Basics, Part 6
Wal Hannington, 1896-1966
Vanguard
In politics, the word
“vanguard” means the professional force, human framework or “cadre” which can
lead the mass movement of the people on a revolutionary path.
The relationship of the
revolutionary vanguard to the mass organisations of the people is in some
respects similar to the relationship of a doctor to the people, or of
accountants and lawyers to businesses, or of an architect or an engineer to
builders and their clients.
The vanguard is made up of
professional revolutionaries.
The revolutionary vanguard is
a servant, and not a master. The vanguard party of the working class serves the
working class. It does not boss the working class. Nor does it substitute
itself for the working class.
The working-class vanguard
party, which is the communist party, is not separate from the mass movement. It
is intimately involved with the mass movement at all times and at all levels.
The vanguard party educates, organises and mobilises. As a vanguard, it must
have expert knowledge about how mass movements in general, and especially about
how the primary mass organisations of the working class which are the trade
unions, work.
To deal with this crucial
matter (i.e how trade unions work) here, in the attached document (and download
linked below), is a text from the Marxists
Internet Archive’s Encyclopaedia
of Marxism, written by Brian Basgen and Andy Blunden, two comrades
who clearly have vast experience of what they are writing about.
This text is empirical and
experiential and there is nothing wrong with that, because experiential is
exactly what trade unions and other mass organisations are. Trade unions arise
out of the existing consciousness of workers as it is found under capitalism.
In many ways, workers emulate capitalist forms of organisation. Their initial
purpose is to get a better money deal in exchange for their labour-power in the
capitalist labour-market.
Trade unions are therefore in
the first place reformist, and not revolutionary. Nor can trade unions become
revolutionary without the assistance of professional revolutionaries, organised
separately as a communist party. Lenin dealt with this relationship in “What is to be Done?”, which we will
look at tomorrow.
Trade unionists who think
that they can dispense with the assistance of a communist party – the ones
known as “economists”, “workerists” or “syndicalists” – are on a road to ruin.
Rules of Debate
Crucial to the democracy of
mass organisations are the Rules of Debate and Procedure of Meetings. These are
a bit like language, or political education, or the Internet, in the
sense of being communistic, and not given as authority. They are not imposed by
a “state”. There is no institutional enforcer of these rules. They exist in
society, but without a “state” to enforce them.
For example, the South
African Communist Party has no given Rules of Debate or Standing Orders.
Unfortunately, this does not prevent people from claiming “Points of Order”!
The nature of the notional
“rules” is such that they are only effective to the extent that they are
understood in common by the members of any particular gathering, and enforced
by these members.
Wal Hannington [1896-1966,
pictured] was well known as a communist leader of the unemployed workers’
movement in Britain in the 1930s. Our summary of his 1950 booklet “Mr
Chairman” is included with this item on Trade Unions because communists involved
in trade unions need this knowledge of rules of debate and procedure of
meetings, as well.
Hannington wrote: "The
Chairman is there to guide the meeting, not to boss it." This is the most
valuable message in his book. The Rules of Debate and the Procedures of
Meetings are only justified to the extent that they liberate the people
present. They become useless when they are felt as a burden or as an
obstruction.
The point is not for the
Chairperson to “keep order”, or for individuals to be bullied down with “points
of order”. The Chairperson serves the meeting, and the meeting needs to know
how to guide the Chairperson. Everything works best when everybody is familiar
with the generic Rules of Debate.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Worker
Solidarity and Unions, MIA, Meetings, Hannington.
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