May 27, 2008 13:24 | by
Ronald van Raak, Socialist Party Member of the Netherlands' National
Parliament
On
22nd November, 2006, the Dutch Socialist Party, a radical party
of the left, saw its representation in Parliament rise from 8 MPs
to 25, one in six of the country's voters having opted to support
its list of candidates. The result came in the wake of the SP's
leadership of the successful campaign for a 'no' vote in the referendum
on the European Constitution. The bulk of the new voters came from
former Labour Party and Green Left supporters disillusioned by their
parties' rightward stampede and Eurofanaticism. In the course of
a single euphoric evening, the party led by Jan Marijnissen had
become by far the most significant force on the European EU-critical
left. Reactions were not long in coming. The SP's long history of
internationalism - including, to declare an interest, generous financial
support for this website - did not protect it from baseless accusations
of nationalism, xenophobia and worse. Below, Ronald van Raak, one
of the new intake of MPs after that extraordinary election, answers
these charges and explains the SP's internationalism is one of the
factors which has led it to reject the neoliberal club which is
the European Union.
'The peasants have seized power',' wrote Ilja Pfeijffer in response
to the election results of 22nd November 2006. According to the
well-known poet, these elections, which saw the SP's parliamentary
strength increase in one leap from nine seats to twenty-five, had
brought to power narrow-minded provincials at the expense of the
free-thinking and right-minded section of the nation. It was no
coincidence that the victors had, a year earlier, made possible
'the ridiculous and xenophobic result of the referendum on Europe.'
There is something exceptional in the air when such a renowned poet
lowers himself to use such unpoetic language Or when friends from
the left such as Green Left chair Femke Halsema or the progressive
philosopher Dick Pels see a connection between the SP's electoral
success and increasing racism. Just as remarkable is the taking
up of cudgels by members of the present government against what
they choose to call the 'anti-European and nationalist' opinions
of the SP.
The stereotyping by some of the SP as a 'nationalist' party cannot
be explained by differences in international ideals, which are visibly
in keeping with those of other left parties. This image is also
not explicable in terms of actual involvement in international institutions,
for the SP is fully active in the World Social Forum (WSF), the
European Social Forum (ESF), the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe (PACE) and the European Parliament, as well as being present
in the parliamentary assemblies of the OECD and NATO and in the
United Nations. The SP maintains, moreover, friendly relations with
political parties and other organisations throughout the world,
and is the only political party in the Netherlands which runs an
extensive and almost daily-updated English language webpage. The
party is also always happy to participate in international peace
missions.
The image that some people draw of the SP as a 'nationalist' party
is probably explicable by reference to the various ways in which
parties attempt to bring their international ideals nearer to fruition.
The SP is not in favour of neoliberal internationalism. At the point
where international developments threaten rights won on the national
level, whether here in the Netherlands or elsewhere in the world,
the party will take the side of maintaining these democratic and
social rights, taking a position which opposes the playing off of
different nations' citizens, one group against another. It was on
this basis that in 2005 the SP constructed its campaign against
the European Constitution, by which democratically legitimised competences
were to be transferred to far less democratic EU bodies. With this
practical position the SP stands in a long tradition.
Socialists and the nation state
Socialists seem by definition to be internationalists. This had
its beginnings with Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who wrote in
1848 The Communist Manifesto for the Federation of Communists, one
of the first international political movements. In this manifesto
Marx and Engels described how the free market economy made the production
and consumption of all countries "cosmopolitan". This
international economic order had as its consequence a sharpening
of contradictions in every society. Globalisation of the economy
would in this way lead to 'political centralisation'. Marx appeared
to foresee the current process of European unification when he predicted
that these economic developments would force independent countries
into "one nation, one government, one law, one national class
interest, one customs union."
Marx was also one of the founders of the Socialist International,
viewed as necessary by him in order to present international capitalism
with a balancing weight. The socialist parties which took their
inspiration from him were nevertheless well aware that the concrete
struggle would have to be fought on the national level, or sometimes
even locally. It is for this reason that they created, on the national
level, links between the socialist parties and left trade unions.
This practical approach can also be seen in the work of Ferdinand
Domela Nieuwenhuis, who in1888 became the Netherlands' first socialist
Member of Parliament. Domela Nieuwenhuis maintained close contacts
with socialists in other countries, yet became known through his
support for strikes and demonstrations on the local level aimed
at better wages and improved working conditions.
Socialists not only drew attention to the wretched living and working
conditions workers had to endure, but also demanded full national
citizenship for these workers. They played a leading role in the
international struggle for universal suffrage, which would give
the workers a voice in national politics. Although socialism found
inspiration on the international level, the nation state turned
out to be by far the principle forum of struggle for the emancipation
of those whom the Internationale referred to as 'the refuse of the
earth'. Successful local trade unions, such as the General Federation
of Dutch Diamond Workers (ANDB - 1894), laid the basis for national
trade unions such as the National Federation of Unions (NVV - 1906),
a forerunner of the present-day FNV, the Netherlands' major trade
union federation.
International organisations led, on the other hand, a rather less
flourishing existence. The first (1864) and second (1889) socialist
Internationals represented, it is true, important platforms for
international debate, but had only limited influence on the daily
political struggle. During the First World War, millions of workers
from different countries met each other in combat, thus unwittingly
sending the message that international solidarity could not stand
up to nationally-formulated interests. The third International (1919),
established after the revolution in Russia, weighed, when it came
to direct political work, most heavily in the scales. But it developed
at the same time into an effective tool of intervention for the
Soviet Union. Not only political parties in eastern Europe, but
those in the west - such as the CPN in the Netherlands - were long
influenced in their political opinions by the Communist Party in
Moscow.
Think internationally, act locally
In 1972, during the sixties' last wave of international protest
against the established order, the SP was born. The war in Vietnam,
the exploitation of the Third World, the Cold War with its terrifying
military alliances - these were the dominant issues in the kind
of radical thinking that brought the SP into existence. The new
party was, in keeping with the traditions of socialism, international,
but from its first hour it was active primarily on the local level.
While other left splinter-groups of the 1970s have since disappeared,
the SP has grown to become of the country's biggest political parties.
In an independent but sympathetic study of the party, Her geheim
van Oss: Een geschiedenis van de SP (2001)("The secret of Oss:
A History of the SP" - Oss being the small industrial town
where the party was first established) Kees Slager looked for explanations
as to why the SP had not only survived but grown so significantly.
An important reason, the historian noted, is that its vaunted socialist
ideals have always been coupled with a practical orientation. Dreams
of a better world did not keep SP activists from giving their attention
to questions such as leaky gutters, or from demonstrating against
poor working conditions or mobilising tenants to combat the rundown
of social housing.
The SP has always understood how to root itself in this combination
of ideological internationalism and pragmatic activism. Conducting
campaigns is a direct form of politics, which involves people in
decision-making, brings problems to the general attention and puts
those in a position to address them under pressure. Such activism
is an important complement to the representational politics of council
chamber and parliament. The local or national form of this activism
has nothing to do with the issues addressed. Actions can be just
as effective in drawing attention to local questions as they can
for global problems. Examples of this are provided by campaigns
initiated by the SP involving actions outside branches of ABN Amro
and ING Postbank, after it was discovered that these branches were
providing finance to firms involved in testing and maintaining cluster
bombs. In connection with these actions, and in the wake of an initiative
from Norway's left government to have cluster bombs banned internationally,
the SP in Parliament put forward a proposal for a law forbidding
their use. The party was then represented in May 2007 in Peru at
an international conference to discuss such a ban. In the same year
the SP was the most significant force behind the petition campaign
'Openness on Iraq', an action conducted in support of the demand
for an independent enquiry into the Netherlands' support for the
invasion of that country in 2003.
The SP's practical and local actions are linked to analyses and
positions relating to international developments. In March 2005
the party organised a congress which focused entirely on international
policy and which resulted in the adoption of a manifesto of principles
entitled Heel de Wereld - 'The Whole of the World'. Three years
on, following on this, a broad internal discussion continues. In
addition, research reports have appeared on, amongst other issues,
the future of the European Union, (A Better Europe Starts Now, 2006)
the situation in Israel and Palestine (Het beloofde land, het beroofde
land, ('The promised land, the stolen land', 2007), the decision-making
process which led to the Netherlands' role in the war in Iraq (Onverantwoord
goedgelovig, of welbewust misleidend?, 'Irresponsibly gullible,
or consciously misleading?', 2007), internal EU migration of European
workers (Open grenzen, eerlijk werk, 'Open borders, honest work',
2006), the international transport of waste (Waste has a future,
2007) and on the future of development cooperation (A better world
begins now, 2007).
'Provincial' versus 'cosmopolitan'?
The battle of words within the left over the 'provincial' and the
'cosmopolitan' is not new. The current discussion revives memories
of the 1980s, before the SP has made its breakthrough to become
a national party. In 1983 the party published a leaflet, Gastarbeid
en kapitaal ('Guestworkers and capital') in which it called for
attention to be paid to the growing tensions in old neighbourhoods
in which large numbers of immigrants had been housed in a very short
period of time. Because of their local involvement, many active
members were in these years confronted for the first time by the
dark side of the multicultural society, because of which newcomers
in our society were left to their fate. The SP was during this time
accused by other left parties of nationalism and xenophobia. The
proposals made by the party in the 1980s, such as voluntary desegregation
in education and housing and the offering of language courses were,
however, in the wake of the rise of Pim Fortuyn's right-wing populist
movement and the spread of its ideas, quickly adopted as consensual,
including amongst representatives of those same left parties.
A further reproach is that the SP's approach to discussion of values
and standards is conservative. This relates to another issue which
has long divided left parties. The SP, early on in the days of the
government headed by Labour Prime Minister Wim Kok (1994-2002),
called emphatically for attention to be paid to the consequences
for public morale of a policy based on more market and less government.
In his book Tegenstemmen (1996), translated into English under the
title Enough! A Socialist Bites Back, SP leader Jan Marijnissen
explained how in the 'Me-age' people's interdependence was being
eroded. In 2001 this critique constituted an important part of what
provoked the initiative 'Stop de uitverkoop van de beschaving' ('Stop
the sell-off of civilisation'). Within the two other parties of
the Dutch parliamentary left, the Green Left and the PvdA (Labour
Party) there was and remains a current of criticism directed at
the moral appeal of the SP, which is put down to a sort of cultural
conservatism. There has for a long time within these parties also
been much criticism of the SP as a sort of museum party, a means
of making young people more conscious of our shared history and
the vulnerability of our democracy.
A third charge levelled against the SP is that the party is opposed
to European cooperation, the political course of European unification
being a further sensitive point dividing the left parties. During
the campaign around the European Constitution in 2005 supporters
of the Treaty in the Labour Party (PvdA) and the Green Left stood
in diametrical opposition to the SP, which opposed it. In addition,
during the campaign the SP was beset with accusations regarding
its lack of any international and European understanding. Following
the 'no' vote of June, 2005, each of the three parties of the parliamentary
left presented a memorandum on Europe's future. In October of that
year appeared the PvdA's contribution, Europa: vertrouwen herwinnen
('Europe: recovering confidence'); in May 2006 came the Green Left's
Vrij Europees ('Free European') and in November 2006 the SP's Een
beter Europa begint nu ('A better Europe begins now'). The Green
Left and the SP stuck in their contributions to the discussion largely
to the principles to which they had adhered before the referendum.
The PvdA, on the other hand, opted to distance itself from its support
during the campaign for a federal 'superstate' and to go instead
for a European redirection, on the basis of which the party now
argued for more limits to be placed on the market economy, a clearer
delineation of the competences of the European Union and greater
involvement of citizens in European politics. This brought the PvdA
further away, in this area, from the Green Left, and closer to the
SP. Yet by making Frans Timmermans - one of the authors of the rejected
Constitutional Treaty - its Secretary of State for European Affairs
when it entered a coalition government with Christian Democrats
following the election of November, 2006, Labour appeared rather
to have returned to its old ways and its old thoughts. Discussion
of the new European treaty, the Lisbon Treaty, will make it clear
where precisely the PvdA now stands.
In the areas of immigration and integration, of values and standards,
and of the future of Europe the PvdA and Green Left have in the
past often taken their lead from the SP. This is especially true
of the former, Labour having in recent years adjusted its position
on many points to one closer to that of the SP. The accusation of
provincialism remains, however. Politicians who write off people's
concerns about their own lives and their own neighbourhoods as 'provincial'
demonstrate just how far removed they are from the citizens whose
interests they claim to want to serve. This is unconvincing, especially
while it remains so unclear just what is implied by their own 'cosmopolitanism'.
It is certainly the case that ever more of the problems with which
we are faced do not stop at our borders, that they demand international
coordination and cooperation. But the arrogant disregard for national
politics as, even now, the most effective means for the emancipation
of men and women and the protection of democratic and social rights
is not cosmopolitan so much as short-sighted. A truly cosmopolitan
spirit is one which sees the connections between the local, national
and international and seeks the most effective way to realise fine
ideals in practical reality.
This article was translated from Jaarboek voor socialistische
discussie en analyse, ('Critique, Yearbook of socialist discussion
and analysis'), where it appeared on 14th May 2008.