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Debate on the Theses on the National and Colonial Question
Second Congress of the Communist International
28 July 1920
The Theses themselves and the whole debate surrounding them are available
in two volumes from New Park Publications, published in 1977.
Connolly (Ireland): Comrade Lenin's Theses have sketched
the basic features of the general tactics of the Communist International
towards the national
revolutionary movement in the oppressed countries. In order actually
to apply these Theses, the Communist International must be correctly
informed about the economic and historical movement in these countries
and moreover have the opportunity to be able to assess the revolutionary
significance of the various forces at work in the countries in question.
Therefore we would like, without discussing the Theses as a whole,
to give a detailed report on the situation in Ireland.
The Irish question can be considered as a question of national oppression
from three standpoints: from the standpoint of the national revolutionary
movement, from the standpoint of the pettybourgeois social democrats
and liberals, and from the standpoint of the Communist International.
The first tendency considers Ireland as a separate national unit economically
and politically oppressed by England over the last seven hundred years
and sees the solution to the question purely and simply in the complete
independence of Ireland from Great Britain. For that purpose however
a bourgeois-democratic Irish state must be set up after the pattern
of the democratic republics of western Europe. In no other case could
Ireland ever succeed in developing fully in the economic and cultural
respect.
From the standpoint of the liberals, which is shared with slight differences
by the petty-bourgeois social-democrats, Ireland is already economically
and politically a part of Great Britain. Therefore it is sufficient
to satisfy national demands by means of sensible political concessions
within the framework of limited self-government. Meanwhile this independence
must be prevented from becoming a danger to the realm.
From the standpoint of the Communist International the position is
very different. In the last phase of capitalism the position of all
national minorities and colonies is exceptionally complicated. Among
the majority of these oppressed peoples and races there is a revolutionary
movement directed against imperialism. Even if the struggle of the
Communist International is proceeding in another direction, it cannot
simply turn its back on these revolutionary uprisings, whose purpose
also is to free themselves from imperialism. It must rather support
every movement that can contribute to the advancement of the world
revolution. The Communist International must encourage and support
every movement that strives to weaken the imperialist powers and to
advance the growing world revolution. The Communist International
must strengthen and unite all communist groups involved in such struggles.
Such policies would lead to the formation of a Communist Party in which,
under the pressure of the military dictatorship of imperialism, a strict
centralization and a good discipline develop, and which thus will
be rendered capable of carrying on a bitter struggle for power against
its own national bourgeoisie, after liberating itself from the imperialist
yoke. Taking these circumstances into account we demand the support
of national revolutionary movements by the Communist International.
The only means which promises success is the active support of national
movements with the help of the communist groups in the countries in
question, however weak they may be. This is especially true of Ireland,
where support for the national movement by the Communist International
and its British section, without the inclusion of communist groups,
would only weaken the latter. Support by the Communist International
is the only means that permits them, even in the very first stages
of revolutionary struggle, to play a significant role. In their struggle
against British imperialism the Irish nationalists will use any means,
and if the struggle of the Communist International is only carried
out through the mediation of the little communist groups I have mentioned,
the nationalists will be forced to remain neutral towards the communists,
who will meanwhile be able to develop and attract new forces. Indeed,
they may perhaps have to support these communist groups actively, thus
unconsciously making their propaganda easier.
If there was no communist movement in Ireland, the direct result, regardless
of whether it remained subject to the military dictatorship ruling
it at the moment or formed a bourgeois state, would be that it would
be turned into the basis for the counter-revolutionary attack on the
coming social revolution in Britain. And here we must pay particular
attention to the fact that in the British struggles the fleet would
play no small role, and that Ireland possesses splendid harbours and
submarine bases for a white fleet destined to blockade Britain. This
takes us back to the first part of our report which considered Ireland's
strategic position in its importance for communism. If we consider
the international situation as a bitter struggle between the centre
of the world revolution, Soviet Russia, with the small states grouped
around Russia on the one hand, and the League of Nations led by British
imperialism on the other, then Ireland, that constant hearth of revolution
in the heart of the empire, which keeps an English army of 200,000
men permanently occupied, is of great importance for the international
revolutionary movement. On the other hand we must strain every nerve
to prevent Ireland from being converted into a kind of basis for the
hangmen of the English revolution in the sense that we mentioned above.
As far as the Irishmen are concerned who live in America and scattered
throughout the British Empire, everybody knows of the lively interest
that they take in the political development of their homeland, as well
as of the speed with which they react to events there.
This being so, the tendency of Irish politics towards communism will
draw with it the masses of Irishmen living in British possessions and
in the United States, strengthen the communist movement in these countries,
and lend power to the international proletarian movement in general.
Comrade Connolly then reads the report that is published below and
appeared unabridged in issue 12 of the 'Communist International' attributed
to Thomas Darragh (a pseudonym).
Revolutionary Ireland and Communism
by Thomas Darragh
Ireland is of primary importance to international communism primarily
for the following two reasons, viz: 1) its strategic position with
regard to England, the seat of British imperialism; 2) the influence
of Ireland's political development on the broad masses of its nationals
scattered throughout the British Empire and the United States of America.
For the purpose of this report it is necessary to give a brief survey
of the Irish labour and socialist movements, and the personalities
who played and are playing a part in their development. The recent
history of the Irish labour movement may be said to start from the
coming of Jim Larkin to Ireland in 1907. Up to this time very few of
the Irish workers were organized in trades unions, and of these about
75 per cent were in Irish branches of English unions. They were mere
dues-paying members who exercised little or no effect upon the policy
of these unions, whose executive offices were in England.
Larkin, who was identified with the Independent Labour Party of England
from its inception, came over as organizer of the English Dockers'
Union, and within a short time of his arrival the first big strike
in Ireland took place in Belfast. This strike is noteworthy in as much
as, along with the dock and transport workers of the city, the police
came out on strike. It was marked by much rioting and military activity.
Within a few months of the settlement of the Belfast dispute the dockers
in Cork went on strike. As a result of the treatment meted out to the
Belfast strikers by the executive of the union in England, and a continuation
of the same policy with regard to the Cork workers, Larkin broke away
from the English Dockers' Union and organized the Irish Transport and
General Workers' Union on the lines of industrial unionism. After a
series of fiercely fought strikes the Transport Workers' Union got
a permanent foothold in the bigger ports and industrial centres. Connolly
returned from America in 1910 and immediately went to see Larkin, who
was in Mountjoy prison in Dublin. As a result of this meeting Connolly
took over the management of the union during Larkin's imprisonment,
and on his release they joined forces. From this onwards they worked
together until Larkin went to America to raise funds for the union
treasury, which had been completely exhausted by the great Dublin strike
of 1913-1914.
Connolly spent his early life in the Social Democratic movement in
Britain, particularly in Scotland. He was one of the few intrepid young
Marxists who in the early days of the Social Democratic Federation
split from the first manifestations of Hyndman's social-patriotism
and reformism to form the Socialist Labour Party, of which he was the
first chairman and organizer. Up to the last he was in constant touch
with it and his influence is still felt in this organization, which
is one of the few fighting socialist bodies in Britain. In 1896 he
returned to Ireland and founded the Irish Socialist Republican Party,
the first socialist party in Ireland. He was editor of its official
organ, The Workers’ Republic, by means of which the
revolutionary doctrines of the party began to make themselves felt
on the Irish working
masses. It is noteworthy to record that alone of all other parties,
no matter how extreme in nationalism, the ISRP was the first to openly
advocate the establishment of an Irish Republic. The party was small
though active, and contested some few municipal elections without
success.
In 1902 Connolly went to America to raise funds for the party by a
lecture tour. The tour completed he stayed on and was identified with
the foundation of the IWW, and was for a time an organizer of the American
Socialist Labour Party. In 1908 he founded the Irish Socialist Federation
in America and
was editor of its official organ, The Harp,
which was later transferred to Ireland. In 1910, on his return to
Ireland, he
published Labour in Irish History, the only Marxian interpretation
of the history of the development of the Irish proletariat and peasantry.
From 1910, Larkin and Connolly dominated the Irish labour and socialist
situation. Their work consisted in organizing the Irish Transport
and General Workers Union, educating the masses in the use of the
mass
strike and the sympathetic strike, and in the transformation of the
Irish Trade Union Congress into an Irish Labour Party. So powerful
did the Transport Union become, with its revolutionary cry for the
abolition of the wage system, that in 1913 the Irish bourgeoisie
and English capitalist interests in Ireland combined to crush it.
This
resulted in the Dublin strike and lock-out, which lasted for over
ten months and was the first great proletarian upheaval in Ireland.
The
radical section of the British workers rallied to the aid of their
Irish comrades, sending money and food into Dublin; but the British
labour leaders, true to their position as henchmen of the capitalist
class and saboteurs of every revolutionary act of the workers, killed
the demand for sympathetic action in Britain, and the Irish workers
were forced back to the shops. This proved a pyrrhic victory for
the bourgeoisie, the Transport Union emerging from the struggle depleted
in membership and in funds, but still with its organization intact,
and with a bitterness in the minds of the workers which flared into
action in 1916.
The outbreak of the world war found the Transport Union sufficiently
recovered to make vigorous protest against the social-traitors of
British Labourism, who, rallying to the defence of the British Imperial
state,
assisted in the already beginning double brutal coercion of Ireland
as a small nationality and the Irish workers as a class. Larkin and
Connolly held meetings throughout the country, baring the capitalist-imperialist
nature of the conflict; urging the workers to use the crisis by every
means in their power; ruthlessly criticizing British Labourism; revealing
the essentially bourgeois-imperialist content of the Irish Parliamentary
Party, which had hitherto masqueraded as the party of democratic
opposition to British imperialism, and now supported the war, and
the equally
bourgeois reaction of Sinn Féin, which declared Ireland to
be neutral. Realizing that the difficulties of British imperialism
must
necessarily be the opportunity of the Irish proletariat, they set
about the development of the Irish Citizen Army, extending its scope,
arming
its members and intensifying the military nature of its organization.
In order to raise funds Larkin went to America, being exiled immediately
the British government found he was out of the country, Connolly
taking full charge of both the union and the Citizen Army, and carrying
on
the work alone. From now until Easter 1916, the Irish Citizen Army
dominated Irish Labour politics.
The Irish Citizen Army
The Irish Citizen Army was founded in Cork in 1908. Its purpose was
to protect the strikers from the brutality of the police, but beyond
this it was little heard of and of no particular importance until
the latter end of 1913, when it figured in several riots arising
out of
the Dublin strike. With the outbreak of the world war serious attention
was paid to its organization, military instructors were obtained
(the first instructor being Captain White, son of British Field Marshal
Sir George White. He was identified with the Dublin strike and subsequently,
in 1916, was arrested in South Wales for attempting to bring the
miners
out on strike to prevent Connolly's execution) and the systematic
arming of its members was begun.
Connolly as Commandant surrounded himself with a socialist staff,
the chief of whom was Michael Mallon, a silk weaver subsequently
executed
by the British in 1916. National revolutionary ferment developing
rapidly all over the country was met by British military suppression,
which
resulted in the establishment of military staff co-operation between
the Irish Volunteers (the Nationalist Republican armed forces) and
the ICA, upon the initiative of the latter, which dominated the alliance
until the 1916 rebellion. British activity in suppressing all revolutionary
papers resulted in Connolly's paper, The Workers' Republic,
being published under an armed guard of the Citizen Army, which also
provided a guard
for Liberty Hall, the headquarters of the Transport Union. This condition
of affairs lasted for about three months, the last number of The
Workers' Republic being issued two days before the rebellion.
The Army was designed upon a proletarian basis, with the Commandant,
staff officers and ordinary officers elected by the soldiers, and
in addition, a governing committee consisting of equal representatives
of the officers and the men. Its activities were confined to the
neighbourhood
of Dublin city. It was of first rate efficiency, outmatching in many
competitions the rival Irish Volunteers, holding on several occasions
demonstrations of actual street fighting, and its well-trained officers,
especially the Commandant, lecturing and instructing the Irish Volunteers,
particularly in street fighting. The ICA being drawn from the proletariat
had within its ranks many men who through economic necessity had
served in the British Army.
It was the ICA which set the pace in the months preceding the rebellion,
and despite the usual wavering of the middle class leaders of the
IV, when faced with the actual crisis the iron determination of the
ICA
and its leader forced the participation of the IV in the uprising.
The immediate causes of the failure of the revolutionary forces was
the countermanding at the eleventh hour of the mobilization order
of the Irish Republican troops throughout the country by the timid
right-wing
bourgeois leaders, who had always opposed Connolly and the co-operation
of the IV with the ICA. Despite this, 1,000 raw Republican troops
defended the captured capital against 47,000 disciplined and modernly
equipped
British soldiers, a victorious onslaught on Dublin from the north
county took place, and there were several attempts at uprisings in
the West
of Ireland.
In the rising the Citizen Army, as a unit of the Republican forces,
attacked and seized Dublin Castle, the executive headquarters of
the British government in Ireland, as well as holding several strategic
positions throughout the city. Connolly was Commander-in-Chief of
all
the fighting forces of the Republic during the rising. After the
surrender Connolly, who had been severely wounded during the fighting,
and Michael
Mallon, Chief of Staff of the ICA, were executed along with several
of the left-wing nationalist leaders, while the majority of the remainder
of the prominent proletarian leaders were killed during or after
the fighting. An overwhelmingly greater percentage of the ICA than
of the
IV participated in the fighting, and as a result during the arrests
that followed the ICA was practically destroyed as an organization,
while the IV was able to preserve its organization intact throughout
the greater portion of the country, where no fighting had occurred.
On its reorganization after the release of all prisoners in December
1917, the ICA retained its proletarian basis, but as the situation
was now dominated by the IV and all the leaders of the ICA were killed,
it steadily weakened, and is not now an effective influence on Irish
political life. It must be remembered that it is not a Communist
organization, although it is hostile to the present social democratic
tendencies
of the Socialist Party of Ireland, having co-operated with it only
once, when it forced the holding of a meeting, despite the military,
in favour of the Russian Bolshevik Revolution.
The
ICA programme is the establishment by force of arms of a Workers'
Republic in Ireland, though the form and structure of such a republic
are not consciously understood by the majority of its members.
Sinn
Féin and the Irish Volunteers
In order properly to understand Sinn Féin it is necessary to
deal with its political predecessor, the Irish Parliamentary Party.
This party dominated Irish national politics for well over 40 years.
Its aim was to secure Home Rule for Ireland within the British Empire,
by constitutional means. Out of a total of 104 Irish members in the
British Parliament the Irish Parliamentary Party numbered about 80,
the remainder being mostly Unionists returned from the Protestant constituencies
of North-East Ulster, who stand on the anti-Home Rule platform and
are a wing of the English Tory Party.
Under the leadership of Parnell the Irish Parliamentary Party pursued
a policy of obstruction in the British Parliament, and maintained
its independence by refusing to ally itself with any British party,
throwing
its weight now to this side and now to that. This policy led to its
gradually compromising, until finally it became the tail end of the
English Liberal Party. Though still protesting its independence in
Ireland, this attachment to the Liberal Party caused it to become
identified with English Imperial politics, thus relinquishing its
so-called democratic
opposition to English imperialism. Its final act in this role was
its opposition to the Boer War, 1899-1901.
Whilst this party was losing its hold on the national revolutionary
mind of the people a new national policy in the form of Sinn Féin
made its first appearance. A pamphlet called The Resurrection
of Hungary. A Parallel for Ireland began to attract attention.
In this work Arthur Griffith, an independent bourgeois journalist,
traced Hungary's fight
for political independence against Austria, and advocated the adoption
in Ireland of the tactics employed by the Hungarian nationalists.
He sketched a programme, subsequently amplified with the attainment
of
his party to power after 1916, the most salient points being (a)
the election of members by the English electoral system pledged to
abstention
from the British Parliament; (b) the actual setting up of an Irish
Parliament or General Council; (c) refusal to pay taxes to the English
imperial exchequer; (d) establishment of a policy of protection,
especially against England; (e) the encouragement of Irish industries;
(f) the
building up of an Irish Consular service; (g) and the general encouragement
of all Irish national movements, such as the Gaelic League, the organization
of the Irish language-revival movement, the Gaelic Athletic Association
for the revival of old Irish sports and games, the Irish literary
and dramatic renaissance and the Irish Boy Scouts (Fianna), organized
in opposition to the English military Baden-Powell Boy Scouts.
Sinn Féin was a party designed to use political and extra-parliamentary
action, but did not advocate the use of arms for the accomplishment
of its object, nor did it aim at the establishment of an Irish Republic.
It remained true to the Hungarian parallel and urged the establishment
of an Irish Parliament which should be united to the British Parliament
only in the person of a British monarch, who would also be king of
Ireland, thus ratifying the decrees of both Parliaments. In fact in
the first decade of the twentieth century no party except the Irish
Socialist Republican Party openly advocated an Irish Republic.
For many years, even up to the rebellion, despite the waning popularity
and political bankruptcy of the Irish Parliamentary Party, Sinn Féin
made little headway, existing rather as a critic of the Irish Parliamentary
Party than as a definite political party. In its economic doctrine
it followed the obsolete bourgeois economist Friedrich List, and its
pronunciamentos on economic questions were reactionary in the extreme.
In 1913 it assumed an attitude of hostility to the Dublin strike.
From the outbreak of the war to the rebellion Sinn Féin assumed
a more revolutionary role, being largely influenced by the Irish
Volunteer movement, which rather than Sinn Féin itself was the
dominant National force in Irish politics. After the rebellion, though
Sinn
Féin played no actual active part in the struggle, by shedding
the more reactionary portions of its doctrines aid harmonizing its
programme with the now popular demand for an Irish Republic, it assumed
the position of the political leader of the Irish people. It leaped
from success to success until in the 1918 parliamentary general elections
it swept the country, following which it set up its own Parliament,
Dáil Éireann, and attempted to form ministries and
assume the government of the country. It was immediately declared
illegal;
since then it functions whenever possible, though most if its members
and prominent officials are being continually imprisoned in English
jails, from which they escape by hunger-striking, jail deliveries
and other means. With the increasing oppression of English militarism
Sinn
Féin is coming more and more under the dominance of the Irish
Volunteers. In the recent elections Sinn Féin captured the
majority of the municipalities and rural councils, its nearest competitor
being
the Irish Labour Party, which co-operates with it in the local government
of the country. The whole policy of Sinn Féin is to make British
government impossible in Ireland, and at the same time to establish
as many of its own institutions as possible, so that it may step
in and function as the government of the country.
The Irish Volunteers in form is a purely military organization with
a General Staff and officers elected by the rank and file. Its programme
originally consisted in the establishment of an Irish Republic by
force of arms, and now the Republic has crystallized into the form
which
is in the process of establishment by the united efforts of themselves
and Sinn Féin. Its membership consists mostly of proletarians
and the peasantry, though on the average mostly officered by the
younger members of the petty bourgeoisie and farmers. The majority
of the rank
and file look upon the establishment of the Irish Republic as of
the first importance, and are inclined to defer the solution of social
problems to the successful accomplishment of this aim. The allegiance
of the country members to this ideology is being somewhat under-mined
by their being now mostly organized in the IT&GWU, the consequent
spark of class consciousness derived from this, and the increasing
economic difficulties which force them into opposition to the farmer-class
members of the IV. On the whole there are but few socialists within
their ranks, but many sympathizers and admirers of Connolly and the
idea of a Workers' Republic.
Owing to the constant national revolutionary ferment that dominates
the activity of all classes of the population, and the almost universal
opposition to England, which throws otherwise antagonistic classes
into spasmodic co-operation, it is difficult actually to determine
of what classes the various organizations are the Political expression.
Roughly speaking Sinn Féin is controlled in the rural districts
by the small farmers and petty peasantry or tenant farmers, in the
towns
by the small shopkeepers and middle men, and in he cities by the
smaller manufacturers, merchants and bourgeois intellectuals. There
are practically
no big landowners or even moderately big capitalists in this movement;
this class in Ireland being economically dependent upon English capitalism
and having as its Political expression the English Liberal parties.
The conglomeration of classes comprising Sinn Féin necessarily
causes antagonism to develop within the Party and results, as long
as endures the co-operation of these classes and the working masses,
necessary to achieve political independence, in its being unable
to formulate any definite socio-economic programme. Its aim being
political
independence, it finds it necessary to draw all classes of the population
to it to accomplish this object, and, to preserve the co-operation
of the classes, it dare not issue any definite political and economic
programme. Instead it has issued a so-called democratic programme,
breathing all the false glittering generalities of bourgeois democracy – the
will of the sovereign people, the ownership of the land and resources
of the country by and in the interests of the whole people, the equality
of all citizens, etc., etc.; but it reveals its essential class content
by promising international regulation of the conditions under which
the working class will live. The ideology of the two allied movements,
Sinn Féin and the Irish Volunteers, is similar to that of
any small nationality. Finally the hope of Sinn Féin is the
development of the already existing antagonism between America and
England, and
the tendency is to rely more and more on American capitalism and
to become subservient to its interests.
The Irish Labour Movement
The Irish labour movement is composed of the Irish Transport and
General Workers' Union, local or national craft unions, and branches
of the
big English trades unions, such as the National Union of Railwaymen
and the Amalgamated Society of Engineers. It functions nationally
through the Irish Trade Union Congress and Labour Party, and locally
through
Trades Councils, composed of representatives of the various unions
in the district. By far the most powerful body is the IT&GWU,
which now numbers 120,000 members. It was originally organized on
the lines
of industrial unionism, and though small in numbers and restricted
to the larger towns, it wielded with tremendous efficiency and success
the weapons of the mass and the sympathetic strike, at the same time
carrying on an almost incessant revolutionary propaganda campaign.
Since the rebellion, with the loss to the union of its two leading
figures and the indiscriminate increase of its membership, its revolutionary
outlook has deteriorated, until now it has become a federation of
unskilled workers with a large sprinkling of craft unions and with
bureaucratic
and strong centralization tendencies. It is not a craft union, but
neither has it kept abreast of the later developments of industrial
unionism, consequently tending to become an unwieldy and ineffective
weapon for the proletariat either against alien imperialism or native
capitalism.
The larger portion of its membership at the present time consists
of the poorer peasantry and agricultural labourers, who are not in
close
sympathy and whose activities are not in co-ordination with those
of the industrial proletariat. It should not be forgotten, however,
that
the organization of the rural proletariat has been a tremendous accomplishment,
and has imbued them with a certain amount of class consciousness.
On account of the form of the organization and the failure of the
IT&GWU
sufficiently to educate these rural workers as to their class position,
it has been demonstrated that this is not the organization to bridge
the gulf between the agricultural and industrial proletariat.
The general condition of Irish life being nationalistically revolutionary,
the IT&GWU, in common with the craft unions, has a much stronger
fighting spirit than its English prototypes. In alliance with the Nationalists
the Irish labour movement defeated conscription in 1918; on May 1,
1919, it stopped industry throughout the greater portion of the country;
and only recently, again in alliance with the Nationalists, by a two
day general strike it forced the British government to release over
100 political prisoners who were on hunger strike. In the majority
of these cases, however, the general sentiment of the people practically
forces the labour movement to take action, and the strike is carried
out by unionists and non-unionists alike.
It is only comparatively recently that the IT&GWU has entered the
political arena as a dominant force, and its successes in the late
municipal elections have only strengthened its tendency toward reaction.
The Irish Labour Party and Trade Union Congress, acting through its
local Trades Councils, emerged from the municipal elections as the
second party in numerical strength, and of the labour members elected
the IT&GWU secured an overwhelming majority. This solidifies the
domination of the Irish Labour Party and Trade Union Congress by the
IT&GWU, which gave to it its present form and programme. Despite
the insistence of the Labour Party that this programme was constructed
by Connolly and must therefore be revolutionary, it refuses to understand
that such a programme was designed for use by the proletariat in a
pre-world-revolutionary period.
The attempt of the IT&GWU, under the slogan of the One Big Union,
to absorb the craft unions, has led to the development of antagonisms
within the Labour Party. The craft unions object to such absorption
primarily because of their craft ideology, and also because they claim
that the transport union does not represent industrial unionism, but
the growth of a federation which is tending to bring the whole labour
movement under a bureaucracy. The craft unions in Ireland are small
and constantly dwindling. They are of little political importance with
the exception of one or two big branches of English unions, the tendency
of which is to break away from the parent bodies and form national
unions. A large section of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers has
already done so recently.
The transport union publishes the only labour paper in Ireland, The
Watchword of Labour a weekly with a circulation of about 10,000 and
which shares the common fate of all nationalist and rebel papers
in Ireland – continual suppression by the government. This paper,
while claiming to be the successor of Connolly's revolutionary Workers'
Republic, in fact constantly emasculates his application of revolutionary
Marxism to Ireland in much the same manner as Kautsky emasculates the
general principles of Marxism. It voices or represents the views of
the dominant section of the IT&GWU, the Irish Labour Party and
the Socialist Party of Ireland.
Internationally the Irish labour movement is affiliated to the Yellow
International. Cathal O'Shannon, the editor of The Watchword
of Labour, executive member of the Irish Labour Party and at present
President
of the Socialist Party of Ireland; Thomas Johnston, treasurer of
the Irish Labour Party; William O'Brien, secretary of the Irish Labour
Party, treasurer of the IT&GWU, and one of the biggest forces
in the Irish labour movement, and another Irish Labour Party executive
member, together with Hughes, assistant secretary of the IT&GWU,
who represented the Socialist Party of Ireland, being the delegates
from Ireland. O'Shannon and Johnston, who were equipped with supplementary
mandates from the SPI, were the only two to reach Berne. They signed
the Adler-Longuet resolution and generally adopted the policy of
that wing of the conference.
The Socialist Party of Ireland, which was founded in 1896, underwent
many changes of programme and name, until now it is a very small
and ineffective party with no bearing upon national politics. The
same
personalities who dominate the Irish Labour Party and the IT&GWU
influence and direct its policy and tactics. For one brief spell
it was captured by the left wing, which during its brief term of
power,
against the violent opposition of the rest of the Party, succeeded
in introducing a few revolutionary conceptions into its long established
programme, ordered the revocation of the affiliation to Berne and
secured a majority vote in favour of the Third International, and
held a meeting
in Dublin on the last anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. Before
it had time to consolidate its forces it lost power, consequently
its orders regarding the internationals were never put into force.
It is
now a party numbering scarce 150 members in Dublin, about 30 of whom
may be considered effective members, and a few hundred members throughout
the country, badly organized and having no direct connection with
each other or the Dublin headquarters. It is very inactive, has no
paper
and but a few pamphlets by its own members, none of which deal with
the problems facing the Irish proletariat.
A force which will undoubtedly play an important part in the revolutionary
development of Ireland is the Co-operative movement led by George
Russell (A.E.) There are several well organized branches of this
movement,
which now form a considerable part of the economy of the country,
and may readily be utilized by the proletarian state for the solution
of
the immediate problems of food distribution, etc. during the first
period of the proletarian dictatorship. It is in the co-operative
production on the land by the poor peasantry that the Communists
will be chiefly interested. This movement, which tends to destroy,
even
now, the ideology of small private property ownership among the land-hungering
poorer peasantry, is of paramount importance to the Communists. For
it actively tends to the solution of one of the most important and
difficult problems of the proletarian state, by initiating the organization
of the poorer peasantry on the basis of large-scale co-operative
production, thus mentally harmonizing the two sections of the working
class and
making certain the unity of the industrial proletariat and peasantry
under the dictator-ship of the proletariat.
Ulster, or more properly the north-east corner of Ireland, is the
big manufacturing and industrial centre. Industrially it bears a
greater
resemblance than any other part of the country to the highly industrialized
portions of England and Scotland. It is dominated by the only big
capitalists in the country, who are closely allied with the British
bourgeoisie.
Economically the workers are organized in branches of English Trades
unions, and politically the vast majority adheres to the Unionist
Party, the party of extreme opposition to Sinn Féin and any
form of Irish nationalism. One of the main factors, though steadily
declining
of late years, is its religious antagonism to the rest of the country.
In many respects the problems of the Communists are here much easier,
it being possible to rally the proletariat to their banner on the
straight issue of the capitalist state versus the proletarian state.
The lack
of any nationalist republican feeling on the part of the majority
of the proletariat renders them hostile to the establishment of an
Irish
bourgeois republic. With the exception of the anti-Nationalist feeling,
which is partly the outcome of religious bigotry, Ulster presents
a problem similar to that presented by any large industrial centre,
and
for this reason may become one of the chief centres of the proletarian
struggle against an Irish bourgeois state.
MacAlpine: I would like to
draw the attention of the Congress to the 12th Thesis:
'The centuries of oppression of the colonial population and of the
weaker nationalities by the imperialist powers has awoken not only
hostility in the labouring masses of the oppressed countries but
also distrust of their oppressors in general, including the proletariat
of those nations.'
As an example of this one can quote the attitude towards the English
proletariat of the working masses of Ireland, who often make no distinction
between the ruling class of England and the English workers. This
attitude on the part of the Irish workers also explains the fact
that the English
labour movement has up to now failed to understand the problems raised
by Ireland.
Most of the Polish revolutionaries I have talked to about current
conditions in Ireland are amazed by the similarity with conditions
in Poland in
1905. The similarity is striking, and while the revolutionary times
are favourable to us we cannot afford to ignore the possibility,
that Ireland's national claims can be exploited by the English bourgeoisie
during a social crisis. The attitude of the British revolutionary
movement
towards Ireland has up to now neither been distinguished by tolerance
nor has it adopted the attitude of the social democrats, who support
the demands of the Irish nationalists in words. The fact that Ireland
is an important weapon against British imperialism and that on the
other hand it can be turned into a dangerous tool against the social
revolution seems to have been forgot-ten. It seems that the shop
stewards' movement is the first to give full recognition to the importance
of
the Irish question and its relationship to the British revolutionary
movement. The discussions that took place at its Conference in London
at the beginning of the year, and its resolutions, aroused the interest
of Irish workers in this movement and contributed to creating better
relations between the proletariat of the two countries.
It is extremely important that the British communists actively support
Ireland, that they agitate among the British troops in Ireland and
that they prevent troops and munitions from being shipped to Ireland.
It is interesting to note that the result of the activity of the
British labour movement on this question was the withdrawal of the
Irish railwaymen
from the National Union of Railwaymen, and that in the last few months
the engineering workers in the southern part of Ireland have left
the Amalgamated Engineering Union.
Nevertheless, no direct links can be permitted between the English
communists and the Irish nationalist movement except through the
mediation of the Irish communists or after consultation with them.
Equally important
is the condition that, while the English communists support the
national struggle, they nevertheless distinguish strictly between
the national
and the communist revolution. They must point out that their attitude
towards Ireland is no bourgeois humanitarian reaction to oppression
but the result of common class interests between the proletariat
and the peasantry of the two countries.
Hermann Gorter recently said that the attitude of the English workers
towards Ireland is the barometer of revolutionary socialist feeling
in Great Britain, and we could add that the attitude of the British
communists towards Ireland is the measure of the clarity of the
communist mode of thought in Britain. In relation to the claim made
in the
Commission that English workers would regard support for the revolutionary
struggle
of the colonies against British imperialism as treason, it must
be said that the faster English workers learn to commit such treason
against the bourgeois state the better it will be for the revolutionary
movement.
Such support is very necessary, even if it is only limited to the
education of the English working masses.
I protest violently against our Italian Comrade Graziadei's proposal
to put 'show active interest' in place of 'give support' in number
11 of the Theses. That is a Wilsonian phrase and meaningless, like
all that gentleman's phrases. It is an underhand way of abolishing
this point completely, and is reminiscent of the methods applied
by the Second International towards the smaller nationalities.
I wanted to touch upon various other points, but since I have very
little time available I will only mention them briefly. The position
in Ulster or at least in the northern part of that province is different
from that in the other parts of Ireland. In many respects it offers
the communists a less complicated problem than is the case in the
other parts of Ireland.
The majority of the inhabitants of this part of Ireland consists
of anti-nationalists and of opponents of the other part of Ireland.
Even
if at first glance this makes the situation more complicated, the
necessity of class struggle is thus clearer here. Political oppression
is not
con-fused with economic oppression by the workers. The circumstance
that Ulster is the industrial centre of Ireland and that it thinks
itself to be an equal component of the United Kingdom means that
it is on an equal footing with the great industrial centres of England.
I would gladly also speak about the question of the co-operative
which is developing to be an important part of Irish economic life,
but I
cannot do so because of lack of time. The growth of co-operatives
in the countryside is neutralizing that ideology of private property,
which creates so many problems for communists, especially when it
is
present among the peasantry. The co-operatives are developing the
idea of a whole range of production on a communist basis and are
combatting
the land hunger of the rural labourers and the semi-proletarians.
We support the Theses including the additions proposed by Comrade
Roy.
Historical Note
Roddy Connolly and Eamonn MacAlpine (an Irish-American and friend of
Larkin) were the two official Irish delegates. Their visit to Russia
was financed by Jack White of Citizens' Army fame.
What is bizarre in the political analysis of both delegates (and not
just from an historic perspective) is the assertions that revolution
would be easier in what was to become the north of Ireland because the
Unionist workers there weren't imbued with nationalism.
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