Democratic Principle
by Amadeo Bordiga
The use of certain terms in the exposition of the problems of communism
very often engenders ambiguities because of the different meanings these
terms may be given. Such is the case with the words democracy and
democratic. In its statements of principle, Marxist communism presents
itself as a critique and a negation of democracy; yet communists often
defend the democratic character of proletarian organizations (the state
system of workers' councils, trade unions and the party) and the
application of democracy within them. There is certainly no contradiction
in this, and no objection can be made to the use of the dilemma, "either
bourgeois democracy or proletarian democracy" as a perfect equivalent to
the formula "bourgeois democracy or proletarian dictatorship".
The Marxist critique of the postulates of bourgeois democracy is in fact
based on the definition of the class character of modern society. It
demonstrates the theoretical inconsistency and the practical deception of a
system which pretends to reconcile political equality with the division of
society into social classes determined by the nature of the mode of
production.
Political freedom and equality, which, according to the theory of
liberalism, are expressed in the right to vote, have no meaning except on a
basis that excludes inequality of fundamental economic conditions. For this
reason we communists accept their application within the class
organizations of the proletariat and contend that they should function
democratically.
In order to avoid creating ambiguities, and dignifying the concept of
democracy, so entrenched in the prevailing ideology which we strive
relentlessly to demolish, it would be desirable to use a different term in
each of the two cases. Even if we do not do this, it is nonetheless useful
to look a little further into the very content of the democratic principle,
both in general and in its application to homogeneous class organs. This is
necessary to eliminate the danger of again raising the democratic principle
to an absolute principle of truth and justice. Such a relapse into
apriorism would introduce an element foreign to our entire theoretical
framework at the very moment when we are trying, by means of our critique,
to sweep away the deceptive and arbitrary content of "liberal" theories.
I
A theoretical error is always at the root of an error of political tactics.
In other words, it is the translation of the tactical error into the
language of our collective critical consciousness. Thus the pernicious
politics and tactics of social-democracy are reflected in the error of
principle that presents socialism as the inheritor of a substantial part of
the doctrine that liberalism opposed to the old spiritualist doctrines. In
reality, far from ever accepting and completing the critique that
democratic liberalism had raised against the aristocratic and absolute
monarchies of the ancien regime, Marxist socialism in its earliest
formulations demolished it utterly. It did so not to defend the
spiritualist or idealist doctrine against the Voltairean materialism of the
bourgeois revolutionaries, but to demonstrate how the theoreticians of
bourgeois materialism had in reality only deluded themselves when they
imagined that the political philosophy of the Encyclopedists had led them
out of the mists of metaphysics and idealist nonsense. In fact, like all
their predecessors, they had to surrender to the genuinely objective
critique of social and historical phenomena provided by Marx's historical
materialism.
It is also important from a theoretical point of view to demonstrate that
no idealist or neo-idealist revision of our principles is needed to deepen
the abyss between socialism and bourgeois democracy, to restore to the
theory of proletarian revolution its powerfully revolutionary content which
had been adulterated by the falsifications of those who fornicate with
bourgeois democracy. It is enough merely to refer to the positions taken by
the founders of Marxism in the face of the lies of liberal doctrines and of
bourgeois materialism.
To return to our argument, we will show that the socialist critique of
democracy was in essence a critique of the democratic critique of the old
political philosophies. Marxism denies their alleged universal opposition
and demonstrates that in reality they are theoretically similar, just as in
practise the proletariat did not have much reason to celebrate when the
direction of society passed from the hands of the feudal, monarchical and
religious nobility into the hands of the young commercial and industrial
bourgeoisie. And the theoretical demonstration that the new bourgeois
philosophy had not overcome the old errors of the despotic regimes, but was
itself only an edifice of new sophisms, corresponded concretely to the
appearance of the revolutionary movement of the proletariat which contained
the negation of the bourgeois claim of having forever established the
administration of society on a peaceful and infinitely perfectible basis,
thanks to the introduction of suffrage and of parliamentary democracy.
The old political doctrines based on spiritualist concepts or even on
religious revelation claimed that the supernatural forces which govern the
consciousness and the will of men had assigned to certain individuals,
families or castes, the task of ruling and managing the collective
existence, making them the repositories of "authority" by divine right. To
this, the democratic philosophy which asserted itself at the time of the
bourgeois revolution counterposed the proclamation of the moral, political
and juridical equality of all citizens, whether they were nobles, clerics
or plebeians. It sought to transfer "sovereignty" from the narrow sphere of
caste or dynasty to the universal sphere of popular consultation based on
suffrage which allowed a majority of the citizens to designate the leaders
of the state, according to its will.
The thunderbolts hurled against this conception by the priests of all
religions and by spiritualist philosophers do not suffice to give it
recognition as the definitive victory of truth over obscurantist error,
even if the "rationalism" of this political philosophy seemed for a long
time to be the last word in social science and the art of politics, and
even if many would-be socialists proclaimed their solidarity with it. This
claim that the time of "privilege" was over, once a system with its social
hierarchy based on the consent of the majority of electors had been set up,
does not withstand the Marxist critique, which throws a completely
different light on the nature of social phenomena. This claim may look like
an attractive logical construction only if it is admitted from the outset
that the vote, that is, the judgement, the opinion, the consciousness of
each elector has the same weight in delegating power for the administration
of the collective business. It is already evident that this conception is
unrealistic and unmaterialist because it considers each individual to be a
perfect "unit" within a system made up of many potentially equivalent
units, and instead of appraising the value of the individual's opinion in
the light of his manifold conditions of existence, that is, his relations
with others, it postulates this value a priori with the hypothesis of the
"sovereignty" of the individual. Again this amounts to denying that the
consciousness of men is a concrete reflection of the facts and material
conditions of their existence, to viewing it as a spark ignited with the
same providential fairness in each organism, healthy or impaired, tormented
or harmoniously satisfied in all its needs, by some undefinable supreme
bestower of life. In the democratic theory, this supreme being no longer
designates a monarch, but confers on everyone the equal capacity to do so!
In spite of its rationalist front, the democratic theory rests on a no less
childish metaphysical premise than does "free will", which, according to
the catholic doctrine of the afterlife, wins men either damnation or
salvation. Because it places itself outside of time and historical
contingencies, the democratic theory is no less tainted with spiritualism
than are the equally erroneous philosophies of revelation and monarchy by
divine right.
To further extend this comparison, it is sufficient to remember that many
centuries before the French Revolution and the declaration of the rights of
man and citizen, the democratic political doctrine had been advanced by
thinkers who took their stand resolutely on the terrain of idealism and
metaphysical philosophy. Moreover, if the French Revolution toppled the
altars of the Christian god in the name of Reason, it was, wittingly or
not, only to make Reason into a new divinity.
This metaphysical presupposition, incompatible with the Marxist critique,
is characteristic not only of the doctrine constructed by bourgeois
liberalism, but also of all the constitutional doctrines and plans for a
new society based on the "intrinsic value" of certain schemes of social and
state relations. In building its own doctrine of history, Marxism in fact
demolished medieval idealism, bourgeois liberalism and utopian socialism
with a single blow.
II
To these arbitrary constructions of social constitutions, whether
aristocratic or democratic, authoritarian or liberal, as well as to the
anarchist conception of a society without hierarchy or delegation of power,
which is rooted in analogous errors, the communist critique opposed a much
more thorough study of the nature and causes of social relations in their
complex evolution throughout human history and a careful analysis of their
characteristics in the present capitalist epoch from which it drew a series
of reasoned hypotheses about their further evolution. To this can now be
added the enormous theoretical and practical contribution of the
proletarian revolution in Russia.
It would be superfluous here to develop the well-known concepts of economic
determinism and the arguments which justify its use in interpreting
historical events and the social dynamic. The apriorism common to
conservatives and utopians is eliminated by the analysis of factors rooted
in production, the economy, and the class relations they determine. This
makes possible a scientific explanation of the juridical, political,
military, religious and cultural facts which make up the diverse
manifestations of social life.
We will merely retrace the historical evolution of the mode of social
organization and grouping of men, not only in the state, an abstract
representation of a collectivity fusing together all individuals, but also
in other organizations which arise from the relations between men.
The basis of the interpretation of every social hierarchy, whether extended
or limited, is the relations between different individuals, and the basis
of these relations is the division of tasks and functions among these
individuals.
We can imagine without serious error that at the beginning the human
species existed in a completely unorganized form. Still few in number,
these individuals could live from the products of nature without the
application of technology or labour and in such conditions could do without
their fellow beings. The only existing relations, common to all species,
were those of reproduction. But for the human species - and not only for it
- these were already sufficient to form a system of relations with its own
hierarchy - the family. This could be based on polygamy, polyandry or
monogamy. We will not enter into a detailed analysis here; let us say only
that the family represents an embryo of organized collective life, based on
a division of functions directly determined by physiological factors, since
the mother nourished and raised the children, and the father devoted
himself to the hunt, to the acquisition of plunder and to the protection of
the family from external enemies, etc.
In this initial phase, where production and economy are almost totally
absent, as well as in later stages when they are developing, it is useless
to dwell on the abstract question of whether we are dealing with the
individual-unit or the society-unit. Without any doubt, the individual is a
unit from a biological point of view, but one cannot make this individual
the basis of social organization without falling into metaphysical
nonsense. From a social perspective, all the individual units do not have
the same value. The collectivity is born from relations and groupings in
which the status and activity of each individual do not derive from an
individual function but from a collective one determined by the multiple
influences of the social milieu. Even in the elementary case of an
unorganized society or non-society, the simple physiological basis which
produces family organization is already sufficient to refute the arbitrary
doctrine of the individual as an indivisible unit free to combine with
other fellow units, without ceasing to be distinct from, yet somehow,
equivalent to them. In this case, obviously the society-unit does not exist
either, since relations between men, even reduced to the simple notion that
others exist, are extremely limited and restricted to the sphere of the
family or the clan. The self-evident conclusion can be drawn in advance:
the society-unit has never existed and probably never will except as a
"limit" which can be brought progressively nearer by the disappearance of
the boundaries of classes and states.
Setting out from the individual-unit in order to draw social conclusions
and to construct social blueprints or even in order to deny society, is
setting out from an unreal supposition which, even in its most modern
formulations, only amounts to refurbishing the concepts of religious
revelation and creation and of a spiritual life which is not dependent upon
natural and organic life. The divine creator - or a single power governing
the destiny of the universe has given each individual this elementary
property of being an autonomous well-defined molecule endowed with
consciousness, will and responsibility within the social aggregate,
independent of contingent factors deriving from the physical influence of
the environment. Only the appearance of this religious and idealist
conception is modified in the doctrine of democratic liberalism or
libertarian individualism. The soul as a spark from the supreme Being, the
subjective sovereignty of each elector, or the unlimited autonomy of the
citizen of a society without laws - these are so many sophisms which, in
the eyes of the Marxist critique, are tainted with the same infantile
idealism, no matter how resolutely "materialist" the first bourgeois
liberals and anarchists may have been.
This conception finds its match in the equally idealist hypothesis of the
perfect social unit - of social monism - based on the divine will which is
supposed to govern and administer the life of our species. Returning to the
primitive stage of social life which we were considering and to the family
organization discovered there, we conclude that we do not need such
metaphysical hypotheses of the individual-unit and the society-unit in
order to interpret the life of the species and the process of its
evolution. On the other hand, we can positively state that we are dealing
with a type of collectivity organized on a unitary basis, i.e. the family.
We take care not to make this a fixed or permanent type or to idealize it
as the model form of the social collectivity, as anarchism or absolute
monarchy do with the individual. Rather we simply record the existence of
the family as the primary unit of human organization, which will be
succeeded by others, which itself will be modified in many aspects, and
which will become a constituent element of other collective organizations,
or, one may suppose, will disappear in very advanced social forms. We do
not feel at all obliged to be for or against the family in principle, any
more than, for example, for or against the state. What does concern us is
to grasp the evolutionary direction of these types of human organization.
When we ask ourselves whether they will disappear one day, we do so
objectively, because it could not occur to us to think of them as sacred
and eternal, or as pernicious and to be destroyed. Conservatism and its
opposite (i.e. the negation of every form of organization and social
hierarchy) are equally weak from a critical view-point, and equally
sterile.
Thus leaving aside the traditional opposition between the categories
individual and society, we follow the formation and the evolution of other
units in our study of human history: organized human collectivities, broad
or restricted groupings of men with a hierarchy based on a division of
functions, which appear as the real factors and agents of social life. Such
units can in a certain sense be compared to organic units, to living
organisms whose cells, with their different functions and values, can be
represented by men or by rudimentary groups of men. However the analogy is
not complete, since while a living organism has well-defined limits and
obeys the inflexible biological laws of its growth and death, organized
social units do not have fixed boundaries and are continually being
renewed, mingling with one another, simultaneously splitting and
recombining. If we dwelt on the first conspicuous example of the family
unit, it was to demonstrate the following: if these units which we are
considering are clearly composed of individuals and if their very
composition is variable, they nonetheless behave like organic and integral
"wholes", such that to split them into individual units has no real meaning
and is tantamount to a myth. The family element constitutes a whole whose
life does not depend on the number of individuals that comprise it, but on
the network of their relationships. To take a crude example, a family
composed of the head, the wives and a few feeble old men is not equal to
another made up of its head and many strong young men.
Setting out from the family, the first organized social form, where one
finds the first example of division of functions, the first hierarchies,
the first forms of authority and the direction of individuals' activities
and the administration of things, human evolution passes through an
infinite series of other organizational forms, increasingly broad and
complex. The reason for this increasing complexity lies in the growing
complexity of social relations and hierarchies born from the
ever-increasing differentiation between functions. The latter is directly
determined by the systems of production that technology and science place
at the disposal of human activity in order to provide an increasing number
of products suited to satisfying the needs of larger societies evolving
towards higher forms of life. An analysis which seeks to understand the
process of formation and change of different human organizations, as well
as the interplay of relations within the whole of society, must be based on
the notion of the development of productive technology and the economic
relations which arise from the distribution of individuals among the
different tasks required by the productive mechanism. The formation and
evolution of dynasties, castes, armies, states, empires, corporations and
parties can and must be studied on the basis of these elements. One can
imagine that at the highest point of this complex development a kind of
organized unit will appear which will encompass all of mankind and which
will establish a rational division of functions between all men. What
significance and limits the hierarchical system of collective
administration will have in this higher form of human social life is a
matter for further study.
III
To examine those unitary bodies whose internal relations are regulated by
what is generally called the "democratic principle", for reasons of
simplicity we will distinguish between organized collectivities whose
hierarchies are imposed from outside and those that choose their own
hierarchy from within. According to the religious conception and the pure
doctrine of authority, in every epoch human society is a collective unit
which receives its hierarchy from supernatural powers. We will not repeat
the critique of such a metaphysical over-simplification which is
contradicted by our whole experience. It is the necessity of the division
of functions which gives rise naturally to hierarchies; and this is what
has happened in the case of the family. As it develops into a tribe or
horde, it must organize itself in order to struggle against rival tribes.
Leadership must be entrusted to those most able to use the communal
energies, and military hierarchies emerge in response to this need. This
criterion of choice in the common interest appeared thousands of years
before modern democratic electoralism; in the beginning kings, military
chiefs and priests were elected. In the course of time, other criteria for
the formation of hierarchies prevailed, giving rise to caste privileges
transmitted by inheritance or even by initiation into closed schools, sects
and cults. Nevertheless, in normal practice, accession to a given rank and
inheritance of that rank were motivated by the possession of special
aptitudes. We do not intend to follow here the whole process of the
formation of castes and then of classes within society. We will only say
that their appearance no longer corresponds to the logical necessity of a
division of functions alone, but also to the fact that certain strata
occupying a privileged position in the economic mechanism end up
monopolizing power and social influence. In one way or another, every
ruling caste provides itself with its own organization, its own hierarchy,
and likewise, economically privileged classes. To limit ourselves to one
example - the landed aristocracy of the Middle Ages, by uniting itself for
the defence of its common privileges against the assaults of the other
classes, constructed an organizational form culminating in the monarchy,
which concentrated public powers in its own hands to the complete exclusion
of the other layers of the population. The state of the feudal epoch was
the organization of the feudal nobility supported by the clergy. The
principal element of coercion of the military monarchy was the army. Here
we have a type of organized collectivity whose hierarchy was instituted
from without since it was the king who bestowed the ranks, and in the army,
passive obedience was the rule. Every form of state concentrates under one
authority the organizing and officering of a whole series of executive
hierarchies: the army, police, magistracy, bureaucracy. Thus the state
makes material use of the activity of individuals from all classes, but it
is organized on the basis of a single or a few privileged classes which
appropriate the power to constitute its different hierarchies. The other
classes, and in general all groups of individuals for whom it was only too
evident that the state, in spite of its claims, by no means guaranteed the
interests of everyone, seek to provide themselves with their own
organizations in order to make their own interests prevail. Their point of
departure is that their members occupy an identical position in production
and economic life.
As for organizations which provide themselves with their own hierarchy, if
we ask what is the best way to ensure the defence of the collective
interests and to avoid the formation of privileged strata, some will
propose the democratic method whose principle lies in using the majority
opinion to select those to fill the various offices.
Our critique of such a method must be much more severe when it is applied
to the whole of society as it is today, or to given nations, than when it
is introduced into much more restricted organizations, such as trade unions
and parties.
In the first case it must be rejected without hesitation as without
foundation, since it takes no account of the situation of individuals in
the economy and since it presupposes the intrinsic perfection of the system
without taking into consideration the historical evolution of the
collectivity to which it is applied.
The division of society into classes distinguished by economic privilege
clearly removes all value from majority decision-making. Our critique
refutes the deceitful theory that the democratic and parliamentary state
machine which arose from modern liberal constitutions is an organization of
all citizens in the interests of all citizens. From the moment that
opposing interests and class conflicts exist, there can be no unity of
organization, and in spite of the outward appearance of popular
sovereignty, the state remains the organ of the economically dominant class
and the instrument of defence of its interests. In spite of the application
of the democratic system to political representation, bourgeois society
appears as a complex network of unitary bodies. Many of these, which spring
from the privileged layers and tend to preserve the present social
apparatus, gather around the powerful centralized organism of the political
state. Others may be neutral or may have a changing attitude towards the
state. Finally, others arise within the economically oppressed and
exploited layers and are directed against the class state. Communism
demonstrates that the formal juridical and political application of the
democratic and majority principle to all citizens while society is divided
into opposed classes in relation to the economy, is incapable of making the
state an organizational unit of the whole society or the whole nation.
Officially that is what political democracy claims to be, whereas in
reality it is the form suited to the power of the capitalist class, to the
dictatorship of this particular class, for the purpose of preserving its
privileges.
Therefore it is not necessary to devote much time to refuting the error of
attributing the same degree of independence and maturity to the vote of
each elector, whether he is a worker exhausted by excessive physical labour
or a rich dissolute, a shrewd captain of industry or an unfortunate
proletarian ignorant of the causes of his misery and the means of remedying
them. From time to time, after long intervals, the opinion of these and
others is solicited, and it is claimed that the accomplishment of this
"sovereign" duty is sufficient to ensure calm and the obedience of whoever
feels victimized and ill-treated by the state policies and administration.
IV
It is clear that the principle of democracy has no intrinsic virtue. It is
not a "principle", but rather a simple mechanism of organization,
responding to the simple and crude arithmetical presumption that the
majority is right and the minority is wrong. Now we shall see if and to
what extent this mechanism is useful and sufficient for the functioning of
organizations comprising more restricted collectivities which are not
divided by economic antagonisms. To do this, these organizations must be
considered in their process of historical development.
Is this democratic mechanism applicable in the dictatorship of the
proletariat, i.e. in the state form born from the revolutionary victory of
rebel classes against the power of the bourgeois states? Can this form of
state, on account of its internal mechanism of the delegation of powers and
of the formation of hierarchies, thus be defined as a "proletarian
democracy"? The question should be broached without prejudice, because if
although we might reach the conclusion that the democratic mechanism is
useful under certain conditions, as long as history has not produced a
better mechanism, we must be convinced that there is not the slightest
reason to establish a priori the concept of the sovereignty of the
"majority" of the proletariat. In fact the day after the revolution, the
proletariat will not yet be a totally homogeneous collectivity nor will it
be the only class. In Russia for example, power is in the hands of the
working class and the peasantry, but if we consider the entire development
of the revolutionary movement, it is easy to demonstrate that the
industrial proletarian class, although much less numerous than the
peasantry, nevertheless plays a far more important role. Then it is logical
that the Soviet mechanism accords much more value to the vote of a worker
than that of a peasant.
We do not intend to examine thoroughly here the characteristics of the
proletarian state constitution. We will not consider it metaphysically as
something absolute, as reactionaries do the divine right of the monarchy,
liberals, parliamentarism based on universal suffrage, and anarchists, the
non-state. As it is an organization of one class destined to strip the
opposing classes of their economic privileges, the proletarian state is a
real historical force which adapts itself to the goal it pursues, that is,
to the necessities which gave birth to it. At certain moments its impulse
may come from either broad mass consultations or from the action of very
restricted executive organs endowed with full powers. What is essential is
to give this organization of proletarian power the means and weapons to
destroy bourgeois economic privilege and the political and military
resistance of the bourgeoisie, in a way that prepares for the subsequent
disappearance of classes themselves, and for the more and more profound
modifications of the tasks and structure of the proletarian state.
One thing is sure - while bourgeois democracy's real goal is to deprive the
large proletarian and petty-bourgeois masses of all influence in the
control of the state, reserved for the big industrial, banking and
agricultural oligarchies, the proletarian dictatorship must be able to
involve the broadest layers of the proletarian and even semi-proletarian
masses in the struggle that it embodies. But only those who are the victims
of democratic prejudice could imagine that attaining this end merely
requires the setting up of a vast mechanism of electoral consultation. This
may be excessive or - more often - insufficient, because this form of
participation by many proletarians may
result in their not taking part in other more active manifestations of the
class struggle. On the other hand, the intensity of the struggle in
particular phases demands speed of decision and movement and a centralized
organization of efforts in a common direction, which, as the Russian
experience is demonstrating with a whole series of examples, imposes on the
proletarian state constitutional characteristics which are in open
contradiction to the canons of bourgeois democracy. Supporters of bourgeois
democracy howl about the violation of liberties, whereas it is only a
matter of unmasking the philistine prejudices which have always allowed
demagogues to ensure power to the privileged. In the dictatorship of the
proletariat, the constitutional mechanism of the state organization is not
only consultative, but at the same time executive. Participation in the
functions of political life, if not of the whole mass of electors, then at
least of a wide layer of their delegates, is not intermittent but
continuous. It is interesting to note that this is accomplished without at
all harming the unitary character of the action of the whole state
apparatus - rather to the contrary. And this is thanks precisely to the
criteria opposed to those of bourgeois hyperliberalism, that is, virtual
suppression of direct elections and proportional representation, once, as
we have seen, the other sacred dogma of the equal vote, has been
overthrown.
We do not claim that these new criteria introduced into the representative
mechanism, or codified in a constitution, stem from reasons of principle.
Under new circumstances, the criteria could be different. In any case we
are attempting to make it clear that we do not attribute any intrinsic
value to these forms of organization and representation. This is translated
into a fundamental Marxist thesis: the revolution is not a problem of forms
of organization. On the contrary, the revolution is a problem of content, a
problem of the movement and action of revolutionary forces in an unending
process, which cannot be theorized and crystallized in any scheme for an
immutable " constitutional doctrine".
In any case, in the mechanisms of the workers' councils we find no trace of
the rule of bourgeois democracy, which states that each citizen directly
chooses his delegate to the supreme representative body, the parliament. On
the contrary, there are different levels of workers' and peasants'
councils, each one with a broader territorial base culminating in the
congress of Soviets. Each local or district council elects its delegates to
a higher council, and in the same way elects its own administration, i.e.
its executive organ. At the base, in the city or rural council, the entire
mass is consulted. In the election of delegates to higher councils and
local administrative offices, each group of electors votes not according to
a proportional system, but according to a majority system, choosing its
delegates from lists put forward by the parties. Furthermore, since a
single delegate is sufficient to establish a link between a lower and
higher council, it is clear that the two dogmas of formal liberalism
-voting for several members from a list and proportional representation -
fall by the wayside. At each level, the councils must give rise to organs
that are both consultative and administrative and directly linked to the
central administration. Thus it is natural that as one progresses towards
higher representative organs, one does not encounter parliamentary
assemblies of chatterboxes who discuss interminably without ever acting;
rather, one sees compact and homogeneous bodies capable of directing the
action and political struggle, and of giving revolutionary guidance to the
whole mass thus organized in a unitary fashion.
These capacities, which are definitely not automatically inherent in any
constitutional schema, are reached in this mechanism because of the
presence of an extremely important factor, the political party, whose
content goes far beyond pure organizational form, and whose collective and
active consciousness and will allow the work to be oriented according to
the requirements of a long and always advancing process. Of all the organs
of the proletarian dictatorship, the political party is the one whose
characteristics most nearly approach those of a homogeneous unitary
collectivity, unified in action. In reality, it only encompasses a minority
of the mass, but the properties which distinguish it from all other
broad-based forms of representative organization demonstrate precisely that
the party represents the collective interests and movement better than any
other organ. All party members participate directly in accomplishing the
common task and prepare themselves to resolve the problems of the
revolutionary struggle and the reconstruction of society, which the
majority of the mass only become aware of when they are actually faced with
them. For all these reasons, in a system of representation and delegation
based not on the democratic lie but on a layer of the population whose
common fundamental interests propel them on the course of revolution, it is
natural that the choices fall spontaneously on elements put forward by the
revolutionary party, which is equipped to respond to the demands of the
struggle and to resolve the problems for which it has been able to prepare
itself. We do not attribute these capacities of the party to its particular
constitution, anymore than we do in the case of any other organization. The
party may or may not be suited to its task of leading the revolutionary
action of a class; it is not any political party but a precise one, namely
the communist party, that can assume this task, and not even the communist
party is immune to the numerous dangers of degeneration and dissolution.
What makes the party equal to its task is not its statutes or mere internal
organizational measures. It is the positive characteristics which develop
within the party because it participates in the struggle as an organization
possessing a single orientation which derives from its conception of the
historical process, form a fundamental programme which has been translated
into a collective consciousness and at the same time from a secure
organizational discipline.
To return to the nature of the constitutional mechanism of the proletarian
dictatorship - of which we have already said that it was executive as well
as legislative at all levels - we must add something to specify what tasks
of the collective life this mechanism's executive functions and initiatives
respond to. These functions and initiatives are the very reason for its
formation, and they determine the relationships existing within its
continually evolving elastic mechanism. We refer here to the initial period
of proletarian power whose image we have in the four and a half years that
the proletarian dictatorship has existed in Russia, because we do not wish
to speculate as to what the definitive basis of the representative organs
will be in a classless communist society. We cannot predict how exactly
society will evolve as it approaches this stage; we can only envisage that
it will move in the direction of a fusion of various political,
administrative and economic organs, and at the same time, a progressive
elimination of every element of coercion and of the state itself as an
instrument of power of one class and a weapon of struggle against the
surviving enemy classes.
In its initial period, the proletarian dictatorship has an extremely
difficult and complex task that can be subdivided into three spheres of
action: political, military and economic. Military defence against
counter-revolutionary attacks from within and without and the
reconstruction of society on a collective basis depend upon a systematic
and rational plan of activity which, while utilizing the diverse energies
of the whole mass with the maximum efficiency and results, must also
achieve a powerful unity. As a consequence, the body which leads the
struggle against the domestic and foreign enemy, that is, the revolutionary
army and police, must be based on discipline, and its hierarchy must be
centralized in the hands of the proletarian power. The Red Army itself is
thus an organized unit whose hierarchy is imposed from without by the
government of the proletarian state, and the same is true for the
revolutionary police and tribunals.
The problems of the economic apparatus which the victorious proletariat
erects in order to lay the foundations of the new system of production and
distribution is more complex. The characteristic that distinguishes this
rational administration from the "chaos" of bourgeois private economy is
centralization. Every enterprise must be managed in the interest of the
entire collectivity and in harmony with the requirements of the whole plan
of production and distribution. On the other hand, the economic apparatus
(and the groups of individuals that comprise it) is continually being
modified, not only through its own gradual development but also by the
inevitable crises in a period of such vast transformations, which cannot be
without political and military struggles. These considerations lead to the
following conclusions: in the initial period of the proletarian
dictatorship, although the councils at different levels must appoint their
delegates to the local executive organs as well as to the legislative
organs at higher levels, the absolute responsibility for military defence,
and in a less rigid way, for the economic campaign, must remain with the
centre. For their part, the local organs serve to organize the masses
politically so that they will participate in fulfilling the plans and
accept military and economic organization. They thereby create the
conditions for the broadest and most continuous mass activity possible, and
can channel this activity towards the formation of a highly centralized
proletarian state.
These considerations certainly are not intended to deny all possibility of
movement and initiative to the intermediary organs of the state hierarchy.
But we wanted to show that one cannot theorize that they must be formed by
the application of groups of electors organized on the basis of factories
or army divisions to the revolution's executive tasks of maintaining
military or economic order. The structure of such groups is simply not able
to confer any special abilities on them. The units in which the electors
are grouped at the base can therefore be formed according to empirical
criteria. In fact they will constitute themselves according to empirical
criteria, among which, for instance, the convergence in the workplace, the
neighbourhood, the garrison, the battlefront or any other situation in
daily life, without any of them being excluded a priori or held up as a
model. This does not prevent the representative organs of the proletarian
state from being based on a territorial division into electoral districts.
None of these considerations is absolute, and this takes us back to our
thesis that no constitutional schema has the value of a principle, and that
majority democracy in the formal and arithmetic sense is only one possible
method for coordinating the relations that arise within collective
organizations. No matter what point of view one takes, it is impossible to
attribute to it an intrinsic character of necessity or justice. For
Marxists these terms have no meaning. Therefore we do not propose to
substitute for the democratic schema which we have been criticizing any
other schema of a state apparatus which in itself will be exempt from
defects and errors.
V
It seems to us that enough has been said about the democratic principle in
its application to the bourgeois state, which claims to embrace all
classes, and also in its application to the proletarian class exclusively
as the basis of the state after the revolutionary victory. Something should
be said about the application of the democratic mechanism to organizations
existing within the proletariat before (and also after) the conquest of
power, i.e. in trade unions and the political party.
We established above that a true organizational unity is only possible on
the basis of an identity of interests among the members. Since one joins
unions or parties by virtue of a spontaneous decision to participate in a
specific kind of action, a critique which absolutely denies any value to
the democratic mechanism in the case of the bourgeois state (i.e. a
fallacious constitutional union of all classes) is not applicable here.
Nevertheless, even in the case of the party and the trade union it is
necessary not to be led astray by the arbitrary concept of the "sanctity"
of majority decisions.
In contrast to the party, the trade union is characterized by the virtual
identity of its members' immediate material interests. Within the limits of
the category, it attains a broad homogeneity of composition and it is an
organization with voluntary membership. It tends to become an organization
which all the workers of a given category or industry join automatically or
are even, as in a certain phase of the dictatorship of the proletariat,
obliged to join. It is certain that in this domain number remains the
decisive factor and the majority decision has a great value, but we cannot
confine ourselves to a schematic consideration of its results. It is also
necessary to take into account other factors which come into play in the
life of the union organization: a bureaucratized hierarchy of functionaries
which paralyses the union under its tutelage, and the vanguard groups that
the revolutionary party has established within it in order to lead it onto
the terrain of revolutionary action. In this struggle, communists often
point out that the functionaries of the union bureaucracy violate the
democratic idea and are contemptuous of the will of the majority. It is
correct to denounce this because the right-wing union bosses parade a
democratic mentality, and it is necessary to point out their
contradictions. We do the same with bourgeois liberals each time they
coerce and falsify the popular consultation, without proposing that even a
free consultation would resolve the problems which weigh on the
proletariat. It is right and opportune to do this because in the moments
when the broad masses are forced into action by the pressure of the
economic situation, it is possible to turn aside the union bureaucrats'
influence, which is in substance an extra-proletarian influence of classes
and organizations alien to the trade union, thereby augmenting the
influence of the revolutionary groups. But in all this there are no
"constitutional" prejudices, and communists, provided that they are
understood by the masses and can demonstrate to them that they are acting
in the direction of their most immediate felt interests, can and must
behave in a flexible way vis-à-vis the canons of formal democracy. For
example, there is no contradiction between these two tactical attitudes: on
one hand, taking the responsibility of representing the minority in the
leadership organs of the unions insofar as the statues allow; and on the
other hand, stating that this statutory representation should be suppressed
once we have conquered these organizations in order to speed up their
actions. What should guide us in this question is a careful analysis of the
developmental process in the unions in the present phase. We must
accelerate their transformation from organs of counter-revolutionary
influence on the proletariat into organs of revolutionary struggle. The
criteria of internal organization have no value in themselves but only
insofar as they contribute to this objective.
We now analyze the party organization which we have already touched on in
regard to the mechanism of the worker's state. The party does not start
from as complete an identity of economic interests as does the union. On
the contrary it bases the unity of its organization not on category, like
the union, but on the much broader basis of the entire class. This is true
not only in space, since the party strives to become international, but
also in time, since it is the specific organ whose consciousness and action
reflect the requirements of victory throughout the process of the
proletariat's revolutionary emancipation. When we study the problems of
party structure and internal organization, these well-known considerations
force us to keep in mind the whole process of its formation and life in
relation to the complex tasks which it continually has to carry out. At the
end of this already long exposition, we cannot enter into details of the
mechanism which should regulate consultation of the party's mass
membership, their recruitment and the designation of responsible officers.
There is no doubt that for the moment there is nothing better to do than
hold to the majority principle. But as we have emphasized, there is no
reason to raise use of the democratic mechanism to a principle. Besides its
consultative functions, analogous to the legislative tasks of the state
apparatus, the party has executive tasks which at the crucial moment of the
struggle, correspond to those of an army and which demand maximum
discipline toward the hierarchy. In fact, in the complex process which has
led to the formation of communist parties, the emergence of a hierarchy is
a real and dialectical phenomenon which has remote origins and which
corresponds to the entire past experience of the functioning of the party's
mechanism. We cannot state that the decisions of the party majority are per
se as correct as those of the infallible supernatural judges who are
supposed to have given human societies their leaders, like the gods
believed in by all those who think that the Holy Spirit participates in
papal conclaves. Even in an organization like the party where the broad
composition is a result of selection through spontaneous voluntary
membership and control of recruitment, the decision of the majority is not
intrinsically the best. If k contributes to a better working of the party's
executive bodies, this is only because of the coincidence of individual
efforts in a unitary and well-oriented work. We will not propose at this
time replacing this mechanism by another and we will not examine in detail
what such a new system might be. But we can envisage a mode of organization
which will be increasingly liberated from the conventions of the democratic
principle, and it will not be necessary to reject it out of unjustified
fears if one day it can be shown that other methods of decision, of choice,
of resolution of problems are more consistent with the real demands of the
party's development and its activity in the framework of history.
The democratic criterion has been for us so far a material and incidental
factor in the construction of our internal organization and the formulation
of our party statutes; it is not an indispensable platform for them.
Therefore we will not raise the organizational formula known as "democratic
centralism" to the level of a principle. Democracy cannot be a principle
for us. Centralism is indisputably one, since the essential characteristics
of party organization must be unity of structure and action. The term
centralism is sufficient to express the continuity of party structure in
space; in order to introduce the essential idea of continuity in time, the
historical continuity of the struggle which, surmounting successive
obstacles, always advances towards the same goal, and in order to combine
these two essential ideas of unity in the same formula, we would propose
that the communist party base its organization on "organic centralism".
While preserving as much of the incidental democratic mechanism that can be
used, we will eliminate the use of the term "democracy", which is dear to
the worst demagogues but tainted with irony for the exploited, oppressed
and cheated, abandoning it to the exclusive usage of the bourgeoisie and
the champions of liberalism in their diverse guises and sometimes extremist
poses.
Rassegena Communista - February 1922
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