The Lake-of-the-Woods Communist Club, the Duluth-Superior Club of the CPUSA, the Iron Range Club of the CPUSA, the Hardwood Creek Trail Club of the CPUSA, the Upper Peninsula Club of the CPUSA, the Escanaba Club of the CPUSA, the Republic Club of the CPUSA, the Westside Club of the CPUSA and the Barron Club of the CPUSA denounce this statement as a betrayal of the working class revolutionary and anti-imperialist movements.
Barack Obama is Wall Street's president saddling the American people with unending wars abroad paid for with austerity measures here at home.
This statement on its face reflects a perversion of revolutionary class consciousness and a complete distortion of Marxism-Leninism.
Erwin Marquit and the National leadership of the Communist Party USA have refused to participate in the struggles of working people for peace, social and economic justice and they have sabotaged all efforts trying to rebuild the CPUSA.
All poppycock and lies.
Shame on this International Meeting of Communist and Worker's Parties for accepting this "statement" without question or verification of facts.
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USA, Communist Party USA 14 IMCWP, Contribution of CPUSA [En.]
14 IMCWP, Contribution of CPUSA [En.]
Sunday, 25 November 2012 00:00
Communist Party, USA. (CPUSA)
Contribution of the Communist Party USA
14th International Meeting of CWP
Presented by Erwin Marquit,
Organizational Secretary Minnesota/Dakotas District, CPUSA; member of International Department CPUSA.
We
express our gratitude to the Lebanese Communist Party for hosting this
important meeting under the present difficult conditions. The
Communist Party USA not only welcomes the reelection of President
Barack Obama, but actively engaged in the electoral campaign for his
reelection and for the election of many Democratic Party congressional
candidates. We regarded the 2012 election as the most important in the
United States since 1932, an election held in the midst of the Great
Depression. The
election of President Franklin Roosevelt in 1932 led to the
legalization of the right of workers to organize labor unions and to
bargain collectively with employers. It led to the establishment of a
compulsory employer-worker funded pension system for retired workers. It
also introduced measures that enabled unemployed families to survive
the Great Depression, among which were employment in the public sector
for the unemployed, work camps for youth, and food provisions for the
poverty stricken. Except for the youth camps, which ended with the onset
of World War II, all of these are measures that the 2012 Republican
Party agenda would have eliminated or greatly weakened. We believed that
if the Republican candidate for President were elected and if both
houses of the Congress fell under the control of the far right, racist
sector (calling itself the “Tea Party”) that now dominates the
Republican Party, the nation’s return to pre-1932 conditions would be a
real danger. Because
of this danger, we viewed our participation in mainstream electoral
activity as obligatory, even though both major parties in the United
States are dominated by capital, with no effective competition from a
mass-scale social-democratic party, We are aware that some on the Left
in the United States thought that the correct approach to the elections
was either to boycott them, or as a protest, to run or support
small-scale left-wing candidacies with no possible chance of winning. We
Communists rejected this strategy because too much was at stake. Why did the Communist Party not run a candidate in the 2012 presidential elections? In
the 1930s, the CPUSA played an outstanding role in the establishment of
industrial unionism and the winning of sweeping social welfare
measures. In the course of those struggles the Communist Party grew
rapidly, achieving a membership of close to 100,000. At that time, we
always pointed out clearly that the lasting solution to the crises
produced by the capitalist system was the replacement of the capitalist
system itself. In our election pamphlets for the 2012 elections, we
continued to emphasize the long-term goal of a socialist transformation
of the economy. With
the beginning of the Cold War in 1946, the U.S. government introduced a
wide range of repressive measures against the Communist Party, which
included the imprisonment of its leaders and those that replaced them,
and the blacklisting of its members to deny them employment. Eight camps
for internment of Communists in case of a national emergency were
constructed; Communist-led labor unions were denied
collective-bargaining rights; eleven unions that refused to purge
Communists from their leadership ranks were expelled from the CIO labor
federation, and all but two of these were subsequently destroyed. Under
these oppressive measures, the size of the Party was vastly reduced. The
internal crises within the socialist countries and the subsequent
collapse of socialist systems in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe
took a further toll. Anti-Communist sentiment among sectors of the U.S.
population was stimulated by the demonizing of Communist-led countries
for half a century. The U.S. government and media continually portrayed
the socialist countries of Europe and Asia as the gravest enemy of the
United States with nuclear missiles pointed toward the United States As
a result, in 1984, Gus Hall, the Communist candidate for president in
1984—the last Communist candidate in a presidential election—received
only 0.03% of the vote. In small measure, this was partly due to the
fact that the United States had, and still has, the most undemocratic
electoral system among all bourgeois democracies, with no proportional
representation except in a handful of local city elections. In our
electoral system, when there are more than two candidates, the candidate
with largest number of votes wins without the possibility, in most
cases, of a supplementary vote for the two leading candidates. Most
voters regard a vote for a minority party as a wasted vote, since it
cannot elect any candidates except under unusual local conditions. In
the past four years, the Republican Party has succeeded in many states
in amending state constitutions to reduce the potential vote for the
Democratic Party by placing obstacles in the path of low-income people
and the elderly to vote by requiring documentation they often do not
possess. Such restrictions are aimed particularly at reducing votes of
African Americans and Latinos and poverty-stricken segments of the
population. The Republican Party is notorious for its use of illegal
means to restrict selectively votes in areas likely to support its
candidates. In such areas in Florida, for example, voters had to wait
five hours to cast their ballots because the Republicans in office
deliberately underfunded voting facilities. The
events since the last decades of the twentieth century made clear the
urgency of a different electoral strategy. The decrease in industrial
employment in the basic industries and the loss of jobs in other
industries as a result of computerization produced a precipitous decline
in mass-employment industrial enterprises, and led to a decline in
labor-union membership, abetted by an increasing assault by big capital
on the right of workers to seek union recognition for collective
bargaining. The possible attractiveness of a socialist alternative
provided by the full employment, universal health care, free higher
education, and other social welfare measures in the socialist countries
had previously restrained the capitalists from an all-out assault on
labor unions. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the European
socialist countries removed that restraint. As
a result, labor-union membership in the private sector in the United
States, which had already begun to decline from its peak of 39% in 1958,
declined precipitously to under 7% today. Until last year, the federal,
state, and local governments did not show the same aggressiveness
against labor unions, so public sector labor-union membership has held
steady at about 36% since the 1980s. Two years ago, the far-right
elements that now dominate the Republican Party began a campaign to
deprive public-sector workers of the right to collective bargaining. The
virtual destruction of the labor movement in the US, which the
Republicans clearly intend, would be a terrible defeat for the Left and
the entire working class. This
assault on trade unions is happening just as the major unions in the
United States have been breaking with their anti-Communist past and have
been moving into positions of authentic solidarity with workers’
struggles in other countries. An example is the support U.S. unions are
giving workers in Colombia and Mexico. A
key strategy for reversing the decline in labor-union membership is the
enactment of a federal law proposed by the labor unions that Obama and
the Democrats in Congress were unable to enact over the opposition of
the Republicans. This law would require employers to recognize and
bargain collectively with a labor union when a majority of their
employees have signed statements requesting such recognition, repairing
the defect in the present Fair Employment Practices Act that allows
employers to delay and block recognition by a combination of legal and
illegal maneuvers for which there is no effective redress. The
far rightward shift in the Republican Party was narrowing the breathing
space for resistance to corporate power by the working class and allied
elements of other classes. An important consideration in the 2012
elections was that a Republican victory in the presidential and
congressional elections could lead an absolute majority of far-right
justices in the current ideologically divided Supreme Court by
presidential lifetime appointment of far-right justices to fill an
anticipated two or more vacancies due to retirement or death. This
raised the threat that the Supreme Court would produce rulings that
further restrict the rights of labor unions to organize and bargain
collectively; reverse the gains in women’s rights by ruling against
legislation that granted women the right to equal pay for equal work,
contraception, and abortion; rule against laws outlawing racial
segregation, discrimination against women, and laws that protect African
Americans and Latinos from discrimination in employment and housing,
and that give gays and lesbians equal rights in employment and marriage.
A Supreme Court dominated by right-wing justices could even abolish the
federal Environmental Protection Agency. The far-right Republican Party
agenda includes all these issues. Even with the present Supreme Court,
we have been witnessing the erosion of democratic rights. Apart from the
drive by the far-right to restrict voting rights, the Supreme Court has
upheld the right of corporations to devote unlimited funds to elect
candidates that will serve their interests, declaring that corporations
are “persons” under law and therefore have the right of freedom of
speech! The
most import success of the Obama Administration since its election in
2008 was the introduction of a major expansion of the people’s access to
financing of their health care. As a result of this legislation, 25
million people now have access to health care who previously did not
have it. The repeal of this health care law was one of the main points
in the programs of the Republican Party presidential and Congressional
candidates in the 2012 election. Even without a repeal, there is still
the danger that it will be ruled unconstitutional by the present Supreme
Court even though the lower courts have upheld it. Whatever the present
Supreme Court might not rule, a Supreme Court loaded with right-wing
justices appointed by a Republican president would still be able to do
so. Obama
has opposed Republican attempts to introduce austerity programs similar
to those in the European Union. The Republicans have opposed his
efforts to use government funds as economic stimuli to reduce
unemployment, as well as his attempts to remove the special provisions
of the income tax code that have allowed the rich to be taxed at a lower
percentage of income than the average working person, and to eliminate
of tax benefits that the corporations get when exporting of jobs abroad.
The Occupy movement, with its slogan, “We are the 99 %,” that swept
through the country in 2011, sharply drew attention to the power of the
top 1%” of the population and stimulated support for Obama’s efforts to
require higher taxes for the wealthy. The Republicans have blocked all
proposals to reduce global warming, environment destruction, industrial
pollution, and other actions arising from corporate greed that that
threaten to destroy the biophysical basis of human existence.
Republicans even want to privatize the FEMA, the federal agency for
disaster mitigation. Another
important issue is that of justice for immigrant workers and their
families. There are between 10 and 11 million irregular immigrants in
the United States, mostly from Mexico and other Latin American
countries. Our Party supports the regularization of their status, with
full rights in the workplace and in the community, and access to U.S.
citizenship. The Obama administration has moved too slowly on this issue
(and the CPUSA has been sharply critical of this), but it is now taking
some modest but real steps. The Republicans, on the other hand, have
whipped up a racist frenzy against immigrants that has led to vigilante
action and in some cases the murder of immigrant workers. Romney had
promised to make life so hard for undocumented immigrants that they
would all “self” deport. Faced
with a choice between the victory of either the Democratic Party or
Republican Party, the Communist Party viewed a victory of the far-right
Republican Party as an extreme disaster. In this situation, we saw the
necessity of a policy of center-left alliances in order not to separate
ourselves from the people’s struggles for dealing with the far right
onslaught, The basis of such an alliance now includes the labor
movement, organizations of African Americans and Latinos, the women’s
movement, gay and lesbian civil rights groups, and organizations of the
elderly and retirees. On some issues, these groups are joined by a few
far-sighted elements of capital. What
do we mean by “far-sighted” elements of capital? As in all capitalist
countries, big capital is not a monolith of common interest. Not only
are elements of capital in competition with one another, but differences
in their investment policies give rise to conflicting political
interests. Corporations with investments in the oil, coal, and natural
gas industries tend to have the most right-wing orientations.
Corporations with heavy investments in China are somewhat wary of China
bashing by the Republicans and even by Obama. Some corporations derive
their superprofits by operations that do severe environmental damage and
contribute heavily to global warming, while others depend on a
relatively healthy environment for their maximum profits. That is why
some elements of big capital support the Republican Party, while others
support the Democratic Party because they can see a limited common
interest some issues with the working-class base of support for the
Democratic Party. Our present strategy is build alliances both inside
and outside the Democratic Party to curtail the dominance of big capital
over the lives of our people. We
are well aware that mass political activity on issues of social justice
domestically and anti-imperialist solidarity internationally will not
spring from within the Democratic Party. The Communist Party must
continue to work with other components of this alliance to generate mass
activity independently of the two parties to pressure the president and
the Congress to act on its demands. In
our electoral policy, we seek to cooperate and strengthen our
relationship with the more progressive elements in Democratic Party,
such as the Progressive Caucus in the U.S. Congress, a group of
seventy-six members of the Congress co-chaired by Raúl Grijalva, a
Latino from Arizona, and Keith Ellison, an African American Muslim from
Minnesota. We also will strengthen our relationship to the Congressional
Black Caucus (formed by African Americans in the Congress), which has
been the point of origin of innovative policies including an end to the
U.S. economic blockade of Cuba, and with the Congressional Hispanic
Caucus. In its domestic policy, for example, the Progressive Caucus has
put forth a program for using the public sector to deal with
unemployment. It has opposed the use of the so called “war on terror” to
incarcerate U.S. citizens indefinitely without criminal charges. In its
foreign policy, the Progressive Caucus and the Black Caucus are
outspoken in their opposition to U.S. imperialist policies abroad. The
Progressive Caucus, now that Obama has been reelected, will be playing
an important role in contributing to the mobilization of mass activity
on critical issues to bring pressure on the Congress and administration
to act on them. In
this year’s elections, the labor unions made vigorous efforts to
involve their members and their retirees in phoning and door-to-door
visits to campaign for Obama and the Democratic Party candidates for the
Congress and state legislatures. In my state, our Party members
preferentially participated in the election campaign through these
labor-union channels. In
my state, Minnesota, and the states of Maine, Maryland, and Washington,
voters were asked to approve or accept ballot initiatives (that is,
plebiscites or referenda) to permit or ban same-sex marriage. Because
the Republican Party relies not only on financial support from major
sections of big capital, but needs the votes of its right-wing Christian
evangelical mass base, it has made its support of the ban on same sex
marriage a major campaign issue. Our Party, as does the labor movement,
and also Obama and the Democratic Party, considers the right of same-sex
couples to marry as a civil-rights issue. By campaigning to bring out
people to vote against such a ban, they were also bringing out people
who would most likely vote for against the bigoted far-right candidates
of the Republic Party. In three states, the voters approved the right to
same-sex marriage. In the fourth state, Minnesota, the attempt to
insert a ban of such marriage in the state constitution was rejected. In
selectively cooperating with the progressive elements of the Democratic
Party, we generally openly maintain our identity as Communists and seek
to build our party through its visible activities. In
our foreign policy, U.S. Communists consistently oppose all U.S.
imperialist activities abroad. We participate in the Cuban solidarity
movement and demand the end of the U.S. economic blockade against Cuba
and the freeing of the Cuban Five. We opposed the NATO intervention in
Libya and oppose U.S. intervention in Syria. We support immediate
withdrawal of NATO troops from Afghanistan and oppose the use of drones
for assassination and bombing. We call for the end of sanctions against
Iran. We oppose the intrusion of the United States militarily and
politically in the affairs of Southeast Asia. We oppose the
China-bashing policies of the U.S. government. We welcome the election
of several progressive, anti-imperialist governments in Latin America
and oppose U.S. attempts to undermine them. This leftward shift in Latin
American, opening a path to possible socialist development, is of
tremendous importance in the worldwide anti-imperialist struggle. We
call for the replacement of U.S. support of the apartheid regime in
Israel by support for a two-state solution based on the 1967 borders
with the right of return of Palestinians to their native cities and
villages. The day before the elections, the New York Times, in
discussing the prospects of a Palestinian/Israel agreement, wrote:
“Whatever chance exists of a new American peace initiative after the
election is likely to vanish if Mitt Romney wins; at private
fund-raising event, he said that the Arab-Israeli conflict was ‘going to
remain an unsolved problem’ and seemed unconcerned about it.” With
the elections now over, there is a prospect that growing support in the
United States for a just Middle East solution can induce President
Obama once again to put pressure on the Israeli government to end the
settlement expansion and resume negotiations leading to such a solution.
An indication of such growing support is the letter on 19 October 2012
signed by fifteen leaders of the principal U.S. Christian churches
calling upon the Congress to reconsider giving aid to Israel because of
human rights violations. Reverend Gradye Parsons, the top official of
the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) said, “We asked Congress to treat
Israel like it would any other country, to make sure our military aid is
going to a country espousing the values we would as Americans—that it
is not being used to continually violate the human rights of other
people.” The letter said that Israel had continued expanding settlements
in the West Bank and East Jerusalem despite American calls to stop
claiming territory that under international law and United States policy
should belong to a future Palestinian state. This is a sharp contrast
to the evangelical Christian churches, which have been part of the core
of the far right support of the Republican candidates for president and
the Congress. A Jewish-American organization called “J Street,” first
organized six years ago as a “pro-Israel pro-peace” organization, has
been gaining growing support among Jewish Americans for its advocacy of
an end to the settlement expansion and a two- state solution based on
the 1967 borders. In the 2012 elections, it contributed 1.8 million
dollars to support the election of 72 candidates for the U.S. Congress,
of which 71 were elected, The
Republican presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, had direct links to
some of the most reactionary elements in U.S. politics and with right
wing extremist groups in other countries who brought us not only the
Iraq and the war in Afghanistan, but also the contra wars in Nicaragua,
El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. He sought support from the extreme
right wing Cuban exile mafia in South Florida. The election of Romney
would have greatly increased the probability of direct U.S. military
intervention in Latin America in the coming period. The Republicans in
the Congress prevented Obama from shutting down the detention camp at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the U.S. naval base in Cuban territory that has
been occupied illegally since 1903. A
key element of the Communist Party’s strategy of alliances is to imbue
the struggles of these alliances with enhancement of the democratic
rights, and to promote the increasing use of the public sector to extend
the acceptance of a socialist consciousness. Obviously the Communist
Party needs far more growth than it has been able to achieve. We are,
however, effectively using our participation in people’s struggles and
the Internet to recruit new members. We have an online daily news
publication, People’s World, www.peoplesworld.org, a monthly online theoretical journal Political Affairs, www.politicalaffairs.net, as
well as national and district Websites. As a result of our online
activities, we have been forming Party clubs in states in which we
previously had very few or even no members. This influx of new members
led us to have a national Party school earlier this year to acquaint new
members with the Marxist-Leninist orientation of the Party. The
reelection of Obama places before us the high-priority task of
reversing the decline in labor-union membership by securing the
enactment of the law requiring the recognition of labor unions when
supported by the majority of workers of an enterprise and securing
passage of other legislation that benefits the working people. The fact
that the composition of the new Congress did not change ideologically
enough to facilitate passage of this law still presents us with a
difficult struggle. The fact that Republican Party still controls the
lower house of the Congress and has enough votes in the upper house to
block legislative changes of a highly progressive nature presents an
obstacle that we will have to combat until it can be changed in the 2014
elections. We still have the task of strengthening the center-left
alliance and enriching its anti-imperialist character. While
the victory of Obama is a welcome aid for us in our domestic struggles,
we still face the challenge of mobilizing mass pressure on his
administration to reverse the imperialist character of U.S. foreign
policy. The CPUSA will pursue this formidable task vigorously in
alliance with domestic progressive forces and with our comrades in the
Communist and Workers’ Parties and their allies throughout the world.
Last Updated on Thursday, 06 December 2012 14:38