Monday, May 23, 2011

THE LEFT Re-Re-Revisionism? It would be best for CPI and CPI(M) to unite. Just a thought. SUGATA SRINIVASARAJU

AP
Half-Together Left leaders are united on many fronts
THE LEFT
Re-Re-Revisionism?
It would be best for CPI and CPI(M) to unite. Just a thought.


Revival Options

  • Introspect to see if failure is organisational or at the leadership level
  • Relook assessment of political priorities in a fast-changing India
  • With Left space shrinking, examine possibility of a CPI-CPI (M) merger
  • Walk the talk: be more responsive to people and society than to dogma
  • Rein in thuggish cadres. Bring back leaders who have quit the party.
  • Keep the middle class in mind in an India moving from being a welfare state

***

The Mamata sweep in West Bengal, the defeat in Kerala, another bastion, the backdrop of the debacle in the 2009 general elections—all this has added to the general apprehension that the space occupied by the Left parties may be shrinking. Communist veterans like A.B. Bardhan of the CPI and Somnath Chatterjee of the CPI(M) have spoken about this with quite some pain. "My agony is that the Left parties are becoming more and more irrelevant," Somnath told Outlook. Bardhan, on his part, warns the Left and its leaders to "either change or be out".

It's in the light of this decay of the Left that it is being asked if a reunification of the major Left parties, the CPI and the CPI(M), could stem the rot. Commentators wonder if such a reunion might make a difference to the fate of the Left, given that the historical reasons for the split in 1964 no longer apply and are no longer relevant.

 
 
"The Left finds that its space is shrinking. Our leaders have to change or they may soon find themselves out."A.B. Bardhan, Veteran CPI Leader
 
 
The 1964 split in the Communist movement was caused by differences over the characterisation of the Indian state and over alignment with China and the erstwhile Soviet Union. One section argued that in order to keep the extreme right and right reactionaries out, a "national democratic revolution" was called for. In real terms, this meant the Left should join hands with democratic forces like the Congress. Another dreamt instead of a "people's democratic revolution". The Communist movement was also divided into pro-Soviet and pro-China groups. When the differences began to be seen as irreconcilable, the CPI(M) was formed. The Naxals of the late 1960s and early 1970s—forerunners to the Maoists of today—went with the CPI(M), calling the CPI "revisionist". But they very soon set up their own Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist).

But the point is, none of these original differences are relevant in 2011: the Soviet bloc has collapsed; the Indian state has changed—at least a little—to become accommodative of a range of opinion; and, most importantly, corporate interests have grown to the detriment of the poor, creating for the Left a new arena of relevance. The CPI(M) even made a departure from its historical position to support the UPA government in 2004 to keep out "communal elements". When such an exception can be made, why should the burden of history prevent a reunification?

"Our party has always been willing for a merger, but the response hasn't been positive enough from the other side," says S. Sudhakar Reddy, deputy general secretary of the CPI. "We don't want to blame the CPI(M), but as the bigger party, it should realise the importance of Left unity. In the last two decades, we have come together on many issues. We have agreed on more issues than we have differed on." And D. Raja, CPI national secretary, points out that in 1993, his party even updated the preamble of its constitution to suit the changing times, but the CPI(M) still holds on to its earlier ideological position. "India is moving from being a welfare state to a neo-liberal state and many of our earlier assessments are no longer relevant," he says, and, recalling the time when Inderjit Gupta headed the CPI and Harkishen Singh Surjeet the CPI(M), adds that there was a joint circular issued to establish coordination between the parties. "It was just short of a merger."

But S. Ramachandran Pillai, a CPI(M) politburo member, still holds there are differences, at the philosophical, organisational and political levels. "If reunification has to happen, these have to be settled first. On basic ideological issues, we have grave differences, our tactics and strategies differ. On all immediate political issues, however, we are together," he says. "If you ask whether a merger is possible, the answer is 'yes'. But it may not happen. There are many historical reasons."

Somnath Chatterjee was initially hesitant to comment on his former party, the CPI(M), but opened up later. "The space occupied by the Left is shrinking. It is time for some change. One is not sure if the failure of the CPI(M) is at the organisational or the governance level, but there is certainly a growing distance between the people and the party. There is a smugness in the leadership. There is arrogance. Reunification of the two Left parties per se may not bring about any change. Whether they unite or not they should remain close to the people," he says.

 
 
"It's my agony that the Left parties are becoming irrelevant. The leadership is getting smug and arrogant."Somnath Chatterjee, Ex-CPI(M) Leader
 
 
Dr Siddanagouda Patil, state secretary of the CPI's Karnataka unit, says one of the major hurdles is how the trade unions of the two parties—though they do engage in joint activities—will take it. Both sides admit that their trade unions have entrenched interests and the relationship between them is not exactly cordial. The CPI's AITUC has far more members than the CPI(M)'s CITU. Should a merger be considered, the nitty-gritty of reorganising the assets and office-bearers of both sides will have to be sorted out. "At different points, we have tried to discuss unification of our kisan sabhas, trade unions, electricity board workers' unions," says Raja. "We've even discussed the formation of federations, but for various reasons, it hasn't worked out."

Leaders of both parties, however, concede there are major advantages to coming together, not least for the creation of a larger political base. "In terms of arithmetic, one plus one is two," says Raja. "But in politics, it's much more." The CPI(M) has a presence in West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura, while the CPI has a scattered presence in many states. "We can aspire to be a major opposition party in states like Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu," says Patil. "We can also make a dent in states like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, where we have had a decent presence in the past." Some workers and office-bearers believe a reunification could bring about greater impact in Orissa, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Delhi, Jharkhand, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. The work of the mass reach-out organisations of the two parties, they say, could create a political force in these states.

Another challenge before the Communists is whether they should become social democrats, adapting to the broader Indian political climate. But the CPI(M) has an entrenched position on this: in its political education classes, anyway, the CPI(M) ridicules the CPI as a "social democratic party". There's strong resistance to such an ideological transformation on both sides.

And if confirmation of resistance to a possible merger were needed, one need go no further than the different responses of Bardhan and Brinda Karat of the CPI(M) to the present crisis in the Left. Bardhan wants the Left to connect with and become relevant to groups such as the emerging and aspirational middle class and the youth; Brinda says a review of mistakes will definitely take place, but, foreclosing any possibility of major change, adds that it won't lead to the kind of "reformed" Left its critics root for.

PRINT COMMENTS
THE LEFT
A few things. For a balance in polity, a source of necessary dissent, they matter.
SABA NAQVI
THE LEFT
Done in by their own hubris, Left intellectuals never learned to accept criticism
OUTLOOK
LEFT & REFORMS
Will the Left's losses lead to a surge in the economic reforms agenda? Not so fast.
PRAGYA SINGH
FOREIGN POLICY
How actionable is the Left's instinctive anti-Americanism now?
PRANAY SHARMA
OPINION
It had been 'Ek dhakka aur do' time ever since 2009 Lok Sabha election —the power punch was delivered last week
CHANDAN MITRA

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