Workers Vanguard No. 889
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30 March 2007
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TROTSKY
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LENIN
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For Class-Struggle Defense!
(Quote of the Week)
In advancing a class-struggle strategy in the fight to free
death row political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal, we follow in the tradition of the
early International Labor Defense (ILD) led by James P. Cannon, a founder of the
Communist Party and later of American Trotskyism. In an article written just
days before the execution of anarchist workers Sacco and Vanzetti, the ILD
emphasized the need to combat illusions sown by liberals in the “justice” of the
capitalist frame-up system. Today, as Mumia’s fight enters a new critical stage
on the legal front, it is all the more urgent that his supporters around the
world mobilize in mass protest centered on the power of the labor
movement.
In the many years of struggle for the liberation of Sacco and
Vanzetti, tens of thousands of workers have learned this: that there is one
power that is irresistible, one upon which they can rely for base, militancy and
strength—the organized might of the working masses.
They have learned that the liberals, with their counsels for
moderation and exclusive reliance upon the essentially just nature of the courts
and the machinery of the law, with their faith in the efficacy of wire-pulling,
interviews, have accomplished nothing but the weakening of the movement
for Sacco and Vanzetti. The liberals, inside and outside the labor
movement, have only spread illusions in the ranks of the workers, and kept them
acquiescent and in leash until the last moment when the executioners reach out
to turn the electric switch of death….
We do not ask for mercy for Sacco and Vanzetti from the corrupt
reactionaries of Massachusetts. We call upon the workers to exert their
invincible power to obtain their release so that they can rejoin actively the
ranks from which they were seized.
—“‘Friends’ of Sacco and Vanzetti,” Labor Defender,
September 1927
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Spartacist English edition No. 60
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Autumn 2007
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A Review
Bryan Palmer’s James P. Cannon and the Origins
of the American Revolutionary Left, 1890–1928
of the American Revolutionary Left, 1890–1928
A Biography of James P. Cannon
The publication of a major biography of James P. Cannon, a founding
American Communist and the foremost leader of American Trotskyism for its first
40-plus years, is a significant event for Marxist revolutionaries. Cannon was
the finest communist leader yet produced in the United States. The International
Communist League (Fourth Internationalist)—which has its origins in the
Revolutionary Tendency, a faction expelled from Cannon’s Socialist Workers Party
(SWP) in 1963-64—claims Cannon as a central revolutionary forebear. At his death
in 1974, Cannon was the National Chairman emeritus of the SWP, which had de
facto abandoned the Trotskyist program more than ten years earlier. But in his
prime Cannon had the evident capacity to lead the proletarian revolution in
America to victory.
James P. Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary
Left, 1890-1928 by Bryan Palmer, a well-known social historian who is
currently a professor at Canada’s Trent University, is quite good—far better
than one would expect from a sympathetic, but nonetheless academic, source. The
Prometheus Research Library, library and archive of the Central Committee of the
Spartacist League/U.S., section of the ICL, was among the many institutions and
individuals that provided Palmer with assistance in preparing this volume, as he
notes in the book’s “Acknowledgements.”
Palmer’s 542-page volume, which covers Cannon’s early years through
his 1928 expulsion from the Communist Party, is a substantial addition to the
existing published material on Cannon’s political evolution and his leadership
role in the first decade of American Communism, when it attracted the best
American working-class fighters and before it was homogenized into a rigid,
non-revolutionary Stalinist dogmatism. The Communist Party had been formed with
the intent of following the model of Russia’s Bolsheviks, who led the world’s
first successful workers revolution, the October Revolution of 1917. Those who
flocked to the Bolshevik cause in the U.S. included Cannon, a former member of
the Socialist Party (SP) and the syndicalist Industrial Workers of the World
(IWW).
The study of this period of Cannon’s history as a communist is
critical for revolutionaries not only in the U.S. but internationally. As Cannon
noted:
“Out of the Communist Party in the United States came the nucleus
of the Fourth International in this country. Therefore, we should say that the
early period of the Communist movement in this country belongs to us; that we
are tied to it by indissoluble bonds; that there is an uninterrupted continuity
from the early days of the Communist movement, its brave struggles against
persecution, its sacrifices, mistakes, faction fights and degeneration to the
eventual resurgence of the movement under the banner of Trotskyism.”
—Cannon, The History of American Trotskyism (1944)
And Cannon stayed the course, becoming a leader of
the Fourth International when it was founded in 1938. For various historical
reasons, the American Trotskyists became a mainstay of the Fourth International.
They had the advantage of operating in conditions of relative stability, unlike
a number of other Opposition groups, which were crushed by state repression
before or during World War II. Moreover, Cannon, unlike other prominent figures
in Trotsky’s International Left Opposition (ILO), brought with him a factional
following that had worked together for years in the Communist Party.
Palmer’s solidly researched volume helps round out the picture
drawn in the late Theodore Draper’s essential two-volume history of the early
American Communist movement, The Roots of American Communism (New York:
Viking Press, 1957) and American Communism and Soviet Russia (New York:
Viking Press, 1960). One of the many ex-Communists who became anti-Communists,
Draper nonetheless maintained a feel for the concerns and struggles of Communist
cadre. He was aided in his research by Cannon, many of whose substantial letters
to Draper were subsequently selected for publication as The First Ten Years
of American Communism (1962). These letters fleshed out Cannon’s earlier
recollections of the period in the first chapters of The History of American
Trotskyism.
Palmer reports that Draper consciously downplayed Cannon’s
contributions to his second volume. Nonetheless, Draper paid tribute to Cannon,
writing a preface to First Ten Years. Explaining why Cannon’s memory of
events in the 1920s was significantly better than that of his contemporaries,
Draper concluded, “Unlike other communist leaders of his generation, Jim Cannon
wanted to remember. This portion of his life still lives for him
because he has not killed it within himself.”
Palmer’s biography supplements Cannon’s own published speeches and
writings from the period under study, including those compiled in Notebook of
an Agitator (1958) and the more internally oriented party material published
in James P. Cannon and the Early Years of American Communism, Selected
Writings and Speeches, 1920-1928 (1992). The latter volume was published by
the Prometheus Research Library, which acquired a substantial collection of
Cannon material from the 1920s in preparing the book.
The PRL introduction to James P. Cannon and the Early Years of
American Communism noted that the archives of the Communist International
(CI) in Moscow were likely to contain additional documents by Cannon from the
1920s. Shortly after the capitalist counterrevolution that destroyed the Soviet
Union in 1991-92, PRL researchers were given access to the archives and were
able to make copies of previously unavailable papers by and about Cannon from
the archives of the Comintern, the American party, the Red International of
Labor Unions (RILU)—also known as the Profintern—and the International Red Aid.
Palmer received permission from the Russian State Archive of Socio-Political
History (RGASPI) to use the PRL’s copies of their material in researching his
book. Palmer’s frequent references to Communist Party Political Committee
minutes contrast favorably to the biographies of William Z. Foster by Edward P.
Johanningsmeier (Forging American Communism, the Life of William Z.
Foster [Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994]) and James R. Barrett
(William Z. Foster and the Tragedy of American Radicalism [Chicago:
University of Illinois Press, 1999]). Johanningsmeier and Barrett write as if
the factional battles of the period were incidental to the party’s trade-union
work, with which they are overwhelmingly concerned.
Palmer was also able to use the James P. Cannon Papers, which were
deposited by the SWP at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, as well as
substantial documentary material on early American Communism from other
libraries. Palmer collected an impressive amount of material documenting
Cannon’s little-known early years and his activities in the IWW. His portrayal
of Cannon’s leadership of the International Labor Defense, including the
years-long campaign in defense of anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti until their
execution in 1927, is second to none. Palmer paints a picture of James P. Cannon
that is not fundamentally new, but it is significantly enhanced.
An “Age of Innocence”?
We take exception, however, to Palmer’s conclusion that Cannon
represented the “revolutionary Left in its age of innocence up to 1928,” free of
the “worldly-wise knowledges that have calloused the politics of our time,
undermining belief in the possibility of thoroughgoing transformation,
dismissing the broad capacity of working-class people to effect material change,
containing the expansiveness of radicalism in various liberal accommodations to
‘the art of the possible’.” Palmer attributes this supposed loss of innocence to
the corrupting and corrosive effects of Stalinism.
Corruption and rejection of revolutionary purpose in the American
workers movement preceded the Russian Revolution and its Stalinist
degeneration; the Communist movement was founded in rebellion against the
reformist Socialists and trade-union bureaucrats who insisted on the politics of
the “possible.” The rise of American imperialism and its huge superprofits had
led to the development of a labor aristocracy that gave rise to a particularly
venal trade-union bureaucracy at the head of the American Federation of Labor
(AFL). American Marxist Daniel De Leon popularized the description of the AFL
tops as “labor lieutenants of the capitalist class,” a term later picked up by
Lenin. Revulsion at the open racism and reformist municipal “sewer socialism” of
Victor Berger and his ilk in the heterogeneous Socialist Party propelled Cannon
out of its ranks and into the IWW in 1911, on the road that would eventually
lead him to communism.
The idea of Cannon as an innocent stands in contrast to the
description written by West Indian poet Claude McKay of Cannon’s demeanor in
fighting for the liquidation of the underground Communist Party in favor of the
legal Workers Party at the Fourth Congress of the Communist International in
1922. McKay wrote that Cannon “had all the magnetism, the shrewdness, the punch,
the bag of tricks of the typical American politician, but here he used them in a
radical way” (A Long Way From Home [New York: Arno Press and the
New York Times, 1969]).
Cannon was an authentic American communist leader. As noted in the
PRL introduction to Early Years of American Communism, “If Cannon,
feeling at a dead end in the internal factional wars, was able to make the leap
in 1928 to Trotsky’s programmatic and international understanding of Stalinism,
it was in large part because he had tried, in the preceding
period, to chart a path for the party based on revolutionary communism.” Only
with the help of Trotsky’s seminal 1928 Critique of the draft program of the
Comintern (subsequently published in The Third International After Lenin)
did Cannon extricate himself from the Stalinizing party to continue the struggle
that he had taken up early in his youth—the fight to lead the American working
people to socialist revolution. The Third International After Lenin was
the de facto founding document of the International Left Opposition. Cannon’s
recruitment to the ILO—along with a good part of the faction he had led—was a
tremendous validation of Trotsky’s struggle against the degeneration of the
Russian Revolution.
Draper vs. New Left Historians
Palmer astutely realized that a biography of Cannon, who had
largely been ignored by historians since Draper wrote his two volumes, would be
a way to cut through the schism that has dominated the academic study of
American Communism. This debate pits anti-Communist historians like Draper and,
more actively, Draper’s epigones such as John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr,
against New Left-derived historians like Maurice Isserman. (Klehr is the author
of a major study of the CP in the 1930s, The Heyday of American Communism
[New York: Basic Books, 1984], while Isserman’s major work in the New Left mode
is Which Side Were You On? The American Communist Party During the Second
World War [Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press, 1982].)
Klehr, Haynes and their ilk, in whose hands Draper’s thorough research has
degenerated into shallow anti-Communist muckraking, paint a picture of American
Communism as little more than a Soviet espionage network that slavishly followed
the foreign policy dictates of the Kremlin from its inception. In contrast, the
New Left historians, many of whom were influenced by parents or other mentors
who were activists in the Stalinized CP after 1928, argue that the political
line coming from Moscow played at most a secondary role in what was mainly an
indigenous movement of the American left.
Palmer’s Introduction, based on an earlier article by him
(“Rethinking the Historiography of United States Communism,” American
Communist History, Vol. 2, No. 2, December 2003), motivates his biography of
Cannon as a way to transcend the sterility of that academic debate by injecting
the question of the degeneration of the Russian Revolution, i.e., of Stalinism.
The breadth and depth with which Palmer surveys the existing works on American
Communist history—both secondary histories and firsthand memoirs—is very
impressive, as is the sheer weight of documentary material he marshals. More
casual readers will find the 155 pages of footnotes more than they can handle,
but Palmer’s detailed list of sources and comments on them will be an important
resource for historians of American Communism for some time to come.
Palmer writes from the point of view of one who is sympathetic not
to some kind of ersatz academic “Marxism,” but to the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution
itself. Such sympathy has been nonexistent among academic historians of American
Communism, as Palmer himself noted in an earlier reply to his critics:
“Almost nobody in academic circles in the year 2003 is willing to
stand the ground of the original Bolshevik tradition. The study of US Communism
is no exception to this. Recognition of the colossal and overwhelmingly positive
accomplishments of the Russian Revolution of 1917 is side-stepped…. The immense
resources and programmatic guidance of this Bolshevism, willingly given to the
cause of the only force which could sustain the gains of October, the world
revolution and its armies of proletarian internationalism, are quibbled about,
as if the early Communist International’s motivation was nothing more than
‘domination’ and ‘foreign control’.”
—Palmer, “Communist History: Seeing It Whole. A Reply to Critics,”
American Communist History, Vol. 2, No. 2, December 2003
It is unfortunate, then, that Palmer situates Cannon as a leader of
something called the “revolutionary Left,” presenting communism as part of a
continuum of “Left” organizations. Even prefaced by the word “revolutionary,”
“Left” has only an amorphous, relative political meaning (Left vs. Right), with
no class content. In current as well as historical usage, “Left” includes not
only working-class political formations, but bourgeois and petty-bourgeois
parties as well. It is thus a notion that encompasses reformist class
collaboration—the working class is seen simply as a constituent part of
all “progressive” forces.
The formation of the Socialist Party in 1901 represented a more
widespread recognition that the working class needed its own political party as
distinct from the bourgeois parties; it was formed through a merger of the
Social Democratic Party—which included a split led by Eugene Debs from the
bourgeois Populists—with Morris Hillquit’s split from Daniel De Leon’s Socialist
Labor Party. The formation of the American Communist movement represented a
giant step forward from the SP because it recognized the need for a clear
political break not just with the bourgeois parties but also with reformist
currents within the working class. Cannon wrote:
“The launching of the Communist Party in 1919 represented, not
simply a break with the old Socialist Party, but even more important a break
with the whole conception of a common party of revolutionists and opportunists.
That signified a new beginning for American socialism, far more important
historically than everything that had happened before, including the
organization of the Socialist Party in 1901. There can be no return to the
outlived and discredited experiment of the past.”
—Cannon, “Eugene V. Debs and the Socialist Movement of His Time,”
reprinted in The First Ten Years of American Communism
Palmer’s use of “revolutionary Left” reflects a failure to make a
qualitative distinction between communism and the radical-populist,
social-democratic, anarchist and syndicalist movements that were often
intertwined in the left internationally before the Bolshevik Revolution.
Palmer’s dissolution of communism—the program of the revolutionary international
working class for the overthrow of capitalism—into the amorphous “Left” is a bow
in the direction of the pervasive retrogression of political consciousness that
followed the destruction of the world’s first workers state in 1991-92. This
retrogression is evident not only in academic circles but, especially, in the
ostensibly Marxist movement itself. A prime example is Alan Wald’s review of
Palmer’s book (“The Story of James P. Cannon, A Revolutionary Life,” Against
the Current, July/August 2007), which questions the applicability in the
21st century of the program stemming from the Russian Revolution.
The Significance of the Russian Revolution
The Bolshevik Revolution, in the words of a 1939 “Speech on the
Russian Question” by Cannon, “took the question of the workers’ revolution out
of the realm of abstraction and gave it flesh and blood reality” (Cannon, The
Struggle for a Proletarian Party [1943]). It vindicated the Marxist
understanding, reasserted in Lenin’s The State and Revolution (1917),
that the bourgeois state could not be reformed to serve the interests of the
workers but had to be smashed and replaced by a workers state, the dictatorship
of the proletariat. It demonstrated, as Cannon makes clear above, that the
proletariat needed a disciplined vanguard party based on a clear revolutionary
program if it was to conquer state power. Cannon and the other co-founders of
the American Communist movement, many of whom had long histories in the American
Socialist and syndicalist movements, made a political leap—at
least in intent—when they decided that the experience of the October Revolution
was decisive. This involved not simply recognizing that the revolution in Russia
had won, but grasping that working-class revolutionaries had to apply the
lessons of that victory to the American terrain.
This was easier said than done, and the misunderstandings that ran
through the early American Communist movement—the insistence on an “underground”
party, the advocacy of “revolutionary” unions counterposed to the reformist-led
trade unions, the refusal to run candidates for bourgeois parliamentary
office—were enormous. These misconceptions were not limited to the American
party. In his seminal work written for the Second Congress of the Communist
International in 1920, addressing ultraleft tendencies in Holland, Britain,
Germany and elsewhere, Lenin stressed the singular experience that led to the
crystallization of a Bolshevik vanguard party in tsarist Russia:
“Would it not be better if the salutations addressed to the
Soviets and the Bolsheviks were more frequently accompanied by a
profound analysis of the reasons why the Bolsheviks
have been able to build up the discipline needed by the revolutionary
proletariat?…
“For about half a century—approximately from the forties to the
nineties of the last century—progressive thought in Russia, oppressed by a most
brutal and reactionary tsarism, sought eagerly for a correct revolutionary
theory, and followed with the utmost diligence and thoroughness each and every
‘last word’ in this sphere in Europe and America. Russia achieved Marxism—the
only correct revolutionary theory—through the agony she
experienced in the course of half a century of unparalleled torment and
sacrifice, of unparalleled revolutionary heroism, incredible energy, devoted
searching, study, practical trial, disappointment, verification, and comparison
with European experience. Thanks to the political emigration caused by tsarism,
revolutionary Russia, in the second half of the nineteenth century, acquired a
wealth of international links and excellent information on the forms and
theories of the world revolutionary movement, such as no other country
possessed.
“On the other hand, Bolshevism, which had arisen on this granite
foundation of theory, went through fifteen years of practical history (1903-17)
unequalled anywhere in the world in its wealth of experience. During those
fifteen years, no other country knew anything even approximating to that
revolutionary experience, that rapid and varied succession of different forms of
the movement—legal and illegal, peaceful and stormy, underground and open, local
circles and mass movements, and parliamentary and terrorist forms. In no other
country has there been concentrated, in so brief a period, such a wealth of
forms, shades, and methods of struggle of all classes of modern
society, a struggle which, owing to the backwardness of the country and the
severity of the tsarist yoke, matured with exceptional rapidity, and assimilated
most eagerly and successfully the appropriate ‘last word’ of American and
European political experience.”
—V.I. Lenin, “Left-Wing” Communism—An Infantile Disorder
(1920)
During the latter half of the 19th century, two generations of
Russian intellectuals underwent intense political ferment in search of means to
throw off the stultifying tsarist yoke. Out of this ferment the most able
gravitated to revolutionary Marxism. These intellectuals, in turn, led the
nascent proletariat of the tsarist empire in the same direction. The 1903 split
in the Russian Social Democracy between Lenin’s “hard” Bolsheviks and the “soft”
Mensheviks, originally over the narrow question of how to define party
membership, anticipated the subsequent definitive split carried through by Lenin
between Bolshevism and Menshevik labor reformism in 1912. The key importance of
a political and organizational break from reformism was only generalized by
Lenin in 1914, when—after the ignominious collapse of the Second International
into social chauvinism in the face of World War I—he called for a Third
International. The new International was founded in early 1919, 18 months after
the Bolshevik victory in Russia.
The necessity of a break with reformism was not the only lesson the
Bolsheviks had to impart. The revolutionary Russian Social Democrats (the
Bolsheviks adopted the title “Communist” only in 1918) had had to find a way to
mobilize the peasantry—the vast majority of the tsarist empire—behind the
proletariat. This was key to the Russian victory. They also had to come up with
a revolutionary proletarian approach to the national question—only some 50
percent of the population of the tsarist empire was ethnic Russian. If the
Bolsheviks had not successfully grappled with these issues, it would have
shipwrecked the Russian Revolution. The Polish Communist Party, for example, was
sterilized in the postwar period by its failure to develop a revolutionary
approach to the peasantry, and paid a price for its earlier inability to deal
with the Polish national question.
Lenin speaks of the quick succession of political conditions in
Russia that compelled the Bolsheviks to develop a variety of tactics. There were
other places in East Europe where conditions of material backwardness and severe
repression meant that Marxist-inclined workers were not offered the luxury of
parliamentary reformism. Many of the Social Democratic parties of the Balkans
also had merit (e.g., Dimitar Blagoev’s Bulgarian Narrow Socialist Party and the
Serbian Social Democrats, which were the only other parties in belligerent
countries besides the Bolsheviks to vote against war credits from the beginning
of World War I). In contrast, the relative bourgeois-democratic stability that
had prevailed before the war in the English-speaking world worked against the
possibility of revolutionaries transcending the divisions among radical
populism, anarcho-syndicalism and parliamentary socialism as the Bolsheviks
did.
Palmer understands that the overwhelming authority the Bolsheviks
enjoyed in the early Communist International stemmed from the fact that they had
much to teach, but he gives short shrift to the substance of those
lessons. He does not, for example, include any discussion of the collapse of the
Second International into social chauvinism as the war began. This is where
Palmer’s use of “revolutionary Left” does more to obscure than to illuminate the
political evolution of those who came to found American Communism, feeding into
his insistence that the 1920s was an “age of innocence.”
The Corruption Didn’t All Come from Moscow
Palmer sympathizes not simply with the October Revolution, but with
Trotsky’s fight against the Stalinist degeneration of that revolution. This
degeneration grew out of the utter devastation to which an already economically
backward Russia had been subjected as a result of World War I and the bloody
Civil War that erupted a few months after the Bolsheviks took power. The
proletariat that had made the revolution was decimated, with the better elements
being drawn into the Red Army and party and state administration. Conditions of
great material scarcity produced strong objective pressures toward
bureaucratism, which had an impact on both the party and state. These were
compounded by the isolation of the young workers state, felt especially after
the defeat of a revolutionary opportunity in Germany in 1923. Amid the profound
demoralization that swept through the Soviet proletariat, a growing bureaucratic
caste seized political power from the working class, ostentatiously rigging the
delegate elections to the January 1924 Thirteenth Conference of the Soviet party
and thus stifling the voice of the Bolshevik Opposition led by Trotsky. While an
account of this process is outside the scope of his book, Palmer correctly
points to the adoption of the dogma of “socialism in one country,” first
promulgated by Stalin in late 1924, as key to the CI’s abandonment of its
revolutionary purpose.
The degeneration of the Russian Revolution was a process that began
in 1924 but did not end there. Palmer correctly distinguishes the revolutionary
program and principles that characterized the decisions of the Communist
International in 1919-22 from the zigzags of the degenerating CI in 1924-28,
first under Zinoviev and then Bukharin. As Palmer wrote in his earlier essay in
American Communist History, “The Comintern was invested with a powerful
and justified authority, but it was not, before 1923, regarded as some
‘sacrosanct deity’” (“Communist History: Seeing It Whole. A Reply to Critics”).
Palmer understands that the ouster of Bukharin in 1929 and Stalin’s
domestic turn to forced collectivization of the peasantry—in the face of an
imminent counterrevolutionary threat by the kulaks (the wealthier peasants), who
had grown emboldened by Stalin/Bukharin’s conciliationist policies—dictated the
sterile, sectarian adventurism of the Comintern’s 1928-34 “Third Period.” During
the Third Period, all parties (not just the American) abandoned reformist-led
trade unions in favor of building “revolutionary” ones. A useful documentary
record of the CI’s degeneration can be found in the two volumes by Helmut
Gruber, a history professor (now emeritus) at the Polytechnic University in
Brooklyn, New York: International Communism in the Era of Lenin (Ithaca,
New York: Cornell University Press, 1967) and Soviet Russia Masters the
Comintern (Garden City, New York: Anchor Books, 1974).
The adoption of the popular-front policy at the CI’s Seventh World
Congress in 1935, which mandated that the Communist parties seek out
class-collaborationist alliances with putatively “democratic” and “anti-fascist”
wings of the bourgeoisie, signaled the final descent of the Communist
International into reformism, though there was a brief period of left rhetoric
during the Hitler-Stalin pact in 1939-41. In 1943, Stalin ignominiously and
formally interred the CI as a hindrance to continuing his World War II alliance
with the “democratic” imperialists. Most Communist parties retained their
allegiance to Moscow into the 1970s, making them not very desirable governmental
partners as far as the imperialist bourgeoisies were concerned. But the
participation of the Communist parties in France and Italy in popular-front
governments in the immediate postwar period played a critical role in staving
off proletarian revolutions in those countries.
An understanding of this process of programmatic degeneration and
its link to the fights going on in the Russian party is the beginning of wisdom
for any serious study of Communist history. If Palmer’s account of this process
in the 1920s has a flaw, it is in its overemphasis on the process of
Bolshevization and what he calls “Zinoviev’s appetite for bureaucratic
centralism” rather than on the political drift away from a revolutionary
program.
Palmer insists that it was the “bureaucratization and triumphant
Stalinization of the Comintern” which “lowered a final curtain on the innocence
of the revolutionary Left in 1928.” He ignores the very real objective pressures
in the United States that were also pushing the party away from a revolutionary
purpose. In fact, no party of the Comintern degenerated simply under the
influence of Moscow. There was a co-degeneration as the 1920s went
on. Though the particulars were very different in the Soviet Union, the same
underlying objective pressure affected the cadre of the Western Communist
parties—the recession of the post-WWI revolutionary wave and the stabilization
of the capitalist world after the defeat of the German Revolution in 1923. It
was the relative lack of revolutionary opportunities that underlay both the
degeneration of the Russian Revolution and the corruption of the Comintern’s
national parties, as Cannon recognized:
“The party was influenced from two sides—nationally and
internationally—and this time adversely in each case. Its decline and
degeneration in this period, no less than its earlier rise, must be accounted
for primarily, not by national or international factors alone, but by the two
together. These combined influences, at this time working for conservatism, bore
down with crushing weight on the still infant Communist Party of the United
States.
“It was difficult to be a working revolutionist in America in
those days, to sustain the agitation that brought no response, to repeat the
slogans which found no echo. The party leaders were not crudely corrupted by
personal benefits of the general prosperity; but they were affected indirectly
by the sea of indifference around them….
“The party became receptive to the ideas of Stalinism, which were
saturated with conservatism, because the party cadres themselves were
unconsciously yielding to their own conservative environment.”
—Cannon, The First Ten Years of American Communism
Cannon’s Formative Years
Cannon wrote little about his youth and upbringing in Rosedale,
Kansas (now a part of Kansas City), but Palmer uncovered what he could about
Cannon’s working-class Irish immigrant parents and family. His mother, Ann, who
died when Cannon was 14, was his father’s second wife. Palmer has managed to
unravel Jim Cannon’s relations to his five siblings and half-siblings, formerly
quite murky. Cannon’s father, John, was only intermittently employed, but the
young Jim sometimes went with him to work in the building trades. Cannon’s right
thumb was smashed in an accident at his father’s work site, resulting in the
amputation of the top of the digit. This minor disfigurement was seldom
mentioned by Cannon.
Cannon’s father later left the working class to open an insurance
office and real estate business. Palmer insists that in later life Cannon
embellished his father’s proletarian credentials. Regardless, Cannon was won to
socialist politics by his father, and his upbringing was typical of the Irish
immigrant proletariat—Jim left school at 13 to work first at a packing house,
then on the railroads and subsequently in the printing trades. He hung out in
pool halls and bars with other young Irish workingmen. Palmer uses Cannon’s
unpublished semi-autobiographical fiction—written in the 1950s—to throw light on
his early youth and social attitudes. Given the paucity of other sources, this
is probably merited. But one can imagine the very private Cannon squirming at
some of Palmer’s suppositions.
What was unusual in Cannon’s youth was the fact that at age 17,
when he was already supporting himself and living on his own, he decided to go
back to high school. Cannon had been sympathetic to socialism since
participating in the 1906-07 defense campaign for Western Federation of Miners
leaders William “Big Bill” Haywood and Charles Moyer, falsely accused of murder.
But Cannon joined the Socialist Party only in 1908, shortly after enrolling in
high school. Cannon found it difficult to support himself and attend school; he
attended for only three years and did not graduate. Palmer acquired the
yearbooks of Rosedale High for the relevant years, gleaning details about
Cannon’s high school career and obtaining a picture of the young man as part of
the Rosedale Society of Debate in 1910.
Cannon made a serious study of oratory in high school, developing
himself as a powerful public speaker. Leaving high school, Cannon joined the
Industrial Workers of the World in 1911, cultivating his speaking ability as a
soapbox agitator on the streets of Kansas City, and subsequently as an itinerant
Wobbly (as IWW members were known). Later, in the Communist Party, Cannon was
much in demand as a speaker. Cannon could explain complicated political concepts
in easily understandable language, as the material in Notebook of an
Agitator amply demonstrates. He excelled as a communist propagandist.
A young teacher, Lista Makimson, was the mentor of the debate
society. She and Cannon developed a romantic relationship while he was still in
school; they married in 1913. Palmer debunks the myth that Lista was greatly
Cannon’s senior—they were separated by only seven years. Cannon’s relationship
with an older woman, as well as his membership in the IWW, where agitation for
non-conformist ideas overlapped with labor radicalism, contradicts Palmer’s
assertion that Cannon “seemed to embody an odd fusion of traditionalist,
Victorian notions of gender relations and sexuality and a bohemian, avant-garde
disdain for material acquisitions and the trappings of money.”
Cannon certainly had a disdain for material acquisitions. He was
also a private man, especially about sexual matters, as were many of his day and
age. But he traveled in bohemian circles, and Palmer himself recounts Cannon’s
enthusiastic remembrances of a speech on “free love” by anarchist Emma Goldman.
Jim and Lista married only because it looked as though he was going to spend six
months in jail for his labor activities; they subsequently had two children.
Cannon left Lista in 1923 for fellow Communist Rose Karsner, who became his
lifelong companion. He and Rose only married at the end of their lives, when
they thought it necessary in order to get full Social Security benefits. This is
hardly evidence of “Victorian notions of gender relations.”
Palmer’s complaint that Cannon practiced a “conventional monogamy”
and “never really engaged with the potentially transformative
gender politics of a militantly feminist approach to the personal
realm” says more about the postmodern conceits of academic milieus than it does
about Cannon. Ted Morgan’s A Covert Life: Jay Lovestone, Communist,
Anti-Communist, and Spymaster (New York: Random House, 1999) is more of an
extended gossip column than a serious attempt to examine the life of this
unprincipled adventurer who latched on to the Communist movement in his youth
only to become a CIA operative later in life. But Lovestone’s private affairs,
unearthed by Morgan, show that eschewal of “conventional monogamy” is hardly a
ticket to “transformative gender politics,” whatever they may be.
Cannon was elected Kansas City delegate to the Seventh National
Convention of the IWW in 1912. Here he caught the eye of legendary Wobbly leader
Vincent St. John, who subsequently sent him on the road as an itinerant
organizer. Palmer writes, “More than any other single individual, St. John put
Cannon on the track of being a professional revolutionary.” Palmer has
discovered much that is new here, and his book excels in the account of Cannon’s
life as a Wobbly. Cannon went to Newcastle, Pennsylvania, where he helped
produce the IWW paper Solidarity. From there, in early 1913, St. John
sent Cannon to Akron, where a strike for union organization had erupted among
the rubber workers, both native-born and immigrant. According to Palmer, “Cannon
became one of the central IWW figures writing for the rebel press, appealing for
funds, and taking the struggle of Akron’s workers beyond the boundaries of
Ohio.” With the defeat of the Akron strike, Cannon was active in a manufacturing
strike in Peoria (where he and Lista married). Palmer reports that by the end of
the summer of 1913 “Cannon was one of only sixteen Wobbly agitators who were
recognized by the General Executive Board of the IWW as having ‘voluntary
credentials’ as itinerant organizers.” From Peoria, Cannon moved on to
organizing a strike by immigrant iron-ore dock workers in Duluth. Here Cannon
was pretty much in charge of the IWW’s efforts, working with the famous Frank
Little.
Palmer writes that Lista’s marriage to Cannon precluded her working
any longer at Rosedale High. Cannon was thus forced to return to Kansas City in
the fall of 1913. He worked on a local syndicalist paper, The
Toiler, and helped to lead a major free speech fight, though because of
his domestic responsibilities he kept himself off the front lines in order to
avoid arrest. He became, as Palmer puts it, “a member of what some Wobblies
rather condescendingly referred to as ‘the homeguard’.” Palmer says that Cannon
grew increasingly disillusioned as the Wobblies concentrated more on organizing
rural workers than the industrial proletariat; he was even more disillusioned at
the lack of a coordinated defense campaign to counter the state raids and
arrests that broke upon the Wobblies after the U.S. entered World War I in 1917.
Palmer concludes that Cannon’s “homeguard years as a disillusioned Wobbly, then,
were among the worst of Cannon’s life, whereas his year as a hobo rebel,
immersed in the rough-and-tumble class struggles of his time, was a period of
his fondest memories and most prideful accomplishments.”
The Founding of American Communism
It was the October Revolution that propelled Cannon back on the
road to being a professional revolutionary. Seeing the “anti-political” IWW
crushed by the action of the bourgeois state while a disciplined Marxist party
committed to political activity led a successful proletarian revolution in
Russia, Cannon rejoined the Socialist Party in order to hook up with its
developing pro-Bolshevik left wing. Palmer adds only a few new details to the
account of Cannon’s role in the founding of the American Communist movement,
divided at first into two parties—the Communist Party of America and the
Communist Labor Party—both dominated by ultraleftism.
One of the few native-born American radicals who joined the largely
immigrant Communist movement, and one of the very few with real experience in
workers struggles, Cannon was among the first to assimilate the lessons of
Lenin’s “Left-Wing” Communism. From the outset, Cannon opposed the
American Communists’ “dual unionist” insistence on the formation of
revolutionary unions, and he quickly rose to prominence in the fight against
those who believed the party should be underground in principle. He was
appointed editor of the Cleveland-based Toiler, which subsequently became
the Daily Worker. Cannon was the chairman of the above-ground Workers
Party when it was founded in December 1921. (The party changed its name to
Workers [Communist] Party in 1925 and to Communist Party in 1929.)
Ironically, the Comintern’s campaign against the ultraleftism that
infected the young Communist parties led to the reversal of a
correct position that had been adopted by sections of the American
Communist movement: opposition to running candidates for executive office. The
program adopted by the United Communist Party (UCP) at its founding in May 1920,
reasserting a position in the September 1919 manifesto of the Communist Party of
America, declared:
“The United Communist Party participates in election campaigns and
parliamentary action only for the purpose of revolutionary propaganda.
Nominations for public office and participation in elections are limited to
legislative bodies, such as the national congress, state legislatures and city
councils.”
—UCP Program, reprinted in Revolutionary Radicalism, Lusk
Commission Report to
New York State Senate, submitted 24 April 1920
New York State Senate, submitted 24 April 1920
This position indicated a healthy, and correct, revulsion with
the arch-reformist practice of the Socialist Party, whose ranks included 56
mayors and 22 police officials in 1912. The UCP program, however, wrongly
declared that Communist representatives elected to legislative bodies “will not
introduce nor support reform measures.”
As we point out elsewhere in this issue (see “Down With Executive
Offices!”, page 20), in combatting the ultraleftists at the Second Congress, the
distinction between executive and legislative positions was lost. In the wake of
the contradictory Second Congress theses on parliamentarism, the plank against
running for executive office—evidently a position pushed in particular by C.E.
Ruthenberg—became a subject of debate in the American party. The following year,
in the lead-up to the December 1921 founding of the Workers Party, the
Communists in New York City ran Ben Gitlow for mayor. Cannon had a big hand in
advocating and orchestrating this campaign. A Comintern document written for the
August 1922 underground party convention declared, “The communists must
participate as revolutionists in all general election campaigns, municipal,
state and congressional, as well as presidential” (“Next Tasks of the Communist
Party in America,” printed in Reds in America [New York City: Beckwith
Press, 1924]).
Five months after the Workers Party was founded, Cannon left for
Moscow to serve as American representative to the Executive Committee of the
Comintern (ECCI). Cannon’s seven-month stay in Soviet Russia was a critical
experience in deepening his understanding of Bolshevism and the importance of
the Communist International. It also provided him with a yardstick by which to
later measure the degeneration of the Comintern. In a 1955 letter to Draper
quoted by Palmer, Cannon recalled:
“I never was worth a damn on a mission to Moscow after my first
trip in 1922. Then everything was open and aboveboard. A clear-cut political
issue was presented by both sides in open debate and it was settled
straightforwardly, on a political basis, without discrimination or favoritism to
the factions involved, and without undisclosed reasons, arising from internal
Russian questions, motivating the decision and determining the attitude toward
the leaders of the contending factions. That was the Lenin-Trotsky Comintern,
and I did all right there. But after 1924 everything was different.”
—Cannon, The First Ten Years of American Communism
Palmer adds new and sometimes fascinating detail in his account of
Cannon’s Moscow activities. Cannon’s November 1922 speech to the American
Commission (see “We Want the Comintern to Give Us Assistance,” page 44) was but
the culmination of a long and trying battle against those who insisted on
maintaining an illegal Communist Party parallel to the legal Workers Party. The
victory by the so-called “Liquidators” in Moscow laid the basis for the American
Communists to finally really engage in the American class struggle.
The Comintern and the Black Question
The American Communist movement—like that in most other industrial
countries—had been formed on the crest of the wave of labor radicalism that
swept much of the globe at the end of World War I. Trade-union membership
doubled in the U.S. between 1916 and 1920, and the end of the war saw a massive
strike wave involving large numbers of unskilled immigrant workers for the first
time. The war years had seen an 80 percent fall in immigration and a mass influx
of blacks from the American South to the North, beginning the transformation of
the black population from rural sharecroppers into an integral part of the
industrial working class. The mass migration of black people had interacted with
the pre-existing division between the largely Protestant, native-born white
workers and the overwhelmingly Catholic workers from Ireland and Southern and
Eastern Europe, leading over the next two decades to the displacement of
religious and ethnic hostilities by anti-black racism as the central divide in
the proletariat.
The significance of the black question was little understood by
revolutionaries in the U.S. It was the Communist International of Lenin and
Trotsky that brought to the American workers movement the crucial understanding
that the struggle for black emancipation is a central, strategic question for
the American workers revolution. In his essay “The Russian Revolution and the
American Negro Movement,” Cannon writes:
“The earlier socialist movement, out of which the Communist Party
was formed, never recognized any need for a special program on the Negro
question. It was considered purely and simply as an economic problem, part of
the struggle between the workers and the capitalists; nothing could be done
about the special problems of discrimination and inequality this side of
socialism....
“The American communists in the early days, under the influence
and pressure of the Russians in the Comintern, were slowly and painfully
learning to change their attitude; to assimilate the new theory of
the Negro question as a special question of doubly-exploited
second-class citizens, requiring a program of special demands as part of the
over-all program—and to start doing something about it....
“Everything new and progressive on the Negro question came from
Moscow, after the revolution of 1917, and as a result of the revolution—not only
for the American communists who responded directly, but for all others concerned
with the question.”
—Cannon, The First Ten Years of American Communism
By 1917, almost one-quarter of the 45,000 workers who labored in
the Chicago stockyards were black. Black workers were a significant section of
the workforce in steel as well, making up some 12-14 percent of the workers at
the key Homestead mill. Yet most AFL unions refused to admit black workers or
else organized them in separate Jim Crow locals. The first major efforts to
bring unskilled laborers into the AFL—in the Chicago stockyards and in the steel
industry nationally—were led at the end of the war years by William Z. Foster, a
longtime syndicalist activist. Foster had broken with the IWW in 1911, opposing
its strategy of building revolutionary unions in favor of “boring from within”
(i.e., working to undermine the AFL bureaucracy from within the craft unions).
But Foster also bowed to the reactionary Gompers bureaucracy on the question of
support to the imperialist world war, going so far as to sell war bonds.
The stockyard organizing drive, concentrated at first among the
Slavic immigrant workers, made some initial headway in organizing black
workers—some 4,000-5,000 were union members by 1919. An integrated union march
through Chicago’s South Side in July 1919 gave promise of success; but the
brutal race riots that swept the city three weeks later destroyed the
interracial organizing efforts. A disastrous strike against a wage cut in 1921,
in which black workers largely scabbed, wiped out the gains that had been won in
the earlier struggles. The organizing drive among steel workers led to 250,000
workers, almost half the total workforce in steel, walking off the job in
September 1919. Within ten days, 14 workers had been killed. Troops were brought
in to occupy Gary, Indiana. While the strike was initially solid among the
unskilled immigrant workers, few black workers joined and many native-born
skilled workers scabbed. The strike had collapsed in the Midwest by November and
was broken nationally by the middle of December, though it was not officially
called off until the following month.
The 1919 defeats, the result of state repression and racist
reaction, occurred as the American Communists were first breaking from the
Socialist Party. Shortly thereafter, the U.S. government began a wave of
repression aimed at the Communists. Beginning in November 1919 and lasting over
four months, the “Palmer Raids” (named for then Attorney General A. Mitchell
Palmer) involved raids of Communist offices, closing of newspapers and mass
arrests of Communists, anarchists and other leftist workers (over 6,000 in the
first week of January 1920 alone). Foreign-born Communists and other radicals
were deported en masse. Many leading Communists were jailed on “criminal
syndicalism” charges. The repression quickly abated, though many leading
Communists remained under indictment well into the decade. But the Palmer Raids
gave credence to the ultraleftists’ undergroundism, leading to the prolonged
debate on whether or not the fledgling Communist movement could function
openly.
The Early TUEL
By the time the Workers Party was founded in December 1921, it was
clear that American Communists could publicly propagate their views. The
American bourgeoisie was largely satisfied that the smashing of the organizing
drives and the repression in 1919-20 had had the desired effect. Republican
Warren G. Harding was elected president in November 1920 on a program of
returning the country to “normalcy.” A national strike by railway shop workers
in 1922 was the last gasp of postwar labor militancy. The strike centrally
involved 256,000 machinists (members of the International Association of
Machinists [IAM] and maintenance workers); Workers Party supporters played a
role in helping to lead it. The strike was defeated by the scabbing by some of
the AFL craft brotherhoods, and by a sweeping government injunction, issued at
the request of U.S. Attorney General Harry Daugherty, that basically forbade the
striking unions to take any action to further the strike (known as the Daugherty
injunction). This set the tone for repeated use of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act
against the unions in the ’20s. The union-busting offensive combined with a
resurgence of racist terror (the Ku Klux Klan had several million members in the
1920s) and anti-immigrant legislation to make the 1920s a decade of racist,
juridical and anti-labor reaction.
The American Communists paid a high price for this period of
reaction—higher than they did for the intense repression of 1919-20—which led to
great pressures toward abandoning the revolutionary purpose on which the
Communist movement had been founded. Objective conditions in the 1920s dictated
that the Communist Party would encompass only a small minority of the working
class. The American Communists, including Cannon, were themselves slow to
recognize this, and the twists and turns dictated by the Stalinizing Comintern
in the latter half of the ’20s didn’t help.
It looked at first as if the Workers Party was destined for great
success in the labor movement. Having been recruited by former fellow
syndicalist Earl Browder to be part of a labor delegation to the Soviet Union in
1921, William Z. Foster was won to Bolshevism by all he saw and experienced in
his three-and-a-half months there. After attending the founding conference of
the Profintern in Moscow, Foster returned to Chicago in the late summer and
joined the Communist Party, at the time still an underground organization.
Under the influence of Lenin’s “Left-Wing” Communism, the
American Communists had abandoned their dual-unionist perspective; their policy
now dovetailed with Foster’s long-held strategy, though not without some
differences over his rigid opposition to any trade-union organizing outside the
AFL framework. The Trade Union Educational League (TUEL), which Foster had
founded in late 1920, was placed at the service of the Workers Party and
functioned as its trade-union arm from early 1922. Foster’s own party membership
was to remain a secret until 1923, and the TUEL was headquartered in Chicago,
separate from the party headquarters in New York. Foster retained the close ties
he had cultivated with John Fitzpatrick’s Chicago Federation of Labor (CFL),
under whose aegis he had begun his organizing campaigns. An ardent Irish
nationalist and trade-union “progressive,” Fitzpatrick had for a while been
advocating the formation of a labor party. He was a thorn in the side of the AFL
bureaucracy under Samuel Gompers. The TUEL received substantial protection from
Gompers’ virulent anti-Communism because of Foster’s work for the CFL.
Organized around the journal Labor Herald, the TUEL had no
dues or membership structure so as to avoid any charge of dual unionism (its
public income came from literature sales and donations, and it also received
Comintern subsidies). It fought “to develop trade unions from their present
antiquated and stagnant condition into modern, powerful labor organizations
capable of waging successful warfare against Capital” (William Z. Foster, “The
Principles and Program of the Trade Union Educational League,” Labor
Herald, March 1922). Advocating the abolition of capitalism and the
establishment of a workers republic, the TUEL sought the affiliation of American
trade unions to the Red International of Labor Unions. The TUEL program did not
mention the Jim Crow restrictions that kept blacks out of the AFL craft unions;
nor did it oppose the draconian restrictions the government had just imposed on
immigration. This failure to confront the anti-black and anti-immigrant
prejudices common in the working class was a real weakness. The fight against
anti-black racism was a question that the American Communists, under prodding
from the Comintern, were only beginning to address.
The TUEL saw as its immediate task an aggressive campaign for the
amalgamation of AFL craft unions into unions organized on an industry-wide
basis, raising the slogan, “amalgamation or annihilation.” Beginning with a
motion for amalgamation in the CFL in March 1922, the TUEL managed in the
succeeding 18 months to get amalgamation motions passed in 16 international
unions, 17 state federations, many city labor councils and thousands of union
locals.
Grappling with the Labor Party Question
As they came up from the underground, the American Communists began
to grapple with the issue of whether or not to call for a labor party. In a
chapter appropriately titled “Pepper Spray,” Palmer details the ways in which
the Workers Party under the tutelage of a Hungarian-born Communist named Jószef
Pogány (known in the U.S. as John Pepper) made a mess of it.
In “Left-Wing” Communism Lenin advocated that the British
Communists affiliate to the British Labour Party (BLP) and give it critical
support in the coming elections. Though its program and leadership were
reformist, the BLP was based on affiliated trade unions; it had been formed as
an expressly working-class party. Lenin termed it a “bourgeois workers party.”
In order to maintain their hold on the working class in the face of the impact
of the Bolshevik Revolution and postwar radicalization, the BLP tops were
talking left and had in 1918 adopted a provision in the party constitution
(Clause Four) calling for wholesale nationalization of industry. Lenin advocated
that the Communists vote for the BLP—while retaining their complete freedom of
agitation, propaganda and political activity—to help prove to the masses that
once elected to government the BLP tops would in fact betray the interests of
the working class. This exposure would facilitate the Communists winning the
working-class base of the Labour Party.
Lenin had brought up in his discussions with American delegates at
both the Second and Third CI Congresses the question of whether or not an
equivalent party to the BLP could be formed in the United States. The Workers
Party finally adopted the call for a labor party in May 1922. In his November
1922 speech Cannon endorses the idea of a labor party “something after the
nature of the English Labour Party.”
The formation of a labor party can be a big step forward on the
road to a mass communist party, but it can also easily become a giant obstacle.
The problem with the slogan is objective; as Trotsky later explained, everything
depends on the context in which it is raised:
“One can say that under the American conditions a labor party in
the British sense would be a ‘progressive step,’ and by recognizing this and
stating so, we ourselves, even though indirectly, help to establish such a
party. But that is precisely the reason I will never assume the responsibility
to affirm abstractly and dogmatically that the creation of a labor party would
be a ‘progressive step’ even in the United States, because I do not know under
what circumstances, under what guidance, and for what purpose that party would
be created. It seems to me more probable that especially in America, which does
not possess any important traditions of independent political action by the
working class (like Chartism in England, for example) and where the trade-union
bureaucracy is more reactionary and corrupted than it was at the height of the
British empire, the creation of a labor party could be provoked only by mighty
revolutionary pressure from the working masses and by the growing threat of
communism. It is absolutely clear that under these conditions the labor party
would signify not a progressive step but a hindrance to the progressive
evolution of the working class.”
—Trotsky, “The Labor Party Question in the United States,” 19 May
1932
Elements in the trade-union bureaucracy in the United States had
begun to raise the idea of a labor party during the post-WWI strike wave. John
Fitzpatrick had run for mayor of Chicago in 1919 on a Labor Party ticket,
garnering 56,000 votes. Fitzpatrick sought to unite into a national party the
local labor parties that had sprung up in several cities, including Seattle and
Minneapolis. But by the time the American Communists, having emerged from the
underground, began to pay attention to these efforts, Fitzpatrick’s party was no
longer an unambiguous attempt to create a working-class party organizationally
independent of the bourgeoisie. At a convention in 1920, the Labor Party had
merged forces with the bourgeois Committee of 48, the remnants of the
“Progressive” movement that had dominated both bourgeois parties earlier in the
century but was distinctly on the outs in President Harding’s America.
The Progressives wanted to run the old Republican warhorse Robert
La Follette for president. Fitzpatrick would not go along with support to such
an openly bourgeois candidate. But his divergence from a proletarian orientation
was indicated by his party’s change of name to Farmer-Labor Party (FLP). The FLP
ran its own candidate for president, Parley Parker Christensen, who received a
quarter of a million votes. His vote was not centered in urban working-class
centers: it was overwhelmingly in the Western agrarian states where American
family farmers were facing ruin and where the bourgeois populist tradition
remained strong.
The American Communists could not at first agree on what attitude
to take toward Fitzpatrick’s FLP. This was a source of dispute right up to the
Fourth Congress of the Comintern. The ECCI advised the American Communists to
enter the labor party movement:
“The idea now prevailing of the establishment of a labor party in
America has enormous political importance. The basis of our activity must
be the Left Wing of the Trade Union Movement. All attention and energy
must be devoted to our activity among the masses of the Left Wing in the Trade
Union movement. If we succeed in building a large Labor Party—at first only with
a moderate political program—it will be an event of historical importance, not
only for the American Labor movement, but for the Labor movement of the whole
world.”
—“To the Communist Party of America from the Executive Committee of
the Communist International,” undated but written shortly after the Fourth CI
Congress, reprinted in Spartacist No. 40, Summer 1987
This CI decision was based on reports at the Fourth Congress that
there was a growing movement for an “independent labor party” in the left wing
of the trade-union movement in the United States (see “We Want the Comintern to
Give Us Assistance,” page 44). The FLP per se was not mentioned in the CI
decision.
The American Communists began to campaign for a labor party even
before the ink was dry on the ECCI letter. They did so while in an implicit bloc
with Fitzpatrick’s CFL and without explicitly criticizing
Fitzpatrick’s Farmer-Labor orientation. The Labor Herald declared:
“The pioneer work in this movement, as in many other things, came
from the Chicago Federation of Labor. This organization was the initiator of the
Farmer-Labor Party, the first attempt to give expression to the trade unions on
the political field.”
—National Committee of the Trade Union Educational League, “A
Political Party for Labor,” Labor Herald, December 1922
The article did not mention Fitzpatrick’s merger with the
bourgeois Committee of 48, nor the fact that the FLP’s support was
overwhelmingly from small capitalist farmers. It insisted, “In order to mobilize
all the potential strength of the Labor Party, it is necessary that it make
provision for including the exploited small-farming class along with the
industrial workers. But the actual workers, being the only class whose interests
give them a clear-cut line of action at all times, must dominate the party…. It
must be a Labor Party in fact as well as name.” In the absence of any concrete
criticism of Fitzpatrick’s FLP, this insistence on a “labor” party was
meaningless.
The only principled basis for participation in a labor party
movement at this time would have been an attempt to polarize and split the FLP
by insisting on a break with the bourgeois Progressives and an unambiguously
working-class orientation. The Workers Party had embarked on an opportunist and
class-collaborationist course.
The party agreed to participate in a national conference called by
Fitzpatrick’s FLP for July 3 to found a party of workers and
farmers. In this case, the Workers Party’s own opportunist impulse to
cash in on Fitzpatrick’s popularity dovetailed with the emphasis on a “workers
and peasants” united front, then coming from Zinoviev’s Comintern. A Peasant
International was formed in the autumn of 1923; the CI would soon begin pushing
for the establishment of two-class worker and peasant parties. John Pepper had
arrived in the U.S. with an ECCI delegation in 1922 and appointed himself
permanent CI representative. Pepper made it his business to keep up on the
shifts in policy as the CI degenerated and he soon made himself indispensable to
the New York WP leadership around C.E. Ruthenberg. Pepper, whom Palmer aptly
terms “a living articulation of the nascent degeneration of the Russian
Revolution,” was in the forefront of the U.S. party’s wholesale adoption of
farmer-laborism.
In joining in with Fitzpatrick’s call for a farmer-labor party, the
American Communists were submerging the crucial call for political independence
of the working class from the bourgeoisie into the “progressive” petty-bourgeois
radical morass they had set out to combat. Two-class parties, supposedly uniting
the working class with the peasantry or small farmers, are inevitably and
invariably bourgeois parties, as Trotsky exhaustively demonstrates
in The Third International After Lenin. Trotsky derisively wrote of the
American variant:
“According to Pepper’s conception, a party of a few thousand
members, consisting chiefly of immigrants, had to fuse with the farmers through
the medium of a bourgeois party and by thus founding a ‘two-class’ party, insure
the socialist revolution in the face of the passivity or neutrality of the
proletariat corrupted by super-profits.”
—Trotsky, The Third International After Lenin
Pepper, a consummate opportunist maneuverer, indicated no knowledge
of the history of bourgeois agrarian Populism in the United States. He had
grandiose illusions and thought that if the Workers Party could capture the
farmer-labor movement, the party would catapult itself into national influence.
Under his direction, the Communists rode roughshod over the concerns of
Fitzpatrick, packing the July 3 Farmer-Labor convention with Communist delegates
and provoking a walkout by the vengeful CFL leader. The Federated Farmer-Labor
Party (FFLP) that was created on July 3 consisted largely of the Communists and
no one else.
The effect of the split with Fitzpatrick was exactly the opposite
of what Pepper intended. The Workers Party lost the protection of its bloc
partners in the AFL. Gompers, with the full backing of Fitzpatrick, launched a
witchhunt that drove TUEL supporters out of labor councils and unions around the
country. By 1925, the TUEL had been driven virtually underground in the
shrinking AFL craft unions. Though forced by Pepper’s idiocies, the break with
Fitzpatrick was very likely, given the string of labor defeats and the political
climate in the U.S. at the time. Gompers had cut the subsidy to the Chicago
Federation of Labor to force it to sever ties with the Workers Party. But a
sliding apart based on clear political differences would have been far less
damaging than an acrimonious split over organizational grievances.
The debacle of the July 3 convention led Foster and Cannon to make
a pact to fight for leadership of the party against Pepper and his American
supporters. Foster and Cannon were horrified at the growing isolation of the
TUEL in the AFL. But they fully imbibed the opportunist adaptation to
farmer-laborism and the unprincipled call for a “two-class party” that had led
to the July 3 debacle. Thus they helped lead the Workers Party into deepening
its unprincipled course, taking the FFLP far down the road to support for
Republican Senator La Follette in the 1924 presidential elections.
Palmer’s account downplays the political problems with the Workers
Party’s uncritical adoption of farmer-laborism. He blames the problem on Pepper
and Moscow, not the opportunist impulse in the American party itself. Far from
being the sole source of opportunism, it was the Comintern—where Trotsky had
vehemently opposed the support to La Follette—that pulled the American party
back from supporting La Follette. Trotsky wrote:
“For a young and weak Communist Party, lacking in revolutionary
temper, to play the role of solicitor and gatherer of ‘progressive voters’ for
the Republican Senator La Follette is to head toward the political dissolution
of the party in the petty bourgeoisie.”
—Trotsky, Introduction (1924), The First Five Years of the
Communist International
Palmer wrongly writes that the sudden pullback from support to La
Follette was like the Fitzpatrick split “all over again.” He insists that “the
mechanical reversal of communist policy spoke to the ways in which the WP was
now subject to a Communist International bureaucratism that had no sensitivity
to international realities and little flexibility in its local renegotiation of
programmatic error.” There is no room for “flexibility” on the elemental
question of drawing the class line in electoral activity. If the Workers
Party had persisted in support to a bourgeois candidate, its cadre would have
been finished as a revolutionary force.
The conflation of bourgeois third parties with genuine labor
parties has been a source of opportunism before and since. Cannon earnestly
sought to assimilate the lessons and turn the party around, as Palmer lays out.
But the Comintern under Zinoviev only confused the party more by insisting that
it maintain the fictitious Federated Farmer-Labor Party front group. Cannon and
the American Trotskyists originally drew the wrong lessons from the American
Communist experience in the 1920s, dropping the labor party slogan from their
arsenal entirely until Trotsky insisted that they adopt it again in the midst of
the labor upsurge that built the mass industrial unions in 1938. This will
hopefully be a topic in Palmer’s second volume.
Issues in the Factional Wars
Cannon and Foster’s successful fight to win a majority of delegates
to the Workers Party’s Third Convention in December 1923, and hence a majority
on the incoming Central Executive Committee (CEC, the leading body between party
conferences), is well laid out by Palmer. They drew into their faction Ludwig
Lore’s supporters in the German federation and the needle trades, and most
importantly, the Finnish-language federation, the largest single voting bloc.
Cannon was key to establishing and cementing this alliance.
The factional struggle took on the ferocity it did in part because
of the role played by Jay Lovestone, an indefatigable Ruthenberg factional
operative who learned quickly in the Pepper school. The split between
Foster-Cannon and Ruthenberg-Lovestone reflected in part a national bifurcation
between the TUEL, based in industrial Chicago, and the central party leadership
based in New York. In his It Had to Be Revolution: Memoirs of an American
Radical (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993), Charles Shipman gives a
sense of the social and political tensions in the party at the time. Shipman
(known at that time as Manuel Gomez) was a member of the Workers Party in
Chicago in 1923-24, later joining the Cannon faction and becoming head of the
party’s All-American Anti-Imperialist League.
Ruthenberg viewed the Foster-Cannon bloc as a collection of
trade-union opportunists. There was an element of truth in this view. As Cannon
himself later wrote, he was “not very sensitive” to the risk of opportunist
errors at the time. Though there were certainly differences of approach and
nuance between the groups, there were no fundamental programmatic disagreements.
After their December 1923 victory, Cannon and Foster managed to get the party
headquarters moved to Chicago. But they insisted that Ruthenberg remain party
secretary. Cannon was assistant secretary and Foster party chairman. They
succeeded in having Pepper recalled to Moscow. However, lines hardened, leading
to the factional wars that dominated the party until Lovestone’s expulsion in
1929.
Pepper continued to play a role as a Ruthenberg operative in
Moscow. The Cannon-Foster faction’s majority in the party leadership was
overthrown by Comintern fiat at the party’s Fourth Convention in 1925. Cannon
and Foster parted ways in reaction to the Comintern edict, with Cannon leading
those faction members who refused to organize a revolt against the Comintern
decision. After 1925, Cannon maintained his own separate faction. Palmer writes
particularly well about the Foster-Cannon split and its aftermath.
Palmer uses material from the Comintern archives to shed new light
on issues under dispute in the Workers Party. For example, he reports that the
formation of the United Council of Working Class Women/Wives and similar local
women’s organizations led by party activists was a source of controversy in
1924. Palmer asserts that the Ruthenberg-Lovestone faction tended to support
these auxiliary party women’s organizations while Cannon did not. Cannon
expressed concern that “the theory of operating under another name is somewhat a
survival of the days when our Party was obliged to work illegally” (Cannon
Letter to Jeanette Pearl, 22 September 1924). Cannon wrote that “political work
among the women must be conducted directly by the Party, in the name of the
Party…and not under some other organization—real or camouflage.” However, he
also wrote that he had “hesitated a long while over the question,” adding,
“Women’s work is very complicated, and I am far from being able to qualify as an
‘expert’ on the question. However, its importance is self-evident.”
Palmer incorrectly takes Cannon to task for insisting that work
among women be directly under the political control of the party leadership,
seeing this as evidence of a “blind spot” on the need for special work among
women. The Workers Party had created an internal Women’s Commission/Bureau in
1922, as mandated by the Third CI Congress resolution on methods and forms of
work among women. The task was to make this a real body overseeing real party
work. But, as Palmer notes, this body “was largely a figurehead organization.”
In fact, the Workers Party appears to have produced very little propaganda about
women’s oppression, and to have carried out very little work on the woman
question per se, reflecting a tendency to bend to the backward attitudes in the
working class. This was true no matter which faction was in power. Neither side
pushed women to take leadership roles. Only a few women—largely intellectuals
like Juliet Stuart Poyntz and Rose Pastor Stokes—served on the Central Executive
Committee. Women were, however, a large part of the party’s base in the heavily
Jewish needle trades, where Rose Wortis helped lead the work. The garment
workers’ leaders were originally part of the Foster-Cannon group, though they
switched to Ruthenberg-Lovestone after 1925.
The trade-union work, and in particular the TUEL, was always a
source of controversy in the party’s factional wars. The only AFL unions in
which the party retained a base after the early 1920s were in the needle trades
and in coal mining. Both of these industries were in decline and their workers
suffered job and wage cuts throughout the decade, making them particularly
volatile. As Ian Angus details in his excellent history of the early Canadian
Communist Party, Canadian Bolsheviks (Montreal: Vanguard Publications,
1981), the Canadian Communists won leadership of the Cape Breton miners, solidly
organized in District 26 of the United Mine Workers (UMW). The party led an
August 1922 strike against wage cuts to partial victory and subsequently did an
exemplary job in maintaining the district union intact against the bosses’
attacks and UMW chief John L. Lewis’s attempts to wrest back control. The UMW
collapsed in most of the rest of Canada. The American party did not lead even a
substantial region of an AFL union until it won control of some New York needle
trades locals in 1925. The party led a successful furriers strike in 1926, but a
long and militant needle trades strike the same year failed to win its main
demand. In the aftermath, the reformist needle trades tops went after the TUEL
supporters and succeeded in purging many from leadership positions. The
Communists’ heroic efforts in the 1926-28 “Save the Union” movement in
opposition to the Lewis bureaucracy in the UMW, which won significant support
from black miners, were also defeated.
The party’s work, both in the trade unions and in particular as
regards the black population, was hampered by Foster’s insistence that the only
course was to “bore from within” the AFL (though he was forced to abandon this
long-held belief to remain a party leader during the Third Period). AFL unions
mostly retained their racist color bars throughout the 1920s. Cannon rightly
opposed a sole emphasis on the AFL, although his factional co-leader, William F.
Dunne, leaned more toward Foster’s position.
With Foster and Cannon both in the USSR attending the Sixth Plenum
of the ECCI in 1926, Albert Weisbord and other party supporters propelled
themselves into the leadership of an organizing strike among the textile workers
of Passaic, New Jersey, outside of the AFL framework. Palmer gives the Passaic
strike the attention it deserves. As the strike dragged on, the party moved to
hand control over to the AFL, agreeing to the Gompers bureaucracy’s demand to
dump Weisbord from the strike leadership. Cannon wrote in later years that this
had been a mistake (see The First Ten Years of American Communism). Far
better that the party gain the reputation of following through on its
commitments to working-class leadership. Defeated strikes, too, if well fought,
can pave the way for a party to attain mass influence in subsequent class
struggles.
In this period of reaction, the TUEL could and should have played a
role as a largely educational vehicle for Communist propaganda in the AFL, and
for the episodic organizing of solidarity actions in support of strikes and
other labor actions. Simply maintaining the TUEL as a fighting force for
militant class struggle would have put party trade unionists in a good position
for the future. However, the TUEL became a factional football in late 1925-26,
and Palmer’s detailing of the dispute, based on documents from the Moscow
archives, is quite useful. Cannon and Ruthenberg wanted to liquidate the TUEL in
favor of “broader” trade-union oppositions. Foster vehemently opposed this move.
When the Comintern insisted that the TUEL be maintained, Cannon still insisted
that it seek to organize on a broader basis than hitherto. But the support the
TUEL had won in its 1922-23 campaigns for amalgamation and a labor party was
based on the bloc with the Fitzpatrick forces in the CFL. For Communists to
insist on organizing “broad” trade-union oppositions without a clear and
principled programmatic basis is an opening for opportunist adaptation.
The ILD…and Lovestone
U.S. president Harding’s “normalcy” notwithstanding, state
repression against radical and labor activists was a fact of life. Defense of
those threatened by the state had a real urgency; defense work was the one arena
where the party’s work could garner something approaching mass support. Cannon
was always proud of the role he played in helping to found and lead the
International Labor Defense (ILD), whose work has served as a model for the
Partisan Defense Committee in the U.S. and the other fraternal non-sectarian
defense organizations set up by ICL sections around the world. Building in large
part on the ties Cannon maintained from his days as an IWW agitator and his
reputation in the broader labor and Socialist movement, the ILD was a real,
ongoing united-front organization (impossible in the current period for the tiny
and exemplary defense organizations associated with national sections of the
ICL).
The ILD’s founding convention in 1925 was attended by over 100
delegates. By the end of 1926 it had 20,000 individual members (dues were ten
cents a month, raised to 15 cents in 1927) and 156 branches. The trade-union and
other labor organizations that affiliated to the ILD as bodies claimed some
75,000 members. Palmer’s section on the ILD excels in the detail and care with
which he recounts the organization’s activities and its scrupulous methods of
financial accountability. He is careful to credit Rose Karsner’s significant
role in the organization, which was linked to the CI’s International Red Aid.
Palmer reports that Cannon faction lieutenant Martin Abern eventually took over
some of Karsner’s duties, exercising his abilities as an excellent
administrator; the young Max Shachtman gained further experience as a communist
journalist editing the ILD’s Labor Defender.
The most famous campaign of the ILD in that period was the defense
of Italian immigrant anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. Arrested
in the aftermath of the Palmer Raids in 1920 and falsely accused of robbing a
shoe factory in Braintree, Massachusetts, and killing the paymaster, Sacco and
Vanzetti were convicted in a 1921 trial saturated with anti-Italian chauvinism
and anti-anarchist hysteria. The death sentence was pronounced in April 1927.
Cannon’s writings on Sacco and Vanzetti, available in Notebook of an
Agitator, are exceptional examples of communist agitation, combining
pedagogy with polemics. Cannon combatted illusions in the capitalist courts,
insisting that the case was “an issue of the class struggle and not merely one
of an exceptional miscarriage of so-called justice.”
Reading James P. Cannon and the Revolutionary Left, it is
impossible not to see the parallels between the American capitalist state’s
vendetta against the two immigrant anarchists and its current determination to
execute MOVE supporter and former Black Panther Party member Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Sacco and Vanzetti were seen by the state as symbols of all those who challenge
capitalist rule. Mumia, a Philadelphia journalist known as the “voice of the
voiceless,” was falsely accused of killing a police officer and sentenced to
death in a 1982 trial that was saturated with racism and hatred for his past as
an activist in the Black Panther Party. He is seen as a symbol of all those who
would challenge the capitalist system of exploitation and racial oppression.
And just as the ILD had to combat the attempts by various bourgeois
liberals and trade-union reformists to sabotage a class-struggle
policy to defend Sacco and Vanzetti, the PDC has had to expose those who seek to
derail the fight for Mumia’s freedom into dead-end reliance on the capitalist
courts and politicians. Unfortunately, Palmer spends little time examining the
ways and means by which Cannon exposed the treachery of sundry socialists,
anarchists and liberals in the case of Sacco and Vanzetti. But he does amply
illustrate that the ILD built the broadest possible united-front actions against
the threatened execution.
As Palmer writes, the case of Sacco and Vanzetti “stirred the soul
of America in the 1920s.” Not just America, but the world. Tens of thousands
participated in protests in U.S. cities in the spring and summer of 1927;
millions hit the streets from Moscow to Paris. As the date of the execution
approached, there were a few sporadic strikes and other labor actions. The
bourgeois state was determined to execute Sacco and Vanzetti for their political
views. Cannon knew from his experience in the campaign to free Big Bill Haywood
and Charles Moyer, who were acquitted in 1907, that mass protest could at times
compel the forces of bourgeois reaction to back down. But despite a massive
protest movement, the state executed Sacco and Vanzetti in August 1927. Their
funeral march in Boston drew 100,000 participants.
Palmer correctly sees Cannon at his “organizational and
journalistic best” in the ILD work, but he also sees Cannon’s participation in
this mass agitation as something separate and apart from his role as a Workers
Party leader. He writes, “The ILD had been something of an interlude of peaceful
coexistence in the factional gang warfare of Workers (Communist) Party internal
struggle in the mid- to late 1920s.” Palmer’s assertion is belied by the many
instances, which he himself recounts, in which the Ruthenberg-Lovestone forces
tried to undercut the ILD’s work. The ILD was conceived and founded in the midst
of one of the most intense periods of factional struggle, which lasted from the
Fifth ECCI Plenum in the spring of 1925 through the party’s Fourth Convention
that August. As noted in the PRL Introduction to James P. Cannon and the
Early Years of American Communism, Ruthenberg tried to scuttle the ILD even
before it was founded.
The Sacco-Vanzetti campaign was at its height in the spring and
summer of 1927, when the faction fight again exploded in the aftermath of
Ruthenberg’s sudden death in March. Lovestone pulled out all the stops to have
himself anointed Ruthenberg’s successor as party secretary, rushing off to
Moscow in May to attend the CI’s Eighth Plenum. With Cannon, Foster and other
party leaders forced to follow Lovestone to Moscow, the ILD’s work in the
Sacco-Vanzetti campaign had to continue without Cannon for a period. Throughout
that summer, a revived Cannon-Foster bloc devoted its efforts, ultimately
unsuccessful, to preventing Lovestone from winning a majority at the party’s
Fifth Convention in August. Despite Cannon’s attempt to postpone it, the
convention took place in the midst of the ILD’s final burst of
agitation against the execution.
The ILD’s accomplishments are the more impressive in light of
Cannon’s simultaneous concentration on the internal factional struggle. But the
ILD was founded and did its work only because Cannon was a major
leader of the Workers Party with a factional base of his own that was able to
safeguard the defense work from factional intrigues.
Collective Leadership Is No Panacea
Though occasional faction fights are crucial to maintaining the
programmatic integrity of a Leninist party in the face of the relentless
pressures of bourgeois society, the permanent factional warfare in the American
party indicated that something was deeply wrong. The different approaches that
distinguished Foster’s largely trade-union base from the more immigrant,
ex-ultraleftists of the Ruthenberg-Lovestone forces would have provided for
healthy political debate in a real Leninist party. It was not principally
differences over the real work of the party that fueled the factional lineups,
nor was it Lovestone’s overweening personal ambition, though this was certainly
a factor. The fight in the American party was fueled in part by the fight in the
Russian party and the Comintern, which pitted Trotsky’s Left Opposition
(blocking in 1926-27 with Kamenev and Zinoviev to form the Joint Opposition)
against the rising bureaucracy led by Stalin, for whom the cause of world
proletarian revolution was rapidly receding.
Palmer astutely characterizes the situation as the “balkanization
of the American leadership,” writing:
“A weakened Central Executive Committee majority, in which
Ruthenberg’s political authority was counterposed to the hegemony of Foster in
trade union work, with Cannon’s role shunted off as something of an appendage to
each (by which his labor defense field was necessarily related to these
bifurcated wings, but somewhat subordinate to both), undoubtedly satisfied
competing sectors of the Comintern and suited Stalin’s agenda adroitly.”
Stalin’s struggle against Trotsky greatly affected the American
party situation: one of the principal reasons for the Comintern’s deposing of
the Foster-Cannon majority in 1925 was certainly its alignment with Ludwig Lore,
who had publicly defended Trotsky. More of a left social democrat than a
Bolshevik, Lore was duly drummed out of the party. The generally rightist
political thrust of this putative Trotskyist may well have confused the Workers
Party cadre about the true nature of Trotsky’s fight in the Russian party. After
1925, ritual denunciations of Trotsky were de rigueur for Comintern party
leaders. As Palmer notes, “Cannon distinguished himself in the general Central
Executive Committee factional rush to condemn Trotsky by refusing to jump on the
bandwagon of political invective, but he did go along for the ride.”
There are certainly indications that Cannon harbored some doubts
about the struggle in the Russian party. But as he later stated:
“My state of mind then was that of doubt and dissatisfaction. Of
course, if one had no responsibility to the party, if he were a mere commentator
or observer, he could merely speak his doubts and have it over with. You can’t
do that in a serious political party. If you don’t know what to say, you don’t
have to say anything. The best thing is to remain silent.”
—Cannon, History of American Trotskyism
Cannon was deeply unhappy with the state of permanent factional war
in the Workers Party. Palmer points to the fact that Cannon, after his 1925
break with Foster, argued for the primacy of program over faction and insisted
that votes should be taken on the “main political line, regardless of who is for
or against.” In late 1926, Cannon managed to win over two key
Ruthenberg-Lovestone supporters in New York—Jack Stachel and William
Weinstone—on a program of fighting to end party factionalism. This was a
promising development. Palmer does not, unfortunately, discuss the indications
that Cannon’s campaign was making headway with Ruthenberg before the latter’s
untimely death in 1927.
Since the party factional pot was kept boiling by the heat supplied
by the Comintern, Cannon’s “faction to end factions” was doomed to failure.
Palmer describes how the CI leadership simply brushed the Cannon group aside as
inconvenient. After Ruthenberg died, Foster joined Cannon and Weinstone in
campaigning for Weinstone to be general secretary of the party. But it was
Lovestone who won the Comintern’s approval, and Weinstone subsequently slipped
back into the Lovestone fold.
Cannon’s energetic efforts to end the factionalism were unique
among the party leadership. But collective leadership is, in itself, no panacea.
The experience of the Canadian Communist Party demonstrates that neither
collective leadership nor refusal to join in the Comintern’s anti-Trotsky chorus
were guarantees of resistance to Stalinist degeneration. Ian Angus in
Canadian Bolsheviks details the admirable lack of permanent factions—or
indeed of any factional struggle at all—at the top of the Communist Party of
Canada (CPC) through 1928. From the party’s founding in 1921, the Canadian
leadership worked collectively in an axis around Maurice Spector, editor of the
Worker and national chairman from 1923-28, and Jack MacDonald, who was
first national chairman, then party secretary.
Spector went to Germany to cover the unfolding revolution in 1923,
in which the Communist Party faltered in the face of the left Social Democrats’
opposition and refused to try to lead an insurrection in a situation where it
had the mass of the working class behind it. Spector subsequently attended the
13th Party Conference in Moscow in January 1924, where the Stalinist bureaucracy
won its decisive victory. These experiences led him to harbor real doubts about
the campaign against Trotsky and to agree with Trotsky’s analysis of the German
defeat when he later read The Lessons of October. Under Spector’s
editorship, the Worker maintained a conspicuous silence on the
anti-Trotsky campaign as it developed throughout 1924. The rest of the Canadian
leadership acquiesced to Spector’s policy. The party maintained a studied
neutrality on Trotskyism until early 1927, with the sole exception of one
November 1926 Worker article written by the one nascent Stalinist in the
Canadian leadership, Tim Buck.
No one in the Canadian leadership had a factional ax to grind
against Spector; the party was small and in other matters reliably toed the line
of the degenerating Comintern. The Canadian leadership was at first able to
deflect demands for a statement against the Russian Opposition. Things changed
after Tim Buck went to Moscow as delegate to the ECCI’s Seventh Plenum in the
fall of 1926. He not only voted for the resolutions against the
Trotsky-Zinoviev-Kamenev Joint Opposition but went back determined to force the
issue in Canada. At an April 1927 CEC meeting, Buck put forward a motion
condemning the Russian Opposition and endorsing the program of socialism in one
country. The Canadian leadership knew by this time that to refuse to endorse
Buck’s motion would provoke a major confrontation with the Comintern. All voted
with Buck except Spector. Yet the CEC refused Spector’s offer to resign his
posts and insisted on covering for him (so long as he agreed to be quiet) by
presenting their anti-Trotsky resolution as unanimous. This charade was
maintained for over a year.
By that time, Spector had a far better idea of what the Left
Opposition stood for than did Cannon, but he was by no means a Trotskyist. Under
Spector, the Canadian paper fully supported the disastrous liquidation of the
Chinese Communist Party into the Guomindang, which led to the defeat of the
Second Chinese Revolution of 1925-27. Spector sought out Cannon to discuss their
doubts and dissatisfaction at a February 1928 plenum of the American CEC. They
subsequently both attended the Comintern’s Sixth Congress. Both were on the
Program Commission and received copies of two of the three sections of Trotsky’s
scathing Critique of the draft Comintern program. Translations of this seminal
Trotsky document were, for some reason, distributed to Commission members,
though in numbered copies that had to be returned. Spector and Cannon read and
studied the document and were thoroughly won over, particularly by Trotsky’s
penetrating analysis of the defeat in China. They made a pact in Moscow to
smuggle out Trotsky’s Critique and to go back to their respective parties to
fight for the Left Opposition’s program. Both succeeded in smuggling out the
document. Cannon emerged with some 100 supporters, Spector with only a handful.
Spector had understood enough of the Left Opposition’s fight
against the degeneration of the Russian Revolution to vote against “socialism in
one country” in the Canadian CEC in April 1927. It was well known in the
Canadian party that he had doubts about the anti-Trotsky campaign. His
hesitancies in fighting for his views earlier within the CPC likely damaged the
prospects of winning a broader layer of cadre to Trotskyism. Many of his
prospective cothinkers had been operating on the premise that Spector’s
Trotskyist sympathies had very little to do with the real work of the Canadian
party. On the other hand, the shock of Cannon’s sudden conversion to Trotsky’s
views disposed his co-factionalists to seriously consider them.
More importantly, if paradoxically, the hard factional lines in the
American party worked to Cannon’s advantage, collective leadership
to Spector’s disadvantage. Factional loyalties allowed Cannon to
quickly win over Karsner, Shachtman and Abern and meant that Cannon had time to
talk to others who might be sympathetic before he was expelled. Even those who
were not able to read the smuggled copy of the Critique were disposed to
question Cannon, Shachtman and Abern’s expulsions. Spector had little room to
maneuver in the Canadian party, and the small group of youth cadre whom he had
drawn around him (according to Angus, largely through personal complaints
against MacDonald), far from showing any interest in the Left Opposition, became
Buck’s acolytes. Relations with MacDonald, who had been Spector’s central
collaborator for seven years, were evidently quite strained by this point.
MacDonald did not join the Trotskyists until 1932; before MacDonald decided he
had had enough, he went through more than two years of hell in the CPC as it
gyrated into the Third Period and as Buck consolidated his control.
The Toronto Trotskyists initially formed a local of the
organization Cannon and his supporters founded, the Communist League of America
(CLA). The Canadians formed their own national organization only in 1934.
Spector’s role in the CLA, where he was a member of the anti-Cannon Abern
clique, is detailed in the PRL’s Dog Days: James P. Cannon vs. Max Shachtman
in the Communist League of America, 1931-1933 (New York: Prometheus Research
Library, 2002), as well as in an article by Palmer, “Maurice Spector, James P.
Cannon, and the Origins of Canadian Trotskyism” (Labour/Le Travail No.
56, Fall 2005). These works provide clues as to the probable weaknesses of
Spector’s efforts on behalf of the Left Opposition in 1928. Cannon’s development
into a Leninist party leader speaks to his strengths:
“The genesis of the CLA from an established grouping within the
Communist Party, with years of political collaboration and agreement behind it,
gave it an organizational stability and political cohesion lacking in other
International Left Opposition sections outside of the Soviet Union itself. Most
other leaders who came over to the Left Opposition from parties of the Communist
International did so only after they had been discredited and stripped of all
supporters. Cannon stands out as the only one expelled while he was still a
credible party leader, able to win others to his political course.”
—PRL Introduction, James P. Cannon and the Early Years of
American Communism
The PRL Introduction also addressed the question of
why Cannon, uniquely among the top leaders of the American party,
was won to Trotskyism. There were factors in the political profile of Cannon’s
faction that militated against his leap to the Left Opposition: a parochial
concern for American questions, insistence on the strategy of a bloc with the
“progressives” in the trade unions, lack of emphasis on the fight against
special oppression of blacks and women. At the same time, the PRL Introduction
observed:
“The fight of the Cannon-Foster faction against an orientation to
La Follette’s bourgeois third party movement after the 1924 elections; Cannon’s
insistence on the leading role of the working class in any farmer-labor party;
the strong, if skewed, internationalism that made Cannon break with Foster and
refuse to lead a rightist revolt against the Communist International in 1925;
Cannon’s attempt to reverse the dead-end factional wars which crippled and
deformed the party after 1925; his willingness to break with the party’s
adaptation to the AFL unions in 1928: all this predisposed Cannon to make the
leap to the Left Opposition when that option presented itself. Cannon, unlike
the other Workers Party leaders, had not been made cynical by the corrupt
maneuvering inside the degenerating Comintern.”
The Revolutionary Comintern: The High Point
The upsurge in revolutionary working-class struggle that threatened
to overwhelm much of the capitalist world toward the end of World War I,
culminating in the great Russian Revolution and the establishment of the
Communist International, represents the high-water mark of revolutionary
proletarian struggle. Study of this unique period, and of the
program and principles established by the first four Congresses of the Communist
International, is essential for Marxist revolutionaries—all the more so today,
amid the pervasive, incessant propaganda barrage that “communism is dead.” Also
important is the study of the processes by which the sections of the Comintern
were destroyed as revolutionary organizations, though this experience is not
unique. (Under different circumstances, the First and Second Internationals also
underwent a process of degeneration.) Palmer’s biography of the man who
pioneered the fight to build a Bolshevik “party of the Russian Revolution” on
American soil deserves the attention of every youth seeking a coherent program,
theory and organization to change the world.
There are some parallels to be drawn between the 1920s and the
current period of reaction, but one overwhelming difference stands out: in the
1920s the Soviet Union existed as an example to the world proletariat. In that
period, the European working class was overwhelmingly socialist and communist in
its sympathies. The American working class was by far the most politically
backward of any in the industrial world, with its social weight and power far
outstripping its political consciousness. Still lacking a mass political party
independent of the bourgeois parties, this huge proletariat was, however, the
key to humanity’s future. American imperialism was on the rise and was to
dominate the world. The American Communist Party had an importance in the
Comintern far outweighing its numbers.
The disproportion between the social power and the political
consciousness of the American working class still bedevils American
revolutionaries. The proletariat in the United States remains in thrall to the
capitalist Democrats and Republicans. But American imperialism is in decline.
The counterrevolution in the Soviet Union has left the United States as the
world’s only superpower in the current conjuncture; its military strength is far
out of proportion to its current economic weight. This is a situation that
cannot last even in the historical middle term, but the transfer of so much
productive capacity to China, a very unstable deformed workers state, makes
future prognosis difficult. The diminished economic weight of the U.S.
proletariat in the global arena does not in itself determine the role it will
play in the world socialist revolution, which depends on historic developments.
The nuclear-armed American bourgeoisie remains the most dangerous and powerful
gendarme of the world imperialist system.
In any case, the legacy of James P. Cannon remains no less
important today for revolutionaries in the U.S. and around the world. James
P. Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary Left, 1890-1928 is a
substantial contribution to communist historical study. It stands as refutation
of those who bought the self-serving anti-Cannon line propagated by Max
Shachtman as he descended from revisionism to renegacy after breaking with
Trotsky’s Fourth International in 1940. Shachtman insisted that Cannon was never
more than an unreconstructed Zinovievist, shaped irreversibly into a bureaucrat
by his experiences in the degenerating Communist International. This view of
Cannon has been perpetuated with particular vehemence by ostensible Trotskyists
in Britain, especially the late Al Richardson and his cothinkers at the journal
Revolutionary History (RH).
The RH crowd cannot appreciate one of the main strengths of
the Cannon faction: its antipathy to Lovestone’s opportunism, which flowered
when he took over leadership of the Workers Party in 1925. After his expulsion,
Lovestone became the leader of the Bukharinite Right Opposition in the U.S. The
CLA was thus well inoculated against any attempt to make a “left-right bloc,” an
unprincipled maneuver that has been extolled in the pages of RH.
Elsewhere, the “left-right bloc” shipwrecked the Spanish section of the Left
Opposition under Andrés Nin (paving the way for the defeat of the 1936-38
Spanish Revolution), and also, for example, led to the foundering of Polish
Trotskyism and ruined the building of a Danish Trotskyist organization.
We hope that Palmer’s promised second volume, covering Cannon’s
years as a Trotskyist, when he developed into a first-class Leninist party
leader, also finds a publisher.
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