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Lutte Ouvrière

Lutte Ouvrière (Workers' Struggle, French pronunciation: [lyt.uvʁiˈjɛʁ]) is a Trotskyist communist party[2] in France, named after its weekly paper. Arlette Laguiller has been the party's spokeswoman since 1973 and ran in each presidential election until 2012, when Nathalie Arthaud was the candidate. Robert Barcia (Hardy) was its founder and central leader. Lutte Ouvrière is a member of the Internationalist Communist Union. It emphasises workplace activity and has been critical of such recent phenomena as alter-globalization.

Workers' Struggle
Lutte ouvrière
LeaderCollective leadership:
(Central Committee);
Spokesperson:
Nathalie Arthaud
Founded1939; 84 years ago (1939) (groupe Barta)
1956; 67 years ago (1956) (LO)
Split fromWorkers and Peasants' Socialist Party
HeadquartersParis
Membership (2018) 8,000 claimed adherents[1]
IdeologyCommunism
Trotskyism
Feminism
Anti-capitalism
Political positionFar-left
International affiliationInternationalist Communist Union
ColoursRed
Seats in the National Assembly
0 / 577
Seats in the Senate
0 / 343
Seats in the European Parliament
0 / 72
Website
www.lutte-ouvriere.org

Constitution of France
Parliament; government; president

History Edit

Its origins lie in the tiny Trotskyist Group founded in 1939 by David Korner (Barta). This developed factory work throughout the war and was instrumental in the Renault strike of 1947, along with the anarcho-syndicalists. The group was exhausted by this effort and collapsed in 1952.

After attempts to revive the Trotskyist Group, Voix Ouvrière was founded in 1956 by Robert Barcia, known as Hardy and the group's pre-eminent leader, and by Pierre Bois, a leading activist in the Renault plant. Effort was made to involve Barta but disputes between him, Hardy and Bois prevented it.

VO established itself through the 1960s by producing mass factory bulletins, usually weekly. The Communist Party of France (PCF) retained its hegemonic position within the workers' movement in France and its members sometimes tried to prevent the distribution of VO bulletins. In part this explains the continued use of semi-clandestine operation within VO and in LO today.

After being banned due to its support of the Students Revolt of May '68, the group became Lutte Ouvrière.

Since the 1970s Edit

An ongoing issue is the possibility and conditions of cooperation with fellow Trotskyist party the Revolutionary Communist League, the French section of the Fourth International. In 1970, LO initiated fusion discussions with the LC (as the LCR was then called). After extensive discussions, the two organisations had agreed the basis for a fused organisation. However, the fusion was not completed. In 1976 discussions between the Ligue and Lutte Ouvrière progressed again. The two organisations started to produce a common weekly supplement to their newspapers, common electoral work and other common campaigning. Since then on occasions the two organizations have stood joint candidates at some elections.

LO has made great efforts to stand in elections either on its own or in an alliance with the LCR. As a result, Arlette Laguiller has become well known to the public as LO's perennial presidential candidate. The early 1970s also saw two breakaways from Lutte Ouvrière. The first such split, in 1974 in Bordeaux, took the name l'Union Ouvrière, but rapidly disintegrated, so much so that when another small split group that developed a year later expected to be able to fuse with l'Union Ouvrière, it found it had already disappeared and were forced to form their own organisation as a consequence. This new group, Combat Communiste, evolved into Socialisme International, an affiliate of the International Socialist Tendency.

Another more recent breakaway developed after Arlette Laguiller's relatively high electoral results in the 1990s and LO's statement that this meant that a new workers' party was a possibility. This statement, as well as a dispute over the personal code members were expected to abide by, led to the departure of over a hundred members to form the Voix des Travailleurs group. This later fused with another smaller group but has more recently joined the Revolutionary Communist League as a recognised faction. In the period up to 2008, a minority faction existed within LO and appeared publicly, although its supporters were segregated in their own cells.

LO has gained critique for their position on the 2004 French law on secularity and conspicuous religious symbols in schools. André Victor written in his article Islamic Hijab and the Subjugation of Women 25 April 2003[3] that "Sarkozy has spoken out against hijab on passport photos, and presumably earned the approval of millions of voters, which was probably the real purpose of this exercise in demagoguery". It considers that "The real problem is that wearing the hijab, visible sign of the subjugation of women to their husband, father, brother or men in general, has been the subject of a political campaign of organizations present in fundamentalist migrant groups to impose their law within them, especially women. ... Therefore this policy leads to increase the weight of the most reactionary religious authorities within the immigrant population". While considering the law as hypocrite, LO stated that "For teachers, not accepting hijab, - particularly in the classroom, - means to support women in their family and social environment, attempting to resist the machismo".

Following the very low score of Arlette Laguiller in the first round of the April–May 2007 presidential election (1,33%, compared to 5,72% in 2002), the party was left with a debt of 1,4 million Euros. According to Michel Rodinson, a party official, the campaign cost was in total 2 million Euros (800,000 of which are paid by the state). The rent of the Zenith for meetings in Paris, as well as the December political poster campaign, account for most of the expenses.[4]

 
Rally organized by Workers' Struggle (Lutte Ouvrière) on 29 February 2008 at the Maison de la Mutualité (Paris) for the 2008 town elections.

In the local elections in 2008, Lutte Ouvrière broke with tradition by joining the Socialist Party-led slates by the first round of the elections in a number of towns, preferring this tactic to the more usual option of cooperating with other far left groups to run a joint election campaign. Because an organized minority faction called "L'Étincelle" supported some lists running against lists supported by the party leadership, Lutte Ouvrière suspended the faction from the organization in February 2008; the faction was expelled in September 2008. The faction has agreed to take part in the initial stages of the New Anticapitalist Party set up by the LCR with others, though this may not be a long-term strategy, with one member explaining it as "foot in both camps" strategy.[5][6][7]

Unlike in 2004 and 1999, when it ran common lists with the Revolutionary Communist League, LO ran autonomous lists in the 2009 European Parliament election in France. For the 2022 French legislative election, LO announced that the party would run its own slate separate from the New Ecologic and Social People's Union, which they believe to be reformist.[8]

Fête de Lutte Ouvrière Edit

Another very public activity of LO is their annual fête which is held in the grounds of a chateau which the organisation purchased for that purpose in 1981. The annual Fête de Lutte Ouvrière is probably the largest public gathering of the revolutionary left in Europe.

Leadership Edit

 
Nathalie Arthaud
 
Arlette Laguiller

The 2012 presidential candidate, Nathalie Arthaud, is a teacher and was an elected town councillor for Vaulx-en-Velin, in charge of youth matters. Arthaud was also the spokesperson for Arlette Laguiller's 2007 presidential campaign. Arlette Laguiller had first run as the LO candidate in 1974, and subsequently in 1981, 1988, 1995, 2002, with 2007 being her last candidacy, and still plays an active part in the leadership of the party. For long, the internal organisations of the party were largely unknown to the general public, the spokeswoman and regular presidential candidate Arlette Laguiller being the only party leader appearing in public. Even to party members, some leaders were known only by cadre names. The party justified such secrecy measures by the possibility that it may have to enter clandestinity, should a highly repressive government take power. For similar reasons, marriages and children were strongly discouraged.

Bernard Seytre, a member of LO for 20 years, confirmed the "iron discipline which rhythms the life of this Trotskyist organisation, whose responsibles [cadres] do not have the right to have children, lest they be excluded".[9]

Lutte Ouvrière was criticised by political opponents in the 2002 presidential campaign as being a political cult, for example by Daniel Cohn-Bendit, his older brother Gabriel Cohn-Bendit, L'Humanité and Libération.[10][11] In part, this strict disciplinary attitude has enabled LO to be a very stable organisation in contrast to the instability that they allege characterises so many other left groups. LO is a difficult organisation to actually join and after becoming a member, individuals are expected to conform to a code of conduct, which is considered old fashioned by some critics.

Election results Edit

Presidential Edit

President of the French Republic
Election year Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Rank Votes % Rank
1974 Arlette Laguiller 595,247 2.33   5th Lost
1981 668,057 2.30   6th Lost
1988 606,017 1.99   8th Lost
1995 1,615,552 5.30   6th Lost
2002 1,630,045 5.72   5th Lost
2007 487,857 1.33   9th Lost
2012 Nathalie Arthaud 202,548 0.56   9th Lost
2017 232,384 0.64   10th Lost
2022 197,094 0.56   12th Lost

International relations Edit

LO maintains relations with the following other Trotskyist groups (Internationalist Communist Union):

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Européennes 2019: Lutte ouvrière mènera une liste autonome". L'Express. Agence France-Presse. 11 December 2018. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  2. ^ "Présentation". Lutte Ouvrière : Le Portail (in French). Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Lutte Ouvrière Hebdo - Foulard islamique et soumission des femmes" (in French). Lutte-ouvriere-journal.org. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  4. ^ Dépenses de campagne: énorme ardoise pour LO, la LCR s'en tire sans déficit[permanent dead link], Metro, 24 April 2007 (in French)
  5. ^ "France: Lutte Ouvrière deaf to call for anticapitalist party". 15 July 2008.
  6. ^ "Lutte Ouvriere excludes its minority". Workers' Liberty. 4 February 2008.
  7. ^ "Minority faction expelled from Lutte Ouvriere". Workers' Liberty. 23 September 2008.
  8. ^ "Législatives 2022 : où en sont les négociations des partis de gauche avec La France insoumise ?" (in French). France Info. 3 May 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  9. ^ L'Express, La chute d'Arlette 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine by François Koch, 26 December 2002 (in French)
  10. ^ . L'Humanité (in French). 11 April 2002. Archived from the original on 29 June 2005.
  11. ^ Daniel Cohn-Bendit and his brother Gabriel, Arlette n'est pas une sainte, Libération, 4 April 2002 (mirrored) (in French)

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • Internationalist Communist Union site

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This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations February 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2012 You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French June 2017 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Lutte ouvriere see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fr Lutte ouvriere to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this template message Lutte Ouvriere Workers Struggle French pronunciation lyt uvʁiˈjɛʁ is a Trotskyist communist party 2 in France named after its weekly paper Arlette Laguiller has been the party s spokeswoman since 1973 and ran in each presidential election until 2012 when Nathalie Arthaud was the candidate Robert Barcia Hardy was its founder and central leader Lutte Ouvriere is a member of the Internationalist Communist Union It emphasises workplace activity and has been critical of such recent phenomena as alter globalization Workers Struggle Lutte ouvriereLeaderCollective leadership Central Committee Spokesperson Nathalie ArthaudFounded1939 84 years ago 1939 groupe Barta 1956 67 years ago 1956 LO Split fromWorkers and Peasants Socialist PartyHeadquartersParisMembership 2018 8 000 claimed adherents 1 IdeologyCommunismTrotskyismFeminismAnti capitalismPolitical positionFar leftInternational affiliationInternationalist Communist UnionColoursRedSeats in the National Assembly0 577Seats in the Senate0 343Seats in the European Parliament0 72Websitewww wbr lutte ouvriere wbr orgPolitics of FrancePolitical partiesElectionsConstitution of FranceParliament government president Contents 1 History 2 Since the 1970s 3 Fete de Lutte Ouvriere 4 Leadership 5 Election results 5 1 Presidential 6 International relations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditIts origins lie in the tiny Trotskyist Group founded in 1939 by David Korner Barta This developed factory work throughout the war and was instrumental in the Renault strike of 1947 along with the anarcho syndicalists The group was exhausted by this effort and collapsed in 1952 After attempts to revive the Trotskyist Group Voix Ouvriere was founded in 1956 by Robert Barcia known as Hardy and the group s pre eminent leader and by Pierre Bois a leading activist in the Renault plant Effort was made to involve Barta but disputes between him Hardy and Bois prevented it VO established itself through the 1960s by producing mass factory bulletins usually weekly The Communist Party of France PCF retained its hegemonic position within the workers movement in France and its members sometimes tried to prevent the distribution of VO bulletins In part this explains the continued use of semi clandestine operation within VO and in LO today After being banned due to its support of the Students Revolt of May 68 the group became Lutte Ouvriere Since the 1970s EditAn ongoing issue is the possibility and conditions of cooperation with fellow Trotskyist party the Revolutionary Communist League the French section of the Fourth International In 1970 LO initiated fusion discussions with the LC as the LCR was then called After extensive discussions the two organisations had agreed the basis for a fused organisation However the fusion was not completed In 1976 discussions between the Ligue and Lutte Ouvriere progressed again The two organisations started to produce a common weekly supplement to their newspapers common electoral work and other common campaigning Since then on occasions the two organizations have stood joint candidates at some elections LO has made great efforts to stand in elections either on its own or in an alliance with the LCR As a result Arlette Laguiller has become well known to the public as LO s perennial presidential candidate The early 1970s also saw two breakaways from Lutte Ouvriere The first such split in 1974 in Bordeaux took the name l Union Ouvriere but rapidly disintegrated so much so that when another small split group that developed a year later expected to be able to fuse with l Union Ouvriere it found it had already disappeared and were forced to form their own organisation as a consequence This new group Combat Communiste evolved into Socialisme International an affiliate of the International Socialist Tendency Another more recent breakaway developed after Arlette Laguiller s relatively high electoral results in the 1990s and LO s statement that this meant that a new workers party was a possibility This statement as well as a dispute over the personal code members were expected to abide by led to the departure of over a hundred members to form the Voix des Travailleurs group This later fused with another smaller group but has more recently joined the Revolutionary Communist League as a recognised faction In the period up to 2008 a minority faction existed within LO and appeared publicly although its supporters were segregated in their own cells LO has gained critique for their position on the 2004 French law on secularity and conspicuous religious symbols in schools Andre Victor written in his article Islamic Hijab and the Subjugation of Women 25 April 2003 3 that Sarkozy has spoken out against hijab on passport photos and presumably earned the approval of millions of voters which was probably the real purpose of this exercise in demagoguery It considers that The real problem is that wearing the hijab visible sign of the subjugation of women to their husband father brother or men in general has been the subject of a political campaign of organizations present in fundamentalist migrant groups to impose their law within them especially women Therefore this policy leads to increase the weight of the most reactionary religious authorities within the immigrant population While considering the law as hypocrite LO stated that For teachers not accepting hijab particularly in the classroom means to support women in their family and social environment attempting to resist the machismo Following the very low score of Arlette Laguiller in the first round of the April May 2007 presidential election 1 33 compared to 5 72 in 2002 the party was left with a debt of 1 4 million Euros According to Michel Rodinson a party official the campaign cost was in total 2 million Euros 800 000 of which are paid by the state The rent of the Zenith for meetings in Paris as well as the December political poster campaign account for most of the expenses 4 nbsp Rally organized by Workers Struggle Lutte Ouvriere on 29 February 2008 at the Maison de la Mutualite Paris for the 2008 town elections In the local elections in 2008 Lutte Ouvriere broke with tradition by joining the Socialist Party led slates by the first round of the elections in a number of towns preferring this tactic to the more usual option of cooperating with other far left groups to run a joint election campaign Because an organized minority faction called L Etincelle supported some lists running against lists supported by the party leadership Lutte Ouvriere suspended the faction from the organization in February 2008 the faction was expelled in September 2008 The faction has agreed to take part in the initial stages of the New Anticapitalist Party set up by the LCR with others though this may not be a long term strategy with one member explaining it as foot in both camps strategy 5 6 7 Unlike in 2004 and 1999 when it ran common lists with the Revolutionary Communist League LO ran autonomous lists in the 2009 European Parliament election in France For the 2022 French legislative election LO announced that the party would run its own slate separate from the New Ecologic and Social People s Union which they believe to be reformist 8 Fete de Lutte Ouvriere EditAnother very public activity of LO is their annual fete which is held in the grounds of a chateau which the organisation purchased for that purpose in 1981 The annual Fete de Lutte Ouvriere is probably the largest public gathering of the revolutionary left in Europe Leadership Edit nbsp Nathalie Arthaud nbsp Arlette LaguillerThe 2012 presidential candidate Nathalie Arthaud is a teacher and was an elected town councillor for Vaulx en Velin in charge of youth matters Arthaud was also the spokesperson for Arlette Laguiller s 2007 presidential campaign Arlette Laguiller had first run as the LO candidate in 1974 and subsequently in 1981 1988 1995 2002 with 2007 being her last candidacy and still plays an active part in the leadership of the party For long the internal organisations of the party were largely unknown to the general public the spokeswoman and regular presidential candidate Arlette Laguiller being the only party leader appearing in public Even to party members some leaders were known only by cadre names The party justified such secrecy measures by the possibility that it may have to enter clandestinity should a highly repressive government take power For similar reasons marriages and children were strongly discouraged Bernard Seytre a member of LO for 20 years confirmed the iron discipline which rhythms the life of this Trotskyist organisation whose responsibles cadres do not have the right to have children lest they be excluded 9 Lutte Ouvriere was criticised by political opponents in the 2002 presidential campaign as being a political cult for example by Daniel Cohn Bendit his older brother Gabriel Cohn Bendit L Humanite and Liberation 10 11 In part this strict disciplinary attitude has enabled LO to be a very stable organisation in contrast to the instability that they allege characterises so many other left groups LO is a difficult organisation to actually join and after becoming a member individuals are expected to conform to a code of conduct which is considered old fashioned by some critics Election results EditPresidential Edit President of the French Republic Election year Candidate First round Second round ResultVotes Rank Votes Rank1974 Arlette Laguiller 595 247 2 33 nbsp 5th Lost1981 668 057 2 30 nbsp 6th Lost1988 606 017 1 99 nbsp 8th Lost1995 1 615 552 5 30 nbsp 6th Lost2002 1 630 045 5 72 nbsp 5th Lost2007 487 857 1 33 nbsp 9th Lost2012 Nathalie Arthaud 202 548 0 56 nbsp 9th Lost2017 232 384 0 64 nbsp 10th Lost2022 197 094 0 56 nbsp 12th LostInternational relations EditLO maintains relations with the following other Trotskyist groups Internationalist Communist Union Workers Fight UK The Spark United States Combat Ouvrier fr Guadeloupe and Martinique Organisation Revolutionnaire des travailleurs Haiti Union Africaine des Travailleurs Communistes Internationalistes fr Africa Sinif Mucadelesi Turkey Lucha de Clase Spain L Internazionale Italy Bund Revolutionarer Arbeiter Germany See also EditInternational Workingmen s Association Arlette Laguiller Parti des TravailleursReferences Edit Europeennes 2019 Lutte ouvriere menera une liste autonome L Express Agence France Presse 11 December 2018 Retrieved 11 December 2018 Presentation Lutte Ouvriere Le Portail in French Retrieved 23 March 2023 Lutte Ouvriere Hebdo Foulard islamique et soumission des femmes in French Lutte ouvriere journal org Retrieved 6 May 2013 Depenses de campagne enorme ardoise pour LO la LCR s en tire sans deficit permanent dead link Metro 24 April 2007 in French France Lutte Ouvriere deaf to call for anticapitalist party 15 July 2008 Lutte Ouvriere excludes its minority Workers Liberty 4 February 2008 Minority faction expelled from Lutte Ouvriere Workers Liberty 23 September 2008 Legislatives 2022 ou en sont les negociations des partis de gauche avec La France insoumise in French France Info 3 May 2022 Retrieved 3 May 2022 L Express La chute d Arlette Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine by Francois Koch 26 December 2002 in French Arlette Laguiller n aime pas le debat L Humanite in French 11 April 2002 Archived from the original on 29 June 2005 Daniel Cohn Bendit and his brother Gabriel Arlette n est pas une sainte Liberation 4 April 2002 mirrored in French External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lutte ouvriere Official website Internationalist Communist Union site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lutte Ouvriere amp oldid 1147801184, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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