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Organized Labour and the Politics
of the Class Struggle Today
Viewpoint on the Tasks of the 36th Central Convention Communist
Party of Canada (CPC)
Toronto Ontario, February 5‐7 2010
By: Don Currie
Chair Canadians for Peace and Socialism
Editor Focus on Socialism
January 11, 2010
www.FocusOnSocialism.ca
INTRODUCTION
A Convention of the Communist Party of Canada (CPC) is always a significant event in the
struggle of the working class to defeat capitalism and replace it with socialism. Only the
Communists strive to take responsibility for the whole revolutionary process underway in
our own country and globally. Every revolutionary class conscious worker is concerned that
the Communist Party becomes strengthened and more effective in fulfilling its historic
responsibilities to the working class of Canada and all of its peoples and for the victorious
outcome of the cause of the International Communist Movement.
From its formation in 1978 the Committee of Canadian Communists (CCC) under the
leadership of W.C. (Bill) Beeching 1 and later, Canadians For Peace and Socialism (CPS), our
members have critically studied the theory and practice of the CPC and have consistently
striven to strengthen its work. The 36th Convention is no exception.
CPS has forwarded two contributions to the pre‐convention discussion of the CPC, for
consideration by its membership and delegates, one by its honorary chair of CPS, John
Beeching and the other by current Chair of CPS, Don Currie. The CPS contributions
conformed to pre‐convention discussion rules limiting statements to 1000 words. 2 Such a
restriction necessarily limited the contribution on the role of the organized labour
movement to a sparse treatment. We take this opportunity to elaborate in more detail
those views and in addition comment on some questions of the general line of the Draft
Resolution.
The 36th Central Convention Draft Main Political Resolution
The CPC Draft Main Political Resolution (MPR) is a strengthened and more exacting
statement of the current conjuncture of class forces in Canada over previous documents of
its type. There is no doubt that the global capitalist crisis and the response of the
International Meetings of Communist and Workers Parties (IMCWP) is beginning to clarify
1
William Beeching Collection, Focus On Socialism, http://72.3.249.139/focusonsocialism.ca/upload/FOS‐
CCCFocusOnMarxismLeninism%20Vol%201%20Iss%201Rev1.pdf
2
CPC 36th Convention, http://www.focusonsocialism.ca/upload/36th‐Central‐Convention‐Bulletin‐1.pdf,
http://www.focusonsocialism.ca/upload/36th‐Central‐Convention‐Bulletin‐2.pdf
http://www.focusonsocialism.ca/upload/36th‐Central‐Convention‐Bulletin‐3.pdf
http://www.focusonsocialism.ca/upload/36th‐Central‐Convention‐Bulletin‐4.pdf
Organized Labour and the Politics of Class Struggle
January 11, 2010 www.FocusOnSocialism.ca Page 2 of 27
theory and program and strengthen the strategy and tactics of the entire Communist
Movement and each one of its member organizations.
The concluding paragraph of the statement of the Delhi 11th Meeting of the IMCWP
proclaims:
“We the communist and workers’ parties of the globe and representing the interests of
the working class and all other toiling sections of society (the vast majority of the global
population) underlining the irreplaceable role of the communist parties call upon the
people to join us in strengthening the struggles to declare that socialism is the only real
alternative for the future of humankind and that future is ours.” 3
The Organized Working Class: Key Element of the Fightback
This contribution to the pre‐convention discussion attempts to be in the spirit of that
declaration. It is not about repeating what is manifestly true in the MPR. Neither is it an
attempt to improve its descriptive analysis. What follows is a more elaborated statement of
those basic ideas CPS believes were overlooked or treated inadequately and that in our view
are critical and require further work and development.
The MPR, throughout, correctly accords to the working class the central role in leading
Canada forward to economic and political independence, peace and socialism. That
profound truth alone elevates the role of the Communist Party above all other political
forces for progress that are active in the body politic of our country. All other political
parties represent, in one way or another, the class interests of wealth and privilege, all with
a direct interest in perpetuating state monopoly capitalism. The Communist Party alone of
all of the political parties recognizes and accepts the inevitability of the revolutionary
overthrow of the capitalist system and its replacement by the historically imminent and
necessary system of socialism.
The CPC accepts the responsibility of studying deeply the organic composition our class. It
acknowledges this duty and takes on the necessity of examining the living, fighting,
psychology and historical evolution the Canadian working class has travelled to its present
stage. The CPC takes on the difficult and historically necessary task to thoroughly scrutinize
3
IMCWP, 11th Meeting of the International Communist and Workers’ Parties, November 22, 2009,
http://11imcwp.in/content/delhi‐declaration
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and expose how the Canadian working class is currently embattled with foreign and
domestic finance capital and what problems of the class struggle are urgently in need of
resolution. We approach that task with the fullest confidence in scientific socialism,
Marxism‐Leninism, correctly applied, to solve all of the problems confronted by the working
class as it struggles to find its way to socialism.
That is why CPS is confident it will be understood when we say that the Communist Party of
Canada’s Draft Main Political Report is adept throughout the document at identifying
problems of the class struggle but weak in substantiating theoretically what needs to be
done to solve them. One wants to cry out after reading each paragraph: “Yes I agree – but
how do we do it! What must be done?” That is particularly the case with the sections in the
MPR dealing with labour political action and coalition building.
For example: in the crucially important section entitled “The Organized Working Class: Key
Element of the Fightback” encompassing paragraphs 46 to 60, the MPR correctly points out
in paragraph 46 what it is that the capitalist ruling class fears above all else; a working class
challenge to finance capital’s economic and political power. The Draft Resolution states:
“that the working class has the potential to unite all the diverse forces of society…into
political movements that have the potential to overthrow them.” (ie. the capitalist class
DC).
The following paragraphs of the section are then taken up with identifying all of the
problems standing in the way of the working class realizing its potential. It is a long and
daunting list.
Finally in paragraph 59 the resolution attempts to get at the essence of the problem. After
discussing in some detail recent labour struggles and the strengths and weaknesses
revealed in those struggles, the resolution states:
“The problem of leadership – or lack thereof – in the fight back against the corporate
agenda is not primarily organizational, but rather ideological in character. It is absolutely
essential to build the left and provide workers with a vision of something larger, of a
road that leads somewhere.”
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The draft resolution then goes on to propose the convening of a CLC sponsored special
emergency conference to; “…develop a comprehensive strategy to confront the impact of the
current crisis…” One of the key issues at such a conference would be labour unity and the
cessation of raiding.
What Kind of CLC Conference and When?
It is correct and obligatory not only to call for such a conference but to elaborate in some
detail the Communist proposals for a “comprehensive strategy to confront the impact of
the current crisis” Regrettably the MPR has not defined what specific type of CLC
Conference it has in mind.
We urgently suggest consideration of the following proposal.
There is no doubt that the convening of such a CLC Conference would, by itself, be
significant even if it did not succeed in adopting a “comprehensive strategy to confront the
impact of the current crisis.” The symbolism of such a meeting would have a profound
effect on labour politics.
The Communist Party of Canada should immediately re‐issue its call for a CLC Conference
and coming out of the 36th Convention undertake a public campaign for such a meeting as
the central task of the leadership and membership of the Party.
Such a CLC Conference is made more urgent by the decision of Prime Minister Harper to
prorogue Parliament and exclude the people from the affairs of state until sometime in
March 2010. A pubic campaign by the Communist Party to mobilize support among workers
and the organized labour movement for the calling of such a conference would place the
CPC at the centre of labour politics.
Prime Minster Harper’s decision cannot be dismissed as simply a cynical self serving
manoeuvre ‐ which of course it is. It is more sinister than that. The Harper Conservatives are
now the chosen party of war profiteering, the global investment plans of Canadian finance
capital and profit interests. Having the ear of the Harper cabinet are those sections of
Canadian and US capital that are plundering the energy resources of Canada and in so doing,
endangering the economic future of the whole country. Parliamentary democracy is no
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longer a useful tool in the pursuit of the profit interests of this traitorous cabal of self‐
interested militarists and profiteers.
Parliamentary democracy is proving to be an impediment to monopoly capital and is being
dismantled and replaced with executive and administrative power. Simultaneously the
weakness within the “centre‐left” which did not recognize the Harper conservatives as the
main danger (i.e. he NDP, Liberals, environmentalists etc,) compounds the difficulty in
mobilizing opposition to this sinister move. This situation can only be reversed by organized
labour intervening directly in the struggle for democracy. Labour has a big stake in
defending democracy. Once administrative and executive power is consolidated in the
hands of monopoly capital and their councils and associations the ability to reverse it, even if
social democracy is in power, will require a bitter struggle that will only be won by mass
mobilization and the political power of the working class.
The spontaneous movement that arose in support of a Liberal‐NDP‐Bloc coalition and that
could have defeated the Harper Conservatives, were it not for the betrayal by Michael
Ignatieff, and now another popular upsurge of protest against the prorogation of
Parliament, illustrates the fact that the majority of Canadians who oppose the Harper
Government are ahead of all of the opposition parties. Millions of Canadians are ready to
support a movement inside Parliament or at the polls to defeat the Harper government.
There is a growing realization that Harper poses a threat to democracy, and represents all
those interests that seek open dictatorial governance in Canada.
That is why there is no room for business as usual politics on the left. The Leader of the
Communist Party is called upon to go to the people of Canada and in the first place to the
organized labour movement to underline the gravity of the situation. The Conservative
Government of Canada, a minority in the body politic of the nation, is exhibiting an appetite
for and undertaking all of the actions to take Canada in the direction of open corporate rule.
The Harper Conservatives, confident of the support of their finance capitalist backers, have
become the main threat to the interests of the working class, democracy and peace and
they must be stopped and administered a crushing and humiliating defeat. The only force in
the country capable of doing that is organized labour and all of the forces of popular
resistance that can be attracted to labour’s banner.
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Ideally such an all‐in CLC Conference would be convened in Vancouver and during the Winter
Olympics as the real Parliament of the people and majority public opinion. The audacity of
such a meeting would seize the imagination of the whole country and strengthen the
resolve of all Canadians who are the victims of the economic depression.
The CLC should be called upon to extend invitations to all of its affiliates, each and every
people’s organization in the country presently involved in resisting cutbacks, each and every
peace organization campaigning for the immediate withdrawal of Canadian troops from
Afghanistan, and every MP and MLA who has a record of publicly opposing the corporate
line of the old line parties.
It falls to the Communist Party to take up this audacious work. Such a task should be
considered the concentration work of the whole party so long as Parliament is prorogued. A
CLC Conference should be promoted as a the real people’s Parliament of the majority, a
Parliament for the mobilization of majority public opinion against the Harper Government,
the prelude to building the great electoral coalition that must come together in the next
federal election to deal Harper and his minions a crushing defeat.
The Main Ideological Weakness of the Organized Labour Movement
The Draft Main Political Resolution in posing the question of the main ideological weakness
and the need to develop a “left” within the labour movement carries with it the obligation
to attempt to answer those important questions. The authors of the section have once again
posed the correct question but without a hint as to what they consider to be the answer.
Let us attempt to answer concretely the latter two questions mentioned by drawing on the
history of our Party. The main ideological weakness of the organized labour movement was
dealt with by the Communists 85 years ago, and in essence is still valid. The question was
answered in a famous booklet published by the Trade Union Educational League (TUEL) and
authored by Tim Buck entitled “Steps to Power, A Program for the Trade Union Minority of
Canada.” 4
What was its central thesis? Buck and the TUEL speaking directly to trade union militants
said:
4
Tim Buck, “Steps to power, a program of action for the Trade Union minority of Canada”, Published by Trade
Union Educational League, 1924, (Toronto)
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“Our problem and the aim of this booklet is to direct our activities and the activities of
our organizations so that, instead of merely functioning as a kind of bargain counter
across which officials continually haggle with the boss in a futile effort to maintain a
balance between wages and the cost of living, our organizations will also engage in
struggles for more fundamental things; which struggles in turn, while strengthening the
unions, will bring them into direct conflict with capitalism as a system.”
Buck was among a whole generation of militant class conscious labour revolutionaries that
emerged during and after the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution who studied deeply the theories of
Marx and later Lenin, about the role of trade unions in the struggle for socialism. Marx and
Engels spoke of the role of the trade union movement in its nascent stage with profound
foresight as to the future role it was destined to play. Their advice began with the
Communist Manifesto 5 published February 21, 1846 and was given further elaboration in
Marx’s celebrated Wage‐Labour and Capital lectures to the German Workingmen’s Club in
Brussels 1847 and in a series of programs and resolutions authored by Marx and Engels
during the 12 year span of the International Workingmen’s Association from 1864 to 1876. 6
The initial work of Marx and Engels was further developed by Lenin during the growth of the
world trade union movement in the era of the development of capitalism to its imperialist
stage, extending from the 1905 Revolution up to the time of his death in January 1924.
Lenin’s advice was carried forward into the period of the Communist International in the
1920’s and 30’s, a period of turbulent growth of the organized working class in both
capitalist states and the socialist USSR.
After the defeat of Nazi Germany, with the main blow struck by the Red Army, the
International Communist Movement once again turned its attention to the organized labour
movement. The Communists participated in organizing the World Federation of Trade
Unions (WFTU) 7 . The WFTU represents the struggle to unite the organized labour
movements of the capitalist and socialist world into a great militant world‐wide labour
movement.
5
Communist Manifesto, http://www.focusonsocialism.ca/random.asp?ID=23
6
Karl Marx, “Inaugural Address of the International Working Men’s Association”, The International Workingmen’s
Association (The First International, 1864, http://www.connexions.org/CxLibrary/Docs/CX5580‐Inaugural.htm
7
www.wftucentral.org
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A restudy of the glorious historical role the Communists played in working for a unified
global movement of the organized working class is called for today. It is important to
establish for the present generation of trade union militants the continuity in new
conditions, of the theoretically substantiated Marxist fundamentals of program, strategy
and tactics that enabled millions of workers to organize and fight to abolish the profit
system.
The great US Communist and working class leader William Z. Foster writing in Chapter Seven
of his remarkable work; “History of the World Trade Union Movement” commented (we
quote extensively because of the exemplary, profound, simple and direct way Foster speaks
to his working class audience about the question of working class power):
“Marx actively supported every strike and other struggle for amelioration of the
workers’ hard conditions and he repeatedly drafted programs of immediate demands.
But at the same time he warned again and again of the futility of the trade unions
confining themselves to such partial struggles. They ought never to forget their final
objective of abolishing capitalism outright. The conquest of political power is the basic
task confronting workers. In a celebrated passage, directed towards the trade unions,
Marx declared; Instead of the conservative motto ‘a fair day’s pay for a fair days work!’
they ought to inscribe on their banner the revolutionary watchword, ‘Abolition of the
wage system.’ To learn this most basic reality in terms of actual achievement, in the face
of treacherous opportunist leaders, defenders of capitalism, has been the most difficult
of all lessons for the workers, but decisive millions of them have grasped it and are
putting it in action.” 8
Tim Buck and W.Z Foster guided by Marx answered the question in their day as to what
constituted the main ideological weakness of organized labour.
What is the main ideological weakness of the organized labour movement today? Is it not
essentially the same as it was in 1847, 1864 to 1876, 1925, and 1956? It can be summed up as
the historical struggle conducted by Communists with a variety of non‐Marxist trends inside
the labour movement that attempt to divert the working class from undertaking political
action on “fundamental things” that of necessity unavoidably brings the whole labour
movement into direct conflict with capitalism. The Communists always conducted that
8
W.Z. Foster, “History of the World Trade Union Movement” International Publishers, New York 1956
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struggle by organizing and joining in support of each and every immediate struggle of the
working class, but always in the course of doing so, openly declaring that if the working class
was to become a class for itself it must accept the task of abolishing the wage labour and
profit system.
Is the Struggle for Wages Futile?
Nothing said by Marx, Buck or Foster can be taken to suggest that the struggle for wages,
improved benefits and job security is futile. The current global crisis of capitalism is the
pretext used by finance capital for an across the board assault on the wages and living
standards of hundreds of millions of workers. The fight back against this capitalist assault
on workers’ livelihoods is much more than a simple “defensive” struggle. The struggle for
wage gains has once again become an essential component of the revolutionary process.
The economic struggle of workers today is the answer in practice to capitalist propagandists
who assert that it is irresponsible for workers during a period of mass unemployment to
fight for higher wages. Workers are implored, threatened and legislatively ordered back to
work by their capitalist oppressors to set aside their wage demands and meekly accept
wage reductions, loss of benefits and job security. Why? Because bourgeois economists
never tire of repeating the canard that unrealistic wage demands during a depression is
counter‐productive to economic recovery. Since, they contend, a rise in wages will be
accompanied by a rise in prices and thwart an economic recovery dependent on consumer
spending.
W.Z. Foster makes reference to the Marxist lessons on the importance of the struggle for
wages which necessitates another extensive quotation from his “History of the World Trade
Union Movement.” Foster said:
“Among their elementary contribution to trade union theory, Marx and Engels
demonstrated the practical benefits of trade union action in improving wage standards –
and this in the face of a host of bourgeois economists (and many confused trade union
leaders) who held that the workers locked in a sort of economic vise, lost through raised
living costs any and all wage increases that they might win by trade union action. Such a
theory implied passive submission to capitalist exploitation. Marx in his famous
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discussion with Weston in 1865 9 knocked this dangerous illusion on the head. He
demonstrated, with elaborate precept and example, that it was possible for the workers
under capitalism, by trade union action, to wrest, a greater portion of their surplus value
from the employers. Marx summed up that, ‘A general rise in the rate of wages would
result in a fall of the general rate of profit, but broadly speaking, not affect the prices of
commodities.’ This elementary argument of Marx’s gave trade unionism a perspective
of resolute struggle against capitalist exploitation. It is now taken as a matter of course
in labour circles and is still used effectively in trade union negotiations with employers
who accuse the unions of causing the high cost of livening. But to make it prevail
originally Marx had to wage years of bitter struggle against various opposition elements
in the labour movement.” 10
Today, in the midst of global economic depression to call for a renewed struggle for
increased wages is not only economically imperative but potentially revolutionary. There is
an implied demand for power in the defiant slogan “we didn’t create the crisis and we will
not be its victims” 11 summing up the only response that can be given by labour to the
attempts of state monopoly capitalism to make the working class pay for the crisis of
capitalism. The slogan is a militant rejection of the entire rationale of finance capital that the
labour power of workers is a mere commodity like any other to be bought and sold to serve
the interests of the profit system.
Capitalist economists assert that if the commodity labour power serves the interests of
capital it can be warehoused until needed. Mass unemployment can be used to drive down
the price of labour power, thereby increasing profits. The commodity can be selected as
useful and applied or rejected as redundant and cast off. “After all”, reasons the capitalist,
“we are not dealing with people, but only with what they have for sale in the market place;
their labour power”.
This can best be illustrated by the contempt that the Harper Conservatives have for
Canadian workers. Human Resources Minister Diane Finley said in an interview to Canwest
News Service last January on the crisis in the EI system that:
9
Value Price and Profit – Karl Marx – International Publishers ‐ 1935
10
Ibid page 68
11
Communist Party of Canada leaflet “The Working People Didn’t Create the Crisis and We Won’t Pay for It”
http://www.communist‐party.ca/news/Statements/2009/Crisis%202009.pdf
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“Our goal is to help people get back to work, and get back to work quickly in jobs that
will last. We do not want to make it lucrative for them to stay home and get paid for it,
not when we still have significant skill shortages in many parts of the country." 12
In a recent CBC radio documentary on Sudbury and the affects of the Steelworkers strike
with Vale on the economy of the city and region the so‐called “unreasonableness” of the
nickel workers demands to maintain wages and pension benefits and job security in the
midst of a fall in the world price of nickel rang throughout the program. The mayor of
Sudbury declared bleakly that there was a requirement on the part of the union
membership, in the “interests of all”, to become more realistic and recognize the new reality
of Vale’s far flung corporate empire that can shift production to low wage areas in the world
and ride out falling nickel prices and still maintain handsome profit margins. The burden of
the advice to the striking Steelworkers was to accept a race to the bottom as the inevitable
result of the vagaries of capitalism in the 21st Century. 13
It didn’t occur to the interviewer to pose the question of the private ownership of the
company and the resource as the real reason for the economic woes of Sudbury. Also
suggested in the documentary was that the old “good” employer was preferable to the new
“bad” one.
Adapt to the Profit System or Abolish It?
The opportunist idea that the working class must adapt to each and every twist and turn of
the capitalist economy and meekly accept the consequences of faceless investors buying
and selling global corporate assets is at root the reformist belief that the capitalist system is
permanent and nothing better exists to replace it. The only option for workers they argue is
to passively accept its anarchic development and wait for a better day to redress the gap
between wages and the cost of living.
In simplistic terms that states the two standpoints in theory and practice of the role of
organized labour, the reformist and the revolutionary. Waffling between the two in centrist
confusion attempting to reconcile the two polarities is the theory that for the moment
12
Norma Greenaway, Canwest News Service, “Govt. won't pay unemployed to stay home: Minister”, January 29,
2009, http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=1232650
13
CBC, The Current, “A Mining Town”, www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/2009/200911/20091116.html
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workers are constrained to do little more than fight to defend gains, ameliorate the worst
affects of capitalist exploitation because “socialism is not yet on the agenda”.
The assertion that socialism is not on the agenda is based on a particular theoretical view of
the revolutionary process in the present era. That theory has been determined to be correct
and has been with us for many decades and still dominates the thinking of the present
leadership of the CPC. The essence of the theory was clearly enunciated in the late 1970’s by
Bill Kashtan, General Secretary of the Communist Party of Canada in his closing remarks to
the Central Committee on October 18th 1977 where he discussed in some detail the concept
of left‐centre coalitions and what constituted a correct labour policy and program “to make
the trade union movement a more effective force…”.
The essence of that position, in the aftermath of the election of President Obama was
repeated 32 years later by Sam Webb National Chair of the Communist Party of the USA in a
speech in New York City on March 21st. 2009 where Webb also outlined in some detail as to
what constituted the role of the CPUSA in building an effective coalition in support of the
Obama administration.
First the quotation from Bill Kashtan from October 1977:
“The main thrust of this meeting, has been the necessity of unity and alliances, of left‐
centre coalitions, not only for the trade union movement, but of the work of the party
over the next period of time. This coincides with how we estimate the present stage of
the anti‐monopoly struggle. The main link in this struggle at this time, is how we can
develop a united fight‐back around a democratic alternative to the crisis of policies of
monopoly. When we say this, what do we mean? We speak of a democratic (Kashtan’s
italics) alternative, not a socialist (Kasthan’s italics) alternative because the masses of the
people are not yet prepared to unite around a socialist alternative. The masses of
working people however are prepared to unite around a democratic alternative that
begins to curb the power of monopoly and gets at the effects of the crisis.
”That is how the report of the CEC places the present stage of the anti‐monopoly
struggle. At the same time it is necessary to show that anti‐monopoly struggle as the
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decisive part of the struggle for socialism, the pathway to it, the link in the chain, that
opens the door to the next stage, the struggle for socialism.” 14
We will come back to this concept after quoting Sam Webbs viewpoint. Here is the
quotation from Sam Webb March 21, 2009:
“Labour and its allies now have a friend, a people’s advocate and the first African
American in the White House. And because of this he should be supported and
defended against partisan and racist attack, both open and coded….
“Obama is a reformer and we could well be entering an era of reforms, possible radical
reforms. And yet some say his main mission is to save capitalism…
“Setting aside some obvious differences, Obama shares a similar mindset. His model of
governance isn’t socialist, but it favours the interests of working people and their allies
and challenges corporate power and prerogatives…
“But like the New Deal, it isn’t encoded into the historical process rising like the phoenix
from the ashes on a particular day and year. It will be the result of a contested and fluid
political process in which a labour‐led people’s movement will grow in unity and gain in
understanding – not to mention take advantage of divisions within ruling circles, resist
simplified notions of the Democratic Party and leave its distinct anti‐corporate imprint on
the reform process.
“Socialism may be an objective necessity, but t isn’t yet on the agenda given the balance of
forces and the disposition of millions. (italics DC) While this is not a socialist moment from
an action point of view (what is obsolete for us isn’t necessarily obsolete to the
American people) it is a ripe moment to enter into a dialogue with million about
socialism and its meaning for our country,” 15
14
“Some Questions of Party Line” Bill Kashtan, Communist Viewpoint, Volume 10 No.1 January February 1978.
15
“Out of the Crisis: Building a new era of justice and peace”, Sam Webb,
http://www.cpusa.org/article/view/1038/
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Socialism Is On the Agenda
These quotations appear on first reading to be so reasonable why would anyone attempt to
dispute their logic? They are based on a somewhat shop worn catch phrase, “revolution as a
process”, not to be confused with the correct phrase, “the revolutionary process.”
Revolution as a process suggests there is a defined series of stages, obligatory and
necessary that must be gone through before we reach the “socialist stage” of the process.
Socialism is on hold until we get there. When exactly we reach the socialist stage is
unknown and one can only suppose it will become manifest when it is announced by some
oracle.
Such doctrinaire views have nothing to do with Leninism. Such views elevate the reformist
concept of an incremental gradualist approach to progress, denying the Marxist view of the
possibility and necessity of leaps in development. If accepted it consigns the role of the
communists to waiting upon events. Such views must be subjected to the closest critical
scrutiny because they fail the test of a dialectical resolution of the relationship between the
struggle for reforms and the struggle for socialism in the last stage of capitalism ‐ the
imperialist stage.
The profound mistake and weakness in both of the above quotations is that they describe
the moment but not the objectively real context in which labour politics is unfolding in our
era ‐ the era of imperialism.
Imperialism is the era of intense inter‐imperialist rivalry with the threat of direct and proxy
inter‐imperialist wars, including nuclear confrontations, due to its uneven development.
Imperialism is an entire epoch of imperialist wars and extreme reaction, but also, due to its
innate instability, the appearance of revolutionary situations that if mastered can rapidly
lead to socialism. The prerequisites for revolution are maturing in many regions of the world
and that fact forms the main content of the revolutionary process in the 21st Century. That is
the significance of the conclusions reached at recent meetings of the IMCWP. It is
incumbent upon the CPC to study those prerequisites as they exist in Canada and prepare
the working class to recognize them and act upon them as they arise.
It has always been the great merit of the Communist Party of Canada from its inception that
it worked hard to explain, in detail and convincingly, the socialist alternative to capitalist
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crisis at each historical stage. With Lenin’s help the Communist Party of Canada became
convinced of the inevitability of revolutionary breakthroughs in one or more countries in the
global imperialist system, not excluding Canada, which had reached the imperialist stage in
its economic and political development. Lenin’s scientific view of the world revolutionary
process was brilliantly confirmed in 1917 and continues to be confirmed today throughout
Latin America.
The Communist Party of Canada throughout its history, alone of all of the organizations of
the labouring and democratic masses, held out the inevitability of the revolutionary passage
of capitalism to socialism in our country. In every struggle of the working class for its
immediate vital interests the Communist Party never tired of explaining to workers, that
they must not only become a class for themselves but fight for a new economic and political
system that in its achievement would liberate all from the exploitation and oppression of
finance capital.
The working class, because of the position it holds within the productive forces and its
dispossessed status within the relations of production is accorded the historic mission of
leading the nation. Such an idea struck fear in the halls of corporate power and still does.
The full coercive power of the capitalist state has been rolled out every time there has been
a perceived threat that the idea that the working class should hold the reins of state power
might gain widespread acceptance. That is the root cause of why Prime Minister has placed
so much oppressive legislation on the books and why he increasingly resorts to arbitrariness
and prorogation as a means to suppress and evade public anger.
The Communist Party’s Program always embodied that idea as its central thesis and never
hid it. That is why attention to the development of the Party’s program was central to the
Party’s theoretical work. The program was critical to the future of the working class and to
properly arm it for the struggles it faced. The Communist Party considered its main task to
prepare itself and the working class for political power. That required a careful analysis of
the contradictions requiring resolution that opened the path to socialism.
For A Militant Working Class Program for Organized Labour Today
Upon what Leninist concept of imperialist should our approach to the revolutionary process
be based in our time? It must be based on Lenin’s penetrating insight into imperialism as the
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last and final stage of imperialism beyond which there is no other “rungs in the ladder”
except socialism.
Lenin stated:
“The dialectics of history is such that the war, by extraordinarily expediting the
transformation of monopoly capitalism into state‐monopoly capitalism, has thereby
extraordinarily advanced mankind towards socialism.
“Imperialist war is the eve of socialist revolution. And this not only because the horrors
of the war give rise to proletarian revolt—no revolt can bring about socialism unless the
economic conditions for socialism are ripe—but because state‐monopoly capitalism is a
complete material preparation for socialism, the threshold of socialism, a rung on the
ladder of history between which and the rung called socialism there are no intermediate
rungs.” 16
That idea has been vulgarized into asserting that its advocates are suggesting there is a
revolutionary situation and socialist revolution will break out now if we advocate it. That of
course is absurd and deserves to be dismissed for what it is ‐ an invitation not to think.
What is the Significance of Lenin’s Teachings on Imperialism for Independent
Labour Political Action?
First of all its significance must be grasped by the communists. What political forces will cut
through the confusion and break the dominance of sterile doctrinaire theories that abound
in organized labour today? What forces will emerge to provide the creative answer to the
problem of formulating a militant working class program of struggle? What forces will wage
that struggle for a militant rank and file theory and practice inside the present day labour
movement? What political forces will compel even the most entrenched organized labour
leaders to embrace and take up that struggle?
The Communist Party has the responsibility to provide the theoretical answer to these
questions. As the Party begins to answer the first question, the matter of the ideology of
16
VI Lenin, “The Impending Catastrophe and How to Combat It”, Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1977,
Moscow, Volume 25, pages 323‐369
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leadership, the answer to the second question, what kind of “left” that needs to be
organized becomes obvious.
There is no “left” without an organization of militant Communist and non‐communist
workers to speak for and build it. There is no “left” without an independent and militant
program of independent labour political action that confronts corporate power. And there
can be no program of independent labour political action that confronts corporate power
unless the Communists call a conference of its trade union members and supporters and
drafts it. If there is some other credible force willing and able to do that, we must know
who they are. It should not be kept a secret.
CPS argues there is no force other than the Communist Party to take up such work. What is
required is the initial first step. Some years ago the Central Committee (CC) decided to draft
a “Labour Bill of Rights” 17 that could have served as an important first step in developing a
political action program for the militant rank and file of labour but that decision was not
carried out.
Communists and militant rank and file workers with whom we work on the job and inside
the labour movement and all those they attract to a program of political action constitute
the “left” that the draft resolution speaks of. If there is some other “left” out there, then
those who drafted this section are called upon to say who it is, what it is, where it is and
what it stands for. If there is no left out there and no concrete proposal for the Party to
undertake the arduous task to build one, then one is forced to the conclusion that the Draft
Resolution expects that workers will do it themselves spontaneously just because the
Communists have told them it is necessary.
Admittedly building the kind of left that is required is not easy. Let us not evade that
problem. What is to be done when the Communist Party’s presence inside the labour
movement is too weak to immediately organize the “left” political action committees,
caucuses, rank and file organizations that are urgently required?
What is to be done is similar in form and approach to what was done in re‐establishing the
Canadian Peace Congress. Take the first step.
17
Communist Party of Canada, http://www.communist‐party.ca/electoralreform/index.html
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Before proceeding let us address the question that will fly to the fore – as it did when the
proposal to rebuild the Congress was being discussed; “It is a mechanical approach”. “We
need a record of activity first”. “It is in contradiction to our previous role in the Canadian
Peace Alliance”, “It is not in accord with our policy of building peace coalitions”, “Where are
the forces?”, “We need other forces to work with us first”. Everything was considered
except to act and bring together the Party and non‐Party peace activists who recognized the
need to re‐build the Congress.
The Congress was rebuilt out of necessity because the peace movement requires a
consistent anti‐imperialist voice. It was re‐established to fulfil its historical role as part of the
worldwide renaissance of the greatest peace organization ever to emerge after WW2, the
World Peace Council. The Congress is being rebuilt precisely because there is no other
organization except the Canadian Peace Congress that can fulfill that role.
That same audacious approach is required in building a “left” organization of labour
militancy. If we are indifferent as to what kind of coalition is required, the one that we don’t
want will always appear. Petty bourgeois radicals are busy creating them without end. Wait
and another will come along and we will be invited to jump on its bandwagon, maybe even
winning a little praise for doing so.
Communists envision and fight for a particular type of coalition. One that arises out of a
defined Marxist analysis rooted in the material conditions the working class confront. That
task forms the basis and articulates the theory and practice today to advance the working
class struggle. That type of coalition is not only militant but also internationalist in form and
character. From the outset it must declare publicly its affiliation to the WFTU and send its
leading cadre to its meetings to participate in its work.
What are the steps to be taken to begin Communist led left labour coalition building of a
new type?
First the Labour Commission of the Communist Party must write a new contemporary
“Steps to Power”. Its appeal and focus must speak directly to the militant trade union rank
and file about the “fundamental demands” that must be taken up and fought for today to
bring organized labour into a direct confrontation and challenge to corporate power. In
essence it must place the demands of organized labour at the head of the nation.
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Secondly the appeal must be popularized in the Communist press, circulated as widely as
possible and through a designated spokesperson that has no other responsibility. The
Communist Party must organize a worker conference where a “Steps to Power” manifesto
will be debated and adopted followed by a public declaration that such an organization is
now in existence and will begin its work.
In a hitherto unpublished correspondence with this observer August 4th 1970, Tim Buck,
recovering from a paralytic stroke in Hillcrest Hospital took the time to elaborate his views
on the critical importance of developing young party cadre. Among other things Buck said:
“Conferences of activists certainly offer possibilities, organization of them should be
considered. Note well Don: (Buck’s underline DC) It is very important that the process
through which young activists are brought forward should be an integral part of the
over‐all struggle to extend and strengthen the Party and its influence among the
workers.” 18
That is the advice we must accept and implement in assigning someone to this critical file. A
genuine, rank and file left political action movement will be organized step by step, inch by
inch and in no other way. It will not happen quickly but it will materialize and eventually
succeed due to the power of its clearly enunciated program of political action and because
objectively it answers the urgent need for a higher level of labour political action as the
current economic crisis rolls out and deepens.
On what fundamental objective reality should that program of political action be based? It
can only be based on tirelessly explaining to workers that in the last stage of capitalism, the
imperialist stage, there are no other rungs in the ladder of capitalism and beyond which
there is only socialism.
Again we quote Lenin to reinforce the point:
“It is because Russia cannot advance from the economic situation now existing here
without traversing the ground which is common to state capitalism and to socialism
(national accounting and control) that the attempt to frighten others as well as
themselves with “evolution towards state capitalism” (Kommunist No. 1, p. 8, col. 1) is
18
Tim Buck Letter, FOS Tim Buck Ave, August 4, 1970,
www.FocusOnSocialism.ca/focusonsocialism.ca/upload/BucktoCurrieAugust041970.pdf
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utter theoretical nonsense. This is letting one’s thoughts wander away from the true
road of “evolution”, and failing to understand what this road is. In practice, it is
equivalent to pulling us back to small proprietary capitalism.
“In order to convince the reader that this is not the first time I have given this “high”
appreciation of state capitalism and that I gave it before the Bolsheviks seized power I
take the liberty of quoting the following passage from my pamphlet The Impending
Catastrophe and How to Combat It , written in September 1917.
“. . . State‐monopoly capitalism is a complete material preparation for socialism, the
threshold of socialism, a rung on the ladder of history between which and the rung called
socialism there are no intermediate rungs ” (pages 27 and 28)
“Please note that this was written when Kerensky was in power, that we are discussing
not the dictatorship of the proletariat, not the socialist state, but the ‘revolutionary‐
democratic’ state. Is it not clear that the higher we stand on this political ladder, the more
completely we incorporate the socialist state and the dictatorship of the proletariat in
the Soviets, the less ought we to fear ‘state capitalism’? Is it not clear that from the
material, economic and productive point of view, we are not yet on ‘the threshold’ of
socialism? Is it not clear that we cannot pass through the door of socialism without
crossing ‘the threshold’ we have not yet reached?
“From whatever side we approach the question, only one conclusion can be drawn: the
argument of the ‘Left Communists’ about the ‘state capitalism’ which is alleged to be
threatening us is an utter mistake in economics and is evident proof that they are
complete slaves of petty‐bourgeois ideology.” 19
The “fundamental demands” that the organized labour movement must take up and fight
for are those demands, which, in the course of the struggle to achieve them, challenges and
confronts corporate power and its domination over the economy state and government.
Those key “fundamental demands” are already in the Draft Resolution and the Program of
the Communist Party but need to be ferreted out and elevated to first rank importance
19
VI Lenin, “‘Left‐Wing’ Childishness”, Lenin’s Collected Works, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1972 Volume 27,
pages 323‐334
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reworked in language workers use on the job and understand and then popularized. They
are:
1. Organized labour has the power, the right and the necessity to lead the nation and
must strive to do so. To do that labour rejects the economic model of US‐Canadian
economic integration and expresses its support and confidence in the ability of
Canadian workers themselves, to independently and without foreign domination and
control to rebuild the Canadian economy in the interests of all Canadians. There is no
other force in the country that can or will do it.
2. To lead the nation organized labour recognizes and accepts the unavoidable
necessity to fight to curb the power of monopoly and break its stranglehold over the
economy, state and government. The organs of state power must be dedicated to
the needs of the people. That is the role of government, not as is presently the case,
to uphold the primacy and tyranny of banks and the private ownership of the means
of production. This is the essence of genuine working people’s democracy that
labour must uphold and defend.
3. The key demands around which such a struggle can be joined and won are:
a. The nationalization and public ownership of the decisive sectors of the
economy, in the first place the energy resource sector from coast to coast to
coast including the entire construction, extraction, processing, and
transportation phases of that vital resource to satisfy the industrial,
manufacturing, urban and rural domestic needs of all Canadians first. All
investment in the energy sector can come under federal scrutiny and control
without first changing the constitution. There is enough power in the
National Energy Board 20 rules even as it stands, to begin to halt the sell‐out
policies of the private energy interests. All that is required is a government
willing to do it.
b. A national economic development program based on the public ownership of
the transportation industry, including the entire network of pipelines,
railroads, airlines and trucking; public ownership of basic industry and
20
National Energy Board, Chapter N‐7, Consolidated Statutes of Canada, http://www.neb.gc.ca/clf‐
nsi/rpblctn/ctsndrgltn/ct/ntnlnrgybrdct‐eng.html
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secondary processing industries in particular basic steel and metal producing
industries, both ferrous and non‐ferrous and basic chemical production as the
first step to overcoming regional underdevelopment and make possible the
centralized planned, rational and democratic development of the economy
including a peaceful resolution to the responsible exploitation of the
resources of the far north and arctic and with due regard to all of the
legitimate native land claims settlements outstanding.
c. Public democratic control over the banks and the enactment of laws to direct
its enormous investment potential to the task of nation building which in the
first place means the restoration of the manufacturing sector; specifically with
emphasis on machine and tool building, a Canadian auto industry, funding
research and development to identify the latest advances in technology
applied to production that can ease labour and provide work for all.
d. Canadian food self sufficiency.
e. A comprehensive plan to stop environmental degradation and global warming
relying on science and technology in the hands of the people to achieve that
goal.
The Communist Party’s Program and the Future
Through arduous theoretical, ideological and practical work, relying on its own resources
and learning from the international Communist movement, Canadian Communists
developed their program as only they could, defining it as; anti‐imperialist, anti‐monopoly,
patriotic, democratic, working class, and socialist in content.
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The program at the same time described the alliance of class forces that potentially could be
organized and led by the working class to achieve socialism in our country. Nearly a decade
has passed since the adoption of the current program of the Communist Party of Canada,
February 2001. There are many inadequacies and weaknesses in the program reflecting the
inner party struggle from which it emerged in 1990 that now require revisiting, correcting
and updating to align it with the new revolutionary reality emerging internationally and in
Canada.
CPS proposes that delegates to the 36th Convention adopt a resolution as one of its principal
tasks, the establishment of a Program Commission to organize a Party‐wide public
discussion and prepare for adoption at its next convention a revised and updated Program.
That task is made necessary to bring the Program more closely in line with Canadian
economic and political developments over the past decade, but more importantly to provide
a line of advance to socialism that more accurately reflects the work of the International
Movement of Communist and Workers Parties as it is creatively applied to Canada in the 21st
Century.
The current stage of development of capitalism in Canada is correctly defined by Canadian
Communists as advanced imperialism in the fullness of that definition as Lenin originally
stated it in his great work “Imperialism – The Highest and Last Stage of the Development of
Capitalism”. In essence imperialism is capitalism in the monopoly stage where the export of
capital is the principal activity of the finance capitalist class and competition for division and
re‐division of global markets and resources accounts for its extreme aggressiveness and
competitive instability.
Imperialism means political reaction and militarism and the attempt to suppress all
resistance to its global aims. Imperialism also means, as Lenin observed, the last stage of
the capitalist system in an advanced moribund and decaying stage, extremely parasitic and
beyond which there no other “rungs in the ladder” or historical stages in the development
of capitalism and beyond which there is only socialism.
The full implication of that brilliant idea is being restudied by all of the Communist Parties in
developed capitalist states. It must be taken up by the Communist Party of Canada as
central to all of its theoretical work. Until that theoretical work has been undertaken and
the lessons drawn the Party’s mass work will suffer. The main weakness of the Communist
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Party of Canada is not its low membership, undoubtedly a serious problem, but its low level
of theoretical work.
Back to Buck Forward to Socialism
Tim Buck in his memorable 1970 work, Lenin and Canada 21 , brought the Party to the leading
edge of an understanding of the inter‐imperialist relationship between Canada and the USA
which prevailed at that time. The entire book should be considered a basic text of every
Party school and recommended reading for all of the young people attracted to our ranks.
Bucks farsightedness necessitates a lengthy quote from Chapter 7 entitled Lenin and
Canadian independence. Buck said:
“The idea that a modern sovereign state, of fully developed state monopoly capitalism,
could lose its independence and become dependent upon and, in essentials, subservient
to another, and still remain an imperialist state, an active partner in the exploiting,
oppressive, bellicose, imperialist world system, seeking to preserve that reactionary
system by wars of conquest, had never occurred to us until it happened in Canada.
When it did happen our first tendency was to assume that Canada could either continue
to be an imperialist state or could become dependent upon the United States but that it
was not possible for her to be both at the same time. Again we were impelled by our
need to take counsel with Lenin and again Lenin’s guidance led us to ‘... the sense of bold
forecast of the future and of bold practical actions for its achievement.’ (Vol. 21, p. 72)
“Reference to Lenin showed the argument that it must be “either, or, imperialist state or
dependency,” to be just a boggle over static concepts. Indeed reading Imperialism
afresh, for light on the unexpected developments, showed clearly that Lenin’s
explanations of certain features of imperialism as a distinct and higher stage of
capitalism could have been written to help us to understand the new, radical change in
the relations between Canada and the United States which was signalized by
government action during the period of November 1947 to March 1948. For example:
21
Tim Buck, Lenin and Canada, Progress Publishers, Toronto, 1970
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“Finance capital is such a great, such a decisive, you might say, force in all economic and
all international relations, that it is capable of subjecting and actually does subject, to
itself even states enjoying the fullest political independence. (Vol. 22, p. 259)
“...it must be observed that finance capital and its foreign policy, which is the struggle of
the great powers for the economic and political division of the world, gives rise to a
number of transitional forms of state dependence.
“...diverse forms of dependent countries which, politically, are formally independent, but
in fact, are enmeshed in the net of financial and economic dependence, are typical of this
epoch. (Vol. 22, p. 263 – Lenin’s emphasis)”
Tim Buck would be the first to advise that today we must readdress his work in the light of
the 40 year experience since it was written. We say that without in any way suggesting that
its fundamental analysis is not still fully valid.
Buck left us with a brilliant analysis of that relationship turning to Lenin for help in answering
the complexity of the Canadian‐US relationship. We are now confronted with returning to
the subject and begin the discussion on how that relationship must be broken and
reconstructed as the working class answer to the imperialist vision for our country and
continent.
The Canadian Communists are called upon to make a major contribution to defeating the
imperialist plan for North America in particular the canard that there is no alternative to the
capitalist integration of our two countries. That canard accords Canada with a subservient
role as a convenient source of cheap raw materials, primarily energy, for the further
expansion of US capitalism.
We are also confronted with the task of developing a Communist view of continentalism. A
proletarian vision of the development of the North American continent is required. It is
needed to counter‐pose the imperialist vision for North America as a base of reaction from
which US imperialism with the assistance of Canadian and Mexican finance capital cooperate
in joint venture to dominate the world.
We Communists have an entirely different view of continentalism. Our view is based on the
belief that the labouring masses of Canada, the USA and Mexico and Cuba share the same
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dream, of a North American continent at peace, productive, responsible and planned for the
labouring masses that create all of the riches and wonders of this part of the world. Cuba
has provided all of the people of North America with an example of what could be achieved
in joint cooperation.
A working class vision of our continent ultimately can only be a great commonwealth of
socialist states, equal and sovereign, that will preserve our beautiful continent from the far
arctic to the Yucatan Peninsula.
That was the promise of the recently concluded Tri‐Lateral Conference of the World Peace
Council held in Toronto in October. Delegates began to discuss the future of our continent
as a great zone of peace and peaceful economic development and that idea must be taken
up by Canadian Communists and made the property of millions.
These are some of the challenges confronting the delegates to the upcoming 36th
Convention of the Communist Party. The central task can be summed up as the demand
placed upon the Communists to place before the people of Canada and our brothers and
sisters of the USA and Mexico, that we reject the plans of imperialism for our respective
countries and rededicate ourselves to a different vision that only socialism can realize.
Left Turn Canada!
Back to Buck, Forward to Socialism!
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