"Letter
to C.W. Fitzgerald in Beverly, Massachusetts from N. Lenin [V.I.
Ul'ianov] in Berne, Switzerland. [Written between Nov. 13 and
Nov. 22, 1915.] Text of a letter
from Lenin to the head of the fledgling "Socialist Propaganda
League" approving of a recent letter which had been sent
and outlining the position faced by the revolutionary socialist
movement in the current international political environment.
"We say and we prove that all bourgeois parties, all parties
except the working-class revolutionary Party, are liars and hypocrites
when they speak about reforms. We try to help the working class
to get the smallest possible but real improvement (economic and
political) in their situation and we add always that no reform
can be durable, sincere, serious if not seconded by revolutionary
methods of struggle of the masses," Lenin states, adding
"We do not preach unity in the present (prevailing in the
Second International) socialist parties. On the contrary we preach
secession with the opportunists. The war is the best object-lesson.
In all countries the opportunists, their leaders, their most
influential dailies and reviews are for the war, in other words,
they have in reality united with "their" national bourgeoisie
(middle class, capitalists) against the proletarian masses....
And we are for secession with nationalistic opportunists and
unity with international revolutionary Marxists and working-class
parties." Lenin sends his best wishes for the success of
the new organization.
"Manifesto
of the Socialist Propaganda League of America." [Nov. 26,
1916] The "Left Wing"
of the Socialist Party of America was a long-existing ideological
trend, dating back to the 1901 origin of the SPA and before.
It was not until the end of 1916, however, in the aftermath of
the abject failure of the Second International to avert war and
with the slogan of "Preparedness" sweeping America,
that this radical fraction began the process of formal organization.
The November 26, 1916, meeting in Boston which adopted this manifesto,
established a dues-based membership organization, and initiated
an official organ called The Internationalist may properly
be regarded as the moment of origin of a formal "Left Wing
Section of the Socialist Party" -- an evolving movement
which would in 1918 begin publication of another Boston newspaper
called The Revolutionary Age and set into motion the political
process leading to the formal splitting of the Socialist Party
into Social Democratic and revolutionary Socialist wings in 1919.
The manifest states: "The time is passed when our national
Socialist parties, bound by old forms and moved by old ideals,
can proceed with its old propaganda within the conÞnes
of capitalist legality and morals, and expect within these limits
to advance the cause of industrial democracy. We are at the dawn
of a new era; the day is big with the content of social eruptions,
economic and political strikes, revolutions. It is an era in
which the class conflict approaches its climax.”
"Constitution
of the Socialist Propaganda League of America." [January
1917] Organizational law of
the Socialist Propaganda League of America, the Boston-based
forerunner of the "Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party."
According to the group's state objective, "The SPLA declares
emphatically and will work uncompromisingly in the economic and
political Þelds for industrial revolution to establish
industrial democracy by the mass action of the working class."
This constitution reveals the SPLA as a dues-based organization
(5 cents per month for members affiliated with local "branches,"
10 cents per month for at-large members). The organization was
to be governed by a "National Committee" of seven,
who would in turn elect a National Secretary and National Treasurer
to handle the day-to-day operations of the group. Major policy
matters were to be determined by referendum vote of the organization,
with 3% of the organization sufficient to call a vote on any
matter, irrespective of where those members were located.
"Manifesto
of the Socialist Propaganda League of America." [January
1918] In the aftermath of the
Bolshevik victory in the Russian Revolution, the Socialist Propaganda
League of America issued a new organizational manifesto attempting
to make general application of some of the forms and principles
of the Bolsheviks. The SPLA advocated for the "dictatorship
of the proletariat," calling "bourgeois democracy"
a "fraud" by which "Imperialism promotes the most
brutal interests of the ruling class." The manifesto stated
that "the revolution of the proletariat annihilates the
parliamentary regime and state," replacing it with "a
new form of governmnet ... consisting of the industrially organized
workers" in the form of workers' councils. The group called
for "the unity of industrial action and Socialist politics"
and stated that it was organized "to work in the Socialist
Party as well as independently of the party." It called
for the coordinated international action of the proletariant
and the establishment of a new International of revolutionary
socialist organization -- a call rewarded by inclusion of the
Socialist Propaganda League by name in the first formal call
for the establishment of a Third International in Moscow.