gurrier said:
Quite. I think the whole idea of creating a 'mass party of the working class' is simply a symptom of political thinking that is stuck in the 1930's.
Ok. That's your conclusion, let's look at your reasoning.
gurrier said:
Trotskyism, in general, has almost always existed within a large social democratic pool provided by labour parties and social democratic forces within trade unions.
It's a side issue but I think you are extrapolating rather too much from the experience of my own current to "Trotskyism" in general. The bulk of self-described Trotskyists at most points have worked as independent organisations. These groups have of course had to work out how to interact with these mass organisations and how to win over the workers who adhere to them, but that's true of all subjectively revolutionary groups and not something particular to Trotskyism.
gurrier said:
Your strategy is, briefly, to attempt to rebuild these types of broad social democratic forces and to work within them as revolutionaries.
Another minor but important distinction here. The aim is not to rebuild social democratic forces or organisations, but to rebuild basic class organisations. It is likely that the majority within such organisations will at least initially be reformist in outlook, but that's not our goal. It is instead a result of something we'll get to in a moment, which is the existing reformist attitude of most politically inclined workers.
gurrier said:
The problem being that there simply aren't large numbers of workers out there with strong social democratic beliefs
This I think is the key statement in your post, the hinge around which the rest rotates. And on one level it is correct. As Random interpreted your statement, you are saying that there is no huge mass of workers who believe in a parliamentary road to socialism or who believe that we can reform our way there. Social Democracy in the Bernsteinian sense is indeed dead.
But that's been true for a long time. Reformism long ago became not a movement aiming for socialism by a particular means but a movement aiming at reforming capitalism to make it less exploitative / nicer / fairer. Reformism in this sense is far from dead, despite the fact that most of the traditional social democratic parties have abandoned even this outlook in favour of varying forms of Thatcherism. Its the persistence of this outlook amongst large sections of the working class which had led to the creation of new working class parties in various parts of the world - most recently in Germany.
What's more, every movement which has arisen has thrown up new layers of activists, most of whom have gravitated towards one reformist "solution" or another. So we get Tobin Taxes and fair trade coffee, and changing the world without taking power, and illusions in UN resolutions and all the rest.
gurrier said:
There just aren't masses of people who have faith in any left wing political project at the moment and I don't think it is any easier to build active participation in a social democratic project than a leninist project.
Or presumably an anarchist project.
Leaving terminological issues aside for a moment (ie my point about what project we are trying to build above), I think that this is false. I would expect it to be false for theoretical reasons - that in the mass people tend to look for apparently easier solutions first - and I think that theory is more than adequately borne out by recent events.
Various new mass or semi-mass political organisations have come into being around the world, including what we would consider new workers parties (also including "civil society" organisations which I'm not really interested in for the purposes of this thread but this applies to them too). The one thing all of them that I can think of have in common is that they are, at least as a majority strand, reformist in outlook. We have seen these new non-revolutionary organisations come into existence in Holland, Germany, Brazil, Portugal etc. What we haven't seen are new mass or even semi-mass revolutionary organisations, whether Leninist, Anarchist or other.
If it really was just as easy (or difficult) to build those projects surely we would have seen it happen as often or more often, instead of not at all. It isn't as if there is a shortage of revolutionary groups of every conceivable stripe out there trying. The answer, as somebody from my tradition would expect, is that it isn't as easy. It's necessary, but more difficult.
[edited to add: articul8 I don't know the answers to the questions you asked earlier in the thread about Wrack, Serwotka etc. I live in Ireland so I'm not really up to date on such details]