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Re: [A-List] European Workers Party
Grandiose and ambitious idea. The rationale is
good,
but a good rationale it's necessary but not sufficient to
develop a idea.
First step for this project of future European Workers Party :
to translate the rationale document for European languages.
Second step : to explain relations of this EWP with
already existing workers parties in some European countries.
Third step: to know similar projects, at national levels,
in each country and to articulate an to integrate
in this project. You could see, for instance,
the Portuguese manifesto published at
http://resistir.info/manifesto/manifesto_trad_ingles.html
Fourth step : to explain why a party and not,
more modestly, a platform for understanding,
common actions, etc. Would be possible to begin
with a centralized organization ab initio?
But a like grandiose ideas.
Kind regards of
Jorge
Figueiredo
At 17:31 21-10-2002 +0300, you wrote:
Fellow listers
Mark Jones and I have been throwing around some ideas concerning
the
opportunities for political development within the EU. Below
represents
about as far as we have got, and, in line with our desire to develop
a
European dimension in A-list discussions, we present it in the hope
that,
regardless of your country of origin/residence, you will feel free to
build
on it, rip it to shreds or whatever, in a suitably comradely spirit,
of
course.
Michael Keaney
Project for a European Workers' Party (EWP)
Rationale: there is a need for an EU-wide political organisation of
the
left.
At the beginning of the 21st century the crisis afflicting the
global
capitalist economy has deepened to such an extent that the very
survival of planet earth is at stake. Instead of the exterminism of Cold
War
mutually
assured destruction, today we face the exterminism of a globally
untrammelled capitalism that rides roughshod over spaces previously
considered part of the commons, backed by the full military power of
the
United States and its sub-imperialist collaborators. The manifest
contradictions of such a trajectory include growing evidence of
ecological
degradation -- climate change, freak weather, species extinction,
increased prevalence of rare diseases and human disorders -- in addition
to
the
widening inequalities between rich and poor, developed and
underdeveloped,
North and South. Rather than pursue even the most inoffensive
ameliorative
policies, those at the helm of the US state apparatus are intent
on perpetuating the status quo and, to that end, securing supplies of
fossil
fuel energy at any price. Both inside the US
and outside, the desperation underlying such a policy has provoked
splits
within ruling
classes and focused global opposition movements more intently on
the
realities of US imperialism. Within the EU this has become apparent
as
mainstream political leaders express alarm over US unilateralist
warmongering.
The European Union, as a political space, offers an arena of struggle
to
those recognising the above realities and willing to engage in the task
of
uniting progressive forces across national boundaries to the end of
constructing a radical anti-imperialist movement capable not only
of
challenging the hegemony of US imperialism, but offering an
alternative
model of political economy in which exists both economic and
ecological
security for all inhabitants. To that end we propose the establishment
of
the European Workers Party.
The EWP owes its allegiance to the social classes of solidarity of
the
whole of the European Union and not to those of any one member-state.
The
social classes of solidarity include the workers by hand and brain,
small
farmers and small businesses, and the mass and public professions. It is
to
these groups and their social and political interests, that the
European
Workers' Party would pledge itself.
The EWP would be premised on the recognition that the determining
last
instance of political life in the EU is the EU itself and not the
state
authorities of the member countries. While all important national
political
parties including greens, social-democrats, Christian democrats,
and
socialist and ex-communist parties, do have pan-European organisations
and
form common blocs in the European parliament, the primary political
focus
and level of organisation is always the national state. The EWP's
programme
would be about broadening the EU, welcoming new entrants from
central,
eastern and southern Europe and campaigning against the chauvinist
rejection
of expansion and redistribution, and against racist
anti-immigration
policies championed by the right and apologists of the
"centre".
The EWP would be strongly anti-imperialist as well as anti-racist and
would
campaign specifically against US interference in EU domestic affairs and
for
the closing of US military bases in Britain, Germany and elsewhere.
The EWP ought to participate fully in political and social life and to
take
part in local and national as well as EU elections, to form cells
and
branches in trade unions and other social organisations.
The programme of the EWP ought to be based on an analysis of the
capitalist
crisis, of the general unsustainability of the capitalist system, and of
the
structure, functioning and crisis-modalities of imperialism. The
fundamental
and radical nature of the general crisis of late capitalism means that
the
historic tasks of the international proletariat, analysed and laid out
by
Marx and Lenin and others, remain to be accomplished, and are more
urgent
than ever. Since there is no alternative to socialism but barbarism
and
ecocide, historical and social logic dictates that socialism must be
the
prime goal of any authentic working-class party. Socialism entails
firstly,
the expropriation of the expropriators, the public ownership of
large-scale
industry and science, workers' control of industry, land to the tiller,
and
the social and historical liquidation of the exploiter classes: the
big
bourgeoisies, the landed interest, finance, monopoly and corporate
capital,
and the various sub-groups and layers of sepoy-classes which defend them
and
serve them; these subaltern classes and layers also face historical
dissolution.
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