British Labour movement & English Revolution

1945 Labour Party posterEver since the formation of the Labour Party in 1900, there has been controversy on the left over whether or not to participate in the party. To develop a correct understanding of this question, it is important to look at the experience of the past. Our task is to learn from history in order to avoid unnecessary mistakes. History, after all, is littered with the wreckage of small sectarian groups who attempted to mould the workers’ movement into its preconceived plans and failed.

Different “Marxist” groups have made one mistake after another on this key question. Towards the end of the 1960s, a number of left groups abandoned work in the Labour Party in disgust at the counter-reforms of the then Labour government. They wrote off the party and set about building their own independent revolutionary parties, ignoring everything that had been written on the importance of the mass organisations. The more isolated they were, the more ultra-left they became. Rather than connect with the real movement, they continually sought to tear the advanced workers away from the mass. They saw their prime task as to “expose” the leadership through shrill denunciation. This has been the hallmark of all these different sectarian groups. With such antics they end up playing into the hands and reinforcing the position of the right-wing leaders.

– From Britain: Marxism and the Labour Party – Some important lessons for today

(Separate sections on the British Labour movement and the English Revolution are available)

Title Created Date Author
Women enter battle 08 March 2004 Pat Reet
The lessons of the 1984-85 miners' strike 05 March 2004 Phil Mitchinson
Miners strike: "A turning point in the history of the movement" - Interview with Nigel Pearce, NUM 04 March 2004
The Miners and the Printers 06 February 2004 Jim Brookshaw
"Strike: When Britain Went to War" 26 January 2004 Alan Woods
[Book] In the Cause of Labour - A History of British Trade Unionism 10 November 2003 Rob Sewell
[Ted Grant] The one weakness of the outstanding Scottish Marxist John Maclean 03 November 2003 Ted Grant
John Maclean - agitator, organiser, educator 01 November 2003 Margaret McIntyre
"For socialism and peace"? - The British Labour Party and war in historical perspective 17 April 2003 Barbara Humphries
"The situation in Britain for the Left is as good as it has been at any time I can remember" Interview with Jeremy Dear, general secretary of the British NUJ (national Union of Journalists) 01 April 2003 Socialist Appeal (Britain)
How the British Labour Party was formed 20 December 2002 Barbara Humphries
History of the Labour Party - Taff Vale, the unions and Labour 20 December 2002 Barbara Humphries
Labour in Government 20 December 2002 Barbara Humphries
Labour's 1945 landslide and beyond 20 December 2002 Barbara Humphries
Britain: New Labour - a historical assessment 20 December 2002 Barbara Humphries
The founding of the Communist Party of Great Britain 30 July 2000 Steve Reynolds
Olwyn Hughes: worker, fighter, Marxist 01 January 1998 Alan Woods
Labour in the Thirties 23 November 1997 Barbara Humphries
The end of Lib-Labism 20 February 1997 Barbara Humphries
Labour's foundation years 20 November 1996 Barbara Humphries