John Riddell:
Recollections of the Late 1950s
John Riddell, who became Executive Secretary of the
League for Socialist Action in the early 1970s, recalls his first
encounter with the Canadian Trotskyist movement. This brief memoir was
written as part of the preparations for Against the Stream, a
history of Canadian Trotskyism that John Riddell and Ian Angus are now
preparing.
Reprinted with permission, from
Socialist Voice,
Number 22, November 23, 2004
How Marxists in the Unions
Reached Out to Student Radicals
Recollections of the Late 1950s
by John Riddell
One day during the Ontario provincial election campaign of 1959, I took
the streetcar after high school to Toronto's Cabbagetown to canvass my
poll for the CCF (Cooperative Commonwealth Federation, predecessor of the
NDP). Cabbagetown was then a poor working-class district, where the CCF
faced an uphill struggle; it was running Tom MacAuley, head of the
Steelworkers local in United Steel Wares, the major factory in that part
of town.
During my canvass, I ran into Joe Rosenblatt, whom I had met several
times before at antinuclear events, where he was selling the Trotskyist
newspaper, the Workers Vanguard. He offered to help me canvass, so
we'd have time to talk over coffee afterwards.
Joe and I were worlds apart: he, a self-educated worker in his
twenties—employed at USW along with a number of other Vanguard
supporters—and I an over-confident high-schooler with no experience in the
workers' movement or a working-class milieu. I wanted to learn more about
Joe's world, and I found out that he already knew a great deal about mine.
Joe supported the anti-nuclear movement, in which I was active, and
like me he strongly backed its radical wing, which favored unilateral
disarmament by the NATO powers. But he had no patience with my
philosophical pacifism, and startled me by arguing that the only way to
"ban the bomb" was to disarm our capitalist rulers.
Joe was also active, like me, in the efforts to merge the CCF into a
new party—which was in 1961 to give birth the NDP. He described how he and
his comrades were working to make the New Party a real labor party, not a
coalition of liberal-minded individuals, and to endow it with a socialist
program. He urged me to join with the Vanguard comrades in building a left
wing of the New Party movement.
Trotskyists in the Unions
I soon found that Joe's group, the Socialist Educational League (SEL),
was made up of about 15 comrades—mostly factory workers, active in their
unions and in the New Party movement. (In those days, public-sector
unionism was almost non-existent.)
The SEL had been formed after the Trotskyists’ expulsion in the early
1950s from the CCF. After those expulsions, the socialist left in the CCF
was very weak. But SEL members were active in the unions' Political Action
Committees, which had been set up to support the CCF. A couple of the
SELers were delegates to the Toronto Labor Council. Many of them had been
recruited from the factory milieu; others had gone to work there because
that was the natural arena for revolutionaries. They sold me James P.
Cannon's Struggle for a Proletarian Party, which explained all that
very well. Among the comrades from that time still active are George
Bryant, Ernie Tate, and Alan Harris (now in Britain).
The SEL also put out a monthly newspaper, maintained a bookstore, ran
the yearly campaigns of its leader Ross Dowson for the Toronto mayoralty
(vigorous efforts, with door-to-door distribution of up to 40,000
leaflets), sent yearly "Trailblazing Tours" doing door-to-door work and
visiting socialists in workers' neighborhoods across Canada, maintained a
full-time bookstore, and held a weekly public forum.
Revolutionary Regroupment
The SEL was then the only activist group to the left of the Stalinist
CP. A few years earlier, in the mid-1950s, the SEL had been quite isolated
politically. Its members worked energetically to link up with other
forces. Demonized by the Stalinists, feared and excluded by the CCF brass,
and hounded by McCarthy-era anti-Communism, they sought allies where they
could, and even worked with the Quakers for a time. "At one point, they
were the only people who would talk to us," one veteran recently told me.
That had changed after the Khrushchev denunciation of Stalin and the
Hungarian revolution of 1956. The Canadian Stalinist movement had
fractured, and the SEL had been able to open up discussions with the
dissident CPers. The SEL organized a broad public meeting together with
leading ex-CPers, and then printed up the transcript in a widely
circulated 5¢ pamphlet. Ross Dowson became secretary of the Toronto
Committee to Free Morton Sobell (a victim of the U.S. McCarthyite
witchhunt)—the first time Trotskyists had been accepted into a committee
that also included the CP. The SEL held a well-attended and prestigious
forum on Revolution and Literature, addressed by ex-CPer Annette
Rubenstein.
The most promising element in the ex-CP milieu was the Québécois group
led by Henri Gagnon. The relationship was helped along by the SEL's
sensitivity to the Quebec national question, dating from the
anti-conscription fight 15 years earlier. In 1958, two leading comrades of
the SEL moved to Montreal to work with the Gagnon forces.
In the United States, the SEL's cothinkers of the Socialist Workers
Party took part in a similar regroupment effort that culminated in 1958 in
a united-front electoral ticket in New York State. The joint ticket
included SWPers alongside prominent ex-members of the CP. In Vancouver,
the Canadian Trotskyists recruited CP founder Malcolm Bruce and other
prominent party members. Efforts in Montreal were unsuccessful, however,
and in Toronto most of the ex-CP forces headed out of politics. But by the
time I met Joe Rosenblatt, new openings emerged: the New Party movement
and the challenge of defending the Cuban Revolution.
The New Party and the Cuban Revolution
The year 1959 was not a time of militant struggles by the working class
in the Toronto area. But these two issues—labor’s effort to build a new
political party, and the inspiration of the Cuban revolution—gripped the
imagination of many working people. SEL members campaigned in their
workplaces with some success to build the new party and defend Cuba.
Indeed, they scored a minor breakthrough among Toronto’s Teamsters,
recruiting about a dozen of them in 1961-62.
The SEL was active on many other issues. It conducted active education
for women's rights, supported the Black freedom struggle in the U.S., and
struggles for colonial liberation in Algeria and Vietnam. It also
collaborated with Milton Acorn, Al Purdy, and other socialist poets—a
story worth telling separately. (Joe Rosenblatt, I soon learned, was
himself a poet, and was soon to make his reputation in this arena.)
Winning Over Radical Students
But it was among youth that the SEL, known from 1961 as the League for
Socialist Action (LSA), made its breakthrough. This was surprising, given
that most student radicals (and they were still only a small handful) were
then quite hostile to Marxism. SEL/LSA members spent a lot of time seeking
contacts among student radicals, at first with little success. The student
peace movement was decidedly pacifist, counting on persuasion and moral
witness to bring about negotiated disarmament. It refused to defend Cuba
against U.S. attacks. Socialist groups were absent from the campuses, and
the student NDP was conventional in politics. The LSA's call to make the
New Party a genuine labor party was strange and alien to most student
radicals.
But in talking to radical students about the working class, the LSA had
a very convincing argument. LSA comrades were themselves of the working
class, and spoke of its struggles with authority. The LSA's wealth of
practical experience in the labor movement was immensely attractive. The
LSA was a foretaste of the revolutionary working-class movement many of
the young radicals aspired to build. The LSA's orientation to build its
forces in industrial unions turned out to be an ideal base from which to
link up with revolutionary-minded students and to win significant members
of that new generation to revolutionary socialism.
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