| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
A weekly newspaper Socialist Worker, a monthly magazine, Socialist Review , and a quarterly theoretical journal, International Socialism. In addition they publish an international bulletin and an internal bulletin Party Notes, various pamphlets and books often through their publishing house Bookmarks and a number of rank and file news papers for specific industries such as Post Worker.
Leading members include Chris Bambery, Weyman Bennett, Alex Callinicos, Lindsey German, Chris Harman, Dave Hayes, Chris Nineham, John Rees, John Rose, and Martin Smith.
The SWP is a revolutionary socialist party that stands in the tradition of Leon Trotsky it's supporters often refer to their beliefs as 'socialism from below', which term can be attributed to Hal Draper originally. This differentiates their ideas from those of other socialists. In particular they seek to distinguish themeselves from refromist parties, such as (the Labour PartyThe Labour Party is a centre- left or social democratic political party in Britain (see British politics), and one of the United Kingdom's three main political parties. Under its leader Tony Blair it won a landslide in the 1997 general election, and forme) in Britain and from various forms of what is described as Stalinism usually associated with the former Soviet Bloc and the old Communist Parties. These are collectively seen as advocating socialism from above that is a socialism which is in fact the negation of socialism seen, in the words of Karl Marx, as the 'self emancipation of the proletariat'.
The SWP also seeks to differentiate itself from other Trotskyist tendencies. In common with them it defends the body of ideas codified by the first four Congresses of the Communist International and the founding Congress of the Fourth international of Leon Trotsky in 1938. However it disagrees with the development of the Fourth International after the Second World War and has many differences with those Trotskyist tendencies which accept those developments. It also differs in many regards with one important tendency, that of Lutte Ouvriere, whose forerunners also dissent from what may be termed Trotskyist orthodoxy.
The principle difference between the SWP and other Trotskyists is it's opposition to all substitutionist strategies. This is the idea that social forces other than the proletariat, for Marxists a potentially social revolutionary class due to it's 'radical chains', may substitute for the proletariat in the struggle for a socialist society. This idea led the founder of the SWP, Tony CliffTony Cliff (May 20th 1917 May 9th 2000) was a Trotskyist politician. Born Yigael Gluckstein in a Jewish Zionist family in Palestine. Opposed to Zionism, he changed his name to Ygael although in later years he would become far better known by his pen name, to reject idea that the USSR was a degenerated workers' state the position held by other Trotskyists and derived from Leon Trotsky's analysis in the 1930's. Cliff was to argue that in fact the USSR was a form of capitalism which he refered to as bureaucratic state capitalistThere are multiple definitions of the term state capitalism . The most common definition of state capitalism within Marxist literature is that it is a social system combining capitalism (the wage labor system of producing and appropriating surplus value) and also argued was the case in Eastern EuropeEastern Europe is, by convention, a region defined geographically as that part of Europe covering the eastern part of the continent. Generally this means that it lies between the Ural and Caucasus mountains and the western border of Russia, or alternative and later in othe countries ruled by Stalinist parties such as China, Vietnam and Cuba.
Other IS/SWP theoreticians, for example Nigel Harris and Chris Harman would later extend and develop a distinct body of state capitalist analysis based on Cliff's initial work. This theory was summed up in the slogan "Neither Washington nor Moscow, but International Socialism". Ironically the slogan was first raised by Max Shachtmans group the International Socialist League in their paper Labor Action and only borrowed by the IS/SWP at alter date. ironically because one of Cliff's concerns when first developing his idea of state capitalism was to differentiate his ideas from the idea of bureaucratic collectivism associated with Shachtmans tendency. Cliff's version of state capitalism must also be differentiated from those associated with figures such as CLR James and Raya Dunajevsjkaja.
As a Trotskyist tendency the SRG/IS was faced with developing an explanation as to why and how a number of countries in the former colonial world had succeeded in throwing off their previous subjection to various imperial powers and forming states characterised by the SRG/IS as being bureaucratic state capitalist. In part such an explanation was needed to understand why such colonial revolutions had not developed into uninterupted or Permanent RevolutionPermanent Revolution is the theory of how to sustain Communism within an undeveloped ('backward') state. Although most closely associated with Leon Trotsky, the call for Permanent Revolution is first found in the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels's as had been argued would be the case by Leon Trotsky in his theory of the same name. Taking Trotsky's theory as his starting point Tony Cliff developed his own theory of deflected permanent revolution which argued that where there a revolutionary working class did not exist the intelligentsia could, in certain limited circumstances, take the leadership of the nation and lead a succesful revolution in the direction of a state capitalist solution. the outcome of such a revolution then would be deflected from the goal of a social revolution as was the projected outcome of any analogous revolution in Trotsky's original work.
Cliff's essay Permanent Revolution was first published in International Socialism journal, No. 12 Spring 1963, in response to the Cuban Revolution largely took it and the earlier Chinese Revolution as it's subject. However the general conception of a deflected permanent revolution would be much exercised as a key analytical tool by IS theoreticians in the coming years. Most notable in this respect is the work of Nigel Harris in relation to India and later of Mike Gonzalez on Cuba and Nicaragua. Most recently the theory has been given a central place in Cem Uzun's work Making the Turkish Revolution.
State capitalism and deflected permanent revolution came to be seen as central to a distinct IS politics by the mid-1960's along with the theory of the permanent arms economy (PAE). In fact the three theories taken together are often seen as being the hallmarks of the IS tradition although this is contested by some former leaders of the IS, including Nigel Harris and Mike Kidron both of whom worked on the PAE and now repudiate it, and by some other Trotskyists outside the IS Tradition. What is for certain that the PAE, the most contested of these three theories, unlike the others, did not originate with Tony Cliff.
The PAE actually originated with a member of Max Shachtmans Workers' party/International Socialist League named Ed Sard in 1944. Sard, writing as Walter J Oakes, in Politics argued that the PAE was to be understood allowing capitalism to achieve a level of stability by preventing the rate of profit from falling as spending on arms was unproductive and would not lead to the increase of the organic composition of capital. Later in 1951 in New International, this time writing as T N Vance, Sard argued that the PAE operated through it's abilty to apply J M Keynes multiplier effect. Although briefly mentioned by Duncan Hallas in a Socialist Review of 1952 the theory was only introduced to the IS by Cliff in 1957.
In his May 1957 article The Permanent War Economy, only later did it become the permenent arms economy, Cliff offered the PAE to readers in a version derived from Sards earlier essays but without reference to Keynes and using a Marxist theoretical framework. This was the only attempt to develop the idea, which it is suggested explains the long post war boom, until the publication of Mike Kidron's Western capitalism Since the War in 1968. Kidron would further develop the theory in his capitalism and Theory. Additional work was also contributed by Nigel Harris and later by Chris Harman. However it should also be noted that Mike Kidron was to repudiate the theory as early as the mid-1970's in his Two Insights Don't make a Theory in International Socialism No 100. This was followed by a rejoinder from Chris harman since which time the theory has assumed less importance for IS theory as a whole as the long boom it is asserted as an explanation of recedes into history.