The
Canadian Left from 1900-1918 consisted essentially of the Socialist
Party of Canada
and
the Social Democratic Party. The SPC was the Canadian equivalent of
the SDF in Britain at the same time, but there was an important
difference. Whereas the SDF had a reformist majority and an
“impossiblist" minority (some of whom broke away in 1904 to
form the SPGB), the SPC had an impossiblist majority and a reformist
minority. The Canadian Social Democratic Party was formed when this
reformist minority broke away in 1911.
"Impossiblism" was a term of abuse invented by the reformists in the SDF to describe their opponents. Basically, it was the view that a socialist party should only seek support on the basis of Socialism and the abolition of the wages system and so should not have any programme of immediate demands. It also involved the view that socialism could only come about when a majority of workers wanted and understood it The task of a socialist party was seen as being educational—with a view to get workers to become socialist then eventually, when there was a socialist majority winning control of political power — as opposed to advocating reforms to be achieved within capitalism.
However, this refusal to advocate reforms did not mean that impossiblists thought a socialist party should oppose them. On the contrary, it was recognised that any socialist elected to a parliament or a local council should vote for any measure considered to be in the interest of the working class.
The SPC, for instance, in its platform (which it published in every issue of its paper the Western Clarion and in its pamphlets) declared:
"Impossiblism" was a term of abuse invented by the reformists in the SDF to describe their opponents. Basically, it was the view that a socialist party should only seek support on the basis of Socialism and the abolition of the wages system and so should not have any programme of immediate demands. It also involved the view that socialism could only come about when a majority of workers wanted and understood it The task of a socialist party was seen as being educational—with a view to get workers to become socialist then eventually, when there was a socialist majority winning control of political power — as opposed to advocating reforms to be achieved within capitalism.
However, this refusal to advocate reforms did not mean that impossiblists thought a socialist party should oppose them. On the contrary, it was recognised that any socialist elected to a parliament or a local council should vote for any measure considered to be in the interest of the working class.
The SPC, for instance, in its platform (which it published in every issue of its paper the Western Clarion and in its pamphlets) declared:
"The Socialist Party, when in office, shall always and everywhere until the present system is abolished, make the answer to this question its guiding rule of conduct: will this legislation advance the interest of the working doss and aid the workers in their class struggle against capitalism? If it will, the Socialist Party is for it; if it will not, the Socialist Party is absolutely opposed to it. In accordance where this principle the Socialist Party pledges itself to conduct all the public affairs placed in its hands in such a manner as to promote the interests of the working class alone.”
The
SPGB adopted a similar position, but in Canada this was not just an
academic matter since the SPC did succeed in getting a few of its
members elected to local and provincial councils.
Critics
persists in equating not advocating some reform measure with being
opposed to it. For instance, they claims that the SPC was opposed to
giving the vote to women and attributes this to the party supposedly
being a male-dominated organisation. But the Western
Clarion show that
the SPC was not opposed to this measure, but merely that it did not
seek support on the basis of favouring it. An SPC member of the
British Columbia Legislative Assembly brought into a bill to give
votes to women. In a debate between the SPC and the Political
Equality League on the subject of "Will Woman Suffrage Solve the
Economic Problem?” in which the Suffragette speaker complained that
her SPC opponent (also a woman, incidentally) wasn't really opposed
to giving votes to women. Of course, she wasn’t as the SPC wasn’t.
What the SPC was opposed to was the argument that the granting of
votes to women would somehow solve the economic problems faced by
working class women; in a socialist society women would of course
have an equal say with men in the way things were run. As the Western
Clarion put it:
“every Socialist as a matter of course stands for the
enfranchisement of women and equal rights for the sexes in every
department of life".
What
reformist critics, fail to understand is the logic of the
impossiblist position adopted by the SPC. This involved not
advocating any reforms to be achieved within capitalism on the
grounds that socialism was the only solution and that absolute
priority should be given to trying to achieve it. So the fact that
the SPC did not advocate woman’s suffrage is not to be attributed
it being against women any more than the fact that it didn’t
advocate old-age pensions is to be attributed to it being against
retired people. It sprang from a more general position.
Janice
Newton in 'The
Feminist Challenge to
the Canadian Left 1900-18'
does not understand the impossiblist position (she expresses a
preference for the confused reformism, where Christianity and
temperance reform were mixed up with some socialist ideas, of the
Social Democratic Party) but she is profoundly prejudiced against the
SPC. She paints a
picture of it as a male organisation composed of lumberjacks and
miners who smoked, drank, swore, told dirty jokes, used prostitutes
and whose conception of socialism was one where men would continue to
go out to work but where women would be confined to working at home,
cooking their meals, washing their clothes, darning their socks and
serving as objects of their sexual desires. Needless to say, this is
pure prejudice. No doubt the fact that some SPC members smoked and
drank at party meetings would have put off women (in those days). It
is true also that the rhetoric sometimes used—calling on working
men to show their "manhood” and stand up to the bosses who
were exploiting them—wrongly suggested that the class struggle was
exclusively a male affair. There will also have been individual SPC
members who were prejudiced against women. But to claim that the
SPC’s conception of socialism was a male-dominated one is an absurd
fabrication. We have already quoted from Newton herself, in fact the
statement from the Western
Clarion to the
effect that “every Socialist, as a matter of course, stands for the
enfranchisement of women and equal rights for the sexes in every
department of life".
So
what evidence does Newton produce to back up her case? Her first line
of argument is the same mistaken one as over votes for women. The SPC
didn’t advocate it, therefore it was against it. Thus Moses Baritz
is quoted as arguing against the view that birth control would allay
poverty; Newton twists this into saying that he and the SPC were
against birth control. Similarly, just because the SPC did not seek
support on the basis of sex reform (abolition of marriage, etc.), she
claims this meant it was against this even though the passages she
quotes from the Western Clarion make it clear that SPC members
had "individual opinions" as to what will happen to
relationships between the sexes in a socialist society.
But
the biggest distortion comes over the concept of the "family
wage", i.e. a wage paid to a man providing him with enough to
maintain a wife and family at home. Newton quotes Kautsky and the
Western Clarion
to the effect that one of the consequences of the entry of women and
children on to the labour market is to exert a downward pressure on
men’s wages, since, whereas previously employers were obliged by
market forces to include in men’s wages an element to cover the
cost of maintaining a family, with women and children earning
something too this was no longer necessary. Kautsky and the Western
Clarion stated this
as a matter of fact (a fact, we would have thought, that can’t be
contested). But Newton interprets this as a complaint and as a call
to keep women out of the labour market so as to maintain male wages.
Some male trade unionists did take up this position, but not the SPC.
The SPC stood not for a family wage, nor equal wages, nor any kind of
wages but for the abolition of the whole wages system. As the Western
Clarion put in 1910
"for the she worker there is only one issue, the destruction of
the wages system" and an SPC candidate in Ontario was called to
order by the SPC’s executive committee for including a proposal for
equal pay in his election manifesto and "was told he should
stand only for the abolition of the wages system".
So
how can she claim that the SPC’s vision of the "socialist
future" was one where "the working man earned sufficient
wages to support a wife and family" and which “would reverse
the effects of capitalism on family life, return women to the home
and re-establish the male wage earner’s position as head of the
household” ?
Such
patent distortions and there are many others too regarding the
Socialist Party of Canada PC, make the book valueless as a
contribution to feminist let alone working class history.
Adam
Buick
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