Amadeo Bordiga

I have recently been reading the works Amadeo Bordiga. I wanted to know what the ICT thinks of Amadeo Bordiga, Bordigism, and his ideas. To me Amadeo Bordiga has come up with good theories, such as abstentionism from parliamentism. However, his ideas, such as organic centralism are very idealistic. I also would like to know what Bordiga thought about the degeneration of the Russian Revolution. I have heard Councilists denounce Bordiga as a Trotskyist, but I don't believe these accusations. It would be nice to listen to other people's opinion of Bordiga

Forum: 

Huge question...you will probably have to study a lot of documents regarding the matter ad no-one will give you a quick answer.

BUT....I see Bordiga as a link in the evolution of the communist perspective we advocate. He embodied positions which could be considered revolutionary and vestiges of the past which we have abandoned. Perhaps similar to Lenin.

In my opinion the personalities and details of the evolution of the communist positions is a useful means to deepen understanding, but secondary to a knowledge of those ideas themselves which are synthesised n the actual publications of our organisation.

I am not advocating ignorance, I think I am echoing Damen who criticised Bordiga for wishing to retreat into theoretical study divorced from the class struggle.

Perhaps it is more true to say we are Damenists rather than Bordigist, but I repeat, I see little value in such 'personalisation' and am more interested in the political positions per se.

I think Amadeo himself said something similar

The new movement cannot wait for supermen, nor have Messiahs, it must be founded on the revival of what could be preserved for a long time; but preservation cannot be restricted to the teaching of theses and to the search for documents, it uses living instruments in order to form an old guard and to hand over – uncorruptedly and potently – to a young guard. The latter rushes off towards new revolutions, that might have to wait not more than a decade from now the action on the foreground of the historical scene; the party and the revolution having no concern at all for the names of the former and the latter.

I think that means that means that we do not have to ''master'' old texts and set former ''great men'' on pedestals, we have to be constantly upgrading our theory in the light of new events. Not discarding and replacing that which is firmly established, but illustrating its validity by analysing the unfolding situation.

Good start to ICT perspectives re Bordiga

leftcom.org

One thing I am not so clear about is this

We owe to Bordiga the correct theory of the relationship between party and class on which the success of revolution depends. We can state, without fear of exaggeration or contradiction, that the definition of such a relationship is a fixed point in Marxism, representing a happy fusion between the experience of the “Italian Left” and that of Lenin in the victorious conclusion to the October Revolution. And we must add that what Bordiga produced on “party and class” not only served as a Marxist reference point to the parties which were being formed in the wake of the October Revolution in the post First World War period but it is still a classic, and will remain so in the period up to the next proletarian revolutionary wave. To ignore or weaken its terms, even if done in Bordiga’s name or that of some vague approximation to Bordigism, would be to undermine the meaning of the revolutionary party and its permanent role of giving a lead in working class action.

leftcom.org

I think that Bordiga's writings on the matter indicate a definite contradiction to the position we hold. We do not advocate Party rule. I think Bordiga does.

Quote

A party is that collection of people who have the same general view of the development of history, who have a precise conception of the final aim of the class they represent, and who have prepared in advance a system of solutions to the various problems which the proletariat will have to confront when it becomes the ruling class. It is for this reason that the rule of the class can only be the rule of the party. After these brief considerations, which can very evidently be seen in even a superficial study of the Russian Revolution, we shall now consider the phase preceding the proletariat’s rise to power in order to demonstrate that the revolutionary action of the class against bourgeois power can only be a party action.

marxists.org

Jas,

Loren Goldner published a text entitled 'Communism is the Material Human Community: Amadeo Bordiga Today':

libcom.org

Which is a good place to start concerning Bordiga's contribution to understanidng the degeneration of the Russian Revolution, since Bordiga's relevant writings on this are not available to us Anglos. The text is divided into two parts - in the first part Goldner essentially introduces Bordiga and outlines his contribution to Marxist theory focusing on his analysis of the USSR as a capitalist society due to the operation of the market in the agrarian sector and the identification of capitalism with the agrarian revolution. While the second part focuses on the contribution of the 'neo-Bordigist' current that requires very careful reading, it took me a few reads to get what was being argued.

I should add that Goldner's text is not universally worshipped. For instance, comrades in the ICT are quite critical of it from what I gather, see link below, which is the only critical review I am aware of online, it is by an ICTer in the US:

oocities.org (scroll down on that page to see it)

Also, I'd recommend the Antagonism text 'Bordiga versus Pannekoek' - libcom.org - which I think is a really useful presentation of both Bordiga and Pannekoek ideas.

Don't want this post to be long, so I might come back later with my own thoughts.

Hopefully others will contribute so the discussion will develop.

Bordiga is alway a problem for us. We were greeted at the Durham Miners' Gala by someone (a Trot?) who said "Ah the Bordigists are here". To which you always want to say "yes and no". I think the text by Onorato Damen Steve indicates gets closest to explaining our attitude. At first we are all "Bordigists" but from very early on the Italian Left was more than Bordiga and Bordiga was much more passive/fatalistic in his fight against the degeneration of the Comintern than others (cf the Committee of Intesa which Bordiga did not initiate but supported and Bordiga's Letter to Korsch). Even in the 1920s Bordiga's method could be mechanical (e.g. the application of abstentionism). I think we need to revisit Party and Class too. I think the lsander that Bordiga was a Trotskyist arises from his defence of Trotsky's right to opposition in the Comintern in 1926 (which we published in IC and is somewhere on this site).

One thing is clear from his life anyone who retires from political life for nearly 20 years and does not keep up with the class development does not contribute in the same way as when they are involved in the struggle. When the PCInt was first formed Bordiga initially said they should all go into the Togliatti Stalinist PCI! Some of his closest followers did apparently (and then left again).

And Bordiga was actually arguing that the party had no real basis for existence in 1951-2 and thus the creation of the International Communist Party after the split was not really what Bordiga wanted (this is why Damen refers to the "party he did not want"). He seems to have wanted something like a study group until the class revived. Damen thought this undialectical since there was a need for an organisation within the class to fight for revolutionary perspectives until the struggle revived. Since 1952 the Bordigists have refused all dialogue with Battaglia and have split so many times that keeping up with the splits is a task in itself. Battaglia refer to these groupings as "late Bordigism" since they believe that they also distort Bordiga in a way which does him no credit. However I would encourage Zanthorus to find out more and as he does so help us to deepen the discussion on Bordiga's legacy.

Cleishbotham - Zanthorus has not posted on this thread unless I have missed something.

Thanks Android for correcting the "senile disease of a left wing communist" and apologies to Jas4500 to whom I would offer the same encouragement (not to mention Zanthorus who probably already knows much of all this from what I have read from him on other forums).

Android,

Damen on Pannekoek here

istitutoonoratodamen.it

Thanks Steve. I will have a look at it using Google Translate.

Thank you all for your responses. After reading a couple of Bordiga's works it seemed apparent that he might support party rule. This seemed contradictory because the communist left in general is absolutely opposed to it. In Bordiga's "Theses on the Abstentionist fraction of the Italian Socialist Party" theses 13 reads, "13. The pre-conditions for the victory of proletarian power in the struggle for the realization of communism are to be found not so much in the rational use of skills in technical tasks, as in the fact that political responsibilities and the control of the state apparatus are confided to those people who will put the general interest and the final triumph of communism before the particular and limited interests of groups. Precisely because the Communist Party is the organisation of proletarians who have achieved this class consciousness, the aim of the party will be, by its propaganda, to win elective posts for its members within the social organisation. The dictatorship of the proletariat will therefore be the dictatorship of the Communist Party and the latter will be a party of government in a sense totally opposed to that of the old oligarchies, for communists will assume responsibilities which will demand the maximum of sacrifice and renunciation and they will take upon their shoulders the heaviest burden of the revolutionary task which falls on the proletariat in the difficult labour through which a new world will come to birth." marxists.org Bordiga does talk about the need for soviets, but it seems that Bordiga is in favor of party commisars being in control of the state, executing the party programme, rather than workers. This seems contradictory because left communists generally oppose party substitutionism. This is what led me to be confused about Bordiga's political positions. He seems more in favor of a council like Sovnarkom being in control of the state rather than the congress of soviets. I'm still pretty confused about Bordiga. I haven't finished reading all of the suggested articles. Once again thank you all for your responses.

Actually I thought your quote a little ambiguous. Precisely because the Communist Party is the organisation of proletarians who have achieved this class consciousness, the aim of the party will be, by its propaganda, to win elective posts for its members within the social organisation. The dictatorship of the proletariat will therefore be the dictatorship of the Communist Party and the latter will be a party of government in a sense totally opposed to that of the old oligarchies, for communists will assume responsibilities which will demand the maximum of sacrifice and renunciation and they will take upon their shoulders the heaviest burden of the revolutionary task which falls on the proletariat in the difficult labour through which a new world will come to birth. It could be read as meaning that individual communists would attempt to win mandates in the council structure. Something we support. I suspect Bordiga himself was not totally clear on the issue.

Jas

I don't agree with Steve that the quote is ambiguous and agree with your rejection of it but you have opened up a big question here. You quote from Thesis 13 which neither we, nor the ICC nor the ICP (Programma) have as part of the Theses on Parliamentarism as we all have a maximum of 12 (I think the ICC only has 11). You are quoting from marxists.org who are using a 1978 English version of Communist Program and which includes a much longer document with even more sections. This now becomes a historical puzzle. Are these all the same theses? Have Programma added other documents, perhaps elaborated by Bordiga later? As it means delving into the Italian archive (which I don't have time for now) it will be a while before we solve this but thanks for raising it.

I only thought it a little ambiguous because it said

''...the party will be, by its propaganda, to win elective posts for its members within the social organisation.'

This I found compatible with the sovereign power of the workers' councils.

But he goes on to say, and I think he is only restating his position from Party and Class

''The dictatorship of the proletariat will therefore be the dictatorship of the Communist Party''

I think that the Battaglia article holding up Party and Class as valid now is wrong, unless I have misunderstood something.

I do see what Steve is saying. More than likely I am misunderstanding Bordiga. After rereading the theses I don't think Bordiga literally means a party dictatorship. To Bordiga a party is a group of conscious workers. They use propaganda and other means to make workers conscious. In the ICT article "Bordiga: Beyond the Myth and Rhetoric" it says that Bordiga preferred science and theory, this probably reflected in his writings.

Mmmmmmmm.....from what I have read, I would be more incline to say Bordiga did have in mind a Party dictatorship. His whole approach seems to be about special, highly knowledgeable revolutionary technicans who are beyond the control of the ignorant class in general. My concept is that the Party has to carefully educate the mass of the class who have to have sufficient grasp of the revolutionary process to participte fully and reject the anti-communist elements whilst retaining full sovereignty. The Party cannot simply be a school to produce revolutionary specialists to administer a separate power. Its concern must be the bulk of the class. Somewhat relevant... Proletarian revolution depends entirely on the condition that, for the first time, theory as understanding of human practice be recognized and lived by the masses. It requires that workers become dialecticians and put their thought into practice. It thus demands of its “people without qualities” more than the bourgeois revolution demanded of the qualified individuals it delegated to carry out its tasks (because the partial ideological consciousness developed by a segment of the bourgeois class was based on the economy, that central part of social life in which that class was already in power).........Revolutionary theory is now the enemy of all revolutionary ideology, and it knows it. Guy Debord

libcom.org

I think he is right in saying the Party does not bend to the soviets, it always maintains its full perspective. However this still is not a passport to Party rule without a mandate, a mandate that can only be obtained by submitting to the delegatory process which is open to all workers.

I can accept that soviet power would produce a central body partially or fully consisting of Party members, perhaps all from the same party.

Arguably relevant........What's bad about political/intellectual elitism? It alienates everyone else from politics and critical thinking, rendering them powerless more effectively than any oppressive government could ever do. The propaganda of network TV is not more responsible for the apathy of the mainstream Westerner than the average radical leftist is. Those for whom being "political" and "educated" has become an identity, who use these terms to define themselves as a certain type of person, thus make others think that politics and radical thinking are the hallmark of a certain group of people (a drab and haughty group, at that), no more, and marginalize themselves from the rest of the world which so badly needs some of their ideas—but not their scornful "specialism," not their divisionary attitudes and identities.

My little contribution: Bordiga was a giant and therefore his political mistakes ( above all after WW2) were gigantic...often developed by his followers inside Programma and further in the other 4-5 parties claiming his own political inheritance... I think too the absurd and awful concept of Party's Dictatorship against and instead of Prolet. Dictatorship (as just in Russia ?? if just not, take a look at our statement titled "1921 - The Beginning of Counterrevolution?"), his anti-party mood, his judgment on Russia either as a "mystery which we can discuss very little and with circumspection" or it was state industrialism(?) against which Damen's definition of "state capitalism"was "dismissive" of both. cheers

I agree with you No Nick in Bordiga's Proletarian Dictatorship and Class Party it reads "In conclusion the communist party will rule alone, and will never give up power without a physical struggle. This bold declaration of not yielding to the deception of figures and of not making use of them will aid the struggle against revolutionary degeneration." - marxists.org This was one of his works in the 1950's. In the 1920's Bordiga at least talked about Workers Councils.

So, are we rejecting the BC article mentioned in this thread?

Should it be modified or deleted from the site?

From the same article

Bordiga lacked a true evaluation of the dialectic because the basis of his education was largely based on scientific facts (16)which led him to see the world and life on the level of rational development when the reality of social existence and of revolutionary struggle often poses a world a good part of which obeys irrational impulses. The methodology based on mathematical certainties, which belongs to science, is not always in agreement with a methodology based on the dialectic which is movement and contradiction and this, when it comes to analysing revolutionary politics and perspectives, is no small matter.

I think this is saying something I was clumsily trying to say before......

The issue of class consciousness cannot be settled simply by scientific explanation, it requires propaganda, art, literature aimed at broad masses who are deprived of the higher intellectual training of the scientist.

Also the issue of whether 'Marxism' is a science, or 'proletarian science'.

Steve

There are two articles mentioned in this thread. Which are you talking about?

Party and Class is a classic of it time. We don't have to agree with all of it today and Damen seems to have thought that Bordiga posed the question of class and party correctly even if he disagreed on Bordiga's final conclusion that the party rules. I think jas has worked this out well.

I refer to this

We owe to Bordiga the correct theory of the relationship between party and class on which the success of revolution depends. We can state, without fear of exaggeration or contradiction, that the definition of such a relationship is a fixed point in Marxism, representing a happy fusion between the experience of the “Italian Left” and that of Lenin in the victorious conclusion to the October Revolution. And we must add that what Bordiga produced on “party and class” not only served as a Marxist reference point to the parties which were being formed in the wake of the October Revolution in the post First World War period but it is still a classic, and will remain so in the period up to the next proletarian revolutionary wave. To ignore or weaken its terms, even if done in Bordiga’s name or that of some vague approximation to Bordigism, would be to undermine the meaning of the revolutionary party and its permanent role of giving a lead in working class action.

...........

I think it is fully supporting a view of the party as ruling organ that we do not support.

"Giving a lead" does not mean support for the "party as a ruling organ". This was one of the things that separated Damen and Bordiga in 1952.

Yes, however I do not think you are addressing the issue which is an endorsement in very strong terms of Bordiga's Party and Class. Whilst I could accept the line

''its permanent role of giving a lead in working class action.''

the rest as far as I can see regards Bordiga's view on the Party as beyond critique.

I am satisfied that the ICT position on the Class/Party relation as it stands now is correct.

However I think that this paragraph is not.

In my mind the issue is of paramount importance.

I think for most people Communism is broadly conceived as the rule of an elite who will hide behind all the symbols of an unattainable equality whilst in reality pursuing their own ego trip, lining their pockets and lording it over the masses.

Probably the consequence of this is the relative success of anarchist ideology and the prevalent apathy/nihilism/dare i say it-decomposition (hardly an ICC invented term, the situationists were using it in the 50s) as people have no faith at all in structures that put one human being above another.

Our own intervention on libcom et al illustrates the point. There is very little understanding of communism in terms of the rule of the working class through territorial councils, very little understanding of the concept of a party as an organ to disseminate class consciousness, a party not looking to gain State power.

Our lack of clarity in our presentation of the issue will do little to dispell that.

On a related point, I would like to enquire about the nature of the "hierarchy" that some people seem to consider necessary.

In my mind hierarchy can have a positive and a negative sense.

Negative, a group of people in a position of authority. to me, that is what Bardiga's Organic Centralism is promoting, perfectly in line with his concept of Party Dictatorship.

Positive, a set of functional organs whose members are instantly recallable, who are subject to the class' wishes in an obvious way.

No personality cults, no great men, no separate power.

A Party, yes, but one whose concern is the class consciousness of the mass, without hierarchical division in the sense of permanently entitled bureaucrats.

That able and willing individuals be allowed to exercise leading roles is no problem, as long as they are permanently under the control of the party in general.

What I would say is that democratic centralism, for want of a better phrase, can only be as good as the people involved, so a rigorous party regime is possibly the best guarantee of a favourable outcome, but that is probably a chapter for the future.

I have also been thinking about a brief slogan/phrase to instantly communicate our perspective.

The essential objective of the Communist Party we wish to construct is to create a society based on the power of Revolutionary Workers' Councils

Steve

When you are criticising Bordiga's Party and Class you seem to be referring to other writings by Bordiga. The "Party and Class" which Damen refers to is the one in Rassegna Comunista 1922. It is a document full of suggestions and ideas (not always clear) but does not talk of the party exercising a dictatorship as far as I remember (in fact does not deal with that issue). It is here.

marxists.org

You will also find that Bordiga was one of the most vehement in attacking personality cults (hence why the Bordigists today opt for anonymity in their written works - something which makes it harder to work our what Bordiga wrote - a case in point is "organic centralism" which Damen thought started with good intentions (i.e. it sought the maximum of coherence through debate) but was then distorted by the "epigones" who turned it into a means for domination by the executive).

Re your intentions to wipe out ambiguity in how we present our views on the need for a fighting party of the class and not a new ruling caste in waiting there is no easy set of phrases to dispel the ideas of the counter-revolution which sits so heavily on us today. The party will arise whether "libertarians" like it or not as is it is part of the process of the class coming to conscious. Already anarchist groups like AF or Solfed accept this since they are trying to organise themselves (but would never call themselves a "vanguard" since that smacks of Leninism (even if objectively that is what they are). I don't deny that we could present our views better but we are improving (even if not fast enough for you!).

And forms as you point out are not enough - content matters too. Our organising principle (and the organising principle of the working class) is democratic centralism (which most people also think is just centralism or Stalinism - another legacy of the counter-revolution) but as you say it only works as long as people make it work (i.e. there are no formal organisational guarantees for anything unless there is constant activity and involvement of the mass of the membership [of the revolutionary organisation] or mass of the class [in the organs of working class rule/administration in a future society].

Party and Class is from 1921according to your link (you wrote 1922).

Now, from the paragraph I quoted, I do not think it spells out that we are only dealing with that one document, which as you say, suggests but does not outrightly say ''party rule''

Again

We owe to Bordiga the correct theory of the relationship between party and class on which the success of revolution depends. We can state, without fear of exaggeration or contradiction, that the definition of such a relationship is a fixed point in Marxism, representing a happy fusion between the experience of the “Italian Left” and that of Lenin in the victorious conclusion to the October Revolution. And we must add that what Bordiga produced on “party and class” not only served as a Marxist reference point to the parties which were being formed in the wake of the October Revolution in the post First World War period but it is still a classic, and will remain so in the period up to the next proletarian revolutionary wave. To ignore or weaken its terms, even if done in Bordiga’s name or that of some vague approximation to Bordigism, would be to undermine the meaning of the revolutionary party and its permanent role of giving a lead in working class action.

leftcom.org

Now I read that as an absolute endosement of Bordiga's position on the relationship between Party and class, not simply as the acceptance of one relatively short text, and I think even that goes against the idea of sovereign workers' councils.

I think this Bordiga text of the same year dispells any doubt.

marxists.org

Translated from “Partito e azione di classe”, Rassegna Comunista, Year I, No. 4, May 31, 1921.

Now, your link says Rassegna Comunista, no 2, April 15, 1921.

A month or so between them.

Are we seriously expected to believe that the call for absolute support of the non negotiable Bordiguist position does not take into account both texts?

According to the ICC book on the International Conferences, the CWO (regardless of who said it) stated the role of the Party was to rule.

Even this does not exclude Party rule, even if it suggests that exclusion.

''Its task will be to fight for a communist perspective in the mass organs of proletarian power (soviets). The party, however, will remain a minority of the working class and is not a substitute for the class in general. The task of establishing socialism is one for the working class as a whole. It is a task which cannot be delegated, not even to the class conscious vanguard.''

Let us clear the air on this one.

So you are not quoting Party and Class. I don't care what Bordiga wrote one month before or later in this context as this is the text Damen refers to. Our position, and Damen's, are well known so the air is already clear.

Whaht the CWO said, as reported by the ICC, in 1979 is not really relavant since we went through a long debate on this between 1980 and 1983 and our current psotions date from then and are summed up in the ICT Platform.

I would also suggest that this

”Its task will be to fight for a communist perspective in the mass organs of proletarian power (soviets). The party, however, will remain a minority of the working class and is not a substitute for the class in general. The task of establishing socialism is one for the working class as a whole. It is a task which cannot be delegated, not even to the class conscious vanguard.”

is a lot less ambiguous than your

The essential objective of the Communist Party we wish to construct is to create a society based on the power of Revolutionary Workers’ Councils

After all many libertarians would say that this implies party rule too (since you mention its existence). The SWP also has something like this in the pages of Socialist Worker. What you are trying to do is get a simple formula that banishes all ambiguities but this is not so simple as you imply. The long, patient, and often tedious, explanation of our positions on all issues cannot be short-circuited. It is why we wrote the consciousness pamphlet where we make a critique of Bordiga's position on the party. There is nothing to stop you developing it further.

The only part of your reply I still cannot clearly accept is the first paragraph.

Now I do see the point. You're arguably correct if you know that the entire edifice of total support for Bordiga (that's what I read) on the issue of party and class relations rests on the one document.

I say arguably because I think what that text is leading to is Pary rule, but as you say it is not overtly stated.

Perhaps I'm in a minority of one but I would not say what Damen said on Bordiga's perspective of the arty/class relationship.

The rest of your response is fine.

I had no critique of the

”Its task will be to fight for a communist perspective in the mass organs of proletarian power (soviets). The party, however, will remain a minority of the working class and is not a substitute for the class in general. The task of establishing socialism is one for the working class as a whole. It is a task which cannot be delegated, not even to the class conscious vanguard.”

which is a fine quote.

Nor do I think that a few well selected phrases are going to overwhelm all opposition, but they are not useless.

Steve

I took it to be "Party and Class" when I translated it as it is in quotes i the original.

I think a fuller critique of Bordiga on the party (to distinquish what you are trying to make clearer) would be good. I am not yet ready to do it (especially as we have not yet even finished translating the material in Damen's book on Bordiga so I await to see what comes next). In fact I'll get straight back to it now...

While we are here....I think we have a problem with this para

Let’s make our thinking on this more precise. The terms of the schema in question have to be “historicised” in the sense that in the determinist “prius” [i.e. what has gone before] there is not only in play individual impulses produced by economic stimuli and appetites but that these stimuli and Onorato Damen appetites have to be understood in terms of the shifts and changes in the total process of the capitalist economy, in the level of development of the means of production, in their technical sophistication, in variations of the market, in its recurrent crises, in the growing domination of financial capital, etc., etc.

leftcom.org

Cleish

Did Damen eventually change his mind on 'Party and Class' (the 1921 Bordida document)?

I think that document alone is bad.

e.g.

it is necessary to have an organ which inspires, unites and heads it – in short which officers it

In the only true revolutionary conception, the direction of class action is delegated to the party.

The concept of the proletariat’s right to command its own class action is only on abstraction devoid of any Marxist sense

In my mind Bordiga is reproducing the Party dictatorship of Lenin and Damen is not objecting.

Again

''We owe to Bordiga the correct theory of the relationship between party and class on which the success of revolution depends. We can state, without fear of exaggeration or contradiction, that the definition of such a relationship is a fixed point in Marxism, representing a happy fusion between the experience of the “Italian Left” and that of Lenin in the victorious conclusion to the October Revolution.''

Steve

Damen has been dead for 32 years and has said nothing about Bordiga since he died! Two years before we called round in August 1977 to ask him a few questions but "the old fossil", as he was irreverently called, was at the dentist. Unfortunately we never met him. His book is therefore all we have to go on and we have not yet finished translating it into English. I doubt you will get the answer you want since we are dealing with historical documents written at different times (Bordiga in 1921 , Damen's observations in 1951-2). We don't need to sanitise them or excuse them even if some of the formulae may now appear antiquated. What we do know is that as a result of the 1951 split between the Bordigists and the internationalists Damen drafted the 1952 Platform of the PCInt in which he concluded that the proletariat cannot delegate to anyone its class rule not even its revolutionary party. That seems clear enough. The party or perhaps you would prefer to call it "revolutioanry organisation" since the ignoramuses on libcom think (judging from their replies to you) that the word "party" means a body which intends to win power (usually by electoral means). We can call it what you like (pink elephant does not sound too offensive) but the fact is that as part of the process of coming to consciousness the working class will have to produce a revolutionary minority (even if some prefer not to recognise it as such) which will give the lead in the move to destroy the capitalist state and its exploitative system. Under the terms of capitalist ideological and material domination it is a given. But the pink elephant is a fighting not a ruling organisation. It promotes world revolution and leaves the task of transforming social relations in each area to the local working class (who may choose to elect pink elephant supporters to the class wide bodies but they take up their role as delegates of the people who elected them). The world pink elephant meanwhile devotes itself to the task of widening the world revolution (and their will be many tensions between the members in each location and the bigger task but then no one said that world revolution was "Come Dancing").

What Damen and Bordiga debated a lifetime ago is part of the process of how we got here but we don't have to justify every dot and comma. As our Italian comrades frequently say "this is archaeology". And in Party and Class Bordiga did give the best description of the dialectic in the entire history of Marxism (but then Engels died shortly after the first movie picture was being shot). I think that the correct relationship between party and class is broadly stated as Damen has it despite your quite correct concerns.

Well, the practical relevance is that we don't hold up Bordiga's Party and Class as reflecting todays positions if anyone asks.

I have no problem with the term PARTY or REVOLUTIONARY ORGANISATION.

PARTY is an advanced form of REVOLUTIONARY ORGANISATION. Sound right?

I haven't read ICT statutes in ages. Are they online, or can you send them?

There are no ICT statutes as such. There are CWO and BC statutes (and, for all I know, statutes for other affiliates). The BC and CWO statutes are almost identical (the differences are really in the organisation of a larger organisation as against a smaller one. We don't put statutes on line (although there is nothing "secret" in them). I sent copies round to everyone before the last meeting in August (as we had new members who had just been asked if they agreed with them) but as we for some reason cannot communicate directly by email you probably did not receive them. I will get someone to send them again.

On "Party and Class" there are some good bits and some terrible bits. "Theory is grey my friend" (Faust [Goethe] quoted often by Lenin) not black and white.

Cheers.

Thery is always up for modificatin. Last I heard even Einstein's theory of relativity may have to be reconsidered. But theory is very important.

I reckon some of what we are talking about comes down to the capacity of a sufficient mass of the class to come to an adequate level of class consciousness to keep a revolution advancing.

I agree that on their own the vast bulk cannot get beyond trade union consciousness.

But the question is can enough, with the efforts of the vanguard, attain that consciousness.

What I think it means is that the task of the rev org and party is twofold.

1 A profound and lengthy development of the vanguard

2 A barebones mass dissemination of essential ideas to the class in general.

Now this is not meant to be some sort of exclusive separation, anyone is welcome to any knowledge, debate etc.

At the moment I think we are doing this well enough.

Very interesting and important discussion. A lot of what is being talked about here is coinciding with some thoughts and ideas I've been having myself about the relationship between party and class.

I have recently been trying to avoid the word "lead" or "leadership" to describe the role of the revolutionary minority to the rest of the class. Not that these words are not accurate (when understood correctly), but when used by Trotskyists refer to a relationship that is completely alien to the real dialectical role between party and class. Tthe reason why communism hasn't materialized is due to a "crisis of leadership" is Trotskyism in a nutshell. What Trotskyists and the left consider "leadership" is something I believe is unmarxist.

When the left talks about "leadership" or "leading the class" it is usually a regression back to Kautskyism that the revolutionary minority has to bring the story of communism to the workers and that the "defeats" of the class is due to a lack of "leadership." "Leadership" meaning converts bringing the good word of st. marx to the lost sheep. This is something I believe gets the whole relationship between the party and the class way off and something (as I see it) something that the ICT understands.

To use an inventive analogy, the left considers the party to be the conductor of the class struggle. The true role of the party is to be a revolutionary GPS. The former conception of the relationship between the party and the class is in some dire need of some dialectical reasoning. Almost as important, though hardly talked about if ever, is the influence and the "leadership" of the rest of the class upon the revolutionary minority. As Marx put it: "who will educate the educators?"

A good example of this is how Trotskyists/leftists talk about "defeats" of the working class, such as a failed strike. A strike is a failure because of the union had a poor leadership blah blah blah. Entirely alien is the idea that a "failure" can in fact play a greater role in unveiling and revealing the gears of capital and the necessity of a unified class struggle against capital amongst the workers.

I have to go right now. Maybe others can critique this? I feel I have much more to delve into.

The P/C relationship is a 2 way dialogue between members of the same class.

The Party is a catalyst but it is the bulk of the class which will have to create life.

What is it that we want? To develop ourselves, not capital which leaves us insignificant. We don't want to be proletarians.

The answers will come in the process. We have learnt a lot already, one point being that Party rule is not compatible with abolition of the proletariat.

The official thought of the social organization of appearances is itself obscured by the generalized subcommunication that it has to defend. It cannot understand that conflict is at the origin of everything in its world. The specialists of spectacular power - a power that is absolute within its realm of one-way communication - are absolutely corrupted by their experience of contempt and by the success of that contempt, because they find their contempt confirmed by their awareness of how truly contemptible spectators really are.

Guy Debord

I recently noticed that out of all Left Communists Bordiga never seemed to criticize the degeneration of the Russian Revolution until 1926. It seems the Italian Left (from what I see, so far) didn't seem to criticize the Russian Revolution until after the Stalinist counter-revolution. They only seemed to criticize the opportunism and Brest-Litovsk Treaty before 1926, but I'm probably wrong. Bordiga's texts never covered anything about the bureaucracy, dead soviet power, to me Bordiga seemed to think that Lenin was perfect. All the other Left Communist groups in other countries were making the same criticism as the ICT does about the degeneration in the Russian Revolution in the early 1920s and 1919. The positions of the Italian Left and Bordiga were indeed what they are now, but it seemed that their criticism of the degeneration came much later than other Communist Left groups at the time.

Jas

I don't think you are wrong. The Italian Left always took their starting point the situation of the international working class and were less concerned about what happened in the RFSFR (remembering too that until the mid-1920s there were a number of social experiments going on still there and the idea that you could talk of socialism when only one country had had a revolution would have seemed premature. On the other hand the early judgement of Ruhle etc that Russia was "state capitalist" border on the infantile. It allowed Lenin to retort that it was not even that good and state capitalism would have been an advance! One reason the early CWO identified with the German Left was because of its early critique of the USSR but we later came to see that this was not the only issue to distinquish the CL.

Bordiga in 1926 in the CI did criticise what was going on inside Russia politically (it is somewhere on our site) but he never had a critique of the economic bases of the USSR. Bilan always referred to the Russia of Stalin as a political entity which was "centrist". I have not yet read any article by them which tackled the economic nature of the USSR although some of the ICL must have been thinking about it as Damen pronounced that the USSR was state capitalist and imperialist in 1943. Bordiga never had a coherent position on the nature of the USSR as the publication of the letters between him and Damen show (translation of which are still under way - should be ready soon).

Cleishbotham wrote:

Bordiga never had a coherent position on the nature of the USSR

Most books (in English) that discuss Bordiga's perspective focus entirely on his writings on it in the post-WW2 phase of his political activity. But I read somewhere, can't remember at the moment exactly where that he held to a dual nature analysis - that the working class had taken political power but that economic relations remained capitalist. Does anyone know how accurate or not this is? I think in the past Cleish. you've said that he had multiple positions on this.

Also, as far as I know throughout his life, Bordiga defended the suppression of the Kronstadt revolt, which back up Jas point.

"

I think the ICC is right to talk in terms of a problem from the outset almost.

QUOTE

From 1918 on the political power of the working class was being restricted and stifled by the state apparatus at whose head stood the Bolshevik party. Since the seizure of power the Bolshevik Party had entered into conflict with the unitary organs of the proletariat and presented itself as a party of government. This substitution of the councils’ power by that of the party was justified theoretically (along with the militarisation of labour) in Trotsky’s work Terrorism and Communismwritten at the beginning of the Twenties — a tragic work which already contained the theoretical justification for acts like the Kronstadt massacre.

“We have more than once been accused of having substituted for the dictatorship of the soviets the dictatorship of our party. Yet it can be said with complete justice that the dictatorship of the soviets became possible only by means of the dictatorship of the party. It is thanks to the clarity of its theoretical vision and its strong revolutionary organisation that the party has afforded to the soviets the possibility of becoming transformed from shapeless parliaments of labour into the apparatus of the supremacy of labour. In this ‘substitution’ of the power of the party for the power of the working class there is nothing accidental, and in reality there is no substitution at all. The communists express the fundamental interests of the working class. It is quite natural that in the period in which history brings up those interests in all their magnitude on to the order of the day that the communists have become the recognised representation of the working class as a whole.” (Trotsky. Terrorism or Communism.)

....................

NB As regards Kronstadt I am not saying the class cannot violently surpress opposition.

I know Bordiga supported a party of government in his theses of the abstentionist communist fraction cited earlier in this thread. I don't want to sound sectarian or infantile, but a party dictatorship even by a few concious workers seems anti-Marxist. In the Communist Manifesto, Marx wanted the whole proletarian class in control of the state, Marx did not want the party to take control of the state, he wanted the party to lead and guide the workers and educate them, so that they could take power on their own, with the party using propaganda and helping the working class create communism after the seizure of power. In some of Bordiga's writings they seem to support a party dictatorship and in some a class dictatorship. It makes sense that Bordiga and the Italian Left seemed more concerned with the international class. The only writings I can find from the Italian Left in the 1910s and 1920s are Bordiga's. Are there any documents I can find written by Onorato Damen (or someone else in the Italian Left) in the 1920s or 1910s?

A remark from Steve. "I agree that on their own the vast bulk cannot get beyond trade union consciousness.". I dislike both the sentiment, and the way it's expressed. Sorry about that.

Please elaborate.

Is the word "bulk'' not to your liking? Majority sound better?

I think its an important point. There seem to be many articles saying Lenin changed his mind on the point, but I think it accurate.

It is not an insult. It does not exclude the capacity of the majority to attain revolutionary consciousness.

Don't be sorry, say what you think.

Jas

The Platform of the Committee of Intesa 1925 was drafted by Damen (it is signed also by his wife, Francesca ("Cecca") Grossi and others, including Bordiga (who was the first to accept the demand by the new PCd'I leadership that it should be withdrawn). We have run out of these but a new run is currently at the printers (£3 plus postage) and will be out on Friday next.

There is a confusion about what Bordiga wrote and what not since Programma have a policy of not signing articles (presumably in the interests of "organic centralism") so I appreciate your dilemma. I have to go now but will return to this later...

I'm with Charlie on this.

Steve says : "I agree that on their own the vast bulk cannot get beyond trade union consciousness."

Stevein says : "It does not exclude the capacity of the majority to attain revolutionary consciousness."

Bit of clarification needed there.

There are plenty of past examples of the class forming assemblies or soviets that clearly go well beyond "trade union consciousness" - destroying sectoral divides, rejecting the 'national interest' etc. (It was class action that forced Lenin into an about turn in 'State and Revolution'.) Presumably the ICT response is that these were defeated not just by conjunctural events, but by the absence of the influence of a communist minority (party or whatever). I'm not arguing this isn't the case, but it seems dangerous ground for a rev organisation to hold such a pessimistic view of the class's ability to attain consciousness through its struggle.

There is room for clarification here, but I think there is a salient point that the consciousness generated though struggle, in the absence of the revolutionary party, wll fall short of that required to make a revolution.

A high point in this regard was represented by the Spanish Civil War where despite the revolutionary rhetoric, the absence of a truly revolutionary party which would not have advocated class collaboration in the name anti-fascism meant workers were defeated in the service of the ruling class.

No party, no revolution, if anything, i think that was Lenin's, Bordiga's and is our position

Shug

This is a discussion forum and Steve has put his personal take on it. The whole problem is that people in these exchanges try to take shortcuts which lead them to make formulations which require more explanation. The ICT's full view is in the Consciousness pamphlet (Chapter 5).

You don't have to wait for "State and Revolution" in 1917 to see a change in Lenin's views. Even in "What is to be Done" he says at least six times that the real problem is "the lag of leaders [behind] the spontaneous upsurge of the masses". That is because his pamphlet is against the "Economists" who argued that the economic struggle would automatically lead to the political understanding of the need to overthrow capital. He was thus not arguing that workers were incapable of understanding the theory of socialism (as the SPGB always argue) but that the growth of consciousness was not a direct product of the economic struggle. Thus it is likely that only certain sections of the class [who form a revolutioanry minority] will arrive at the need for revolution rather than the class as a whole.

Lenin's phrase about trades union consciousness was borrowed from Kautsky but by 1907 (i.e after reflecting on the 1905 experience) Lenin was stating that he had perhaps gone too far and in any case that particular polemic had been superseded. I think it would be better if we refrained from using it too if only because it leads to confusion as to our meaning.

Here in America workers seem to be very nationalistic, I'm very sure the majority of American workers will have a trade union conscious. In other countries I see a much higher level of concious amongst the workers, but it is not revolutionary conciousness. The party must educate and do everything possible to increase the consciousness of the workers. The party fights hard for it's programme within the soviets. If the majority of workers could achieve revolutionary concious on their own, then we could all be councilists and anarchists, but that's not the reality. The majority of workers will have a trade union conscious.

Jas

Re the domination of nationalism over US workers it might appear so at the moment but class consciousness is an incredibly flexible thing. Remember that in Europe millions of workers went off to war singing nationalist anthems in 1914 only to start mutinying and striking in 1916-17. Workers are incredibly resilient (and doesn't capitalism love them for it) but at certain points daily exploitation becomes too much and (usually in conjunction with some political crisis) the dam breaks and the struggle becomes unstoppable. At these points in time revolutionaries need to be prepared and organised. In the meantime we try to reach as many workers as possible to have an international network ready to respond and to fight within the class for a communist programme.

from BC

A great contribution to this relation was elaborated in the writings of Lenin and the experience of Bolsheviks intervention.

“The history of all countries bears witness to the fact that the working class by its own effort alone is able to arrive only at a purely trade-unionist consciousness, that is, the conviction of the need to unite in unions, to lead the fight against the bosses, to claim this or _that law required by the workers from the government etc.” .

_

................................

Given the material conditions that the proletariat faces in its life under capitalism, in the materialist view of the genesis of consciousness and the weight of the dominant ideology, the class - at best - is pushed into a "simple" fight for demands. The organised vanguard of the class (the Party) is formed, rather, by those who, beyond the historical period and the level of class struggle, are developing revolutionary consciousness. The Party is actively involved in the struggles, but does not adapt to the spontaneity of the moment, but must take action by making itself the Communist political reference point, pushing the proletariat to take on board revolutionary consciousness. The task of communists is not, to paraphrase Lenin, to ask passively in the service of the labour movement, but to represent the interests of the movement as a whole, to show the movement's ultimate goal, the overcoming of capitalism.

leftcom.org

So I recently found a quote frequently used by anti-Bolsheviks. The quote is supposedly from Felix Dzerzhinsky in 1918. it reads, "we stand for organized terror" I copied and pasted the quote in to google, the only websites that used the quote were Wikipedia, anti-semetic, anti-immigration, and various far right groups. It is interesting I could never find the whole passage, in which this quote was cited. Its always fun to foil Bourgeosie anti-Bolshevik propaganda, but the problem is the lack of access of first hand accounts of the Russian Revolution without it being from a Bourgeosie and pro-tsar perspective.

Workers are incredibly resilient (and doesn’t capitalism love them for it) but at certain points daily exploitation becomes too much and (usually in conjunction with some political crisis) the dam breaks and the struggle becomes unstoppable. At these points in time revolutionaries need to be prepared and organised. In the meantime we try to reach as many workers as possible to have an international network ready to respond and to fight within the class for a communist programme.

Great description of the role of revolutionary organization! Sometimes discussions about that can last for weeks with everyone writing essay length arguments but sometimes you can sum it all up succinctly without even knowing it.

Thank you Shug for your support. Steve and Stevein actually contradict each other. (I hope they're not the same person!) The trouble is that Stevein also says: ""There seem to be many articles saying Lenin changed his mind on this point, but I think it accurate". As I understand it Lenin DID change his mind. But what does Stevein think accurate: his first or second idea? Is the ICT's "act" (not that it is an act) starting to fall apart?

.

Sometimes I get very confused by what the two Steves say. Now Stevein writes:"The Party is actively involved in the struggles, but does not adapt to the spontaneity of the moment, but must take action by making itself the Communist political reference point, pushing the proletariat to take on board revolutionary consciousness."

With regard to class spontaneity, did not the Bosheviks respond to it well when they declared "all power to the soviets"? And as to pushing the proletariat "to take on board revolutionary consciousness" - take on board sounds like they have to swallow it whole and uncritically. This can't be right! Surely the class doesn't create soviets unless it has quite a sum of consciousness already. The job of the party must be to develop it further and to criticize failings and false ideas? When the Steves are elected to workers councils, they'll have to be a bit more careful about what they say else we'll all be in the shit! ,

I think I said that on their own, workers will not attain mass revolutionary consciousness.

Battagiia Comunista say-

Given the material conditions that the proletariat faces in its life under capitalism, in the materialist view of the genesis of consciousness and the weight of the dominant ideology, the class — at best — is pushed into a “simple” fight for demands.

I think Lenin was right in his assessment in the sense that the generalisation of revolutionary consciousness requires a Party, it will not arise from the daily struggle. BC are right.

The fact that the workng class can set up soviets does not mean the mass or even a substantial fraction have attained revolutionary consciousness.

I don't see the contradictions.

..............

Charlie's last post- I am quoting Battaglia here.

The working class has to take on board revolutionary theory, the bearer of which is the party, IF we are to have a successful revolution.

So, yes, the class has to heed the party, in other words the advanced part of the class has to win the rest to its perspective, or the formation of soviets will have been in vain.

The 'steves' are all me, if I log in on a certain computer I cannot sign in as stevein7.

.............

''Surely the class doesn’t create soviets unless it has quite a sum of consciousness already.''

That sounds quite likely, but I would say that the process of acquiring a higher grade of consciousness on a sufficiently mass scale is not advanced enough until the soviets are won over by the revolutionary party. Exact details will be revealed when it happens but the point is that the formation of soviets is not synonomous with the generation of revolutionary consciousness on the scale that instigating a successful revolution requires.

Going back to Bordiga and Lenin, there is some problem with the idea of party rule, but nonethelesss, the party is supremely important and unless its revolutionary perspective is adopted by the soviets, capitalist order will be restored.

Regarding invariance....The latest RP 60 attacks the concept, but there may be a point here. The proletarian condition may vary in detail in time and place, but essentially it does not change. It is exploited. It is powerless in terms of the official structure.It is in antagonism with all of capitalist socety. Now, the fluctuations in daily conditions faced by individual workers will make them more or less inclined to embrace the fundamental critique posited by revolutionaries, but I think they should not constitute that critique. The trap is a Byzantine intellectual construction, possibly frequently anchored in reference to concrete reality, yet unfocused, bulky, unweildy, bend the capacity of the capitalist-blinkered mindset. Rather the focus needs to be on a core 'intense' message which is able to be easily diseminated. The construction of such a message can be the result of profound reflection, but one aspect is a 'public face', the latter, internal to the organistion.Also in RP 60, I was unsure about the concluding part of the Onrato Damen article. The concept of proletarian dictatorship =party dictatorship seemed wrapped in an opaque cover and the current TCI position was not made explicit.

Following Cleishbotham's comment of 2011-09-04, it is instructive to read such comments by those deeply knowledgable in the history of the communist left.  How many workers today have come to know what is being talked about ?

Anyone new to trying to fathom what has been going on so far as 'the creation of the International Communist Party' is concerned, should note that there are two - or more.  The website names of two of them slightly vary, in that one has the three words run together without spaces, whereas the other one's words are separated by hyphens.

Thus the website  internationalcommunistparty.org   has articles under Internationalist papers, which I am finding well worth reading.

The website  international-communist-party.org  has many articles and details of many in the journal 'Communist Left', also of considerable interest.

The question of how soon the working class needs a party and of how it should be formed remain lacking in agreed answers, which doesn't seem to be of much help so far.  Help for whom?!  - For the working class and for those grappling with struggle to sort out our thinking.  Cheers.

Thanks for the sharper analysis.

I am going to say that the upper limit of consciousness on a mass scale in the absence of the revolutionary party may in fact go beyond trade union consciousness (is this exactly quantified?) but will still fall short of the consciousness required for a successful revolutionary outcome. The vacuum will be filled by an organised capitalist current.

The class party is a result of the class struggle, it may well contain elements from social strata other than the proletariat but must exert deep influence on the class for a positive outcome. The process of formation and extending the influence of the class party is a practical and theoretical process in no way divorced from the class struggle, but without the struggle for the party, the class struggle will be in vain as the capitalist crisis inevitably means that regardless of the depth and intensity of the defense struggle, the proletarian condition can only deteriorate.

Regardless of semantic arguments concerning the precise quality of proletarian consciousness, there is a dividing line here.

NO REVOLUTIONARY PARTY = NO REVOLUTION

Hopefully that cuts the Gordian knot.

It also follows that our purpose as an organisation is not to act as a cheerleader for the working class in general to stand up for itself, but to provide a reference point for the minority who are in the process of breaking with capitalism and to propagate that perspective and the need for an organised mechanism for that purpose.