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Fwd (GLW): Socialists and the S11 blockade




The following article appears in the current issue of Green Left Weekly
(http://www.greenleft.org.au):

Socialists and the S11 blockade
COMMENT BY JORGE JORQUERA AND PETER BOYLE

MELBOURNE ? The S11 blockade of the World Economic Forum meeting was an
important opportunity for the parties of the left in Australia. A wide
range of people ? independents, radical environmental activists,
progressive unionists, students ? were prepared to act against corporate
globalisation. Many of them made critical contributions to organising this
mobilisation as well as participating in the blockade.

Events like this ? all too rare in recent years ? offer socialists the
opportunity to discuss politics with a larger audience and to contribute to
building the broad, ongoing united action that is needed to defeat the
attacks of the corporations and their governments.

Acting from this understanding, the Democratic Socialist Party (DSP)
involved itself in building S11 from the beginning. Some of its members
carried a heavy S11 Alliance leadership responsibility throughout the
three-day mass, non-violent blockade.

The DSP's aim was an action that participants would find both inspiring and
educational, and that would be as politically successful as possible in the
given relationship of forces. The organisation needed to produce such a
result required respect for the democratic decisions of the movement.

A quite different approach was adopted by others at S11, mainly those
belonging to the International Socialist Organisation, who should take a
long, hard look at the role they played.

Their attitude was exemplified by the experience of the several thousand
people who came in the first dark and wet hours on the Monday morning.
These demonstrators were confronted by several ISO members wielding
megaphones and commanding: ?Move away from the stage! Go around to the back
of the casino and join the blockade!?

It didn't matter to these ISO members that the main entrance was thinly
blockaded; they ignored all previous agreements of the S11 Alliance (of
which they were members) to build up blockade points in an orderly manner,
starting from the main entrance. Instead the ISO sent people running off
into the dark.

The ISO had decided before the blockade began that the S11 Alliance
marshalling plan and speakers' stage had to be ignored and abandoned. It
even issued a leaflet urging people to ignore the stage and to follow the
?real? militants ? itself, of course. The group's motivation was clearly to
ensure it could pose as the ?most militant? group on the left.

The ISO and Socialist Alternative (a split-off from the ISO) failed to see
what should have been obvious: that the stage would be important in
building the blockade by convincing people to join in and by helping to
organise, as it did. In fact, leading ISO and Socialist Alternative members
were saying before S11 that ?it will be all over in a couple of hours? and
we would have ?won or lost? by then.

So it was no surprise that most of the ISO and Socialist Alternative
members who volunteered to be marshals went missing in action on Monday
(there were a few exceptions). The job of organising serious blockading was
left to the remaining team of marshals, made up mainly of members of the
DSP, independent activists, several Socialist Party members and one Labor
left activist.

Stephen Jolly from the Melbourne-based Socialist Party played a leading
role in organising the first aid tent and with the media. Workers Power,
another small left group, played a practical role before S11 but asked to
be excused from organisational responsibilities during the blockade so it
could distribute its publication.

But, having avoided responsibility for organising the blockade, the ISO
instead concentrated on militant posturing and trying to get into the media
as much as possible. At the same time, they kept trying to pull people off
the blockades being organised by the marshals to drag them to areas where
they thought there was more action.

Socialist Alternative showed a similar contempt for the democratic
decisions of the S11 Alliance. They prised away a few people to stage a
15-minute occupation of the Herald-Sun building. For the rest of the
blockade, they did little more than blockade-hop with their red flags. At
one point they pulled their members out of a blockade because they did not
agree with how it was being organised, weakening it just before it was
attacked by the police.

This irresponsible behaviour made it harder for S11 organisers to build up
the blockade lines and keep their discipline and solidarity.

Fortunately, the numbers of blockaders soon grew to a size that rendered
the ISO and Socialist Alternative's antics ineffective and S11 marshals
were able to keep the blockades together, including by using the stage to
motivate people and coordinate reinforcements.

Nevertheless, on Tuesday, the ISO launched a screaming attempt to draw
people away from the stage just before thousands of unionists arrived.

It had taken S11 Alliance activists weeks to convince and pressure the
Victorian Trades Hall Council to march its independently organised
September 12 rally to the blockade (and the ISO didn't help with their
?militant? posturing at S11 meetings and before the press).

Part of the deal was for Trades Hall to have the stage for two hours. But
just minutes before the main union contingent arrived, the ISO demanded
that the activists running the stage disperse the unionists who had already
arrived. They started yelling at the stage and pushing S11 Alliance stage
organisers.

Even on the Wednesday victory march through the city, the ISO repeatedly
sought to divert the march from its agreed course. They failed because the
marshals were supported by the mass of the marchers.

Of the thousands of participants in the S11 blockade during those three
wonderful days, many have decided that it is time to get seriously
organised against capitalism. At least in part, the S11 experience will
have convinced them of what organisation can achieve. Those socialists who
contribute disorganisation don't help at all.

[Jorge Jorquera is the Melbourne district secretary of the DSP and was one
of the S11 organisers. Peter Boyle coordinated the DSP's national
intervention into S11.]






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