Saturday, May 26, 2012

SYRIZA or the magnificent breakthrough of a unique unifying and original experience

by Yorgos Mitralias

Translated by  John Catalinotto

A nightmare for "those on top," a hope for "those on the bottom," SYRIZA made a sensational debut on the political landscape of Europe in deep crisis. After quadrupling its electoral strength on May 6, SYRIZA now aims not only to become the largest party in Greece in the June 17 elections, but to be able to form a left-wing government which will repeal the austerity measures, repudiate the debt and chase the Troika out of the country. So it's no surprise if SYRIZA fascinates many outside Greece, and if almost everyone is asking about its origin and true nature, its goals and ambitions.
SYRIZA, however, is not exactly a newcomer to the European left. Born in 2004, the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) would have to attract the attention of political scientists and the international media, not least because from its beginning, it was a totally new and original type of political entity in the landscape of the Greek, European and even global left.

 First, because of its composition. Formed the alliance of Synaspismos (Coalition) -- a left reformist party of vague Eurocommunist origin having members in Parliament -- with a dozen far left-wing organizations that cover almost the entire spectrum of Trotskyism, former -Maoism and "movementism," even at its birth the Coalition of the Radical Left was an exception to the rule that insisted -- and still insists -- that the more or less traditional parties to the left of social democracy never ally with the far-left organizations!
But SYRIZA's originality does not stop there. Having been conceived as an electoral and temporary alliance (it was founded just before the 2004 elections), SYRIZA has withstood the tests of time and managed to survive its ups and downs, its successes and above all to survive its crises and failures to become a shining example of a reality that the international radical left is still struggling to achieve: the coexistence of different sensitivities, tendencies and even organizations in the same political party of the radical left! Eight years after the birth of SYRIZA, the lesson can now be drawn: Yes, this coexistence is not only possible, but it is also fruitful and can even guarantee, in the long term, great success.

But, we wonder, how the dozen so disparate "components" of SYRIZA were able to first meet and then agree for a so long and so original organizational coexistence? The question is relevant and deserves a thorough and detailed response. No, the "miracle" of SYRIZA did not fall from heaven, and it is not just luck. It has matured at length and most importantly, it has germinated in the best possible conditions, in the social and anti-globalization movements over the last 15 years.

You could say it all started 15 years ago, in 1997, with the constitution of the Greek branch of the movement of European Marches against Unemployment. It was not only that it was the first step towards what we called a little later the alter-globalization movement of the Social Forums. Especially in Greece the European Marches had an even more important function, doing something that was previously unthinkable: unifying the left in action. Thus thanks to the European Marches, trade unions, social movements, parties and organizations of the Greek left (KKE included, at least for a while!), which had never met, or even that mutually ignored each other, came together to participate in a completely new European movement, alongside trade unions, social movements and political movements in other countries, hitherto completely unknown in Greece.

It is not therefore by chance that the first blow to the visceral sectarianism that has always characterized the Greek left gave rise to the same touching scenes of meetings, examples almost of psychodrama, between militants who previously did not recognize each other, and who suddenly discovered that the "other" was not so different from themselves. Clearly, this mixture took hold especially as Greek activists left the country and discovered a real European activism in flesh and bones, which previously they had not suspected existed.

Strengthened by this first coming together in action, which was all the more solid since it was done in a social movement of a new genre, most of the  varied Greek political components of European Marches participated, in 1999, in a second original experience that aimed at deepening their need for unity. It was the Space for Joint Dialogue and Action, which, while advancing the necessary debate over policy and program, preparing the ground for the next unitary and movementist experience, that of the Social Forum, which was going to deeply affect the evolution of the Greek left.

Aided by the enormous popular success of the Social Forum, the step towards the formation of the Coalition of the Radical Left was taken almost spontaneously and with enthusiasm in 2003-2004. Activists of the components of SYRIZA who had met each other in struggles, and who had traveled and demonstrated together by the thousands in Amsterdam (1997), Cologne (1999), Nice (2000) and Genoa (2001), Florence (2002), Paris (2003) etc.., had had time to develop among themselves not only a political but also a human rapport before arriving at the foundation of their Coalition of the Radical Left. This coalition still was going against the grain of what was happening elsewhere in Europe, where such an alliance between a left reformist party and far-left-wing groups was simply unthinkable ...

However, after a rather successful birth, the successive adventures of SYRIZA were by no means always happy, and several times they were almost completely interrupted. Obviously, there have been many crises of confidence between SYRIZA's spine --  Synaspismos -- and its partners on the extreme left, something that was "logical." But as time went by, the homogenization of SYRIZA had the effect that the crises -- as well as the debates -- not only passed through almost the entire Coalition and its individual components, but it was most evident ... that the clashes raged inside Synaspismos itself, where its tendencies were undergoing permanent recomposition.

Finally, SYRIZA found some inner peace only after the departure in 2010 of the Social Democratic wing of Synaspismos (which gave birth to the Democratic Left) and the remoteness of its former president Alekos Alavanos who after having "introduced" his protégé Alexis Tsipras, became his sworn enemy. From that time on, the political line of the Coalition was clearer (and further left), while its young leader Alexis Tsipras set up his structure and accumulated the first successes that would give an ever more radical SYRIZA the necessary credibility to take advantage of the exceptional circumstances created by the debt crisis. SYRIZA was now ready to assume the role of the political group that could best embody the hopes and expectations of entire sections of Greek society in revolt against austerity policies, the Troika, the bourgeois parties and the capitalist system itself!
Alexis Tsipras
The lesson to draw from this almost exemplary story is obvious: after all, what's involved is an achievement that only unrepentant sectarian forces (and, glory to God, there are many such in Greece!) could deny. However, the history of SYRIZA is far from over, and the serious struggles have only just begun. In sum, the current balance can only be provisional. But woe to those who won't take part on the pretext of the grave mistakes and the "betrayal" by SYRIZA and who look forward to finally saying: "I told you so." No, even this provisional and incomplete assessment must be made because, in the (hard) times to come, we, from the radical left in Europe, cannot permit ourselves the luxury of failing to benefit from the experiences, successes and setbacks of others.

A political entity with a program permanently characterized by a ... soft fuzziness, the Coalition of the Radical Left has almost always swung between the reformist left and a serious anti-capitalism. Indeed, it may have drawn its strength from this eternal oscillation. Yet we must be clear: what was a plus in "normal" periods, could become a liability if not a boomerang in times of acute crisis and exacerbation of class confrontations. In simpler terms, SYRIZA, which has just brilliantly made its breakthrough, will find itself on the space of a few weeks (!) transformed from a small minority party in a minority Greek left, into the leading party with governmental pretensions. And all this not in any old country and any old historical period, but in the Greece that is the "laboratory" and test case for this austerity-driven Europe in the midst of a nervous breakdown ...

The upward climb is so steep it can make you dizzy. Having become in record time the nightmare of the big-shots and the hope of the little people and the voiceless in Greece and even throughout Europe, SYRIZA is now called on to take on gigantic and downright historic tasks for which it is neither politically nor organizationally prepared. So what is to be done? The answer should be clear and unequivocal: Simply help SYRIZA! In every way possible. And first of all, do not abandon it, either in Greece or in Europe. Simply put, while confronting the common enemy, do the opposite of those who fail to combine their criticisms SYRIZA with solidarity with and even support for SYRIZA as it confronts the common class enemy. Your support can be critical … but it should still be support! Not tomorrow, but today. For, beyond the tactical or other differences, the battle SYRIZA is currently waging is our battle; it's the battle for all of us. To abstain is equivalent to denying aide to a person in danger. Or rather to the populations of entire countries in danger! ...

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