The Socialist Workers Party (SWP) is a
communist party in the United States. Originally a group in the
Communist Party USA
The Communist Party USA, officially the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA), is a communist party in the United States which was established in 1919 after a split in the Socialist Party of America following the Russian Revo ...
that supported
Leon Trotsky against
Soviet leader
During its 69-year history, the Soviet Union usually had a ''de facto'' leader who would not necessarily be head of state but would lead while holding an office such as premier or general secretary. Under the 1977 Constitution, the chairman ...
Joseph Stalin, it places a priority on "solidarity work" to aid
strikes and is strongly supportive of
Cuba. The SWP publishes ''
The Militant
''The Militant'' is an international socialist newsweekly connected to the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and the Pathfinder Press. It is published in the United States and distributed in other countries such as Canada, the United Kingdom, Aus ...
'', a weekly newspaper that dates back to 1928. It also maintains
Pathfinder Press.
History
Communist League of America
The SWP traces its origins back to the former
Communist League of America
The Communist League of America (Opposition) was founded by James P. Cannon, Max Shachtman and Martin Abern late in 1928 after their expulsion from the Communist Party USA for Trotskyism. The CLA(O) was the United States section of Leon Trotsky's I ...
(CLA), founded in 1928 by members of the CPUSA expelled for supporting Russian communist leader
Leon Trotsky against
Joseph Stalin. Concentrated almost exclusively in
New York City and
Minneapolis, the CLA did not have more than 100 adherents in 1929. After five years of propaganda work, the CLA remained a tiny organization, with a membership of about 200 and very little influence.
The rise of
fascism in
Nazi Germany and the failure of the communist and social democratic left to stop its rise created a situation where radical parties throughout the world reexamined their priorities and sought mechanisms for building united action. As early as December 1933, a Trotskyist splinter group called the
Communist League of Struggle (CLS), headed by former Socialist Party youth section leader
Albert Weisbord and his wife Vera Buch, approached
Norman Thomas of the
Socialist Party of America
The Socialist Party of America (SPA) was a socialist political party in the United States formed in 1901 by a merger between the three-year-old Social Democratic Party of America and disaffected elements of the Socialist Labor Party of Ameri ...
seeking a
united front hunger march of the two organizations followed by a general strike. This suggestion was dismissed as "
poppycock
Poppycock is a brand of candy, candied popcorn. Though it is marketed in a variety of combinations, the original mixture consists of clusters of popcorn, almonds, and pecans covered in a candy glaze. Other specialty combinations include mixtures ...
" by SP Executive Secretary
Clarence Senior, but the seed of the idea of joint action had been planted.
[Myers, ''The Prophet's Army,'' pg. 112.]
Entryism
Early in 1934, some French Trotskyists of the Communist League conceived of the idea of entering the
French Socialist Party
The Socialist Party (french: Parti socialiste , PS) is a French centre-left and social-democratic political party. It holds pro-European views.
The PS was for decades the largest party of the "French Left" and used to be one of the two major p ...
(the ''Section Française de l'Internationale Ouvrière'' or SFIO) in order to recruit members for the Trotskyists, or so some critics have charged. The group retained its identity as a factional organization inside the SFIO and built a base among the party's youth section, continuing their activity until
popular front action between the SFIO and the mainline
Communist Party of France made their position untenable. This tactic of "entering" the larger social democratic parties of each country, endorsed by Trotsky himself, became known as the "
French Turn" and was replicated by various Trotskyist parties around the world. In 1934, the Communist League of America merged with the
American Workers Party
The American Workers Party (AWP) was a socialist organization established in December 1933 by activists in the Conference for Progressive Labor Action, a group headed by A.J. Muste.
Formation
The American Workers Party was established in Decem ...
led by
A. J. Muste, forming the
Workers Party of the United States.
Throughout 1935, the Workers Party was deeply divided over the "
entryism" tactic called for by the "French Turn" and a bitter debate swept the organization. Ultimately, the majority faction of
Jim Cannon,
Max Shachtman
Max Shachtman (; September 10, 1904 – November 4, 1972) was an American Marxist theorist. He went from being an associate of Leon Trotsky to a social democrat and mentor of senior assistants to AFL–CIO President George Meany.
Beginnings
S ...
and
James Burnham won the day and the Workers Party determined to enter the
Socialist Party of America
The Socialist Party of America (SPA) was a socialist political party in the United States formed in 1901 by a merger between the three-year-old Social Democratic Party of America and disaffected elements of the Socialist Labor Party of Ameri ...
, though a minority faction headed by
Hugo Oehler refused to accept this result and split from the organization.
The Socialist Party was itself beset with factional disagreements. The party's left-wing Militant faction sought to expand the organization into an "all-inclusive party"—inviting in members of the
Lovestone and Trotskyist movements as well as radical individuals as the first step towards making the Socialist Party a mass party. Although there were no mass entries at this time, several radical oppositionists did make their way into the party, including former
Communist Party leader
Benjamin Gitlow, youth leader and ex-
Jay Lovestone supporter Herbert Zam and attorney and American Workers Party activist
Albert Goldman.
Goldman at this time also joined with YPSL leader Ernest Erber to establish a newspaper in Chicago with a Trotskyist orientation, ''
The Socialist Appeal,'' later to serve as the organ of the Trotskyists inside the Socialist Party.
[Myers, ''The Prophet's Army,'' pg. 113.]
In January 1936, just as the National Executive Committee of the Socialist Party was expelling the Old Guard for their factional organization and alleged "violation of party discipline", James Cannon and his faction won their internal battle in the Workers Party to join the Socialist Party, when a national branch referendum voted unanimously for entry.
Negotiations commenced with the Socialist Party leadership, with the admissions ultimately made on the basis of individual applications for membership rather than admission of the Workers Party and its approximately 2,000 members as a group. On June 6, 1936, the Workers Party's weekly newspaper, ''The New Militant,'' published its last issue and announced "Workers Party Calls All Revolutionary Workers to Join Socialist Party".
Although party leader Jim Cannon later hinted that the entry of the Trotskyists into the Socialist Party had been a contrived tactic aimed at stealing "confused young Left Socialists" for his own organization, it seemed that at its inception the entryist tactic was made in good faith. Historian Constance Myers notes that while "initial prognoses for the union of Trotskyists and Socialists were favorable", it was only later when "constant and protracted contact caused differences to surface". The Trotskyists retained a common orientation with the radicalized Socialist Party in their opposition to the European war, their preference for
industrial unionism
Industrial unionism is a trade union organizing method through which all workers in the same industry are organized into the same union, regardless of skill or trade, thus giving workers in one industry, or in all industries, more leverage in ...
and the
Congress of Industrial Organizations
The Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) was a federation of unions that organized workers in industrial unions in the United States and Canada from 1935 to 1955. Originally created in 1935 as a committee within the American Federation of ...
over the trade unionism of the
American Federation of Labor
The American Federation of Labor (A.F. of L.) was a national federation of labor unions in the United States that continues today as the AFL-CIO. It was founded in Columbus, Ohio, in 1886 by an alliance of craft unions eager to provide mutu ...
, a commitment to trade union activism, the defense of the Soviet Union as the first workers' state while at the same time maintaining an antipathy toward the Stalin government and in their general aims in the 1936 election.
Cannon went to
Tujunga, California, a suburb of Los Angeles, to establish another new newspaper, ''Labor Action,'' targeted to trade unionists and Socialist Party members and aimed at winning them over to Trotskyist views while Shachtman and Burnham handled the bulk of the faction's activities in New York.
Norman Thomas attracted nearly 188,000 votes in his 1936 Socialist Party run for President, but performed poorly in historic strongholds of the party. Moreover, the party's membership had begun to decline. The organization was deeply factionalized, with the Militant faction split into right ("Altmanite"), center ("Clarity") and left ("Appeal") factions, in addition to the radical pacifists led by Thomas. A special convention was planned for the last week of March 1937 to set the party's future policy, initially intended as an unprecedented "secret" gathering.
[Myers, ''The Prophet's Army,'' pg. 127.]
Split from the Socialist Party of America
Prior to the March convention, the Trotskyist Socialist Appeal faction held an organizational gathering of their own in Chicago, with 93 delegates gathering on February 20–22, 1937.
The meeting organized the faction on a permanent basis, electing a National Action Committee of five to "coordinate branch work" and "formulate Appeal policies". Two delegates from the Clarity caucus were in attendance. James Burnham vigorously attacked the Labour and Socialist International, the international organization of left-wing parties to which the Socialist Party belonged and tension rose along these lines among the Trotskyists. United action between the Clarity and Appeal groups was not forthcoming and an emergency meeting of Vincent Dunne and Cannon was held in New York with leaders of the various factions including Thomas,
Jack Altman
Jack may refer to:
Places
* Jack, Alabama, US, an unincorporated community
* Jack, Missouri, US, an unincorporated community
* Jack County, Texas, a county in Texas, USA
People and fictional characters
* Jack (given name), a male given name, i ...
and Gus Tyler of Clarity. At this meeting, Thomas pledged that the upcoming convention would make no effort to terminate the newspapers of the various factions.
There was no action to expel the Trotskyist Appeal faction, but pressure continued to build along these lines, egged on by the Communist Party's increasingly vehement denunciations of Trotsky and his followers as wreckers and agents of international fascism. The convention passed a ban on future branch resolutions on controversial matters, an effort to rein in the activities of the factions at the local level. It also banned factional newspapers, establishing a national organ instead.
Constance Myers indicates that three factors led to the Trotskyists' expulsion from the Socialist Party in 1937: the divergence between the official Socialists and the Trotskyist faction on the issues, the determination of Altman's wing of the Militants to oust the Trotskyists, and Trotsky's own decision to move toward a break with the party. Recognizing that the Clarity faction had chosen to stand with the Altmanites and the Thomas group, Trotsky recommended that the Appeal group focus on disagreements over Spain to provoke a split. At the same time, Thomas, freshly returned from Spain, had concluded that the Trotskyists had joined the Socialist Party not to make it stronger, but to capture it for their own purposes.
On June 24–25, 1937, a meeting of the Appeal faction's National Action Committee voted to ratchet up the rhetoric against the
American Labor Party and
Republican nominee for
mayor of New York Fiorello LaGuardia (a favorite son of many in Socialist ranks) and to reestablish their newspaper, ''The Socialist Appeal.''
[Myers, ''The Prophet's Army,'' pg. 139.] This was met with expulsions from the party beginning August 9 with a rump meeting of the Central Committee of Local New York, which expelled 52 New York Trotskyists by a vote of 48 to 2 (with 18 abstentions) and ordering 70 more to be brought up on charges.
Wholesale expulsions followed, with a major section of the
Young People's Socialist League (YPSL) leaving the party with the Trotskyists.
The 1,000 or so Trotskyists who entered the Socialist Party in 1936 exited in the summer of 1937 with their ranks swelled by another 1,000. On December 31, 1937, representatives of this faction gathered in Chicago to establish a new political organization—the Socialist Workers Party.
Formation of the Socialist Workers Party
The October 2, 1937 issue of the ''Socialist Appeal'' included a convention call from the so-called "Left Wing" to "All Locals and Branches of the Socialist Party", accusing the NEC of the party of having "betrayed the principles of socialism" by withdrawing the party's candidate for mayor of New York in favor of LaGuardia and for having ordered "the bureaucratic expulsion of all the revolutionary members of the party who oppose and obstruct this sell-out policy". A convention was called by four Socialist Party State Committees, the NEC of the YPSL and the organized Left Wing organizations of Chicago and New York, originally slated for Thanksgiving weekend, November 25–28, in Chicago, but it was soon postponed until December 31 "in order to provide adequate time for discussion by the membership" of important questions.
In December 1937, an agenda was published by the Convention Organizing Committee naming Cannon as the primary reporter on the Trade Union question, Shachtman on the Russian Resolution, Goldman on the Spanish Resolution, Canadian
Maurice Spector on the International Resolution, Burnham on the Declaration of Principles of the new organization and Abern on Party Organization and Constitution. The gathering was to conclude with the election of a new National Committee.
On December 31, over 100 regular and fraternal delegates gathered in Chicago, where they were greeted by a speech of welcome delivered by Chicago leader Albert Goldman, a labor attorney. As editor of the Trotskyist movement's ongoing theoretical magazine, ''The New International'', Shachtman delivered the first official report to the gathering, dealing with the political situation in the United States. He declared:
It is entirely inconceivable that American imperialism can succeed in resisting the inexorable tendencies that are pulling it into the vortex of the coming world war.
If the working class is unable to prevent the outbreak of war, and the United States enters directly into it, our party stands pledged to the traditional position of revolutionary Marxism.
It will utilize the crisis of capitalist rule engendered by the war to prosecute the class struggle with the utmost intransigence, to strengthen the independent labor and revolutionary movements, and to bring the war to a close by the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of proletarian rule in the form of the workers state.
The convention devoted a full day to discussion of the labor movement's problems and the role of the new organization in the unions, with Cannon delivering the primary report. While criticizing the "reactionary role which the
AFL
AFL may refer to:
Sports
* American Football League (AFL), a name shared by several separate and unrelated professional American football leagues:
** American Football League (1926) (a.k.a. "AFL I"), first rival of the National Football Leagu ...
leadership has played", Cannon declared that "our party...takes a clear-cut position in favor of the earliest and completest possible unification of the
AFL
AFL may refer to:
Sports
* American Football League (AFL), a name shared by several separate and unrelated professional American football leagues:
** American Football League (1926) (a.k.a. "AFL I"), first rival of the National Football Leagu ...
and the
CIO
CIO may refer to:
Organizations
* Central Imagery Office, a predecessor of the American National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
* Central Intelligence Office, the national intelligence agency of the former Republic of Vietnam
* Central Intellige ...
, and also the hitherto unaffiliated Railroad Brotherhoods".
1940 split
The 1940 split in the SWP followed an internal factional debate over the party's internal government, the class nature of the Russian state and
Marxist
Marxism is a Left-wing politics, left-wing to Far-left politics, far-left method of socioeconomic analysis that uses a Materialism, materialist interpretation of historical development, better known as historical materialism, to understand S ...
philosophy and other questions. The SWP experienced many other factional conflicts and splits in its history, but this was the largest and foreshadowed many features of those to come.
The majority faction, led by Cannon, supported Trotsky's position that the
Soviet Union remained a "
workers' state" and should be supported in any war with capitalist states, despite their opposition to Stalin's government. The minority faction, led by Shachtman, held that the Soviet Union should not be supported in its war with
Finland. One of its leaders,
James Burnham, held in addition that the Soviet Union had degenerated so far that it deserved no defense whatsoever. Like this debate, most later factional disputes within the SWP centered on different attitudes toward revolutions in other countries.
The opposition faction alleged that Cannon's leadership of the SWP was "bureaucratic conservative" and demanded the right to its own publications to express its views outside the party. The majority faction said this was contrary to Lenin's concept of
democratic centralism
Democratic centralism is a practice in which political decisions reached by voting processes are binding upon all members of the political party. It is mainly associated with Leninism, wherein the party's political vanguard of professional revo ...
and that disagreements within the SWP should be debated only internally. Similar disagreements over the SWP's internal government have surfaced in most later faction fights, with most later opposition factions raising similar demands and accusations. Despite this, most of these later factions claimed political descent from Cannon and the SWP majority, not from earlier opposition factions and splinter parties.
The minority faction led by Shachtman eventually split away almost 40% of the party's membership as well as its youth organization, the
Young People's Socialist League, forming the
Workers Party.
World War II
A number of members were imprisoned under the
Smith Act of 1941, under
Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration, including Cannon (see
Smith Act Trials
The Smith Act trials of Communist Party leaders in New York City from 1949 to 1958 were the result of Federal government of the United States, US federal government prosecutions in the postwar period and during the Cold War between the Soviet Uni ...
). Those imprisoned included the main national leaders of the SWP and those members most prominent in the Midwest Teamsters. With Roosevelt's decision to increase the power of the
FBI during this time, the arrests were made swiftly.
The party put into practice the so-called
Proletarian Military Policy of opposing the war politically while attempting to transform what they saw as an imperialist war into a civil war. The party lost a number of its members while sailing in extremely perilous convoys to Murmansk. Problems caused by some experienced leaders' imprisonment and many others' enlistment in the armed forces meant that the editorship of ''
The Militant
''The Militant'' is an international socialist newsweekly connected to the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and the Pathfinder Press. It is published in the United States and distributed in other countries such as Canada, the United Kingdom, Aus ...
'' passed through a number of hands during the war.
The SWP was active in supporting labor strikes that occurred despite the wartime "no-strike pledge" and protests against racist discrimination during the war, such as
A. Philip Randolph
Asa Philip Randolph (April 15, 1889 – May 16, 1979) was an American labor unionist and civil rights activist. In 1925, he organized and led the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first successful African-American led labor union. In ...
's
March on Washington Movement. The Post Office refused to mail some issues of ''The Militant'' and threatened to cancel its third-class mailing permit, citing objections to its articles calling for violent overthrow of the government. The SWP said it was being persecuted for opposing racist discrimination.
Postwar years
After the war, the SWP and the
Fourth International both expected that there would be a wave of revolutionary struggles like those that accompanied the end of the previous war. Indeed, revolutions did occur in
Yugoslavia,
Albania,
Korea and
China
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and ...
, to name only those that resulted in the overthrow of capitalism, but contrary to Trotskyist expectations they were headed by Moscow-oriented "
Stalinist
Stalinism is the means of governing and Marxist-Leninist policies implemented in the Soviet Union from 1927 to 1953 by Joseph Stalin. It included the creation of a one-party totalitarian police state, rapid industrialization, the theory o ...
" parties.
The largest strike wave in United States history, involving over five million workers, occurred with the end of the war and the wartime pledge made by many
union leaders not to strike for the duration, but this did not mean there were not many strikes during wartime as there were many
wildcat strikes
A wildcat strike action, often referred to as a wildcat strike, is a strike action undertaken by unionised workers without union leadership's authorisation, support, or approval; this is sometimes termed an unofficial industrial action. The legalit ...
during this period as well as strikes officially called by the
United Mine Workers of America
The United Mine Workers of America (UMW or UMWA) is a North American Labor history of the United States, labor union best known for representing coal miners. Today, the Union also represents health care workers, truck drivers, manufacturing worke ...
. There were also protests by GIs demanding rapid demobilization after the end of the war, sometimes called the going-home movement. The SWP participation in this upsurge led to a brief period of rapid growth for the SWP immediately after the war.
The end of the war also saw the reorganization of the Fourth International in which the SWP played a major role. As part of this process, moves were made to heal the breach with Shachtman's supporters in the Workers Party (WP) and for the two groups to fuse. This eventually came to nothing, but some SWP members who supported the views of
Felix Morrow and
Albert Goldman grew dissatisfied with what they saw as the SWP's ultra-leftist attitude towards revolutionary policies. Eventually, they left the SWP in a state of demoralization and some joined the WP.
Meanwhile, a faction within the WP called the
Johnson-Forest Tendency, named for
C. L. R. James (known as Johnson) and
Raya Dunayevskaya (Forest), was impatient with the WP's caution and felt the situation could rapidly become pre-revolutionary. This led them to leave the WP and rejoin the SWP in 1947. This tendency had moved further away from the "
orthodox Trotskyism
Orthodox Trotskyism is a branch of Trotskyism which aims to adhere more closely to the philosophy, methods and positions of Leon Trotsky and the early Fourth International, Vladimir Lenin and Karl Marx than other avowed Trotskyists.
The first Tro ...
" of the SWP, producing tension. For example, they continued to hold the position that the Soviet Union was a "
state capitalist" society. By 1951, their presence in the SWP was ever more anomalous and most left to form the
Correspondence Publishing Committee
Correspondence Publishing Committee was a radical left organization led by C. L. R. James and Martin Glaberman that existed in the United States from approximately 1951 until it split in 1962. History
The Correspondence Publishing Committee has ...
. Dunayevskaya and her supporters eventually formed the News and Letters Committees in 1955 after splitting with James, who was deported from the United States to Britain, where he continued to advise the Correspondence Publishing Committee, which split again in 1962, with those loyal to James taking the name
Facing Reality.
Cold War period
The brief postwar wave of labor unrest gave way to the conservatism of the 1950s, the reform of previously radical labor unions and
McCarthyism
McCarthyism is the practice of making false or unfounded accusations of subversion and treason, especially when related to anarchism, communism and socialism, and especially when done in a public and attention-grabbing manner.
The term origin ...
. The SWP's attempt at entryism into the growing civil rights movement, which continued uninterrupted out of World War II, could not fully offset these trends and the SWP experienced a period of decline and isolation.
The party also had a number of splits over these years. One saw the departure of the faction of
Bert Cochran
Bert Cochran, born Alexander Goldfarb (December 25, 1913 – June 6, 1984) was an American Communist politician and writer. A Trotskyist, he was a member of the Socialist Workers Party from the 1930s to the 1950s.
Biography
Cochran was born in ...
and Clarke, who formed the
American Socialist Union
The Socialist Union of America, also called American Socialist Union, Socialist Union or Cochranites were a Trotskyist group that split from the Socialist Workers Party in 1953 and disbanded in 1959. It included most of the SWPs trade union base, ...
, which lasted until 1959. That 1953 opposition supported some of the positions of
Michel Pablo, the Secretary of the Fourth International, although Pablo disagreed with their wish to dissolve the Fourth International.
The next, smaller split was that of
Sam Marcy
Sam Ballan (1911 – February 1, 1998), known by his pen name Sam Marcy, was an American lawyer, writer, and Marxist-Leninist activist of the post-World War II era. He co-founded the Workers World Party in 1959 and served as its chairperson unt ...
's Global Class War faction, which called within the SWP for support of
Henry Wallace's
Progressive Party presidential run in 1948 and regarded
Mao Zedong as a revolutionary leader. This faction ended up leaving the SWP in 1958 after supporting the suppression of the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956, a position contrary to that of the SWP and other Trotskyist tendencies. It went on to form the
Workers World Party.
Meanwhile, throughout the 1950s and into the 1960s the remaining members of the SWP clung to its firmly held beliefs and grew older. Consequently, the party membership shrank over these years from a postwar high in 1948 until the tide began to turn in the early 1960s. The
Cuban Revolution signaled a change in the SWP's political direction as it embarked on pro-Castro "solidarity work" through the
Fair Play for Cuba Committee The Fair Play for Cuba Committee (FPCC) was an activist group set up in New York City by Robert Taber in April 1960.
History
The FPCC's purpose was to provide grassroots support for the Cuban Revolution against attacks by the United States govern ...
. The result was a small accretion of youth to the party's ranks. In the same period, longtime SWP leader Murry Weiss won another group of youth from the
Shachtmanites as they joined the
Socialist Party of America
The Socialist Party of America (SPA) was a socialist political party in the United States formed in 1901 by a merger between the three-year-old Social Democratic Party of America and disaffected elements of the Socialist Labor Party of Ameri ...
. Many of the new recruits were drawn from the student movement, unlike those who had led the party since the 1930s; as a result, the party's internal culture began to change.
1960s
Despite such growing signs of an end to the isolation the group endured during the McCarthyite period, it experienced a new split in the early 1960s. A number of small oppositional groups developed within the party. One of the key issues was the Cuban Revolution and the SWP's response to it. Cannon and other SWP leaders such as
Joseph Hansen saw
Cuba as qualitatively different from the Stalinist states of
Eastern Europe. Their analysis brought them closer to the
International Secretariat of the Fourth International (ISFI), from which the SWP had split in 1953. The SWP successfully negotiated a reunification of the ISFI and the International Committee of the Fourth International, leading to the creation in 1963 of the
reunified Fourth International. Two sections of the ICFI, including
Gerry Healy's
Socialist Labour League, rejected the merger and turned against the SWP leadership, working with opponents within the party.
The most important faction opposing the SWP leadership's new line was the Revolutionary Tendency (RT), led by
James Robertson and
Tim Wohlforth
Timothy Andrew Wohlforth (May 15, 1933 – August 23, 2019), was a United States Trotskyist leader. On leaving the Trotskyist movement he became a writer of crime fiction and of politically oriented non-fiction.
As a student, Wohlforth joined the ...
, which rejected the SWP's "capitulation" to
Pabloism
Michel Pablo ( el, Μισέλ Πάμπλο; 24 August 1911, Alexandria, Egypt – 17 February 1996, Athens) was the pseudonym of Michalis N. Raptis ( el, Μιχάλης Ν. Ράπτης), a Trotskyist leader of Greek origin.
Early activism ...
and opposed joining the USFI. It was critical of the Castro government, arguing that Cuba remained a "
deformed workers' state". However, a split developed within this faction between groups headed by the two men. Nonetheless, both the RT and the Reorganized Minority Tendency split to form the Spartacist (see
Spartacist League
The Spartacus League (German: ''Spartakusbund'') was a Marxist revolutionary movement organized in Germany during World War I. It was founded in August 1914 as the "International Group" by Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht, Clara Zetkin, and other ...
) and the
American Committee for the Fourth International
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) is a Trotskyism, Trotskyist Political parties in the United States, political party in the United States, one of several Socialist Equality parties around the world affiliated with the International Committee of ...
respectively, with the latter becoming aligned with Healy's SLL.
In the aftermath, the
Seattle branch also left to found the
Freedom Socialist Party
The Freedom Socialist Party is a left-wing socialist political party with a revolutionary feminist philosophy based in the United States. It views the struggles of women and minorities as part of the struggle of the working class. It emerged fro ...
after protesting the alleged suppression of internal democracy, as did Murray and
Myra Tanner Weiss
Myra Tanner Weiss (May 17, 1917 – September 13, 1997) was an American Communist following Trotskyism, and a three time U.S. vice presidential candidate of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP).
Biography
Myra Tanner was recruited to the American Tr ...
.
The SWP supported both the civil rights movement and the black nationalist movement that grew during the 1960s. It particularly praised the militancy of black nationalist leader
Malcolm X, who in turn spoke at the SWP's public forums and gave an interview to ''Young Socialist'' magazine. After his assassination, the SWP had limited success in forming alliances with his followers and other black nationalists. But these movements were part of the
radicalization that aided the SWP's growth.
The SWP provided a political ideology for African Americans seeking equality in the early 20th century. Black nationalists were in favor of socialist policy and ideas. During the 1960s, the SWP had begun selecting African American candidates on their presidential ticket. The SWP hoped to change American values and ensure each citizen had equal rights under the law. "Many black nationalists turned to the Socialist Workers Party because the SWP proposed that its black members collaborate with other militant African Americans," according to a group of historians studying the public service of African Americans. The SWP expanded the ideas of nationalism to African Americans and arguably expanded black nationalism for generations.
Like all left-wing groups, the SWP grew during the 1960s and experienced particularly brisk growth in early 1970s. Much of this was due to its involvement in many of the campaigns and demonstrations against the
war in Vietnam. The SWP advocated that the antiwar movement should call for the immediate withdrawal of all American troops and focus on organizing large, legal demonstrations for this demand. It was recognized by friend and foe alike as a major factor influencing the direction of the antiwar movement along these lines. One of the leaders of the antiwar movement at this time, along with
Dave Dellinger
David T. Dellinger (August 22, 1915 – May 25, 2004) was an American pacifist and an activist for nonviolent social change. He achieved peak prominence as one of the Chicago Seven, who were put on trial in 1969.
Early life and schooling
Delli ...
and many others, was Fred Halstead, a World War II veteran and former leader of the garment workers union in New York City. Halstead was the 1968 presidential candidate of the SWP and visited Vietnam in that capacity.
The SWP was also increasingly outspoken in its defense of the Castro government and its identification with that government. A new leadership led by Jack Barnes (who became national secretary in 1972) made identification with Cuba an ever-greater part of the politics of the SWP throughout the 1970s.
The party also published many of Trotsky's works in these years through its publishing house, Pathfinder Press. Not only were the better-known writings reprinted, many for the first time since the 1930s, but other more obscure articles and letters were collected and printed for a wider audience than they had when first distributed. The expansion of the press also allowed the SWP to host ''Intercontinental Press'', the FI magazine that moved from Paris to New York in 1969, which later merged with ''Inprecor''.
1970s and new leadership
The growth of labor militancy in the early 1970s affected the SWP and currents developed within it urging a reorientation of the party toward this militancy. One such current was the Proletarian Orientation Tendency, which included Larry Trainor, and eventually dissolved.
Another tendency developed called the Internationalist Tendency (IT). The IT posed a greater challenge to the group's leadership as it agreed with the Fourth International's advocacy of guerrilla warfare as a "tactic on a continental scale" in Latin America. But despite tensions between the SWP and the rest of the international, when the former expelled the IT, the International refused to side with the tendency. The IT disintegrated over the next few months, some of its supporters finding their way back into the SWP.
The international tensions developed further when the SWP and its co-thinkers established the Leninist Trotskyist Tendency in 1973 in order to contribute to the debate for the Fourth International (post-reunification)#Tenth World Congress: guerrilla debate, Tenth World Congress. It argued for a reversal of the Latin American guerrilla warfare, guerrilla war orientation adopted at the Fourth International (post-reunification)#Ninth World Congress: Vietnam solidarity, Ninth World Congress. This period was the peak of the SWP's growth and influence. The party continued its involvement in the movement against the war in Vietnam, which peaked in 1970–71. The SWP also supported Chicano nationalism, including the Raza Unida Party. It helped organize protests demanding legal abortion through the Women's National Abortion Action Coalition. With the mid-to-late 1970s decline of these movements and the end of the 1960s–1970s youth radicalization, SWP membership and influence went into decline.
In 1978, the SWP leadership decided that the key task was for party members to make a turn to industry. This turn entailed party members getting jobs in blue-collar industries in preparation for, the SWP leadership projected, increasing mass struggles. The 1977–78 coal miners' strike and developments like Steelworkers Fight Back were among the events pointed to in arguing for this change in policy. Party members sought to get jobs in the same workplaces in order to work as organized "fractions", doing "communist political work" as well as union activity.
As a result, many members were asked to move and change jobs, often out of established careers and into low-paying jobs in small towns. Many of the older members with experience in trade unions resisted this "colonization program", which upset their established routine in the unions, as did some of the younger members.
1980s and after
Internal affairs
Opposition to the "turn to industry" developed within the SWP. This opposition was not homogeneous and was itself beset by differences among different factions.
A further factor in the growing divisions within the SWP was the move by Jack Barnes, Mary-Alice Waters and others in the leadership away from the Trotskyist label. In 1982, Barnes gave a speech, later published as ''Their Trotsky and Ours: Communist Continuity Today,'' in which he rejected Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution, arguing that it failed to sufficiently distinguish between the democratic and socialist tasks of a workers' revolution. Barnes argued that anticapitalist revolutions typically began with a "workers' and farmers' government" that initially concentrated on bourgeois-democratic measures and only later moved on to the abolition of capitalism.
Barnes also argued that the Trotskyist label unnecessarily distinguished leftists in that tradition from leftists of other origins, such as the Communist Party of Cuba, Cuban Communist Party or the Sandinista National Liberation Front. He argued that the SWP had more in common with these organizations than with many groups calling themselves Trotskyist. The SWP has continued to publish numerous books by Trotsky and advocate a number of ideas commonly associated with Trotskyism, including Trotsky's analysis of Stalinism.
The opposition factions continued to support the theory of permanent revolution and the Trotskyist label: they anticipated that the SWP leadership was reassessing its place in the Fourth International. While declaring their support for the Cuban and the leftist Nicaraguan governments, they were more critical of the Castroist and Sandinista leadership. They also continued to oppose the "turn to industry".
One opposition group rallied around the Weinsteins on the West Coast (with supporters elsewhere too) while a second group rallied around George Breitman and Frank Lovell. Together they formed an opposition bloc on the SWP's National Committee, but in 1983 both groups were expelled. The opposition factions, having split from the SWP, formed new organizations. The Weinstein group formed the San Francisco-based Socialist Action (U.S.), Socialist Action. The Breitman-Lovell group after a time formed the Fourth Internationalist Tendency. Both groups described themselves as "public factions" of the SWP and set the task of recapturing the SWP to their understanding of Trotskyism. Another group, mainly in Los Angeles, had been close to Breitman, belonged briefly to Socialist Action, and left to join the "regroupment" organization Solidarity (U.S.), Solidarity.
This was the most recent split or major faction fight in the SWP. The organization has experienced an unusually long period of internal peace since, although it has declined steadily in both its membership and its political influence within the American left. Numerous recent expulsions—sometimes of long-standing SWP veterans—have contributed to the membership decline. In 2003, the party sold its major headquarters building in New York City for $20 million and moved to another location in Manhattan. Party leaders Barnes and Mary-Alice Waters subsequently sold their West Village condominium for $1.87 million.
Activities
The SWP's most high-profile and controversial campaign in the late 1980s and early 1990s was its Mark Curtis (SWP member), Mark Curtis Defense Committee, established after Curtis, an SWP activist and trade union organizer, was charged and convicted on burglary and rape charges in 1988. The party claimed that Curtis had been framed by police for his role in defending immigrant workers. Curtis was eventually paroled, but he was later arrested in Chicago on prostitution-related charges and then expelled from the SWP.
The SWP now focuses much of its energy on raising awareness about socialist ideas by running political candidates for office, holding weekly Militant Labor Forums and distributing ''The Militant'', a socialist weekly, as well as Pathfinder books, many of which feature Barnes's speeches and writings. SWP members are present in a handful of trade unions and take part in such activities as promoting Cuban solidarity, joining striking workers' picket lines, actions against racism and police brutality, opposing US imperialist wars, defending the Bundy standoff, Bundy family, speaking out against attacks on democratic rights, and promoting the creation of a broad-based labor party.
On November 5, 2022, during the 2022 California Proposition 1, California abortion proposition debate, Betsey Stone announced the SWP's opposition to the constitutional amendment in ''The Militant'', arguing that "we need to fight to make abortion rarer by changing the social conditions that have led to its widespread use".
International affiliation
Due to legal constraints, the SWP ended its formal affiliation with the
Fourth International in the 1940s. It remained in close political solidarity with the Fourth International. The SWP broke formally with the Fourth International (post-reunification), Fourth International in 1990, though it had been increasingly inactive in the Trotskyist movement since Barnes's 1982 speech "Their Trotsky and Ours", which some view as signaling a break with Trotskyism. The SWP action followed the 1985 World Congress and the SWP closed Intercontinental Press in 1986. The SWP's international formation is sometimes called the Pathfinder tendency because they each operate a Pathfinder Bookstore which sells the publications of the SWP's publishing arm, ''Pathfinder Press''.
In 1986, the party won a lawsuit against the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a result of years of spying and disruption. It was also found that Herbert Hill of the NAACP, a former SWP member, was an informant on the party after he left in the 1940s.
Presidential politics
The SWP has run candidates for President since 1948. It received its greatest number of votes in 1976, when its candidate Peter Camejo received 90,310 votes.
In the 2004 United States presidential election, presidential election of 2004, the SWP ran Róger Calero for President and Arrin Hawkins for Vice President. Both candidates were constitutionally unqualified for the positions (under Article II, section 1) because Calero is not an American citizen and Hawkins was 29 years old, with the minimum age being 35 (this had been done before, notably by running 31-year-old Linda Jenness in 1972). James Harris (Socialist Workers Party politician), James Harris and Margaret Trowe, the SWP's ticket from 2000, stood in on the ballot in some states where Calero and Hawkins could not be listed. The two tickets combined received over 10,000 votes. They were on the ballot in 11 states and the District of Columbia, more than any other socialist candidates. The vote total does not reflect the actual vote because of the unqualified status of the candidates. County clerks (in some states) and statewide Secretaries of State have discretion in reporting votes for ineligible candidates. The same situation obtained in 2008.
Target of COINTELPRO
The Church Committee report of 1976 stated that the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had investigated the SWP since 1940 and, in 1961, initiated a COINTELPRO program against it. The FBI said it had targeted the SWP because of its support for "such causes as Castro's Cuba and integration problems arising in the South". Under the COINTELPRO operation the FBI collected information about SWP members' political views, conducted up to 92 break-ins of the SWP's offices, and interfered in elections to damage the campaigns of SWP candidates. FBI officials testified to the Church Committee that the SWP has "not been responsible for any violent acts nor has it urged actions constituting an indictable incitement to violence".
Anchor Foundation
A 2016 study published in the peer-reviewed
Journal of Business Case Studies used public records to study the sale of the assets of the Anchor Foundation, "a private 501(c)(3) foundation associated with the Socialist Workers Party (SWP), a small radical organization."
[Eagan, J. V. (2016). The Anchor Foundation: A Tax Case Study In The Use Of Foundations By Adversarial Groups. Journal of Business Case Studies (JBCS), 12(4), 145–152. https://doi.org/10.19030/jbcs.v12i4.9791] The study noted, "The case raises issues under the tax rules covering private foundations of 'disqualified persons,' fiduciary duty of care, excessive compensation, disclosure of contributors, political expenditures, and disclosures in the Form 990s."
The study reported, "The key event in this case is the sale of 410 West Street. In June 2003, about three years after part ownership was donated to the Anchor Foundation, 410 West Street was sold by 406 West Street Realty Corp (signed for by Jack Barnes) and Anchor Foundation (signed for by Norton Sandler) for $20 million to 410 West LLC (City of New York, 2003). The 410 West LLC is a private company with no apparent relationship to the SWP (New York State, 2003)."
According to the paper, there was a rapid depletion of assets while the compensation for Barnes and Waters saw manifold increases. The study added, "One interesting component of the 2003 West Street transaction was the 'Finder’s Fee & Supervisory Services' for sale of 410 West St that was paid to Jack Barnes ($475,000) and Mary Alice Waters ($263,735), for a total finder's fee of $738,735, 3.7% of the sale price (Anchor Foundation 2004 Form 990).”
Personnel
National Secretaries
* James P. Cannon (1938–1953)
* Farrell Dobbs (1953–1972)
* Jack Barnes (since 1972)
Prominent current and former members
* Martin Abern
* Harry Braverman
* George Breitman
*
James Burnham
* Peter Camejo
* Joseph Carter (socialist), Joseph Carter
*
Bert Cochran
Bert Cochran, born Alexander Goldfarb (December 25, 1913 – June 6, 1984) was an American Communist politician and writer. A Trotskyist, he was a member of the Socialist Workers Party from the 1930s to the 1950s.
Biography
Cochran was born in ...
* Jake Cooper (socialist), Jake Cooper
* Stephanie Coontz
* Clifton DeBerry
* Farrell Dobbs
* Hal Draper
*
Raya Dunayevskaya
* James T. Farrell
* Eric Flint
* Clara Fraser
* Richard S. Fraser, Richard Fraser
*
Albert Goldman
*
Joseph Hansen
* Sidney Hook
*
C. L. R. James
* Martin Koppel
* Lyndon LaRouche
* Frank Lovell
*
Sam Marcy
Sam Ballan (1911 – February 1, 1998), known by his pen name Sam Marcy, was an American lawyer, writer, and Marxist-Leninist activist of the post-World War II era. He co-founded the Workers World Party in 1959 and served as its chairperson unt ...
* Kathleen Mickells
* Paul Montauk
*
Felix Morrow
* George Novack
* Evelyn Reed
* Harry Ring
*
James Robertson
* Olga Rodriguez (activist), Olga Rodriguez
*
Max Shachtman
Max Shachtman (; September 10, 1904 – November 4, 1972) was an American Marxist theorist. He went from being an associate of Leon Trotsky to a social democrat and mentor of senior assistants to AFL–CIO President George Meany.
Beginnings
S ...
* Ed Shaw (activist), Ed Shaw
* Carl Skoglund
* Morris Starsky
* Arne Swabeck
* Larry Trainor
* Mary-Alice Waters
* Eduard Limonov
* David Loeb Weiss
*
Myra Tanner Weiss
Myra Tanner Weiss (May 17, 1917 – September 13, 1997) was an American Communist following Trotskyism, and a three time U.S. vice presidential candidate of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP).
Biography
Myra Tanner was recruited to the American Tr ...
* Herbert Hill (labor director), Herbert Hill
See also
* American Left
* COINTELPRO
* History of the socialist movement in the United States
* List of communist parties
* List of political parties in the United States
* Pathfinder Mural
* Socialist Workers Party (disambiguation)
* Socialist Equality Party (United States) (SEP)
Footnotes
Further reading
Books
* Breitman, George (ed.) ''Founding of the Socialist Workers Party: Minutes and Resolutions, 1938-39.'' New York: Monad Press, 1982.
* Cannon, James P., ''The History of American Trotskyism: Report of a Participant.'' New York: Pioneer Press, 1944.
* Fields, A. Belden, ''Trotskyism and Maoism: Theory and Practice in France and the United States.'' Brooklyn, NY: Autonomedia, 1988. .
* Halstead, Fred, ''Out Now!: A Participant's Account of the Movement in the United States Against the Vietnam War.'' New York: Monad Press, 1978.
* Jayko, Margaret (ed.), ''FBI on Trial: The Victory in the Socialist Workers Party Suit Against Government Spying.'' New York: Pathfinder Press, 1988.
* LeBlanc, Paul; Bryan Palmer, and Thomas Bias (eds.), ''US Trotskyism, 1928-1965.'' In Three Volumes. Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2019.
* McDonald, Larry, ''Trotskyism and Terror: The Strategy of Revolution.'' Washington, D.C.: ACU Education and Research Institute, 1977.
* Myers, Constance Ashton, ''The Prophet's Army: Trotskyists in America, 1928-1941.'' Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1977.
* Sheppard, Barry, ''The Party: The Socialist Workers Party, 1960-1988. A Political Memoir. Volume 1: The Sixties.'' Chippendale, Australia: Resistance Books, 2005.
* Sheppard, Barry, ''The Party: The Socialist Workers Party, 1960-1988. A Political Memoir. Volume 2: Interregnum, Decline, and Collapse, 1973-1988.'' Chippendale, Australia: Resistance Books, 2012. .
* Wohlforth, Tim, ''The Prophet's Children: Travels on the American Left.'' Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanity Press, 1994.
Archival material
* George Breitman Papers. Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives at New York University, New York
Finding Aid
* James P. Cannon Papers. Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison. Also available on microfilm.
* Frank Lovell Papers. Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, New York University
Finding Aid
* Max Shachtman Papers. Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, New York University
Finding Aid
* David Loeb Weiss Papers. Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, New York University.
* Myra Tanner Weiss Papers. Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, New York University.
* Socialist Workers Party records 1928-1990. Hoover Institution for War and Peace, Stanford, California
Finding aid
* Melba Windoffer Papers. Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington
Finding Aid
* George E. Rennar Papers. Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington
Finding Aid
External links
''The Militant'' homepagePathfinder Press homepage Marxists Internet Archive.
Includes ephemera produced by the SWP.
Catalogue of the SWP publications within Tony Whelan's papers Held at the Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick.
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Socialist Workers Party (United States),
Anti-capitalist political parties
COINTELPRO targets
Communism in the United States
Trotskyism in the United States
New Left
Far-left political parties
Far-left politics in the United States
Socialism in the United States
Political parties in the United States
1938 establishments in the United States
Trotskyist parties in the United States