Sunday 30 March 2014

Weekly Update #23

Hello everyone,
Your  new brief guide to the week is below!
 

SWP Branch Meetings
This week there is no branch meeting, as the time and location will be used instead to host a Unite Against Fascism meeting - see below for details.
The following week, we will be discussing socialism and the fight for women's liberation Thursday 10th April 7 pm West End Community Centre, Derby 

File:Suffragette Sylvia Pankhurst Suffragette Sylvia Pankhurst.jpg

Unite Against Fascism Public Meeting
There will be a Unite Against Fascism public meeting entitled Cuts, crisis and unemployment: why immigrants are not to blame. This will be at 7 pm in the West End Community Centre, Mackworth Road, Derby.


Industrial Action
There is industrial action happening in several places at the moment, any messages of support and/or picket visits for which will be appreciated.

NAPO
On Monday, NAPO (National Association of Probation Officers) workers will be walking out as part of their dispute over the privatisation of the probation service at 12 noon. There will also be pickets from 8-10 on Tuesday. Send messages of support to info@napo.org.uk and if you can turn up in person to support them, your nearest offices can be found here .

Solicitors
Solicitors will also be walking out on Monday and striking on Monday and Tuesday - find out more here.

Bombardier
Bombardier workers in Burton upon Trent have been taking 14 days of strike action since 26th March, after management attempted to force workers to accept night shifts. Send messages of support to mick.stevens@unite.org and visit the picket line at Central Rivers Depot, Barton-under-Needwood, DE13 8ES



Marxism 2014
 
Marxism is the largest festival of its kind in Europe. From 10-14th July in central London there will be more than 160 meetings and events going on. It's a great place to discuss and learn about all areas of politics and Marxist thought and activity. At the moment there is a £5 discount for early bookings, but this will only last for a few more days - go here for more information and to book your ticket!

Thursday 27 March 2014

James Conolly: The Easter Rising and the struggle against imperialism

Last week we had a talk and discussion about the role of James Conolly and the Easter Rising in the struggle against British imperialism, and the comrade who gave it has kindly sent us the text of the talk. Enjoy!

I think it is important to put the events of 1916 into some kind of historical context so I am going to begin by giving a lightning survey of the events leading up to the Rising starting in 1885.  In the election that year the Parnellites won 85 of the Irish seats, whereas the liberals won none.  Parnell was the leader of the Home Rule Party in Ireland.  They now held the balance between the liberals and the conservatives.  In this situation Gladstone decided to give Ireland its own Parliament.  His Home Rule Bill, however, was defeated in the Commons because 93 Liberals voted against it.  Gladstone resigned and with the Liberals split the Conservatives came to power.

In 1893 Gladstone became Prime Minister again.  He was dependent on the 81 Nationalist members in Parliament because the Liberals only had a majority of 40 over the Conservatives.  Another Home Rule Bill was introduced.  This time it got through the Commons, but it was defeated in the Lords.  Once again Gladstone resigned and, except for Roseberry’s brief ministry, the Liberals didn’t rule the country again until their landslide victory in 1905.  Then the new prime minister, Campbell-Bannerman, could afford to adopt a ‘wait and see’ approach to Home Rule because he was not dependent on Irish votes.  All this changed under his successor.  In 1909 the Lord’s lost their veto over legislation voted for by the Commons three times, and following the 1910 election the Liberals were once again dependent on Irish support.  A new Home Rule Bill was introduced.  In 1912 it passed through the Commons by a majority of 10 votes, but the House of Lords rejected it by 326 votes to 69 in January 1913.  It was reintroduced and again passed by the Commons but was again rejected by the Lords, this time by 302 votes to 64.

Home rule was vehemently opposed by many Irish Protestants, the Irish Unionist Party and Ulster’s Orange Order.  Most of the leaders of this opposition, especially Sir Edward Carson, threatened the use of force to prevent Home Rule.  They were helped by their supporters in the British Conservative Party.  In January 1912, after first obtaining the sanction of local magistrates, the Ulster leaders openly began to raise and train an army - the Ulster Volunteers.  On 28 September 1912 at Belfast City Hall just over 450,000 Unionists signed the Ulster Covenant to resist the granting of Home Rule.  The British Government let them raise money to buy arms. 
In November 1913 the supporters of Home Rule formed the Irish Volunteers.  It was not formed to fight the British government, but rather to ensure that the government did not waver in its intention to enact the Home Rule legislation it had initiated.  The Volunteers included members of the Gaelic League, Ancient Order of Hibernians and Sinn Fein, and, secretly, the Irish Republican Brotherhood.   Redmond, the leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party, took over control of the Irish Volunteers
Tension mounted and some kind of military confrontation seemed to be a possibility.  Early in 1914, Lloyd George proposed a temporary exclusion of Ulster for three years.  Redmond grudgingly acquiesced to this as “the price of peace”. 

When Carson rejected 'temporary' exclusion, a military solution seemed the only alternative.  But in late March 57 officers in a cavalry brigade stationed in Curragh threatened to resign their commissions if they were ordered to go to Ulster to reinforce the Government’s position.  With other resignations imminent the Government backed down.  The Ulster Volunteers continued to buy arms.  One of their major operations in getting arms involved the smuggling of almost twenty-five thousand rifles and between three and five million rounds of ammunition from Germany.  The shipments landing in Larne, Donaghadee and Bangor in the early hours between Friday 24 and Saturday 25 April 1914.  Nothing was done to prevent this.

On 25 May1914 the  Commons passed the Bill’s third reading by a majority of 77.  Asquith, however, accepted  the Lords' demand to amend the Act to temporarily exclude the six counties, which for a period London would continue to govern, and would later make special provision for them.  How temporary the exclusion would be, and whether northeastern Ireland would eventually be governed by the Irish government, remained an issue of some controversy.  To save endless debate in parliament, George V invited MPs from each of the British Liberal and Conservative parties, and two each from the nationalists and unionists to a conference at Buckingham Palace.  The conference, held between 21 and 24 July, achieved very little and Redmond and his party reluctantly agreed to what they understood would be a trial exclusion of now six years.  Using the Parliament Act, the Lords was deemed to have passed the Act.  It received the Royal Assent in September 1914. 

For all its shortcomings, the Bill was for Redmond the fulfilment of a lifelong dream.   "If I may say so reverently", he told the House of Commons, "I personally thank God that I have lived to see this day"  It made Redmond a nationalist hero and he could have had every expectation of becoming head of a new Irish government in Dublin.  When war broke out  1914, Asquith decided to abandon his Amending Bill, and instead rushed through the Suspensory Act which  ensured that Home Rule would not come into operation until the end of the war. The Ulster question was 'solved'  through the promise of amending legislation.  What this would be was left undefined.  In spite of this Redmond remained very popular.  This can be seen by the fact that at the start of War, over 90% of the Irish Volunteers followed his call to support the British war effort and enlisted in the 10th and 16th  (Irish) Divisions of the British Army. 

This left the Irish Volunteers with a rump estimated at 10–14,000 members.  Even among these there was considerable opposition to the idea of an unprovoked rising including from leading members like Bulmer Hobson, a northern journalist of Quaker background, and Eoin MacNeill, a history professor and chief of staff of the volunteers.




Ignoring this opposition the Military Council of the Irish Volunteers secretly organised the Rising.  The Council consisted of Joseph Plunkett, Thomas MacDonagh, Patrick Pearse, Tom Clarke, Sean MacDermott, Eamonn Ceannt and eventually James Connolly.  Their aspirations to mount a serious military challenge to Britain rested on two things falling into place. 

The first was a supply of arms.  Negotiations for arms were carried out with the German Government which agreed to send a shipment of 20000 rifles, 1,000,000 rounds of ammunition and a supply of explosives to the rebels by the ship the Auld.  But although the Auld reached the Kerry coast safely on Good Friday 21 April 1916, its presence was detected by the British authorities and the captain was forced to scuttle the ship.

The organisers also needed to organise a large mass rising without the authorities finding out.  Their solution was an ingenious, if rather cynical, one.  The Military Council decided to mobilise the entire Irish Volunteer Force for manoeuvres on Easter Sunday, a sight to which the British authorities had become accustomed, and to inform them only at the last minute of the intention to rise.  They expected that some volunteers would return home, but thought many would remain to fight.  It was hoped that if the rebels could hold out in Dublin, until separatists in the rest of Ireland rose up in support. 

This didn’t work for 2 reasons.  Firstly, MacNeill discovered the Military Council’s plan on Easter Thursday, and issued an order countermanding the mobilization.  Secondly the plan was so secret that few people, even amongst the leadership, knew precisely what was happening.  Volunteers, particularly outside of Dublin, who would have supported the Rising, had they known the Military Council’s intentions, obeyed McNeill’s order. The military plans of the rebels have also been criticised by historians and other observers.  Most of the leaderes lacked military experience.  The selection of the GPO as the headquarters had little symbolic or strategic value.  In contrast, and despite their vulnerability, the rebels failed to capture the more strategic Trinity College or the symbolic Dublin Castle.  Nevertheless the fighting lasted from Easter Monday to the following Monday.  Although often dismissed as an event of little military significance, the resistance of the rebels and the British authorities’ determination to suppress the rebellion as quickly as possible, ensured that much of the city centre was devastated  by artillery.  An estimated 1500 rebels participated in the fighting.  450 people died (250 civilians, 116 soldiers and 64 rebels including the 15 leaders subsequently executed by the authorities).  Over 2,600 were wounded, mostly civilians.

The Easter Rising is the defining event of the modern Irish republican tradition.  It is seen as the central episode in the long story of Ireland’s struggle for independence and the proclamation of 1916 is regarded as the founding document of the Independent Irish State. 
Yet the initial reaction of most Irish people was hostile.  The rebel prisoners were jeered by Dubliners as they were led off by British soldiers.  The response of the nationalist press which generally supported Redmond’s Irish Party was also hostile.  An editorial by the Galway Express said, ‘Easter Monday, 1916, has made history.  But oh, what rank and nauseating stains will besmear its pages – how generations yet unborn will burn with shame.’  The Irish Independent infamously appeared to encourage General Maxwell to continue executing the rebel leaders when it appeared that the ringleaders might yet be saved due to public consternation about the policy of executions. 

It has been argued that as there was no chance of military success, the rebellion’s leaders faced with a choice between imprisonment for an ignominious failure to rise, or for mounting a heroic if doomed protest, opted for the ‘propaganda of the deed’.  Their tactics appeared to reflect that it had become an essentially symbolic insurrection.  The occupation of a number of prominent strongholds around the city and the decision to fight in an orthodox military fashion added a symbolic and moral weight to the protest that guerrilla tactics would not have had.  But simply then waiting for the Brits to come implied a certain air of defeatism. 

It is certainly true that some of the leaders craved military action at any cost, and had  reconciled themselves to martyrdom.  Pearse, for example, was deeply influenced by Catholicism and the pagan tradition as represented by the ancient Irish sagas.  He tried to combine what he saw as the pagan ideals of strength and truth with the Christian ideals of love and humility.  This led him to desire martyrdom which would ensure his immortality and the redemption of his people. - his views were shared by his fellow poets Thomas MacDonagh and Joseph Mary Plunkett.  He attached an unusual importance to the notion of blood-sacrifice as his response to the arming of the Ulster Volunteers shows,
I would like to see every body of Irish citizens armed.  We must accustom ourselves to the thought of arms, to the use of arms.  We may make mistakes in the beginning and shoot the wrong people, but bloodshed is a cleansing and a sanctifying thing and a nation which regards it as the final horror has lost its manhood,  There are many things more horrible than bloodshed and slavery is one of them.
He described the first 16 months of the War as the ‘most glorious in the history of Europe’ arguing that ‘the old heart of the earth needed to be warmed with the red wine of the battlefields.’

So why did Connolly became involved in the Easter Rising if it was doomed to failure and can only be understood as a symbolic gesture with the religious and mystical overtones of a search for martyrdom and the idea of blood sacrifice.   He had at one time rejected Pearse’s heroic conception of war and emphasised the differences between socialism and nationalism.  Responding to Pearse’s militant rhetoric he wrote ‘We do not think that the heart of the earth needs to be warmed with the red wine of millions of lives.  We think anyone who does is a blithering idiot’.


In the months running up to the rebellion, however, his writing took on a more Nationalist tone,  By July 1915 he was in contact with physical force nationalists and, in early 1916, as we have seen, he was coopted onto the IRB’s Military Council.  By this time Connolly’s rhetoric had begun to resemble that of Pearse.  Connolly wrote that ‘no agency less potent than the red tide of war on Irish soil will ever be able to enable the Irish race to recover self-respect … we recognise that of us, as of mankind before Calvary, it may truly be said: “Without the shedding of blood there is no redemption.” He was also given Last Rites before his execution.
Connolly’s biographers have struggled to reconcile this kind of statement and his acceptance of the Last Rites prior to his execution with his atheistic Marxist background.  In fact it has allowed groups like the ‘Catholic Truth Society’ to claim that although he might have used Marxist words he genuinely held orthodox Catholic and nationalist values.
Some socialists have also criticised Connolly for submerging his ‘red ideals’ in the ‘Green Revolution’ e.g. Sean O’Cassey wrote:
        Jim Connolly has stepped from the narrow byway of Irish socialism onto the             broad  and crowded highway of Irish nationalism … The big creed of Irish             nationalism became his daily rosary, while the higher creed on international             humanity that had so long bubbled from his eloquent lips was silent forever             and Irish labour lost a leader.
I will try to explain why both views are incorrect.  To begin let us look at his religious views.
You can only understand them by relating them to the historical context in which they were written.    Recent research has thrown light on the question.  In a letter to the Scottish socialist John Matheson, 30 January1908, Connolly wrote:
For myself, though I have usually posed as a Catholic, I have not gone to my duty for 15 years, and have not the slightest tincture of faith left. I only assumed the Catholic pose in order to quiz the raw freethinkers, whose ridiculous dogmatism did and does dismay me, as much as the dogmatism of the Archbishop.  In fact I respect the good Catholic more than the average free-thinker.
Clearly the first sentence in no way contradicts Connolly when he wrote:
        We feel that Socialism is based upon a series of facts requiring only unassisted         human reason to grasp and master all their details, whereas  Religion of every         kind is admittedly based on ‘faith’ … Socialism, as a party, bases     itself upon             its knowledge of facts, of economic truths, and leaves the building up of                 religious ideals or faiths to the outside public, or to its individual members if             they so will.  It is neither freethinker nor Christian, Turk nor Jew, Buddhist             nor Idolator, Mohammedan nor Parsee – it is only human.
Nor does it contradict Connolly when he defined religion::
        as the outcome of the efforts of mankind to interpret the workings of the             forces of nature and to translate its phenomena into the terms of a language             which could be understood. . . . Religions are simply expressions of the human         conception of the natural world.
So if this is what he believed why did he pose as a Catholic?  As we have seen he said it was to oppose the free thinker.  This attitude goes back to his contact with the Socialist Labour Party during his time in the USA.  The SLP had reprinted an article by the Belgian socialist Vanderville which argued that the most important remaining struggle was between the Black International and the Red International. 
Connolly opposed it because he thought it pandered to an implicit racism in US society.  At the time Catholics made up a large proportion of recent immigrants and were often attacked on a religious basis.  This reaction unfortunately found an echo in some socialist circles when the supposed intellectual superiority of a’ free thinking’ position was counterpoised to the backwardness of Catholics.  On his return to Ireland  he was equally vehement in his attacks on those “raw atheists” within the labour movement there who, by claiming that the Catholic Church bred anarchism and terrorism, alienated the majority of Catholic workers from the cause of socialism.
 He was convinced that Catholicism could not be kept out of the debate on socialism in Ireland.  He believed that it would be pointless to try to win the mass of Irish people to socialism by putting himself forward as an atheist.  Catholic workers he believed were rebels in spirit and democratic in feeling because for hundreds of years there had been no class as lowly paid or as harshly treated as themselves.  So when the socialist Tom Bell asked, “Was he a Catholic?” he replied:
In Ireland, all Protestants are Orangemen and howling jingoes. If the children go to the Protestant schools, they get taught to wave the Union Jack and worship the English King. If they go to the Catholic Church, they become rebels. Which would you sooner have?
Connolly was, however, opposed to every tendency to identify socialism with the Catholic Church.  He condemned any attempt by the hierarchy of the Church to dominate public opinion and to attack the labour movement and socialism:
    As long as the priest speaks to us as a priest upon religious matters     we will listen to him, with all the reverence and attention his sacred     calling deserves, but the moment he steps upon the political platform,     or worse still, uses the altar from which to tell us what to do with our     political freedom, then in our sight, he will cease to be a priest and be     simply a politician.
During the Dublin labour dispute of 1913, Connolly furiously condemned the role of the Catholic hierarchy and their open support for the employers.  
He was always careful to make this distinction between the Church as an institution and individual Catholics who, refusing to accept the Church’s “bull-dozing,” “stand by their rights as citizens, whilst observing their duties as Catholics.”  Both priests and ordinary Catholics who actively supported labour were a positive asset to the foundation of a socialist Ireland.  His understanding of socialism as taking up the basic humanistic values the Church as an institution had rejected prepared the ground for an alliance with those Irish nationalists who had become disillusioned with the superficial dogmatism of the Catholic Church.

He was confident that the future of Catholicity (in the sense of a strictly nondenominational body of Christian values) was safe in a socialist Ireland.  He believed that the Catholic Church would not oppose socialism, in view of the Church’s acceptance of the de facto government and social order of a country in order to preserve its own position:
        When the Church realises that the cause of capitalism is a lost cause it will             play along with Socialism. 
Connolly accepted being given the Last Rites at the request of Padraic Pearse, a devout Catholic who had moved very close to Connolly’s socialist teachings.  Carl Reeve and Anne Barton Reeve in ‘James Connolly: the Road to the Irish Rebellion’ contend that it is impossible to believe that at this time, when he felt he represented the deepest hopes of Irish men and women, the majority of whom were Catholics, that he would affront the people he led, and refuse the last rites for the dying a most sacred sacrament whatever his personal beliefs.  Seen in this light, Connolly’s acceptance of the last rites of the Catholic Church before his execution was not contrary to, but in keeping with, his position as a socialist and his understanding of how to relate to his predominantly Catholic audience.   In any case whatever doubt there is about his religious beliefs his actions as a great Union organiser clearly show his commitment to socialism and as Lenin wrote:
        Unity in the revolutionary struggle of the oppressed class for the creation of             paradise on earth is more important to us than unity of proletarian opinion on         paradise in heaven.

Now let us turn to O’Casey’s accusation that Connollly abandoned socialism and wrapped himself in the ‘Green Flag’.  All empires say they want to bring civilisation, democracy etc. to childlike people who can’t do it for themselves.  Connolly spent much of his life attacking these pretensions of empire.  He is important because he was the first prolific socialist writer from one of the colonies.  His central concern was how the fight for independence linked up with the struggle against capitalism in Ireland.  Indeed he saw the link as intrinsic to everything he did.  The membership card of  the ISRP was crystal clear in its attitude to empire:
The subjection of one nation to another as of Ireland to the authority
of the British crown is a barrier to the free political development of the
subject nation and can only serve the exploiting classes of both nations …
Therefore the national and economic freedom of the Irish people must
be sought in the same direction, viz, the establishment of an Irish
Socialist republic.

Fighting empire brought Connolly into contact with the IRB, the 2,000 strong secret society, which traced its roots back to the Fenian movement.  From his earliest days in Ireland he tried to win over the Republicans to socialism.  He directed many of his arguments in his paper ‘The Workers Republic’ towards them and wrote for some of their papers.  He argued that the Nationalist movement had to move beyond ‘a morbid idealising of the past’ and present a political and economic programme to the people of today.  To do this the Republicans should form a political party and seek to win elections.  In that way they could challenge the Home Rule Party which was continuously compromising with imperialism and ‘drive them from political life’. 

Perceptively he wrote:
A party aiming at a merely political republic and proceeding along such lines
would always be menaced by the danger that some astute politician might by
enacting a sham measure of Home Rule, disorganise the Republican forces by
an appearance of concession until the critical moment passed.
This, it should be remembered, was written before Lloyd George, managed to do precisely this with the Treaty.

Connolly believed that the bourgeoisie could no longer lead a struggle for independence.   He wrote the Irish rich,
Have now bowed their knee to Baal, and have a 1000 economic strings in the
shape of investment binding them to English capitalism as against every historical attachment drawing them to Irish patriotism; only the Irish working class remainas the incorruptible inheritors of the fight for Irish freedom.
Therefore it is ridiculous Connolly argued to:
talk of revolting against British rule and refuse to recognise the fact that our
way to freedom can only be hewn by the strong hand of labour, and that labour revolts against oppression of all kinds, not merely the peculiarly British brand.
He saw that workers did not compartmentalise the form of oppression they had to fight.  Once in a struggle against empire, their consciousness widened and they began to look for the full liberation of their class. 
 No amount of protestations could convince intelligent workers that the class
which grinds them down to industrial slavery can, at the same time, be leading
them forward to national liberty.
To the objection that a fight for a socialist republic would frighten off potential allies he made this devastating reply:
It may be pleaded that the ideal of a Socialist Republic, implying, as it does
a complete political and economic revolution would be sure to alienate all our
middle class supporters who would dread the loss of their property and privileges.  What does this objection mean?  That we must conciliate the privileged classes in Ireland!  But you can only disarm their hostility by assuring them that in a free Ireland their privileges will not be interfered with.  That is to say, you must guarantee that when Ireland is free fron foreign domination, the green coated Irish soldiers will guard the fraudulent gains of capitalist and landlord from ‘the thin hands of the poor’ as remorselessly and just as effectually as the scarlet-coated Emissaries of England do today.
On no other basis will the classes unite with you.  Do you expect the masses to
fight for this ideal?

He claimed that:
The cry for a ‘union of classes’ is in reality an insidious move on the part of
our Irish master class to have the powers of government transferred from the
hands of the English capitalist government into the hands of an Irish government and to pave the way for this change by inducing the Irish workers to abandon all hopes of bettering his position.
When the Irish Parliamentary Party called for unity to get Home Rule Connolly replied,
Every oppressor of the poor, every heartless sweater, every enemy of progress
 and champion of reaction feels perfectly safe in Ireland as long as the cry of ‘national unity’ paralyses the hand of the friend of progress and forbids open
Warfare against the Irish oppressor and reactionist who shelters behind the Green or Orange flag.
This message is very radical because it contradicted  a key tenet of all republican organisations from Connolly’s time to today that at least until Irish independence was achieved and partition removed there had to be national unity between all the Irish people.  So it was not a question of wrapping the Green Flag around him and joining the National community.  He defended Home Rule because it was a legitimate democratic demand and it would open the way for class politics to emerge in Ireland.

Connolly was adamantly opposed to Partition, but not from a nationalist perspective.  He believed that it would produce ‘a carnival of reaction’ where Irish politics would be dominated by two right wing blocks for decades.  Partition would help the ‘Home Rule and Orange capitalists to keep  their rallying cries before the public as the political watchwords of the day.
He was determined to open a political space for protestant workers and called for special propaganda ‘for conversion to socialism of Orangemen’.  Part of that meant exploding the myth that the Orange Order stood for civil and religious liberty.  In an article he pointed out that William of Orange was actually supported by the Pope during the Battle of the Boyne and that the Te Deum was sung in the Vatican to celebrate his victory.  He appealed for Catholic and Protestant worker to fight alongside each other.  When 1000s of Catholics and rotten Prods were expelled from their jobs in 1912 he called for a march led by the non sectarian Labour Band  and had nothing to do with Joe Devlin’s exclusive appeal to Catholics to come to the rescue of their Northern brethren. Joe Devlin was a journalist and a prominent Nationalist politician.   Connolly also recruited workers from the Larne aluminium plant into the ITGWU, when the town was a noted bastion of Orange support.  His strategy was to encourage a militant joint struggle and in the course of that struggle to take up the issue of loyalism.
Crucial to this was his vision of what type of Ireland he wanted.  Only a bold call for a socialist Ireland rather than an Ireland united on a capitalist and clerical basis could hold any appeal to Protestant workers.  There was no future for Protestant workers in a capitalist Ireland where the green flag fluttered;
When the Sinn Feiner speaks to men who are fighting against low wages and tells them that the Sinn Fein body has promised lots of Irish labour at low wages to any foreign capitalist who wished to establish in Ireland, what wonder, if they come to believe that change from Toryism to Sinn Feinism would simply be a change from the devil you know to the devil they do not.

From all this it can be clearly seen that Connolly saw socialism and the fight against imperialism as part of the same battle.  Home rule in a united Ireland could only come about by uniting catholics and protestants workers in a revolution to establish a socialist republic.  To understand how Connolly got from this position to one in which he could be accused of abandoning socialism for nationalsim we have to next look at the effects the First World War had on him.

1914 was an appalling year for Connolly.  In February the ITGWU was finally beaten in the great lock out.  March and April brought the Curragh Mutiny.   In July partition became a virtual certainty when Home Rule leaders entered negotiations with the Unionists at a conference in Buckingham Palace.  On top of all that, August brought war and the collapse of the Second International.  Connolly had to deal with these disasters virtually alone.  The main networks that he had helped to create  - the ITGWU and the small socialist party, the ILP – were either weakened or severely disoriented.  At the first ILP meeting after the outbreak of the War, Tom Johnson, the future leader of the Irish Labour Party favoured a victory for the allies as being ‘better for the growth of liberty and democratic ideas’.  The other members voted to suspend all public meetings less they led to violent opposition.  To oppose the War Connolly had to hold street meetings under the name of a ficticious organisation: the Belfast Section of the Irish Citizen Army.
       
He took up the classic Socialist position:
We have held and do hold that war is a relic of barbarism because we are governed by a ruling class with barbaric ideas; we have held and do hold that the working class of all countries cannot escape the horrors of war until in all countries the barbarous ruling class is thrown from power.
His solution to war was summed up in one word revolution.  He had already, in 1914, indicated what his choice would be in such a situation.  He had written:
Even an unsuccessful attempt at socialist revolution by force of arms, following the paralysis of the economic life of militarism [by a general strike], would be less disastrous to the socialist cause than the act of socialists allowing themselves to be used in the slaughter of their brothers.

However in the absence of a socialist party, and in the context of a defeated working class, he could only strike a blow in Ireland on Republican terms.  This is why he not only joined the 1916 Rising but became one of its main instigators.  At no point did he think purely in nationalist terms, rather he recognised that a blow struck in Ireland against a great empire would give encouragement to colonial struggles all over the world.  He hoped that it would set off a chain reaction:
Starting thus, Ireland may yet set a torch to a European conflagration that will not burn out until the last throne and last capitalist bond and debenture will be shrivelled on the funeral pyre of the last war lord.
The Proclamation issued in the General Post Office was quite limited but Connolly’s support for the Rising was not conditional on it having a semi-leftwing message.  It was his desperation to do something against the war.  This desperation might explain some of the things he said and the fact that during the Rising itself he never issued a specific socialist proclamation stating publically that he wanted both ‘economic as well as political liberty.

Finally we have to address the question whether the Rising was an heroic gesture with no hope of success.  The efforts made by Joseph Plunkett and Roger Casement in Germany pointed to the serious nature of the Military Council’s efforts to get German assistance.  In their history of the Easter Rising Michael Foy and Brian Barton argued that the ‘Ireland Report’.the lengthy memorandum submitted by Plunkett and Casement to the Germans represented ‘a detailed and cogent analysis of the conduct of a successful military campaign whose unmistakable objective was the complete destruction of British military and political power in Ireland’.  There were only 6,000 combat troops in the island who were supported by 9,500 members of the Royal Irish Constabulary.  The leaders had hoped to mobilise the bulk of the 16.000 Irish Volunteers and to have used the 20,000 rifles from the Auld to arm them.  It is arguable if this had happened the Rising would have been successful, or if not successful sufficiently damaging to Britain to severely hamper her war effort.  Therefore the question should really be whether when this didn’t happen should they have called the Rising off and if they had decided to do this would it have been possible?

Great strike action yesterday!

Derby's teachers joined a national action called by the NUT union to take on the Tories' education policies. See their blog here to find out what happened!

Sunday 23 March 2014

Weekly Update #22

Hello everyone,
Your  new brief guide to the week is below!


SWP Branch Meetings
This week we have a guest speaker who will be giving a talk on 
Benefits St - why do Tories demonise the poor?
Thursday 27th March 7 pm West End Community Centre, Derby*


Next week, we will not have a meeting, as there will be a Unite Against Fascism public meeting instead (see below for details)

NUT strike action
 
The NUT is set to take strike action on 26th March against ongoing attacks on teachers' pay and conditions and the disastrous policies that Michael Gove is inflicting on education.
 
Send messages of support and solidarity here, or email cityofderbynut@gmail.com
Unite Against Fascism Public Meeting
Following from yesterday's fantastic Stand Up to Racism and Fascism demonstration in London, there will be a Unite Against Fascism public meeting entitled Cuts, crisis and unemployment: why immigrants are not to blame. This will be at 7 pm in the West End Community Centre, Mackworth Road, Derby

Anti-Racism, Anti-Fascism National Demonstration
Yesterday more than 30 anti-racists took a coach down to London to join the Stand up to Racism and Fascism protests called by Unite Against Fascism and the TUC to mark the UN's Anti-Racism Day. At a time when so much of the ruling class's rhetoric is centred around trying to divide working class people one from another by divisive racial, ethnic and religious haranguing it was great to see thousands of people come together in such a loud, visible and lively spirit of solidarity! Pictures from the event are up now on the blog - see this post here.


Marxism 2014
 
Marxism is the largest festival of its kind in Europe. From 10-14th July in central London there will be more than 160 meetings and events going on. It's a great place to discuss and learn about all areas of politics and Marxist thought and activity. At the moment there is a £5 discount for early bookings, but this will only last for a few more days - go here for more information and to book your ticket!


* Apologies for the incorrect meeting being listed in last week's update, this is simply my inability to read a list - d'oh!

Stand Up to Racism and Fascism - March 22nd

In recent years we have seen the far right, in particular fascist groups such as the BNP and the EDL, attempt to present themselves as acceptable political parties.

We have also seen racism become increasingly acceptable in both the media and mainstream parties, with constant presentation of immigrants as a threat, fear-mongering about Roma people and of course Islamophobia.

Yesterday in London thousands of people joined together to oppose racism and fascism as part of a day of action called by Unite Against Fascism and the TUC.

Comrades from Derby were out and about, and played an important role in organising the coach that took a big group of us down to London - as you can see, it was a great celebration of those of us who refuse to let the ruling class tell us that our fellow human beings are to be mistrusted and feared!


















Sunday 16 March 2014

Weekly Update #21

Hello everyone,
Your  new brief guide to the week is below!

Fraternally,
Derby Socialist Workers' Party

SWP Branch Meetings
This week we have the rescheduled and revamped James Conolly: The Easter Rising and the struggle against imperialism, which seems appropriate following St Patrick's Day!
Thursday 20th March 7 pm West End Community Centre, Derby (see attached map for directions)
Next week, we will be going cultural, with a Shakespearean The Tempest and the New World Thursday 27th March, 7 pm, West End Community Centre.

Anti-Racism, Anti-Fascism National Demonstration
On Saturday 22nd March there will be a national demonstration in London against the fascism of groups like the BNP and EDL and the racism of parties like UKIP to mark the UN's Anti-Racism Day. This is an event that all socialists should support, as the ruling class, the racists and the fascists once again try to divide working people from each other.

Unite Against Fascism have organised a coach for the day. Places are free but limited!
To book a space on the coach, call 07929 043 415

NUT strike action
The NUT is set to take strike action on 26th March against ongoing attacks on teachers' pay and conditions and the disastrous policies that Michael Gove is inflicting on education.
Send messages of support and solidarity here.


Education Question Time
The NUT in Derby is also organising a Question Time event, modelled on the BBC show's format for 18th March. It is an open event and will have people from all parts of the political spectrum there - so it is important for socialists to intervene, make contributions and ask the tough questions.
Some details are now available on the NUT blog, including how to get tickets and submit questions for the panel. Click here to go to the blog.


Marxism 2014
Marxism is the largest festival of its kind in Europe. From 10-14th July in central London there will be more than 160 meetings and events going on. It's a great place to discuss and learn about all areas of politics and Marxist thought and activity. At the moment there is a £5 discount for early bookings - go here for more information and to book your ticket!

Monday 10 March 2014

Weekly Update #20

Hello everyone, Welcome to your brief guide to the week in Derby!


SWP Branch Meetings
This week we have what do we mean by revolution?

which is a pretty crucial question for a revolutionary party, I'm sure you will agree!
Thursday 13rd March 7 pm West End Community Centre, Derby
 

Next week, we have a variation on the talk that we was scheduled for this Thursday: James Conolly: the Easter Rising and the struggle against imperialism. Thursday 20th March, 7 pm, West End Community Centre.

NUT strike action
The NUT is set to take strike action on 26th March against ongoing attacks on teachers' pay and conditions and the disastrous policies that Michael Gove is inflicting on education.
Send messages of support and solidarity here.

The NUT in Derby is also organising a Question Time event, modelled on the BBC show's format for 18th March (not 17th as we said last week - apologies). It is an open event and will have people from all parts of the political spectrum there - so it is important for socialists to intervene, make contributions and ask the tough questions.
Some details are now available on the NUT blog, including how to get tickets and submit questions for the panel. Click here to go to the blog.


Anti-Racism, Anti-Fascism National Demonstration
On Saturday 22nd March there will be a national demonstration in London against the fascism of groups like the BNP and EDL and the racism of parties like UKIP to mark the UN's Anti-Racism Day. This is an event that all socialists should support, as the ruling class, the racists and the fascists once again try to divide working people from each other.

Unite Against Fascism have organised a coach for the day. Places are free but limited!
To book a space on the coach, call 07929 043 415
Marxism 2014
Marxism is the largest festival of its kind in Europe. From 10-14th July in central London there will be more than 160 meetings and events going on. It's a great place to discuss and learn about all areas of politics and Marxist thought and activity. At the moment there is a £5 discount for early bookings - go here for more information and to book your ticket!

Sunday 2 March 2014

Weekly Update #19

Hello everyone,
Your  new brief guide to the week is below!

SWP Branch Meetings

This week we were due to have socialism and the fight for women's liberation, but unfortunately our speaker has not been able to attend so this has been postponed. Instead we will have a discussion on the 1916 Easter Rising in Ireland. An event which rarely receives the coverage it deserves in the UK.

Thursday 3rd March 7 pm West End Community Centre, Derby
Next week, we have Benefits St - Why do Tories Demonise the Poor? CORRECTION: This meeting is not next Thursday, it is in fact scheduled for later this year.

Next Thursday is what do we mean by revolution, where we will discuss the kind of revolution socialists want to see! Thursday 13th March, 7 pm, West End Community Centre.

NUT strike action
The NUT is set to take strike action on 26th March against ongoing attacks on teachers' pay and conditions and the disastrous policies that Michael Gove is inflicting on education.
Send messages of support and solidarity here.

The NUT in Derby is also organising a Question Time event, modelled on the BBC show's format for 18th March (not 17th as we said last week - apologies). It is an open event and will have people from all parts of the political spectrum there - so it is important for socialists to intervene, make contributions and ask the tough questions.
Some details are now available on the NUT blog, including how to get tickets and submit questions for the panel. Click here to go to the blog.

Anti-Racism, Anti-Fascism National Demonstration
On Saturday 22nd March there will be a national demonstration in London against the fascism of groups like the BNP and EDL and the racism of parties like UKIP to mark the UN's Anti-Racism Day. This is an event that all socialists should support, as the ruling class, the racists and the fascists once again try to divide working people from each other.

Unite Against Fascism have organised a coach for the day. Places are free but limited!
To book a space on the coach, call 07929 043 415
Marxism 2014
Marxism is the largest festival of its kind in Europe. From 10-14th July in central London there will be more than 160 meetings and events going on. It's a great place to discuss and learn about all areas of politics and Marxist thought and activity. At the moment there is a £5 discount for early bookings - go here for more information and to book your ticket!

An Introduction to Marxist Economics

This week's meeting was on the subject of Marxist economics. We had a very lively discussion afterwards, but here is, more or less, the speech that was given. Enjoy!


An introduction to Marxist economics



Marxist economics differs significantly from mainstream economics. Mainstream economics tends to focus on the amount of money people have. At first, this may seem like common sense. After all, the more money people have, the richer they are. A lot of mainstream economics tends to focus on things like deficits, surpluses, interest rates and inflation. All of this is about how much money there is about, who owns it and in the case of inflation, whether the amount of money you have will buy you the same things today as it did yesterday.
Mainstream economics is good at understanding how money moves and flows, grows and shrinks. Marxist economics is more interested in the driving factor that makes money worth something in the first place – value. In this talk I want to give a brief outline of Marx’s economic perspective, how it works in practise, and how Marxist economics informs our political perspective.


Marx and economics

Marxist economics is about value: how it is created in a capitalist society and what that means for social organisation. Marx did not get this idea from scratch. He was building on the work of earlier economists like Adam Smith and Ricardo, but with a few insights of his own. His theory did not spring into being fully-formed, but developed over the course of several decades. The most complete version is to be found in what is possibly his most famous work, Capital.

Volume I of Capital begins not with the working class, or the factory, or money. It begins with the commodity. The commodity is the heart of capitalism, its distinctive product, that which differentiates it from other forms of economic and social organisation. The commodity is any product created not for use but for trade. One criticism that is often heard when Marx’s theories are brought up in polite company is that of course Marx was all very well in his day but of course the system has changed now so it is no longer valid. And when you think about Marx’s starting point, of course they must be right. In Marx’s day commodities tended to be things like coats, but of course today none of us use such items. Commodities today are all services like Facebooks and suchlike.

Facetiousness aside, commodities are a really useful way of looking at capitalism. In every bottle of Coke we see the same process as in every TV, car and copy of GTA 5. It is the finished product of the system, and yet it is not produced because it is useful. Yes, every commodity satisfies some want or need, but that is not why it is made. It is made so that it can be sold. The sole purpose of production is to make a profit for the producer.

This is not the same as making money. Money is another kind of commodity. It is produced for exchange, just like a coat. The unique thing about it is that it is a universal form of exchange. All commodities are produced to be traded for something else, yet in capitalism we do not exchange coke for coats, but for the money commodity.


Value

So if everything is produced for exchange, what is being exchanged? When I buy my new 3D flatscreen TV for £1,000, what is it that makes my TV worth £1,000 – and more importantly, a thousand pounds of what?

This is where one of Marx’s key concepts comes in – value. What is embodied in every commodity made by capitalism is the one thing that all commodities have in common – human labour. When a worker sells their labour power to a capitalist, they do work on the production of commodities. It is this common feature which allows the commodities to be exchanged at all. If labour were not expended on them there would be nothing to exchange.

However, if exchanging £1,000 for a TV is really just an exchange of one item that embodies a certain amount of labour power for another, there would be no profit. If I exchange one orange for one orange, I have no more than I started with. Yet profit is at the heart of capitalism. It is the reason that businesses produce. Where does this profit come from?

The source of profit is the same as the source of exchange value: human labour power. It is also one of Marx’s key insights into the nature of economics. It is also very straightforward, once you think about the way businesses which you are familiar with actually work. One job I had once was working in a caravan handbrake factory. I was paid just over £5 an hour to work on a small production line for 7.5 hours a day. On the line we had to make hundreds of handbrakes per day between the four of us. Needless to say, the number of handbrakes we produced was worth far more to the company when sold on than it paid us in wages. This difference between the cost of human labour and the cost of the plant needed for us to produce the handbrakes is the profit that the company makes.

You may be thinking that the machinery is a source of profit – after all without it we could not have made any handbrakes at all, but it cannot be. No matter how much more efficient it makes the process of production, it cannot make more profit for the manufacturer. This comes down to the question of what is being exchanged when a commodity is bought and sold – a quantity of human labour power – and to what the machinery is really doing in the production process, which we will come onto shortly.

So the ability of the employer to pay their workers less than the value of the goods they produce is crucial to profit-making. Labour power is the source of value but by exchanging a lower value of the money commodity for each worker’s labour power than is congealed in the commodities they have created, an employer can profit. This is a necessarily exploitative relationship – and a worker can be well-paid and this will not affect the fundamental relationship between the employer and the worker. In fact a well-paid worker in a high-technology industry in the West can be more exploited in absolute terms than a sweatshop worker in Bangladesh in terms of their ability to generate more value from their work for their employer. Of course, this is not to make light of the poverty created by the system, but it does highlight one of the odder features of capitalism. It’s interesting that the very terminology adopted by capitalists unconsciously reflects this situation. In Engels’ book on the working class in England he reports how factory owners would refer to their workers as ‘hands’ – a term which accurately reflects what a worker means to an employer: not people, but a device for doing work.


Socially Necessary Labour Time

So what generates profits for an individual employer is the exploitation of the labour power that they purchase from their workers. But in capitalism all employers are in competition with others. If they are to survive, they must make more profits than their competitors or go bust. I will explain why shortly.

One way to do this is to lengthen the working day and decrease wages. Both of these make more profits by increasing the rate at which workers are exploited. Labour power is made cheaper but the number of commodities produced is higher so the profits of the capitalist rise. However, this cannot be extended indefinitely: workers need a certain minimum in order to survive, they physically can only work for so long. In addition, workers under sustained attack have a tendency to fight back – capitalists do not always get away with attacks on pay and conditions by employers. There is a limit to how much you can increase your profits this way.

This is where machinery comes in. Investing in new machinery can help make production more efficient and increase the amount of production. However, the machinery is purchased for an amount of money that reflects the labour congealed in it, just like any other commodity. Once purchased it is not a new source of value, but a way of extracting more value from the labour power of the workers involved in the production of the employer’s commodities. This is what Marx called ‘dead labour’, as opposed to the ‘living labour’ of workers.

However, the first employer to do this has a huge advantage over their competitors – with fewer workers they can produce more commodities and therefore make more profits when they sell them.

The reason that they can make more profits is that the money price of a commodity reflects the socially necessary labour time required to produce it. When the first manufacturer invests in new machinery, the price they can charge for their products is the same as the price of the old labour-intensive price that the rest of the industry is still using. However, all the manufacturers are in competition, so if they are not to go under they must invest in new machinery too. As everyone invests in the new machinery and the companies compete with each other, the money price they charge will drop to reflect the new lower labour time cost that is now socially necessary. This is a key difference between Marx’s understanding of economy and earlier thinkers like Smith.

This also shows one way in which the money price of a commodity does not directly reflect the amount of value created by the labour power congealed in it. The price, under normal conditions of capitalist production, is primarily affected by the socially necessary labour time required to produce the commodity – that is to say the average labour power used at average intensity in particular social conditions. However there are a range of other conditions in which the price of an object may differ significantly from the amount of labour invested in it. One major issue is crisis, which we will look at shortly.


The long-term tendency of the rate of profit to fall

What this shows about capitalism is its dynamism. It is constantly in motion, constantly changing. Nothing stays the same for long, and means of production are constantly being revolutionised as competing capitalists try to increase their profits. However, as you can see from the way that they have to increase their profits, there are limits to their ability to do this, and over time the rate of profit – the rate by which they can extract value from their workers – will fall as the socially necessary labour time for production falls. As the rate of profit falls, the profitability of the system as a whole falls. Capital accumulates – which is to say that there is more and more dead labour compared to living labour and it is harder and harder for capitalists to squeeze increased value from their workforce.

Crisis

The long-term tendency of the rate of profit to fall is at the heart of another key feature of the capitalist system: crisis. We are currently still in one of the longest crises in the history of capitalism, more than seven years after it began. Crisis has been a frequent visitor to the system, both as a whole and in its various parts. Mainstream economics often refers to crisis as ‘recession’ because it is interested in the growth of economies and thinks in terms of how much money is in them, so it sees recession as a setback on the path to growth. However, the real cause of crisis in the system is an accumulation. Because capitalists don’t extract profits just so that they can consume more, but so that they can create more profit, they reinvest a lot of the value that they extract in more production. This goes back into creating more commodities for sale and therefore more profit. Eventually, however, there comes a point where too much has been produced. Warehouses lie full of commodities that cannot be sold. Profit falls everywhere. Capitalists cannot just store up their profits indefinitely. Unless there are fresh profits being generated, the value of the money commodity will fall, as it only gains its apparent value through its use as a medium of exchange.

Meanwhile, as capitalists are unable to invest because they will not receive profits from their investments, workers are laid off because they are no longer generating profit. As workers are laid off or their pay is reduced, their consumption falls, leading to further and further reductions in profitability and still more workers losing their jobs. This is what happened in the great depression of the 1930s, and what we began to see again in 2007, as the financial crisis meant that workers, whose real wages have not increased since the early 1980s, were unable to secure further credit with which to maintain or increase levels of consumption. Demand and production fell and has not recovered fully to the levels reached before the crisis, which means that capitalists have yet to see a renewed increase in profits and investments are still low.


Destruction of capital

If crisis is a constant feature of the system, you would expect it to have collapsed long ago, but unfortunately it has not. The reason for this is that crisis destroys much of the accumulated capital that is clogging up the system. Unprofitable firms close down, its machinery is bought up by profitable parts of the system at a fraction of its value. The prices of unsold commodities fall. Workers’ conditions can be attacked more easily because of the higher unemployment, and profits begin to rise again as the cost of investment for the profitable parts of the system decrease (buying up cheap machinery from collapsed competitors) and more value is extracted from the workforce.

All of this means that capitalism goes through constant cycles of boom and bust, and must continue to do so. It also means that those who pay the cost of crises are the working class. Anyone who has seen the way in which austerity policies have been introduced can see this for themselves. The wealthy have continued to accumulate capital yet find few opportunities to reinvest it, and workers have paid through lower wages and reduced public services. Further, in the next crisis the managers of capitalism in the developed world will find it extremely difficult to resolve the crisis in the same way. Workers' living standards can only be cut so far without serious resistance, and capital can only sit idle for so long.


Fictitious Capital

Fictitious capital is basically finance capitalism. This is a system that runs alongside the productive processes of capitalism, that often supports capitalist production either through investment of the money commodity into production or the provision of credit to allow commodities to be purchased. Fundamentally it is an industry which deals in only one commodity – the money commodity, and has a huge influence on where that commodity goes and how much of it is manufactured. The current crisis within the capitalist system has its roots in the tendency of the system to seek new forms of profit – in this case by commodifying specific amounts of the money commodity into a series of transferable betting slips with names like Collateralised Debt Obligations and Credit Default Swaps. The interaction between the system of fictitious capital and the productive system is necessarily complex and headache-inducing, and probably deserves a talk all of its own.


Why socialism?

Our understanding of capitalist economy leads us to certain conclusions. Firstly, the working class are necessarily exploited by capitalist modes of production. Secondly, the working class is the class with the power to change the system.

By concentrating workers in large companies, workers understand their common interests and their ability to act together. Workers are the only source of profits for capitalists. By withholding their labour, workers can bring the system to a halt. This is why in the Socialist Workers’ Party we emphasise workers’ action over other forms of action. Direct action, demonstrations, protests can all have an impact, but only workers can stop the system. This is why 2 million people could march against the war, and yet it still went ahead. On the other hand, a general strike would have made war impossible to conduct.

Mainstream economists will tell you all about money. Marxist economics can teach us the value both of money and of the class of people that make it valuable.

Further Reading
This introduction is necessarily brief and glosses over much detailed analysis - much of which we were able to bring up in our discussion after the speech, especially on the nature of the financial crisis of the last 7 years. If you are interested in learning more about Marxist economics, one way is to come and meet us! Another way is to read some of these:

Bookmarks, the socialist bookshop also has a whole range of books on the subject of economics
Marx's oeuvre can be found online at the Marxists Internet Archive, but if attempting Capital itself, I would strongly recommend Marxist academic David Harvey's free accompanying lecture series and/or his book A Companion to Capital.