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Revolutionary Communist Party (UK, 1978)

The Revolutionary Communist Party, known as the Revolutionary Communist Tendency until 1981, was a Trotskyist political organisation formed in 1978. From 1988 it published the journal Living Marxism. It started with only a few dozen supporters; its membership peaked at 200 in the mid-1990s.[1]

Revolutionary Communist Party
Founded1978; 45 years ago (1978)
Dissolved1997; 26 years ago (1997)
Split fromRevolutionary Communist Group
NewspaperThe Next Step
Living Marxism
Ideology1978–1991
Communism
Trotskyism
1991–1997
Libertarianism
Political position1978–1991
Far-left
1991–1997
Syncretic
Colors  Red

After 1991, the party abandoned Trotskyism and mainstream leftism before publicly taking a libertarian position. It was disbanded in 1997, although a number of former members maintain a loose political network to promote its ideas.

Beginnings

 
The "Workers March for Irish Freedom", taking the cause of Irish hunger strikers to the Trades Union Congress conference in 1981, was a turning point for the party

The party originated as a tendency in the Revolutionary Communist Group which had split from the International Socialists in the 1970s. This group had concluded that there was no living Marxist tradition in the left and Marxism would have to be re-established.[2] The RCG saw the British working class and especially the labour movement as dominated by bourgeois ideology and chauvinist nationalism, and the IS as pandering to its low-level trade union consciousness and economism; they asserted that a purer vanguard party was needed, focusing on anti-imperialism rather than trade unionism.[3][4]

Disagreements about the course the Revolutionary Communist Group should take in relation to support for the Anti-Apartheid Movement and the African National Congress led Frank Furedi, a sociologist at the University of Kent (better known then by his cadre name Frank Richards), to break off and form his own group in 1978. The Revolutionary Communist Tendency (RCT) hoped to draw together those militant working class leaders who were disappointed by the limitations of reformism to help to build a new working class leadership and develop an independent working class programme.[2][3][5] The RCT renamed itself the Revolutionary Communist Party in 1981.[5]

Stance

Taking a strong line which it considered to be inspired by Vladimir Lenin's work on the relationship between imperialism and reformism, the party originally held that the "only hope of securing any decent sort of life - or even guaranteeing survival - lies in the working class taking control over society".[6] It further argued that traditional Stalinist and social-democratic appeals to the bourgeois state had undermined working-class independence and that as a result an independent vanguard party should be organized to campaign for a distinctly working-class politics. In 1978, for example, when the left was strong within the Labour Party, the RCP argued that "Labour is the party which attempts to resolve the crisis by integrating militant working class resistance into the capitalist system".[7] This position included a rejection of support for the Labour Party and one that questioned the allegiances of the trade union movement. A consequence of this belief was a growing distrust of traditional statist left-wing struggles as reformist. According to some, the RCP took a view that reformism consolidated bourgeois ideology in the potential leadership layers of the working class. The RCP took a number of positions coined to distinguish independent working-class politics from statist reformism which included:

The party's programme can be traced through the publications "Our Tasks and Methods" (a reprint of the Revolutionary Communist Group's founding document), the 1983 general election manifesto Preparing for Power and the article "The Road to Power" in the theoretical journal Confrontation (1986).

Historian Evan Smith suggests that there has been a debate about whether the RCP was part of the left.[3] Frank Furedi later described the party's approach: “We tried to transcend the left-right divide. Lots of left-wingers said we were not really left-wing because we did not speak their language. We wanted to have an experimental approach and not repeat the problems of the past.”[17] Andy Beckett of The Guardian wrote:

Despite its name, most of its stances were not communist or revolutionary but contrarian: it supported free speech for racists, and nuclear power; it attacked environmentalism and the NHS. Its most consistent impulse was to invoke an idealised working class, and claim it was actually being harmed by the supposed elites of the liberal left.[18]

Front groups and campaigns

According to historian Evan Smith,

The RCT/RCP formed several front groups around single issues during the late 1970s and early 1980s, with the most prominent being the Irish Freedom Movement (which had begun as the Smash the Prevention of Terrorism Act Campaign) and Workers Against Racism (originally East London Workers Against Racism). SPTAC and ELWAR were both set up to rival the alleged chauvinism of the British left and larger campaign organisations around the issues of Irish solidarity and anti-racism, such as the Troops Out Movement and the Anti-Nazi League. From the beginning, it seemed that the RCT/RCP was more comfortable directing its own single-issue groups than joining other larger campaign groups.[3]

Workers Against Racism

Beginning as East London Workers Against Racism (ELWAR) before it was launched as a national campaign, Workers Against Racism campaigned against state racism. Protests were organised against deportations and passport checks at hospitals and unemployment benefit offices. ELWAR also organised patrols and vigils to defend immigrants against racist attacks.[19] In Parliament, Conservative MP Nicholas Winterton demanded of the Home Secretary "if he will seek to proscribe the East London Workers against Racism vigilante group".[20] Workers Against Racism was criticised in the press for its activities during the 1981 Brixton riots. An internal Home Office report to then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher claimed:

[T]he Revolutionary Communist Party set up a Lambeth Unemployed Workers' Group shortly before the Riots, and has since formed a South London Workers Against Racism group, similar to the East London Workers Against Racism which attracted some notoriety for organising vigilante patrols.[21]

Anti-deportation campaigns

 
George Roucou, marching to freedom, with his wife Kay and Workers Against Racism organiser Charles Longford

The party's Workers Against Racism campaign fought many deportation threats, like George Roucou's, on the grounds that British immigration law was racist. Roucou was a shop steward in the building workers' union UCATT in Manchester. Workers Against Racism helped to organise a campaign culminating in a one-day strike and demonstration by his fellow council workers on 6 February 1987. On 13 March 1987, with 500 protesting outside, the Home Office appeal panel reversed Roucou's deportation order.[22] On 11 June 1985, Metso Moncrieffe was arrested and held by police pending a deportation order. Workers Against Racism campaigners raised the case, disrupting a test match at the Edgbaston cricket ground in July 1985 with a Metso Must Stay banner and helping to build a 1,000-strong march for him in December 1986. In September 1987, Moncrieffe's deportation order was overturned.[23]

Supporting Irish republicanism

Supporting Irish republicanism was central to the work of the party. According to historian Jack Hepworth, "Advocating ‘unconditional support’ [for the IRA] enabled the RCP to challenge reformism on the British left and nationalism in the labour movement."[4]

In 1978, the RCP organised the Smash the Prevention of Terrorism Act Campaign and held protests outside police stations where suspects were held. The party organised a conference of trade unionists opposed to Northern Ireland being part of the United Kingdom in Coventry in 1981 and later that year held a march to the TUC conference, the Workers March for Irish Freedom. On Saturday 6 February 1982, the Irish Freedom Movement (IFM) was founded at a meeting in Caxton House, Archway and TUC general secretary Len Murray wrote to the thirteen trades councils that sponsored the conference threatening them with disaffiliation if they attended.[24] RCP Political Committee member Mick Hume, who edited The Next Step, recalls that the IFM were accused of complicity in the 1984 bombing of the Conservative Party conference.[25] The IFM published a quarterly bulletin Irish Freedom and organised an annual march on the anniversary of internment. When the voices of Sinn Féin supporters were banned from the British broadcast media, Living Marxism carried a front page interview with its leader Gerry Adams and the IFM picketed Broadcasting House. After the Brighton bombing, an RCP editorial in the next step said:

We support unconditionally the right of the Irish people to carry out their struggle for national liberation in whatever way they choose. We neither support nor condemn any particular tactic the republican movement pursues, whether it is an electoral campaign or a bombing campaign.[17]

Similarly, after the Enniskillen bombing in 1987, Hume reiterated that British radicals’ responses could "not be based on emotional revulsion at particular incidents of violence or terror".[4]

By the end of the 1980s, according to historian Jack Hepworth, "the IFM was the largest radical solidarity movement in Britain, with an annual August march in London typically attracting an estimated 3,000 demonstrators" and an activist base beyond the party faithful; by 1990 it had twenty branches in the UK.[4]

Student politics

The party primarily recruited amongst students. By 1984, it had 45 university and polytechnic branches.[4]

Electoral involvement

The RCP stood candidates in the May 1981 local elections, under its own name and that of ELWAR. It stood a candidate in the 1983 Bermondsey by-election, its campaign mainly consisting of heckling Labour candidate Peter Tatchell, who lost the seat to the Liberal Party; the RCP candidate received 38 votes. It fielded four candidates in the 1983 United Kingdom general election, who achieved a total vote of nearly 1000. In 1983, the party began its annual "Preparing for Power" public conferences. In 1986, it launched a new theoretical journal, Confrontation. In the 1986 United Kingdom local elections, the RCP stood 38 candidates, including Claire Fox (under the name Claire Foster), who received a total of just under 2300 votes, with an average of 60 votes each. In the 1986 Knowsley North by-election, its candidate was also backed by the Workers Revolutionary Party and received 664 votes, its highest so far. In the 1987 Greenwich by-election, its candidate received 91 votes.[3]

In 1987, it launched the Red Front electoral coalition, appealing to other anti-Labour groups to join it. its manifesto demanded work or full pay, the defence of trade union rights, equal rights for all, and opposition to war. It had a libertarian flavour and also argued that "The dangers from Aids have in fact been grossly exaggerated. The principal threat to homosexuals in Britain today is not from Aids, but from the safe sex campaign." Two other groups joined the campaign: Red Action and the Revolutionary Democratic Group. The Front stood 14 candidates, including Kenan Malik. The candidate in Knowsley North achieved 538 vote (1.37%); the others between 111 and 300. It stood its own candidates in the 1989 Glasgow Central by-election and 1989 Vauxhall by-election, receiving 141 and 171 votes respectively.[3]

Campaign Against Militarism

 
Campaign Against Militarism protest in 1994

In 1993, the party helped launch the Campaign Against Militarism (CAM) to fight against western military intervention. CAM organised protests against the military interventions in Somalia, Bosnia and Iraq. On 10 September 1993, seventy Somalis and CAM supporters occupied the United States embassy after an alleged massacre of civilians in Mogadishu,[26] the only time it has happened. After they were evicted by armed marines, eleven were convicted under the as yet untested criminal trespass laws, but charges were dropped after lawyer Mike Fisher sought to have the case tried in the United States, arguing that the offence, if any, was committed on American soil. CAM was the only left-wing group that joined British Serbs in their demonstrations over the military strikes on Yugoslavia in 1994.[citation needed]

In The Empire Strikes Back, Mike Freeman identified "the metamorphosis of what had long regarded itself as a peace movement into a war movement" after Labour rallied to support the First Iraq War.[27] Later, this trend was called "humanitarian imperialism" in Living Marxism. The party opposed Western military intervention in Bosnia, Somalia, Kosovo, Iraq and East Timor.[28]

Controversial positions

The party took a number of positions that were strongly criticised by others on the left:

  • In The Truth About the AIDS Panic, Michael Fitzpatrick and Don Milligan wrote that there is "no good evidence that Aids is likely to spread rapidly among heterosexuals in the West".[29] The pamphlet argued that the government campaign warning of a heterosexual aids epidemic was a moral panic that would worsen prejudice against gay people.
  • When British miners struck against redundancies in 1984, the party argued that the union's refusal to hold a national ballot was a major problem: "The only way to win the passive majority for the strike was to launch an aggressive campaign around a national ballot".[30]
  • In the struggle against Apartheid in South Africa, the party argued that "sanctions don't make sense" because it was wrong to call on the governments that had supported Apartheid to overthrow it. Rather, workers ought to "take direct action", like blocking South African imports at docks.[31]

When the organisation re-thought its outlook in 1991, it adopted a number of positions that put it at odds with the New Labour milieu:

  • Living Marxism argued against what it called the "new authoritarianism", the greater official interference and surveillance of ordinary people by the state. The growth in "at-risk" registers and CCTV were examples.[32]
  • The party opposed the increase in judicial[33] and other kinds of non-majoritarian overriding of parliament as well as the subordination of parliament to the European Convention on Human Rights.[34]

Criticism

In 1981, Alex Callinicos of the British Socialist Workers Party (SWP) took issue with the party's argument that "such issues as racism and Ireland form [...] a vital component of revolutionary propaganda". Callinicos claimed instead that "if most of the workers involved have reactionary views on questions such as race, the position of women, and so on", then that was less important than that they were fighting over pay and conditions. Callinicos also called into question the party's stress on "the connection between reformism and nationalism", saying they were "paleo-marxists".[35] In 1984, the SWP and other left parties denounced the RCP for calling for a national ballot in the miners' strike.[3]

The party's stance on AIDS was widely criticised by the gay rights movement.[36] On 30 June 1990, Simon Watney and Edward King of the group OutRage! kicked over the party's stall at the Gay Pride march.[37] Watney criticised Michael Fitzpatrick and Don Milligan for giving credence to the idea that AIDS was a "gay plague" by their insistence that there would be no epidemic amongst heterosexuals in the west. However, OutRage! was divided over the attack.[38]

Nick Cohen,[39] Marko Attila Hoare[40] and Oliver Kamm[41] strongly criticised the party and its former members after the dissolution for opposing the military interventions in Bosnia, Kosovo and Iraq. Hoare, Cohen and Kamm also rejected Noam Chomsky's defence of Living Marxism and its coverage of the Bosnian war.[42]

In 1997, environmental journalist George Monbiot argued that the party had undue influence at Channel 4 in an article titled "Marxists found alive in C4" after two of its members contributed to the Against Nature television programme, whose director Martin Durkin is also connected to the group.[43] Elsewhere, Monbiot took issue with Living Marxism for putting too much stress on freedom as if "there should be no limits to human action, least of all those imposed by 'official and semi-official agencies [...] from the police and the courts to social services, counsellors and censors'".[44]

Andy Rowell and Jonathan Matthews of the Norfolk Genetic Information Network criticised the party for championing genetic engineering.[45] Andy Rowell and Bob Burton[46] along with Jonathan Matthews of the Norfolk Genetic Information Network charged Living Marxism with a history of attacking the environmental movement.

Re-orientation and disbandment

At the end of the 1980s, the party had moved away from its roots as a Trotskyist organisation, leading some critics to argue that they had abandoned the notion of the class struggle. In 1988, its weekly tabloid newspaper The Next Step carried an article arguing that "the disintegration of the official labour movement, and the apparent lack of a left-wing alternative, has consolidated an overwhelmingly defensive mood in the working class".[47]

In the 1987 general election, party members stood as part of the Red Front, arguing that working people needed to break with the Labour Party, but no Red Front candidate retained their election deposit.

In 1988, the party made The Next Step into a bulletin for its supporters. Later that year, a monthly magazine called Living Marxism was set up for a wider readership. Despite its beginnings as a far-left outlet, the politics espoused by the magazine developed a pronounced libertarianism. In December 1990, Living Marxism ran an article by Furedi, "Midnight in the Century", which argued that the corrosive effect of the collapse of both Stalinism and reformism on the working class meant that "for the time being at least, the working class has no political existence".[48]

In 1997, the point was put more forcefully:

In today's circumstances class politics cannot be reinvented, rebuilt, reinvigorated or rescued. Why? Because any dynamic political outlook needs to exist in an interaction with existing individual consciousness. And contemporary forms of consciousness in our atomised societies cannot be used as the foundation for a more developed politics of solidarity.[49]

Between 1990 and 1997, the party developed the view that more than capitalism itself the danger facing humanity was the absence of a force for social change (in philosophical language, a "subject" of history) and the culture of low expectations that suppressed it.[50] Prefacing a 1996 Living Marxism manifesto, Mick Hume argued:

Of course [...] we could have produced a familiar list of left-wing slogans complaining about problems like unemployment, exploitation and poverty which continue to scar our society. But that would be to ignore the transformation which has taken place in the political climate [...]. At different times, different issues matter most. Each era has thrown up its own great questions which define which side you are on [...]. [A]t Living Marxism, we see our job today as doing much more than criticising capitalism. That is the easy bit. There is a more pressing need to criticise the fatalistic critics, to counter the doom-mongers and put a positive case for human action in pursuit of social liberation. [...] [D]ealing with [...] unconventional questions, and puncturing the anti-human prejudices which surround them, is the precondition for making political action possible in our time.[51]

In 1994, the Irish Freedom Movement was dissolved. As the Northern Ireland peace process unfolded, the RCP increasingly turned from unconditional support for the IRA towards scorn at its gradualism and reformism.[4]

In February 1997, shortly after the party disbanded, Living Marxism re-branded as LM, possibly to further distance itself from its leftist origins. Articles in LM argued:

  • Against support for Tony Blair's New Labour project in 1997.[52]
  • Against "humanitarian interventions" in the Balkans, East Timor and Iraq.[53]
  • For freedom of speech and the "right to be offensive".[54]
  • Against the "new authoritarianism" of CCTV cameras, anti-social behaviour orders and anti-harassment laws.[55]
  • Against the demonisation of the white working class.[56]

This magazine ran at least two articles in which the authors argued that the mass murder carried out in Rwanda in 1994 should not be described as genocide. In December 1995, LM carried a report by Fiona Fox from Rwanda which argued:

The lesson I would draw from my visit is that we must reject the term 'genocide' in Rwanda. It has been used inside and outside Rwanda to criminalise the majority of ordinary Rwandan people, to justify outside interference in the country's affairs, and to lend legitimacy to a minority military government imposed on Rwanda by Western powers.[57][17]

LM continued to create controversy on a variety of issues, most notably on the British Independent Television News (ITN) coverage of the Balkan conflict in the 1990s. The controversy centred on LM featuring an article by Thomas Deichmann in which he alleged that the ITN coverage of a refugee detention centre in Trnopolje during the conflict gave the false impression that the Bosnian Muslims were being held against their will in Serbian concentration camps. The ensuing libel award and costs arising from legal action by the ITN against LM were estimated to total around £1 million. The action bankrupted the magazine and its publishers.[58]

Later organisations

Many former members of the party and some of the people who contributed to LM magazine continue to be politically active, most notably in the Academy of Ideas (formerly the Institute of Ideas), a think tank led by Claire Fox; the online magazine Spiked, initially edited by Mick Hume and later by Brendan O'Neill; and the Manifesto Club in which a leading figure is Munira Mirza, appointed by Boris Johnson as London's Director of Policy for culture, the arts and creative industries, and subsequently as his head of Number 10 policy unit.[59][18][60] Other groups produced by former members include Debating Matters, the Young Journalists' Academy, WorldWrite, Audacity.org, the Modern Movement, and Parents with Attitude. The Battle of Ideas has also been held annually since 2005 by the Academy of Ideas, which has been described as a "refuge" for former RCP members.[61] Some commentators, such as George Monbiot, have pointed to apparent entryist tactics of having jobs and lives used by former RCP members designed to influence mainstream public opinion.[62]

One party member from the 1990s explained in an article in Spiked:

I never left the RCP: the organisation folded in the mid-Nineties, but few of us actually 'recanted' our ideas. Instead we resolved to support one another more informally as we pursued our political tradition as individuals, or launched new projects with more general aims that have also engaged people from different traditions, or none. These include Spiked and the Institute of Ideas, where I now work. It must be said that this development annoyed our political opponents immensely, and a cursory Google search (try 'LM network' if you have time to kill) will return a plethora of exposés purporting to show that former members of the RCP are involved in various sinister conspiracies. [...] [T]he impossibility of simply doing away with a school of thought that is no longer attached to an organisation is perhaps what annoys our opponents most of all.[63]

In April 2019, three former members of the Revolutionary Communist Party, Claire Fox, James Heartfield and Alka Sehgal Cuthbert were selected as candidates for Nigel Farage's Brexit Party in the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom.[64][65][66] Stuart Waiton stood in Dundee West at the 2019 general election.[67]

References

  1. ^ Fitzpatrick, Michael (28 February 2018). "The point is to change it". Waiting for the Revolution. Manchester University Press. doi:10.7228/manchester/9781526113658.003.0013. ISBN 9781526113658.
  2. ^ a b 'Our Tasks and Methods,' Revolutionary Communist, no 1
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Smith, Evan (21 November 2022). "A Platform for Working Class Unity? The Revolutionary Communist Party's The Red Front and the pre-history of Living Marxism/Spiked Online in the 1980s". Contemporary British History. Informa UK Limited. 37: 89–127. doi:10.1080/13619462.2022.2142780. ISSN 1361-9462. S2CID 253791729.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Hepworth, Jack (28 April 2022). "'The moral rearmament of imperialism': the Revolutionary Communist Party, the Northern Ireland conflict, and the new world order, 1981-1994". Contemporary British History. Informa UK Limited. 36 (4): 591–621. doi:10.1080/13619462.2022.2070479. ISSN 1361-9462.
  5. ^ a b c "A radical life - Frank Furedi in conversation with Tom Slater". spiked. 28 July 2017. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  6. ^ Revolutionary Communist Party, The Red Front: A platform for working class unity, London: Junius, 1987: 7
  7. ^ Mike Freeman and Kate Marshall Who Needs the Labour Party? London: Junius, September 1978
  8. ^ The Red Front, A Platform for Working Class Unity, London, Junius, 1987, p.37
  9. ^ Under a National Flag, London: Junius, 1978, p.17
  10. ^ Joan Phillips, Policing the Family, 1988, p.104
  11. ^ James Heartfield, 'The Tyranny of Identity Politics' Spiked-online, January 2008
  12. ^ Joan Phillips, Policing the Family, 1988, p. 104
  13. ^ Mary Masters Workers against Imperialism, 1979, p. 35
  14. ^ Pat Roberts and Christine Drury Police out of Brixton, London: Junius, 1981, p. 13
  15. ^ East London Workers Against Racism, Our Flag Stays Red, London: Junius, April 1981
  16. ^ Evan Smith (5 February 2022). "Anti-statism and the trajectory from the Revolutionary Communist Party to Spiked [paper at Historical Materialism conference, 2021]". New Historical Express. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  17. ^ a b c LeBor, Adam (26 November 2020). "The Marxist cell in Number 10". The Critic Magazine. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  18. ^ a b Beckett, Andy (1 August 2020). "Why Boris Johnson's Tories fell for a tiny sect of libertarian provocateurs". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  19. ^ S. Glynn ,East End immigrants and the battle for housing,, Journal of Historical Geography 31 (2005) pp.528-545, p 542
  20. ^ 'Vigilante Groups', HC Deb 29 January 1982 vol 16 c451W http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/written_answers/1982/jan/29/vigilante-groups#S6CV0016P0_19820129_CWA_65
  21. ^ 'Civil Disorder', Records of the Prime Minister's Office, 1980 Apr 02 - 1981 Oct 29, PREM 19/484http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=8759386
  22. ^ Under Siege: Racial Violence in Britain Today, Keith Teare, Penguin, 1988, page 145
  23. ^ Under Siege: Racial Violence in Britain Today, Keith Teare, Penguin, 1988, page 150
  24. ^ David Pallister, 'Ulster Conference Ban', Guardian, 4 February 1982
  25. ^ Mick Hume, Brighton bomb memories Spiked, 13 October 2009
  26. ^ The Guardian, 11 September 1993, p. 14; Daily Telegraph, 11 September 1993, p 9
  27. ^ Mike Freeman, The Empire Strikes Back: Why we need a new Anti-War Movement, London, Junius, 1993, p 46
  28. ^ Linda Ryan, 'Narcissus' Empire,' LM, December 1999, issue 126
  29. ^ London, Junius, 1988, p. 8
  30. ^ Mike Freeman, Our Day Will Come: The Miners' Fight for Jobs, London, Junius, 1985, p. 36
  31. ^ Charles Longford, Black Blood on British Hands, London, Junius, 1985, p. 59, p. 67
  32. ^ James Heartfield, 'The Victim Support State', Living Marxism, December 1993, issue 62
  33. ^ 'James Heartfield, 'Judges Rule,' Living Marxism, April 1996, issue 89
  34. ^ James Heartfield, 'Getting it Wrong on Human Rights,' Living Marxism, December 1997, issue 106
  35. ^ 'Politics or Abstract Propagandism', International Socialism no.11, 1981, pp.121-2
  36. ^ Lucy Robinson, Gay Men and the Left in Post-War Britain: How the Personal Got Political (Manchester: Manchester University Press 2007) p. 161
  37. ^ Ian Lucas Outrage! an oral history, London: Cassell, 1998, p.26
  38. ^ Ian Lucas Outrage! an oral history, London: Cassell, 1998, pp.43-5
  39. ^ What's Left?, London: Harper, 2007
  40. ^ The Left Revisionist November 2003
  41. ^ '"LM was probably correct" - Chomsky', 31 October 2005
  42. ^ Marko Attila Hoare "The Guardian, Noam Chomsky and the Milosevic Lobby" 2009-02-14 at the Wayback Machine, Henry Jackson Society, 4 February 2006
  43. ^ George Monbiot, "Marxists found alive in C4", The Guardian, 18 December 1997. Monbiot's online version of the article has had its headline changed from the print version, to "The Revolution has been Televised"
  44. ^ Far Left or Far Right? Prospect, November 1998
  45. ^ [1] Rowell and Matthews, 'Strange Bedfellows,' The Ecologist, 19 March 2003
  46. ^ Rising Rhetoric on Genetically Modified Crops, PRWatch, First Quarter 2003, Volume 10, No. 1
  47. ^ 'The Problem of Political Leadership', the next step, 3 June 1988, pp. 8-9
  48. ^ Frank Furedi (as Frank Richards). "Midnight in the Century", Living Marxism, December 1990
  49. ^ Frank Furedi "Class politics cannot be rebuilt or regenerated today", LM, May 1997
  50. ^ James Heartfield, The 'Death of the Subject' Explained, Sheffield, 2002
  51. ^ The Point is to Change It: A Manifesto for a World Fit for People, London: Junius (1996), p.x-xiii.
  52. ^ 'Nightmare on Downing Street,' LM, May 1997, issue 100
  53. ^ Linda Ryan "Narcissus' Empire", LM, December 1999, issue 126
  54. ^ James Heartfield 'Why hate speech?' LM, February 1998, issue 107
  55. ^ Charlotte Reynolds 'Hard Labour', LM,, May 1997, issue 100
  56. ^ Michael Fitzpatrick 'Yob culture clash', Living Marxism, November 1994, issue 73
  57. ^ "Massacring the truth in Rwanda", LM, December 1995, issue 85
  58. ^ Hume, Mick (2005-03-07). . The Times. Archived from the original on 2011-05-23. Retrieved 2007-04-14.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  59. ^ "Sky executive among Johnson's first appointments". The Guardian. 23 July 2019. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  60. ^ Hepworth, Jack (28 April 2022). "'The moral rearmament of imperialism': the Revolutionary Communist Party, the Northern Ireland conflict, and the new world order, 1981-1994". Contemporary British History. Informa UK Limited. 36 (4): 591–621. doi:10.1080/13619462.2022.2070479. ISSN 1361-9462. Subsequently, maintaining an informal network, activists formed the influential internet magazine spiked in 2000 and founded the Institute of Ideas
  61. ^ Turner, Jenny (8 July 2010). "Who Are They?". London Review of Books. 32 (13). ISSN 0260-9592. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
  62. ^ George Monbiot Invasion of the entryists, The Guardian, 9 December 2003
  63. ^ Dolan Cummings, 'In defence of "radicalisation"', sp!ked review of books, No. 5 (September 2007).
  64. ^ correspondent, Peter Walker Political (23 April 2019). "Former communist standing as MEP for Farage's Brexit party". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
  65. ^ JamesHeartfield (26 April 2019). "Glad to announce that I am contesting the Yorkshire and Humber constituency for the @brexitparty_uk in the European elections".
  66. ^ "Former Revolutionary Communist Party's Spiked: Alka Sehgal Cuthbert Candidate for Farage's Brexit Party". 13 April 2019.
  67. ^ "Dundee West parliamentary constituency - Election 2019". BBC News. Retrieved 2020-09-15.

Further reading

  • Beckett, Andy. "Licence to rile", The Guardian, 15 May 1999 (Retrieved 17 October 2006).
  • Fitzpatrick, Michael (28 February 2018). "The point is to change it". Waiting for the Revolution. Manchester University Press. doi:10.7228/manchester/9781526113658.003.0013. ISBN 9781526113658.
  • Morgan Jones (30 June 2022). "Culture war 'Marxism': The Revolutionary Communist Party diaspora and the Conservative Party". Renewal. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  • Heartfield, James."Dave Hallsworth" Obituary, Guardian, 20 December 2007 (Retrieved 28 October 2009).
  • McVicar, John. Punch, 29 May 2000 (Retrieved 28 October 2009).
  • Milligan, Don. Radical Amnesia and the RCP, Reflections of a Renegade, January 8, 2008.
  • Small, Mike. The Faction That Fools The World, Variant #24 (Winter 2005).
  • Turner, Jenny. Who Are They?, London Review of Books Vol 32 no 13, 8 July 2010.
  • Walker, Dave. "The Demise of the Revolutionary Communist Party". What Next Journal. (Retrieved 16 June 2006).

External links

  • Archive of scanned RCT and RCP Publications
  • Spiked Online
  • Institute of Ideas
  • Lobby Watch - LM & Institute of Idea IoI
  • LM group at SourceWatch
  • Living Marxism at SourceWatch

revolutionary, communist, party, 1978, confused, with, revolutionary, communist, party, 1944, revolutionary, communist, party, britain, marxist, leninist, revolutionary, communist, party, known, revolutionary, communist, tendency, until, 1981, trotskyist, poli. Not to be confused with Revolutionary Communist Party UK 1944 or Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain Marxist Leninist The Revolutionary Communist Party known as the Revolutionary Communist Tendency until 1981 was a Trotskyist political organisation formed in 1978 From 1988 it published the journal Living Marxism It started with only a few dozen supporters its membership peaked at 200 in the mid 1990s 1 Revolutionary Communist PartyFounded1978 45 years ago 1978 Dissolved1997 26 years ago 1997 Split fromRevolutionary Communist GroupNewspaperThe Next StepLiving MarxismIdeology1978 1991CommunismTrotskyism1991 1997LibertarianismPolitical position1978 1991Far left1991 1997SyncreticColors RedPolitics of the United KingdomPolitical partiesElectionsAfter 1991 the party abandoned Trotskyism and mainstream leftism before publicly taking a libertarian position It was disbanded in 1997 although a number of former members maintain a loose political network to promote its ideas Contents 1 Beginnings 2 Stance 3 Front groups and campaigns 3 1 Workers Against Racism 3 2 Anti deportation campaigns 3 3 Supporting Irish republicanism 3 4 Student politics 3 5 Electoral involvement 3 6 Campaign Against Militarism 4 Controversial positions 5 Criticism 6 Re orientation and disbandment 7 Later organisations 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBeginnings Edit The Workers March for Irish Freedom taking the cause of Irish hunger strikers to the Trades Union Congress conference in 1981 was a turning point for the party The party originated as a tendency in the Revolutionary Communist Group which had split from the International Socialists in the 1970s This group had concluded that there was no living Marxist tradition in the left and Marxism would have to be re established 2 The RCG saw the British working class and especially the labour movement as dominated by bourgeois ideology and chauvinist nationalism and the IS as pandering to its low level trade union consciousness and economism they asserted that a purer vanguard party was needed focusing on anti imperialism rather than trade unionism 3 4 Disagreements about the course the Revolutionary Communist Group should take in relation to support for the Anti Apartheid Movement and the African National Congress led Frank Furedi a sociologist at the University of Kent better known then by his cadre name Frank Richards to break off and form his own group in 1978 The Revolutionary Communist Tendency RCT hoped to draw together those militant working class leaders who were disappointed by the limitations of reformism to help to build a new working class leadership and develop an independent working class programme 2 3 5 The RCT renamed itself the Revolutionary Communist Party in 1981 5 Stance EditTaking a strong line which it considered to be inspired by Vladimir Lenin s work on the relationship between imperialism and reformism the party originally held that the only hope of securing any decent sort of life or even guaranteeing survival lies in the working class taking control over society 6 It further argued that traditional Stalinist and social democratic appeals to the bourgeois state had undermined working class independence and that as a result an independent vanguard party should be organized to campaign for a distinctly working class politics In 1978 for example when the left was strong within the Labour Party the RCP argued that Labour is the party which attempts to resolve the crisis by integrating militant working class resistance into the capitalist system 7 This position included a rejection of support for the Labour Party and one that questioned the allegiances of the trade union movement A consequence of this belief was a growing distrust of traditional statist left wing struggles as reformist According to some the RCP took a view that reformism consolidated bourgeois ideology in the potential leadership layers of the working class The RCP took a number of positions coined to distinguish independent working class politics from statist reformism which included The rejection of all controls on immigration 8 Opposition to any national economic recovery strategies such as import controls which aimed to pit British workers against those overseas 9 Free abortion and contraception on demand 10 Decriminalisation of homosexuality 11 and complete equality under the law 12 Unconditional support for the struggle against British imperialism in Northern Ireland on the grounds that British workers cannot ignore the cause of Irish liberation without renouncing their own class interests 13 A claim that the police occupied Brixton We have to organise on the streets and housing estates to keep the police out 14 Opposition to no platforming fascists but through the campaign Workers Against Racism aiming to organise physical defence against racist attacks 15 16 5 The party s programme can be traced through the publications Our Tasks and Methods a reprint of the Revolutionary Communist Group s founding document the 1983 general election manifesto Preparing for Power and the article The Road to Power in the theoretical journal Confrontation 1986 Historian Evan Smith suggests that there has been a debate about whether the RCP was part of the left 3 Frank Furedi later described the party s approach We tried to transcend the left right divide Lots of left wingers said we were not really left wing because we did not speak their language We wanted to have an experimental approach and not repeat the problems of the past 17 Andy Beckett of The Guardian wrote Despite its name most of its stances were not communist or revolutionary but contrarian it supported free speech for racists and nuclear power it attacked environmentalism and the NHS Its most consistent impulse was to invoke an idealised working class and claim it was actually being harmed by the supposed elites of the liberal left 18 Front groups and campaigns EditAccording to historian Evan Smith The RCT RCP formed several front groups around single issues during the late 1970s and early 1980s with the most prominent being the Irish Freedom Movement which had begun as the Smash the Prevention of Terrorism Act Campaign and Workers Against Racism originally East London Workers Against Racism SPTAC and ELWAR were both set up to rival the alleged chauvinism of the British left and larger campaign organisations around the issues of Irish solidarity and anti racism such as the Troops Out Movement and the Anti Nazi League From the beginning it seemed that the RCT RCP was more comfortable directing its own single issue groups than joining other larger campaign groups 3 Workers Against Racism EditBeginning as East London Workers Against Racism ELWAR before it was launched as a national campaign Workers Against Racism campaigned against state racism Protests were organised against deportations and passport checks at hospitals and unemployment benefit offices ELWAR also organised patrols and vigils to defend immigrants against racist attacks 19 In Parliament Conservative MP Nicholas Winterton demanded of the Home Secretary if he will seek to proscribe the East London Workers against Racism vigilante group 20 Workers Against Racism was criticised in the press for its activities during the 1981 Brixton riots An internal Home Office report to then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher claimed T he Revolutionary Communist Party set up a Lambeth Unemployed Workers Group shortly before the Riots and has since formed a South London Workers Against Racism group similar to the East London Workers Against Racism which attracted some notoriety for organising vigilante patrols 21 Anti deportation campaigns Edit George Roucou marching to freedom with his wife Kay and Workers Against Racism organiser Charles Longford The party s Workers Against Racism campaign fought many deportation threats like George Roucou s on the grounds that British immigration law was racist Roucou was a shop steward in the building workers union UCATT in Manchester Workers Against Racism helped to organise a campaign culminating in a one day strike and demonstration by his fellow council workers on 6 February 1987 On 13 March 1987 with 500 protesting outside the Home Office appeal panel reversed Roucou s deportation order 22 On 11 June 1985 Metso Moncrieffe was arrested and held by police pending a deportation order Workers Against Racism campaigners raised the case disrupting a test match at the Edgbaston cricket ground in July 1985 with a Metso Must Stay banner and helping to build a 1 000 strong march for him in December 1986 In September 1987 Moncrieffe s deportation order was overturned 23 Supporting Irish republicanism Edit Supporting Irish republicanism was central to the work of the party According to historian Jack Hepworth Advocating unconditional support for the IRA enabled the RCP to challenge reformism on the British left and nationalism in the labour movement 4 In 1978 the RCP organised the Smash the Prevention of Terrorism Act Campaign and held protests outside police stations where suspects were held The party organised a conference of trade unionists opposed to Northern Ireland being part of the United Kingdom in Coventry in 1981 and later that year held a march to the TUC conference the Workers March for Irish Freedom On Saturday 6 February 1982 the Irish Freedom Movement IFM was founded at a meeting in Caxton House Archway and TUC general secretary Len Murray wrote to the thirteen trades councils that sponsored the conference threatening them with disaffiliation if they attended 24 RCP Political Committee member Mick Hume who edited The Next Step recalls that the IFM were accused of complicity in the 1984 bombing of the Conservative Party conference 25 The IFM published a quarterly bulletin Irish Freedom and organised an annual march on the anniversary of internment When the voices of Sinn Fein supporters were banned from the British broadcast media Living Marxism carried a front page interview with its leader Gerry Adams and the IFM picketed Broadcasting House After the Brighton bombing an RCP editorial in the next step said We support unconditionally the right of the Irish people to carry out their struggle for national liberation in whatever way they choose We neither support nor condemn any particular tactic the republican movement pursues whether it is an electoral campaign or a bombing campaign 17 Similarly after the Enniskillen bombing in 1987 Hume reiterated that British radicals responses could not be based on emotional revulsion at particular incidents of violence or terror 4 By the end of the 1980s according to historian Jack Hepworth the IFM was the largest radical solidarity movement in Britain with an annual August march in London typically attracting an estimated 3 000 demonstrators and an activist base beyond the party faithful by 1990 it had twenty branches in the UK 4 Student politics Edit The party primarily recruited amongst students By 1984 it had 45 university and polytechnic branches 4 Electoral involvement Edit The RCP stood candidates in the May 1981 local elections under its own name and that of ELWAR It stood a candidate in the 1983 Bermondsey by election its campaign mainly consisting of heckling Labour candidate Peter Tatchell who lost the seat to the Liberal Party the RCP candidate received 38 votes It fielded four candidates in the 1983 United Kingdom general election who achieved a total vote of nearly 1000 In 1983 the party began its annual Preparing for Power public conferences In 1986 it launched a new theoretical journal Confrontation In the 1986 United Kingdom local elections the RCP stood 38 candidates including Claire Fox under the name Claire Foster who received a total of just under 2300 votes with an average of 60 votes each In the 1986 Knowsley North by election its candidate was also backed by the Workers Revolutionary Party and received 664 votes its highest so far In the 1987 Greenwich by election its candidate received 91 votes 3 In 1987 it launched the Red Front electoral coalition appealing to other anti Labour groups to join it its manifesto demanded work or full pay the defence of trade union rights equal rights for all and opposition to war It had a libertarian flavour and also argued that The dangers from Aids have in fact been grossly exaggerated The principal threat to homosexuals in Britain today is not from Aids but from the safe sex campaign Two other groups joined the campaign Red Action and the Revolutionary Democratic Group The Front stood 14 candidates including Kenan Malik The candidate in Knowsley North achieved 538 vote 1 37 the others between 111 and 300 It stood its own candidates in the 1989 Glasgow Central by election and 1989 Vauxhall by election receiving 141 and 171 votes respectively 3 Campaign Against Militarism Edit Campaign Against Militarism protest in 1994 In 1993 the party helped launch the Campaign Against Militarism CAM to fight against western military intervention CAM organised protests against the military interventions in Somalia Bosnia and Iraq On 10 September 1993 seventy Somalis and CAM supporters occupied the United States embassy after an alleged massacre of civilians in Mogadishu 26 the only time it has happened After they were evicted by armed marines eleven were convicted under the as yet untested criminal trespass laws but charges were dropped after lawyer Mike Fisher sought to have the case tried in the United States arguing that the offence if any was committed on American soil CAM was the only left wing group that joined British Serbs in their demonstrations over the military strikes on Yugoslavia in 1994 citation needed In The Empire Strikes Back Mike Freeman identified the metamorphosis of what had long regarded itself as a peace movement into a war movement after Labour rallied to support the First Iraq War 27 Later this trend was called humanitarian imperialism in Living Marxism The party opposed Western military intervention in Bosnia Somalia Kosovo Iraq and East Timor 28 Controversial positions EditThe party took a number of positions that were strongly criticised by others on the left In The Truth About the AIDS Panic Michael Fitzpatrick and Don Milligan wrote that there is no good evidence that Aids is likely to spread rapidly among heterosexuals in the West 29 The pamphlet argued that the government campaign warning of a heterosexual aids epidemic was a moral panic that would worsen prejudice against gay people When British miners struck against redundancies in 1984 the party argued that the union s refusal to hold a national ballot was a major problem The only way to win the passive majority for the strike was to launch an aggressive campaign around a national ballot 30 In the struggle against Apartheid in South Africa the party argued that sanctions don t make sense because it was wrong to call on the governments that had supported Apartheid to overthrow it Rather workers ought to take direct action like blocking South African imports at docks 31 When the organisation re thought its outlook in 1991 it adopted a number of positions that put it at odds with the New Labour milieu Living Marxism argued against what it called the new authoritarianism the greater official interference and surveillance of ordinary people by the state The growth in at risk registers and CCTV were examples 32 The party opposed the increase in judicial 33 and other kinds of non majoritarian overriding of parliament as well as the subordination of parliament to the European Convention on Human Rights 34 Criticism EditIn 1981 Alex Callinicos of the British Socialist Workers Party SWP took issue with the party s argument that such issues as racism and Ireland form a vital component of revolutionary propaganda Callinicos claimed instead that if most of the workers involved have reactionary views on questions such as race the position of women and so on then that was less important than that they were fighting over pay and conditions Callinicos also called into question the party s stress on the connection between reformism and nationalism saying they were paleo marxists 35 In 1984 the SWP and other left parties denounced the RCP for calling for a national ballot in the miners strike 3 The party s stance on AIDS was widely criticised by the gay rights movement 36 On 30 June 1990 Simon Watney and Edward King of the group OutRage kicked over the party s stall at the Gay Pride march 37 Watney criticised Michael Fitzpatrick and Don Milligan for giving credence to the idea that AIDS was a gay plague by their insistence that there would be no epidemic amongst heterosexuals in the west However OutRage was divided over the attack 38 Nick Cohen 39 Marko Attila Hoare 40 and Oliver Kamm 41 strongly criticised the party and its former members after the dissolution for opposing the military interventions in Bosnia Kosovo and Iraq Hoare Cohen and Kamm also rejected Noam Chomsky s defence of Living Marxism and its coverage of the Bosnian war 42 In 1997 environmental journalist George Monbiot argued that the party had undue influence at Channel 4 in an article titled Marxists found alive in C4 after two of its members contributed to the Against Nature television programme whose director Martin Durkin is also connected to the group 43 Elsewhere Monbiot took issue with Living Marxism for putting too much stress on freedom as if there should be no limits to human action least of all those imposed by official and semi official agencies from the police and the courts to social services counsellors and censors 44 Andy Rowell and Jonathan Matthews of the Norfolk Genetic Information Network criticised the party for championing genetic engineering 45 Andy Rowell and Bob Burton 46 along with Jonathan Matthews of the Norfolk Genetic Information Network charged Living Marxism with a history of attacking the environmental movement Re orientation and disbandment EditAt the end of the 1980s the party had moved away from its roots as a Trotskyist organisation leading some critics to argue that they had abandoned the notion of the class struggle In 1988 its weekly tabloid newspaper The Next Step carried an article arguing that the disintegration of the official labour movement and the apparent lack of a left wing alternative has consolidated an overwhelmingly defensive mood in the working class 47 In the 1987 general election party members stood as part of the Red Front arguing that working people needed to break with the Labour Party but no Red Front candidate retained their election deposit In 1988 the party made The Next Step into a bulletin for its supporters Later that year a monthly magazine called Living Marxism was set up for a wider readership Despite its beginnings as a far left outlet the politics espoused by the magazine developed a pronounced libertarianism In December 1990 Living Marxism ran an article by Furedi Midnight in the Century which argued that the corrosive effect of the collapse of both Stalinism and reformism on the working class meant that for the time being at least the working class has no political existence 48 In 1997 the point was put more forcefully In today s circumstances class politics cannot be reinvented rebuilt reinvigorated or rescued Why Because any dynamic political outlook needs to exist in an interaction with existing individual consciousness And contemporary forms of consciousness in our atomised societies cannot be used as the foundation for a more developed politics of solidarity 49 Between 1990 and 1997 the party developed the view that more than capitalism itself the danger facing humanity was the absence of a force for social change in philosophical language a subject of history and the culture of low expectations that suppressed it 50 Prefacing a 1996 Living Marxism manifesto Mick Hume argued Of course we could have produced a familiar list of left wing slogans complaining about problems like unemployment exploitation and poverty which continue to scar our society But that would be to ignore the transformation which has taken place in the political climate At different times different issues matter most Each era has thrown up its own great questions which define which side you are on A t Living Marxism we see our job today as doing much more than criticising capitalism That is the easy bit There is a more pressing need to criticise the fatalistic critics to counter the doom mongers and put a positive case for human action in pursuit of social liberation D ealing with unconventional questions and puncturing the anti human prejudices which surround them is the precondition for making political action possible in our time 51 In 1994 the Irish Freedom Movement was dissolved As the Northern Ireland peace process unfolded the RCP increasingly turned from unconditional support for the IRA towards scorn at its gradualism and reformism 4 In February 1997 shortly after the party disbanded Living Marxism re branded as LM possibly to further distance itself from its leftist origins Articles in LM argued Against support for Tony Blair s New Labour project in 1997 52 Against humanitarian interventions in the Balkans East Timor and Iraq 53 For freedom of speech and the right to be offensive 54 Against the new authoritarianism of CCTV cameras anti social behaviour orders and anti harassment laws 55 Against the demonisation of the white working class 56 This magazine ran at least two articles in which the authors argued that the mass murder carried out in Rwanda in 1994 should not be described as genocide In December 1995 LM carried a report by Fiona Fox from Rwanda which argued The lesson I would draw from my visit is that we must reject the term genocide in Rwanda It has been used inside and outside Rwanda to criminalise the majority of ordinary Rwandan people to justify outside interference in the country s affairs and to lend legitimacy to a minority military government imposed on Rwanda by Western powers 57 17 LM continued to create controversy on a variety of issues most notably on the British Independent Television News ITN coverage of the Balkan conflict in the 1990s The controversy centred on LM featuring an article by Thomas Deichmann in which he alleged that the ITN coverage of a refugee detention centre in Trnopolje during the conflict gave the false impression that the Bosnian Muslims were being held against their will in Serbian concentration camps The ensuing libel award and costs arising from legal action by the ITN against LM were estimated to total around 1 million The action bankrupted the magazine and its publishers 58 Later organisations EditMany former members of the party and some of the people who contributed to LM magazine continue to be politically active most notably in the Academy of Ideas formerly the Institute of Ideas a think tank led by Claire Fox the online magazine Spiked initially edited by Mick Hume and later by Brendan O Neill and the Manifesto Club in which a leading figure is Munira Mirza appointed by Boris Johnson as London s Director of Policy for culture the arts and creative industries and subsequently as his head of Number 10 policy unit 59 18 60 Other groups produced by former members include Debating Matters the Young Journalists Academy WorldWrite Audacity org the Modern Movement and Parents with Attitude The Battle of Ideas has also been held annually since 2005 by the Academy of Ideas which has been described as a refuge for former RCP members 61 Some commentators such as George Monbiot have pointed to apparent entryist tactics of having jobs and lives used by former RCP members designed to influence mainstream public opinion 62 One party member from the 1990s explained in an article in Spiked I never left the RCP the organisation folded in the mid Nineties but few of us actually recanted our ideas Instead we resolved to support one another more informally as we pursued our political tradition as individuals or launched new projects with more general aims that have also engaged people from different traditions or none These include Spiked and the Institute of Ideas where I now work It must be said that this development annoyed our political opponents immensely and a cursory Google search try LM network if you have time to kill will return a plethora of exposes purporting to show that former members of the RCP are involved in various sinister conspiracies T he impossibility of simply doing away with a school of thought that is no longer attached to an organisation is perhaps what annoys our opponents most of all 63 In April 2019 three former members of the Revolutionary Communist Party Claire Fox James Heartfield and Alka Sehgal Cuthbert were selected as candidates for Nigel Farage s Brexit Party in the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom 64 65 66 Stuart Waiton stood in Dundee West at the 2019 general election 67 References Edit Fitzpatrick Michael 28 February 2018 The point is to change it Waiting for the Revolution Manchester University Press doi 10 7228 manchester 9781526113658 003 0013 ISBN 9781526113658 a b Our Tasks and Methods Revolutionary Communist no 1 a b c d e f g Smith Evan 21 November 2022 A Platform for Working Class Unity The Revolutionary Communist Party s The Red Front and the pre history of Living Marxism Spiked Online in the 1980s Contemporary British History Informa UK Limited 37 89 127 doi 10 1080 13619462 2022 2142780 ISSN 1361 9462 S2CID 253791729 a b c d e f Hepworth Jack 28 April 2022 The moral rearmament of imperialism the Revolutionary Communist Party the Northern Ireland conflict and the new world order 1981 1994 Contemporary British History Informa UK Limited 36 4 591 621 doi 10 1080 13619462 2022 2070479 ISSN 1361 9462 a b c A radical life Frank Furedi in conversation with Tom Slater spiked 28 July 2017 Retrieved 30 December 2022 Revolutionary Communist Party The Red Front A platform for working class unity London Junius 1987 7 Mike Freeman and Kate Marshall Who Needs the Labour Party London Junius September 1978 The Red Front A Platform for Working Class Unity London Junius 1987 p 37 Under a National Flag London Junius 1978 p 17 Joan Phillips Policing the Family 1988 p 104 James Heartfield The Tyranny of Identity Politics Spiked online January 2008 Joan Phillips Policing the Family 1988 p 104 Mary Masters Workers against Imperialism 1979 p 35 Pat Roberts and Christine Drury Police out of Brixton London Junius 1981 p 13 East London Workers Against Racism Our Flag Stays Red London Junius April 1981 Evan Smith 5 February 2022 Anti statism and the trajectory from the Revolutionary Communist Party to Spiked paper at Historical Materialism conference 2021 New Historical Express Retrieved 30 December 2022 a b c LeBor Adam 26 November 2020 The Marxist cell in Number 10 The Critic Magazine Retrieved 30 December 2022 a b Beckett Andy 1 August 2020 Why Boris Johnson s Tories fell for a tiny sect of libertarian provocateurs The Guardian Retrieved 30 December 2022 S Glynn East End immigrants and the battle for housing Journal of Historical Geography 31 2005 pp 528 545 p 542 Vigilante Groups HC Deb 29 January 1982 vol 16 c451W http hansard millbanksystems com written answers 1982 jan 29 vigilante groups S6CV0016P0 19820129 CWA 65 Civil Disorder Records of the Prime Minister s Office 1980 Apr 02 1981 Oct 29 PREM 19 484http www nationalarchives gov uk documentsonline details result asp Edoc Id 8759386 Under Siege Racial Violence in Britain Today Keith Teare Penguin 1988 page 145 Under Siege Racial Violence in Britain Today Keith Teare Penguin 1988 page 150 David Pallister Ulster Conference Ban Guardian 4 February 1982 Mick Hume Brighton bomb memories Spiked 13 October 2009 The Guardian 11 September 1993 p 14 Daily Telegraph 11 September 1993 p 9 Mike Freeman The Empire Strikes Back Why we need a new Anti War Movement London Junius 1993 p 46 Linda Ryan Narcissus Empire LM December 1999 issue 126 London Junius 1988 p 8 Mike Freeman Our Day Will Come The Miners Fight for Jobs London Junius 1985 p 36 Charles Longford Black Blood on British Hands London Junius 1985 p 59 p 67 James Heartfield The Victim Support State Living Marxism December 1993 issue 62 James Heartfield Judges Rule Living Marxism April 1996 issue 89 James Heartfield Getting it Wrong on Human Rights Living Marxism December 1997 issue 106 Politics or Abstract Propagandism International Socialism no 11 1981 pp 121 2 Lucy Robinson Gay Men and the Left in Post War Britain How the Personal Got Political Manchester Manchester University Press 2007 p 161 Ian Lucas Outrage an oral history London Cassell 1998 p 26 Ian Lucas Outrage an oral history London Cassell 1998 pp 43 5 What s Left London Harper 2007 The Left Revisionist November 2003 LM was probably correct Chomsky 31 October 2005 Marko Attila Hoare The Guardian Noam Chomsky and the Milosevic Lobby Archived 2009 02 14 at the Wayback Machine Henry Jackson Society 4 February 2006 George Monbiot Marxists found alive in C4 The Guardian 18 December 1997 Monbiot s online version of the article has had its headline changed from the print version to The Revolution has been Televised Far Left or Far Right Prospect November 1998 1 Rowell and Matthews Strange Bedfellows The Ecologist 19 March 2003 Rising Rhetoric on Genetically Modified Crops PRWatch First Quarter 2003 Volume 10 No 1 The Problem of Political Leadership the next step 3 June 1988 pp 8 9 Frank Furedi as Frank Richards Midnight in the Century Living Marxism December 1990 Frank Furedi Class politics cannot be rebuilt or regenerated today LM May 1997 James Heartfield The Death of the Subject Explained Sheffield 2002 The Point is to Change It A Manifesto for a World Fit for People London Junius 1996 p x xiii Nightmare on Downing Street LM May 1997 issue 100 Linda Ryan Narcissus Empire LM December 1999 issue 126 James Heartfield Why hate speech LM February 1998 issue 107 Charlotte Reynolds Hard Labour LM May 1997 issue 100 Michael Fitzpatrick Yob culture clash Living Marxism November 1994 issue 73 Massacring the truth in Rwanda LM December 1995 issue 85 Hume Mick 2005 03 07 The day I faced being a 1m bankrupt The Times Archived from the original on 2011 05 23 Retrieved 2007 04 14 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Sky executive among Johnson s first appointments The Guardian 23 July 2019 Retrieved 25 July 2019 Hepworth Jack 28 April 2022 The moral rearmament of imperialism the Revolutionary Communist Party the Northern Ireland conflict and the new world order 1981 1994 Contemporary British History Informa UK Limited 36 4 591 621 doi 10 1080 13619462 2022 2070479 ISSN 1361 9462 Subsequently maintaining an informal network activists formed the influential internet magazine spiked in 2000 and founded the Institute of Ideas Turner Jenny 8 July 2010 Who Are They London Review of Books 32 13 ISSN 0260 9592 Retrieved 24 November 2020 George Monbiot Invasion of the entryists The Guardian 9 December 2003 Dolan Cummings In defence of radicalisation sp ked review of books No 5 September 2007 correspondent Peter Walker Political 23 April 2019 Former communist standing as MEP for Farage s Brexit party The Guardian via www theguardian com JamesHeartfield 26 April 2019 Glad to announce that I am contesting the Yorkshire and Humber constituency for the brexitparty uk in the European elections Former Revolutionary Communist Party s Spiked Alka Sehgal Cuthbert Candidate for Farage s Brexit Party 13 April 2019 Dundee West parliamentary constituency Election 2019 BBC News Retrieved 2020 09 15 Further reading EditBeckett Andy Licence to rile The Guardian 15 May 1999 Retrieved 17 October 2006 Fitzpatrick Michael 28 February 2018 The point is to change it Waiting for the Revolution Manchester University Press doi 10 7228 manchester 9781526113658 003 0013 ISBN 9781526113658 Morgan Jones 30 June 2022 Culture war Marxism The Revolutionary Communist Party diaspora and the Conservative Party Renewal Retrieved 29 December 2022 Heartfield James Dave Hallsworth Obituary Guardian 20 December 2007 Retrieved 28 October 2009 McVicar John The Scoop that Folded a Magazine Punch 29 May 2000 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Milligan Don Radical Amnesia and the RCP Reflections of a Renegade January 8 2008 Small Mike The Faction That Fools The World Variant 24 Winter 2005 Turner Jenny Who Are They London Review of Books Vol 32 no 13 8 July 2010 Walker Dave The Demise of the Revolutionary Communist Party What Next Journal Retrieved 16 June 2006 External links EditArchive of scanned RCT and RCP Publications Archive org archive of LM website Spiked Online Institute of Ideas Lobby Watch LM amp Institute of Idea IoI LM group at SourceWatch Living Marxism at SourceWatch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Revolutionary Communist Party UK 1978 amp oldid 1148145035, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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