CHCH and AKL Left Forums initiated (watch this space for WGTN!)

Greece Elections

Greece and Syriza: Lessons for Aotearoa (Tamaki Makaurau/Auckland)

The first Auckland Left Forum for 2015. Greece has shown that a party radically rejecting neoliberalism can get elected – but now comes the hard party. How can the Left in Aotearoa learn from this success:

Speakers include:
SUE BRADFORD (Auckland Action Against Poverty)
JOE CAROLAN (Socialist Aotearoa, Unite Union)
DAPHNE LAWLESS (Fightback)
JOE TRINDER (MANA Movement)

Entry by koha

Wednesday 25th February, 6:30pm
Grey Lynn Community Centre, Auckland
[Facebook event]

end zero hours

End Zero Hour Contracts (Otautahi/Christchurch)

Zero hour contracts, where people have no guarantees around their hours of work are common for many people. Having no guaranteed hours leave many working people under employed, subject to unpredictable work patterns, leaves people vulnerable to loosing hours for taking sick leave or raising concerns with their employer.

This forum will also discuss the idea of establishing a progressive network and regular forum to discuss local progressive ideas and campaigns.

All welcome!

Monday, 2nd March, 7pm
WEA Building, 59 Gloucester St, Christchurch
[Facebook event]

Housing: Foreign ownership is not the problem

not-for-sale-house

Fightback is running a series of articles on the housing crisis in Aotearoa/NZ.

Ian Anderson (Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington) and Bronwen Beechey (Tamaki Makaurau/Auckland) examine the centre-left focus on foreign ownership, and argue rather that private capitalist ownership is the problem.

For more on the housing crisis, see Urban Housing is an Ecosocialist Issue, Housing Under Neoliberalism, Desperate people: Christchurch’s Slum Dwellers, or Living Outside the Rainbow: Queerness and the Housing Crisis.

Bankers warned early this year of a drop in property prices; a bust to follow the boom. It would be overconfident to pick an exact date. But when (rather than if) the crash comes, we need to understand the fundamental problem if we can hope to address it.

One narrative places the blame on foreigners. The New Zealand Labour Party recently threatened to bar non-residents from buying existing residential homes. Strangely, Australian investors were excluded; if speculation is the problem, why not restrict all investors?

Labour’s policy is symptomatic of a general tendency to scapegoat foreigners (particularly Asians) for deeper economic problems. Local investors still routinely donate to the Labour Party; foreigners are easier to blame.

Another form of scapegoating blames immigration itself for the housing shortage. A number of letters to the editor in the mainstream press have suggested that migration be reduced or halted until the housing shortage is remedied.

This generalised anti-foreign sentiment obscures class divisions. A “non-resident” may be an economic migrant, moving to New Zealand for work, not yet past the red tape of legal residency, and trying, along with other low-income earners, to find affordable accommodation while facing the additional burden of discrimination by landlords. As Labour indicates, “non-residents” may also be overseas property speculators with no plan to live here.

Locals also speculate on the housing market, gambling with houses they never plan to live in. Depending on who you listen to, foreign buyers own around 4% (according to property investor Peter Thompson) or 7-10% (according to former Labour leader David Shearer) of homes in Aotearoa/NZ. This is less than a quarter of all homes owned by non-occupiers; around 40% and counting according to Statistics NZ.

It’s worth distinguishing here between personal property and private property. Understandably, many want ‘a place of their own’, as distinct from a commodity to trade. As Marx and Engels underline in The Communist Manifesto, capitalism itself abolishes and undermines many forms of personal property:

We Communists have been reproached with the desire of abolishing the right of personally acquiring property as the fruit of a man’s own labour, which property is alleged to be the groundwork of all personal freedom, activity and independence.

Hard-won, self-acquired, self-earned property! Do you mean the property of petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form? There is no need to abolish that; the development of industry has to a great extent already destroyed it, and is still destroying it daily.

Capitalist private property means that the ‘value’ of houses can be anonymously exchanged, sold on for personal gain. Marxists call this the contradiction between ‘use value’ (a place to stay) and ‘exchange value’ (a property to sell). Although house prices are partly a problem of supply and demand, there are by most estimates more empty houses than homeless people; the drive for profit is the fundamental problem.

It’s tempting to simply portray bankers and other financial institutions as parasitic; they don’t produce anything. While some (often anti-Semitic) conspiracy theories suggest that bankers are perverting the natural course of capitalism, profitable financial institutions are necessary to generalised capitalist production. Banks centralise the means of exchange, and lend out the initial capital for private production:

When the system of exchange is relatively simple, the personal knowledge and trust of individual capitalists may guarantee the quality of debts incurred, but in a complex market system this cannot form an adequate foundation for the credit system. The bank seeks to institutionalize what was before a matter of personal trust and credibility (David Harvey, The Limits to Capital).

Banks and financial institutions must also make a profit – which means interest, predatory lending, speculation, incentives to gamble with workers’ lives as poker chips. Trade in houses as commodities undermines the right to affordable housing, driving further extension of credit. Debt operates as a form of social pacification for an anxious middle class operating on a speculative bubble (Joel Cosgrove, Housing Under Neoliberalism). Ninety per cent of private debt is in housing.

Alongside proposing barring non-residents from buying houses, Labour also proposed a Capital Gains Tax. As a direct tax on profiteering, this is a better policy than xenophobic scapegoating. That said, many countries, including the US and UK, already have a Capital Gains Tax – speculation and property booms still run rampant. Market mechanisms cannot address a problem produced by the market.

Only strict restrictions on market activity, combined with a democratically planned expansion of public housing, can begin to address the root of the crisis. Capitalist parties will not grant this willingly.

Thoughts on reform, revolution, social change and elections in light of SYRIZA’s win

chavez_llega_4_octu

Hugo Chavez and supporters at Chavez’s final campaign rally in Caracas on October 4, 2013, three days before his re-election as president.

The Coalition of the Radical Left (Syriza)’s electoral victory in Greece has renewed questions and possibilities for socialists and other forces seeking liberation. This piece takes a broad historical perspective on socialist approaches to electoral processes.

By Mike Treen, director of UNITE Union (Aotearoa/NZ). Reprinted from Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal.

The election of the radical left-wing SYRIZA party in Greece and a possible victory of the similarly radical party Podemos in Spain has raised the hopes of millions of people across Europe and the globe that we can put an end to austerity-type policies, put in place policies that will protect working people from the capitalist crisis and advance society to a new era of social justice governments.

The SYRIZA victory and the electoral victories of left-wing governments in Latin America over the past 15 years have placed on the political agenda the issue of whether socialists can use elections in capitalist society as springboards to a deeper revolutionary socialist transformation of society in the interests of the majority of working people.

Many socialists had rejected this possibility. They claim to be arguing in the tradition of a “genuine socialism” that supposedly understands that any attempt to follow this course will only lead to defeat for working people, as occurred in Chile in 1973, when the military overthrew the elected socialist president Salvador Allende and imposed a vicious dictatorship. These socialists also claim that this is essentially the experience of all revolutionary socialist movements since the Russian Revolution in 1917.

Lessons of the Russian Revolution

I agree that the 1917 Russian Revolution has provided important lessons for socialists wanting to transform society and bring working people to power.

The revolution had a profoundly democratic and popular character. It attracted support from around the world, including in New Zealand from then-leader of the New Zealand Labour Party, Harry Holland.

An important part of the Russian revolutionary experience was the formation of workers’, peasants’ and soldiers’ councils or “soviets” as elected and representative institutions that organised the new republic to deal with the crises and hunger resulting from the terrible world war into which the tsarist monarchy and its imperialist allies had plunged the country. These soviets emerged with the first revolution in February 1917, which overthrew the tsarist monarchy. They formed a type of counter power to the new government that was based in the discredited tsarist parliament and consisted of parties representing the capitalists and landlords who wanted to continue the hated war and refused to carry out land reform and a host of other revolutionary measures that the masses of people were demanding. The period from February to October 1917 (using the old calendar in use at the time) in Russia was dubbed a period of “dual power”.

Campaigning for “peace, bread and land”, the Bolshevik Party of Lenin and its allies eventually gained a majority in the soviets. It was a national congress of these soviets that assumed power in October and, in the immortal words of Lenin to the congress, began “the construction of a new, socialist order”. The majority of the Soviet congress elected a coalition government consisting of the Bolshevik and Left Social Revolutionary parties. The Bolsheviks had majority support in the major cities and the Left SR’s had majority support in the countryside.

A constituent assembly (renewed parliament) was elected shortly after the formation of the Soviet government and the non-revolutionary parties looked to it as an alternative government that could eventually spearhead an overthrow of the new government based on the soviets. But the assembly’s claim to be representative was challenged. The elected deputies had been selected before the assumption of power by the soviets. So in the case of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, it split into left and right factions and although the Left SR’s enjoyed majority support from the members and electoral base of the party, the Right SR’s had a majority of the deputies. The assembly was deemed irrelevant when it voted against a resolution recognising the Soviet government. It was disbanded by decision of the soviets.

The leaders of the new Soviet government might have considered a role for the constituent assembly if the election to it was more representative of the revolutionary spirit and soviet majority that existed in the country. But the Assembly was largely bypassed by events. The early decisions of the new government—ending Russia’s participation in World War I, granting independence to some of the nations long oppressed by tsarism, including Finland and the Baltic states, beginning a distribution of land to the peasants—were unstoppable and confined the conservative constituent assembly to be a footnote in history.

Almost immediately, a civil war was launched against the revolutionary government by the capitalists and landlords who saw their interests threatened. They were supported by nearly every imperialist power in existence at that time – Great Britain, France, Japan, the US. By siding with the counter-revolution and with the foreign imperialists, choosing military weapons as their method of “discussion”, the non-revolutionary parties excluded themselves from the Soviet structures. The exigencies of civil war soon corroded the internal democracy of the Soviets and a bureaucracy began to grow into an uncontrollable force.

The bureaucracy was a product of the terrible destruction of the civil war in both human and material terms. The resulting conditions of harsh, material want; death of many, many key cadre; and low cultural level of the country to begin with (illiteracy) combines to allow the bureaucracy to overthrow the direct rule of the working class through the soviets.

The bureaucracy found its political representative in Joseph Stalin, who turned the country into a police state and murdered nearly all of the generation that made the revolution, including nearly all of the Central Committee members of his own party, the Bolsheviks. The bureaucracy claimed to rule in the name of socialism and workers’ power but only represented their own narrow material privileges. Many decades later, the descendants of the original caste of bureaucrats in the Soviet Union and in East Europe led the restoration of capitalism, including the privatisation of the vestiges of collective property that still remained by the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Among the presumed lessons of the Russian Revolution drawn by revolutionaries in other countries in the immediate aftermath of 1917 was that the process of formation of workers’ and peasants’ councils (soviets) would be repeated elsewhere, with only modest variation, if genuine socialism was to form. This would be especially true, it was thought, in more advanced capitalist countries like Germany, where workers made up a much larger proportion of the population than in Russia and therefore soviet-type councils were even more likely to form and would wield even greater power.

Workers’ councils

This seemed to be confirmed by the revolutionary crisis that erupted in Germany in 1918 and led directly to the defeat of German imperialism in World War I. As in Russia, councils of workers and of soldiers and sailors arose. They challenged the existing capitalist government for power. The advance to workers’ power seemed to be connected to the spread of these councils rather than elections to parliament.

But these workers’ councils were undermined and subverted from within, including through clever methods by Germany’s experienced social-democratic leaders by appearing to favour the soviets, all the better to prepare to strangle them. The German soviets lost momentum and became disoriented. Eventually, they were disbanded by force as the social-democratic led government of defeated Germany led a counter-revolution.

The revolutionary waves that followed in Germany during the early 1920s didn’t necessarily follow the same “soviet” formula and the possibility of winning elections to the existing state and federal government structures became a topic of discussion. The question was asked as to whether a revolutionary majority could be won in the capitalist governing institutions that could stimulate the further advance of the revolutionary struggle against capitalism. The congress of the Communist International that convened in 1922 and discussed this very issue answered in the affirmative.

A revolutionary upsurge in China in 1925-27 was accompanied by the formations of workers’ and peasants’ councils, but the bourgeois-landlord Chiang Kai Shek regime launched a bloody counterrevolution against the young Communist Party of China and the survivors retreated to the countryside to launch a prolonged revolutionary war, which eventually triumphed in 1949.

A period of revolutionary upsurge and contestation for power in many countries of Europe in the 1930s was defeated, resulting in the elimination of bourgeois democracy and formation of fascist governments in Italy, Germany and Spain.

In Spain, however, there were popular revolutionary councils formed in response to the launching of the fascist uprising by General Franco. But by this time the Communist Party of Spain had become an instrument of the conservative, foreign policy of the USSR, which was seeking rapprochement with the imperialists as a strategy to counter the rise of fascism. The Soviet leaders ordered their vassal party in Spain to restrain the revolutionary upsurge of Spanish workers and farmers so as not to upset the French and British imperialists, with whom Stalin wanted to form a diplomatic bloc with against Hitler.

Many Spanish workers and farmers were supportive of anarchist or other left-wing parties like the POUM. They sought to preserve an independence for the revolutionary councils that had arisen and were a challenge to the authority of the parliament of the Spanish bourgeois republic, which was dominated by moderate parties. In the end, the revolutionaries were constrained and even disarmed by the bourgeois government. Franco and the fascists triumphed.

The lesson of this period in history seemed to be that before a revolutionary working-class party or parties can win a majority in a country and have the possibility of winning an election to a parliament, all forms of democracy will be destroyed by the capitalist class. And they will use all the most vicious and murderous ideologies and methods to achieve their goals if need be. Capitalist “civilisation” will be crushed under the heel of the fascist jackboot with the capitalists and landlords cheering the brown shirts on.

Post-war struggles

Following World War II, a war allegedly in support of democracy and against fascism, the “democratic” imperialists – France, the Netherlands, Britain and the USA – sought to reestablish colonial rule in the places where it was weakened and being challenged, such as China, Vietnam and Indonesia. It also embarked on crushing the strong leftwing movements that arose during the war, to the point of threatening capitalist rule — in France, Greece and Italy, in particular. The “Resistance” movements were largely led by the official Communist parties of those countries. They had tremendous prestige among the masses as a result of their wartime sacrifices.

But the armies and governments of the democratic imperialists, supported by Joseph Stalin, ordered them to surrender their arms and to relinquish nascent institutions of revolutionary power where they had arisen. In Greece, this caused a vicious civil war that was launched against the Resistance army by the reconquering British army. The only parties to ignore Stalin’s directive was the Yugoslav resistance led by Josip Broz Tito, whose partisan army triumphed in 1945, and the Albanian resistance, which also won power, in part as a consequence of the Yugoslav triumph.

The British killed thousands in Kenya before conceding independence in 1962.

In some cases national liberation struggles, like that in Vietnam, merged with a working-class struggle for socialism. In that same year the Portuguese African colonies of Mozambique, Angola and Guinea Bissau won their freedom and tiny Timor in South-East Asia declared its independence. Millions perished in these struggles.

South Africa, with the support of US imperialism, continued to militarily attack and try to subvert the new governments in Africa until it was militarily defeated in 1989 with the assistance of military forces from revolutionary Cuba. Timorese independence was blocked a second time by a two-decade long Indonesian occupation.

Even after independence, the former imperialists manipulated and attacked the new governments to force them to become simply vassals to preserve the interests of the major capitalist corporations extracting their wealth from the natural resources and labour that existed there. Where they could, right ing military regimes were established to prevent the working class and peasants asserting their interests.

The Indonesian government faced attacks dating from the country’s declaration of independence following Japan’s defeat in 1945 until sovereignty was ceded formally in December 1949. In 1965, a military coup was staged against the radical government that developed and was based on the main nationalist and a large Communist Party. More than 500,000 supporters of the Communist Party were slaughtered by the Indonesian army.

The first democratically elected prime minister of newly independent Republic of Congo, Patrice Émery Lumumba, was a radical leftwing Congolese independence leader. Within 12 weeks of independence, Lumumba’s government was deposed in a coup. Lumumba was subsequently imprisoned by state authorities under Joseph-Desiré Mobutu and executed by firing squad. The United Nations, which he had asked to come to the Congo, did not intervene to save him. Belgium, the United States (via the CIA) and the United Kingdom (via MI6) have all admitted involvement in Lumumba’s death. Mobutu formed a bloody dictatorship that looted the country for decades and left a country tragically weak and divided country.

The British ruled Iraq from 1920 and established their own king over the country. Repeated attempts to gain real independence were drowned in blood. British War Lord Winston Churchill ordered the first poison gas attacks from the air on “rebels” in 1920. Formal independence was granted in 1932, but British bases and control remained. A republic was established in 1958, but the US and British generally sought out and supported military dictators until one of them by the name of Saddam Hussein got too big for his boots and invaded Kuwait in 1990. Another client regime was established following the US military invasion in 2003, the country has now collapsed into virtual ethnic religious cantons.

In 1951, Iran elected Mohammad Mosaddegh as Prime Minister. He became enormously popular in Iran after he nationalised Iran’s petroleum industry and oil reserves. He was deposed in the 1953 Iranian coup d’état organised by US and British covert operatives. A new shah or king was imposed on the country, who ruled through torture and terror until overthrown in the 1979 Iranian revolution. Iran has remained under permanent attack from the US in particular ever since. The US even supplied poison gas and other weapons to the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq during its eight year war against Iran from 1980 to 1988.

The CIA supported a brutal dictatorship in Guatemala from 1930 that handed over the best land to the US-based United Fruit Company and allowed the establishment of US military bases. A revolt in 1944 allowed the country to have free elections for the first time. A series of moderate left governments tried to progressively improve the situation. A land reform that affected the United Fruit Company was the last straw and the CIA organised a coup that established a murderous military dictatorship that lasted until 1996. Hundreds of thousands of workers and peasants were slaughtered by the regime.

The Brazilian military overthrew a moderate reformist government in 1964 that had promised land reform and the nationalisation of the country’s oil resources. It remained in power until 1984.

Socialist Party leader Salvador Allende was elected president in Chile in 1970. His progressive government was overthrown in a military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet on September 11, 1973. Thousands of Allende supporters were slaughtered and imprisoned. Pinochet remained in power until 1990 (and commander in chief of the military until 1998). He was a particular favourite of UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and US President Ronald Reagan.

The Argentine military overthrew the elected government in 1976 and remained in power until 1983 when it retired following its humiliating defeat by Britain after it invaded the Malvinas Islands and declared the repatriation of the islands to the country. The Argentine military was, if anything, even more brutal than the Chileans. Tens of thousands were killed or “disappeared” during the long nightmare of military rule.

Dictatorships centred on a single family were established and maintained for decades in Haiti and Nicaragua. Death squads became routine methods of rule in El Salvador, Guatemala and Colombia.

Europe joined the military dictatorship pattern when Greek generals seized power in 1967 and held on until 1974. The Portuguese military-backed fascist dictatorship lasted from 1926 to 1974. General Franco remained in power in Spain from 1939 until his death in 1975.

Revolutionary victories

The only victories for revolutionary movements seemed to come when the revolutionary forces already had a military force and territory under their control and were able to establish a form of “dual power” on a geographic and political level where they could contest for power. This occurred in China, Korea, Vietnam and Laos.

The Cuban revolution triumphed in 1959 after a relatively short revolutionary guerrilla war of a little over two-years led by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. The revolution has maintained Cuba’s independence and freedom ever since. In 1979 the Sandinista National Liberation front (FSLN) triumphed over the Somoza family dictatorship in Nicaragua after a decade-long armed revolt. An armed uprising in tiny Grenada established a revolutionary government led by Maurice Bishop in 1979.

It seemed that there was little chance of a popular revolution in the interests of working people without an immediate confrontation with military or fascist dictatorships or outright imperialist invasion. The appeared to be true whether you lived in a capitalist state with democratic forms or a dictatorship.

In those circumstances, discussing what would happen if socialists won an election and were determined to overthrow the capitalist system and bring in a genuine socialist democracy based on real institutions of people’s power seemed academic. The initial discussion of that possibility by the Communist International in its early years in the 1920s was forgotten or ignored, seemingly having no relevance to current circumstances.

Another aspect of the Stalinist degeneration of the Russian Revolution also bore down on revolutionary thinking. Because of the extreme polarisation of society during the revolution, Russia ended up with virtually all the parties opposing the revolution joining the armed revolt against it. The revolution was turned into a one-party state. Stalinism turned that de facto reality into a permanent principle. In addition, the fact that virtually every capitalist and landlord joined the armed opposition, together with the need to mobilise all resources for survival during the civil war, had led to the rapid nationalisation of virtually all aspects of economic life.

Such a rapid process was never intended by the Bolshevik Party leaders. They planned for the nationalisation of banking, key industries and transport, but they wanted to leave much of the economy in private hands during a period of transition that could stretch for some years. As soon as the civil war ended, the Bolsheviks began to allow private commodity production to recover in those less centralised economic spheres where the state couldn’t be expected to be as efficient or effective in production and distribution. They advised those who wanted to follow their example to learn from the Bolsheviks and “effect a slower, more cautious and more systematic transition to socialism”.

The socialist program had initially been for the “commanding heights” of the economy to be nationalised. These would include the big banks, railways, energy production and telecommunications. That would allow the working class to democratically plan all strategic economic development. Small businesses and farmers would be encouraged to enter into cooperative relations by example and persuasion rather than the use of force. However, Stalinism could brook no competition in economic or political terms and opted for the suppression of all commodity production outside the state.

The victory of Stalin’s Russia over Nazi Germany in World War II meant the extension of this bureaucratic form of state control into countries of liberated Eastern Europe, where workers and peasants wanted an end to capitalist rule. For a period of several decades in Russia and Eastern Europe, the state-controlled economies grew at a rapid rate. But when it came to being able to creatively advance with new technologies, these economies lacked either the motive of private profit or the creativity of free thinking individuals. Economic life stagnated.

Despite the continuing existence of broad sympathy for democratic socialist ideas, the bureaucrats and their ideologues saw only the restoration of private profit as the way out — for them that is. The majority of the people were excluded from any say in what happened and were too demoralised and alienated from the regimes to see any point in opposing their overthrow. However the price workers have paid for the restoration of capitalism has been horrendous.

Example of Bolivia and Venezuela

I mention this experience because the failure of the governments of Venezuela and Bolivia to nationalise even more of economic life than they have already is seen by some on the left as a sign that they are not really socialists. Whilet there remains some decisive sectors like banking that will need to be nationalised before socialist economic forms can become predominant, it is not necessary to nationalise the small traders and businesses in which large numbers of people are engaged for survival.

Tens of thousands of working people in the barrios of Caracas and Laz Pas and other modern urban cities are actually small business people by definition but have been enthusiastic supporters of the revolutionary process. Industrial workers in large factories and farms are only a small percentage of the working population and while they can play a leading role through their unions and communities, they need allies among the “petty-bourgois” layers, especially among the small farmers. The desire of the revolutionary governments to minimise economic disruption and protect the jobs and living standards of their supporters is a smart tactic. It is also necessary to train a whole new layer of revolutionary minded professionals to provide some of the technical expertise needed.

Some of the challenges a revolution can face were demonstrated by fact that the “bosses” of the state-owned oil company in Venezuela, who had been sucking the company and therefore the country dry for decades, were able to virtually shut the industry down for three months from December 2002 to February 2003 as part of the attempts by the capitalist class as a whole to overthrow the Chavez government. Defeating that strike was a mini-civil war all in itself. Thousands of managers were sacked and replaced by retired workers, overseas experts and newly promoted and retrained workers. Chavez called this process the renationalisation of the oil company. Once normality had been restored the income available to the state multiplied many fold and has been able to be used in the interests of the people for the first time.

The oil income has also allowed the government to bypass direct challenges to some parts of the existing state that are oriented to the needs of the rich and build new popular institutions to deliver needed health and education services to the majority.

However the challenges remaining are huge. The capitalists are continuing to hoard goods, conduct black-market operations and speculation, and even sabotage production. They hope to break the link between the revolutionary leaders and the mass of the people. Many state institutions like the police remain very corrupt and have been controlled by local city authorities where the capitalists and landlords remain influential. The military however seems largely to have been purged of its right-wing officers who had joined various coup attempts against Chavez and lost.

The officer corps in Venezuela had been somewhat unique in that it hadn’t sent its people to the US military schools but instead to local universities where many were affected by the deep-seated radicalisation of youth that occurred in the 1970s and 1980s. Chavez himself was an instructor at the national military academy. This allowed revolutionary-minded young officers to get significant influence early in the revolutionary process and use that to defend the government and people.

Many attempts have been made to develop alternative institutions of popular power to the existing system of representation. The modest progress in this area until recently is also a sign that this process is not simply a case of a leader or bureaucrat issuing and instruction and, hey presto, it is done. It requires patient work organising and mobilising people in new and creative ways. A review of this process published by NACLA called “The Communal State: Communal Councils, Communes, and Workplace Democracy” deals with many of the problems that process faced under Chavez but which continues under the new President Nicolas Maduro. They wrote:

In January 2007, Chávez proposed to go beyond the bourgeois state by building the communal state. He thus picked up and applied more widely a concern originating with anti-systemic forces. The main idea was to form council structures of all kinds (communal councils, communes, and communal cities, for example), as bottom up structures of self-administration. Councils of workers, students, peasants, and women, among others, would then have to cooperate and coordinate on a higher level in order to gradually replace the bourgeois state with a communal state. According to the National Plan for Economic and Social Development 2007-2013, “since sovereignty resides absolutely in the people, the people can itself direct the state, without needing to delegate its sovereignty as it does in indirect or representative democracy.”

In his government plan for 2013-2019, presented during the electoral campaign for the 2012 presidential elections, Chávez stated clearly “We should not betray ourselves: the still dominant socio-economic formation in Venezuela is of capitalist and rentist character.”14 In order to move further towards socialism, Chávez underlined the necessity to advance in the construction of communal councils, communes and communal cities, and the “development of social property on the basic and strategic factors and means of production.”15 His successor, Nicolás Maduro, committed to the program, and one of the central slogans of the movements supporting his electoral campaign was “Comuna o nada”.

The Venezuelan government has advanced a course that has deepened the revolutionary process and sought to expand the power of working people and survived for 15 years. Socialists need to learn from this example of what may be possible if socialist forces committed to radically changing the power relations in society in the interests of working people may be able to do.

This doesn’t mean we should minimise the dangers. In fact we need to be constantly aware of those dangers. Imperialism and the local ruling class have sought to undermine, overthrow and destroy the Bolivarian revolution by any means necessary. But a smart, determined, revolutionary approach that takes the mass of the people with you in steps that are sensible and achievable at each stage of the process is a necessary part of our tool kit for revolutionary change.

As Maurice Bishop, the assassinated leader of revolutionary Grenada, commented, it is wrong to think that “a revolution is like instant coffee; you just throw it in a cup and it comes out presto”. Bishop himself was overthrown by a secret faction strongly influenced by Stalinist administrative and bureaucratic methods. This faction claimed to want to push the revolution forward but had no understanding of the need to patiently organise and educate working people to take on tasks that matched the level of consciousness and the objective class relations and material conditions and level of development. The end result of their seizure of power was to disarm and demoralise the workers and farmers of Grenada and open the door to invasion by the US under President Reagan in 1983.

Elections in capitalist ‘democracies’

Participation in elections in advanced capitalist “democracies” has been steadily declining in recent decades. In the USA, the last presidential election attracted 55% of the voting-age population and the recent House of Representatives election only 33% participated. The great Republican Party election win in 2014 was achieved with 16% of the voting-age population voting for it

Even in the polarised Greek election, where the stakes seemed very high, one in three did not participate. But the example of the elected SYRIZA-led Greek government standing up for the people against international capital has seen support for it soar. New polls show that 56%-60% are pleased with the election result and 70% believe SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras would make a good prime minister. Similar huge majority support has been in evidence for the left governments in Bolivia, Ecuador, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

Clearly, new methods of engaging people meaningfully in decisions about their future needs to be developed and the old systems aren’t delivering that. Socialists are correct to seek new forms of direct democracy that have mandated representatives. But I think it is also legitimate to have geographic assemblies based on universal suffrage where individuals and parties present alternative programs for discussion and debate. There must also be opportunities in the age of 24/7 television, radio and internet to have a genuine mass participation in debates and informed decision making that have never been available as readily before. Any elected representatives should earn no more than the average wage and be subject to recall if they don’t deliver.

Often it is true that organs of popular power have emerged in revolutionary situations and were not able to develop because the parties of the parliamentary left were opposed to that happening. That was certainly true for Spain from 1936-39 and at least partly true for Chile in 1970-73. But it could have been radically different if the party that had a parliamentary majority supported the growth of organs of popular power while pursuing a program of social measures that was able to win majority support in the country.

‘We haven’t chosen the terrain. We have inherited it. We have the government, but we don’t have power’

I am convinced it would be a mistake for genuine socialists to think that they cannot win majorities in parliaments in capitalist democracies and that this initial, limited and partial power cannot be used to lead broader and deeper struggles to transform society. This was eloquently put by Podemos leader Pablo Igesias, who deserves the last word in this discussion:

But I don’t want my speech today to be a compendium of sterile encouragement. We are among comrades, and it’s time now to accept responsibility for the difficulty of the tasks confronting us.

I just got back from Latin America. There I was able to meet with Evo Morales, with Rafael Correa, and with Pepe Mujica. I am sure that many of you were excited when you saw State of Siege by Costas Gavras and learned about the Tupamaros. Today, an ex-guerrilla, a Tupamaro, is president of Uruguay.

I also met with many government ministers and political leaders. Among them was the son of Miguel Enriquez, leader of the MIR {Movement of the Revolutionary Left], who died in combat in 1974 in Chile. It was moving to remember the Chilean experience — the experience of democratic socialism to which we also aspire.

But upon seeing the son of Enriquez, I remembered what Salvador Allende said to the young members of the MIR: “We haven’t chosen the terrain. We have inherited it. We have the government, but we don’t have power.” That bitter clarity of Allende is something I also found among our brother-presidents in Latin America. What we have ahead of us is not going to be an easy road. We first have to win the elections — and only afterwards will the real difficulties begin.

The polls say that in Greece SYRIZA will win the next election. In Spain the polls say that [Podemos has] already passed the Socialist Party, that we are competing to become the second strongest electoral force in the country, and that every day we are seen more and more as the real opposition force.

We already have more than 130,000 members, and we will leave our constituent assembly next month with our organizational muscle ready. It will be hard, but it’s entirely possible that Podemos in Spain, like SYRIZA in Greece and Sinn Fein in Ireland, will lead a political change. But it is essential that we understand that winning an election does not mean winning power.

To speak of fiscal reform, an audit of the national debt, of collective control over the strategic sectors of the economy, of defense and improvement of public services, of the recovery of sovereign powers and our industrial fabric, of employment policies through investment, of favoring consumption, and of ensuring that public financial entities protect small and medium enterprises and families is what any social democrat in Western Europe would have talked about thirty or forty years ago.

But today, a program like this means a threat to the global financial powers. There is a worldwide party that is much stronger than the Third International was. It’s the party of Wall Street, which has functionaries everywhere. These functionaries have many ID cards. Some have cards from New Democracy, others from PASOK, others from Merkel’s CDU, others from the Socialist Party in Spain or France. Juncker, Merkel, Rajoy, Samaras, Hollande, andRenzi are all members of the same party — the party of Wall Street. They are the Finance International.

This is why, no matter how modest our objectives are, no matter how wide the consensus in our societies regarding them is, we must not lose sight that we are confronting a minority with a lot of power, with very few scruples, and fearful of the electoral results when their parties don’t win. Don’t forget that the powerful almost never accept the results of elections when they don’t like them.

Brothers and sisters, we have a historic task of enormous dimensions ahead of us. What we have to do goes far beyond getting electoral support. We are called upon to defend democracy and sovereignty, but what’s more, we have to defend them on a terrain, like Allende said, that we ourselves have not chosen.

That’s why we have to deal with sectarians strictly. Revolutionaries are not defined by the t-shirts that they wear. They are not defined by converting theoretical tools into a religion. The duty of a revolutionary is not to take pictures of themselves with a hammer and sickle — the duty of a revolutionary is to win.

That’s why our duty is to get closer to civil society. We need the best with us. We need the best economists, the best scientists, the best public sector workers, in order to manage the administration and carry out viable and effective public policies.

Patriotism is not threatening someone, or believing you are better because you have another skin color, or because you speak a language, or because you were born where your mother’s water broke.

The true patriots know that to be proud of your country is to see that all the children — no matter where they come from — go to schools clean, clothed, well-fed, and with shoes on their feet. To love your country is to defend that your grandparents have a pension and that if they get sick that they are attended to in the best public hospitals.

We also need to strengthen our ties with workers in the public finance office, and all other public offices. Some believe that it’s the leaders who make the hospitals, schools, media, and transportation work. They are not the ones who make sure that public facilities are clean, so that they can be used — it’s a lie.

It’s workers who take countries forward. And I know that many who work in public administration wish that people like us were governing, so that they could do their jobs, and that they are sick of corrupt and useless leaders, like we have had up until now.

We must finally work together — in Europe and for Europe. It’s not necessary to read Karl Marx to know that there are no definitive solutions within the framework of the nation-state. For that reason we must help each other and make ourselves be seen as an alternative for all of Europe.

Winning elections is far from winning power. That’s why we must bring together everyone who is committed to change and decency, which is nothing more than turning the Universal Declaration of Human Rights into a manual for government.

Our aim today, unfortunately, is not the withering away of the state, or the disappearance of prisons, or that Earth become a paradise. But we do aim, as I said, to make it so that all children go to public schools clean and well-fed; that all the elderly receive a pension and be taken care of in the best hospitals; that any young person — independently of who their parents are — be able to go to college; that nobody have their heat turned off in the winter because they can’t pay their bill; that no bank be allowed to leave a family in the street without alternative housing; that everyone be able to work in decent conditions without having to accept shameful wages or conditions; that the production of information in newspapers and on television not be a privilege of multi-millionaires; that a country not have to kneel down before foreign speculators.

In one word: that a society be able to provide the basic material conditions that make happiness and dignity possible.

These modest objectives that today seem so radical simply represent democracy. Tomorrow is ours, brothers and sisters!

Fightback Subscription Appeal 2015

print covers

In 2015, Fightback will publish 6 issues of our magazine, plus regular updates on our website, with news, analysis and theory on struggle, solidarity and socialism, in Aotearoa / New Zealand and overseas.

But nothing comes for free under capitalism!

This year, we need your help to make sure the paper is distributed and printed on time, and the webhosting bills are covered. You can do this by:

  1. Taking out a sustaining subscription to Fightback magazine of $10 per month;
  2. Taking out an ordinary subscription to the magazine of $10 per year;
  3. Making a regular donation to support the magazine, website and our other work, of any amount you choose.

Options 1 and 2 include the magazine mailed directly to you!

Our target for 2015 is to have 50 people subscribing or donating regularly. Will you be one of them?

Visit our website at http://fightback.org.nz/subscribe/ , or fill out the form below:


YES! I want to support Fightback‘s magazine and website in 2015 by (choose one):

a) becoming a Sustaining Subscriber for $10/month;
b) becoming a Subscriber for $10/year;
c) becoming a Website supporter for $ …. per week/month/year

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Send to: Fightback Subscriptions, PO Box 10-282, Dominion Road, Auckland

Living Outside The Rainbow: Queerness and the Housing Crisis

LGBT youth homelessness protest, USA

LGBT youth homelessness protest, USA

Fightback is running a series of articles on the housing crisis in Aotearoa/NZ.

Kassie Hartendorp (Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington) explores the specific housing problems faced by queer youth.

When you start to peer past the rainbow flags and glitter shine of LGBTIQ ‘issues’, there are many more stories to be told that don’t end with a marriage certificate and picket fences. While more privileged people along the rainbow have been able to make gains, it’s easy to forget about those who are nowhere near that pot of gold, despite ‘heartwarming’ Youtube clips from rightwing politicians and banks showing their ‘diversity and inclusion’ with their rhinestone adorned cash machines. There have been important gains made, and each one through great struggle – but we are not at the final frontier yet.

One key issue that often gets swept under the rug is housing and homelessness. The very fact that housing continues to be a need for high numbers of people across the globe means, naturally, that it affects sex, sexuality and gender diverse people as well. But the nature of homelessness can look different for our communities, and have more complex factors taking place.

The NZ Government defines homelessness as “living situations where people have no other options to acquire safe and secure housing. This includes people who are:

without shelter

in temporary accommodation

sharing accommodation with a household

living in uninhabitable housing.

This definition goes further than the stereotype of people living on the street, and can encompass many forms of housing instability. Homelessness figures are difficult to record and track easily. Most people who are in transitional housing or are couchsurfing may not associate themselves with the label of ‘homeless’ which carries a heavy stigma – despite the fact that many have experienced it at some point in their lives. In 2009, the Housing Shareholders Advisory Group estimated that the ‘urban homeless’ or those sleeping rough, numbered less than 300 across the country, yet between 8,000 and 20,000 people were living in temporary accommodation unsuited for long term habitation. Within the past year, service providers say that homelessness is ‘on the rise’ with an Auckland Council report claiming that about 15,000 people in Auckland are “severely housing deprived.”

With housing being a key commodity often left to a profit driven market, it is hard to envision a world under capitalism that would not have high levels of poverty, poor health and homelessness. The gap between the rich and the poor, and reliance on a ‘user pays’ system that means paying for almost everything we need to survive, create exactly the kind of conditions that leave many without affordable, stable and secure accommodation. The causes of homelessness can be heavily linked to and influenced by poverty, mental health experiences, disabilities, addiction issues, emotional health and trauma, sexuality and gender, convictions and imprisonment, unemployment or low wages, a lack of affordable housing and are underpinned by the forces of colonisation, patriarchy, racism and capitalism.

This already shows a complicated snapshot of the context that homelessness takes place in – how does this look for people who are sex, sexuality and/or gender diverse? Figures from the USA show that 40% of homeless young people are LGBTIQ (despite being 10% of the population), yet here in Aotearoa, we don’t have statistics on the state of homelessness for our communities of any age range. Anecdotally, when our friends or whānau struggle to find housing, we often take them in and support each other, but this isn’t reflected on any national database.

Some of the key themes that play out in sex, sexuality and gender diverse homelessness are family breakdowns, discrimination (overt and covert) and isolation. It is a sadly normal occurrence for young people to come out and face family rejection, particularly when they are gender diverse. A common scenario exists where parents will only accept a young person back into their home if they commit to living as the gender they were assigned at birth. It is not a safe or healthy option to force someone to ‘go back in the closet’ or live as someone they are not, for the sake of shelter. Yet agencies such as WINZ have had trouble recognising this as a true ‘relationship breakdown’ in the past and have therefore refused youth payments for teenagers who cannot live in such an oppressive environment.

While poverty is almost always a key factor of general homelessness, a person of any socio-economic status can find themselves unwelcome or kicked out of a family home for their sexuality or gender identity. One of the people I spoke with, who has faced an abusive home life says:

I’m a migrant with rich parents who’s under 21. Is anyone going to think I’m genuinely in need? My parents are pulling the “please come home” act, refusing to give me access to my health insurance policy and telling me instead that if I’m ill they can nurse me back to health if I would only come home, and what am I meant to do?

When family and whānau become a site of pain and trauma for LGBTIQ people, often the only option becomes to find new homes and families that will validate the parts of them that are not accepted in their former home.

Homelessness doesn’t just affect young people, and there are further layers that add complexity to the issue such as race, disability and gender. With a shortage of accommodation in urban areas in particular, if you don’t look ‘normative’, you’re a person of colour, you have children or a disability – the chances are low that you will be the first pick of landlords, housing agencies or even most flatmates. Many gay or queer identifying people can downplay their sexuality, but if someone is ‘non-passing’ as a transgender flat-hunter, they are more likely to experience discrimination.

One interviewee based in Auckland currently shares a single bed with their girlfriend while staying in a person’s storage room. They’ve been told they need to leave soon to make way for another transgender person, with the plan to find a new flat with three other likeminded people. So far, they have had no success in finding a safe, affordable and secure flat to move into.

Nobody wants to rent to a bunch of visibly trans/queer disabled teenagers even if we weren’t fighting a housing market that’s totally against us at the moment? Forty people showing up to flat viewings, most of whom in suit and tie or with parents as guarantors (which, as queer babies most of us are estranged from ours, or they’re really poor) ….. I can’t hide how brown and neurodivergent I am, my girlfriend can’t really pass for a masculine cis dude any more as much as she tries… I’m scared. I don’t know what we’re going to do.”

Another interviewee who identifies as takataapui taahine and is identified by others as transgender, queer and Māori, says that homelessness is something they are “intimately acquainted with.” From crashing on sofas, staying in vans and squatting in old sheds and abandoned homes as a teenager, their housing stability as an adult started improving after becoming a sex worker, which helped clear their debt and provided an income that didn’t depend on seasonal opportunities. They state that:

Even now though, with my stable job working at an NGO, I am aware that my position is always precarious… I definitely see my expendability as intrinsically linked to being poor, brown, visibly not a heterosexual cis person. It’s indisputably also linked to disability, or directly because of discrimination against it…  My family have no money for me to fall back on. I’ve recently been kicked out of my house because my neighbor complained that my autistic son throws toys and fruit over the fence. I don’t imagine this situation unfolding in this way if I were a more wealthy, middle aged, white, cis, man or woman.

There are almost no safety nets for people who have intersecting battles and experiences, that don’t fit neatly into common ‘gay’ experience. While communities try hard to support each other, there are not many official options. In Wellington, there is already a shortage of temporary emergency accommodation and many of the services that do exist are run by faith-based organisations that have a chequered history with sexual and gender minorities. What is available for those that cannot viably utilise the Men’s Night Shelter or Women’s Boarding House due to their gender identity? How is the safety of LGBTIQ people guaranteed, particularly when they may be fleeing trauma, discrimination and violence in the first place?

Sandra Dickson, a longtime advocate for sexual violence prevention also notes that abusive domestic partnerships can become even more dangerous to those that do not have alternative housing options. Dickson says that the impact of ‘having no family of origin to return to because of homo/bi/transphobia and gender policing’ on people who experience intimate partner violence is under-discussed. Statistics from the UK show that same sex attracted people experience intimate partner violence at the same rate or higher than heterosexual people, bisexual women experience higher rates of sexual violence, and transgender people are most likely of all to experience any form of violence. Without the resources to quantify this information in Aotearoa, it’s difficult to piece together a formal picture on how domestic violence looks for LGBTIQ+ communities, let alone to begin to work on strategies for support and prevention.

He kokonga whare e kitea, he kokonga ngākau e kore e kitea”

The corners of a house can be seen, but not the corners of the heart.

Te Mahana, the Strategy to End Homelessness in Wellington, writes that “if the issue of homelessness is to be adequately addressed for Māori, it is vital that deeper needs such as spiritual, relationships and cultural connection must also be identified, considered and satisfied” and that the heart of the issue is “cultural dislocation and loss of cultural connection.” The link between colonisation, poverty and homelessness runs strong and is hard to address within a setting of profit driven capitalism and a collective historical amnesia regarding land theft and severe cultural grievances at the hands of colonisers.

The ability to find a safe and secure place to rest one’s head goes further than physical walls, it is about having a papakainga, turangawaewae and a place to physically and spiritually rest, settle and heal. Capitalism doesn’t, by nature, build us homes or papakainga. It doesn’t instinctively nurture us culturally, physically, emotionally, socially or spiritually – we have to fight to be seen as anything other than one-dimensional beings that must spend the majority of our time doing meaningless work to survive, rather than living, exploring, creating and re-generating ourselves, our families and our communities. Sara Fraser, Housing Research Assistant says that one of the things she has learnt whilst working in housing research is:

Providing people with good tenure of housing is a pathway to better health and this is as important in our queer communities as elsewhere. We are overrepresented in the suicide and mental health statistics; social housing is one avenue which provides secure tenure, but with the current government having a hands-off approach to housing, I don’t see how the statistics will drop.”

With the National Government’s plans to sell off state housing to NGOs, rather than focusing on building new homes, the housing crisis around Aotearoa doesn’t look set to ease in the near future. Creating safe, secure and stable housing for sexual and gender minorities isn’t compatible with a housing market that is highly competitive when non-normative bodies and existences are policed or discriminated against. A democratic, public housing solution must ensure both free universal access and specific kinds of support; ‘an association in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all’. When asked what safe and secure housing would like to an interviewee, they replied:

I imagine housing security for me personally, looks like living in a community where people care about each others’ well being, where a homeless person doesn’t exist because resources are shared, and where circumstances are recognised and we don’t imagine that we all exist from a zero sum starting point.“

Let’s continue to create more room for possibilities and imaginings as this, where we dream and demand of more than the narrow, and damaging options that are currently given to us. Let’s question the economic conditions that prioritise profits over quality of life, and let’s continue in creating true papakainga for our communities.

* Thank you to those who shared their stories, thoughts and research as contribution to this article. Arohanui to those who live this, and to those who dedicate their lives to supporting others through this.

** This article is used in reference to, inspired and shaped by Te Whare Tapa Wha, the Māori health model developed by Professor Mason Durie.

If you are sex or gender diverse (intersex or transgender) and currently needing emergency accommodation in Wellington/Te Whanganui-a-Tara, feel free to contact the Temporary Emergency Accommodation Project at the 128 Radical Community Social Centre.