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latest news

Quebec
Mass student strike passes 100th day

23/05/2012: When authoritarianism faces resistance

  Quebec

Germany
30,000 defy police provocations

23/05/2012: Mass demonstration against EU’s austerity policies

  Germany

Tamil struggle
"Seek justice – by all means necessary!"

23/05/2012: Third anniversary of slaughter of Tamil people by Sri Lankan army marked by protests all around the world

  Sri Lanka

Greece
Euro crisis deepens

21/05/2012: Revolution and counter-revolution

  Greece

Algeria
Legislative elections give near-majority to the FLN

20/05/2012: Anger from below, manoeuvres from the top

  Algeria

Burma
Two elections, 90% support but no power

19/05/2012: Workers’ organisations must ensure real change

  Burma

 Russia
CWI supporters arrested during Moscow protests

18/05/2012: Police target socialists at protest camp – urgent protests needed!

  Russia, Solidarity

Lebanon
Union leaders call “a strike without credibility”

18/05/2012: Build fighting, democratic trade unions!

  Lebanon

Germany
Massive state repression against “Blockupy” movement

18/05/2012: Thousands attempt to occupy squares and blockade the ECB in Frankfurt, Germany. Protests are banned.

  Germany

 Kazakhstan
Activists released

18/05/2012: Leader of the “Leave Peoples’ Homes Alone” campaign and member of the SMK, Larissa Boyar, and others have been released from prison

  Kazakhstan, Solidarity

Greece
New elections due as pro-austerity coalition talks fail

15/05/2012: For a Left government! For anti-austerity, pro-worker, socialist policies!

  Greece

Tunisia
General strikes, power struggles and an economic stalemate

15/05/2012: Republic’s president, Marzouki, afraid of ‘new revolution’

  Tunisia

 Kazakhstan
MEP speaks out against repression

15/05/2012: "Despite this ferocious oppression, the opposition and discontent of the working class cannot be silenced"

  Kazakhstan, Video

US
Socialist candidate challenges corporate politics in Washington state

13/05/2012: "During an election dominated by career politicians who are loyal to big business, I am running as a Socialist Alternative candidate to make sure there is at least one independent left-wing, pro-worker candidate in Washington State worth voting for."

  US

US
In calculated move, Obama supports gay marriage

12/05/2012: Step up the Struggle for Equality

  LGBT, US

Nigeria
Experiences of the explosion of class struggle

12/05/2012: Urgency of a working class alternative proven again

  Nigeria

Russia
Moscow left holds May Day Moscow demonstration

12/05/2012: Lively and political CWI contingent attracts variety of activists

  May Day, Russia

May Day
Demonstration in Uleåborg Finland

12/05/2012: Meeting discusses involvement in Afghanistan

  Finland, May Day

Kazakhstan
Miners’ strike ends in victory for workers

11/05/2012: Campaign Kazakhstan reports that newspapers in Kazakhstan said a strike by miners at KazakhMys ended on 7 May with a complete victory for the workers.

  Kazakhstan

 Irish referendum
No to the austerity treaty!

10/05/2012: On 31 May Irish voters are asked to vote on the European fiscal treaty. This video explains what the treaty is about.

  Ireland Republic, Video

May Day in Nigeria
Fanfare fails to mask workers’ anger

10/05/2012: May Day should have offered opportunity for workers to pose their demands and agitation before the government

  May Day, Nigeria

France
Weekend that shocked Europe

09/05/2012: Austerity rejected in Eurozone’s second biggest economy

  France

Sri Lanka
United left May Day in Colombo

09/05/2012: Socialist organisations march to joint rally

  May Day, Sri Lanka

Britain
Legitimacy of Cameron and Clegg further shattered

07/05/2012: The Con-Dem government suffered a crushing defeat in last Thursday’s elections for local authorities and in the mayoral contests apart from London.

  Britain

The capitalist “vampire squid” and the class struggle in Europe

06/05/2012: As economic crisis worsens and class struggles continue in Spain, Greece, Portugal and elsewhere in Europe, the need for working class fight-back and to build the influence of Marxism grows.

  CWI Comment And Analysis, Europe

Hong Kong
Thousands march on May Day

05/05/2012: Socialist Action (CWI) campaigning against the capitalist 1% and against racism

  Hong Kong, May Day

Sweden
May Day in Gothenburg

05/05/2012: Bobby Seale as guest speaker

  May Day, Sweden

 Kazakhstan
Trial of Vadim Kuramshim resumes

04/05/2012: Solidarity needed to free Vadim!

  Kazakhstan, Solidarity

Pakistan
May Day in Sindh

04/05/2012: Fotos of impressive march

  May Day, Pakistan

Lebanon
Build a mass workers’ movement to get rid of the corrupt ruling class

03/05/2012: For a workers’ programme that puts forward the socialist alternative

  Lebanon, May Day

Germany
Heading towards days of action against Troika austerity

03/05/2012: Days of action planned in Frankfurt/Main against European Central Bank and big finance

  Germany

Britain
"We’re striking back on 10 May"

02/05/2012: Pension cuts, job cuts, service cuts

  Britain

Ireland
Water charges are just paving the way for privatisation

02/05/2012: Irish government doesn’t seem to have learned anything from the massive opposition to its Household Tax

  Ireland Republic

US

Ronald Reagan, Hero of the Right

www.socialistworld.net, 09/06/2004
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

Ronald Reagan, the B-movie actor who became the 40th president of the USA (1981-88) has died aged 93. Wall Street will stay closed for Reagan‘s state funeral, a salute to the godfather of today‘s stock market bubble.

Laurence Coates, Sweden

A tearful George W. Bush hailed Reagan‘s “principled stand against totalitarianism, against communism“. According to the right‘s view of history it was Reagan who brought down Stalinism in the Soviet Union. He was perhaps the most right-wing US president of the 20th century, infamous for political gaffes, and an inspiration for today‘s ruling clique – Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld.

The policies implemented on Reagan‘s watch, for example in sponsoring right-wing terror in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East, have rebounded on US capitalism with catastrophic results. His economic doctrine – ‘Reaganomics‘ – which saw the rise of today‘s ‘casino economy‘, will at some stage also rebound on its creators with potentially even more devastating effects.

Reagan presided over a transformation of the Republican Party, which became increasingly dependent on the Christian fundamentalist right. Together with Margaret Thatcher, who ruled Britain during the same period, Reagan spearheaded a global neo-liberal counterrevolution, the main ingredients of which were privatisation, deregulation, welfare cuts and the blind worship of ‘free markets‘. This was a new right: the post-war period‘s pretence at ‘consensus‘ was dumped in favour of raw class politics in the interests of the ruling elite.

Anti-union

Reagan attacked the trade unions, for example, by sacking 12,000 striking air-traffic controllers in 1981 and throwing the union‘s leaders in jail. This was done to introduce the ‘flexible‘ labour markets which have since become the model for capitalist governments everywhere. Unemployment in the US shot up to a post-war record of 11.3% in 1983. Reagan also cut welfare programmes (although not on the same scale as Bill Clinton did in the 1990s) – lashing out at “welfare queens“. An attempt to reclassify ketchup as a vegetable featured in his cuts in the school meals service.

Despite demonising ‘big government‘, Reagan‘s policies led to the biggest Federal budget deficits yet seen (a record which George W. Bush has since beaten). As a result of huge tax cuts for the rich and increased military spending, the national debt tripled to $3 trillion under Reagan. He was unabashed: “the deficit is so big, it takes care of itself“. Even Bush‘s father, before he became Reagan‘s vice president, dismissed these policies as ‘Voodoo economics‘. The result was social polisarisation: soup kitchens in the cities side by side with the ‘yuppie‘ phenomenon of new-rich market speculators.

Popular politician?

According to the myth, Reagan was a popular leader, but only 52% took part in the 1980 presidential election. Just one in four of those eligible to vote chose Reagan over his Democrat opponent, president Jimmy Carter. The Carter years (1977-80), following US imperialism‘s retreat from Vietnam, where marked by a deepening economic crisis. Reagan‘s policies, for example, deregulation of the telecom and media sectors, were in fact a continuation and deepening of the policies Carter had initiated. This was also the case with foreign policy.

Carter‘s arming and training of right-wing Islamist guerrillas in Afghanistan was intensified. Osama bin Ladin & Co were saluted by Reagan as ‘freedom fighters‘ in the struggle against the ‘Evil Empire‘ of the Soviet Union. Similarly, Reagan stepped up economic aid to death squads and right-wing dictatorships in what US capitalism regarded as Its ‘back-yard‘, Latin America.

This gave rise to the biggest scandal of the Reagan years, the Iran-Contra affair, when his administration sold arms to Iran‘s theocratic dictatorship and illicitly sent the money to the Contra guerillas conducting a bloody terror campaign against the left-wing government in Nicaragua. As part of Reagan‘s “stand against totalitarianism“, Donald Rumsfeld was sent to Baghdad to sell arms to Saddam Hussein in 1983.

On a visit to Berlin in 1987, Reagan declared, “Tear down this wall Mr Gorbachev“, to the last Soviet leader. In reality, however, the Berlin Wall was brought down by a mass rebellion against Stalinism in East Germany and the other countries of Eastern Europe – a movement which at first alarmed both the capitalist ruling class in the West and the ruling stratum in the East. The causes of Stalinism‘s collapse – the huge potential of the planned economy was strangled by bureaucratic misrule – have been analysed at length in CWI material. To claim, as the right do today, that Reagan‘s armaments programme was responsible for this collapse, is a crude simplification.

Turning point

The Reagan years were, nevertheless, a turning point in the history of world capitalism. The neo-liberal offensive initiated by Reagan and Thatcher reshaped world politics – with increased capitalist globalisation and the shift to the right of the old workers‘ parties as a result. That two blinkered, not to say stupid, politicians should have become modern capitalism‘s two greatest visionaries says a lot about how decrepit and parasitic the system is. The 1980s was about restoring the profitability of the capitalist system at any price – with a return to an earlier era‘s extreme class polarisation. None of the system‘s fundamental problems have been solved by these policies. On the contrary, an explosive economic and political crisis for US and world capitalism is Reagan‘s legacy to the world.

The article was printed in Offensiv (10 June 2004), the weekly paper of Rättvisepartiet Socialisterna (cwi Sweden)


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