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Workers Vanguard No. 969
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19 November 2010
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TROTSKY
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LENIN
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Irish Independence and the English Proletariat
(Quote of the Week)
Writing when all of Ireland was under British rule, Karl Marx
stressed that for the proletariat in England to develop its class consciousness,
it must champion Irish independence. Today, the emancipation of the working
class in Britain remains inextricably linked to that of the workers in both
Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic, posing the need for proletarian
revolutions that establish a voluntary federation of workers republics in the
British Isles.
I have become more and more convinced—and the thing now is to drum
this conviction into the English working class—that they will never be able to
do anything decisive here in England before they separate their attitude towards
Ireland quite definitely from that of the ruling classes, and not only make
common cause with the Irish, but even take the initiative in dissolving the
Union established in 1801, and substituting a free federal relationship for it.
And this must be done not out of sympathy for Ireland, but as a demand based on
the interests of the English proletariat. If not, the English people will remain
bound to the leading-strings of the ruling classes, because they
will be forced to make a common front with them against Ireland. Every movement
of the working class in England itself is crippled by the dissension with the
Irish, who form a very important section of the working class in England itself.
The primary condition for emancipation here—the overthrow of the
English landed oligarchy—remains unattainable, since its positions cannot be
stormed here as long as it holds its strongly-entrenched outposts in Ireland.
But over there, once affairs have been laid in the hands of the Irish people
themselves, as soon as they have made themselves their own legislators and
rulers, as soon as they have become autonomous, it will be infinitely easier
there than here to abolish the landed aristocracy (to a large extent the
same persons as the English landlords) since in Ireland it is not just
merely an economic question, but also a national one, as the
landlords there are not, as they are in England, traditional dignitaries and
representatives, but the mortally-hated oppressors of the nationality....
In fact, England never has and never can rule Ireland
any other way, as long as the present relationship continues—only with the most
abominable reign of terror and the most reprehensible corruption.
—Karl Marx, Letter to Ludwig Kugelmann (29 November 1869)
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