The Socialist Workers Party
is a serious threat to genuine radical politics
New Statesman, 25th
October 2004
It's Saturday evening, at the midpoint of the
European Social Forum 2004 - an event that is
supposed to represent the coming together of radical
Europe in a quest for a better world. At a meeting
where the Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone, is
due to speak, the stage is invaded. Three hundred
activists chant and wave flags. Soon the stage
is packed with people protesting not against capitalism
or war, but against the organisation of the forum
itself. "Never again must a Social Forum
be organised like this!" announces a woman
through a commandeered microphone. "It has
been a travesty of democracy."
What went wrong? The answer can be summed up
in three words: Socialist Workers Party. Along
with the Greater London Authority (which, it is
estimated, provided £400,000 to fund the
event) and a Trotskyist clique of Livingstone
supporters known as Socialist Action, the SWP
has been trying for a year to claim ownership
of the forum. The hard left has been up to its
old tricks again. This time, it nearly caused
an international incident.
"The SWP and the GLA had it all in hand
from the start," I was told by a leading
British activist who did not want to be named.
"They put together the initial bid to have
the forum in London and would not let anybody
else see it. Since then they've been trying to
turn the whole thing into a giant opportunity
to sell their newspapers and gain new members."
Unfortunately, this is not a conspiracy theory
- or if it is, it's a theory supported by several
leading NGOs. "I've been in plenty of meetings
where at least a third of those present are SWP
members, in various different guises," says
Dave Timms, press officer for the World Development
Movement. "They call themselves Globalise
Resistance, Stop the War Coalition, Project K
- but it's always the same people, and they consistently
packed meetings and voted their own people in
as chairs, speakers and organisers."
Timms's criticisms echo those earlier in the
year from ten big NGOs, including Greenpeace and
Oxfam. They wrote of how, at a meeting held to
determine who would speak at the forum, the SWP
had "packed the room with their supporters".
"This will do nothing to help broaden the
movement in the UK," they wrote.
The Italian mobilising committee for the forum
issued a public complaint in June about how the
SWP and Socialist Action had behaved at a meeting
in Paris: "They . . . were constantly unwilling
to enter into real dialogue, tried to impose their
own way and were often arrogant or used blackmail,
repeatedly refusing to accept decisions and titles
which had already been decided hours before."
Nick Dearden from War on Want, who has been involved
in organising European Social Forums for years,
says he now feels like giving up. "This year's
whole thing has been deeply compromised from the
start. Many of us wanted to open up the organising
process and bring everyone in. The SWP wanted
to shut down debate and run the show themselves.
I think it has actually set radicalism in this
country back."
The "global justice movement", as it
has come to be known, is deeply committed to democracy
and enthused with fresh ideas. The SWP, on the
other hand, is an undemocratic, regressive organisation
that seeks to harness the energy of this new movement
for its own purposes. Its input made this year's
forum seem at times more like a backward-looking,
hard-left gathering than a place where a new world
would be born.
Let's hope for better luck next time.
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