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Severnaya Pravda No. 27, |
Published according to |
From V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, 4th English Edition,
Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1968
First printing 1963
Second printing 1968
Translated from the Russian by George Hanna
Edited by Robert Daglish
page 343
Recently there has been a lively discussion in the newspapers about collections made by St. Petersburg workers for the working-class press. It must be admitted that a most detailed and serious discussion of this question is essential since it is one of tremendous importance from the point of view of political principles.
How does the matter stand? The liquidators (Novaya Rabochaya Gazeta ) insist on the equal division of funds collected. The Marxists (Severnaya Pravda ) demand division according to the wishes of the workers who contribute their pence. The workers must themselves decide, by a discussion on the trend represented by each newspaper, for whom they have made their contributions.
The resolution of twenty-two Vyborg supporters of the liquidators, the first document on the question, said simply (see Novaya Rabochaya Gazeta No. 2, August 9): "Take collections for the benefit of working-class newspapers on a parity basis." Then the resolutions of some of the workers of the Nobel Works and the Putilov Works (ibid., Nos. 6, 8, 9, 10) upheld and actually put into practice the division of collections into three equal parts -- one part each for the Marxists, liquidators and Narodniks. The Novaya Rabochaya Gazeta editors tacitly approved and defended it in an article by G. R.[106] (No. 9).
What are the arguments in favour of equal division? Reference is made to the "sacred slogan of Marxist workers -- Workers of all countries, unite!"
The question arises -- does this slogan demand the alliance of Marxist workers, who are members, say, of a Marxist party, with those who support bourgeois parties? Any worker who gives this a little thought will agree that it does not.
In all countries, even in the most advanced, there are workers who support bourgeois parties -- they are for the Liberals in Britain, for the Radical-Socialists in France, for the Catholics, and the liberal "people's" party in Germany, for the Reform (petty-bourgeois) Party in Italy, etc., including the petty-bourgeois P.S.P. (Polish Socialist Party) in neighbouring Poland.
The great slogan calls upon workers to unite in a proletarian, independent, class party, and not one of the parties mentioned above is proletarian.
Take the basic principle of our Narodniks. From the Narodnik point of view, the abolition of the private ownership of land and its equalitarian division is socialism or "socialisation", but it is an erroneous and bourgeois point of view. Marx long ago showed that the more daring bourgeois economists can and do demand the abolition of private property in land.[107] It is a bourgeois reform that extends capitalism's field of action. We support the peasants as bourgeois democrats in their struggle for land and freedom against the feudal-minded landowners.
However, unity between a proletarian organisation of wage-workers and petty-bourgeois peasant democrats is a flagrant violation of the great Marxist slogan. Attempts at such unity would do great damage to the working-class movement and always end in an early collapse.
The history of Russia (in the years 1905, 1906 and 1907) has demonstrated that there is not and cannot be any mass, class support for the Narodniks, except that of the Left-wing peasantry.
The liquidators and the workers who follow them, therefore, have retreated from Marxism, have left the class path and entered on the path of non-party unity between wage-workers and a petty-bourgeois party. For it is, indeed, a
non-party alliance when the worker is told: don't try to find out which is the proletarian and which is the petty bourgeois party, fork out equally for both![*]
The masses "cannot get at the root of things", wrote G. R. in Novaya Rabochaya Gazeta No. 9. That is precisely why we need an old, tried and tested Marxist newspaper to develop the political consciousness of the masses who "cannot get at the root of things", to help them get at that root and understand it.
The reference made by G. R. and similar writers who oppose organised, Marxist unity (but never raise the question of uniting the two parties!) -- their reference to "masses who cannot get at the root of things" is nothing but the preaching of non-party tendencies, is a retreat from Marxism, is the underhanded pursuit of petty-bourgeois views and policies.
By such a policy the liquidators justify their name, i.e., they are deserters from the Marxist organisation, its destroyers.
page 344
page 345
Notes on |
page 579
[106]
G. R. (G. Rakitin ) -- pseudonym of the Menshevik liquidator V. O.
Tsederbaum.
[p. 343]
[107]
Karl Marx, Theories of Surplus Value (Theorien über den Mehrwert. 2. Teil. Dietz Verlag, Berlin, 1959, S. 36).
[p. 344]