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Workers Vanguard No. 952
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12 February 2010
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TROTSKY
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LENIN
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The Fight for Revolutionary Leadership in the Civil Rights
Movement
(Quote of the Week)
By the early 1960s, a large and growing current of young black
militants was breaking to the left of the liberal reformism and pacifism of
Martin Luther King. Before its expulsion beginning in late 1963, the
Revolutionary Tendency (RT), forerunner of the Spartacist League, fought within
the rightward-moving Socialist Workers Party (SWP) against the tailism and
abstentionism of the SWP leadership, which accommodated to King’s liberal
reformism as well as to a growing black nationalist trend. As represented in the
following resolution submitted by RT supporters in the Young Socialist Alliance,
the SWP’s youth organization, we fought for a perspective of revolutionary
intervention into the civil rights movement with the aim of forging a black
Trotskyist cadre.
(23) The rising upsurge and militancy of the black revolt and the
contradictory and confused, groping nature of what is now the left wing in the
movement provide the revolutionary vanguard with fertile soil and many
opportunities to plant the seeds of revolutionary socialism. Our task is to
create a Trotskyist tendency in the broad left wing of the movement, while
building that left wing. Our ideas will help the movement, not
hurt it. We must consider non-intervention in the crisis of
leadership a crime of the worst sort….
(25) General demands in the south must be:
A) For organized
self-defense movements in southern cities—for the tactics of Robert F. Williams;
against federal military intervention, which always supports the status quo.
B) Against discrimination in unions and
industries—especially companies with government contracts or subsidies.
C) For drives for union organization.
D) For independent political
organization—make voter registration meaningful.
(26) The most oppressed stratum of the working class is in motion.
It struggles bravely but blindly to remove the unbearable burden of capitalist
exploitation from its shoulders. There is only one program which can point the
way to the Negro masses north and south: Trotskyism, the vanguard consciousness
of the proletarians of all the world. The American working class still idles in
a false and quickly dissipating security; the doubly exploited Negro caste has
special demands corresponding to its peculiar needs and the pervading crisis of
leadership. These circumstances dictate special organizational forms which
reflect the independent activity of the Negroes. It is essential that
Trotskyists help crystallize and guide these transitional forms, preserving the
independence of the black proletariat from bourgeois influences, and preparing
the Negro people for the task which they will share with the white sector of the
working class—the revolutionary transformation of society.
—“The Negro Struggle and the Crisis of Leadership” (18 August
1963), reprinted in Marxist Bulletin No. 5 (Revised), “What Strategy for
Black Liberation? Trotskyism vs. Black Nationalism” (September 1978)
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