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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1929 Le Page Three “ARTY PRE By JAY LOVESTONE -CONVENTION DISCUSSION SECTION |the American Party? Tho Comin- part. Hence, the Communist Inter- (Continued) tern has time and again criticized | national generally deals with basic : ij 4 our Party, corrected its shortcom-|problems confronting the various ings, cleared up certain political mis-/ sections. It is very seldom that the A CORRECT ESTIMATE OF THE OPPOSITION. 1e Opposition. is the main, but | mittee as a Right wing. Not a single Our Party’s Development and Growth Executive Committee of the Com- munist {nternational deals with conceptions, set the Party correct] in the trade union field, brought pres sure to bear for reorganization of|smaller inner Party matters. The the only source of Right errors | one of the District “heroes” of the against the Right wing policy, has|concepts of discipline in a Commu-|forces and is now in a position to,as Bittelman, Johnstone, Foster,| the Party along Leninist lines, ete.| Communist International deals with vur Party. It is the principal | Trotsly group is a supporter of the yet to learn the most elementary nist Party. work in greater political harmony|Zack, Browder and Dunne. The This is the duty of the Communist|the main line and guides carefully ce of the Right danger in our Central Committee. Without excep-| ‘ with the Majority of the Central|/Party Convention which will be international. The Communist In-| these political lines of the various y. The Opposition has given | tion we find as Trotskyists through- AN INSTRUCTIVE ROLL CALI Committee and to become an organic} genuinely proletarian in character | ternational represents the collective, | sections. An examination of the at- 1 to, the most notorious oppor-| Out the country, such elements as salah’ ees part of the Party’s leadership. and which will consist of the best | centralized Communist will, based on| titude of the Communist Interna- sts, to the worst incurable Right Dr. Konikow in Boston, Malkin in \representatives of the Party and its the experiences, capaci and eom-/| tional towards the American Party sel and opponents of the Com- New York, Morgenstern in Phila- Political stability and a sense of the Party or been expelled from the Dee A em beret D) Nene oben reveals that since 1923, the Comin- “4 3 F * ae Communist responsibility are essen-| Party for Trotskyism, violation of iat struggles will select the incoming | posite qualities of what is best in rn line in America. Let us cite | delphia, Brahtin in Cleveland, Mass ,+ ra : i aries iat eats el and spoken more decisively than ive C i all its sec i vari Par. i é | > " i ?, SS tial prerequisites for leadership in| Party discipline or some other such| eyer, The Comint has given Central Executive Committee on the all its sections, in the various Par- tern has consistently supported the e of the most outstanding oppor-| and Reynolds in Detroit, Swabeck neice oe ne are da'| basis of correct Communist policy, ties. main political line of the present st, Right wing figures in the ory of our Party. They have all t sworn enemies of the present tral Committee. ‘ rst, comes the infamous Salut- than whom there is no more 2x and desperate opponent of} present leadership of our Party of the Communist International. was expelled from our Party the initiative of the present ership against the Opposition of non and his associates. scondly, we have the veteran at winger, Ludwig Lore. Even he old socialist party many of have had numerous conflicts 1 him as an opponent of the and Giganti in Chicago, Vincent Dunre and Skoglund, ete., in Min- neapolis, Buehler and Allard in Kan- sas, Carlson in Seattle, etc.,—all sup- porters of the Opposition, all op- ponents of the Central Committee. Fifthly, Askeli, Sulkanen and company, who have been thrown out by the Central Committee from the leadership of the Finnish Fraction, have been and continue to be staunch supporters of the present Opposition. These individuals are plain social democrats and are now | working openly hand in glove with | the Finnish social democrats against \the Party. a Communist Party. On this basis, it is very instructive to examine what has happened to the personnel of the Central Committee members, candidates and alternates as elected in 1925 and 1927. Of the nineteen Opposition Central Committee mem- bers and alternates in 1925, we find the following casualties: 1.—Abern, expelled from the Party. 2. non, expelled from the Party. Reynolds, suspended from the Party and under consideration for expul- sion as a Trotskyite. 4.—Schacht- man, expelled from the Party. 5.— Manley, left the Party before his death. 6,—Swabeck, expelled from the Party. 7.—Sullivan, disappeared from the Party and expelled, 8— <) act ainst the Party. Of this Central Committee, the present Majority lost the leader of the Party, Comrade Ruthenberg, through death. This was the heavi- est loss our Party has suffered to date. The above mentioned “losses” by the Opposition, were, of course, gains for the Party. Of the Central Committee elected | at the 1927 Convention, the Opposi- tion had the following casualties: 1. Abern, expelled from the Party. 2.— Cannon, expelled from the Party. 3.—Swabeck, expelled from the Party. 4.—Reynolds, suspended from the Party. 5.—Shachtman, ex- pelled from the Party. At the same guidance to the Party, thru the de- cisions of the Sixth World Congress and the subsequent decisions of the Political Secretariat and Presidium. The Opposition must now drop its) leadership. Without going into cdc- tails, the writer proposes to cite the decisive sections of the various Com- intern decisions. PARTY’S THIRD CONVEN 1923. munism that the Workers Party has aroused, must be organized. Your Central Executive Committee Party responsibility and capac : The decision of the Convention will International be binding for every Party member. the world Communist Party, with Every Party member must unre-/ every one of its sections an orga iic| 5 i * * A servedly accept the decision of the fod a a & ‘ Fone ee ge ae pctee ine | Sixth World Congress of the Com- OPEN LETTER OF ECCI TO feaderahlp.rtheveié colind bi _|intern to the effect that we must TION, leadership, the six cylinder combina-| have iron discipline in our rank tion arranged by Browder and Zack | that the Minority must absolutely) In the open letter from the Exe- cutive Committee of the Communist | International to the Third National | The Communist is themselves in the order of leadership! subordinate itself to the Majority. E. THE COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL AND ITS AMER. Convention of our Party, the Com- ICAN SECTION intern declared, on December 7, 1928: “The excellent work that has been done by the Communists in the Left wing of the labor move- ment in the United States, demon- In no other Party discussion that;so sharply. The same applies to the we have had to date, has the role question of the estimate by the Com- of the Communist International, has} munist International of the Central acted right in inaugurating a cam- paign for membership. “The Workers Party has applied Communist tactics correctly in seeking a united front of all forces to fight the capitalist system in the United States. It has sought uine Left forces, He was once ;, Sthly, and last but not least Greiherty, expelled from the Party. time every member of the Majority | the relationship of the Communist, Committee. It is in this sense that strates that if all the comrades | a united front not only on the integral part. of the Opposition ing dangonne “ocpostaniet Tailings |9-—Loeb, left the Party and joined of the 1927 Central Committee has International to its American sec-|the maintenance of reservations to| were members of the trade unions, | economic but particularly on the ership. tionsvof our Goresttinn it must be 4 business organization and is now continued at his post carrying out) tion, received so much attention as| Comintern decisions played so prom-| the work would increase mani- | political field. . . hirdly, Eastman, the notorious | said that the one District Shick js affiliated with a Jewish Business| the Party duties and responsibilities. | in the present one. This is due to|inent a part in the Party discussion.| fold. . . This was an estimate of the Par- ny of Marxism was brought into reeking with opportunism and which Men’s Association in Chicago. But today there is no consolidated 4 multitude of reasons. One of the|That is why the emphatic reserva- “The propaganda that the Work- | erated Farmer Labor Party was an Party by Cannon and was ex-/has been guilty of more and worse| Nearly the entire 1924 National Right wing groups in our Party. It’s) mai causes is the fact that in this|tions to the decisions of the Sixth ers Party has conducted during | achievement of primary import- ed for his Trotskyist activities Right wing errors than any other Executive Committee of the Young true the Opposition had given birth discussion, considerable time was|World Congress on the United| the past year has been most ef- | ance. : to the whole galaxy of opportunists| spent on the examination of funda-| States, as made by Comrade John- fective. As a result, the ideas of | This was en estimate of the Par- , after the present Majority took leadership. ourthly, the whole Cannon-Trot- group is an off-spring of the dosition, particularly in its pres- fight against the Central Com- | three Districts combined, is the Cali-; Workers League, which was over- fornia District, led exclusively by | whelmingly supporting the Opposi- Opposition supporters. The leader-| tion, is now outside the Party. With \ship of the California District, re-| the exception of Williamson and | pudiated by the last California Dis-| Salzman, all the Opposition mem- | trict Convention, which has rebelledbers of this NEC have ei herein enumerated. It was a pain- ful birth indeed, but with the help of the Central Committee and the Comintern, the Opposition fortun-| ther left | ately got rid of these opportunist | still ascending or descending, put! Communist Communism and the Communist movement are the center of dis- cussion both among the workers and the capitalists. . “The vast sentiment for Com- mental problems, {stone in his declaration in behalf of In no previous discussion was the the Opposition, assumes so much im- questions of the general trend of portance. American imperialism, whether it is) What has been the line of the International towards | ty’s work prior to the Third tional Convention, when the kernel | of the present leadership was the basis of the then Party leadership. To Be Continued By ALEX BITTELMAN. Note: This is the second of a MAJORITY STICKS TO | series of three articles on the les- | sons of the Party discussion.) RIGHT OPPORTUNIST ORIENTATION. ‘he Party discussion has shown t the Majority leadership stub- nly persists in its Right oppor- |ism has become more than ever part jand parcel of world capitalism. | Therefore American capitalism is S. Exemption.” the “Monroe Doctrine” for Lessons of the Party Discussion jority persists in this policy of “U., Wolfe, Lovestone and Pepper are] quently, there is no dissatisfaction,{that Smith will bring them “light g brief reference to the fact that! tion has been pointed out repeated- It even defends|the joint authors of this funny|no radicalization process, no indica-| wines and beer”? Or were they de- the Majority has not corrected its| the theory. | political struggles, The above theory | has absolutely nothing in common} with the Leninist conception of the| role of a Communist Party. | In conclusion. It requires only} he Right danger tion of sharpening class antagon-| ceived into supporting Smith by the fake analysis of t E With the Major- isms and readiness to struggle| 4_ 7, of L. bureaucracy who played and Trotskyism. est expression” of the Right danger, and, consequently, the main danger in the Party. The fatal error that the Majority is making on this fundamental ques- The discussion shows that the itself ly. Majority refuses to correct r z . . * * . American Party. | vi 7. \fr . ist orientation, This remains| becoming even more subjected to the | Inevitably, from such a_ theory, | sowict : i 4 | ‘ : ny + Phe Pca . 4 the working mass vhi ist illusi y, Trotsky: r s ue 5 s " e, despite the maneuver to rele-| general crisis of world imperialism,, Says Comrade Wolfe: there flows a wrong tactical orien- Soukomire ie athe ietiade Sa a2 on the reformist illusions of the ity, Trotskyism remains the “crass-| also on this question, tation. It is due to this orientation | . i masses? To these questions, Com- e Comrade Lovestone and his sis to the background and to ng to the foreground Comrade »per and his thesis. ‘he fatal error of the Majority proven to be the following: The jority does not see that just be- se American capitalism has be- ae the center ef world capital- 1, that thereby American capital- | to all its sharpened difficulties that {are characteristic of the present | third period. Consequently, the Majority does} not accept the general tactical line| of the Comintern, which is based} upon the general Leftward drift of| the masses and which calls for a} “The policies of the Comintern analysis of the world situation (which tends to give a certain correspondence in the tactics of each Party) and upon an analysis of the concrete conditions of each country (which tends to give con- crete differences in the tactics of each Party).” The Communist, December, 1928. (Our emphasis.) |concentrated struggle against re- formism, that the comrades of the Majority} | at every stage are based upon an | remain blind to the general process | of radicalization (uneven as this, radicalization is) which is taking place among the American masses. Here, again, the comzedes of the, Majority run true to their wrong} conception. Radicalization, Left- ward drift—all this is true for Europe, say the leaders of the Ma- lers Comrade Pepper's analysis. BORDER POLICEMAN TRIED ALBANY, N. Y., Feb. 7 (UP).—| ky, border patrolman | rade Pepper gives the answer: the labor aristocracy voted for “‘pros-| perity” (Hoover), the largest por- tion of the rest of the voting work- 2 : és ers have voted for “light wines and of the U. nmigration depart- | beer” - (Smith). ment, goes today on a) : 2 le _ charge of second degree murder in| SUBSTITUE FATALISM FOR MARXIAN POINT OF VIEW. connection with the fatal shooting of Richard Pelkey last September. Pelkey was killed when he disre- Should you ask the question: did the miners and textile workers and the hundreds of thousands of work- in other industries vote for Smith only because they believed Joseph Soblos Ss. on trial ject class or classes, as the case The Daily Worker has even sug-| may be, are impelled to revolu- gested a “Marxian” foundation for! is only then Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Russian Art Oriental Restaurant AJORITY’S WRONG ANALYSIS OF AMERICAN IMPER- TALISM. “he comrades of the Majority | organizational force which keeps son like this: Third period and|the masses with the capitalist par- hly sharpening inner and outer! ties is the social-reformist and so- jority, but in the United States—j nothing doing. Indicative of this | attitude is the analysis of the re- sults of the presidential elections | given by the Majority. Says Comrade Pepper: tionary action—it that the ideas of the masses no longer correspond to the interests of the ruling class.” (Our empha- sis.) Daily Worker, editorial, Nov. 8, 1928. this analysis. It reads: garded a command to halt as he was driving about 20 miles south of the Canadian border, According’ to. Comrade Wolfe, | there is no such thing as a general | Comintern line to be applied by all | Parties, a general line which results | from an analysis of the world situa- KNOWN TO COMRADES for their popular Luncheon, Dinner, Supper Meals, served in Original Oriental Style — Russian Orchestra 1 QQ-QND AVE. Stuyvesant 017 “The enormous vote for Hoover | falls in with the Marxian obser- | | vation that the prevailing ideas of | any given period are the ideas of itradictions? Yes, that is true) capitalism as a whole. For the ited States, the center of world| ritalism, the perspective is for a y golden age. says Comrade Lovestone: “American imperialism is ap- oaching its Victorian day. Thus ie same investors’ mouthpiece Magazine of Wall Street.—A. ) goes on to say proudly: ‘As ome had its Augustinian age id Britain its Victorian age, so e are about to enter upon an soch of affluence and magnifi- nce, of peace and prosperity, iat history may well record as ie Hooverian age.’ Translate ze’ into Wall Street and the truth here.”—The 1928 Elections, by ay Lovestone, The Communist, ecember, 1928. (Our emphasis.) Thus, according to Comrade Love- me, Wall Street, which stands for nerican imperialism, is about to} ter a period of peace, Thus, the voverian age, which can be noth- r else but a period of imperialist d counter-revolutionary wars and zhly sharpened class struggle, be- mes in the analysis of Comrade vestone an American Victorian y (1830-1900), a period of peace, ignificence, etc. From this basically wrong analy- , of the role and perspectives of nerican imperialism, . Comrade vestone comes to an equally ‘ong analysis of reformism in the rited States. In fact, according Comrade Lovestone, there is no cial-reformism in the United ates with the exception of the so- iist party. Says Comrade Lovestone: “We are now in the period of ecisive clashes between socialist eformism and Communism for he leadership of the majority of he working class, This is so in ll countries of high capitalist de- ‘elopment with the exception of he United States.” (Our empha- is.) The Communist, Nov., 1928, Comrade Lovestone, in this in- ance, happens to be consistent, aving established the Victorian se perspective for American im- vrialism, which “exempts” the nited States from the general , isis of world capitalism in the stird period, Comrade Lovestone soceeds to exempt the United tates from the need of decisive ashes between reformism and ommunism in this period. Com- ide Lovestone says, the latter ap- ies to all countries “with the ex- »ption of the United States.” And » make his thought still clearer, he ates: x4 “In America we are fighting che republican and democratic oarties for the majority of the vorking class.” (The Communist, November, 1928.) Wherein lies Comrade Lovestone’s ror? It lies in his failure to see tat the ideological, political and cial-imperialist bureaucracy of the American Federation of Labor. It is the whole ideological system of tion. The policies of the Comintern merely “tend” to give “a certain correspondence” to the tactics of “Smith promised ‘light wines and beer’ to the masses of the the ruling class. This holds true y of all times and places. It is only This is fatalism, not Marxism. Ac-| when economic conditions are such cording to this theory no political | NGLISH Elementary — Intermediate | Advanced—Private or Group | Meyer Gorva, Owner social-reformism, described in the| each Party. In short, there is no Minority thesis as: ‘class collabora-| general line, there is no general pol- tion, the higher strategy of labor, icy, which is to be applied by each LaFolletism, petty-bourgeois social-| section in accord with the concrete ism, pacifism, etc.,” that keeps the | conditions of each country. There | masses in subjection to the capital-|is only “a certain correspondence” working class and was able to swing the largest portion of the | working class votes, but substan- tial sections of the labor aristo- eracy went for Hoover, whom they considered a better champion cial-reformism (chiefly against the! AFL) and defeat social-reformism | among the masses. | It is because of this grave Right jopportunist error of the Majority leadership, that the Minority thesis | states that: “The Party must reject \the wrong view of the Majority of| |the Central Committee . . . that because the S. P. is weak our task! is to win the masses away not from) reformism but from conscious sup-| port of capitalism (Lovestone), that the general CI line of concentrating | and sharpening the struggle against! reformism and pacifism does not} apply +o the U. S.” Despite the sharp warning and criticism of the Minority, the Ma-| MAX BEDACHT will lecture on | “Economic Upbuilding of} Russia and Trotskyism” Thursday, Feb. 14 | at 8 P.M, at 1373 43rd Street, Brooklyn Auspices: Sect. 7, Unit 3, and | Jewish Workers Club PROCEEDS TO GO TO DAILY WORKER. Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) was? Phone: DiCkens 1096. Blue Bird Studio “Photos of the better kind.” 1808 PITKIN AVE., Cor. Amboy St. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. i | | English, Spelling Grammar, Litera- ture, History, Arithmetic, Algebra taught to beginners and advanced pupils at your home or institute. WE HELP CHILDREN IN THEIR SCHOOL HOME WORK 301 LIVINGSTON ST., B’KLYN TRIANGLE 0509. ist parties. Therefore, Comrade/in the tactics of each Party. This| of high tariff, prohibition of im- | Lovestone fails to realize that in| is a “Monroe Doctrine” not only for! migration and ‘prosperity’.” (Our ‘order that we may win away the/|the U. S. section, but for all sec-| emphasis.) Daily Worker, No- masses from the republican and|tions of the CI, and Comrades} vember 10, 1928. democratic parties we must concen- trate upon the struggle against so-| INCORRECT CONCEPTION OF STATE OF RADICALIZA- TIO} What is the picture of the state|of Wall Street and therefore sup-| of mind of the American working| ported Hoover. The “largest por- class that Comrade Pepper paints|tion” of the working class that} here? The aristocracy of labor} voted in the elections was concernec | shares to a degree the crumbs of| only with light wines and beer and} prosperity that fall from the table| therefore supported Smith. 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