Disaster in France-What Must Be Done Now

Nathan Newman nathan at newman.org
Mon Apr 22 14:19:31 PDT 2002


----- Original Message ----- From: "Doug Henwood" <dhenwood at panix.com>

Michael Hoover wrote:
>the working class and the left are not weak because they are
>divided, they are divided because they are weak

-Isn't it hard to tell which comes first? Weakness & division kind of -travel together.

Why do you argue that the French left is so weak-- the Greens/Socialist/Communists are running parliament; it was just strategic idiocy and complacency that let them assume that they could all run their token Presidential candidates, then support Jospin in the runoff.

I don't agree that the left is divided because it is weak, since I think that the left has some great strengths right now, both in the US and globally, which are being thrown away through stupid divisions and self-indulgence sectarian actions. The French left have made some serious inroads on shorter work weeks combined with increasing productivity, while antiglobalization movements are rising globally -- remember, the French government probably had a stronger presence at Porto Allegra than at the WEP.

Like the US, the French election result was a strong left throwing away victory due to silly sectarianism. Yep, the top leaders were not great, but I am absolutely amazed at leftists who assume that the left must rise and fall based on the quality of top leadership. Most left actions are won from the grassroots up, with leaders being dragged along. Gore, Jospin, Schoeder, whatever-- they will act based on grassroots organizing, not cause them. Gore won the largest percentage of the vote since Carter (and the largest total Democratic vote EVER in absolute terms) not because he was a great leader, but because strong leadership at the grassroots, from the NAACP to unions, did massive turnout of their members. Unfortunately, that grassroots leadership was undone by the Naderites counter-organzing. In France, the results were even sadder because it was based on total complacency at the threat of Le Pen.

But the failure is not at the top but with the grassroots organizers who should have been, and always have to be, much smarter than the nominal leadership at the national level of any political parties.

-- Nathan Newman



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