Induction, Part 1
SACP Constitution:
Definition and Rules
Clauses 1 to 7
The jewel of the SACP Constitution is Rule 6.5, which says:
“Members active in fraternal organisations or in any
sector of the mass movement have a duty to set an example of loyalty, hard work
and zeal in the performance of their duties and shall be bound by the
discipline and decisions of such organisations and the movement.
“They shall not create or participate in SACP caucuses
within such organisations and the movement designed to influence either
elections or policies.
“The advocacy of SACP policy on any question relating
to the internal affairs of any such organisations or the movement shall be by
open public statements or at joint meetings between representatives of the SACP
and such organisations or the movement.”
This means that SACP members
active in any part of the mass movement, including the workers’ trade unions,
and including the ANC, do so in the utmost good faith.
SACP members serve the mass
organisations on the terms of those organisations.
This clause is the backbone of
the Alliance of the SACP with the ANC and COSATU, including COSATU’s
affiliates.
The rule means that SACP
members can be trusted, and they are in fact trusted. It is because the mass organisations
understand this rule that the alliance has been so solid, for so long.
Aims of communism
The first aim (Rule 3.1) of the
SACP is that:
“The SACP
strives to be the leading political force of the South African working class
whose interests it promotes in the struggle to advance, deepen and defend the
national democratic revolution and to achieve socialism.”
What newly-inducted communists
need to grasp, more than any other thing, is that the fruit of the work of the
communists is born on other trees, and not in a private communist orchard.
The communists are concerned
with what the non-communists are doing. The Party’s business is to educate,
organise and mobilise masses of people who are not communists. Among the SACP’s
“guiding principles” are the following:
“4.2
Organise, educate and lead the working class in the struggle for socialism and
the more immediate objectives of defending and deepening the national
democratic revolution and of achieving national and social emancipation. The
main aim of the unfolding national democratic revolution is to complete the
national liberation of the African people in particular and black people in
general, to ensure the destruction of the legacy of white supremacy, and the
strengthening of democracy in every sphere of life...
“4.3
Organise, educate and advance women within the working class, the poor and
rural communities in pursuit of the aims of the SACP; and to raise the
consciousness of the working class and its allies around the integral and
oppressive nature of gender relations within South African capitalism.”
The Communist Party is not a
sect. It has no interests separate from those of the working class. The working
class, as the most advanced class, represents the best interests of the entire
society. As the vanguard of the working class, and via the working class, the
Communist Party is the vanguard of the nation.
By its constitution, therefore,
SACP members are bidden to mix with and to partake in the political life of the
whole population, outside of the Communist Party itself. The Party’s rules tell
you how to behave when you are doing so.
This concern with the ways and
means of SACP work within the broad movement will continue throughout our
Induction course.
Mastering the SACP
Constitution
The SACP Constitution, as a
whole, is a model of how a constitution needs to be written. It is as brief as
it can be, and as direct as it can be. Where necessary, it is sufficiently
detailed. It is a very fine document, of which SACP members can be justly
proud.
The attached brief document
contains clauses 1 to 7 of the SACP Constitution. The next item will carry the
remainder of the clauses (8 to 26).
Broadly, clauses 1 to 7 contain
the political prescription for the Party, and the distinguishing features of
the Party, while the remainder describes the Party’s structure.
Clause 7 enables the
establishment of the Young Communist League of South Africa (YCLSA) - the
autonomous youth organisation of the SACP. We will return to the YCL in more
detail in a later part of this Induction course.
·
The above is to
introduce an original reading-text: SACP
Constitution, Definition and Rules, 2012.
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