidarity, our
fight against imperialism and for a just world!!!!

 

Issued by the SACP

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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