Fourth
International Theses on Ireland
1944
Vested
Interests and the Border
Britain, far from deriving super-profits out of her occupation of the
six North-Eastern counties of Ireland, suffers a considerable financial
loss; for, while it is true that there are British businesmen with
Interests In Ulster, it is also certain that these interests would
be completely compensated, and a residue retained, if the British exchequer
were to withdraw its subsidies towards the upkeep of the swollen Orange
bureaucracy and the maintenance of social services in Ulster at the
British level. Even in wartime Ulster is a depressed area. Despite
the 40,000 skilled workers driven to find work in British war Industries
there are still 25,000 officially unemployed out of a total population
of a million and a quarter. Peacetime unemployment is considerably
higher than in any other part of the United Kingdom. Several million
pounds sterling are mulcted annually from the English taxpayer for
the upkeep of the Orange puppet statelet.
The
fact is, however, that British overhead expenses in Ulster fall into
precisely the same category
as do grants to the armed forces, or the police – even when these
expenses take the form not of direct outlays on behalf of the colossal
Ulster police force, and other sections of the state, but of maintenance
of social services and the provision of orders to Ulster Industry during
the ‘normal’ depression periods. Britain maintains its
garrison in Ulster, not primarily as a means of coercing the Irish
people, but to counteract the possibility of a rival imperialism establishing
a military bridgehead in the British isles. The occupation engenders
sentiments of revolt, however, and necessitates the preservation of ‘order’,
i.e., the coercion of the nationalist population...
The Orange bosses and bureaucrats, for their part, need to have their
fingers directly dipped in England’s economic pie. That is why
they are given representation in the Westminster Parliament. At a time
when great monopolies largely derive their super-profits by a barely
-concealed plundering of the Exchequer, and when worthwhile orders
come only to those directly in the swim it, is a life and death question
for Ulster capitalists to maintain a direct connection with the British
state. That is why all De Valera’s promises of virtual autonomy
for the North within a united Ireland, if only Stormont would agree
to sever its direct connection with Britain, have gone unheeded. Without
State representation at Westminster their industries would die, for
out of sight is out of mind. If Britain sacrificed them in a deal with
De Valera they would look for a new imperialist paymaster. Orange 'loyalty'
has its world market price.
Éire and the Border
As her neutrality in the war underscores. Éire is de facto a
sovereign Irish Republic, notwithstanding the slim pretence of British
Dominion status kept up by Westminster. British Liberalism bought out
the absentee landlord class (with the Irish peasants' own money to
be sure!) to stave off a revolutionary seizure of the land. The Easter
Week rising and the Anglo-Irish war brought an end to the foreign occupation
of the South. Under the De Valera regime fiscal autonomy has enabled
a host of petty manufacturing industries to struggle into being. Saddled
with exorbitant interest rates on capital borrowed from British investors,
and dependent on British monopolies for all primary materials, costs
have been excessively high; and the dwindling, impoverished population
cannot provide a market sufficient to absorb at a profitable level
the 'output of labour-saving machinery in use elsewhere. Already the
pathetic ‘industrialization' period, begun only a few years ago,
is at a close.
A chronic unfavourable balance of trade, rapidly dwindling foreign
assets, a falling birthrate, mass unemployment and wholesale immigration
to England revealed that the incurable maladies of world capitalist
economy were eating at the vitals of the new sovereign statelet of Éire.
The Second World War has only accentuated this disintegration. Today
there are a hundred thousand unemployed within the 26 counties of Éire;
while scores of thousands of others have been forced by unemployment
into British war industries or the British armed forces. The export
of men, sending home part of the proceeds of their earnings, has come
to rival the agricultural export industry in importance.
Irish bourgeois nationalism had already exhausted its mission as
a vehicle for the development of the productive forces before any
real
development took place. International socialism alone can ensure
a fresh upswing in production for Ireland; and it is precisely for
this
reason that the one uncompleted task of the bourgeois revolution,
national unification, can only be solved by the proletarian revolution.
The
inclusion of the six Ulster counties within the framework of the
national state would only hasten the decline of the already stagnant
heavy industries
in the North without furthering the development of Southern industry
to any appreciable degree. National unification under the capitalist
system, by plunging the hostile Protestant proletariat of the northern
industries into permanent unemployment, would either lead straight
to the victory of the social revolution or to fascism. There could
be no middle way...
At times in the recent past the nationalist fervour of the common
people of Ireland must have seemed dim, or dead, not only to the
casual observer
but to the workers themselves. But it only lay dormant, ready to
blaze into life again. For the famous patriotism of the Irish people
is something
more than a traditional hangover, or a state of mind induced by bourgeois
propaganda. It is an emotion of revolt, engendered by centuries of
national degradation, kept alive by the knowledge that yesterday's
powerful imperialist oppressor still occupies part of the national
territory and may yet lay a claim to the South of Ireland.
When Tod Williams was hanged by the Stormont regime last year, flags
were flown at half mast throughout Éire, the shops of the main
Dublin thoroughfares closed as a mark of respect and protest rallies,
organised
by the Reprieve Committee, were held throughout the country. The
threat of conscription in Ulster in 1941 created a crisis in Éire
overnight and a wave of anti-British sentiment swept over the Southern
workers.
The workers’ patriotism is their pride in their age-old fight
against imperialism. This is an ennobling sentiment, notwithstanding
the poisonous bourgeois chauvinism mixed into it by the capitalist
politicians and their reformist and Stalinist hangers-on who at all
times seek to manipulate the freedom-loving aspirations of the workers
for their own reactionary ends.
The rich ranchers and rentiers are pro-British. The small farmers
and the basic section of the bourgeoisie which is interested in production
and trade for the domestic market look to England with strong forebodings.
Britain is still a bourgeois democracy and it is not so easy just
yet
to get down to seizing the Éire ports; for, besides the huge
numbers of Irish in British industries and the army, the English workers
in uniform would not go willingly into an aggression against the ‘almost
English' people of Éire.
Catholic
Church’s Mass Basis
If Ireland has hitherto proved to be the most impregnable of all
the Vatican’s citadels, this is not due to accident. During centuries
of national degradation the social classes were mixed into a common
Catholic cement by the British, who persecuted the native Irish ostensibly
on account of their Catholicism... Sentiment against the foreign imperialists
was always uppermost and the masses encased themselves in the rituals
and doctrines of the mother Church as in a suit of armour in lieu of
more material means of defence. Catholic fanaticism the more easily
became synonymous with the spirit of outraged nationality because,
unlike in the other countries, the Irish priesthood never directly
functioned as an exploiter.
For 700 years Ireland was a colony. Against this, for barely two
decades an uncertain independence has lasted for the South; and,
during this
time, the fledgling Éire statelet has been sedulously inculcating
a psychology of national exclusiveness among the masses by fostering
all those ideological distinctions and cultural pursuits which set
the Irish apart from the neighbouring English nationality. It is well
to remember in this connection that in its long-drawn-out trade war
with Britain the Fianna Fáil Government received the backing
not only of the bourgeois and peasant interests involved, but also
of the majority of the workers. So long as imperialism remains intact
in the North and a serious threat to the South, and until the workers
find a revolutionary socialist leadership, we will have to reckon with
the power and prestige of the priesthood...
On the surface the Catholic church looks unassailable. Yet its
coming eclipse can be discerned precisely where the appearance
of strength
seems greatest. A picture of Christ on the Cross pinned to a Falls
Road window is a demonstration against the imperialist status quo,
but the Church cannot lead the change. The republican workers will
throw away their icons as soon as the ideals of socialist internationalism
begin to take shape among them.
To expose the treacherous role of the allegedly neutral Christian
ideology is an essential part of the struggle to develop a revolutionary
consciousness
among the workers...
The cowardly Éire Labour Party, on the other hand, has consistently
pursued a shameful policy of appeasement towards the Catholic Church,
even going so far as to claim that its programme is in conformity with
the Pope’s Charter of Labour.
The Church will be a colossal weight on the side of counter-revolution.
It is one of the main propaganda tasks of our movement to explain
this to the workers. Every insolent interference with the affairs
of the
labour movement must be combated. In particular the role of the
Vatican in the present European situation must be mercilessly
exposed. It
would be treason to socialism to keep silent on grounds of expediency.
In every important strike the bourgeois press is forced to drop
its spurious neutrality. So likewise, in the hundred-and-one
minor sorties
leading up to the decisive revolutionary struggle, hunger marches,
strikes, during every spate of which the bourgeoisie and its
henchmen will take panic and cry ‘wolf', the role of the
clergy will become more and more obvious...
It is reformism, holding out no hope of escape from the drab
routine of poverty, that turns the backward masses over to conservatism
and clericalism and in a crisis makes them storm troopers of
the
reaction.
Notwithstanding its tirades against the Stalinist bureaucracy,
to which it attributes the original sin of the Bolshevik Revolution,
it is precisely
thanks to the opportunist politics of Stalin that the Papacy
is still
a world power despite its notorious role in Spain and elsewhere.
However, the era of Stalinism and reformism is drawing to a close.
The great class struggles impending throughout the world will
find an echo in the remotest corners of rural Ireland. Certainly
reactionary
clericalism will still retain a formidable following but the
majority will be won for the revolution.
The Nationalist Workers
At present the living standards of even the Southern workers
depend in the last resort upon the British Empire. It is the
Colonial
Empire which bolsters up profits, salaries and wages in England,
thus permitting
the absorption at a relatively high price level of Éire’s
agricultural export, on which the remainder of the economic structure
rests. Freedom of access to the British market and state independence
especially in regard to fiscal policy are the twin needs of the Éire
bourgeoisie and, so long as they cannot surmount capitalism, also of
the workers. The Northern nationalist workers, on the other handy are
as economically dependent upon direct incorporation into the United
Kingdom as are the Protestant workers. In the days of sufficient peasant
tillage the Catholic masses had an economic stake in fighting for an
Ireland freed from the British grip on the land. Today, however, when
all trades and occupations draw their life blood from the heavy industries
which only survive by virtue of Ulster's political unity with Britain,
a bourgeois united Ireland could only bring pauperisation to its most
ardent partisans – the Northern nationalist workers.
The Tory regime at Stormont is the oldest in Europe – preceding
Mussolini’s assumption of power it has outlasted the Roman
Duce. The main props of its rule are: (a) its mass following
amongst the Protestants based on Britain's financial bribes and
the spectre
of republicanism; (b) constituency gerrymandering; (c) the Civil
Authority (Special Powers) Acts which give almost unlimited power
to the colossal army of the police.
Ireland was partitioned by the British in such a way as to assure
the Tory Unionist Party of a fool-proof majority over its nationalist
opponents.
Stormont in its turn gerrymandered the six county, electoral
seats so effectively that the nationalist voters can only obtain
a mere
fraction of the representation to which their numbers entitle
them. In consequence
abstention from the vote has become a tradition in many Republican
areas, so much so that a Unionist can get into Stormont by mustering
the merest handful of Protestant votes.
Only a few of the far-reaching powers vested in the Civil Authority
can be listed here:
(a) By police proclamation publications may be banned, meetings
and demonstrations forbidden and a state of curfew imposed.
(b) The police hold the right to enter and search premises without
a warrant and to confiscate or destroy property.
(c) Arrest and interment may be ordered on suspicion.,
(d) Habeas corpus is suspended and internees and their relatives
may be prevented from seeing or communicating with one another.
(e) One of the most sinister clauses relates to the right of
the Civil Authority to withhold the right of inquest.
A jailed or interned Republican is automatically disqualified
from obtaining his family allowances under the Unemployment Insurance
Acts on the grounds that he is not available for work. A former
political prisoner or Republican suspect finds it extremely difficult
to keep
employment owing to the police practice of warning employers
against
them. An isolated incident may kindle with unexpected suddenness
into
a crisis during the course of which hundreds of suspects are
rounded up and scores of families deprived of a breadwinner,
are menaced
by the spectres of hunger and debt. This explains why the barometer
of
parliamentary contests registers such startling overnight changes.
At the last Labour Party Conference it was resolved that the
Party should take the initiative in inaugurating a Northern Ireland
Council
for Civil Liberties. This is a welcome development from the days
of Midgley. The Trotskyist movement has conducted a long campaign
for
the setting up of such a council to combat the injustices meted
out under the Special Powers Acts. Militants in the labour Party,
and
the workers generally, must see to it that this decision is really
implemented
by the building of a genuine Civil Liberties Council supported
by and representative of every section of the labour movement.
Militants
in
the Éire labour movement must demand similar measures.
By bringing into the clear light of day the full, unimpeachable
facts on every case of arbitrary search, arrest and intimidation;
by demanding
full facilities for inquiry into every case of alleged police
intimidation and brutality; by spreading information regarding
the unsanitary
overcrowded conditions under which political prisoners live;
by opposing the farce
of the police-influenced Internees’ Appeals Tribunal; and, in
short, by making a public display of samples of the British ‘democracy’ being
meted out to hundreds of Ulster citizens, a Civil Liberties Council
has a revolutionary role to perform. It can hasten the downfall
of the regime. It can set on fire the conscience of the whole
community,
shaming and shocking even the Protestant petty bourgeoisie into
protest.
The fight for civil liberties is an integral and immensely important
aspect of the class struggle. It is instructive, therefore, to
perceive from this angle how low the Stalinist renegades have
sunk in their
clownish eagerness to act as sycophants to Tory Unionism. Stalinist
policy, as is well known, is to give undivided attention to ‘democracy’s’ battle
against Hitler. However, the tyranny endured by the Ulster minority
is too near at hand and affects too large a number of workers to be
passed over in silence. At their recent Congress, therefore, the Stalinists
passed a resolution ‘demanding’ an end to (religious) sectarian
discrimination in the hiring of labour and ‘insisting'
on various other laudable changes in the direction of greater
justice for the
Catholic workers. However, this was a resolution for the record
only. Civil liberties cannot be wrested from the vested interests
without
the maximum effort of a united proletariat, but complete and
unconditional independence from the Orange capitalist state is
the prerequisite for
proletarian unity. The Stalinists, however, are the most steadfast
and unswerving. supporters of the Orange Tory Cabinet.
Actually, the Stalinist party is completely opposed to the extension
of civil liberties. Its recipe for ending discrimination against
the Catholic workers clearly amounts to this: "Put the Protestant
workers in the same boat: abolish civil liberties for them also!" This
can clearly be seen from the March 13th, 1943 issue of their paper
'Unity’. In the front page editorial, while whole-heartedly professing
agreement on the need for special powers, they permitted themselves
to indulge in a light criticism of the sectarian character of the Civil
Authority (Special Powers) Acts, and – without forthrightly demanding
the abolition of these acts – suggested that the British Emergency
Powers Act would be a 'fairer’ weapon in the hands of the
government. This is equivalent to a demand to abolish hanging
in favour of electrocution.
The Communist Party of Ireland
Protestant-Republican working class unity can be forged only
on the anvil of the class war. National independence will be
won either
as a by-product of the Irish and British revolutionary struggles
or not
at- all. Finally, only the victory of socialism on a world scale
will end national oppression forever. The Trotskyist movement
alone fights
under the banner of international socialism and therefore, alone
of all parties and tendencies represents the true national interests
of
the Irish people. It alone is implacable in its hostility alike
to
imperialism and to all forms of capitalist rule; and alone is
the enemy of every manifestation of bourgeois ideology within
the ranks of the working class. On the other hand, the Communist
Party of
Ireland – Irish,
as it is Communist in name only – confuses, disorients
and increases the disunity of the working class. The Stalinist
Party is never permitted
to absolve itself from a sense of responsibility towards the
capitalist system. This follows from its role as a satellite
of the Kremlin bureaucracy.
The Kremlin bureaucracy is fully aware that the social stability
of the capitalist countries is a prerequisite for its own plunderous
role
over the Soviet working masses. World revolution constitutes
an even greater threat to its vested interests than world imperialism;
for
while it is possible to hope that the antagonisms dividing the
great powers will always drive one of the camps of imperialist
predators
into seeking an understanding with the Kremlin no hope whatever
can be entertained of the revolutionaries making their peace
with
bureaucratic
tyranny. A revolution in any one of the advanced countries would
act as an inspiration and a signal to the Soviet masses to break
asunder
the chains of Stalinism. Thus, under the totalitarian Stalinist
regime, the Soviet Union is as deeply involved as any of the
capitalist countries
in the jugglery of power politics.
It follows, therefore, that either the Stalin regime will be
in the camp of British imperialism or working in collaboration
with
its
(Britain’s)
imperialist enemies; and that the Communist Party of Ireland will be
committed either to supporting the British ruling class or to demagogically
opposing them. However, opposition to British imperialism does not
mean for the Stalinist Party support for an independent proletarian
struggle for national and social freedom. It simply means that an alliance
with the Orange dictatorship on the essentials of the Tory programme,
is replaced by an attempted alliance with the bourgeois nationalist
organisations their programme. One form of ‘national united
front' takes the place of another. That is all.
The social set-up in Northern Ireland undoubtedly offers the
Stalinists admirable scope for the creation on paper of national
fronts to
suit all purposes. In reality of course either form of the so-called
national
front is of an equally fictitious nature. This is not to imply
that the fiction is without its effects; but these are wholly
on the side
of sectarian disunity. What happens is this: each fresh turnabout
of the Stalinists not only leaves the caste bigotry of the workers
unchanged,
but actually leads to a strengthening of the bonds of ideology
uniting them to the bourgeois politicians belonging to their
own particular
side of the community. For instance, during the period of the
Stalin-Hitler pact the Communist Party's flirtation with the
nationalist organisations
had the double consequence of sustaining the worst illusions
of the Republican proletariat and, at the same time, hopelessly
alienating
the Protestant workers. Among the Protestants the Stalinist Party
has registered formidable gains over the past two years, Membership
has
probably increased seven or eight-fold. These new recruits consist
mainly of worker and petty-bourgeois elements completely new
to politics;
drawn towards the ‘left’ out of admiration for the
Red Army but, most of them, unemancipated from the old jingoistic
mentality.
On the other hand the strike breaking role of the Stalinist Party
has alienated most of the experienced industrial militants among
the Protestants.
In Éire, following upon Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet
Union, the Communist Party, afraid to proclaim openly the new policy
foisted upon it by the Kremlin – the ending of Éire neutrality – quietly
dissolved itself into the Labour Party. Hitherto, despite its
imposing record of treachery, Stalinism has always brazenly tried
to justify
itself in the eyes of the workers. In this single episode is
contained the whole preceding twenty years of Stalinist degeneration;
its political
bankruptcy and its moral spinelessness. The greatness of Bolshevism
consisted not merely in its capacity to withstand the material
blows of reaction but even more to swim against the current of
popular feeling.
Stalinism gives a few short grunts and then sinks to the bottom.
Nationalism and Socialism
The fundamental tasks of nationalism awaiting the solution of
the approaching revolution are: (1) the healing of the sectarian
breach;
(2) the winning
of national independence from British imperialism; and (3) the
ending of partition. These form an inseparable trinity. None
are realisable
as isolated aims in themselves, or possible of attainment except
by means of the socialist revolution. Conversely, the socialist
movement can turn its back on the problems of nationalism only
at the price
of prostration before capitalism; for a proletariat divided within
itself cannot seize power. National tasks and social tasks are
thus inextricably woven together.
The national question IS a social question and, moreover, one
of the largest magnitude. Hitherto, the prevailing tendency has
been
to regard
the intrusion of Orange and Nationalist banners into the arena
of the class struggle as a complication of an exclusively detrimental
nature
to the labour movement; as a plague of ideologies, in fact. Most
certainly this judgment holds true under all circumstances so
far
as Orangeism
is concerned. On the other hand, the unsolved national question – which
is not at all a religious sectarian issue from the standpoint of the
nationalist workers – is not necessarily a brake upon the
class struggle but, under favourable circumstances, can act as
a dynamo upon
it, causing violent accelerations of tempo.
Finally, the best Irish nationalists will always be Trotskyists;
for Trotskyism’s conceptions of international solidarity
and socialist co-operation alone correspond to the national needs
of the Irish people.
An isolated proletarian dictatorship, even assuming it were not
militarily overthrown, could not in the long run prevent a resurgence
of sectarian
disunity; for ideology cannot take the place of bread indefinitely.
With the prolongation of hunger and poverty the wheels of the
revolution would begin to revolve backwards. It is only within
a system of world
socialist economy that the unity of the Irish people will become
indestructible for all time.
Labor and the Imperial State
Within limits the class struggle in Northern Ireland has its own internal
rhythm of development, which may lag behind or race ahead of the British.
However, in the last analysis, the balance of political power existing
between the workers and capitalists of Britain exercises a decisive
influence in determining the nature of the regime.
A fascist dictatorship in England would inevitably produce its Ulster
equivalent . . . Similarly, a triumphant socialist revolution in Britain
would be followed in quick succession – if not automatically – by the
assumption of state power by the Irish proletariat.
A reformist Labor Government at Stormont would be unable to maintain
itself for long in the face of an entrenched Tory regirne at Westminster;
for if, despite its minority position in Parliament, the Tory Party
in past years proved sufficiently powerful in the work of sabotage,
and resourceful enough in the invention of calumnies, to bring about
the untimely downfall of two MacDonald Labor regimes; and if at a
later stage, operating through the machinery of the Federation of British
Industries, they conspired to close the New Zealand Government's
channels of trade-notwithstanding New Zealand's relative independence
of Britain as compared to Ulster, it may be accepted without discussion
that the British Tory Government would move into action against a Stormont
Labor regime with ruthlessness, effrontery and ruinous effect.
The choice confronting the unfortunate labor ministers would be reduced
to one of running a risk of provoking a state overturn by the workers
should they postpone the introduction of radical social changes or,
alternatively, of being crushed in the vise of an economic boycott
imposed by the Imperial State should they prove themselves lax in the
defense of property rights and the maintenance of order. Caught in
the midst of a withering cross-fire from three directions – from the
workers, the Republicans and the Imperialists – the Labor regime would
inevitably succumb to mortal wounds. However, during its brief tenure
of office
the commands of the imperial dispenser of gold and food would
be hearkened to like the voice of God. The labor reformists could not
implement to the full the dictates of their imperialist overlords
without, in doing so, eternally disgracing themselves in the eyes of
the nationalist population and the working class in general. They would
equivocate and temporize, squirming round in a vicious circle of half
measures. Confronted with the imperative necessity of taking sides
on an issue, certainly the labor lackeys would always choose the bourgeois
state. But they would take sides weakly. Therefore, imperialism would
not be tempted gratefully to forbear from wrecking their regime; for
it would feel the pressing need of restoring a strong, authoritarian
government in Ulster. British 'good-will' is not a free commodity
on the market. Its price to Ulster is the maintenance of sufficient
internal calm to ensure a peaceful occupation . . .
Historical Note
The Revolutionary Socialist Party, Irish section of the Fourth International
was officially recognised on 20 July 1944 and this document was accepted
by the European Secretariat of the International.
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