Ask most people what socialism means and they will point to the former Soviet Union, China, Cuba and a host of other authoritarian, centralised and oppressive party dictatorships. These regimes have in common two things. Firstly, the claim that their rulers are Marxists or socialists. Secondly, that they have successfully alienated millions of working class people from the very idea of socialism. Indeed, the supporters of capitalism simply had to describe the "socialist paradises" as they really were in order to put people off socialism. Moreover, the Stalinist regimes (and their various apologists and even "opponents", like the Trotskyists, who defended them as "degenerated workers' states") let the bourgeoisie have an easy time in dismissing all working-class demands and struggles as so many attempts to set up similar party dictatorships.
The association of "socialism" or "communism" with these dictatorships has often made anarchists wary of calling themselves socialists or communists in case our ideas are associated with them. As Errico Malatesta argued in 1924:
"I foresee the possibility that the communist anarchists will gradually abandon the term 'communist': it is growing in ambivalence and falling into disrepute as a result of Russian 'communist' despotism. If the term is eventually abandoned this will be a repetition of what happened with the word 'socialist.' We who, in Italy at least, were the first champions of socialism and maintained and still maintain that we are the true socialists in the broad and human sense of the word, ended by abandoning the term to avoid confusion with the many and various authoritarian and bourgeois deviations of socialism. Thus too we may have to abandon the term 'communist' for fear that our ideal of free human solidarity will be confused with the avaricious despotism which has for some time triumphed in Russia and which one party, inspired by the Russian example, seeks to impose worldwide." [The Anarchist Revolution, p. 20]
That, to a large degree happened, with anarchists simply calling themselves by that name, without adjectives, to avoid confusion. This, sadly, resulted in two problems. Firstly, it gave Marxists even more potential to portray anarchism as being primarily against the state and not as equally opposed to capitalism, hierarchy and inequality (as we argue in section H.2.4, anarchists have opposed the state as just one aspect of class society). Secondly, extreme right-wingers tried to appropriate the names "libertarian" and "anarchist" to describe their vision of extreme capitalism as "anarchism," they claimed, was simply "anti-government" (see section F for discussion on why "anarcho"-capitalism is not anarchist). To counter these distortions of anarchist ideas, many anarchists have recently re-appropriated the use of the words "socialist" and "communist," although always in combination with the words "anarchist" and "libertarian."
Such combination of words is essential as the problem Malatesta predicted still remains. If one thing can be claimed for the 20th century, it is that it has seen the word "socialism" become narrowed and restricted into what anarchists call "state socialism" -- socialism created and run from above, by the state (i.e. by the state bureaucracy). This restriction of "socialism" has been supported by both Stalinist and Capitalist ruling elites, for their own reasons (the former to secure their own power and gain support by associating themselves with socialist ideals, the latter by discrediting those ideas by associating them with the horror of Stalinism).
This means that anarchists and other libertarian socialists have a major task on their hands -- to reclaim the promise of socialism from the distortions inflicted upon it by both its enemies (Stalinists and capitalists) and its erstwhile and self-proclaimed supporters (Social Democracy and its various offspring like the Bolsheviks and its progeny like the Trotskyists). A key aspect of this process is a critique of both the practice and ideology of Marxism and its various offshoots. Only by doing this can anarchists prove, to quote Rocker, that "Socialism will be free, or it will not be at all." [Anarcho-Syndicalism, p. 20]
Such a critique raises the problem of which forms of "Marxism" to discuss. There is an extremely diverse range of Marxist viewpoints and groups in existence. Indeed, the different groups spend a lot of time indicating why all the others are not "real" Marxists (or Marxist-Leninists, or Trotskyists, and so on) and are just "sects" without "real" Marxist theory or ideas. This "diversity" is, of course, a major problem (and somewhat ironic, given that some Marxists like to insult anarchists by stating there are as many forms of anarchism as anarchists!). Equally, many Marxists go further than dismissing specific groups. Some even totally reject other branches of their movement as being non-Marxist (for example, some Marxists dismiss Leninism as having little, or nothing, to do with what they consider the "real" Marxist tradition to be). This means that discussing Marxism can be difficult as Marxists can argue that our FAQ does not address the arguments of this or that Marxist thinker, group or tendency.
With this in mind, this section of the FAQ will concentrate on the works of Marx and Engels (and so the movement they generated, namely Social Democracy) as well as the Bolshevik tradition started by Lenin and continued (by and large) by Trotsky. These are the core ideas (and the recognised authorities) of most Marxists and so latter derivations of these tendencies can be ignored (for example Maoism, Castroism and so on). It should also be noted that even this grouping will produce dissent as some Marxists argue that the Bolshevik tradition is not part of Marxism. This perspective can be seen in the "impossiblist" tradition of Marxism (e.g. the Socialist Party of Great Britain and its sister parties) as well as in the left/council communist tradition (e.g. in the work of such Marxists as Anton Pannekoek and Paul Mattick). The arguments for their positions are strong and well worth reading (indeed, any honest analysis of Marxism and Leninism cannot help but show important differences between the two). However, as the vast majority of Marxists today are also Leninists, we have to reflect this in our FAQ (and, in general, we do so by referring to "mainstream Marxists" as opposed to the small minority of libertarian Marxists).
Another problem arises when we consider the differences not only between Marxist tendencies, but also within a specific tendency before and after its representatives seize power. For example, "there are . . . very different strains of Leninism . . . there's the Lenin of 1917, the Lenin of the 'April Theses' and State and Revolution. That's one Lenin. And then there's the Lenin who took power and acted in ways that are unrecognisable . . . compared with, say, the doctrines of 'State and Revolution.' . . . this [is] not very hard to explain. There's a big difference between the libertarian doctrines of a person who is trying to associate himself with a mass popular movement to acquire power and the authoritarian power of somebody who's taken power and is trying to consolidate it. . . that is true of Marx also. There are competing strains in Marx." [Noam Chomsky, Language and Politics, p. 177]
As such, this section of our FAQ will try and draw out the contradictions within Marxism and indicate what aspects of the doctrine aided the development of the "second" Lenin. The seeds from which authoritarianism grew post-October 1917 existed from the start. Anarchists agree with Noam Chomsky when he stated that he considered it "characteristic and unfortunate that the lesson that was drawn from Marx and Lenin for the later period was the authoritarian lesson. That is, it's the authoritarian power of the vanguard party and destruction of all popular forums in the interests of the masses. That's the Lenin who became know to later generations. Again, not very surprisingly, because that's what Leninism really was in practice." [Ibid.]
Ironically, given Marx's own comments on the subject, a key hindrance to such an evaluation is the whole idea and history of Marxism itself. While, as Murray Bookchin noted "to his lasting credit," Marx tried (to some degree) "to create a movement that looks to the future instead of to the past," his followers have not done so. "Once again," Bookchin argues, "the dead are walking in our midst -- ironically, draped in the name of Marx, the man who tried to bury the dead of the nineteenth century. So the revolution of our own day can do nothing better than parody, in turn, the October Revolution of 1918 and the civil war of 1918-1920 . . . The complete, all-sided revolution of our own day . . . follows the partial, the incomplete, the one-sided revolutions of the past, which merely changed the form of the 'social question,' replacing one system of domination and hierarchy by another." [Post-Scarcity Anarchism, p. 174 and p. 175] In Marx's words, the "tradition of all the dead generations weighs down like a nightmare on the brain of the living." Marx's own work, and the movements it inspired, now add to this dead-weight. In order to ensure, as Marx put it, the social revolution draws is poetry from the future rather than the past, Marxism itself must be transcended.
Which, of course, means evaluating both the theory and practice of Marxism. For anarchists, it seems strange that for a body of work whose followers stress is revolutionary and liberating, its results have been so bad. If Marxism is so obviously revolutionary and democratic, then why have so few of the people who read it drawn those conclusions? How could it be transmuted so easily into Stalinism? Why are there so few libertarian Marxists, if it was Lenin (or Social Democracy) which "misinterpreted" Marx and Engels? So when Marxists argue that the problem is in the interpretation of the message not in the message itself, anarchists reply that the reason these numerous, allegedly false, interpretations exist at all simply suggests that there are limitations within Marxism as such rather than the readings it has been subjected to. When something repeatedly fails (and produces such terrible results), then there has to be a fundamental flaw somewhere.
Thus Cornelius Castoriadis:
"Marx was, in fact, the first to stress that the significance of a theory cannot be grasped independently of the historical and social practice it inspires and initiates, to which it gives rise, in which it prolongs itself and under cover of which a given practice seeks to justify itself."Who, today, would dare proclaim that the only significance of Christianity for history is to be found in reading unaltered versions of the Gospels or that the historical practice of various Churches over a period of some 2,000 years can teach us nothing fundamental about the significance of this religious movement? A 'faithfulness to Marx' which would see the historical fate of Marxism as something unimportant would be just as laughable. It would in fact be quite ridiculous. Whereas for the Christian the revelations of the Gospels have a transcendental kernel and an intemporal validity, no theory could ever have such qualities in the eyes of a Marxist. To seek to discover the meaning of Marxism only in what Marx wrote (while keeping quiet about what the doctrine has become in history) is to pretend -- in flagrant contradiction with the central ideas of that doctrine -- that real history doesn't count and that the truth of a theory is always and exclusively to be found 'further on.' It finally comes to replacing revolution by revelation and the understanding of events by the exegesis of texts." ["The Fate of Marxism," pp. 75-84 The Anarchist Papers, Dimitrios Roussopoulos (ed.), p. 77]
This does not mean forsaking the work of Marx and Engels. It means rejecting once and for all the idea that two people, writing over a period of decades over a hundred years ago have all the answers. As should be obvious! Ultimately, anarchists think we have to build upon the legacy of the past, not squeeze current events into it. We should stand on the shoulders of giants, not at their feet.
Thus this section of our FAQ will attempt to explain the various myths of Marxism and provide an anarchist critique of Marxism and its offshoots. Of course, the ultimate myth of Marxism is what Alexander Berkman called "The Bolshevik Myth," namely the idea that the Russian Revolution was a success. However, as we discuss this revolution in the appendix on "What happened during the Russian Revolution?" we will not do so here except when it provides useful empirical evidence for our critique. Our discussion here will concentrate for the most part on Marxist theory, showing its inadequacies, its problems, where it appropriated anarchist ideas and how anarchism and Marxism differ. This is a big task and this section of the FAQ can only be a small contribution to it.
As noted above, there are minority trends in Marxism which are libertarian in nature (i.e. close to anarchism). As such, it would be simplistic to say that anarchists are "anti-Marxist" and we generally do differentiate between the (minority) libertarian element and the authoritarian mainstream of Marxism (i.e. Social-Democracy and Leninism in its many forms). Without doubt, Marx contributed immensely to the enrichment of socialist ideas and analysis (as acknowledged by Bakunin, for example). His influence, as to be expected, was both positive and negative. For this reason he must be read and discussed critically. This FAQ is a contribution to this task of transcending the work of Marx. As with anarchist thinkers, we must take what is useful from Marx and reject the rubbish. But never forget that anarchists are anarchists precisely because we think that anarchist thinkers have got more right than wrong and we reject the idea of tying our politics to the name of a long dead thinker.
Ultimately, the greatest myth of Marxism is the idea that
anarchists and most Marxists want the same thing. Indeed,
it could be argued that it is anarchist criticism of Marxism
which has made them stress the similarity of long term goals
with anarchism. "Our polemics against them [the Marxists],"
Bakunin argued, "have forced them to recognise that freedom,
or anarchy -- that is, the voluntary organisation of the
workers from below upward -- is the ultimate goal of social
development." He continued by stressing that the means to
this apparently similar end were different. The Marxists, he
argues, "say that [a] state yoke, [a] dictatorship, is a
necessary transitional device for achieving the total
liberation of the people: anarchy, or freedom, is the goal,
and the state, or dictatorship, is the means . . . We reply
that no dictatorship can have any other objective than to
perpetuate itself, and that it can engender and nurture
only slavery in the people who endure it. Liberty can be
created only by liberty, by an insurrection of all the
people and the voluntary organisation of the workers from
below upwards." [Statism and Anarchy, p. 179]
As such, it is commonly taken for granted that the ends of
both Marxists and Anarchists are the same, we just disagree
over the means. However, within this general agreement over
the ultimate end (a classless and stateless society), the
details of such a society are somewhat different. This,
perhaps, is to be expected given the differences in means.
As is obvious from Bakunin's argument, anarchists stress
the unity of means and goals, that the means which are
used affect the goal reached. This unity between means
and ends is expressed well by Martin Buber's observation
that "[o]ne cannot in the nature of things expect a little
tree that has been turned into a club to put forth leaves."
[Paths in Utopia, p. 127] In summary, we cannot expect
to reach our end destination if we take a path going
in the opposite direction. As such, the agreement on ends
may not be as close as often imagined.
So when it is stated that anarchists and state socialists
want the same thing, the following should be borne in mind.
Firstly, there are key differences on the question of current
tactics. Secondly, there is the question of the immediate
aims of a revolution. Thirdly, there is the long term goals
of such a revolution. These three aspects form a coherent
whole, with each one logically following on from the last.
As we will show, the anarchist and Marxist vision of each
aspect are distinctly different, so suggesting that the short,
medium and long term goals of each theory are, in fact,
different. We will discuss each aspect in turn.
Firstly, the question of the nature of the revolutionary
movement. Here anarchists and most Marxists have distinctly
opposing ideas. The former argue that both the revolutionary
organisation (i.e. an anarchist federation) and the wider
labour movement should be organised in line with the vision
of society which inspires us. This means that it should be
a federation of self-managed groups based on the direct
participation of its membership in the decision making
process. Power, therefore, is decentralised and there is
no division between those who make the decisions and those
who execute them. We reject the idea of others acting on
our behalf or on behalf of the people and so urge the use
of direct action and solidarity, based upon working class
self-organisation, self-management and autonomy. Thus,
anarchists apply their ideas in the struggle against the
current system, arguing what is "efficient" from a
hierarchical or class position is deeply inefficient from
a revolutionary perspective.
Marxists disagree. Most Marxists are also Leninists. They
argue that we must form "vanguard" parties based on the
principles of "democratic centralism" complete with
institutionalised leaderships. They argue that how we
organise today is independent of the kind of society we
seek and that the party should aim to become the
recognised leadership of the working class. Every thing
they do is subordinated to this end, meaning that no
struggle is seen as an end in itself but rather as a
means to gaining membership and influence for the party
until such time as it gather enough support to seize power.
As this is a key point of contention between anarchists
and Leninists, we discuss this in some detail in
section H.5
and its related sections and so not do so here.
Obviously, in the short term anarchists and Leninists
cannot be said to want the same thing. While we seek
a revolutionary movement based on libertarian (i.e.
revolutionary) principles, the Leninists seek a party
based on distinctly bourgeois principles of centralisation,
delegation of power and representative over direct democracy.
Both, of course, argue that only their system of organisation
is effective and efficient (see
section H.5.8
on a discussion
why anarchists argue that the Leninist model is not effective
from a revolutionary perspective). The anarchist perspective
is to see the revolutionary organisation as part of the
working class, encouraging and helping those in struggle to
clarify the ideas they draw from their own experiences and
its role is to provide a lead rather than a new set of leaders
to be followed (see
section J.3.6 for more on this). The
Leninist perspective is to see the revolutionary party as
the leadership of the working class, introducing socialist
consciousness into a class which cannot generate itself
(see section H.5.1).
Given the Leninist preference for centralisation and a leadership
role by hierarchical organisation, it will come as no surprise
that their ideas on the nature of post-revolutionary society are
distinctly different from anarchists. While there is a tendency
for Leninists to deny that anarchists have a clear idea of what
will immediately be created by a revolution (see
section H.1.4),
we do have concrete ideas on the kind of society a revolution
will immediately create. This vision is in almost every way
different from that proposed by most Marxists.
Firstly, there is the question of the state. Anarchists,
unsurprisingly enough, seek to destroy it. Simply put, while
anarchists want a stateless and classless society and advocate
the means appropriate to those ends, most Marxists argue that
in order to reach a stateless society we need a new "workers'"
state, a state, moreover, in which their party will be in
charge. Trotsky, writing in 1906, made this clear when he
argued that "[e]very political party deserving of the name
aims at seizing governmental power and thus putting the state
at the service of the class whose interests it represents."
[quoted by Israel Getzler, "Marxist Revolutionaries and the
Dilemma of Power", pp. 88-112, Revolution and Politics in
Russia, Alexander and Janet Rabinowitch and Ladis K.D.
Kristof (eds,), p. 105] This fits in with Marx's 1852
comments that "Universal Suffrage is the equivalent of
political power for the working class of England, where
the proletariat forms the large majority of the population
. . . Its inevitable result, here, is the political
supremacy of the working class." [Collected Works,
vol. 11, pp. 335-6] In other words, "political power" simply means
the ability to nominate a government. Thus Engels:
While Marxists like to portray this new government as "the
dictatorship of the proletariat," anarchist argue that,
in fact, it will be the dictatorship over the proletariat.
This is because if the working class is the ruling class
(as Marxists claim) then, anarchists argue, how can they
delegate their power to a government and remain so? Either
the working class directly manages its own affairs (and so
society) or the government does. We discuss this issue in
section H.3.7 any state
is simply rule by a few and so
is incompatible with socialism. The obvious implication of
this is that Marxism seeks party rule, not working class
direct management of society (as we discuss in
section H.3.8,
the Leninist tradition is extremely clear on this
matter).
Then there is the question of the building blocks of
socialism. Yet again, there is a clear difference between
anarchism and Marxism. Anarchists have always argued that
the basis of socialism is working class organisations,
created in the struggle against capitalism and the state
(see section H.1.4
for details). This applies to both
the social and economic structure of a post-revolutionary
society. For most forms of Marxism, a radically different
picture has been the dominant one. As we discuss in
section H.3.10,
Marxists only reached a similar vision for the
political structure of socialism in 1917 when Lenin
supported the soviets as he framework of his workers' state.
However, as we prove in
section H.3.11,
he did so for
instrumental purposes only, namely as the best means of
assuring Bolshevik power. If the soviets clashed with the
party, it was the latter which took precedence. Unsurprisingly,
the Bolshevik mainstream moved from "All Power to the Soviets"
to "dictatorship of the party" rather quickly. Thus, unlike
anarchism, most forms of Marxism aim for party power, a
"revolutionary" government above the organs of working class
self-management.
Economically, there are also clear differences. Anarchists have
consistently argued that the workers "ought to be the real
managers of industries." [Peter Kropotkin, Fields, Factories
and Workshops Tomorrow, p. 157] To achieve this, we have
pointed to various organisations over time, such as factory
committees and labour unions as the "medium which Socialist
forms of life could find . . . realisation." Thus they would
"not only [be] an instrument for the improvement of the
conditions of labour, but also of [were capable of] becoming
an organisation which might . . . take into its hands the
management of production." [Kropotkin, The Conquest of
Bread, pp. 22-3]
As we discuss in more detail in
section H.3.12, Lenin, in
contrast, saw socialism as being constructed on the basis
of structures and techniques (including management ones)
developed under capitalism. Rather than see socialism as
being built around new, working class organisations, Lenin
saw it being constructed on the basis of developments in
capitalist organisation. "The Leninist road to socialism,"
notes one expert on Lenin, "emphatically ran through the
terrain of monopoly capitalism. It would, according to Lenin,
abolish neither its advanced technological base nor its
institutionalised means for allocating resources or
structuring industry. . . The institutionalised framework
of advanced capitalism could, to put it shortly, be utilised
for realisation of specifically socialist goals. They were
to become, indeed, the principal (almost exclusive)
instruments of socialist transformation." [Neil Harding,
Leninism, p.145] As Lenin explained, socialism is
"nothing but the next step forward from state capitalist
monopoly. In other words, Socialism is nothing but state
capitalist monopoly made to benefit the whole people; by
this token it ceases to be capitalist monopoly." [The
Threatening Catastrophe and how to avoid it, p. 37]
The role of workers' in this vision was basically unchanged.
Rather than demand, like anarchists, workers' self-management
of production in 1917, Lenin raised the demand for "universal,
all-embracing workers' control over the capitalists." [Will
the Bolsheviks Maintain Power, p. 52] Once the Bolsheviks
were in power, the workers' own organs (the factory committees)
were integrated into a system of state control, losing whatever
power they once held at the point of production. Lenin then
modified this vision by raising "one-man management" over the
workers (see section H.3.14).
In other words, a form of state
capitalism in which workers would still be wage slaves under
bosses appointed by the state. Unsurprisingly, the "control"
workers exercised over their bosses (i.e. those with real
power in production) proved to be as elusive in production
as it was in the state. In this, Lenin undoubtedly followed
the lead of the Communist Manifesto which stressed state
ownership of the means of production without a word about
workers' self-management of production. As we discuss in
section H.3.13, state "socialism" cannot help being "state
capitalism" by its very nature.
Needless to say, as far as means go, few anarchists and
syndicalists are complete pacifists. As syndicalist Emile
Pouget argued, "[h]istory teaches that the privileged have
never surrendered their privileges without having been compelled
so to do and forced into it by their rebellious victims. It
is unlikely that the bourgeoisie is blessed with an exceptional
greatness of soul and will abdicate voluntarily." This meant
that "[r]ecourse to force . . . will be required." [The Party
Of Labour] This does not mean that libertarians glorify
violence or argue that all forms of violence are acceptable
(quite the reverse!), it simply means that for self-defence
against violent opponents violence is, unfortunately, sometimes
required.
The way an anarchist revolution would defend itself also shows
a key difference between anarchism and Marxism. As we discussed
in section H.2.1,
anarchists (regardless of Marxist claims) have
always argued that a revolution needs to defend itself. This
would be organised in a federal, bottom-up way as the social
structure of a free society. It would be based on voluntary
working class militias. As Bakunin put it, "the peasants, like
the industrial city workers, should unite by federating the
fighting battalions, district by district, this assuring a
common co-ordinated defence against internal and external
enemies." [Bakunin on Anarchism, p. 190] This model of working
class self-defence was applied successfully in both the Spanish
and Ukrainian revolutions (by the CNT-FAI and the Makhnovists,
respectively). In contrast, the Bolshevik method of defending a
revolution was the top-down, hierarchical and centralised "Red
Army" (see section 14 of the
appendix on "What happened during the Russian Revolution?" for
details). As the example of the
Makhnovists (see the appendix on "Why does the Makhnovist movement show there is an alternative to
Bolshevism?") showed, the "Red Army" was not
the only way the Russian Revolution could have been defended
although it was the only way Bolshevik power could be.
So while Anarchists have consistently argued that socialism
must be based on working class self-management of production
and society based on working class organisations, the Leninist
tradition has not supported this vision (although it has
appropriated some of its imagery to gain popular support).
Clearly, in terms of the immediate aftermath of a revolution,
anarchists and Leninists do not seek the same thing. The former
want a free society organised and run from below-upwards by the
working class based on workers self-management of production
while the latter seek party power in a new state structure
which would preside over an essentially state capitalist
economy.
Lastly, there is the question of the long term goal. Even
in this vision of a classless and stateless society there
is very little in common between anarchist communism and
Marxist communism, beyond the similar terminology used to
describe it. This is blurred by the differences in terminology
used by both theories. Marx and Engels had raised in the 1840s
the (long term) goal of "an association, in which the free
development of each is the condition for the free development
of all" replacing "the old bourgeois society, with its classes
and class antagonisms," in the Communist Manifesto. Before
this "vast association of the whole nation" was possible, the
proletariat would be "raise[d] . . . to the position of ruling
class" and "all capital" would be "centralise[d] . . . in the
hands of the State, i.e. of the proletariat organised as the
ruling class." As economic classes would no longer exist,
"the public power would lose its political character" as
political power "is merely the organised power of one class
for oppressing another." [Manifesto of the Communist Party,
p. 53]
It was this, the means to the end, which was the focus of much
debate (see section H.1.1
for details). However, it cannot be
assumed that the ends desired by Marxists and anarchists are
identical. The argument that the "public power" could stop being
"political" (i.e. a state) is a tautology, and a particularly
unconvincing one at that. After all, if "political power" is
defined as being an instrument of class rule it automatically
follows that a classless society would have a non-political
"public power" and so be without a state! This does not imply
that a "public power" would no longer exist as a structure
within (or, more correctly, over) society, it just implies
that its role would no longer be "political" (i.e. an
instrument of class rule). Given that, according to the
Manifesto, the state would centralise the means of production,
credit and transportation and then organise it "in accordance
with a common plan" using "industrial armies, especially for
agriculture" this would suggest that the state structure
would remain even after its "political" aspects had, to use
Engels term, "withered away." [Marx and Engels, Op. Cit.,
pp. 52-3]
From this perspective, the difference between anarchist
communism and Marxist-communism is clear. "While both,"
notes John Clark, "foresee the disappearance of the state,
the achievement of social management of the economy, the
end of class rule, and the attainment of human equality,
to mention a few common goals, significant differences
in ends still remain. Marxist thought has inherited a
vision which looks to high development of technology
with a corresponding degree of centralisation of social
institutions which will continue even after the coming
of the social revolution. . . . The anarchist vision sees
the human scale as essential, both in the techniques which
are used for production, and for the institutions which
arise from the new modes of association . . . In addition,
the anarchist ideal has a strong hedonistic element which
has seen Germanic socialism as ascetic and Puritanical."
[The Anarchist Moment, p. 68]
Moreover, it is unlikely that such a centralised system
could become stateless and classless in actuality. As
Bakunin argued, in the Marxist state "there will be no
privileged class. Everybody will be equal, not only from
the judicial and political but also from the economic
standpoint. This is the promise at any rate . . . So there
will be no more class, but a government, and, please note,
an extremely complicated government which, not content
with governing and administering the masses politically
. . . will also administer them economically, by taking
over the production and fair sharing of wealth,
agriculture, the establishment and development of factories,
the organisation and control of trade, and lastly the
injection of capital into production by a single banker,
the State." Such a system would be, in fact, "the reign
of the scientific mind, the most aristocratic, despotic,
arrogant and contemptuous of all regimes" base on "a new
class, a new hierarchy of real or bogus learning, and
the world will be divided into a dominant, science-based
minority and a vast, ignorant majority." [Michael Bakunin:
Selected Writings, p. 266]
George Barrett's words also seem appropriate:
As Brain Morris notes, "Bakunin's fears that under Marx's
kind of socialism the workers would continue to labour
under a regimented, mechanised, hierarchical system of
production, without direct control over their labour, has
been more than confirmed by the realities of the Bolshevik
system. Thus, Bakunin's critique of Marxism has taken on an
increasing relevance in the age of bureaucratic State
capitalism." [Bakunin: The Philosophy of Freedom, p. 132]
Therefore, anarchists are not convinced that a highly
centralised structure (as a state is) managing the
economic life of society can be part of a truly classless
society. While economic class as defined in terms of
property may not exist, social classes (defined in
terms of inequality of power and wealth) will continue
simply because the state is designed to create and
protect minority rule (see
section H.3.7). As Bolshevik
and Stalinist Russia showed, nationalising the means of
production does not end class society. As Malatesta argued:
"This is the question; either things are administered on the
basis of free agreement of the interested parties, and this
is anarchy; or they are administered according to laws made
by administrators and this is government, it is the State,
and inevitably it turns out to be tyrannical.
"It is not a question of the good intentions or the good will
of this or that man, but of the inevitability of the situation,
and of the tendencies which man generally develops in given
circumstances." [Life and Ideas, p. 145]
The anarchist vision of the future society, therefore, does not
exactly match the state communist vision, as much as the latter
would like to suggest it does. The difference between the two is
authority, which cannot be anything but the largest difference
possible. Anarchist economic and organisational theories are
built around an anti-authoritarian core and this informs both
our means and aims. For anarchists, the Leninist vision of
socialism is unattractive. Lenin continually stressed that his
conception of socialism and "state capitalism" were basically
identical. Even in State and Revolution, allegedly Lenin's
most libertarian work, we discover this particularly unvisionary
and uninspiring vision of "socialism":
To which, anarchists point to Engels and his comments on the
tyrannical and authoritarian character of the modern factory
(as we discuss in
section H.4.4).
Engels, let us not forget,
had argued against the anarchists that large-scale industry
(or, indeed, any form of organisation) meant that "authority"
was required (organisation meant that "the will of a single
individual will always have to subordinate itself, which means
that questions are settled in an authoritarian way."). He (like
the factory owner he was) stated that factories should have
"Lasciate ogni autonomia, voi che entrate" ("Leave, ye that
enter in, all autonomy behind") written above their doors.
This obedience, Engels argued, was necessary even under
socialism, as applying the "forces of nature" meant "a
veritable despotism independent of all social organisation."
This meant that "[w]anting to abolish authority in large-scale
industry is tantamount to wanting to abolish industry itself."
[Marx-Engels Reader, p. 731] Clearly, Lenin's idea of turning
the world into one big factory takes on an extremely frightening
nature given Engels lovely vision of the lack of freedom in
industry.
For these reasons anarchists reject the simplistic Marxist
analysis of inequality being rooted simply in economic class.
Such an analysis, as the comments of Lenin and Engels prove,
show that social inequality can be smuggled in by the backdoor
of a proposed classless and stateless society. Thus Bookchin:
Ultimately, anarchists see that "there is a realm of domination
that is broader than the realm of material exploitation. The
tragedy of the socialist movement is that, steeped in the past,
it uses the methods of domination to try to 'liberate' us from
material exploitation." Needless to say, this is doomed to
failure. Socialism "will simply mire us in a world we are
trying to overcome. A non-hierarchical society, self-managed
and free of domination in all its forms, stands on the agenda
today, not a hierarchical system draped in a red flag." [Murray
Bookchin, Op. Cit., p. 272 and pp. 273-4]
In summary, it cannot be said that anarchists and most Marxists
want the same thing. While they often use the same terms, these
terms often hide radically different concepts. Just because, say,
anarchists and mainstream Marxists talk about "social revolution,"
"socialism," "all power to the soviets" and so on, it does not
mean that we mean the same thing by them. For example, the phrase
"all power to the soviets" for anarchists means exactly that (i.e.
that the revolution must be directly managed by working class
organs). Leninists mean "all power to a central government
elected by a national soviet congress." Similarly with other
similar phrases (which shows the importance of looking at the
details of any political theory and its history).
We have shown that discussion over ends is as important
as discussion over means as they are related. As Kropotkin
once pointed out, those who downplay the importance of
discussing the "order of things which . . . should emerge
from the coming revolution" in favour of concentrating on
"practical things" are being less than honest as "far from
making light of such theories, they propagate them, and all
that they do now is a logical extension of their ideas. In
the end those words 'Let us not discuss theoretical questions'
really mean: 'Do not subject our theory to discussion, but
help us to put it into execution.'" [Words of a Rebel,
p. 200]
Hence the need to critically evaluate both ends and means.
This shows the weakness of the common argument that anarchists
and Leftists share some common visions and so we should work
with them to achieve those common things. Who knows what
happens after that? As can be seen, this is not the case.
Many aspects of anarchism and Marxism are in opposition and
cannot be considered similar (for example, what a Leninist
considers as socialism is extremely different to what an
anarchist thinks it is). If you consider "socialism" as
being a "workers' state" presided over by a "revolutionary"
government, then how can this be reconciled with the
anarchist vision of a federation of self-managed communes
and workers' associations? As the Russian Revolution shows,
only by the armed might of the "revolutionary" government
crushing the anarchist vision.
The only thing we truly share with these groups is a mutual
opposition to existing capitalism. Having a common enemy does
not make someone friends. Hence anarchists, while willing
to work on certain mutual struggles, are well aware there is
substantial differences in both terms of means and goals. The
lessons of revolution in the 20th Century is that once in power,
Leninists will repress anarchists, their current allies against
the capitalist system. This is does not occur by accident, it
flows from the differences in vision between the two movements,
both in terms of means and goals.
Some Marxists, such as the International Socialist Tendency,
like to portray their tradition as being "socialism from
below." Under "socialism from below," they place the ideas
of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Trotsky, arguing that they and
they alone have continued this, the true, ideal of socialism
(Hal Draper's essay "The Two Souls of Socialism" seems to have
been the first to argue along these lines). They contrast this
idea of "democratic" socialism "from below" with "socialism
from above," in which they place reformist socialism (social
democracy, Labourism, etc.), elitist socialism (Lassalle and
others who wanted educated and liberal members of the middle
classes to liberate the working class) and Stalinism
(bureaucratic dictatorship over the working class).
For those who uphold this idea, "Socialism from below" is simply
the self-emancipation of the working class by its own efforts.
To anarchist ears, the claim that Marxism (and in particular
Leninism) is socialism "from below" sounds paradoxical, indeed
laughable. This is because anarchists from Proudhon onwards
have used the imagery of socialism being created and run from
below upwards. They have been doing so for far longer than
Marxists have. As such, "socialism from below" simply sums
up the anarchist ideal!
Thus we find Proudhon in 1848 talking about being a
"revolutionary from below" and that every "serious and
lasting Revolution" was "made from below, by the people."
A "Revolution from above" was "pure governmentalism,"
"the negation of collective activity, of popular
spontaneity" and is "the oppression of the wills of
those below." [quoted by George Woodcock, Pierre-Joseph
Proudhon, p. 143] For Proudhon, the means of this revolution
"from below" would be working class associations for both
credit (mutual banks) and production (workers' associations
or co-operatives). The workers, "organised among themselves,
without the assistance of the capitalist" would march by
"Work to the conquest of the world" by the "force of
principle." Thus capitalism would be reformed away by
the actions of the workers themselves. The "problem of
association," Proudhon argues, "consists in organising
. . . the producers, and by this subjecting capital
subordinating power. Such is the war of liberty against
authority, a war of the producer against the non-producer;
a war of equality against privilege . . . An agricultural
and industrial combination must be found by means of
which power, today the ruler of society, shall become its
slave." [quoted by K. Steven Vincent, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
and the Rise of French Republican Socialism, p. 148 and
p. 157]
Similarly, Bakunin saw an anarchist revolution as coming
"from below." As he put it, "liberty can be created only by
liberty, by an insurrection of all the people and the voluntary
organisation of the workers from below upward." [Statism
and Anarchy, p. 179] Elsewhere he writes that "popular
revolution" would "create its own organisation from the
bottom upwards and from the circumference inwards, in
accordance with the principle of liberty, and not from
the top downwards and from the centre outwards, as in the
way of authority." [Michael Bakunin: Selected Writings,
p. 170] His vision of revolution and revolutionary
self-organisation and construction from below was a
core aspect of his anarchist ideas, arguing repeatedly
for "the free organisation of the people's lives in
accordance with their needs -- not from the top down,
as we have it in the State, but from the bottom up,
an organisation formed by the people themselves . . . a
free union of associations of agricultural and factory
workers, of communes, regions, and nations." He stressed
that "the politics of the Social Revolution" was "the
abolition of the State" and "the economic, altogether free
organisation of the people, an organisation from below
upward, by means of federation." [The Political Philosophy
of Bakunin, pp. 297-8]
While Proudhon wanted to revolutionise society, he rejected
revolutionary means to do so (i.e. collective struggle,
strikes, insurrection, etc.). Bakunin, however, was a
revolutionary in this, the popular, sense of the word. Yet
he shared with Proudhon the idea of socialism being created
by the working class itself. As he put it, in "a social
revolution, which in everything is diametrically opposed
to a political revolution, the actions of individuals
hardly count at all, whereas the spontaneous action of
the masses is everything. All that individuals can do is
clarify, propagate and work out the ideas corresponding
to the popular instinct, and, what is more, to contribute
their incessant efforts to revolutionary organisation of
the natural power of the masses -- but nothing else beyond
that; the rest can and should be done by the people themselves
. . . revolution can be waged and brought to its full
development only through the spontaneous and continued
mass action of groups and associations of the people."
[Op. Cit., pp. 298-9]
Therefore, the idea of "socialism from below" is a distinctly
anarchist notion, one found in the works of Proudhon and
Bakunin and repeated by anarchists ever since. As such, to
hear Marxists appropriate this obviously anarchist terminology
and imagery appears to many anarchists as opportunistic and
attempt to cover the authoritarian reality of mainstream Marxism
with anarchist rhetoric. However, there are "libertarian"
strains of Marxism which are close to anarchism. Does this mean
that there are no elements of a "socialism from below" to be
found in Marx and Engels?
If we look at Marx, we get contradictory impressions. On the one
hand, he argued that freedom "consists in converting the state
from an organ superimposed upon society into one completely
subordinate to it." Combine this with his comments on the Paris
Commune (see his "The Civil War in France"), we can say that
there are clearly elements of "socialism from below" in Marx's
work. On the other hand, he often stresses the need for strict
centralisation of power. In 1850, for example, he argued that
the workers must "not only strive for a single and indivisible
German republic, but also within this republic for the most
determined centralisation of power in the hands of the state
authority." This was because "the path of revolutionary
activity" can "proceed only from the centre." This meant that
the workers must be opposed to the "federative republic"
planned by the democrats and "must not allow themselves to be
misguided by the democratic talk of freedom for the
communities, of self-government, etc." This centralisation
of power was essential to overcome local autonomy, which
would allow "every village, every town and every province"
to put "a new obstacle in the path" the revolution due to
"local and provincial obstinacy." Decades later, Marx
dismisses Bakunin's vision of "the free organisation of the
worker masses from bottom to top" as "nonsense." [Marx-Engels
Reader, p. 537, p. 509 and p. 547]
Thus we have a contradiction. While arguing that the state
must become subordinate to society, we have a central power
imposing its will on "local and provincial obstinacy." This
implies a vision of revolution in which the centre (indeed,
"the state authority") forces its will on the population,
which (by necessity) means that the centre power is
"superimposed upon society" rather than "subordinate"
to it. Given his dismissal of the idea of organisation from
bottom to top, we cannot argue that by this he meant simply
the co-ordination of local initiatives. Rather, we are struck
by the "top-down" picture of revolution Marx presents. Indeed,
his argument from 1850 suggests that Marx favoured centralism
not only in order to prevent the masses from creating obstacles
to the revolutionary activity of the "centre," but also to
prevent them from interfering with their own liberation.
Looking at Engels, we discover him writing that "[a]s soon
as our Party is in possession of political power it has
simply to expropriate the big landed proprietors just like the
manufacturers in industry . . . thus restored to the community
[they] are to be turned over by us to the rural workers who
are already cultivating them and are to be organised into
co-operatives." He even states that this expropriation may
"be compensated," depending on "the circumstances which we
obtain power, and particularly by the attitude adopted by
these gentry." [Marx-Engels Selected Writings, pp. 638-9]
Thus we have the party taking power, then expropriating the
means of life for the workers and, lastly, "turning over"
these to them. While this fits into the general scheme of
the Communist Manifesto, it cannot be said to be "socialism
from below" which can only signify the direct expropriation
of the means of production by the workers themselves,
organising themselves into free producer associations
to do so.
This vision of revolution as the party coming to power can
be seen from Engels' warning that the "worse thing that can
befall the leader of an extreme party is to be compelled to
assume power at a time when the movement is not yet ripe
for the domination of the class he represents and for the
measures this domination implies." [Collected Works,
vol. 10, p. 469] Needless to say, such a vision is hard to
equate with "socialism from below" which implies the active
participation of the working class in the direct management
of society from the bottom-up. If the leaders "assume power"
then they have the real power, not the class they claim
to "represent." Equally, it seems strange that socialism can
be equated with a vision which equates "domination" of a
class being achieved by the fact a leader "represents" it.
Can the working class really be said to be the ruling class
if its role in society is to select those who exercise power
on its behalf (i.e. to select representatives)? Bakunin quite
rightly answered in the negative. While representative
democracy may be acceptable to ensure bourgeois rule, it
cannot be assumed that it be utilised to create a socialist
society. It was designed to defend class society and its
centralised and top-down nature reflects this role.
Moreover, Marx and Engels had argued in The Holy Family
that the "question is not what this or that proletarian,
or even the whole of the proletariat at the moment considers
as its aim. The question is what the proletariat is, and
what, consequent on that being, it will be compelled to do."
[quoted by Murray Bookchin, The Spanish Anarchists, p. 280]
As Murray Bookchin argues:
Thus the ideological underpinning of a "socialism from
above" is expounded, one which dismisses what the members
of the working class actually want or desire at a given
point (a position which Trotsky, for one, explicitly
argued). A few years later, they argued in The Communist
Manifesto that "a portion of the bourgeois goes over to
the proletariat, and in particular, a portion of the
bourgeois ideologists, who have raised themselves to
the level of comprehending theoretically the historical
movement as a whole." They also noted that the Communists
are "the most advanced and resolute section of the
working-class parties . . . [and] they have over the
great mass of the proletariat the advantage of clearly
understanding the line of march, the conditions, and the
general results of the proletarian movement." [Selected
Works, p. 44 and p. 46] This gives a privileged place to
the party (particularly the "bourgeois ideologists" who
join it), a privileged place which their followers had no
problem abusing in favour of party power and hierarchical
leadership from above. As we discuss in
section H.5,
Lenin was just expressing orthodox Social-Democratic (i.e.
Marxist) policy when he argued that socialist consciousness
was created by bourgeois intellectuals and introduced into
the working class from outside. Against this, we have to
note that the Manifesto states that the proletarian movement
was "the self-conscious, independent movement of the immense
majority, in the interests of the immense majority"
(although, as discussed in
section H.1.1, when they wrote
this the proletariat was a minority in all countries bar
Britain). [Op. Cit., p. 45]
Looking at the tactics advocated by Marx and Engels, we
see a strong support for "political action" in the sense
of participating in elections. This support undoubtedly
flows from Engel's comments that universal suffrage "in
an England two-thirds of whose inhabitants are industrial
proletarians means the exclusive political rule of the
working class with all the revolutionary changes in social
conditions which are inseparable from it." [Collected
Works, vol. 10, p. 298 Marx argued along identical lines.
[Op. Cit., vol. 11, pp. 335-6] However, how could an entire
class, the proletariat organised as a "movement" exercise
its power under such a system? While the atomised voting
to nominate representatives (who, in reality, held the
real power in society) may be more than adequate to
ensure bourgeois, i.e. minority, power, could it be used
for proletarian, i.e. majority, power?
This is because such institutions are designed to place
policy-making in the hands of representatives and do not
(indeed, cannot) constitute a "proletariat organised as a
ruling class." If public policy, as distinguished from
administrative activities, is not made by the people
themselves, in federations of self-managed assemblies,
then a movement of the vast majority in the precise sense
of the term cannot exist. For people to acquire real power
over their lives and society, they must establish
institutions organised and run, as Bakunin constantly
stressed, from below. This would necessitate that they
themselves directly manage their own affairs, communities
and workplaces and, for co-ordination, mandate federal
assemblies of revocable and strictly controllable delegates,
who will execute their decisions. Only in this sense can a
majority class, especially one committed to the abolition
of all classes, organise as a class to manage society.
As such, Marx and Engels tactics are at odds with any idea of
"socialism from below." While, correctly, supporting strikes
and other forms of working class direct action (although,
significantly, Engels dismissed the general strike) they
placed that support within a general political strategy which
emphasised electioneering and representative forms. This,
however, is a form of struggle which can only really be
carried out by means of leaders. The role of the masses
is minor, that of voters. The focus of the struggle is at
the top, in parliament, where the duly elected leaders are.
As Luigi Galleani argued, this form of action involved the
"ceding of power by all to someone, the delegate, the
representative, individual or group." This meant that
rather than the anarchist tactic of "direct pressure
put against the ruling classes by the masses," the Socialist
Party "substituted representation and the rigid discipline
of the parliamentary socialists," the inevitably resulted
in it "adopt[ing] class collaboration in the legislative
arena, without which all reforms would remain a vain hope."
It also resulted in the socialists needing "authoritarian
organisations", i.e. ones which are centralised and disciplined
from above down. [The End of Anarchism?, p. 14, p. 12 and
p. 14] The end result was the encouragement of a viewpoint
that reforms (indeed, the revolution) would be the work of
leaders acting on behalf of the masses whose role would be
that of voters and followers, not active participants in the
struggle (see section J.2 for a
ddiscussion on direct action and why anarchists reject electioneering).
By the 1890s, the top-down and essentially reformist nature
of these tactics had made their mark in both Engels politics
and the practical activities of the Social-Democratic parties.
Engels "introduction" to Marx's The Class Struggles in France
indicated how far Marxism had progressed. Engels, undoubtedly
influenced by the rise of Social-Democracy as an electoral
power, stressed the use of the ballot box as the ideal way,
if not the only way, for the party to take power. He notes
that "[w]e, the 'revolutionists', the 'overthrowers'" were
"thriving far better on legal methods than on illegal methods
and overthrow" and the bourgeoisie "cry despairingly . . .
legality is the death of us" and were "much more afraid of
the legal than of the illegal action of the workers' party,
of the results of elections than of those of rebellion." He
argued that it was essential "not to fitter away this daily
increasing shock force [of party voters] in vanguard skirmishes,
but to keep it intact until the decisive day." [Selected
Writings, p. 656, p. 650 and p. 655]
The net effect of this would simply be keeping the class
struggle within the bounds decided upon by the party leaders,
so placing the emphasis on the activities and decisions of
those at the top rather than the struggle and decisions of
the mass of working class people themselves. As we noted in
section H.1.1,
when the party was racked by the "revisionism"
controversy after Engels death, it was fundamentally a
conflict between those who wanted the party's rhetoric to
reflect its reformist tactics and those who sought the
illusion of radical words to cover the reformist practice.
The decision of the Party to support their state in the
First World War simply proved that radical words cannot
defeat reformist tactics.
Needless to say, from this contradictory inheritance, Marxists
had two ways of proceeding. Either they become explicitly
anti-state (and so approach anarchism) or become explicitly
in favour of party and state power and so, by necessity,
"revolution from above." The council communists and other
libertarian Marxists followed the first path, the Bolsheviks
and their followers the second. As we discuss in the
next section, Lenin explicitly dismissed the idea that Marxism
proceeded "only from below," stating that this was an
anarchist principle. Nor was he shy in equating party power
with working class power. Indeed, this vision of socialism
as involving party power was not alien to the mainstream
social-democracy Leninism split from. The leading left-wing
Menshevik Martov argued as follows:
All this is to be expected, given the weakness of the Marxist
theory of the state. As we discuss in
section H.3.7, Marxists
have always had an a-historic perspective on the state,
considering it as purely an instrument of class rule rather
than what it is, an instrument of minority class rule. For
anarchists, the "State is the minority government, from the
top downward, of a vast quantity of men." This automatically
means that a socialism, like Marx's, which aims for a socialist
government and a workers' state automatically becomes, against
the wishes of its best activists, "socialism from above."
As Bakunin argued, Marxists are "worshippers of State power,
and necessarily also prophets of political and social discipline
and champions of order established from the top downwards,
always in the name of universal suffrage and the sovereignty
of the masses, for whom they save the honour and privilege of
obeying leaders, elected masters." [Michael Bakunin: Selected
Writings, p. 265 and pp. 237-8]
For this reason anarchists from Bakunin onwards have argued for
a bottom-up federation of workers' councils as the basis of
revolution and the means of managing society after capitalism
and the state have been abolished. If these organs of workers'
self-management are co-opted into a state structure (as happened
in Russia) then their power will be handed over to the real power
in any state -- the government and its bureaucracy. The state
is the delegation of power -- as such, it means that the idea
of a "workers' state" expressing "workers' power" is a logical
impossibility. If workers are running society then power rests
in their hands. If a state exists then power rests in the hands
of the handful of people at the top, not in the hands of all.
The state was designed for minority rule. No state can be an
organ of working class (i.e. majority) self-management due to
its basic nature, structure and design.
So, while there are elements of "socialism from below" in the
works of Marx and Engels they are placed within a distinctly
centralised and authoritarian context which undermines them.
As John Clark summarises, "in the context of Marx's consistent
advocacy of centralist programmes, and the part these programmes
play in his theory of social development, the attempt to construct
a libertarian Marxism by citing Marx's own proposals for social
change would seem to present insuperable difficulties." [Op. Cit.,
p. 93]
As discussed in the last section,
Marx and Engels left their
followers with an ambiguous legacy. On the one hand, there
are elements of "socialism from below" in their politics
(most explicitly in Marx's comments on the libertarian
influenced Paris Commune). On the other, there are distinctly
centralist and statist themes in their work.
From this legacy, Leninism took the statist themes. Which
explains why anarchists think the idea of Leninism being
"socialism from below" is incredible. Simply put, the actual
comments and actions of Lenin and his followers show that
they had no commitment to a "socialism from below." As we
will indicate, Lenin disassociated himself repeatedly from
the idea of politics "from below," considering it (quite
rightly) an anarchist idea. In contrast, he stressed the
importance of a politics which somehow combined action
"from above" and "from below." For those Leninists who
maintain that their tradition is "socialism from below"
(indeed, the only "real" socialism "from below"), this is
a major problem and, unsurprisingly, they generally fail
to mention it.
So what was Lenin's position on "from below"? In 1904, during
the debate over the party split into Bolsheviks and Mensheviks,
Lenin stated that the argument "[b]ureaucracy versus democracy
is in fact centralism versus autonomism; it is the organisational
principle of revolutionary Social-Democracy as opposed to the
organisational principle of opportunist Social-Democracy. The
latter strives to proceed from the bottom upward, and, therefore,
wherever possible . . . upholds autonomism and 'democracy,'
carried (by the overzealous) to the point of anarchism. The
former strives to proceed from the top downward. . ." [Collected
Works, vol. 7, pp. 396-7] Thus it is the non-Bolshevik
("opportunist") wing of Marxism which bases itself on the
"organisational principle" of "from the bottom upward," not
the Bolshevik tradition (as we note in
section H.5.5, Lenin
also rejected the "primitive democracy" of mass assemblies as
the basis of the labour and revolutionary movements). Moreover,
this vision of a party run from the top down was enshrined in
the Bolshevik ideal of "democratic centralism" (see
section H.5.5).
How you can have "socialism from below" when your "organisational
principle" is "from the top downward" is not explained by Leninist
exponents of "socialism from below."
Lenin repeated this argument in his discussion on the right
tactics to apply during the near revolution of 1905. He
mocked the Mensheviks for only wanting "pressure from below"
which was "pressure by the citizens on the revolutionary
government." Instead, he argued for "pressure . . . from above
as well as from below," where "pressure from above" was
"pressure by the revolutionary government on the citizens."
He notes that Engels "appreciated the importance of action
from above" and that he saw the need for "the utilisation of
the revolutionary governmental power." Lenin summarised his
position (which he considered as being in line with that of
orthodox Marxism) by stating that "[l]imitation, in principle,
of revolutionary action to pressure from below and renunciation
of pressure also from above is anarchism." [Marx, Engels and
Lenin, Anarchism and Anarcho-Syndicalism, pp. 189-90, p. 193,
p. 195 and p. 196] This seems to have been a common Bolshevik
position at the time, with Stalin stressing in the same year
that "action only from 'below'" was "an anarchist principle,
which does, indeed, fundamentally contradict Social-Democratic
tactics." [Collected Works, vol. 1, p. 149]
It is in this context of "above and below" in which we must
place Lenin's comments in 1917 that socialism was "democracy
from below, without a police, without a standing army,
voluntary social duty by a militia formed from a universally
armed people." [Collected Works, vol. 24, p. 170] Given
that Lenin had rejected the idea of "only from below" as
an anarchist principle (which it is), we need to bear in
mind that this "democracy from below" was always placed
in the context of a Bolshevik government. Lenin always
stressed that the Bolsheviks would "take over full state
power," that they "can and must take state power into their
own hands." His "democracy from below" always meant representative
government, not popular power or self-management. The role of
the working class was that of voters and so the Bolsheviks' first
task was "to convince the majority of the people that its programme
and tactics are correct." The second task "that confronted our
Party was to capture political power." The third task was for
"the Bolshevik Party" to "administer Russia." [Selected Works,
vol. 2, p. 352, p. 328 and p. 589] Thus Bolshevik power was
equated with working class power.
Towards the end of 1917, he stressed this vision of a Bolshevik
run "democracy from below" by arguing that "[a]fter the 1905
revolution Russia was ruled by 130,000 landowners . . . yet
they tell us that Russia will not be able to be governed by
the 240,000 members of the Bolshevik party." He even equated
rule by the party with rule by the class -- "the power of the
Bolsheviks -- that is, the power of the proletariat," while
admitting that the proletariat could not actually govern itself.
As he put it, "[w]e know that just any labourer or any cook
would be incapable of taking over immediately the administration
of the State . . . We demand that the teaching of the business
of government be conducted by the class-conscious workers and
soldiers." The "conscious workers must be in control, but they
can attract to the actual work of management the real labouring
and oppressed masses." Ironically, he calls this system "real
popular self-administration" and "teaching the people to manage
their own affairs." He also indicated that once in power, the
Bolsheviks "shall be fully and unreservedly for a strong
government and centralism." [Will the Bolsheviks Maintain
Power, pp. 61-2, p. 66, p. 69 and p. 75]
Clearly, Lenin's position had not changed. The goal of the
revolution was simply a Bolshevik government, which, if it
was to be effective, had to have the real power in society.
Thus, socialism would be implemented from above, by the
"strong" government of the "conscious workers" who
would be "in control." While, eventually, the "labouring"
masses would take part in the administration of state
decisions, the initial role of the workers could be the
same as under capitalism. And, we must note, there is a
difference between making policy and taking part in
administration (i.e. between the "work of management"
and management itself), a difference Lenin obscures.
All of which, perhaps, explains the famous leaflet
addressed to the workers of Petrograd immediately after
the October Revolution, informing that "the revolution
has won." The workers were called upon to "show . . .
the greatest firmness and endurance, in order to
facilitate the execution of all the aims of the new
People's Government." They were asked to "cease
immediately all economic and political strikes, to
take up your work, and do it in perfect order . . . All
to your places." It stated that the "best way to support
the new Government of Soviets in these days" was "by
doing your job." [cited by John Read, Ten Days that
Shook the World, pp. 341-2] Which smacks far more of
"socialism from above" than "socialism from below"!
The implications of Lenin's position became clearer after the
Bolsheviks had taken power in 1917. In that situation, it
was not a case of "dealing with the general question of
principle, whether in the epoch of the democratic revolution
it is admissible to pass from pressure from below to
pressure from above." [Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 24,
p. 190] Rather, it was the concrete situation of a
"revolutionary" government exercising power "from above"
onto the very class it claimed to represent. Thus we have a
power over the working class which was quite happy to exercise
coercion to ensure its position. As Lenin explained to his
political police, the Cheka, in 1920:
It could be argued that this position was forced on Lenin
by the problems facing the Bolsheviks in the Civil War, but
such an argument is flawed. This is for two reasons. Firstly,
according to Lenin himself civil war was inevitable and so,
unsurprisingly, Lenin considered his comments as universally
applicable. Secondly, this position fits in well with the idea
of pressure "from above" exercised by the "revolutionary"
government against the masses (and nothing to do with any
sort of "socialism from below"). Indeed, "wavering" and
"unstable" elements is just another way of saying "pressure
from below," the attempts by those subject to the "revolutionary"
government to influence its policies. As we noted in
section H.1.2,
it was in this period (1919 and 1920) that the Bolsheviks
openly argued that the "dictatorship of the proletariat" was, in
fact, the "dictatorship of the party" (see
section H.3.8 on how
the Bolsheviks modified the Marxist theory of the state in line
with this). Rather than the result of the problems facing Russia
at the time, Lenin's comments simply reflect the unfolding of
certain aspects of his ideology when his party held power (as
we make clear in the appendix on "How did Bolshevik ideology contribute to the failure of the Revolution?",
the ideology of the ruling party
and the ideas held by the masses are also factors in history).
To show that Lenin's comments were not caused by circumstantial
factors, we can turn to his infamous work Left-Wing Communism.
In this 1920 tract, written for the Second Congress of the
Communist International, Lenin lambasted those Marxists who
argued for direct working class power against the idea of
party rule (i.e. the various council communists around
Europe). We have already noted in
section H.1.2 that Lenin
had argued in that work that it was "ridiculously absurd and
stupid" to "a contrast in general between the dictatorship of
the masses and the dictatorship of the leaders." [p. 25]
Here we provide his description of the "top-down" nature of
Bolshevik rule:
"In its work the Party relies directly on the trade unions
. . . In reality, all the controlling bodies of the overwhelming
majority of the unions . . . consists of Communists, who
secure the carrying out of all the instructions of the Party.
Thus . . . we have a . . . very powerful proletarian apparatus,
by means of which the Party is closely linked up with the
class and with the masses, and by means of which, under
the leadership of the Party, the class dictatorship of the
class is realised." [Left-Wing Communism, pp. 31-2]
Combined with "non-Party workers' and peasants' conferences"
and Soviet Congresses, this was "the general mechanism of
the proletarian state power viewed 'from above,' from the
standpoint of the practical realisation of the dictatorship"
and so "all talk about 'from above' or 'from below,' about
'the dictatorship of leaders' or 'the dictatorship of the
masses,' cannot but appear to be ridiculous, childish
nonsense." [Op. Cit., p. 33] Perhaps this explains why he
did not bother to view "proletarian" state power "from below,"
from the viewpoint of the proletariat? If he did, perhaps
he would have recounted the numerous strikes and protests
broken by the Cheka under martial law, the gerrymandering and
disbanding of soviets, the imposition of "one-man management"
onto the workers in production, the turning of the unions
into agents of the state/party and the elimination of working
class freedom by party power? After all, if the congresses
of soviets were "more democratic" than anything in the "best
democratic republics of the bourgeois world," the Bolsheviks
would have no need for non-Party conferences "to be able to
watch the mood of the masses, to come closer to them, to
respond to their demands." [Op. Cit., p. 33 and p. 32] How
the Bolsheviks "responded" to these conferences and their
demands is extremely significant. They disbanded them. This
was because "[d]uring the disturbances" of late 1920, "they
provided an effective platform for criticism of Bolshevik
policies." Their frequency was decreased and they "were
discontinued soon afterward." [Richard Sakwa, Soviet
Communists in Power, p. 203]
At the Comintern congress itself, Zinoviev announced that
"the dictatorship of the proletariat is at the same time
the dictatorship of the Communist Party." [Proceedings and
Documents of the Second Congress 1920, vol. 1, p. 152]
Trotsky, for his part, also universalised Lenin's argument
when he pondered the important decisions of the revolution
and who would make them in his reply to the anarchist delegate
from the Spanish anarcho-syndicalist union the CNT:
As is obvious, Trotsky was drawing general lessons for the
international revolutionary movement. Needless to say, he
still argued that the "working class, represented and led
by the Communist Party, [was] in power here" in spite of it
being "an amorphous, chaotic mass" which did not make any
decisions on important questions affecting the revolution!
Incidentally, his and Lenin's comments of 1920 disprove
Trotsky's later assertion that it was "[o]nly after the
conquest of power, the end of the civil war, and the
establishment of a stable regime" when "the Central
Committee little by little begin to concentrate the
leadership of Soviet activity in its hands. Then would
come Stalin's turn." [Stalin, vol. 1, p. 328] While it
was definitely the "conquest of power" by the Bolsheviks
which lead to the marginalisation of the soviets, this
event cannot be shunted to after the civil war as Trotsky
would like (particularly as Trotsky admitted that "[a]fter
eight months of inertia and of democratic chaos, came the
dictatorship of the Bolsheviks." [Op. Cit., vol. 2, p. 242]).
We must note (see sections
H.1.2 or
H.3.8) Trotsky argued
for the "objective necessity" of the "revolutionary
dictatorship of a proletarian party" until his death.
Clearly, the claim that Leninism (and its various off-shoots
like Trotskyism) is "socialism from below" is hard to take
seriously. As proven above, the Leninist tradition is explicitly
against the idea of "only from below," with Lenin explicitly
stating that it was an "anarchist stand" to be for "'action
only from below', not 'from below and from above'" which was
the position of Marxism. [Collected Works, vol. 9, p. 77]
Once in power, Lenin and the Bolsheviks implemented this vision
of "from below and from above," with the highly unsurprising
result that "from above" quickly repressed "from below" (which
was dismissed as "wavering" by the masses). This was to be
expected, for a government to enforce its laws, it has to have
power over its citizens and so socialism "from above" is a
necessary side-effect of Leninist theory.
Ironically, Lenin's argument in State and Revolution comes
back to haunt him. In that work he had argued that the
"dictatorship of the proletariat" meant "democracy for the
people" which "imposes a series of restrictions on the
freedom of the oppressors, the exploiters, the capitalists."
These must be crushed "in order to free humanity from
wage-slavery; their resistance must be broken by force;
it is clear that where there is suppression there is also
violence, there is no freedom, no democracy." [Essential
Works of Lenin, pp. 337-8] If the working class itself
is being subject to "suppression" then, clearly, there
is "no freedom, no democracy" for that class -- and the
people "will feel no better if the stick with which they
are being beaten is labelled 'the people's stick'."
[Bakunin, Bakunin on Anarchism, p. 338]
Thus, when Leninists argue that they stand for the "principles
of socialism from below" and state that this means the direct
and democratic control of society by the working class then,
clearly, they are being less than honest. Looking at the
tradition they place themselves, the obvious conclusion which
must be reached is that Leninism is not based on "socialism
from below" in the sense of working class self-management of
society (i.e. the only condition when the majority can "rule"
and decisions truly flow from below upwards). At best, they
subscribe to the distinctly bourgeois vision of "democracy"
as being simply the majority designating (and trying to
control) its rulers. At worse, they defend politics which
have eliminated even this form of democracy in favour of
party dictatorship and "one-man management" armed with
"dictatorial" powers in industry (most members of such parties
do not know how the Bolsheviks gerrymandered and disbanded
soviets to maintain power, raised the dictatorship of the
party to an ideological truism and wholeheartedly advocated
"one-man management" rather than workers' self-management of
production). As we discuss in
section H.5, this latter
position flows easily from the underlying assumptions of
vanguardism which Leninism is based on.
So, Lenin, Trotsky and so on simply cannot be considered as
exponents of "socialism from below." Any one who makes such a
claim is either ignorant of the actual ideas and practice of
Bolshevism or they seek to deceive. For anarchists, "socialism
from below" can only be another name, like libertarian socialism,
for anarchism (as Lenin, ironically enough, acknowledged). This
does not mean that "socialism from below," like "libertarian
socialism," is identical to anarchism, it simply means that
libertarian Marxists and other socialists are far closer to
anarchism than mainstream Marxism.
No, far from it. While it is impossible to quote everything
a person or an ideology says, it is possible to summarise
those aspects of a theory which influenced the way it
developed in practice. As such, any account is "selective"
in some sense, the question is whether this results in a
critiqued rooted in the ideology and its practice or whether
it presents a picture at odds with both. As Maurice Brinton
puts it in the introduction to his classic account of workers'
control in the Russian Revolution:
Hence the need to discuss all aspects of Marxism rather than
take what its adherents like to claim for it as granted. In
this, we agree with Marx himself who argued that we cannot
judge people by what they say about themselves but rather what
they do. Unfortunately while many self-proclaimed Marxists
(like Trotsky) may quote these comments, fewer apply them
to their own ideology or actions (again, like Trotsky).
This can be seen from the almost ritualistic way many Marxists
response to anarchist (or other) criticisms of their ideas.
When they complain that anarchists "selectively" quote from
the leading proponents of Marxism, they are usually at pains
to point people to some document which they have selected
as being more "representative" of their tradition. Leninists
usually point to Lenin's State and Revolution, for example,
for a vision of what Lenin "really" wanted. To this anarchists
reply by, as we discussed in section H.1.7
(Haven't you read
Lenin's "State and Revolution"?), pointing out that much of
that passes for 'Marxism' in State and Revolution is anarchist
and, equally important, it was not applied in practice. This
explains an apparent contradiction. Leninists point to the
Russian Revolution as evidence for the democratic nature of
their politics. Anarchists point to it as evidence of Leninism's
authoritarian nature. Both can do this because there is a
substantial difference between Bolshevism before it took power
and afterwards. While the Leninists ask you to judge them by
their manifesto, anarchists say judge them by their record!
Simply put, Marxists quote selectively from their own
tradition, ignoring those aspects of it which would be
unappealing to potential recruits. While the leaders may
know their tradition has skeletons in its closet, they
try their best to ensure no one else gets to know. Which,
of course, explains their hostility to anarchists doing so!
That there is a deep divide between aspects of Marxist
rhetoric and its practice and that even its rhetoric is
not consistent we will now prove. By so doing, we can show
that anarchists do not, in fact, quote Marxist's "selectively."
As an example, we can point to the leading Bolshevik Grigorii
Zinoviev. In 1920, as head of the Communist International he
wrote a letter to the Industrial Workers of the World, a
revolutionary labour union, which stated that the "Russian
Soviet Republic. . . is the most highly centralised government
that exists. It is also the most democratic government in
history. For all the organs of government are in constant
touch with the working masses, and constantly sensitive to
their will." [Proceedings and Documents of the Second Congress
1920, vol. 2, p. 928] The same year, he explained in a
Communist journal that "soviet rule in Russia could not
have been maintained for three years -- not even three weeks
-- without the iron dictatorship of the Communist Party. Any
class conscious worker must understand that the dictatorship
of the working class can by achieved only by the dictatorship
of its vanguard, i.e., by the Communist Party . . . All
questions . . ., on which the fate of the proletarian
revolution depends absolutely, are decided . . . in the
framework of the party organisations." [quoted by Oskar
Anweiler, The Soviets, pp. 239-40] It seems redundant to
note that the second quote is the accurate one, the one
which matches the reality of Bolshevik Russia. Therefore
it is hardly "selective" to quote the latter and not the
former, rather it expresses what was actually happening.
This duality and the divergence between practice and rhetoric
comes to the fore when Trotskyists discuss Stalinism and try
to counter pose the Leninist tradition to it. For example,
we find the British SWP's Chris Harman arguing that the "whole
experience of the workers' movement internationally teaches
that only by regular elections, combined with the right of
recall by shop-floor meetings can rank-and-file delegates be
made really responsible to those who elect them." [Bureaucracy
and Revolution in Eastern Europe, pp. 238-9] Significantly,
Harman does not mention that both Lenin and Trotsky rejected
this experience (see
section H.3.8 for a full discussion on
how Leninism argues for state power explicitly to eliminate
such control from below). How can Trotsky's comment that the
"revolutionary dictatorship of a proletarian party is . . .
an objective necessity" be reconciled with it? And what of
the claim that the "revolutionary party (vanguard) which
renounces its own dictatorship surrenders the masses to the
counter-revolution"? [Writings 1936-37, pp. 513-4] Or his
similar argument sixteen years earlier that the Party was
"entitled to assert its dictatorship even if that dictatorship
clashed with the passing moods of the workers' democracy"?
[quoted by Maurice Brinton, Op. Cit., p. 78]
The ironies do not stop there, of course. Harman correctly notes
that under Stalinism, the "bureaucracy is characterised, like the
private capitalist class in the West, by its control over the
means of production." [Op. Cit., p. 147] However, he fails to
note that it was Lenin, in early 1918, who had raised and then
implemented such "control" in the form of "one-man management."
As he put it: "Obedience, and unquestioning obedience at that,
during work to the one-man decisions of Soviet directors, of
the dictators elected or appointed by Soviet institutions,
vested with dictatorial powers." [Six Theses on the Immediate
Tasks of the Soviet Government, p. 44] To fail to note this
link between Lenin and the Stalinist bureaucracy on this issue
is quoting "selectively."
The contradictions pile up. He argues that "people who seriously
believe that workers at the height of revolution need a police
guard to stop them handing their factories over to capitalists
certainly have no real faith in the possibilities of a socialist
future." [Op. Cit., p. 144] Yet this does not stop him praising
the regime of Lenin and Trotsky and contrasting it with Stalinism,
in spite of the fact that this was precisely what the Bolsheviks
did from 1918 onwards! Indeed this tyrannical practice played a
role in provoking the strikes in Petrograd which preceded the
Kronstadt revolt in 1921, when "the workers wanted the special
squads of armed Bolsheviks, who carried out a purely police
function, withdrawn from the factories." Paul Avrich, Kronstadt
1921, p. 42] It seems equally strange that Harman denounces
the Stalinist suppression of the Hungarian revolution for
workers' democracy and socialism while he defends the Bolshevik
suppression of the Kronstadt revolt for the same goals (and
as we discuss in the appendix "What was the Kronstadt Rebellion?",
the rationales both regimes used
to justify their actions were akin).
Similarly, when Harman argues that if by "political party" it
is "meant a party of the usual sort, in which a few leaders
give orders and the masses merely obey . . . then certainly
such organisations added nothing to the Hungarian revolution."
However, as we discuss in
section H.5, such a party
was precisely what Leninism argued for and applied in
practice. Simply put, the Bolsheviks were never a party "that
stood for the councils taking power." [Op. Cit., p. 186
and p. 187] As Lenin repeatedly stressed, its aim was for
the Bolshevik party to take power through the councils
(see section H.3.11).
This confusion between what was promised and what was done
is a common feature of Leninism. Felix Morrow, for example,
wrote what is usually considered the definitive Trotskyist
work on the Spanish Revolution (in spite of it being, as we
discuss in the appendix "Marxists and Spanish Anarchism,"
deeply flawed). In that work he states that the "essential
points of a revolutionary program [are] all power to the
working class, and democratic organs of the workers,
peasants and combatants, as the expression of the workers'
power." [Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Spain, p. 133]
How this can be reconciled with Trotsky's comment, written
in the same year, that "a revolutionary party, even after
seizing power . . . is still by no means the sovereign ruler
of society."? Or the opinion that it was "only thanks to
the party dictatorship [that] were the Soviets able to lift
themselves out of the mud of reformism and attain the
state form of the proletariat"? [Stalinism and Bolshevism]
Or Lenin's
opinion that "an organisation taking in the whole proletariat
cannot directly exercise proletarian dictatorship" and that
it "can be exercised only by a vanguard"? [Collected Works,
vol. 32, p. 21] How can the working class "have all power"
if power is held by a vanguard party? Particularly when this
party has power specifically to enable it "overcom[e] the
vacillation of the masses themselves." [Trotsky, The
Moralists and Sycophants, p. 59]
Given all this, who is quoting who "selectively"? The Marxists
who ignore what the Bolsheviks did when in power and repeatedly
point to Lenin's State and Revolution or the anarchists who
link what they did with what they said outside of that holy text?
Considering this absolutely contradictory inheritance, anarchists
feel entitled to ask the question "Will the real Leninist please
stand up?" What is it to be, popular democracy or party rule? If
we look at Bolshevik practice, the answer is the latter. As we
discuss in
section H.3.8,
the likes of Lenin and Trotsky concur,
incorporating the necessity of party power into their ideology
as a lesson of the revolution. As such, anarchists do not feel
they are quoting Leninism "selectively" when they argue that it
is based on party power, not working class self-management. That
Leninists often publicly deny this aspect of their own ideology
or, at best, try to rationalise and justify it, suggests that
when push comes to shove (as it does in every revolution) they
will make the same decisions and act in the same way!
In addition there is the question of what could be called the
"social context." Marxists often accuse anarchists of failing
to place the quotations and actions of, say, the Bolsheviks
into the circumstances which generated them. By this they mean
that Bolshevik authoritarianism can be explained purely in
terms of the massive problems facing them (i.e. the rigours
of the Civil War, the economic collapse and chaos in Russia
and so on). As we discuss this question in
"What caused the degeneration of the Russian Revolution?", we
will simply summarise the anarchist reply by noting that this
argument has three major problems with it. Firstly, there is
the problem that Bolshevik authoritarianism started before
the start of the Civil War (as we discuss in
the appendix on "What happened during the Russian Revolution?") and,
moreover, continued after its ends. As such, the Civil War
cannot be blamed. The second problem is simply that Lenin
continually stressed that civil war and economic chaos was
inevitable during a revolution. If Leninist politics cannot
handle the inevitable then they are to be avoided. Equally,
if Leninists blame what they should know is inevitable for
the degeneration of the Bolshevik revolution it would suggest
their understanding of what revolution entails is deeply
flawed. The last problem is simply that the Bolsheviks did
not care. As Samuel Farber notes, "there is no evidence
indicating that Lenin or any of the mainstream Bolshevik
leaders lamented the loss of workers' control or of
democracy in the soviets, or at least referred to these
losses as a retreat, as Lenin declared with the replacement
of War Communism by NEP in 1921." [Before Stalinism, p. 44]
Hence the continuation (indeed, intensification) of Bolshevik
authoritarianism after their victory in the civil war. Given
this, it is significant that many of the quotes from Trotsky
given above date from the late 1930s. To argue, therefore,
that "social context" explains the politics and actions of
the Bolsheviks seems incredulous.
Lastly, it seems ironic that Marxists accuse anarchists of
quoting "selectively." After all, as proven in
section H.2,
this is exactly what Marxists do to anarchism! Indeed,
anarchists often make good propaganda out of such activity
by showing how selective their accounts are and how at odds
they are with want anarchism actually stands for and what
anarchists actually do (see the appendix of our FAQ on
"Anarchism and Marxism").
In summary, rather than quote "selectively" from the works
and practice of Marxism, anarchists summarise those tendencies
of both which, we argue, contribute to its continual failure in
practice as a revolutionary theory. Moreover, Marxists themselves
are equally as "selective" as anarchists in this respect. Firstly,
as regards anarchist theory and practice and, secondly, as regards
their own.
As is obvious in any account of the history of socialism,
Marxists (of various schools) have appropriated key anarchist
ideas and (often) present them as if Marxists thought of them
first.
For example, as we discuss in
section H.3.10, it was anarchists
who first raised the idea of smashing the bourgeois state and
replacing it with the fighting organisations of the working
class (such as unions, workers' councils, etc.). It was only
in 1917, decades after anarchists had first raised the idea,
that Marxists started to argue these ideas but, of course,
with a twist. While anarchists meant that working class
organisations would be the basis of a free society, Lenin
saw these organs as the best means of achieving Bolshevik
party power.
Similarly with the libertarian idea of the "militant
minority." By this, anarchists and syndicalists meant
groups of workers who gave an example by their direct
action which their fellow workers could imitate (for
example by leading wildcat strikes which would use
flying pickets to get other workers to join in). This
"militant minority" would be at the forefront of social
struggle and would show, by example, practice and
discussion, that their ideas and tactics were the
correct ones. After the Russian Revolution of 1917,
Bolsheviks argued that this idea was similar to their
idea of a vanguard party. This ignored two key differences.
Firstly that the libertarian "militant minority" did not
aim to take power on behalf of the working class but
rather to encourage it, by example, to manage its own
struggles and affairs (and, ultimately, society).
Secondly, that "vanguard parties" are organised in
hierarchical ways alien to the spirit of anarchism. While
both the "militant minority" and "vanguard party" approaches
are based on an appreciation of the uneven development of
ideas within the working class, vanguardism transforms this
into a justification for party rule over the working class
by a so-called "advanced" minority (see
section H.5 for a
full discussion). Other concepts, such as "workers' control,"
direct action, and so on have suffered a similar fate.
As such, while Marxists have appropriated certain anarchist
concepts, it does not mean that they mean exactly the same
thing by them. Rather, as history shows, radically different
concepts can be hidden behind similar sounding rhetoric. As
Murray Bookchin argued, many Marxist tendencies "attach
basically alien ideas to the withering conceptual framework
of Marxism -- not to say anything new but to preserve
something old with ideological formaldehyde -- to the
detriment of any intellectual growth that the distinctions
are designed to foster. This is mystification at its worst,
for it not only corrupts ideas but the very capacity of the
mind to deal with them. If Marx's work can be rescued for
our time, it will be by dealing with it as an invaluable
part of the development of ideas, not as pastiche that is
legitimated as a 'method' or continually 'updated' by
concepts that come from an alien zone of ideas." [Toward
an Ecological Society, p. 242f]
This is not some academic point. The ramifications of Marxists
appropriating such "alien ideas" (or, more correctly, the
rhetoric associated with those ideas) has had negative impacts
on actual revolutionary movements. For example, Lenin's
definition of "workers' control" was radically different than
that current in the factory committee movement during the
Russian Revolution (which had more in common with anarchist
and syndicalist use of the term). The similarities in rhetoric,
allowed the factory committee movement to put its weight behind
the Bolsheviks. Once in power, Lenin's position was implemented
while that of the factory committees was ignored. Ultimately,
Lenin's position was a key factor in creating state capitalism
rather than socialism in Russia (see
section H.3.14 for more
details).
This, of course, does not stop modern day Leninists appropriating
the term workers' control "without bating an eyelid. Seeking to
capitalise on the confusion of now rampant in the movement, these
people talk of 'workers' control' as if a) they meant by those
words what the politically unsophisticated mean (i.e. that working
people should themselves decide about the fundamental matters
relating to production) and b) as if they -- and the Leninist
doctrine to which they claim to adhere -- had always supported
demands of this kind, or as if Leninism had always seen in workers'
control the universally valid foundation of a new social order,
rather than just a slogan to be used for manipulatory purposes
in specific and very limited historical contexts." [Maurice
Brinton, The Bolsheviks and Workers' Control, p. iv]
Section H.3.14 discusses this further.
Thus the fact that Leninists have appropriated libertarian (and
working class) ideas and demands does not, in fact, mean that we
aim for the same thing (as we discuss in
section H.3.1, this is
far from the case). The use of anarchist/popular rhetoric and
slogans means little and we need to look at the content of the
ideas proposed. Given the legacy of the appropriation of
libertarian terminology to popularise authoritarian parties and
its subsequent jettison in favour of authoritarian policies once
the party is in power, anarchists have strong grounds to take
Leninist claims with a large pinch of salt!
Equally with examples of actual revolutions. As Martin Buber
notes, while "Lenin praises Marx for having 'not yet, in
1852, put the concrete question as to what should be set up
in place of the State machinery after it had been abolished,'"
Lenin argued that "it was only the Paris Commune that taught
Marx this." However, as Buber correctly points out, the Paris
Commune "was the realisation of the thoughts of people who had
put this question very concretely indeed . . . the historical
experience of the Commune became possible only because in the
hearts of passionate revolutionaries there lived the picture of
a decentralised, very much 'de-Stated' society, which picture
they undertook to translate into reality. The spiritual fathers
of the Commune had such that ideal aiming at decentralisation
which Marx and Engels did not have, and the leaders of the
Revolution of 1871 tried, albeit with inadequate powers, to
begin the realisation of that idea in the midst of revolution."
[Paths in Utopia, pp. 103-4] Thus, while the Paris Commune
and other working class revolts are praised, their obvious
anarchistic elements (as predicted by anarchist thinkers)
are not mentioned. This results in some strange dichotomies.
For example, Bakunin's vision of revolution is based on
a federation of workers' councils, predating Marxist support
for such bodies by decades, yet Marxists argue that Bakunin's
ideas have nothing to teach us. Or, the Paris Commune being
praised by Marxists as the first "dictatorship of the
proletariat" when it implements federalism, delegates being
subjected to mandates and recall and raises the vision of a
socialism of associations while anarchism is labelled
"petit-bourgeois" in spite of the fact that these ideas can
be found in works of Proudhon and Bakunin which predate the
1871 revolt!
From this, we can draw two facts. Firstly, anarchism has
successfully predicted certain aspects of working class
revolution. Anarchist K.J. Kenafick stated the obvious when
he argues that any "comparison will show that the programme
set out [by the Paris Commune] is . . . the system of Federalism,
which Bakunin had been advocating for years, and which had first
been enunciated by Proudhon. The Proudhonists . . . exercised
considerable influence in the Commune. This 'political form'
was therefore not 'at last' discovered; it had been discovered
years ago; and now it was proven to be correct by the very fact
that in the crisis the Paris workers adopted it almost
automatically, under the pressure of circumstance, rather
than as the result of theory, as being the form most suitable
to express working class aspirations." [Michael Bakunin and
Karl Marx, pp. 212-3] Thus, rather than being somehow alien
to the working class and its struggle for freedom, anarchism
in fact bases itself on the class struggle. This means that
it should come as no surprise when the ideas of anarchism are
developed and applied by those in struggle, for those ideas
are just generalisations derived from past working class
struggles! If anarchism ideas are applied spontaneously by
those in struggle, it is because those involved are themselves
drawing similar conclusions from their own experiences.
The other fact is that while mainstream Marxism often appropriated
certain aspects of libertarian theory and practice, it does
so selectively and places them into an authoritarian context
which undermines their libertarian nature. Hence anarchist
support for workers councils becomes transformed into a means
to ensure party power (i.e. state authority) rather than working
class power or self-management (i.e. no authority). Similarly,
anarchist support for leading by example becomes transformed
into support for party rule (and often dictatorship). Ultimately,
the practice of mainstream Marxism shows that libertarian ideas
cannot be transplanted selectively into an authoritarian ideology
and be expected to blossom. Significantly, those Marxists who do
apply anarchist ideas honestly are usually labelled by their
orthodox comrades as "anarchists."
As an example of Marxists appropriating libertarian ideas
honestly, we can point to the council communist and currents
within autonomist Marxism. The council communists broke with
the Bolsheviks over the question of whether the party would
exercise power or whether the workers' councils would. Needless
to say, Lenin labelled them an "anarchist deviation." Currents
within Autonomist Marxism have built upon the council communist
tradition, stressing the importance of focusing analysis on
working class struggle as the key dynamic in capitalist society.
In this they go against the mainstream Marxist orthodoxy and
embrace a libertarian perspective. As libertarian socialist
Cornelius Castoriadis argued, "the economic theory expounded
[by Marx] in Capital is based on the postulate that capitalism
has managed completely and effectively to transform the worker --
who only appears there only as labour power -- into a commodity;
therefore the use value of labour power -- the use the capitalist
makes of it -- is, as for any commodity, completely determined
by the use, since its exchange value -- wages -- is determined
solely by the laws of the market . . . This postulate is
necessary for there to be a 'science of economics' along the
physico-mathematical model Marx followed . . . But he contradicts
the most essential fact of capitalism, namely, that the use value
and exchange value of labour power are objectively indeterminate;
they are determined rather by the struggle between labour and
capital both in production and in society. Here is the ultimate
root of the 'objective' contradictions of capitalism . . . The
paradox is that Marx, the 'inventor' of class struggle, wrote a
monumental work on phenomena determined by this struggle in which
the struggle itself was entirely absent." [Political and Social
Writings, vol. 2, p. 203] Castoriadis explained the limitations
of Marx's vision most famously in his "Modern Capitalism and
Revolution." [Op. Cit., pp. 226-343]
By rejecting this heritage which mainstream Marxism bases itself
on and stressing the role of class struggle, Autonomist Marxism
breaks decisively with the Marxist mainstream and embraces a
position previously associated with anarchists and other libertarian
socialists. The key role of class struggle in invalidating all
deterministic economic "laws" was expressed by French syndicalists
at the start of the twentieth century. This insight predated the
work of Castoriadis and the development of Autonomist Marxism by
over 50 years and is worth quoting at length:
"By way of evidence of the relentless operation of this law
of wages, comparisons were made between the worker and a
commodity: if there is a glut of potatoes on the market,
they are cheap; if they are scarce, the price rises . . . It
is the same with the working man, it was said: his wages
fluctuate in accordance with the plentiful supply or dearth
of labour!
"No voice was raised against the relentless arguments of this
absurd reasoning: so the law of wages may be taken as right
. . . for as long as the working man [or woman] is content to
be a commodity! For as long as, like a sack of potatoes, she
remains passive and inert and endures the fluctuations of the
market . . . For as long as he bends his back and puts up with
all of the bosses' snubs, . . . the law of wages obtains.
"But things take a different turn the moment that a glimmer of
consciousness stirs this worker-potato into life. When, instead
off dooming himself to inertia, spinelessness, resignation and
passivity, the worker wakes up to his worth as a human being
and the spirit of revolt washes over him: when he bestirs himself,
energetic, wilful and active . . . [and] once the labour bloc
comes to life and bestirs itself . . . then, the laughable
equilibrium of the law of wages is undone." [Emile Pouget,
Direct Action]
And Marx, indeed, had compared the worker to a commodity,
stating that labour power "is a commodity, neither more
nor less than sugar. The former is measured by the clock,
the latter by the scale." [Marx-Engels Selected Works,
p. 72] However, as Castoridas argued, unlike sugar the
extraction of the use value of labour power "is not a
technical operation; it is a process of bitter struggle
in which half the time, so to speak, the capitalists
turn out to be losers." [Op. Cit., p. 248] A fact which
Pouget stressed in his critique of the mainstream
socialist position:
"Thus, worker cohesion conjures up against capitalist might a
might capable of standing up to it. The inequality between the
two adversaries -- which cannot be denied when the exploiter is
confronted only by the working man on his own -- is redressed in
proportion with the degree of cohesion achieved by the labour
bloc. From then on, proletarian resistance, be it latent or
acute, is an everyday phenomenon: disputes between labour and
capital quicken and become more acute. Labour does not always
emerge victorious from these partial struggles: however, even
when defeated, the struggle workers still reap some benefit:
resistance from them has obstructed pressure from the employers
and often forced the employer to grant some of the demands put."
[Op. Cit.]
The best currents of autonomist Marxism share this anarchist
stress on the power of working people to transform society
and to impact on how capitalism operates. Unsurprisingly,
most autonomist Marxists reject the idea of the vanguard
party and instead, like the council communists, stress the
need for autonomist working class self-organisation and
self-activity (hence the name!). They agree with Pouget
when he argued that "Direct action spells liberation for the
masses of humanity . . . [It] puts paid to the age of miracles
-- miracles from Heaven, miracles from the State -- and, in
contraposition to hopes vested in 'providence' (no matter
what they may be) it announces that it will act upon the
maxim: salvation lies within ourselves!" [Op. Cit.] As such,
they draw upon anarchistic ideas and rhetoric (for many,
undoubtedly unknowingly) and draw anarchistic conclusions.
This can be seen from the works of the leading US Autonomist
Marxist Harry Cleaver. His excellent essay "Kropotkin,
Self-Valorisation and the Crisis of Marxism" is by far the
best Marxist account of Kropotkin's ideas and shows the
similarities between communist-anarchism and autonomist
Marxism. [Anarchist Studies, vol.2 , no. 2, pp. 119-36]
Both, he points out, share a "common perception and sympathy
for the power of workers to act autonomously" regardless of
the "substantial differences" on other issues. [Reading
Capital Politically, p. 15]
As such, the links between the best Marxists and anarchism
can be substantial. This means that some Marxists have taken
on board many anarchist ideas and have forged a version of
Marxism which is basically libertarian in nature. Unfortunately,
such forms of Marxism have always been a minority current
within it. Most cases have seen the appropriation of anarchist
ideas by Marxists simply as part of an attempt to make mainstream,
authoritarian Marxism more appealing and such borrowings have
been quickly forgotten once power has been seized.
Therefore appropriation of rhetoric and labels should not be
confused with similarity of goals and ideas. The list of groupings
which have used inappropriate labels to associate their ideas
with other, more appealing, ones is lengthy. Content is what
counts. If libertarian sounding ideas are being raised, the
question becomes one of whether they are being used simply
to gain influence or whether they signify a change of heart.
As Bookchin argues:
Unless we know exactly what we aim for, how to get there and
who our real allies are we will get a nasty surprise once
our self-proclaimed "allies" take power. As such, any attempt
to appropriate anarchist rhetoric into an authoritarian ideology
will simply fail and become little more than a mask obscuring
the real aims of the party in question. As history shows.
Some Marxists will dismiss our arguments, and anarchism, out
of hand. This is because anarchism has not lead a "successful"
revolution while Marxism has. The fact, they assert, that
there has never been a serious anarchist revolutionary
movement, let alone an anarchist revolution, in the whole
of history proves that Marxism works. For some Marxists,
practice determines validity. Whether something is true
or not is not decided intellectually in wordy publications
and debates, but in reality.
For Anarchists, such arguments simply show the ideological
nature of most forms of Marxism. The fact is, of course,
that there has been many anarchistic revolutions which,
while ultimately defeated, show the validity of anarchist
theory (the ones in Spain and in the Ukraine being the
most significant). Moreover, there have been serious
revolutionary anarchist movements across the world, the
majority of them crushed by state repression (usually
fascist or communist based). However, this is not the most
important issue, which is the fate of these "successful"
Marxist movements and revolution. The fact that there has
never been a "Marxist" revolution which has not become a
party dictatorship proves the need to critique Marxism.
So, given that Marxists argue that Marxism is the
revolutionary working class political theory, its actual
track record has been appalling. After all, while many
Marxist parties have taken part in revolutions and even
seized power, the net effect of their "success" have been
societies bearing little or no relationship to socialism.
Rather, the net effect of these revolutions has been to
discredit socialism by associating it with one-party
states presiding over state capitalist economies.
Equally, the role of Marxism in the labour movement has
also been less than successful. Looking at the first
Marxist movement, social democracy, it ended by becoming
reformist, betraying socialist ideas by (almost always)
supporting their own state during the First World War
and going so far as crushing the German revolution and
betraying the Italian factory occupations in 1920. Indeed,
Trotsky stated that the Bolshevik party was "the only
revolutionary" section of the Second International,
which is a damning indictment of Marxism. [Stalin,
vol. 1, p. 248] Just as damning is the fact that neither
Lenin or Trotsky noticed it! Indeed, Lenin praised the
"fundamentals of parliamentary tactics" of German and
International Social Democracy, expressing the opinion
that they were "at the same time implacable on questions
of principle and always directed to the accomplishment of
the final aim" in his obituary of August Bebel in 1913!
[Marx, Engels and Lenin, Anarchism and Anarcho-Syndicalism,
p. 248] For those that way inclined, some amusement can be
gathered comparing Engels glowing predictions for these
parties and their actual performance (in the case of Spain
and Italy, his comments seem particularly ironic).
As regards Bolshevism itself, the one "revolutionary" party
in the world, it avoided the fate of its sister parties
simply because there no question of applying social
democratic tactics within bourgeois institutions as
these did not exist. Moreover, the net result of its
seizure of power was, first, a party dictatorship and
state capitalism under Lenin, then the creation of
Stalinism and a host of Trotskyist sects who spend a
considerable amount of time justifying and rationalising
the ideology and actions of the Bolsheviks which helped
create the Stalinism (see the appendix on "What happened during the Russian Revolution?"
for a discussion).
Clearly, a key myth of Marxism is the idea that it has been
a successful movement. In reality, its failures have been
consistent and devastating so suggesting its time to
re-evaluate the whole ideology and embrace a revolutionary
theory like anarchism. Indeed, it would be no exaggeration
to argue that every "success" of Marxism has, in fact, proved
that the anarchist critique of Marxism was correct. Thus, as
Bakunin predicted, the Social-Democratic parties became
reformist and the "dictatorship of the proletariat" became
the "dictatorship over the proletariat." With "victories"
like these, Marxism does not need failures! Thus Murray
Bookchin:
H.3.1 Do Anarchists and Marxists want the same thing?
"In every struggle of class against class, the next end
fought for is political power; the ruling class defends
its political supremacy, that is to say its safe majority
in the Legislature; the inferior class fights for, first
a share, then the whole of that power, in order to become
enabled to change existing laws in conformity with their
own interests and requirements. Thus the working class of
Great Britain for years fought ardently and even violently
for the People's Charter [which demanded universal suffrage
and yearly general elections], which was to give it that
political power." [Collected Works, vol. 24, p. 386]
"The modern Socialist . . . have steadily worked for
centralisation, and complete and perfect organisation
and control by those in authority above the people. The
anarchist, on the other hand, believes in the abolition
of that central power, and expects the free society to
grow into existence from below, starting with those
organisations and free agreements among the people
themselves. It is difficult to see how, by making a
central power control everything, we can be making a
step towards the abolition of that power." [Objections
to Anarchism]
"When F. Engels, perhaps to counter anarchist criticisms,
said that once classes disappear the State as such has no
raison d'etre and transforms itself from a government of
men into an administration of thing, he was merely playing
with words. Whoever has power over things has power over men;
whoever governs production also governs the producers; who
determines consumption is master over the consumer.
"All citizens are transformed into the salaried employees of
the state . . . All citizens become employees and workers of
a single national state 'syndicate' . . . The whole of
society will have become a single office and a single factory
with equality of work and equality of pay." [Essential Works
of Lenin, p. 348]
"Basic to anti-authoritarian Socialism ---specifically,
to Anarchist Communism -- is the notion that hierarchy and
domination cannot be subsumed by class rule and economic
exploitation, indeed, that they are more fundamental to
an understanding of the modern revolutionary project.
Before 'man' began to exploit 'man,' he began to dominate
woman . . . Power of human over human long antedates the
very formation of classes and economic modes of social
oppression. . . . This much is clear: it will no longer
do to insist that a classless society, freed from material
exploitation, will necessarily be a liberated society.
There is nothing in the social future to suggest that
bureaucracy is incompatible with a classless society,
the domination of women, the young, ethnic groups or
even professional strata." [Toward an Ecological
Society, pp. 208-9]
H.3.2 Is Marxism "socialism from below"?
"These lines and others like them in Marx's writings were
to provide the rationale for asserting the authority of
Marxist parties and their armed detachments over and
even against the proletariat. Claiming a deeper and
more informed comprehension of the situation then
'even the whole of the proletariat at the given moment,'
Marxist parties went on to dissolve such revolutionary
forms of proletarian organisation as factory committees
and ultimately to totally regiment the proletariat
according to lines established by the party leadership."
[Op. Cit., p. 289]
"In a class struggle which has entered the phase of civil war,
there are bound to be times when the advance guard of the
revolutionary class, representing the interests of the broad
masses but ahead of them in political consciousness, is
obliged to exercise state power by means of a dictatorship
of the revolutionary minority. Only a short-sighted and
doctrinaire viewpoint would reject this prospect as such.
The real question at stake is whether this dictatorship, which
is unavoidable at a certain stage of any revolution, is
exercised in such a way as to consolidate itself and create
a system of institutions enabling it to become a permanent
feature, or whether, on the contrary, it is replaced as soon
as possible by the organised initiative and autonomy of the
revolutionary class or classes as a whole. The second of
these methods is that of the revolutionary Marxists who,
for this reason, style themselves Social Democrats; the
first is that of the Communists." [The Mensheviks in the
Russian Revolution, Abraham Ascher (Ed.), p. 119]
H.3.3 Is Leninism "socialism from below"?
"Without revolutionary coercion directed against the avowed
enemies of the workers and peasants, it is impossible to
break down the resistance of these exploiters. On the other
hand, revolutionary coercion is bound to be employed towards
the wavering and unstable elements among the masses
themselves." [Collected Works, vol. 42, p. 170]
"The interrelations between leaders-Party-class-masses . . .
now present themselves concretely in Russia in the following
form. The dictatorship is exercised by the proletariat
which is organised in the Soviets and is led by the
Communist Party . . . The Party, which holds annual
congresses . . . is directed by a Central Committee of
nineteen elected at the congress, while the current work
in Moscow [the capital] had to be carried on by [two] still
smaller bodies . . . which are elected at the plenary sessions
of the Central Committee, five members of the Central
Committee in each bureau. This, then, looks like a real
'oligarchy.' Not a single important political or organisational
question is decided by any State institution in our republic
[sic!] without the guiding instructions of the Central
Committee of the Party.
"Who decides this question [and others like it]? We have
the Council of People's Commissars but it has to be subject
to some supervision. Whose supervision? That of the working
class as an amorphous, chaotic mass? No. The Central
Committee of the party is convened to discuss . . . and to
decide . . . Who will solve these questions in Spain? The
Communist Party of Spain." [Op. Cit., p. 174]
H.3.4 Don't anarchists just quote Marxists selectively?
"Other charges will also be made. The quotations from Lenin
and Trotsky will not be denied but it will be stated that
they are 'selective' and that 'other things, too' were said.
Again, we plead guilty. But we would stress that there are
hagiographers enough in the trade whose 'objectivity' . . .
is but a cloak for sophisticated apologetics . . . It
therefore seems more relevant to quote those statements of
the Bolsheviks leaders of 1917 which helped determine Russia's
evolution [towards Stalinism] rather those other statements
which, like the May Day speeches of Labour leaders, were for
ever to remain of rhetoric." [The Bolsheviks and Workers'
Control, p. xv]
H.3.5 Has Marxist appropriation of anarchist ideas changed it?
"the keystone of socialism [. . .] proclaimed that 'as a
general rule, the average wage would be no more than what
the worker strictly required for survival'. And it was said:
'That figure is governed by capitalist pressure alone and this
can even push it below the minimum necessary for the working
man's subsistence . . . The only rule with regard to wage
levels is the plentiful or scarce supply of man-power . . .'
"A novel factor has appeared on the labour market: the will
of the worker! And this factor, not pertinent when it comes
to setting the price of a bushel of potatoes, has a bearing
upon the setting of wages; its impact may be large or small,
according to the degree of tension of the labour force which
is a product of the accord of individual wills beating in
unison -- but, whether it be strong or weak, there is no
denying it.
"Ultimately, a line will have to be drawn that, by definition,
excludes any project that can tip decentralisation to the
side of centralisation, direct democracy to the side of
delegated power, libertarian institutions to the side of
bureaucracy, and spontaneity to the side of authority. Such
a line, like a physical barrier, must irrevocably separate
a libertarian zone of theory and practice from the
hybridised socialisms that tend to denature it. This zone
must build its anti-authoritarian, utopian, and revolutionary
commitments into the very recognition it has of itself, in
short, into the very way it defines itself. . . . to admit
of domination is to cross the line that separates the
libertarian zone from the [state] socialist." [Op. Cit.,
pp. 223-4]
H.3.6 Is Marxism the only revolutionary politics which have worked?