What is Right with the CPI (M)

CPI(M) Supporter

Much is being written these days, especially in the context of West Bengal, about what is wrong with the CPI (M). For a Party that has been in power in the state for more than three decades, this is hardly surprising. But if a Party has been in power in a state for more than three decades, then something must also be right with it. Besides, no matter what the outcome of the forthcoming Assembly elections, it would still be the case that almost half of the electorate in the two most intellectually-advanced states in India, West Bengal and Kerala, would have voted in them for CPI (M)-led formations. What explains this, and also the fact that, notwithstanding all its omissions and commissions, the CPI (M) still continues to attract some of the finest young minds of the country?

The answer is three-fold (and everything I say about the CPI (M) holds generally for the organized Left as a whole): first, it is the only modern force in Indian politics; second, it is the only consistently democratic force in Indian politics; and third, it is the only consistently anti-imperialist force in Indian politics.

Of the two main non-Left political formations in the country, one appeals to Hindutva, and the other appeals to the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty. Both thrive on the essentially feudal features of our society. The CPI (M) by contrast does not owe its being to the identity of Prakash Karat's grandfather, or of Sitaram Yechury's father-in-law. It represents in that sense the only residual link to the modernity of the anti-colonial struggle. The Congress Party, which retained the leadership of the anti-colonial struggle throughout its course, was largely a modern force during that struggle and for a while even after independence; the leaders were more or less equal, debate was free, and sycophancy, let alone dynastic politics, conspicuous by its absence; dynastic politics entered the Congress party at a later date. The Hindutva group, by contrast, never had anything to do with the anti-colonial struggle; its political formation always was, and still remains, a front for an organization that is fundamentally pre-modern in its orientation and appeal. But while modernity was absent from the one and abandoned by the other, it still characterizes the CPI (M) as a political force.

Both the non-Left formations have also at different times sought to abrogate the democratic nature of our polity. The Congress Party imposed upon this country the infamous Emergency which ended only because of a miscalculation on its part and not because of any change of heart (indeed to this day it still has not expressed any contrition on this score). And the Hindutva formation toyed for long with the idea of altering the Constitution of the country and even set up a Commission to suggest recommendations for doing so, until President K.R. Narayanan stepped in to end that effort. The CPI (M) was in the forefront of opposition on both these occasions (though the CPI transgressed on the earlier occasion, for which it later made a self-criticism). The CPI (M)'s systematic defence of the democratic rights of the people has paradoxically been somewhat belied by its own reticence to theorize about the nature of democracy in societies like ours, and by the pervasive association, derived from historical experience but lacking any theoretical justification, of communism with one-Party rule; but this defence has been as steadfast as it has been forceful. By contrast, on the issue of secularism, where the Party, free of any historical baggage, has been more forthright in theorizing its praxis, its role in defending secularism has been more widely acknowledged.

Critics often point to this or that misdemeanour on the part of the CPI (M) cadre, this or that action on the part of CPI (M) ''hoodlums'' to contest CPI (M)'s commitment to democracy. But even if each of the alleged misdemeanours happens to be true, it would be crass empiricism (or alternatively, what comes to the same thing, crass moralism) to deny the CPI (M)'s historical commitment to democracy from a set of individual incidents, of the sort that all political formations at the ground level can be accused of.

But even more significant than the two features mentioned above, is the CPI (M)'s commitment to consistent anti-imperialism, which indeed constitutes its real differentia specifica. Imperialism is more than ''the empire''; and anti-imperialism is more than mere Bush-bashing, or opposition to the Israeli shenanigans in Palestine or American shenanigans in Iraq and Afghanistan. Anti-imperialism in short is not moral opposition to this or that venture on the part of the hegemonic power of the time; it is a whole approach to politics that sees every issue of the day from the perspective of globally-spanning class relations of domination and subordination. And the CPI (M), and the Left in general, is the only force in India, that does so consistently. It sees the Indo-US nuclear deal not just as a ''nuclear deal'' but above all as an ''Indo-US deal''. It evaluates the deal not in terms of the costs and benefits of nuclear power (though the deal is questionable even on this score), but in terms of what it portends for India's relationship with US imperialism.

Many would not agree with what they would see as the CPI (M)'s ''obsession'' with imperialism, an ''obsession'' that even made it withdraw support from the UPA government, despite the obvious short-term political costs of that withdrawal. Many would not even subscribe to the concept of ''imperialism'' itself, the most radical among them remaining satisfied with the concept of the ''empire'' or the ''evil empire''. But if one sees imperialism as a global system and not just as the evil actions of this or that US President, then one cannot help admiring a Party that can stake its everything on a principled opposition to the Indo-US nuclear deal. Indeed its very lack of ''pragmatism'' that characterized its total opposition to the deal, which political pundits and commentators to this day have seen as sheer ''folly'', is what marks it out as a political Party and endears it to thousands who do subscribe to the concept of imperialism. It is this consistent and principled anti-imperialism on its part that makes writers like Noam Chomsky feel concerned when ''progressive'' sections in India launch a no-holds-barred attack on the CPI (M).

The ultra-Left is at best lackadaisical in its anti-imperialism. What it thinks on a whole range of issues concerned with imperialism today is anybody's guess (buried perhaps in arcane pamphlets). And the fact that it treats the CPI (M), which is a consistent anti-imperialist force, as its main enemy, suggests the secondary role at best that it assigns to imperialism in its calculations, highlighting once more the difference between it and the CPI (M) on the issue of imperialism.

The central question of the last hundred years has been the nature of the modernity brought by imperialism to the periphery. The national movement was fought on this issue. The progressive elements of the national movement who split off to form the Communist Party believed that authentic modernity could come only by an alternative route, socialism. While the promise of socialism has been belied for the moment, and many (including perhaps even Amartya Sen) have seen in neo-liberalism the promise of a progressive modernity, the CPI (M) has never given up its perspective on imperialism, has seen in neo-liberalism the form that imperialism takes in the current epoch, and has continued (notwithstanding a passing phase of naïve ''developmentalism'' in West Bengal for which it has been self-critical) to hold up a vision of an alternative anti-imperialist modernity. Anti-imperialism, it believes, is not a ''fundamentalist'' but a modernist position. And that in my view is what is right about the CPI (M).

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Comments

A timely and very well argued

A timely and very well argued piece. - Rohit

Prabhat has given a very

Prabhat has given a very immaculate analysis of the contribution of a responsible political party in CPM. It has played its role in such a responsible manner as to enlighten the masses about the true role politics should play in societal progress, unlike the general cynical understanding of politics as a vehicle for personal disfranchisement and enrichment.

A Stirring Offensive

Congrats to Com PP and Pragoti for the combative piece. I hope it will inspire more comrades to comment. We should not sink into a defeatist or siege mentality and lose political initiative . Let's not also be content with doing a running commentary on what is wrong with our critics. For a change, let's assert why we are right.

Here are a few more points that come to mind on reading Com PP's morale boosting exposition:

1 The CPI(M) is the legitimate flag bearer of the heroic legacy of the international working class movement and the Indian communist movement despite their chequered history.

2 The CPI(M) is the one and only Communist party in the country that has never compromised on its independence of thinking even as it has never compromised on communist internationalism.

3 The CPI(M) is the one and only mass political party in the country which has a majority of practicing secularists among its members and supporters:an irrefutable sign of the party's anti imperialist modernity and an unmistakable evidence that it is the people's most dependable bulwark against right wing Hindutwa fascists .

Com PP's reference to the naive' "developmentalism '' of the West Bengal party is however a little baffling . Has the party self critically and conclusively identified ' naive developmentalism' as the source of the recent errors of judgment of the state unit ? What about Kerala ? Com PP is the Vice Chairman of the state planning board. Does he think that the party unit there has not been guilty of any such errors ?

I thought that party is still in the process of reformulating a credible , class based alternative to neo liberal policies on which it can more effectively mobilize the masses both for elections and for extra parliamentary struggles.

the comment misses

the comment misses dialectics: "Let's not also be content with doing a running commentary on what is wrong with our critics. For a change, let's assert why we are right." If the CPI (M) has to be right, its critics have to be wrong. its negation of negation.

Thank U

Thank u . You are right . I was only suggesting that we were having too little by way of

asserting our strength and were rather preoccupied with explaining what was wrong with

our critics.

I hope the missing dialectics will not stand in the way of taking forward the debate initiated

by Com PP.

@tirtha

is it negation of negation or the unity of opposites?

West Bengal is the one of the

West Bengal is the one of the poorest state in India and figures in the list of states that have world's largest population of hungry and least developed people. I think the authour should include this as one of CPM's many achievements.

whoever has said that wb is

whoever has said that wb is one of the poorest states in india does not seem to have the right statistics or is a blind follower of the anti left media. so please correct yourself

I do not need to invent any

I do not need to invent any statistics. Its there already. Follow the link:

http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/global/hdr2010/news/title,20523,en.html
Specifically it refers to West bengal along with a few other poor states in India:

"Even in countries with strong economic growth in recent years, the MPI analysis reveals the persistence of acute poverty. India is a major case in point. There are more MPI poor people in eight Indian states alone (421 million in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal) than in the 26 poorest African countries combined (410 million). "

Please avoid selective reading of history

@anonymous: There is clear evidence that between 1977 and 1993, West bengal is one of the rare states in India which witnessed a decline in the percentage of undernourished and poverty. And that was definitely under the leadership of the left and CPIM when Operation Barga led to a marked rise in both agricultural output and food consumption levels across classes. It is only later under the neoliberal regime since 1993 that there has been a rise in hunger in WB along with ALL other states in India. The neoliberal anti-farmer, anti-poor policies of the Central government have been responsible for that and I agree that there has been some neglect on part of the WB government also during this period. However, this does not justify your sweeping comment regarding the history and achievements of CPIM since 1964. Selective reading of history does no good to the cause of Left (assuming that you are genuinely concerned about the Left in the country and the poor)! And let me also remind you that CPIM has not given up the battle against neo-liberalism. It is very much alive and kicking!

what is modernity?

i think i am a little confused by what Com. PP means by 'modernity'.
he seperates modernity and anti-imperialism at the beginning
"it (CPM) is the only modern force in Indian politics;....and it is the only consistently anti-imperialist force in Indian politics"

then when he talks about this "modernity" of the CPM he debunks the Congress as having abandoned modernity and the hindutva brigade as never having been modern. What he has used in this paragraph to charachterize modernity is the nature of the people that are a part of the party - "the leaders were more or less equal, debate was free, and sycophancy, let alone dynastic politics, conspicuous by its absence; dynastic politics entered the Congress party at a later date" .
i think we can agree that the BJP is not a modern political formation. But is this so because there is no debate, there is sycophancy etc.? or is it because it has historically represented a class which is essentially pre-modern (feudal) and wants to retain power by preserving the pre-modern relations of production. It represents the rentier class whose main motivations are retaining existing relations of production even at the cost of constraining growth of productive forces. While the Congress could have been and can still be called a modern force in part because it represents beourgois interests which focus on increasing profits (and consequently contribute to increasing productive forces) - essentially represented by Nehru during and immediately post independance. However, the congress did enter into an alliance with the feudal class and stopped land reform thus belying its role as a modern force.
CPM of course can be considered a modern force but not because Com. Yechury and Com. Karat's father were not in the CPM but because it represents class interests that can be furthered only by being based in modernity.

In the last paragraph he talks about "a vision of an alternative anti-imperialist modernity". Com. PP equates modernity simply to consistent anti-imperialism in this paragraph . Can anti-imperialism be equated to modernity? Where does Gandhi come in then? No-one can deny that he was anti-imperialist (and not just against a particular empire). Yet he was one of the most conservative and anti-modern leaders of the national movement.

The question is how do we understand modernity. Can we at all understand it without talking about the development of productive forces and consequent and effectual development of modern relations of production that charachterize it?

Com. PP's take on modernity does get linked to the other recent articles he has written- If you remove the basis of productive forces from modernity then you can very easily argue for protecting petty production, without compromising the rhetoric of modernity.

The debate over modernity can

The debate over modernity can go on and i do not think i am qualified enough in political theory to intervene in that.
But i do not think the distinction between the BJP and the Congress is a correct one. Both the BJP and the Congress represent the bourgeoisie in our country and that is the class which has benefited the most when these parties were in power. Some of the most aggressive neo-liberal policies and the entire shift in India's foreign policy towards a strategic alliance with US imperialism started during the NDA's tenure. Even today on the question of imperialism there is not much resistance from the BJP.
So to brand the BJP as some archaic political formation representing feudal interests would not be correct.
The BJP being a stooge of the RSS is a programmatically fascist force. But nowhere does history show that fascism depended on feudal or per-capitalist formations. Rather it is most aggressive capitalism.
It is important that we do not make errors in understanding our enemies.

Colonial Modernity

I totally agree with Com Roshan. Neither the Congress nor the BJP has been able to transcend Colonial Modernity . Both are also unmistakably pro imperialist. But Congress is secular to the extent it is democratic and vice versa. For historical reasons , it can not permanently position itself as a political party of Hindu majoritarian communalism.This
seems to be the party's sole saving grace today.

The rise of Nazism and Fascism in Europe had led Nehru to warn that Fascism in India will appear in the garb of Hindu majoritarian communalism. As Com Roshan rightly poinits out
the RSS is programmatically fascist which leaves no one in doubt about the difference between the Congress and the BJP . The growing convergence of the interests of US led
global financial capitalism and the fascist forces in India is obvious in their common anti - Islamic platform.

We can debate the categories of imperialism , modernity , secularism and democracy in their complex interrelationship and in relation to the BJP and Congress but there can not be any confusion on fascism which is a daily death and life question for the Indian Citizen. The RSS led BJP remains a greater threat to human life and bourgeois nation building despite our experience of the nationwide authoritarian repression of democratic rights under internal emergency and the semi fascist terror in West Bengal by the Congress in the seventies.

The Left should not allow the BJP to occupy even the political space of the main opposition in the country. In parliamentary democracy, this main opposition space is as crucial as the ruling space for the protection of our civil and human rights. Defeat the Congress , Marginalize the BJP , could well be a strategic slogan for the Left. It may sound a bit too politically ambitious but one can not be realistic without knowing what is one realistic about. It may sound jarring to the post Marxists and the Maoists but you can not afford to err in knowing your enemies.

Thank U, Com Roshan. You do not have to be an academic or be well versed in political theory to see things around you in clear light.

Falling Ideals

Dear Sir (Com. Prabhat Patnaik)

Certain points mentioned in your article are welcome and a similar kind of article written by your good self appeared in Indian Express (Why the Left matters, March 17, 2011). Sir, as a students of economics, since days at Degree college in a small town in Karnataka, my self and fellow students always interested in your writings and discuss among us though we were unable to appreciate all the things because of lack of knowledge of English as a language. You definitely an ideal for us and most of us, particularly me wanted to become like you. We participated in students movements and also fight for rights of people of surrounding area and always dream of revolution. We had lot of hopes from CPM. My understanding of your writing improved when I moved to pursue Ph.D at University of Hyderabad. Instead of writing civil service or police exams, most of our group members either become social activists or pursued career in academics which gives freedom of thinking. It was our firm stand that we will not become collaborator of a state, the State of big land lords and g bourgeois capitalist.

But Sir, one day the old man after enjoying Chief Ministership about 35 years declared "Socialism now ended". It was shocking for us. And the present Chief Minister, pursuing the neo-liberal policies in guise of Red flag and at the same time allowing brutal attacks on poor people in West Bengal.

You mentioned in your article that CPM is secular. If it truly secular, then whey it denied security to Taslim Nasrin? Muslims are living in better conditions in Gujarat than West Bengal ( A government report claims). What you say?

Yes, I know that CPM is the only option not because of its commitment to democratic revolution as you claim, but because of lack of options.

In Indian Express, you wrote that much has been written about Singur and Nandigram. It is really shocking that you call all those valid critics as "self claimed progressive forces". Then Narendra Modi also say the same " Much has been written and talked about Gujarat riots".

You mentioned in Indian express article that a social transformation took place in 20th century on issues of untouchability. And attributes all these to communist parties'. Even you did not acknowledge the Dalit and Backward class movements and Dr. B. R. Ambedkar. May be Because they do not fit into the argument of class.

I am really wonder why you are relentlessly supporting Left parties even when they are wrong. In EPW articles also, we stood by them when they clearly violated democratic rights.

I am really sorry to say sir, We are disheartened that our ideal (Com Prabhat Patnaik) is falling......

PP and his arguments

Dear PP,

You said, " it [Left] has stood consistently against all attempts to abridge the regime of rights (to a point where it even opposed the banning of the Maoists despite their rampant murderous attacks on CPM cadres). Nandigram and Singur in short were tragic episodes; they do not represent an iota of shift on the part of the Left to any alternative, abridged, regime of rights." Are you really serious about your argument ? PP being an acclaimed left intellectual we thought a much better argument. Take the case of UAPA. What was you party stand in the parliament ? What is the essence of UAPA ? Please see how the CPI(M) argued against UAPA ? How many people were arrested under UAPA in West Bengal ? And lastly how West Bengal government argued the case against CBI on Nandigram police firing in the Supreme court. Just analyse what the lawyer representing the West Bengal government said in the supreme court, analyze it and you will realize how undemocratic were the arguments in favor of the higher ranking police officials in favor of firing.