Debates on the origin, foundation, types and functions of political parties, as part of the institutionality of bourgeois democracy, attract much attention and studies on the subject proliferate. The same is not true of the theory of the revolutionary political party, a field of study that is often marginalized, which is seen as outdated or even irrelevant to contemporary political science.
However, nothing is
as urgent as the development of this theory of revolutionary organization. It
can be said that the crisis of the subjective factor remains the most important
and that it hinders the struggle against capital, preventing the waves of the
masses from consolidating their victories. The triumph of the socialist
revolution can only be achieved if there is an adequate organizational
instrument; that is, mass revolutionary parties, armed with an adequate class
consciousness and with the best strategies of struggle.
On the other hand,
within the mass movement there tends to be a frequent and majority position
that believes that political parties should be dispensed with and that
spontaneous crowds resisting capital or the struggles of social movements are
enough to stop the capitalist offensive.
These reflections on
the workers' party, as a revolutionary party, try to update the essential
issues for its understanding and construction; for this, before analyzing
concrete cases of organizational developments, the main theses proposed by the
most advanced moments of the class struggle are presented, especially the
experience of the Third Communist International.
Political economy is
taken as its starting point and shows how the question of the workers' party,
which has its first world expression in the International Working Men's
Association, emerges from the beginning of the formation of capitalism. It was
Marx who wrote its main documents and declarations, and actively participated
in its struggles.
The Third Communist
International elaborates a long document on the revolutionary parties, which
are considered valid until now as general guidelines for the constitution of
workers' organizations. However, in a dynamic of continuity and change, it
becomes essential to introduce the debates and challenges of the twenty-first
century, which make it possible to update the classical theses in accordance
with the demands of the class struggle of this period.
In this expanded
version of the revolutionary party, it is a matter of going deeper and finding
an image of the workers' organization that is not reduced to its classic
components, as a political expression of the social class. The aim is to
incorporate those elements that refer to the understanding of the party as a
way of life that anticipates the society that is proposed.
The experience that
a member of the revolutionary organization carries out is much more than just
the definition and concretization of a strategy, although political action is
the main nucleus. Precisely, in order to achieve the full realization of the transitional
program, the incorporation of other aspects is required, in addition to the
issues of direct political intervention.
The workers' party,
as an alternative way of life to the capitalist one, becomes the meeting place
for the diversity of workers and the attempt to build community spaces, where
solidarity between comrades prevails. It is the place where one learns to detach
oneself from the dominant prejudices and ideology and life opens up to an
emancipatory horizon, even as a possibility of full realization of individuals.
It is not a utopian
approach, but the permanent struggle to make real, with all the difficulties,
limitations and setbacks, the socialist way of life that is proposed to
society. Its realization will always be provisional and precarious, but this
does not invalidate that it is a goal towards which we are heading
collectively.
ORIGIN AND FOUNDATION OF THE REVOLUTIONARY POLITICAL
PARTY
1. The political constitution of the working class.
The first forms of
working-class politics arise in conjunction with the social formation of the
working class in the process of production. The dispersion of jobs that produce
use values, centered on the particularity of each producer, undergoes a process
of abstraction that transforms labor power into a strictly social phenomenon.
Therefore, we arrive
at the constitution of undifferentiated human labor: "Nothing has remained of them except the same
spectral objectivity, a mere jelly of undifferentiated human labor, that is, of
expenditure of human labor power without regard to the way in which it was
spent." In such a way that he can conclude: "As crystallizations of
that social substance common to them, they are values." (Marx, Capital, 1975, p. 47)
It
is important to emphasize, because it is often passed without perceiving it,
that the essence of value is the common social substance; that is, the
conformation of the social forms inherent in the production process or, in
other words, the presence of sociality, as a fundamental characteristic of all
work. In such a way that, from the beginning, the existence of the working
class is radically social.
Marx
goes even further in the formulation of sociality and affirms the universality
of the sociality of labor power, which acquires this world dimension and in
which individual labors are part of the same human labor power. As we
shall see later, this finding will have important consequences for the
international organization of workers.
However, the
labor that generates the substance of values is undifferentiated human labor,
the expenditure of human labor power itself. The whole of the labour-power of
society, represented in the values of the commodity world, here takes the place
of one and the same human labour-power, even though it is composed of
innumerable individual labour-powers. (Marx, Capital, 1975, p. 48)
This social existence of labour takes on a concrete form
by which it enters the capitalist process of production and becomes calculable,
in such a way that the entrepreneur can appropriate a fragment of the
expenditure of labour-power and convert it into surplus value.
Then, this central notion of socially necessary labor
time appears, as the average time required to make a commodity. In the critique
of the capitalist mode of production, the whole process is discarded, leaving
aside this socially necessary labor as well. However, the universal sociality
of labor power, although it arises in the midst of the capitalist production
process, is independent and is the foundation for the construction of a
socialist society.
A third level of deployment occurs at the moment when
this labor power, abstracted from use value and individual labor powers, is
transformed into socially necessary labor time: Each
of these individual labour-powers is the same human labour-power as the others,
in so far as it possesses the character of a social media-labour power and
operates as such a social labour-power, i.e., in so far as it uses only the
average labour-time necessary in the production of a commodity. or socially necessary work time. The
socially necessary labor time is that required to produce any use-value, under
the normal conditions of production in force in a society and with the average
social degree of skill and labor intensity. (Marx, Capital, 1975, p. 48)
This process of social constitution of the working class is the starting
point and the foundation of its formation as a subject. Let us see how the
passage from the social substance to the emergence of the political
subject is made, which leads to the emergence of the workers' parties.
The universal existence of the working social class as an expression of
socially necessary labour time ends up meeting the corresponding class
consciousness; From there, the forms of struggle deepen and are concretized in
a variety of expressions; For example, insurrectionary strikes, duality of
power, protracted people's war, battles for hegemony and various organizational
strategies, such as class coalitions with allied sectors, communes, workers'
councils, united front and soviets.
The class struggle, in its various forms, accompanied by its respective
class consciousness, leads from the first moment to the constitution of the
social class as a political class, whose central concretization is the
revolutionary political party.
They should not be placed at the levels, socially necessary labor time and
political subjectivity, as separate processes, but their continuity and the
dialectical need for a permanent coming and going between one and the other
must be shown. For this reason, the far-reaching tendencies aimed at socialist
revolution, which are contained in socially necessary labour, converge, at some
point, in the revolutionary party, especially in its world form, as a communist
international.
The following table shows the relationship between the fields of use value,
socially necessary labour time and value form, with their respective party
formations.
TABLE 1. Objectifications, Subjectivations and the Revolutionary Political
Party.
|
Plane of objectifications |
Plane of subjectivations |
Revolutionary
political party |
|
Use
Value |
Teleologically
inclined subject |
Transitional programs that signal the passage
from democratic struggles to socialist struggles |
|
Formation of the particular intellect |
Initial Forms
of Class Consciousness |
|
|
Particular existence of
social class |
First forms of political
organization of the working class |
|
|
Socially
Necessary Working Time |
Subjects inclined towards universalization |
Creation of
Communist Internationals |
|
General Intellect Formation |
Class consciousness as the
world consciousness of the working class |
|
|
Universal existence of social classes |
Internationally valid transition program |
|
|
Value
Form |
Subjects inclined towards
the false universalization of a particular. Claim of universality |
Distorted consciousness of
objectifications and creation of bourgeois and petty-bourgeois parties |
|
Subjects inclined towards negativity, prevented
from teleology and universalization |
Alienation |
|
|
Subjects mediated by things
and virtualities |
Schizophrenia of capital |
Own elaboration. 2026.
Since the beginning
of the working class, the political party has been present. Marx and Engels
discover this process, participate fully in it, although they do not manage to
theorize it. The political practice of the two will be articulated with the International
Workingmen's Association, as the First Communist International; Marx will write
his main documents. Revolutionary Marxism implies the creation of workers'
parties, because to constitute oneself as a political subject means to acquire
class consciousness and to be able to take one's destiny into one's own hands.
Considering:
that the
emancipation of the working class must be the work of the workers themselves;
that the struggle for the emancipation of the working class is not a struggle
for class privileges and monopolies, but for the establishment of equal rights
and duties and for the abolition of all class privileges.
http://www.marxists.org/espanol/m-e/1860s/1864-est.htm
page 1
The necessary character of the workers'
international follows from the fact that the ruling classes are politically
organized; and their parties aim to maintain and deepen exploitation and
domination; moreover, no social revolution can succeed without a political
party. Thus, the conquest of political power is placed as part of the
indispensable strategy of the working class. Therefore, the workers' movement
cannot limit itself to spontaneous economic action.
7. In its struggle against the united power of the possessing classes, the
proletariat can act as a class only by constituting itself as a political party
distinct from and opposed to all the old political parties created by the
possessing classes. This constitution of the proletariat into a political party
is indispensable to ensure the triumph of the social revolution and its supreme
goal: the abolition of classes. The coalition of the forces of the working
class, already achieved by the economic struggle, must also serve as a lever in
its struggle against the political power of its exploiters. Since the lords of
land and capital always use their political privileges to defend and perpetuate
their economic monopolies and to subjugate labor, the conquest of political
power has become the great duty of the proletariat. http://www.marxists.org/espanol/m-e/1860s/1864-est.htm
page 3
2. The workers' party as a bearer.
The concept of
carrier is taken directly from Karl Marx's Capital, where it plays an important
role in expressing both the relations between the different moments that lead
from the commodity to money and the personification of economic categories in
concrete individuals, who appear, for example, as buyers or sellers.
Two words to avoid possible misunderstandings. I do not paint the
figures of the capitalist and the landowner in rose-coloured. But here we are
dealing with people only insofar as they are the personification of economic
categories, bearers of certain class relations and interests.
Marx, K. (1975). Capital. Critique of Political Economy. Book One: The
Process of Capital Production (Vol. 1). (P. Scaron, Ed. & Trans.). Mexico:
Siglo XXI Editores. Page 8
The social and
political constitution of the working class is personified through bearers, as
vehicles that allow its concrete existence, which are social organizations and
political parties. The latter, therefore, are manifestations of social class
and depend entirely on it.
The character of the
workers' party, at its international and national level, is given in a triple
aspect:
a.
Bearer of class relations: the workers' party is
formed to dispute the political space that has been hijacked by the bourgeois
parties and the State; In this sense, political organization arises from the
antagonism between social classes.
b.
Bearer of class consciousness: the organization of
the workers, as the concretization of their consciousness, represents the
general and immediate interests of the class, which finally take the form of a
transitional program.
c.
Bearer of the emancipatory project of all forms of
oppression of the capitalist system: as shown by the inherent tendency to
socially necessary labor time, workers struggle not only for their liberation,
but for the liberation of all humanity; for which capitalism must be defeated,
using all political instruments. The political party, in addition to
transforming the interests of the working class into strategies for class
struggle, is also an anticipation of the society to come.
This set of elements
of the portability of the class in the political party is the origin and
foundation of revolutionary organization; For this reason, the revolutionary
party is not something external to the class, but belongs entirely to it, and
its function is to be completely at the service of the workers.
Parties exist as
expressions of class relations, structured by a ruling class that not only
appropriates the labor force, but also the instruments of political
representation. The party cannot be separated from the fact that it lives in an
unequal society, divided between exploiters and exploited. For this reason,
when socialism is achieved and an egalitarian society is achieved, political
parties and the State will disappear.
THE REVOLUTIONARY PARTY AT THE FIRST FOUR CONGRESSES
OF THE THIRD COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL
The first four congresses of the Communist
International signify the synthesis of revolutionary conceptions on the
question of revolutionary parties, which collects the debates prior to the
Russian Revolution, the experience of the Russian Revolution itself and
projects it into the future. In any case, it must be borne in mind that this
enormous experience was cut short with the triumph of Stalinism.
The Theses on
the Structure, Methods and Action of the Communist Parties, which is
the most comprehensive and profound resolution on the question of the party,
are adopted at the Third Congress of the Communist
International, also known as the Third Communist International. The following
table summarizes the eight theses it contains.
Table 2. Theses on
the Structure, Methods and Action of the Communist Parties
|
Nº |
Thesis |
Summary |
|
I |
General |
The organization of the party
must be adapted to the concrete conditions of the struggle and its
objectives. There is no single, immutable or valid organizational form for
all countries; However, all communist parties share a common basis: to build
an organization capable of leading the proletariat, conquering power and
consolidating the revolution. |
|
II |
Democratic centralism |
Democratic centralism is defined as a synthesis between centralization
and proletarian democracy. It must not be a bureaucratic or mechanical
centralization, but a centralization of revolutionary activity. Its aim is to
unite strong leadership, discipline, direct contact with the masses and
active participation of the militants. |
|
III |
The Communists' Duty to Work |
The party must be a
"working school of revolutionary Marxism." Militancy cannot be
limited to accepting a program or paying contributions: each member must
participate in daily political work. To do this, members must be organized
into cells, fractions, commissions or small working groups, with concrete
tasks, accountability and systematic training. |
|
IV |
Propaganda and agitation |
Communist propaganda must be rooted in the concrete life of the
proletariat, starting from its immediate struggles and interests and raising
them towards a revolutionary consciousness. It includes personal interviews,
house-to-house agitation, intervention in factories, trade unions, national
minorities, the army, the countryside and workers' organisations. It must not
be reduced to general formulas, but must translate communism into concrete
problems of the class struggle. |
|
V |
Organization of political
struggles |
The party must not remain
politically inactive. It must use every political or economic situation to
organize campaigns, meetings, demonstrations, strikes, mass actions and
common struggles. The task is to transform scattered struggles into unified
movements, to concentrate forces, to dispute the leadership of reformists and
bureaucrats, and to prepare higher forms of proletarian organization. |
|
VI |
The party press |
The communist press must be subject to the directives of the party and
function as an instrument of propaganda, agitation and organization. The
newspaper must not be a capitalist enterprise or a sensationalist media, but
a proletarian organization of combat. It must collect the experiences of the
militants, intervene in campaigns, defend workers' interests and serve as a
daily link between the party and the masses. |
|
VII |
The overall structure of the
party |
The structure of the party
should not be built according to a formal geographical scheme, but on the
basis of the economic, political and organizational reality of the country.
The base must be in the proletarian and industrial centers. Centralization, effective
regional leadership, division of labor, control, reporting, discipline, and
subordination of the party organizations to the Communist International are
demanded. |
|
VIII |
The Nexus Between Legal Work and Illegal Work |
There must be no essential separation between legal and illegal parties:
both must be prepared to adapt quickly to the changes of the struggle. The
legal party must prepare for clandestinity, repression and insurrection; The
illegal party must take advantage of all legal possibilities to maintain
contact with the masses. The direction of legal and illegal labor must be
unified in the same central direction. |
Prepared by the
author based on the Theses on the structure of the parties.
Within the framework
of the general validity of the premises for the construction and organization
of revolutionary parties, a set of debates is generated that have not been
clearly resolved throughout the experiences of the workers' struggles. Then,
before an extensive treatment of these problems, we will synthetically point
out the core of the discussion.
General guidelines
and forms of organization: this is, without a doubt, one of the most difficult
issues to resolve; For this reason, it ended up consolidating a general model,
valid for all countries, regardless of the concrete situations of the class struggle.
This tendency towards organisational homogenisation was also driven by the
counter-revolution suffered at the hands of the bureaucracies that expropriated
power from the workers in the so-called socialist societies.
Finding the
organizational form that combines the principles of the revolutionary party,
such as building an organization capable of leading the proletariat, conquering
power and consolidating the revolution, with the conditions of the class
struggle in each country, is the main challenge. There are no party formulas or
models, although all organizations in a country must be open to learning from
the experiences of other revolutionary parties. The structure
of the party must be adapted to the reality of each country.
Democratic
centralism: developing a real democracy and not merely a formal one, which
clearly establishes the modalities of the exercise of internal democracy, for
example, the debates around the crucial issues of the class struggle at a given
juncture.
At the same time, to
build a solid revolutionary leadership; that is, the formation of a collective
leadership capable of leading the entire organization towards the seizure of
power and the construction of socialism. This point is strongly pointed out and
to which he will return insistently, and introduces into the dynamics of the
construction of the party the challenge of providing itself with a leadership
in accordance with the challenges of the class struggle. The revolutionary
party not only has to equip itself with a model and strategies for construction
within the mass movement, but also has to develop the guidelines for the
construction of its leadership.
Class consciousness,
program and propaganda: the propaganda of the workers' party is the place where
the program is concretized and transformed into the call to actions that a
political conjuncture demands; in addition, it acquires a constant educational
dimension, which combats the ideological propaganda of the ruling class.
The revolutionary
party's primary function is to organize the struggles of the workers, creating
higher structures that unify their efforts and provide them with a transitional
orientation, adapted to each specific struggle. But it has a double task, which
consists of strengthening the revolutionary organization at each moment of the
class struggle and in building the organization of the working class; Of
course, these are two moments that are intimately related.
CURRENT DEBATES AROUND THE REVOLUTIONARY POLITICAL
PARTY
The question of the
political party is marked by a high level of conflict, both in theory and in
practice. It is difficult to find a
topic that causes extreme polarization and where reality and conceptualization
are opposed with that radicalism. While the bourgeoisie takes over the parties
without limit, the social movements and many currents of the left deny them.
Even the masses live the paradox of hating the parties and, nevertheless,
blindly surrendering to them at election time.
For this reason, two
delimitations are chosen that are considered necessary: firstly, only the
parties will be analysed from the perspective of the socialist revolution and
the emancipation of all forms of oppression; and, secondly, it will be
restricted to those elements of a general nature and that are considered as
basic principles, without going into empirical details. It will try to answer
the question: what are revolutionary parties and what role do they play in the
radical transformation of society?
Establishing what
the revolutionary party consists of means taking into account the following
issues:
1. The revolutionary party form and the party forms.
The discussion about
the party must take place on a double plane, so as not to be trapped in a long
casuistic and conjunctural discussion that distorts the perception of what
political organizations are; An adequate understanding of what the party form is
and its different historical concretions, which lead to the emergence of party
forms, is necessary.
The party form
concerns the very essence of political organization, as an institution that
detaches itself from democracy and is constitutive of it; and, for the
revolutionary party form, it alludes to the set of fundamental characteristics
of this type of political organization, which remains its valid nucleus through
the historical vicissitudes of the class struggle.
These essential
attributes of the revolutionary party are not abstract and timeless postulates;
on the contrary, they are detached from the character, the program and the
policies of the socialist revolution, in the epoch of the profound
decomposition of capitalism and its society.
From the
establishment of these premises, it is possible to analyze the party forms that
occur in societies, the way in which they evolve, the methods of action, along
with the historical triumphs and failures. The construction of revolutionary
parties must start by clearly establishing the indissoluble link between the
revolutionary party form and the specific form it must adopt for the
construction of an international and national parties, taking into account the
experiences of class struggles, organizational traditions and national
cultures.
2. The character and types of revolutions of the twenty-first century.
The character of the
coming revolutions will be socialist or it will not be. An anti-capitalist and
democratic dynamic is articulated in a process of permanent revolution with the
socialist horizon. Although this premise remains valid, it is not defined with
equal clarity what the revolutions of the 21st century will be like, what forms
they will take, what mass organizations they will invent in the midst of the
struggle, what will be the dual-power organizations that will emerge and how
the construction of socialism will take place.
After the end of the
period opened by the Russian Revolution and the failure to open a new
revolutionary cycle, despite the great mass mobilizations, the party forms are
also affected by this vacuum of perspectives, by the difficulty of finding the
appropriate organizational forms and the type of organizations for the tasks
that the workers have to face.
This is the great
strategic challenge we face: to invent the best party forms based on the
revolutionary party form, which remains valid for this historical period.
Therefore, it is not a question of discarding the political party, but of
reinventing it in a dynamic of continuity and change.
Debates about what
kind of revolutionary party we need are intimately intertwined with discussions
about socialism and strategies to combat capitalism. The development of
revolutionary theory is the indispensable condition for the construction of the
revolutionary party.
3. The construction of the revolutionary international and the articulation
with the national parties.
The unstoppable
advance of the globalization of capital and inter-imperialist confrontations
puts the construction of a revolutionary international on the order of the day.
The existence of social classes worldwide is no longer just a Marxist
prediction, but a fact that we verify day by day.
For their part,
especially in the European Union, bourgeois parties tend to converge and
organize internationally, as is the case of the European People's Party and the
Party of European Socialists; And, although they do not achieve an organicity
at this level, there have already been several attempts to create an
international of far-right parties, which drag the conservative parties in
their authoritarian drift.
How to build a
revolutionary international of the masses? What political currents can and
should converge in this initiative? Should we wait for the best conditions to
do so, or should we create a nucleus of the revolutionary international,
however weak they may be?
The demand for
leadership and coordination of world struggles imperatively demands the
resolution of the crisis of revolutionary leadership on a world scale, that it
be built with a clear socialist program and class independence, especially in
relation to the social democratic and progressive currents.
4. The dialectical relationship between the transitional program and the
revolutionary party form.
The revolutionary
party is the bearer of the transitional program; therefore, its task is the
construction and realization of this program in the mobilizations of democratic
and anti-capitalist masses. As a political subject, the revolutionary party is
built from the guidelines of the program; however, there is no obvious and easy
to establish link between the two levels.
The discussion of
the forms of political party that emerge from the transitional program is not
unilateral and there may be different responses or different ways of
concretizing the transitional slogans at the organizational level. For its
part, the program also depends on the ability to elaborate a revolutionary
theory and on the lessons learned from the experiences of the class struggle
that the political party makes and from which it formulates the program.
Several questions
are formulated based on these considerations: does the party express the
guidelines of the transitional program? How did you take the step from the
program to the construction of the party? To what extent does the party form
adopted allow the program to be carried out? What transformations in the
program are produced as demands of the party structure? And, in a special way,
how are the other aspects that intervene in its construction, such as the
experiences of the class struggle or the organizational traditions of a
country, integrated into the relationship between party and program?
5. The double link between mass mobilization and political organization.
The mobilization of
the masses, especially the great social outbursts, has its own dynamics and
rhythms; In addition, although they have been semi-spontaneous uprisings, they
end up providing themselves with some kind of leadership or leaderships, which make
decisions about the course of the struggles. Moreover, in most cases they lead
to organizational forms that try to ensure that the movement is not ephemeral
and that the struggles can continue beyond the insurrectionary moments.
So far, the
political leaderships of mass mobilization have not been up to the demands and
possibilities of the peoples' struggles against authoritarian regimes and the
defense of democratic rights. These leaderships turned their backs on the
masses and eventually led to their immediate, or medium-term, defeat.
From the perspective
of building a revolutionary party, it is essential to be actively involved in
the cycles of mass mobilization, regardless of the political leadership they
have; but, we must ask ourselves about the way to articulate these uprisings with
the construction of a revolutionary organization, which detaches itself from
the dynamics and characteristics of the masses.
Maximum political
and organizational flexibility is required to build the revolutionary party in
the midst of the insurrectionary wave of the masses; and, in this case, it is
the structures of the party that have to be transformed, in order to dispute the
leadership of the struggles in progress and to promote an uninterrupted course
of struggles.
6. The organizational expression of alliances in the revolutionary party.
The question of the
alliances of the workers with the oppressed sectors has been, for a long time,
an unresolved question. Starting with the worker-peasant alliance of the
Russian Revolution and the Chinese Revolution, to the present day, where these
alliances have not been properly realized.
The disagreements
between the working class and contemporary social movements show a fracture
that remains unresolved. This field has been plagued by misunderstandings,
confrontations, oppositions, without there being a resolution that comes from
the opposing parties. The disputes between Marxism and feminism are already
classic, and the distances between the environmental movements and the workers'
parties.
Questions about how
to articulate these struggles remain present and the question of how to build
unified parties and organizations between the main social movements and
revolutionary parties remains one of the main weaknesses of the revolutionary
left.
What types of
alliances should there be between workers' parties and social movement
organizations? Is it preferable to adopt a path of organizational independence
that is only found in unity of action? What transformations are necessary in
the revolutionary parties, so that they can attract and incorporate all the
workers from the other social movements and whose first identity is not that of
work? What structures should be created in the parties to account for social
diversities and their multiple demands, certainly not reducible in a schematic
or simplifying way to the struggle against capitalist oppression? What battles
must be fought within social movements to include the class perspective, not as
an alien element attached to their fundamental concerns, but as a constitutive
element of their conformation as social and political subjects, and as part of
their specific consciousness, whether gender, blackness or ecological?
7. Legal, illegal and non-legal party.
The system of
political parties is imposed by bourgeois democracies, as a mechanism for
controlling representation and the demands of the citizenry; in this way, the
struggles are framed within the institutionality of the State and it is hoped
that from there they can be controlled.
On the other hand,
when there are dictatorial regimes or democracies with a high degree of
authoritarianism, it becomes practically impossible for revolutionary parties
to participate in the bourgeois-democratic system. In such scenarios, the
possibility of fighting at this level is excluded.
The construction of
the revolutionary party requires considering the conditions of the class
struggle and establishing the degree of desirability for the effectiveness of
the participatory struggles within the legal electoral system and,
consequently, legalizing the party and entering the game imposed by the state.
Participation requires a constant process of vigilance and submission to the
interests of the working class.
In those cases where
it is not possible, due to the conditions of repression and authoritarianism,
the option is to build an illegal party, which can survive the repression and
keep in touch with the masses, to fight from there against the dictatorial forms
of the regime.
Finally, there is
another possibility that occurs quite frequently. It is possible that, given
the weakness of the organization, it is not able to legalize itself; In this
situation, the construction of the revolutionary party privileges its insertion
in the masses and struggles to incorporate the most conscious and mobilized
sectors into its ranks. It also often happens that, although there are
conditions for legalization, the level of mobilization of the masses and the
important changes in the relationship of forces between the social classes show
that it is preferable to maintain and strengthen a non-legal party, which
privileges the battles that take place in the streets and in the territories,
rather than in bourgeois institutions. This type of non-legal party must be
differentiated from the illegal party.
8. Discussing
democratic centralism.
One of the central
theses on the functioning of the revolutionary party, established by the Third
Congress of the Third Communist International, is democratic centralism. This
principle responds to the need to guarantee an iron unity of action of the party
in its intervention in the mass movement; for this reason, centralism is
established as a permanent requirement. But centralism has to be accompanied by
the broadest democracy, which guarantees the expression of diverse points of
view and unfettered internal debate.
However, this
formula has historically proven to be insufficient; While it is true that there
has to be a solid unitary leadership at the moment when decisions have already
been made, centralism can get out of control and lead to authoritarian
practices.
The discussion about
how to understand and apply democratic centralism in the revolutionary party is
still to be resolved. So the questions around this issue are still valid: how
is the predominance of internal democracy guaranteed, which has to be the driving
force and which is set aside exclusively in absolutely exceptional moments,
such as a situation of open war? Should democratic centralism be reformulated
and replaced by a principle of democracy, which is accompanied by mechanisms of
centralization or direction? What should be the character of the leadership of
the revolutionary party to avoid the breakdown of internal democracy? By what
procedures is real democracy guaranteed within the party? Are collective
addresses the answer to the problem?
We can even go
deeper into this debate: what kind of internal democracy should be implemented?
Is socialist democracy the guide to democratic centralism? Does the internal
life of the organization prefigure the socialist way of life? Does internal
democracy create the appropriate environment for the expression of gender,
ethnic, transgender, black, and ecological diversities?
Are community
elements taken into account when organizing the internal life of political
organizations? Is the revolutionary party a form of community? How are forms of
solidarity and camaraderie promoted and created among party members? What are
the limits of the party's collective existence?
Democracy with
centralization procedures is much more than an organizational issue; in
reality, it is the foreseen image of an egalitarian society that is to come. It
expresses collective and diverse intelligence together with the formation of a
single will.
9. Political
action.
Political action
defines what the revolutionary party is; For this reason, the Party
establishes, for each historical period, the forms and methods of its practice
in the mass movement and in society. This aspect is linked, preferentially, to
propaganda, agitation and the education of the masses and which, in addition,
leads to the definition of sufficiently differentiated party-building
strategies, depending on the sector in which one intervenes.
It is not possible
to separate the methods of political action from the conception of the
socialist revolution, from the definition of the moment of the class struggle,
from the concretization of the transitional program and from the experience of
the working class and the party.
Although propaganda
and agitation are the tools that are placed in the first place, the education
of the workers, oriented towards the understanding of class antagonisms and the
revolutionary socialist perspective, should not be underestimated as part of
the fight against the influence of the dominant ideology. In this same sense,
the systematic and continuous training of the most advanced sectors of the
working class and of the members of the party must be an unavoidable priority.
10. To oppose the bourgeois parties with revolutionary mass political
organizations.
The world is
governed by political parties, which are the instruments of the world and
national bourgeoisie to guarantee its interests and, above all, the expanded
reproduction of capital. In fact, a few parties control the planet, imposing
their designs on all of humanity. They have appropriated the present and the
future, leaving no room for safety.
The great party
machines decide the course of the world economy, declare wars, launch waves of
neocolonial interventionism, appropriate cultures, attack the rights won by the
masses and roll back democracy. Our fate is played out in the hands of the Republican
Party and the Democratic Party of the United States, the Chinese Communist
Party, United Russia, Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party of India, and the European People's Party.
How can we respond
to this situation of the almost absolute predominance of the imperialist
parties? Is the semi-spontaneous mobilization of social groups enough? Is it
enough for the mass outbursts that occur periodically? Is the political
position of rejecting the building of mass revolutionary parties both
internationally and nationally correct? Is the strategy of trying to place
oneself on the margins of the capitalist system and maintain that there is an
outside from which capital can act and resist effective?
On the contrary, the
strategy of the world bourgeoisie and of the national businessmen is very
clear: to appropriate party structures and deficient democracies to implement
authoritarian regimes, crush the mass movement and enable the uninterrupted
accumulation of capital.
So the real question
is not how to escape from the party system that structures domination
throughout the world, but what kind of revolutionary political parties we
should build, which are radically different in their programs and modes of
operation from the bourgeois parties.
Beyond the
theoretical debates that will have to take place, from the point of view of the
strategy of resistance and socialist revolution, there is no alternative but to
pose the question of the revolutionary party; otherwise, the struggles end up
being devoured by the State and devastated by repression.
11. Theory of the digital party.
Digital technologies
reconfigure social spaces and affect all their components. The process of
virtualization of social life transforms networks into a space for
communication, information, and organization of society; and, therefore, it
becomes a field of dispute between social classes. This is a field in which the
dominant ideology is imposed, although it also tends to overwhelm any
structured system of control.
Several questions
arise around the impacts of social networks on revolutionary parties: are
social networks capable of replacing political parties? Instead of a democracy
organized around political parties, do we now have a society made up of
networks? Is it possible and necessary to transform revolutionary parties into
digital parties?
Are the networks
only instruments at the service of the propaganda and agitation of the
revolutionary party? Are forms of belonging and militancy exclusively on
digital platforms acceptable and viable? To what extent does the revolutionary
party also have to organize itself in the networks and not only in the
territories? What is the impact on internal democracy, communication and
discussions that take place on the networks? Are revolutionary parties
organized around a digital democracy? What is the relationship between the
multitudes of the networks and the political organization? In what way does the
dialectic between the spontaneity of the masses and the party organization have
to be rethought?
A line of work for
the construction of revolutionary parties that takes into account the
transformations in social relations, caused by the explosion of new information
and communication technologies, is visible in digital communities.
Within digital
networks, virtual communities are formed, which share spaces, interests,
motivations, where solidarity and camaraderie work, despite the distances. In
fact, these large collectives that populate the networks end up inventing new
experiences of community life, beyond bourgeois individualism. They also tend
to become politicized spontaneously, as many of them discuss the national and
international situation, even if they do not necessarily lead to political
action.
However, digital
communities and revolutionary political parties are separated by barriers that
seem insurmountable. Communities do not tend to evolve towards more developed
models of organization; and the parties largely ignore the communities and do
not see them as part of the strategies and methods for their construction.
The constitution of any type of
digital political organization must go through the indispensable step of
characterizing exactly what "digital" refers to. In both the
colloquial and academic understanding of the term, there is a tendency to flatten
all kinds of forms of organization as "digital communities", even
when there are enormous differences between them. Let's just look at how
Internet communication has become ubiquitous, there should be no group, much
less something as large as a party, that does not have a group on a digital
messaging application such as WhatsApp or Telegram.
The internet itself, with its
websites, apps, news, and email, has already vastly changed the way we get
organized. There has been a lot of talk about the immediacy of communication,
now international news can be translated and shared globally in a matter of
minutes, without depending on the intermediation of large traditional media
conglomerates. Clearly, there is still a dependency in terms of infrastructure
on other types of transnational corporations, in that sense there has not
really been a democratization of digital communication, but it is difficult to
say that nothing has changed, or that the possibilities of transmitting
messages, disseminating propaganda and international coordination are the same
as they were thirty years ago.
While it is still dominated, at
all levels, by the interests of capital, it is important not to assume that
this control is absolute. Obviously, there are forms of persecution and
censorship; however, it is enough to compare the difficulty of disseminating a
message in a traditional medium with the possibility of doing so through
digital means to notice a substantial discrepancy. The use of digital
dissemination channels, such as social media, to share revolutionary propaganda
does not arouse the same mass interest as other types of content, such as those
focused on entertainment or sports. This is due both to the disposition of
modern audiences and to the way in which messages are disseminated, since those
contents that generate greater profits for the large companies that operate
these platforms tend to be prioritized.
If the irruption of the internet
in the revolutionary organization has already modified its ways of acting, why
is the "digital party" still thought of as something different,
strange and that must be built from scratch? The first step should be to
understand how practice has already changed beyond the understanding of the
movements themselves, only to develop a series of strategies focused on
overcoming the inherent limits of digital communication mediated by capitalist
interests.
As for purely digital forms of
organization, two steps are necessary: first, to differentiate them from
"analog" organizations that have partially migrated to digital; and
second, categorize them depending on the type of structure (or lack of) they
have. In this first point we can see how left-wing organizations, from
communist parties, socialists to social democracy, have a considerable digital
presence, especially the largest ones such as the American Socialist Democracy
(DSA). However, they have not managed to transform this presence into a true
integration in digital communities, nor have they modified their forms of party
membership to include digital members. For organizations that have migrated to
digital, the on-premise, "real-world" organization remains the
primary focus beyond any digital strategy.
It is not the same for true
digital communities, which are fully integrated into the struggle for digital
spaces, and even individual members can have a much greater reach and
effectiveness because they understand the way in which discourse is structured
on social networks. They are divided into three categories: radicalized
communities, communities of opinion leaders, and communities of belonging.
Radicalized communities are
those forms of digital organization that act relatively autonomously based on a
defined ideological position in the face of specific problems. Unlike
traditional parties or organizations, they do not necessarily depend on a formal
structure, a centralized leadership, or a stable militancy, but on discursive
affinities, dynamics of spontaneous participation, and processes of collective
radicalization. The far right has managed to consolidate this type of community
with greater force on platforms such as Kiwi Farms, 4chan or Forocoches, where
the production of reactionary, misogynist, racist or conspiratorial discourses
is articulated with forms of coordinated digital action. However, this
phenomenon is not limited exclusively to the radical right. There are also
digital communities linked to causes understood as progressive or left-wing,
although not always organized around the question of class, but rather around
environmental, gender, identity or cultural problems.
Communities of opinion leaders
are organized around figures with the capacity for discursive concentration,
public influence, and constant content production. In this field, the far right
was also configured early and with great effectiveness, especially from
creators from entertainment, humor, video games or cultural criticism, who
later incorporated ideological themes into their platforms. The particularity
of these communities is that they are not structured solely by a political
doctrine, but by the relationship between an audience and a central figure who
establishes the frameworks from which their followers understand social
conflicts. In the case of the left, revolutionary, and even explicitly
communist, propaganda appears more clearly in these types of communities than
in radicalized communities. Examples such as Hasan Piker, The Deprogram, Red
Scare or Chapo Trap House show how certain digital spaces can combine
entertainment, political analysis, ideological formation and a sense of
belonging. These communities tend to receive more public attention because
their referents have greater visibility, capacity for media intervention and
possibilities of connecting with broad audiences.
The communities of belonging are
those that are articulated around a true "market of ideologies", in
which individuals choose, by subjective proximity and their own will, a
political identity to which they adhere. In these cases, political belonging
does not necessarily arise from participation in grassroots organizations,
unions, parties or territorial movements, but from digital identification
processes. Users find an ideological current, adopt its codes, consume its
content, reproduce its symbols and seek to connect with other individuals who
share the same orientation. This type of community functions as a space of
political socialization in which ideology is experienced first as an identity,
discursive style and form of belonging, rather than as an organized practice.
Its main weakness is that it often lacks mechanisms for sustained collective
action outside the digital environment; however, its importance lies in the
fact that it produces links, imaginaries and political dispositions that can
precede or replace more traditional forms of militancy.
How to open up
political parties to make them attractive to digital communities? How can
parties equip themselves with internal environments and structures that promote
the entry of these communities? What debates should we have with the
communities to propose the question of the political party, although it will
surely have to undergo major transformations?
12. Camaraderie.
The internal life
and relations between the members of a workers' party are guided by
camaraderie. The starting point of this reflection are the theses on
camaraderie elaborated by Jodi Dean, in which some modifications and
interpretations are introduced, in order to adapt them to the reality of
revolutionary political organizations and to specify the meaning of the theses.
Jodi Dean, Comrade 91
Thesis 1.
The comrade defines a relationship characterized by identity and equality,
solidarity. For communists, this unity, equality and solidarity are utopian in
character, cutting across the determinations of capitalist society.
Anti-capitalism and the perspective of
an alternative society, which will be socialist, provide the first frame of
reference for the shared identity of the members of the revolutionary party.
Equality and solidarity are part of that future society, in which the modes of
oppression of the capitalist system have been overcome.
It will be necessary to redefine the
utopian character that Jodi Dean gives it, in the sense of placing it rather as
the anticipation of socialist values, which penetrate as sketches and guides in
the present. For this reason, equality and solidarity, although they cannot be
complete in a society based on exploitation, must be part of the daily practice
of the organization.
The battle to maintain and deepen the
egalitarian and solidary character among the members of the organization is a
permanent battle and the party is structured in such a way that it takes these
aspects into account, in addition to educating the militants within this
perspective.
Thesis 2.
Anyone can be a comrade, although not everyone can be one.
This political and social thesis has a
profoundly delimiting character when it comes to drawing a clear dividing line
between true comrades and those who are definitely not; that is, it establishes
an unbreakable boundary between those individuals who act as exploiters or
stand as direct accomplices of the dynamics of exploitation, and those who
suffer them in their daily lives, that is, the broad group of workers and
historically oppressed sectors.
Likewise, this approach has to do
directly with the complex process of the acquisition and consolidation of class
consciousness, an indispensable conceptual tool that allows us to recognize who
is firmly on this side accompanying the just causes of the subordinates and
who, on the contrary, consciously places himself on the other side, defending
the interests of the ruling class.
Thesis 3.
The individual (as the center of identity) is the comrade's Other.
This thesis proposes the recognition
and full respect of the other; The identity of each member is, in reality, a
shared identity. Each looks at the other party member and finds that the world
is given to him in a similar way; that is, both suffer the effects of
exploitation, in different ways and degrees.
However, this thesis requires a
significant expansion in several directions. Although the starting point is the
recognition of the other, this otherness is made up of a diversity of
identities, which have to be made explicit, because they constitute different
modes of existence.
This means introducing the perspectives
of gender, blackness, transgender, ethnicity and ecology into the perception of
the other; otherwise, the other may remain hidden and inaccessible under the
appearance of a certain uniformizing equality. In each case, the question
arises about the character of that otherness, in which imagination plays a
fundamental role, because it is essential to imagine the other for himself,
using all possible means.
Thesis 4.
The relationship between comrades is mediated by fidelity to a truth. The
practices of camaraderie materialize this fidelity, incorporating its truth
into the world.
While it is true that fidelity to the
truth sustains camaraderie, in a world plagued by lies and conspiracies, it
alone is insufficient to support the relationship between comrades. For this
reason, the reference to the set of truths articulating the class struggle and
the existence of the party occurs at this time.
By this we mean that camaraderie also
occurs when transitional programmatic orientations, methods of struggle,
strategic visions and, especially, the emancipatory horizon of all forms of
capitalist oppression are shared.
The comrades look to
the future together and dispute with the bourgeoisie the idea of a time to
come, endowing themselves, so to speak, with a secular eschatology. The end of
times, not as the end of history, but as the
fulfillment and realization of human
liberation.

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