For an Independent Socialist Quebec
(1970)
Introduction
(from the 1970 pamphlet)
For an Independent Socialist Quebec is the text of a
resolution adopted by the convention of the League for Socialist
Action/Ligue Socialiste Ouvrière, which met in Toronto, September 1970.
The LSA/LSO is a pan-Canadian organization uniting
revolutionary socialists in Quebec and English Canada.
Close to 250 delegates and observers attended the 1970
convention of the LSA/LSO.
Barely one month after the convention ended, the federal
Liberal government headed by Pierre Elliot Trudeau, taking advantage of
the confusion and disarray in the left provoked by the terrorist
kidnapping of a British diplomat and the Quebec labor minister, sent
10,000 federal troops into Quebec and invoked the War Measures Act,
jailing 450 leading militants of the left and nationalist movements.
About one tenth of these were subsequently brought to trial on trumped
up charges of seditious conspiracy and membership in, or aid of, the now
outlawed Front de Liberation du Québec.
The War Measures crisis and subsequent developments are
confirming in striking fashion the validity and relevance of the
analysis developed in the following document on the national liberation
struggle in Quebec.
published in February 1971 printed in Canada
Vanguard Publications, 334 Queen Street West, Toronto 2B, Ontario
For an Independent Socialist Quebec
Since the 1968 convention of the revolutionary
socialists in Canada — the Ligue Socialiste Ouvrière/League for
Socialist Action — the developing liberation movement in Quebec has
continued to deepen and broaden. The profoundly revolutionary character
of Québécois nationalism that we analyzed in the 1968 document, Vive
le Québec Libre/Vers La Libération du Québec, has been confirmed
again and again.
A powerful nationalist upsurge has extended deep into
the ranks of the urban working class, the vast majority of the Québécois
population, taking form notably around the massive mobilizations in
defense of the French language and the development of mass sentiment for
an independent Quebec.
In 1968 we noted that "national consciousness has given
new dimensions to the class struggle." The distinct tempo of the Quebec
struggle is revealed in militant labor conflicts marked by the most
radical forms of action, including sit ins and even armed workers
defense guards.
The powerful student movement has repeatedly mobilized,
descending en masse into the streets and taking over the schools,
advancing demands based on the revolutionary concept that educational
institutions should serve not the capitalist ruling class but the
national liberation struggle of the oppressed workers and farmers of
Quebec.
Less than two months after the 1968 convention pledged
our full support to the movement to make French the "sole official
language," the occupation of Aime Renaud school in St-Leonard brought
the struggle for unilingualism to a head. The election there of a
pro-unilingual school board headed by members of the Mouvement pour
l’Integration Scolaire (MIS — Movement for School Integration) followed
by the rapid formation of MIS sections throughout Montreal island and in
other areas of the nation, raised the language question — the clearest
manifestation of Quebec’s domination by foreign capital — to the level
of a direct political confrontation with the bourgeois parties in the
National Assembly. The revolutionary anticapitalist dynamic of the
demand for a "Quebec français" has exposed the total unwillingness of
both the old and the newer bourgeois nationalist parties to meet the
program of this mass movement: the Union Nationale government charged
MIS leader Raymond Lemieux with "sedition," while Parti Québécois leader
René Levesque has several times felt obliged to denounce the movement,
to the dismay of many of his supporters.
The language question has become a powerful issue in the
trade unions, which for several years have campaigned to make French the
language of work. The Confederation of National Trade Unions (CNTU)
officially supports unilingualism, as does the 60,000 member teachers
union in principle; the demand for a French only Quebec provoked the
biggest debate at the most recent convention of the Quebec Federation of
Labor (AFL/CIO-CLC [Canadian Labor Congress]), and won support of
nearly half the delegates.
The struggle for unilingualism has introduced and
popularized other key aspects of the revolutionary socialist program.
When the massive demonstrations against Bill 63 (a government motion to
legitimize English school privileges) culminated in a massive protest
march of over 40,000 on Quebec last autumn, the contrast between the
popular mood reflected by the crowd outside and the treasonous actions
of the hundred or so deputies inside the chamber prompted some leaders
of the movement to speak of the crowd as "another parliament" that alone
truly represented the Québécois.
The LSO (Ligue Socialiste Ouvrière) intervened actively
in the struggle and correctly attempted to give content to this dual
power concept by posing the idea of a general strike.
The mass march for a "McGill Français" in March 1969,
when federal troops were prepared for action for the first time in
recent years (they were used directly in last fall’s Montreal police
strike), centered around the demand that this bastion of English
privilege and reaction be transformed into a French university which
would put all its immense resources and research facilities to the
service of the Québécois, rather than the giant imperialist corporations
which now rape the resources of the nation.
This concept of an educational system which serves the
revolution — often termed the "red university" — was actually
implemented in the boldest fashion during the massive upsurge of fall
1968 when over 50,000 students, the bulk of Quebec’s junior college
enrollment, occupied their CEGEPs (Colleges d’Enseignement Generale et
Professionelle — junior colleges) — an upsurge that in North America is
equaled in scope only by the U.S. antiwar upsurge on the campuses this
last spring.
Creating action committees on the model of the French
May-June events, the students operated the colleges and schools for
three weeks, utilizing their facilities to produce newspapers, posters,
leaflets and to conduct courses on revolutionary thought. The CEGEP
occupiers’ slogan of "worker student solidarity" (also adopted from
France) was given content by the remarkable sympathy manifested by non
student forces, in the first place the trade unions, behind their bold
actions. A forceful intervention in this movement by the modest forces
of the Ligue des Jeunes Socialistes and the LSO won some of the best
activists in the upsurge to our movement and to the ideas of
revolutionary socialism. These forces were in turn doubled during the
successful intervention of the LSO and LJS in the Bagot by election
campaign, when we ran a candidate against the Quebec minister of
education.
The wave of repression unleashed by the authorities
against the student movement following the decline of the occupations
revealed their awareness of the revolutionary response the students’
action threatened to provoke in other layers of Quebec’s unstable
society. This society badly lacks the job outlets and opportunities
required to absorb the skills and aptitudes of the graduates pouring
from the vastly expanded educational structures of recent years.
Although the revolt has erupted first at this, the most
vulnerable point, other struggles indicate the possibilities for
revolutionary combat which already exist in the Quebec working class.
The militancy of Quebec labor struggles has been shown many times over —
the protests against the Murray Hill limousine monopoly, the Lapalme
Transport workers fight for their jobs, the militant teachers struggles,
including the demonstration of 20,000 teachers at Quebec City last year,
etc.
In several instances, workers have protested industrial
closures or threats of closure by occupying their plants (Davies
Shipbuilding, Vickers, Domtar). During a strike at the company towns of
East Angus and Windsor, paper mill workers occupied a plant and armed
themselves against vigilante attacks by company hired guards. The
Montreal police strike last October 7, 1969, revealed how the explosive
contradictions of Quebec society have even put a question mark over the
reliability for the bourgeoisie of their trained agents of repression.
The largely spontaneous outpourings of nationalist revolt in the Saint
Jean Baptiste Day demonstrations of recent years are another indication
of the explosive potential of the developing national consciousness,
particularly among the youth.
The growing social ferment in Quebec society, itself a
product of the national oppression of the Québécois, has found its
natural expression in a progressively deepening disillusionment with the
constitutional status quo among all sectors of opinion. Today, after
many years of endless federal provincial conferences, ultimatums and
royal commissions, there is less talk of constitutional "reform," much
more talk of separation and the need for an independent state of Quebec
which can plan the economy in the interests of the Québécois.
Independentist feeling is spurred by a worsening
economic conjuncture which has underlined Quebec’s vulnerable position
in the Canadian and North American capitalist economy. In periods of
relative prosperity, unemployment is higher and wages lower in Quebec
than elsewhere; and economic downturns increase the social inequality of
the Québécois many times over.
The struggle to defend the French language has sharpened
enormously as a result of industrialization, urbanization, a
considerable fall in the birth rate among French Québécois, and heavy
postwar immigration which swells the English school system. The strong,
almost unanimous independentist sentiment among the Québécois students
is directly linked with an expansion in educational structures during
the last decade which has multiplied the student population without any
corresponding increase in job opportunities.
The growing support for independentism (this is the word
favored by Québécois nationalists, who consider "separatism" a
pejorative term) is profoundly revolutionary. It signifies above all a
collective disillusionment in the capacity of the existing legal and
political structures — and by implication, the social structures
which they consecrate — to overcome the national inequality; and it
denotes a deep desire for a radical change from top to bottom in the
entire political structure. This is the essential revolutionary dynamic
of the national consciousness.
So far this profound nationalist feeling has politically
been reflected most directly in the refracted mirror of petty bourgeois
opinion — the decision of the Estates General in favor of independence,
the splits of nationalist currents from the established pro-federalist
bourgeois and petty bourgeois parties (Liberals and Ralliement des
Creditistes) and the successive dissolution and regrouping of petty
bourgeois independentist currents which finally resulted in the first
unified independentist party — the Parti Québécois (PQ). The working
class, which has not yet risen to political being through its own mass
party, has yet to develop fully its program for national emancipation.
But the strong showing of the PQ in its first electoral
test in April 1970 dramatically underscored the growing strength of
independentist feeling among the working class. The PQ received close to
25 per cent of the popular vote — the support of one in three
Francophone Québécois, and about half the industrial workers in
Montreal.
The vote for the PQ could be considered the complement
of the mass extraparliamentary struggles which have shaken the Quebec
nation. The main issue behind those mobilizations — the language
question — tends by its very logic to raise the demand for a vast
extension of the authority of the Quebec state, which is responsible for
education and cultural affairs. The evidence from the polls showing a
relatively high concern among PQ voters in such social issues as
education, unemployment and housing also indicates that insofar as the
class defines its social objectives, they are formulated in an
independentist framework. Similar tendencies have been remarked many
times in the case of the student movement — often the bellwether for
indicating the path of radicalization in the working class. The
significance of the conjunction of social and national demands was
metaphorically summarized many years ago by Leon Trotsky when he
observed that the separatism of the Catalan workers and peasants in
Spain was "the envelope of their social indignation."
The entirely progressive thrust of national
consciousness toward a mass sentiment for independence opens a new,
advanced stage in the Quebec struggle, a stage of great revolutionary
significance.
Two years ago we had reason to believe that the struggle
would proceed in another direction. We said: "The political independence
of French Canada stands as an historic alternative, which cannot be
approved or rejected except in terms of given social conditions at a
given time. At this time, there are no grounds to believe that the
working class, by adopting the program of political independence, would
advance its interests in any way, in terms either of its present class
consciousness or of its ultimate objective of defeating the power of the
monopolies politically buttressed by the Ottawa regime."
We noted that "no tendency of the Quebec labor movement
has adopted an independentist program," and questioned whether there is
"such a gap in the level and direction of the class struggle in Quebec
and in English Canada that the workers struggle could be advanced by
orienting to political independence from English Canada." The Quebec
working class, we observed, "is already beginning to move along the
lines of independent political action ... the general motion toward a
labor party is now becoming clear." We suggested that "the projected
party could well in fact be formed as a constituent part of the NDP (New
Democratic Party)."
The powerful upsurge of nationalism and its militant
repercussions in the labor and student movements have confirmed our
understanding that national consciousness — awareness of their
oppression and exploitation as a nation — would play a key role in the
development of class consciousness among the Québécois workers. But
contrary to the perspectives we traced in 1968, the development of
political consciousness has proceeded through the growth of
independentist sentiment and has veered from the road of independent
labor political action to take a detour through the Part Québécois, a
bourgeois party.
Confronted by this new situation, the revolutionary
socialists are obliged to go beyond defense of the right of the
Québécois nation to self determination, to put forward now the demand
for an independent and socialist Quebec. The League must undertake a
major turn in its work, toward the emerging nationalist movement. We
must aim at nothing less than to gain the leadership of the national
struggle around the only program guaranteeing an independent Quebec, the
program of revolutionary socialism.
Two aspects in particular of this new development must
be analyzed: first, the precise character and revolutionary significance
of the new mass movement for independence; and second, why the
nationalist thrust has gone toward the Parti Québécois and what the
emergence of the PQ means for the future development of the struggle.
The desire for an independent state has been a recurring
theme throughout Quebec’s political history, particularly since the
British conquest of 1760 which transposed a national form onto the
developing class conflicts within the former French colony. The nascent
French Canadian bourgeoisie who played the leading role in the events
culminating in the 1837-1838 armed rebellion in Lower Canada made clear
that they aimed to establish a sovereign state — the political
expression of the French speaking "Canadian nation" — on the banks of
the St. Lawrence. (This separatist objective in no way inhibited these
early revolutionaries from collaborating closely with their co-thinkers
in Upper Canada, accepting, for example, the proposal of William Lyon
Mackenzie for an eventual federation of states, with a mutual
sharing of powers in communications, immigration and land concessions.)
The defeat of their bid for power in 1837-1838 and the
confirmation of the hegemony of the English Canadian bourgeoisie through
Confederation in 1867, confined the social base of the French Canadian
petty bourgeoisie to independent small enterprise and the rural economy,
and later, with the penetration and expansion of the imperialist sector,
to the role of urban subcontractors and managerial satraps in the
private corporations and provincial civil service.
Their nationalism developed a conservative,
particularist orientation centered around participation in the pan
Canadian political structures while defining French Canada as a nation
possessing the right to autonomy (but not self determination) with
respect only to powers affecting its cultural and narrowly national
rights. This remained the prevailing expression of French Canadian
nationalism as it was articulated in Quebec political life until well
after the second world war.
If this "cultural autonomism" reflected above all the
ideology of a defeated bourgeoisie, the entire population tended to
mobilize around nationalist themes wherever tensions between the
dominant English Canadian nation and the oppressed French Canadian
nation boiled over in crises mobilizing the broad masses, both rural and
urban, of French Canada — Riel, the Manitoba schools, Boer war, the
conscription crises of first and second world wars, etc. At times it
took a separatist form, as in 1917 when a motion to separate was debated
in Quebec’s legislative assembly.
But the independentist movement as such is a
relatively recent phenomenon which developed during the 1960s, and only
during the last year or so became a mass movement drawing into its ranks
thousands of industrial workers as well as students, clerical and
professional layers.
For revolutionary socialists, the overwhelming evidence
that the thrust of Quebec politics today is toward independence has
enormous progressive significance. The clear evolution of working class
sentiment toward support for political independence answers an important
question which has for some time been posed in the Quebec left.
Every nationalism revolves around concepts which are in
form common to all classes in the nation: nation, language, territory,
etc. But each class within the nation injects its own social content
into its nationalist program. The bourgeoisie, for example, primarily
interested in ensuring its freedom to control the market, emphasizes
demands for territorial integrity and a standing army to protect it;
political institutions like parliament to ensure its political hegemony;
and cultural institutions like a state religion to reinforce its
ideological domination. It advances the demand for a national state
categorically because for it a national state is the necessary condition
for its full development as a ruling class.
The petty bourgeoisie, insofar as it poses demands
distinct from those of the bourgeoisie, stresses democratic objectives
like the universal vote and free education, designed to extend the
rights of citizenship to all classes of the nation, in the first place
to the petty bourgeoisie.
The workers are the most consistent defenders of
democracy, and so they naturally support the democratic demands cited
above. But they go further by raising demands such as freedom of trade
union organization aimed at increasing their power to organize as a
class independent of the bourgeois state. Because they as yet lack their
own political party, the Quebec workers have not yet articulated a fully
developed program of national demands; this will only take shape as the
class organizes independently on the political arena. But already a
number of nationalist demands have been formulated by the trade union
movement — such as the demand that French be made the sole language of
work, the language of collective bargaining and contracts, and on the
shop floor; and the demand for wage parity of Quebec workers with
workers in neighboring Ontario.
Today the period of deepening imperialist crisis ushered
in by the Russian revolution and aggravated by another world war,
increasing competition from the expanding sector of workers states, and
the development of the colonial revolution since the second world war,
is characterized by the decreasing ability of the national bourgeoisie
in the oppressed dependent capitalist nation to play any sort of
independent role vis a vis imperialism; by the increased absolute and
strategic weight of the working class in the political life of those
nations and the necessity for this proletariat to take on many of the
tasks traditionally assigned to the capitalist class of a "normal"
developing bourgeois state, including the tasks of national liberation;
and by the reappearance of powerful nationalist movements among
oppressed nationalities and nations in the developed imperialist
countries of Europe and North America where the vast majority of the
population is working class.
In Quebec all three tendencies have come into focus
simultaneously in a conjunctural period of deepening economic crisis of
the North American capitalist economy.
The right of self determination
The workers party defends unconditionally the democratic
right to self determination for all oppressed nations, up to and
including their right to separate. But whether socialists in an
oppressed nation like Quebec should demand political independence
depends on how we see the direction of the struggle unfolding, and above
all on whether the mass of the population in the oppressed nation shows
a clear inclination to mobilize in support of the demand for political
independence in its struggle for national emancipation.
Where the struggle is clearly orienting toward political
independence, the international workers party has always been the
foremost defender of the independence movement. Thus Marx, for example,
was an early and forceful advocate of independence for Ireland, and held
that the English workers would never be free until Ireland had achieved
its independence from the British Crown. His views were carried forward
by James Connolly who built a working class independence movement in the
early years of this century around the slogan "For a Workers Republic of
Ireland." Today, the upsurge of the nationalist movement for
independence in the North confirms the correctness of the Marx-Connolly
position.
In a number of more recent instances, Trotsky, building
on the traditions and experience of the Bolsheviks in Russia, considered
the demand for political independence in the program of the workers
party. He proposed that in Spain the proletarian vanguard should adopt
the slogan of separation for Catalonia if the Catalonian masses should
indicate that they wished, to separate, either "by means of a free
plebiscite, or by an assembly of representatives , of Catalonia, or by
the influential parties followed by the Catalonian masses, or finally by
a Catalan national revolt." (Leon Trotsky, Ecrits 1928-1940, Tome
III [Publications de la Quatrieme Internationale, Paris, 1959], page
408.) Similarly, he raised the demand for a united, free and
independent workers and peasants Ukraine in 1939, on the basis of
his understanding that "the broad masses of the Ukrainian people wish to
separate from the USSR." ("Independence of the Ukraine and Sectarian
Muddleheads," Fourth International, Vol. 10 [December, 1949]’.)
When we formulated our approach to the issue of
separatism in 1968 on the basis of these general considerations, we had
no reason to believe that (as we stated) "To adopt the program of
separation of Quebec from English Canada" would "advance the overall
struggle." We noted that the existing independentist movement had failed
to win support or much interest from workers; that no significant sector
of the labor movement supported independentism; and that on the
contrary, "the strong roots of the NDP in Quebec and the association of
the majority of the organized working class in Quebec with the Canadian
Labor Congress provide evidence of Quebec labor’s awareness of the great
benefits to be gained for its struggle by allying itself with the
organized forces of the English Canadian working class, in a common
struggle against the federal state."
This assessment, correct two years ago, has since been
decisively invalidated by the actual course of development of the
working class and its organizations. The objective political thrust of
the struggle remains, of course, against the imperialist oppression of
the Canadian bourgeois and their central state apparatus. But rather
than move toward a closer alliance with English Canadian workers and
participation in a unified pan-Canadian labor party, the Quebec workers’
struggle has increasingly developed its own national tempo.
The Quebec Federation of Labor (QFL), while continuing
its formal support for the federal NDP, has refused to endorse the NDP
on the Quebec (national) level, and continues to press for autonomy
within the Canadian Labor Congress. Despite continuing internecine
conflict in the construction trades sector, the major trade union
federations — the QFL, the Confederation of National Trade Unions (CNTU)
and the Corporation des Enseignants du Quebec, the teachers union —
have drawn closer together over distinctly Quebec issues, including
joint political action initiatives at the municipal level. The
unification of these labor bodies into one Quebec-wide federation of
over 600,000 members — half the size of the Canadian Labor Congress —
has become a realizable goal.
The backdrop to these developments has been a
qualitative increase in support for independentism in the labor
movement. The teachers union, like the CNTU, supports unilingualism and
a large majority of its membership is said to support the PQ. A
significant section of the QFL bureaucracy publicly identified with the
PQ during the recent election campaign; and the Montreal Council of the
CNTU, which formally supported the NDP in the 1968 federal election,
voted to endorse the PQ in 1970
As for the NDP, the developments since 1968 have put a
serious question mark over its future in Quebec. The decision by the
NDP's founding convention in 1961 to recognize the binational character
of the Canadian state, and even to make significant gestures toward
Quebec's right to self-determination, fostered hopes that the party
would succeed in linking up with the new generation of Quebec radicals,
and sink roots in the labor movement. However, the NDP has steadily
retreated from even the modest concessions of 1961, and in the recent
Quebec elections, campaigned openly as a "federalist" anti-"separatist"
party. It received an average of slightly over 200 votes in each of
fourteen ridings it contested.
As long as there is no independentist party on the
federal level, the NDP may continue to serve as an electoral vehicle for
reformist demands on the Ottawa government without, however, building a
serious organization in Quebec. The initiative for independent political
action in Quebec will not come from the NDP, nor can we see it playing
any major role in the formation of the mass workers party.
The workers demand for independence is profoundly
revolutionary in that it puts forward the concept that Quebec must be
developed in terms of the needs of the Québécois. The logic of this
demand is for a workers and farmers government which will take over the
foreign capitalist monopolies that dominate and exploit Quebec, and will
operate these industries under socialist planning. Why then has this
powerful independentist sentiment taken the path of the PQ, and not a
labor party with an anticapitalist perspective?
There is no doubt that the failure of the NDP and pan
Canadian labor leadership to relate sympathetically to Québécois
nationalism as it developed throughout the 1960s is a primary reason why
this nationalist thrust was channeled toward the PQ. But this
explanation is in turn linked with another aspect of Quebec’s
particularity — the distinctive path of development which has
characterized its working class.
A new working class
Quebec’s industrialization in the first half of this
century, and particularly during and since the second world war,
produced many changes in its class structures which have only gradually
and belatedly found expression in its politics. Most significant was the
rapid creation of a large urban working class thrust suddenly from the
parochial, traditional life of farm, village and town into the cities,
in the first place Montreal, there to come face to face with the fact
that control and administration of industry are largely in the hands of
foreigners with alien culture, customs, and above all an alien language.
Quebec’s French speaking proletariat was formed almost
entirely through internal migration, the transition from rural petty
bourgeois to urban proletarian milieu occurring quickly and sharply over
only one or at most two generations. This is a major source of Québécois
militancy. In English Canada, immigration of politically experienced
workers from overseas played a crucial role in shaping the early radical
thinking and subsequent political evolution of the workers. In contrast,
the Québécois proletariat, largely cut off from contact with European
socialism, lacks even the tradition of the French revolution which took
place after the Conquest, and is still very new, with few distinctive
traditions.
While this explains the relative political immaturity of
Québécois workers, it also has a very positive side. Insulated from the
pernicious influences of British Fabianism and German social democratic
pragmatism — the back side of the European socialist tradition — the
Québécois are confronted with the possibility of leaping from
reactionary Catholicism, already largely discredited, to the most
advanced ideas of revolutionary Marxism.
If industrialization has created a powerful working
class, for the Québécois petty bourgeoisie which had dominated the
parties and governments of Quebec, it has been a devastating experience.
Its traditional rural base, which afforded this class a certain measure
of stability, has been utterly destroyed, with the remnants passing into
the urban proletariat, particularly during and after the second world
war.
During the last thirty years, a new urban petty
bourgeoisie has developed based on managerial strata in the subsidiaries
of imperialist corporations or their satellite industries, or in the
provincial state apparatus which has expanded to service those
industries. In the private sector the chances of a French Canadian
rising to the top of the managerial hierarchy are very restricted; and
this layer in its lower levels is in constant danger of assimilation
into the upper layers of the working class. (A large proportion of the
students in the new universities are, of course, confronted with this
fate immediately upon graduation, regardless of their level of academic
training.) Thus the apparatus of the provincial state offers them their
only chance to gain even an illusion of playing any independent role.
It is among these layers that we find the origins of the PQ.
In the postwar period, capitalist investment in Quebec
poured increasingly into secondary "transformation" industries designed
to process for subsequent export the resources of the primary sector in
which foreign control was already heavily concentrated. This relatively
sophisticated new type of industry required a vast expansion in
provincial government services, including state subsidies and social
measures aimed at producing a skilled and reasonably healthy work force
— educational reform, state medical insurance, pensions, etc.
The expansion in the powers of the provincial state
provided jobs for an increasing number of young professionally trained
French Canadians. It began, in fact, in the mid-1950s under Duplessis
and the Union Nationale, the party which most faithfully represented the
interests of the rural based petty bourgeoisie, and it was accompanied
by growing Quebec demands for increased taxation power.
The accession to office in 1960 of the urban petty
bourgeoisie through the Liberal Party was accompanied in following years
with a further escalation of Quebec’s fiscal demands, passage of a few
social measures including a belated but deep-going education reform, and
creation of a number of state institutions designed to supplement and
participate in the capitalist expansion [Hydro Quebec, Sidbec (Siderurgie
du Quebec — a "mixed capital" iron and steel complex), Societe Generale
de Financement (General Investment Corporation, government subsidies to
private and "mixed" capital), Caisse de depots et de Placements
(Deposits and Investments Fund, mainly Quebec government pension
premiums), etc.] By 1964-1965 the Quebec government’s’ structures had
been "modernized" to fully correspond to the new imperialist economic
structures. Although these "reforms" were accompanied by a certain
amount of nationalist rhetoric, they in no way violated the imperialist
interests, either English Canadian or American.
But in the process, there developed a sector of the
petty bourgeoisie centered among the technocrats of the provincial
government bureaucracy, the state enterprises and the professional
faculties of the universities, who saw their fate linked with the
extension of powers of the Quebec state. Increasingly frustrated with
the Lesage government’s efforts after 1964 to put the brakes on
constitutional and fiscal reform, they were more and more attracted to
independentism as the solution to their plight. But they lacked a base
of support in the population to move out independent of the traditional
bourgeois parties.
The visit of French president Charles de Gaulle to
Quebec in the summer of 1967 may be said to have marked a turning point.
The massive enthusiastic response to his call "Vive le Quebec Libre"
indicated for the first time that wide layers of the population,
including significant sectors of the working class, were receptive to
the independentist message. Within three months Rene Levesque had broken
with the Liberals and with him went a small section of the party. They
went on to establish in quick succession the Mouvement Souverainete
Association, and later — in alliance with the existing separatist
currents and a nationalist breakaway from the rural based right wing
Social Credit Party — to found the separatist Parti Québécois.
The key element in the PQ program was, of course, its
demand for a sovereign state of Quebec endowed with all the powers of
any "normal" (capitalist) government, as the. necessary instrument of
the emancipation of the Québécois.
But if the Quebec petty bourgeoisie has turned to
independentism to express its frustration at its own instability and
vulnerability as a class, and its impossible desire, latent or overt, to
play an independent role in economic and political life, the main
significance of the PQ is that for the first time very significant
sectors of the new urban proletariat in Quebec have supported a party
that presented the solution to their national oppression in terms of
political independence.
That this sympathy is based on the PQ’s independentism,
rather than any social "reforms" it may offer, is also demonstrated by
the fate of the New Democratic Party, which in this election offered
itself as a non-independentist, pro-federalist reform party. The NDP was
a negligible factor in the election results, despite favorable press
publicity — while the PQ swept many working class polls. It would be
ludicrous to suppose that after mobilizing in militant anticapitalist
struggles which on occasion projected such far reaching concepts as
student control of the universities and workers control of industry, the
Quebec workers flocked to the polls to choose a bourgeois party over a
workers party. No, they voted consciously for independentism. And the
converse of this is that because of its independentism they did
not see the PQ as a bourgeois party!
Nevertheless a clear definition of the class character
of the Parti Québécois is of the utmost importance in determining the
future course of development of the party and of the elements presently
in sympathy with it. Decisive here is its program, its leadership, its
origins and its political record.
Everything about this party indicates its thoroughly
bourgeois character, its role as an obstacle in the path of the working
class. Its program is the most frankly procapitalist of all Quebec
parties. The modest social reforms it advocates are all perfectly
consistent with the requirements of a "streamlined" capitalism: reform
of the tax structures to take the load off declining rural sources of
fiscal revenues; free education to ensure a plentiful supply of skilled
labor for the imperialist conglomerates and the state apparatus; a full
program of state operated medical insurance services as part of the
capitalist state’s increasing assumption of the costs of reproduction of
the work force.
The PQ’s equivocation on "cultural rights," the
touchstone for any nationalist party, flows from its overriding desire
to collaborate with, not combat, English speaking capital. While it
demands that French be made the "sole official language," it
specifically opposes a unilingual school system by urging that "Quebec
should recognize the school rights of the English minority ... from
elementary school to university."
The separation and "sovereignty" it advocates are
consistently modeled after examples of a "cold" separation in the
capitalist and neocolonialist framework: Norway from Sweden, 1905;
Hungary from Austria, 1918; Pakistan from India, 1949; and "above all"
Eire from Great Britain, 1921 — these are the only examples cited by
La Solution, its electoral program. By way of contrast, even the
Union Nationale’s Premier Daniel Johnson saw fit on occasion to cite the
self determination provisions of the constitution of the Soviet Union,
as established under the leadership of Lenin and Trotsky, as a model of
multinational state forms!
The PQ program speaks vaguely of nationalizations "when
the interest of the national economy demands it," but it proposes no
specific nationalizations, and stresses "above all, the creation of new
enterprises, of govern mental financial reservoirs and management
organisms" to guarantee imperialist superprofits.
The PQ leaders seek to extend the dirigisme
(leading policy making role) they project for the capitalist state to
the working class organizations, with their call for full state control
over trade union membership rights, leadership, recognition as
bargaining agents, and conciliation and arbitration procedures.
The PQ’s bourgeois character comes through most
explicitly in its attitude to the foreign monopolies, les trusts,
whose domination of the Quebec economy is the main source of the
national oppression of the Québécois. The PQ enthusiastically welcomes
foreign capital and promises to do everything possible to safeguard its
interests and the class relations associated with them in Quebec. The
PQ’s program explicitly promises the "American corporation" that in
office the party will "play the role of any normal government" by
ensuring that "violent extremism, continual disorder, very discordant
laws and excessive taxation" do not "hinder its operations."
It is this crass pro-imperialism that most clearly
distinguishes the bourgeois PQ from the typical petty bourgeois
nationalist formations of colonial and semicolonial countries. In the
normal case the existence of indigenous sources of support in the form
of a mass petty bourgeois layer, the peasantry, combined with the
relatively small size of the working class and the existence of a
national bourgeoisie of some importance, gives the petty bourgeoisie
some flexibility to maneuver against particular imperialist and monopoly
capital sectors while in general serving as an agency of imperialism.
A Canadian example of a petty bourgeois formation, was
the Social Credit Party in Alberta, which started in the mid-1930s as a
farmer based populist movement with much anticapitalist rhetoric in its
program. When in power it evolved toward the right, capitulating to the
pressures of the war and then the influx of the oil monopolies until
today it is indistinguishable from the traditional bourgeois parties and
has, in fact, largely supplanted them.
But in Quebec the rural based Ralliement des Créditistes
still retains many of Social Credit’s original features, and the
speeches of Ralliement leader Réal Caouette are sprinkled with attacks
on monopoly capital. The "radical" antimonopoly and anti-imperialist
aspects of the programs of petty bourgeois parties reflect the relative
exclusion of these layers from the main sectors of the economy, their
character as petty commodity producers or professional servitors of the
commercial and small capitalist sectors.
The early Union Nationale reflected the viewpoint of
similar layers when it attacked the trusts. Its program in 1936, when it
came to office under Duplessis, included such demands as "an end to
obstacles to land settlement by the ‘big lumber trusts’"; "denunciation
and jailing of canaille (scoundrel) financiers exploiting public
misery"; "handcuffs on the electricity trusts"; "no purchase of
government supplies from the coal trust or the Hydro trust"; "honest
company laws; no stock manipulations or watering." (No such rhetoric may
be found in the PQ program!)
Because they attempt to straddle class lines,
nationalist parties are continually beset by internal conflicts between
a right wing, based in the bourgeoisie and in the upper layers of the
petty bourgeoisie and thus drawn toward imperialism, and a left wing
based in the peasant or working class mass following of the party, whose
lower reaches can be attracted to the program of revolutionary
socialism. The degree of conflict between these tendencies depends on
the heterogeneity of the party’s class composition, and its weight in
the nation’s political life. As it approaches power, the contradictions
sharpen under the direct influence of imperialism and its local agents,
and the right wing, which normally dominates the leadership, comes under
terrific pressure to drop the anticapitalist planks in its program and
dissociate itself more and more from its mass base, even resorting to
the violence of the state (if it is in office) to suppress its left
wing.
The evolution of Quebec’s Union Nationale reveals this
trend toward the right but it is indicated also in the PQ’s direct
predecessor, the Rassemblement pour l’Independance Nationale (RIN). An
urban nationalist party, the RIN was the leading independentist party
until it merged with Levesque’s Mouvement Souveraineté Association (MSA)
to form the Parti Québécois. The history of the RIN was one of continual
formation of factions and splits, between a right wing which sought
nothing more than bourgeois "independence" along the lines of today’s PQ
program and an anti imperialist "left" obsessed with its desires for an
alliance with "the national bourgeoisie" which it identified alternately
with the Liberals’ left wing (Levesque) and the RIN’s right wing.
The transition from the RIN to the PQ was marked
programmatically by the disposal of the anti imperialist aspects of the
former’s program, and the definitive rupture with its left wing which
refused to enter the PQ.
The PQ’s bourgeois program and its organizational
monolithism show how little flexibility it has. It lacks the
maneuverability of the old nationalist parties of the petty bourgeoisie.
The indigenous agricultural base has been destroyed and the new urban
petty bourgeoisie is largely confined to a client role vis a vis
imperialism.
The PQ’s program on agriculture indicates just how
thoroughly it has broken with the traditional rural based nationalist
parties: La Solution states baldly that "the rural or semirural
population is destined to disappear ... [agriculture] should be based
essentially only on big exploitations, each requiring at least as much
capital as the average factory.
The PQ seeks nothing more than a slight expansion of the
measures undertaken in the celebrated Quiet Revolution to modernize the
structures of the provincial capitalist state. "We’ve already come a
long way," is a recurring phrase in its economic program. "Sovereignty"
will give it the extra authority needed for the full exercise of the
"competences" (a favorite PQ word), the "levers," the "tools," to
operate the system.
The Parti Québécois is a bourgeois party presently
without the support of any significant sector of the bourgeoisie —
French Canadian, English Canadian or American. But its program indicates
how completely these layers of the Quebec petty bourgeoisie which
control the PQ are drawn toward, identify with, and depend upon the big
bourgeoisie.
The PQ is all the more firmly committed to the bourgeois
path because of the petty bourgeoisie’s declining possibility to
maneuver between imperialism and the potentially powerful but still
inchoate mass working class movement.
Its strength is not its bourgeois program, but its
nationalist appeal, Yet the independentism of the PQ leadership is not
the powerful, self confident expression of a dynamic new class, but the
uneasy, fearful reaction of unstable layers which feel themselves
threatened by the growing weight of imperialist interests. Their only
refuge is the vulnerable state of Quebec — to which they attribute
miraculous redemptive powers with all the pathetic mystification of a
petty bourgeoisie which identifies its dreams with reality. If only they
could have their own state to do in the 1970s what their ancestors
failed to do in 1837-1838! Alas for them, what was unaccomplished then
is impossible now.
If imperialism blocks the petty bourgeoisie’s hopes for
a "quiet" bourgeois national revolution, the development of a powerful
working class embracing the vast majority of the nation’s population
offers an alternative ally, which, moreover, has every interest in
fighting imperialist domination. But insofar as the working masses are
mobilized in the national struggle, they threaten to move against not
only foreign capital but also its agents in Quebec, to challenge the
entire bourgeois structure.
Unable to see beyond the imperialist reality of today,
fearful of its own position, the petty bourgeoisie dreads the mass
movement and does everything it can to confine its own struggle within
the narrow limits of the electoralist, parliamentarist machine that is
the Parti Québécois. The PQ strenuously tries to assure foreign capital
that it is the best block to the mass movement.
PQ not responsible to workers
Its present working class support gives the PQ what
maneuverability it has against the traditional bourgeois parties. (In
fact, the PQ’s electoral success is largely attributable to the absence
of a mass workers party.) But — and this decisively differentiates the
PQ from, say, the NDP — the trade unions are not in any way committed to
the PQ. They did not create it; they do not finance it; they do not
control it; and they have already been led to criticize the party’s
program while giving it electoral endorsement. To win working class
support and to maintain the sympathy it already has among workers, the
PQ may be obliged to promise or undertake some anti imperialist
measures, by taking on one sector of imperialism while all the more
firmly committing itself to another. But it in turn is not
responsible to the workers or their trade unions.
Is a petty bourgeois leadership capable under any
circumstances of conducting a serious struggle against imperialism and
the national bourgeoisie? In Cuba, the 26th of July Movement, under a
radical petty bourgeois leadership, led a socialist revolution. But the
Castro leadership began with a program which, while largely
bourgeois democratic, promised thoroughgoing agrarian reform and
industrialization — both demands striking at the root of imperialist and
capitalist domination of Cuba. Most significantly, it had a clear
understanding that the Batista dictatorship could only be unseated by
revolutionary armed struggle, which it made a principle in its relations
with other groupings. It sought to mobilize and later armed the
proletarian masses. Its relative independence of the bourgeoisie enabled
it to move to the left under the blows of U.S. reaction to its initial
moves against monopolies. Less than a year after coming to power, it had
completely broken with the Cuban bourgeoisie politically.
The Parti Québécois is no such movement. If the Cuban
example shows us the most exceptional left wing variant of a petty
bourgeois nationalist leadership, the PQ appears as the most bourgeois,
least anti-imperialist of bourgeois nationalist parties. It is
responsible to the bourgeoisie, not the working class. It represents
above all the political immaturity of the class struggle in Quebec, the
lack of political traditions in the French Canadian working class.
The PQ program indicates how thoroughly the party is
controlled by its leadership. While the 90,000 members of the PQ are
predominantly students, housewives, clerical workers and a scattering of
individual trade unionists, its leading cadres are almost without
exception men thoroughly committed to the bourgeois outlook — skilled
bourgeois politicians, former top civil servants, wealthy professionals,
"technocrats" of the state enterprises, journalists and other
ideologists for the bourgeoisie.
Most of them are associated directly with the government
bureaucracy and organizational structures which have grown up during the
last twenty years or so as part of the latest wave of imperialist
penetration into Quebec. They are contemptuous of the working class;
some were responsible for framing restrictive labor legislation while in
the civil service; and the party has already on numerous occasions
supported emergency laws to force strikers back to work (police strike,
Montreal civic employees, etc.).
Many PQ leaders have long records of faithful service in
the traditional bourgeois and petty bourgeois parties. The PQ leader
Rene Levesque held several ministerial portfolios in the Liberal
cabinet headed by Jean Lesage. PQ deputy leader Gilles Gregoire led a
nationalist wing in the federal Social Credit Party’s House of Commons
deputation. PQ Vice President Jacques Parizeau was a top economics
advisor to both Liberal and Union Nationale regimes, and helped draft
much of the present antilabor legislation.
The PQ has already destroyed many who abandoned their
own organizations to enter it. This liquidationism was rationalized on
the basis of the theory — unfortunately still widely held in the Quebec
left — that as a bourgeois party the PQ is a necessary stage in Quebec’s
liberation struggle. On the other hand, entry was justified by some on
the grounds that the PQ might evolve into a labor party or, in power, a
workers and farmers government capable of, and undertaking, serious
anticapitalist measures.
The first theory is just a re-edition of the discredited
"theory of stages" of Menshevism and Stalinism; it is a denial of the
leading role of the working class, not to speak of the necessity of the
proletarian vanguard party in resolving even the national tasks of the
revolution. As for the speculation that the PQ could evolve into a labor
party, everything that is known about this party rules out such a path
of development.
Far from evolving toward a labor party, the PQ will tend
to harden in the opposite direction. For many years, one of the two
major bourgeois parties in Quebec has been identified with a relatively
nationalist stance. There is every indication that the Parti Québécois
may become the alternative party of the bourgeoisie. The Union
Nationale, which has played that role for over thirty years, has now
been cut down to its declining rural base, and is probably irretrievably
smashed as a result of the April 29 debacle. The PQ’s reformist demagogy
and base in the urban petty bourgeoisie makes it a very eligible
candidate to succeed the UN.
Thus it is absolutely impermissible for revolutionaries
to dissolve themselves into the PQ. To do so is to bury the
revolutionary forces, just when they most need to maintain an
independent face.
But the PQ includes within the ranks of its members and
supporters thousands of workers and youth who are in the first stages of
politicization. Thus it contains many elements of the future mass
revolutionary party. Some elements in the left have therefore suggested
that revolutionists should take a tactical orientation to the PQ and
work within it to win forces for the future workers party.
There is nothing in principle to prevent revolutionary
socialists working for their ideas and building their own forces in even
a bourgeois nationalist party like the PQ so long as they retain their
distinct identity and freedom to criticize the party. But the Parti
Québécois is in no way an arena for revolutionary action.
Whatever formal democracy the party’s structures may
appear to have, it is firmly controlled by its petty bourgeois
leadership with their bourgeois outlook. Even at its founding
convention, the "left" was soundly defeated and its leading spokesman,
former RIN leader Pierre Bourgault, was excluded from the executive
slate. Subsequently he was denied nomination in two different ridings
before being allowed to contest unsuccessfully the present prime
minister’s seat. When it appeared that the PQ convention delegates might
support a motion calling for a unilingual Quebec, Levesque intervened
and virtually put his job on the line to prevent its passage.
Mobilizations of the PQ membership are in general limited to election
meetings, county association meetings (where the petty bourgeois
elements heavily predominate) or the occasional recruitment rally which
is usually designed as a comparatively apolitical gala event. The party
does not even publish a regular newspaper for the membership.
It is the Levesque wing which defines the party’s
character; their views prevail, not those of the tail ending "leftists"
and reformist trade union officials who cling to the PQ’s coattails out
of their own fear of the mass movement. Insofar as the labor movement
mobilizes against capital, it will come into conflict with the PQ.
The PQ is a massive diversion from the revolutionary
struggle, an obstacle to the national liberation of the Québécois. The
PQ cannot be "reformed." It must be destroyed.
The workers will not be won to the politics of class
struggle by unprincipled maneuvers. Revolutionists must maintain
complete political and organizational independence of the PQ. This is a
precondition for taking the leadership of the mass struggles to come
which will confront and expose the PQ for what it is.
For all its strategic limitations, however, the PQ has
some measure of tactical flexibility on its left, depending largely on
the degree to which the trade union leadership is prepared to play along
and give it a plausible left cover. It is not excluded that under the
pressure of the mass movement, the PQ might accede to power before the
workers, who provide the main thrust in the independence struggle, have
succeeded in building their own mass party.
In their book La Souveraineté et l'Economie, the
PQ leadership has already outlined in some detail their strategy for a
"cold" independence — "in order, in moderation, in as rational a
framework as possible" — carried off with the support of the English
Canadian and American bourgeoisie in order precisely to head off a mass
movement to the left of the PQ which threatened to launch a "suicidal
economic war" (as the PQ puts it) against imperialist interests.
But it is doubtful that a PQ government, borne to power
on the crest of a powerful mass movement for independence, could
maintain the social stability required by its bourgeois policies without
resorting to the most repressive forms of rule dispensing with
parliament, taking measures to suppress the trade unions, etc. Far from
being a progressive stage in Quebec’s road to national liberation, a PQ
government would be a frankly reactionary government.
Tasks of socialists
The essential contradiction of the Parti Québécois is
that it has co-opted almost the entire nationalist movement and most of
the left, but is completely incapable of responding to the revolutionary
challenge posed by the independentist movement. The revolutionary
socialists of the Ligue Socialiste Ouvrière are now faced with the
responsibility of moving further into the nationalist movement in order
to identify with it, defend it, and participate in all its ongoing mass
actions to project our program — which presents the only road to a
meaningful dependence for Quebec, namely, independence in the socialist
framework.
We have always identified entirely with the broad
nationalist movement, but that movement now becomes a key arena for the
work of the LSO. Today the direction of the working class is clearly
mapped along the independentist road. The PQ reflects the present
political level of the mass independentist sentiment, whose common
denominator is as yet not much more than the vague demand for
sovereignty. But it would be a serious error to equate the movement for
independence with the PQ, which represents more its backward features
than its revolutionary potential.
Does an orientation to the nationalist movement at this
stage in its political development risk subordinating the revolutionists
to the politics of the bourgeoisie and the petty bourgeoisie? On the
contrary, not to get involved in the movement will abandon it to those
alien class forces which feed on the confusion spawned by the lack of an
independent working class voice and encouraged by the absence of the
revolutionary socialists.
Our main task is to intervene in the movement, to build
the revolutionary socialist cadre and to push the independentist thrust
along its natural course toward anti capitalist conclusions. The whole
logic of development is toward confrontation with the PQ — through
growing conflict between the PQ and the broad labor, student and
extraparliamentary nationalist movement and, within the PQ, between its
mass base and the leadership. The most likely perspective for the PQ is
a polarization between its right wing which fears the mass movement, and
a left wing which reflects the pressure of the mass movement on the PQ;
as this pressure builds, it will be accompanied by attempts to build
factions, by splits and probably hasty expulsions of the left. The
revolutionary socialists must therefore work within the nationalist
movement to build the independent class alternative outside the PQ,
confronting it, challenging it to act, and providing the vehicle for the
leftward moving forces propelled out of the PQ by the increasingly
procapitalist policies of its leadership. How long the PQ is able to
sustain and capitalize on the mass illusions in its potential as a
vehicle for national. liberation depends largely on the success of the
revolutionists in building a viable, class alternative to the PQ.
The basis for that alternative already exists in the
trade unions, the powerful mass organizations of the Québécois working
class. Their 600,000 members have already engaged in militant struggles
which have brought them into sharp conflict with not only the
traditional bourgeois parties and governments, but also the labor
policies of the Parti Québécois. Many more confrontations are on the
agenda.
Already, the struggles of the labor movement have shown
a powerful tendency to overflow the limits of the economic struggle and
to seek a political expression. Until recently, the movement toward
formation of a Québécois labor party could be clearly discerned.
Has the development of the PQ invalidated this
perspective? Not at all. The PQ is simply another revelation of the
depth of nationalism and independentist sentiment in the broad layers of
the working class. But it also underscores the failure of the trade
unions and the NDP leadership to come to grips with the national
question. In this sense the PQ is the direct result of the NDP's
hostility toward Quebec's right to self-determination, and to the rotten
chauvinism of trade union bureaucrats in English Canada whose
comprehension of the Quebec national question has been characterized by
demagogic attacks on "separatism" which lack nothing in their
resemblance to the similar themes of spokesmen for the ruling class.
But the objective forces propelling the trade
unions toward independent labor political action remain, even if the PQ
detour has delayed their impact for an indeterminate length of time. And
so long as the revolutionary socialist forces are small and relatively
isolated from the mainstream of the class, the demand for a Quebec labor
party retains all its relevance, as a means of popularizing in a
realistic way, the need to break from the PQ. A mass workers party — so
necessary to break the Québécois worker from the morass and
misleadership of bourgeois and, petty bourgeois politics — will
undoubtedly be independentist. And, forged in the struggle against the
explicitly bourgeois reformism of the PQ, it can be revolutionary.
Our task is to project a program which exposes the
insufficiency of the Parti Québécois and points toward the labor party —
the independent party of the trade unions — as the next logical step
along the road to the independence of Quebec. This concept that
independence of the nation lies through emancipation of the class, and
vice versa, may be expressed through the demand: For an Independent,
Socialist Quebec, Launch the Labor Party.
If the demand for a labor party retains validity,
however, the immediate perspective is postponed. The alliance, albeit
temporary and tenuous, of a section of the trade union leadership with
the PQ means that the case for a labor party must be posed more than
ever in terms of programmatic demands projecting the workers into
struggle against the bourgeois politics upheld by the PQ, and in the
direction of independent class action, demands around which a new, class
struggle leadership in the unions will be forged. While even a labor
party shackled with a reformist program would be a step forward, we must
make clear that a mass revolutionary party is what is required
and what we seek.
Because the demand for an independent Quebec has also
been raised by nonworking class forces for their own reasons, and so far
articulated most clearly by them, its revolutionary implications may not
be readily apparent to those unaccustomed to the Marxist method of
searching out the essential class dynamic in the demand. While the petty
bourgeoisie obscures that dynamic by failing to link it with a
consistent program of anti imperialist, anticapitalist demands, for
revolutionaries the demand for independence must be expressed in the
demand for an independent, socialist Quebec.
The demand for independence, once taken up by the broad
forces of the working class, has a powerful logic that can raise all
other aspects of the revolutionary program. The demand for an
independent, socialist Quebec poses politically what the NDP in English
Canada poses organizationally for the class: Who is to rule? — the
capitalists and their agents who are completely linked with foreign
capital; or the workers, the only ones with a consistent class interest
in breaking with the foreign monopolies?
The LSO/LSA 1968 resolution projected our revolutionary
program in the framework of the Quebec labor party, which we had every
reason then to consider imminent. Consistent with the turn in our
orientation, we should now pose that program in the framework of what an
independent workers and farmers Quebec will do. In the short run, this
tactical presentation of our program can be very useful in describing
the difference between our program and the program and actions of the
bourgeois Parti Québécois.
How to present the challenge of an independent,
socialist Quebec? A few examples will suffice.
We demand that French be made the sole official
language, the language of instruction in all schools and the language of
industry at all levels. If the capitalists won’t oblige, let the trade
unions or workers councils name plant administrators who speak French
and represent the interests of the Québécois nation, to replace the
arrogant, chauvinist Anglophone administrators who buttress the rule of
their class by trampling on the most elementary national rights of the
Québécois.
"Maîtres Chez Nous?" (Masters in Our Own House?)
"Sovereignty?" An independent socialist Quebec would institute economic
planning in the interests of the Québécois, against the monopolies which
plunder our resources to stuff their coffers in the foreign financial
capitals of the world. As an essential first step we would move to take
over all the key sectors of the foreign industries — which constitute 80
per cent or more of Quebec capital — and put them under workers control.
A program to expropriate foreign capitalists might logically develop out
of the campaign for nationwide wage parity with Montreal, and wage
parity between Quebec workers and their Ontario brothers. Companies
which threatened to move out of an independent Quebec would be
nationalized.
The petty bourgeoisie pushes to the fore its demand that
Quebec have an independent voice internationally ... in cultural
affairs. An independent foreign policy? By all means. But an independent
Quebec must speak out in solidarity with the colonial revolution, with
Vietnam, with Cuba and all countries struggling to free themselves from
the oppressive grip of U.S. imperialism and its allies. An independent
socialist Quebec will favor aid and trade with these countries and all
the workers states on the path of socialist development. It will break
from the imperialist alliances and ally itself with the anticapitalist
bloc.
What does the struggle for independence mean for the
future course of relations between the Québécois workers and the workers
of English Canada? If the Québécois workers struggle has tended in
recent years to develop a tempo of its own, rather than develop in
harmony with the earlier pattern of increasing organizational unity with
English Canadian workers, this is due above all to the impact of the
national question in Quebec. To the radicalizing effect of national
consciousness, has been added the alienation resulting from the failure
of the English Canadian workers movement to defend French Canada’s right
to self determination.
Unity between the workers of both nations can come only
through struggle, based on a common understanding that the Quebec nation
has the right to determine its own future, including the right to
separate if it wishes. Now more than ever, our movement must concretize
this right within the labor movement by defending the demand of Quebec
trade unions for full autonomy within pan-Canadian and international
union structures.
Like the Blacks and Chicanos in the United States, the
Québécois workers, because of their national oppression, have already
shown their capacity to play a vanguard role in the developing struggle
for socialism in North America. The developing sentiment for Quebec
independence marks another major step forward, by demonstrating a
growing awareness among the Québécois workers that they are in no way
represented in the existing power structures. Even the vote for the PQ
in April 1970 demonstrates in a distorted fashion their willingness to
fight for their independence as a class.
As for the revolutionary socialists, by going beyond our
defense of self determination, the keystone of our position on the
national question, to solidarize now with the demand for independence,
we lay the essential basis for our intervention in the mass movement in
the period ahead. The heirs of the finest traditions and the most
advanced theoretical achievements of the international working class
movement, the cadres of the LSO/LSA are destined to play a leading role
in the struggles to come. Their ability, unique in the left, to
withstand the mass pressure to capitulate to the PQ, testifies to their
intransigent adherence to revolutionary principles.
Does our support for an independent Quebec necessitate
the formation of a separate Quebec section of the Fourth International?
The one does not follow from the other.
Our program for the nation — self determination (in the
case of Quebec political independence) — cannot be confused with our
concept of the party — democratic centralism. The Fourth International
is not a federation of independent, national parties, but a world party.
The interests of the working class are international because the
bourgeoisie which it seeks to overthrow is organized on a world scale.
But the bourgeoisie governs through national or
multinational states. Thus the key criterion governing the division of
our world movement according to distinct sections is the orientation of
the struggle in a given area against a single centralized state
apparatus. A secondary criterion justifying separate sections is in the
case of external colonies where, apart from the obvious difficulties in
coordinating the struggle against the imperialist bourgeoisie through
one organization embracing the different nationalities, there is little
similarity in political structures, historical traditions, etc. because
the economy of the oppressed nation is not structurally assimilated into
that of the metropolis.
In both Quebec and English Canada, the struggle remains
oriented primarily against the Canadian bourgeoisie, English and French,
and their central state with its government at Ottawa. As long as Quebec
is a part of the Canadian state, it is in the interests of
revolutionists in both nations to participate in a single, centralized
combat party best able to coordinate our common struggle against a
centralizing, imperialist bourgeoisie which dominates both nations and
maintains its rule in part by seeking to foster and exploit national
differences between the workers of the two nations.
Our support for a single revolutionary party in Canada
flows from the experience of our international movement, beginning with
the Bolshevik party, a party which succeeded in uniting and mobilizing
the workers of many different nationalities oppressed under the czarist
autocracy, to carry out the world’s first socialist revolution. The
Bolsheviks, wrote Trotsky,
flatly rejected the national federation principle in
building the party. A revolutionary organ is not the prototype of
the future state, but merely the instrument for its creation. An
instrument ought to be adapted to fashioning the product; it ought
not to include the product. Thus a centralized organization can
guarantee the success of revolutionary struggle — even where the
task is to destroy the centralized oppression of the nationalities.
(The History of the Russian Revolution, Ann Arbor edition,
Vol. III, pages 37-38.)
The argument here against a federated party applies
against a separate party in a nation or a nationality where the struggle
is directed against an oppressive state power whose essential political
and economic structures encompass the oppressed nation.
The case for a single revolutionary party based on the
norms of democratic centralism is strengthened in the case of Quebec by
the obvious similarity of political systems, economic structures, and
the organizational links which already exist between the workers of both
nations.
But the differing tasks and tactical situations faced by
comrades in each respective nation require also considerable flexibility
in our approach to party structures — especially now when the struggle
in Quebec is oriented toward political independence. Within the
framework of a single pan-Canadian revolutionary organization, we have
made some accommodation to the independent dynamic and needs of the
Quebec struggle — through such measures as distinctive names for the
movement in each nation, conscious promotion of Francophone cadres in
the leadership, a distinct editorial board for our French language
journal, joint Political Committee-Montreal Central Committee meetings,
special speaking rights for Québécois comrades at conventions on matters
concerning Quebec, etc.
Further structural adaptations will no doubt become
necessary as the struggle progresses. In particular, there must be
constant collaboration and a flow of information and analysis of Quebec
developments within the party leadership. Special emphasis must be
placed on strengthening and expanding our French language press in the
next period.
Through combining a sensitive appreciation of the
national question with the firmest organizational commitment, we will
fulfill our objective of building the strong party necessary to
overthrow the centralized rule of the Canadian bourgeoisie and set the
workers of both nations on the road to socialism.
Our united forces in both nations have played a vital
role in the struggles which have already unfolded in Quebec. The LSO and
the Ligue des Jeunes Socialistes intervened actively in the mass
movement for a French only school system, the occupations of the schools
and colleges, and the struggle against Bill 63. Our English Canadian
comrades sponsored a cross country tour for Raymond Lemieux, the leader
of the Ligue pour l’Integration Scolaire, and have fought consistently
in defense of Quebec’s rights within the NDP. Comrades in both nations
have been outspoken defenders of Quebec’s political prisoners.
If the struggle on the political plane appears
stalemated temporarily by the rise of the PQ, the very explosiveness of
Quebec’s social contradictions ensures that the next period will
continue to be characterized by a series of far reaching mobilizations
in the extraparliamentary arena, although often related to events in the
national assembly, like the struggle against Bill 63. Our movement must
be geared to intervene in those movements as a dynamic independent
tendency armed with its own program of transitional demands.
Insofar as the PQ feels obliged to participate in these
movements in order not to lose contact with its mass base, this will
necessarily mean working in a united front with hostile class forces.
Already, the LSO has taken a turn in this direction with its
intervention in the Front d’Action Politique (FRAP) in Montreal, a broad
grouping of trade unions, pequistes (PQers), citizens’ committees and left organizations aiming to contest the forthcoming municipal
elections.
Revolutionists can identify with and work in such
multiclass alliances so long as the workers organizations, including the
trade unions and our own organization, have complete political and
organizational freedom, including the right to criticize publicly the
line of the other organizations in the alliance.
As the struggle in Quebec moves onto a qualitatively
higher plane, its defense in English Canada assumes a greater importance
in the work of the League for Socialist Action and the Young Socialists.
Our solidarity with the powerful anticapitalist demands of the Quebec
movement will popularize many aspects of our general revolutionary
program, not least our call for a workers government in English Canada.
The international dimension
The national struggle in Quebec is part of a world wide
phenomenon. Scarcely a single one of the leading capitalist countries
today is untouched by the development of powerful nationalist movements
among oppressed peoples within its own borders. This development,
unforeseen by Marx, was partly anticipated in Trotsky’s theory of the
permanent revolution. That theory, reaffirmed in practice many times
over, projects the possibility for relatively backward nations to pass
over directly to socialism resolving through workers power the
traditional bourgeois tasks of independence, agrarian revolution, etc.
The reverse coin of permanent revolution, as it were, is
that the delay of socialist revolution in the advanced imperialist
countries has, in the epoch of imperialism, brought about a revival and
resurgence of nationalist tendencies among peoples whose national
character was thought to have been suppressed for all time by ascendant
capitalism. Because those oppressed nationalities and nations are
overwhelmingly proletarian, their struggles have a powerful dynamic of
their own which adds a significant new dimension to the class struggle
in the entire country.
Quebec has maintained its national identity over a
continuous history of centuries of domination by foreign powers — the
Québécois are the only one of the original European peoples who
colonized the Western hemisphere never to have won even formal political
independence.
Today, the rise of a powerful nationalist sentiment and
the independentist movement in this nation with its own territory,
language, customs, historical traditions — and above all a skilled
proletariat — has put socialist revolution on the agenda in a major
sector of the Canadian state and of the North American capitalist
economy.
Quebec’s strategic geographical and economic position
means that its revolution, at once national and socialist, has a
powerful radicalizing effect on the workers in English Canada, and is
thereby a big step forward toward the overthrow of capitalism on the
entire continent.
This international aspect of the struggle has always
guided our perspectives. Marx fought for Ireland’s independence, but
added that after separation (from England) might come federation. The
Communist International of Lenin and Trotsky advanced the slogan For a
United Socialist States of Europe to concretize the form of relations it
envisaged between workers states following the extension of the Russian
revolution to Western Europe.
If the advanced workers of Quebec have shown their
fighting capacity by inscribing the demand for political independence on
their banners, there is every reason for an independent, workers Quebec
to link its struggle with that of the workers of all North America,
around a similar concept. Thus, to Rene Levesque’s proposition of
separation then a capitalist common market which will retain Quebec’s
oppression, the socialists counterpose the United Socialist States of
North America — a free Quebec in a socialist world.
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