FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
WHAT is the future of Fascism? What is the future of
the fight against Fascism? Fascism is a historical
phenomenon, arising in a concrete historical situation.
It is useless to discuss abstractly as in a schoolroom
alternative social forms of "Fascism," "Democracy,"
"Dictatorship," etc., without regard to the actual
situation and general line of capitalism in the present
period. Fascism is the outcome of modern capitalism in
crisis, of capitalism passing into the period of the
proletarian revolution, when it can no longer maintain
its power by the old means, but is compelled to resort
to ever more violent methods for the suppression of all
working-class Organisation, and also for the attempted
authoritarian economic unification and Organisation of
its own anarchy, in a last desperate effort to maintain
its existence and master the contradictions that are
rending it. More specifically, Fascism is the
consequence of the delay of the proletarian revolution
in Western and Central Europe in the post-war period,
when the whole objective situation calls for the
proletarian revolution as the only final solution and
ever more visibly raises the issue of the struggle for
power, but when the working-class movement is not yet
strong enough and ready owing to being disorganised and
paralysed by reformism, and thus lets the initiative
pass to capitalism. "Fascism," as Klara Zetkin declared
in 1923, "is the punishment of the proletariat for
failing to carry on the revolution begun in Russia."
Fascism is the abortion consequent on a miscarriage of
the proletarian revolution. But Fascism cannot solve the
contradictions or prevent the collapse of capitalism. On
the contrary, Fascism carries the contradictions, both
within the capitalist world, and between the two worlds
since 1917, the capitalist world and the socialist
world, to the highest point; Fascism brings an extreme
intensification of the class struggle and of the process
of revolutionisation.
THE DIALECTICS OF FASCISM AND REVOLUTION 291
Fascist tendencies are not peculiar to the countries
of completed Fascist dictatorship, to Germany, Austria
and Italy, or to Poland, Hungary, etc. Fascist
tendencies are common in greater or less degree to all
modern capitalism, including Western Europe and America,
wherever the process of decay and the advance of the
class struggle have reached a certain point, and advance
in proportion as working-class resistance is paralysed
or weakened by reformism. I. The Dialectics of Fascism
and Revolution. The victory of Fascism in Central
Europe, and the advance of Fascist tendencies in Western
Europe and America, in 1933-4, represents the highest
point yet reached by the Counter- Revolution since the
war. But this victory of the Counter- Revolution does
not represent the growing strength of capitalism. On the
contrary, it is the direct result of the extreme
aggravation of the world crisis and of the instability
of capitalism, of the shattering of Versailles and all
the peace settlements, of the growth of social
contradictions and mass discontent, bursting all
peaceful and legal forms: that is to say, of the very
advance of all the forces which finally make for the
victory of the proletarian revolution, since the
proletarian revolution alone can solve these
contradictions, which Fascism can only intensify.
Capitalism can no longer maintain its power by the old
means. The crisis is driving the whole political
situation at an accelerating pace. All social and
international contradictions are brought to a new and
greater sharpness by the successive developments of the
crisis of capitalism. All strata of the population are
affected by the crisis. The bourgeois regime is driven
to ever more desperate expedients to prolong for a while
longer its lease of life. For the decade and a half
since the war the bourgeoisie has maintained its power
mainly on the basis of Social Democracy as the governing
instrument to hold in the workers and prevent the
working-class revolution. In return for disciplining the
workers and preaching myths about "democracy" and the
"peaceful path to Socialism," Social Democracy has been
given ministerial posts, patronage and pickings. This
process of being drawn into the capitalist machine has
been held up to the workers as evidence of the gradual,
peaceful conquest of
292 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
"power" by the working class. How much this "power"
was worth, when it came to the test, or rather, where
the real power lay, has been abundantly shown by the
event in Germany, Austria and elsewhere. But this
system, or particular mechanism of capitalist rule in
the post-war crisis, is not eternal-as the Labour
leaders, on the flood-tide of Mondism and successive
Labour Governments, have fondly hoped. The crisis drives
to sharper political issues, to intensified class
struggle, to the need of new forms of capitalist rule,
to rapid and desperate emergency measures. The basis of
widening social reforms and concessions, hastily granted
in the post-war period to stave off revolution, and
constituting the mechanism of Social Democratic
influence and ascendancy in the working class in the
Western Imperialist countries, breaks down under the
strain of the economic crisis, and gives place to the
withdrawal and cutting down of social reforms and
increasing attacks upon the workers. With this process a
new alignment of political forces develops. On the one
hand, the hold of Social Democracy upon the workers
begins to weaken, as shown in its declining numbers, its
increasing use of Social Fascist disciplinary measures
and violence, and in the growth of Communist influence.
In the face of this growing revolutionisation of the
workers, the bourgeoisie hastens to act, while there is
yet time, before Communism has yet won its visibly
approaching majority position in the working class,
while the disorganisation of the workers by Social
Democracy can still prevent successful resistance, and
brings into play the dangerous hazard of Fascism to
smash the advance of the working class. On the other
hand, the working class, tied to capitalism by the
reformist leadership inherited from the preceding
period, is paralysed from being able to play its
decisive role as political leader in the developing
crisis and draw all the discontented strata of the
population under its leadership for the overthrow of
capitalism. On the contrary, since there is no standing
still, the exact reverse process takes place in the
early stages. As the crisis develops, the working class
under reformist leadership appears to grow, not
stronger, but weaker. The policy of coalition with
capitalism has steadily demoralised and sapped the
strength of the old working-class organisations, brought
THE DIALECTICS OF FASCISM AND REVOLUTION 293
membership lower and lower every year to the lowest
point since the war, and destroyed the confidence of the
workers in their Organisation and leadership. The class
struggle goes forward, but in disorganised forms , since
the new fighting leadership has not yet won the majority
of the working class, and has to fight simultaneously
the forces of capitalism and the throttling stranglehold
of the reformist machine. In consequence, the
working-class forces are weakened and divided at the
very moment of the heaviest capitalist attack, not
because of the militant workers who remain true to the
class struggle, but because of the alliance of the
reformist machine with capitalism. This weakening of the
workers' forces in the face of the Fascist attack is the
price of the path of bourgeois "democracy," of Social
Democracy. At the same time as the organised
working-class forces are thus temporarily weakened, the
way is opened for alternative forces, which could
otherwise play only a subordinate part, to come to the
front. The mixed intermediate strata or so-called middle
classes, who can play no independent political role, but
can only act in practice as the ally of either the
working class or capital, come to the front, in
proportion as the active role of the working class is
weakened. They are sharply affected by the crisis and by
all the operations of finance-capital. Their lower
strata are the natural ally of the working class in the
war on finance-capital. But they see from their point of
view the modern parliamentary state as a coalition of
Big Capital ("international financiers") and Labour
bosses, with themselves left out, and feel themselves
squeezed by ever-increasing taxation for the benefit of
big business and the system of social services to the
workers, that is, the system of social reformism. Nor
can the reformist Labour propaganda, which dare not
touch the roots of finance-capital, expose to them the
real reasons of their plight, or give them the
revolutionary lead for which they are groping, to
mobilise them against their real enemy. Thus they become
easy prey for the demagogic propaganda of
finance-capital to give them a sham "revolutionary"
lead, exploiting to the full the weaknesses and
corruption of Labourism or Social Democracy, and
organise them as a counter- force against the working
class, in contradiction to their own interests. Capital
is able for the first time to organise, no longer a mere
mercenary army for its support, but a
294 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
mass movement, built on disgust with Reformism, built
out of those intermediate strata and unstable,
discontented, disillusioned, working-class elements,
against the organised working class. From the ruins and
discredit of Reformism Fascism springs. The old liberal
parliamentary-democratic method of maintaining bourgeois
rule on a basis of social reforms increasingly breaks
down before the realities of the crisis and the
sharpening of the class struggle. On all sides the
bankruptcy of the old social, economic and political
system becomes recognised, and the demand for a complete
change of the social system replaces the old cry for
reforms. Capitalism has to meet this new situation in
which its whole regime begins to be questioned and
denounced, no longer only by the few, but by the
overwhelming majority of the population, and the call
for "socialism" and "revolution" sounds on all sides. An
extreme example of this process is revealed in Germany
on the eve of Fascism, where in the elections of the
summer of 1932 no less than 74 per cent. of the voters
gave their votes for parties proclaiming the aim of
"socialism," and all the parties which declared their
support of capitalism could not win more than a quarter
of the electors. In this situation capitalism is only
able to save its power for one further lease by the
final desperate expedient of staging a sham "revolution"
with the nominal aim of "socialism," but in fact
designed to maintain its power-the "National Socialist
Revolution" or Fascism. The poison, from the point of
view of capitalism, of the "revolutionary" and
"socialist" propaganda which can to-day alone win a mass
hearing, is skilfully rendered harmless by the antidote
of the "national" idea. Thus the final mask of this
ultimate masquerade of capitalism staging a "socialist"
"revolution" to maintain its power becomes the old
"national" label. What is the significance of this ?
Does it mean that the "national" appeal is in fact
stronger to the masses than the socialist? Not at all.
The Nationalist Party in Germany, on the basis of the
pure "national" appeal, could only win two million
votes, where, by the skilful addition of "socialism,"
the "National Socialist" Party could win thirteen
millions. But the "national" label becomes the final
device for distorting and defeating the meaning of
socialism, when the defence of capitalism can no
THE DIALECTICS OF FASCISM AND REVOLUTION 295
longer be openly proclaimed. The whole drive of the
present situation, as all are increasingly compelled to
recognise, is towards the necessity and inevitability of
collective social organisation, that is, towards
socialism. The "national" principle, on the other hand,
represents in reality the rule of a given capitalist
grouping, in opposition to other capitalist groupings.
But the "national" principle is falsely presented to
appear as the expression of the collective, social
principle against private egoism, individualism,
capitalism. In this way the historical movement towards
collective social organisation, when it becomes too
strong to be any longer directly resisted, is attempted
to be distorted from its common, human basis into an
exclusive group-assertive basis, which becomes in fact
the cover for the maintenance of the rule of the capital
class. This is the significance of "National Socialism"
or Fascism. But what is the historical outcome of this
process? The advance to Fascism as the final defence
means the destruction of legality, not by the
revolutionaries, but by the bourgeoisie, and the laying
bare to all of the class struggle as a direct conflict
of force. In order to hold off the revolution, the
bourgeoisie is compelled to play at revolution, and to
seek to "outbid the revolution." They are compelled to
preach to the masses contempt for peace and legality,
which were formerly their best protection. To prevent
the working-class revolution, they are compelled to
stage their masquerade revolution, and even to dub it a
"socialist revolution." The junkers, barons and
industrial magnates, in order to maintain their power,
are compelled to place themselves at the head of bandit
hordes with cries of "Down with Interest-Capital!" "Down
with Unearned Income!" "Nationalisation of the Trusts!"
"Nationalisation of the Banks!" "Socialisation of all
enterprises ripe for socialisation!" etc. The modern
Black Hundreds have to proclaim themselves "socialists"
and enemies of "capitalism" in order to win a hearing
and save capitalism. Such is the measure of the strength
of capitalism revealed in the temporary victory of the
Fascist Counter-Revolution. It is manifest that we have
here not a strengthening, but in reality and in the
final outcome, an extreme weakening of capitalism. The
further examination of the development of the fight
against Fascism will reveal the inevitable final working
out of the dialectics of this process.
296 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
2. The Fight Against Fascism. What, then, of the
future of the fight against Fascism? Fascism, it is
evident from the above analysis, develops out of the
decay of bourgeois democracy and reformism in the
conditions of the capitalist crisis. Indeed, Fascism
develops in the first place in and through the forms of
bourgeois democracy, step by step strengthening the
state coercive apparatus and emergency powers and
restricting the rights of the workers, in proportion as
the workers' resistance is paralysed by reformism and
trust in constitutionalism; and only when the ground has
been thus fully prepared within the shell of
"democracy," and the workers' forces disorganised to the
maximum, only then the final blow is struck and the
complete and open Fascist dictatorship is established.
Germany and Austria are the outstanding examples of this
process, where all the preliminary stages for the
victory of Fascism were carried through by a Bruning or
a Dollfuss in the name of the defence of "the
constitution" and with the support of the Social
Democratic leadership on this basis. In consequence, the
fight against Fascism cannot be conducted on the basis
of trusting to bourgeois "democracy" as the defence
against Fascism. To do this means to invite and to
guarantee the victory of Fascism. The fight against
Fascism can only be conducted on the basis of the united
class fight of the workers (leading all the exploited
strata) against all the attacks of finance- capital,
whether these attacks are conducted through nominal
"democratic" forms or through open Fascist forms. The
stronger the fight of the workers in the early stages,
within the still nominally maintained "democratic"
forms, the less easy becomes the advance of the
bourgeoisie to the further stages, to the open Fascist
forms. Hence the importance of the united working-class
front. The strength of the working-class fight is also
decisive for winning the wavering petit- bourgeois
sections. The bourgeois democrats and reformists argue
that Fascism is the consequence of Communism. "The fear
of the dictatorship of the working class has evoked the
iron dictatorship of Capitalism and Nationalism.
Reaction on the 'Right' has bred reaction on the 'Left.'
Reaction of the 'Left' is displaced by triumphant
reaction of the 'Right' " (Labour Manifesto on
"Democracy versus Dictatorship," March 1933). From
THE FIGHT AGAINST FASCISM 297
this they draw the conclusion, expressed in many
Labour speeches: "To defeat Fascism, root out
Communism." This line is expressed in the abstract
slogan "Democracy versus Dictatorship," presented
without reference to class-relations: that is, in
practice, defence of the existing capitalist state (with
its increasing Fascist tendencies) against the
working-class revolution, under cover of the plea of
defence against the Fascist danger. This line of the
Labour Party is also the line of the big bourgeoisie in
its present propaganda. Thus the Conservative leader,
Baldwin, declared in a speech at Glasgow on June 24,
1932. In Europe you find these Communistic methods were
tried in Italy. What was the result? Something very near
civil war, when the Right beat the Left, and you got a
dictatorship, not of the Left, but of the Right. . . . I
say that a dictatorship of no kind will we have in this
country, either of the Right or of the Left, at any
time. What is important here is not the glaring travesty
of the actual facts: namely, that in Italy the
Communists were in a minority, that the Reformist
Socialists in Italy were defeated, not because they
adopted Communist methods, but because they specifically
refused to adopt Communist methods, because they refused
to seize power in 1920 when by the admission of all it
was theirs !or the taking, because they clung to passive
parliamentary and industrial strike tactics, and
therefore Fascism conquered; and that, finally, the only
country where the working class has adopted Communist
methods, the Soviet Union, is the only country where
Fascism has not been able to show its face. All this has
been long demonstrated by history; and the
Conservative-plus- Labour propagandists are only hoping
to play on the ignorance of their hearers when they thus
endeavour to conceal the real facts. But what is here
important is the exact unity, even to a literal identity
of phrasing, revealed between the line of the Labour
Party and the line of the Conservative Party, that is,
of the ruling party of the bourgeoisie. This identity
should already awaken the alertness of any workingclass
supporter of the Labour Party to the fact that the line
here expressed represents no defence of working-class
interests or real fight against Fascism. The whole
dialectics of revolution and counter-revolution, of
vital importance for the understanding of the present
period,
298 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
lies concealed and distorted behind this treatment.
The conception of Communism as the cause of Fascism is
as shallow in understanding of the real working of
social forces as it is illusory in fact. The growth of
the working-class revolution (Communism), and the growth
of violent capitalist repression, are in reality both
equally the consequence and outcome and expression of
the growing crisis and break-up of capitalism. They
develop as parallel parts of the single process of the
gathering revolutionary crisis. To find in one symptom
the cause of the other symptom is worthy of the
shallowest quack. In fact the example of Austria, where
the Communist Party was still very weak and where Social
Democracy boasted of the completeness of its control of
the working class, has shown how little the bourgeoisie
has need of the pretext of Communism to advance to the
Fascist dictatorship. "Before the war," declared Lenin
(speech to the All-Russian Conference of the Bolshevik
Party in May 19 17), "England was the freest country in
the world. There was freedom in England because there
was no revolutionary movement there." Does this mean
that the masses in pre-war England were fortunate
because they bad no revolutionary movement? On the
contrary. The formal "freedom" was only the mirror, the
counterpart, of the real subjection. The "freedom" was
conditional on the masses accepting passively their
servitude and looking only for the crumbs of reforms.
But so soon as the workers begin to stir against their
servitude and to fight consciously for their liberation,
the "freedom" rapidly disappears and gives place to the
whip. And that is the meaning of Fascism. Fascism marks
the extreme intensification of the capitalist
dictatorship and offensive against the working class;
but it marks thereby at the same time the growth of
capitalist contradictions and the growth of the
revolutionary awakening of the working class. If to-day
in England and the other Western countries the
traditional "freedoms" are being steadily eaten into and
cut down, if police expenditure is trebled since the war
and the police are being centralised and militarised, if
freedom of agitation and assembly and demonstration is
being more and more cut away, if the trade union machine
on top is absorbed into unity with capitalism and the
State, and the price of criticism of Labour leaders is
assessed at seven thousand pounds
THE FIGHT AGAINST FASCISM 299
by the capitalist courts, all this is only a measure
of the awakening of the working class. The awakening of
the working class pricks the myth of "freedom" and lays
bare the lash of the despot. The degree of violence, the
degree of coercion and restriction of rights, the
variation of methods between open complete Fascism and
partial developing forms of Fascism beneath a decaying
"democratic" cover, corresponds to the degree of
development of the working class and of the relations of
the class struggle. When the British and French labour
leaders boast of the supposed immunity of their
countries from Fascism (actually, slower development of
Fascism), they are only paying tribute to the
backwardness of their own movements. But this
backwardness is rapidly disappearing. Does this mean
that, so long as the forms of bourgeois democracy
remain, bourgeois democracy provides the best defence of
the workers against Fascism? On the contrary. The
workers fight, and need to fight, tenaciously for every
democratic right of organisation and of agitation within
the existing regime; but they cannot afford for one
moment to be blind to the fact that bourgeois democracy
is only a cover for the capitalist dictatorship, and
that within its forms the advance to Fascism is steadily
pushed forward. Bourgeois democracy breeds Fascism.
Fascism grows organically out of bourgeois democracy. At
what point did Dollfuss, "champion of democracy in
Europe," become Dollfuss, champion of Fascism? The
process developed through such a series of stages that
up to the very last Social Democracy was offering
alliance to Dollfuss to "save the constitution," at the
same time as Dollfuss was proclaiming the complete
principles of Fascism and preparing to turn his guns
upon the workers. The more the workers place their trust
in legalism, in constitutionalism, in bourgeois
democracy, the more they make sacrifices to save the
existing regime as the "lesser evil" against the menace
of Fascism, the heavier become the capitalist attacks
and the more rapid the advance to Fascism. To preach
confidence in legalism, in constitutionalism, in
bourgeois democracy, that is, in the capitalist state,
means to invite and to guarantee the victory of Fascism.
That is the lesson of Germany and of Austria. And this
is the reality which blows to smithereens the deceitful
and disastrous slogan of "Democracy versus
Dictatorship."
300 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
Yet in face of the deadly lessons of Germany and of
Austria the British Labour Party leadership and Social
Democracy in Western Europe are to-day repeating to the
last detail the fatal line of German Social Democracy.
All that German Social Democracy and the German trade
unions preached and practised, the British Labour Party
and the British trade unions are preaching and
practising to-day. How then can they expect the same
policy to lead to a different outcome? They preach up
and down the country in favour of democracy and
constitutionalism and legality. So did German Social
Democracy. They denounce Communism; they refuse the
united front; they expel all militant workers; they set
up a network of discipline to maintain the safety of
their organisations for capitalism. So did German Social
Democracy. They are faithful pillars of capitalism and
of imperialism. So was German Social Democracy. They are
treading the same road. Only the action of the workers,
learning the lessons in time, refusing to follow their
teaching, breaking their bans and building up the common
front against capitalism, can change the outcome. What
have they to offer the workers if their policy leads to
the same outcome as confronted German Social Democracy?
Nothing. What is their answer? They have no answer.
Citrine, leader of British trade unionism, speaking of
the Trades Union Congress in September 1933, on the
situation that confronted German Social Democracy, could
only say: "I hope to God we are never put into a similar
position. I hope we never have to face that position."
And again, with regard to the growth of mass
unemployment as the visible "common factor" both in
Britain and in Germany. If that gets worse, I cannot
answer for the consequences. "Hope to God." "Cannot
answer." Such is the final lead of British Labourism in
the face of Fascism. Of one thing only Citrine is sure.
It is impossible to fight. If it comes to a fight, the
workers will be beaten. If we go in for the method of
force, we shall be badly beaten. And again: If we try to
organise by force of arms, we shall be beaten. "We shall
be beaten." "We shall be badly beaten." Such is the
litany of defeat before the battle, by which the
reformist leaders seek to drill into the workers the
sense of their own
THE FIGHT AGAINST FASCISM 301
impotence. This is the open invitation to capitalism
to launch the attack on the workers' organisations; the
workers are defenceless and cannot resist; Social
Democracy, as the Chairman of the Trades Union Congress
declared on the same occasion, is "peaceful,
law-abiding, and shrinks from fratricidal conflict," and
therefore is inevitably, as he finds, at the mercy of
its bloodthirsty enemies: One of the tragic lessons of
events in Germany was that the enemies of democracy were
willing to shed blood to destroy liberty, and did not
shrink from murder, arson and lawless action; but Social
Democracy was peaceful, law-abiding, and shrank from
fratricidal strife. The very heart of reformism is here
laid bare. Capitalism is all- powerful. The workers are
powerless against it. The workers must only hope to get
what capitalism permits them through the legal forms
capitalism permits. Let us cling to what capitalism may
grant us through the forms of "democracy" (which were in
fact only won by violent struggle) and "hope to God"
that, if we are docile, capitalism may not strike us
further. Such is the voice of the beaten, trembling
slave, which expresses itself as the philosophy of
reformism. Does, then, the advance of Fascism mean the
end of all things, that there is no hope for the
working-class movement, that there is no hope for the
victory of socialism? On the contrary. The poet, William
Morris, in his imaginative picture already quoted of the
path of the socialist revolution in England (in the
chapter "How the Change Came," of News from Nowhere),
describes how the Government proclaimed martial law and
appointed a well-known general who with modern artillery
carried through a terrible massacre of thousands of
unarmed workers. The following dialogue then ensues
between the narrator and his informant, old Hammond: I
wondered that he should have got so elated about a mere
massacre, and I said: "How fearful! And I suppose that
this massacre put an end to the whole revolution for
that time?" "No, no," cried old Hammond, "it began
it.... That massacre began the civil war." "It began the
civil war." It destroyed the myths and illusions of
legality and passive slavery, and laid bare the civil
war which, once began, could only finally end with the
victory of the
302 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
masses. And that above all is the significance of
Fascism. The old poet is a hundred times right against
the trembling modern reformists, who solemnly declare
that modern artillery and technique have made revolution
impossible. Once the myths and illusions of legality and
pacifism have fallen, once the united mass of the
workers enter into the struggle, with the scales fallen
from their eyes, there is no question of the ultimate
outcome. The exploiters know this well; hence their
anxiety to build up the final rampart of a
national-fascist ideology of deception in the masses,
alongside the direct violence and coercion; and hence
also the importance, on the workers' side, of carrying
through the ideological-political fight of exposure
against Fascism alongside the direct preparation of the
mass struggle and final armed struggle. The example of
Austria has shown how much even a courageous minority of
the workers, shackled and held back at every point by
their reformist leaders, when all the previous
favourable opportunities had been squandered and the
enemy had been allowed to entrench himself over the
whole field before the struggle began, when the great
part of the mass organisations of the workers were
directly held back from the struggle by their chiefs,
could nevertheless accomplish to shake and bring to a
critical position the whole Fascist regime and awaken an
answering spirit of struggle throughout the whole world.
The bands of hundreds of Schutzbundler who fought their
way to freedom across the frontier, are reported to have
cried out as they reached the other side: "Long live the
Soviet Union!" and some "Long live the Communist
International!" Their lesson was learned. How much more
will the final outcome of the struggle be certain, when
the whole working class will fight as a united force
under revolutionary leadership, when Fascism will be
weakened and disorganised by its own internal
contradictions and by the fiasco of its regime and of
its promises, and when disillusionment and discontent
and rising sympathy with their fighting working-class
brothers will spread through the lower Fascist ranks.
Tsarism also fell despite all its machinery of
repression. Far more certainly and rapidly will the
card- castles of the modern Fascist dictatorships fall,
when the time comes. The laying bare of the civil war at
the root of class-society, the explosion of all the
illusions of peace and legality-that is, above
THE FIGHT AGAINST FASCISM 303
all, the historical role of Fascism. Fascism attempts
to organise society on the basis of permanent civil war,
no longer merely with the old state forces, police and
military, of repression, but with permanent special
armed legions of class-war to hold down the workers.
That fact is the most complete expression of the final
bankruptcy of capitalism and of the certainty of its
collapse. The eyes of all are being opened to the
realities of class society and to the real character of
the war confronting the working class. The necessity of
the workers' dictatorship as the sole means to crush the
counter-revolution is becoming understood. The crisis
within the post-war Second International since Fascism
in Germany is only the expression of this process. As we
enter more and more directly into a period of
revolutionary conditions, when the working-class
movement can only be carried forward by revolutionary
methods and under illegal conditions or go under, the
will-o'-the-wisp lights of so-called "democratic
socialism," that is, of "socialism by permission of the
bourgeoisie," inevitably go into eclipse and leave the
workers in the bog; only the clear light of
revolutionary socialism burns stronger than ever and
shows the path forward. The issue becomes more and more
clearly no longer even in appearance a question of two
tendencies, of two paths for the working-class struggle;
in the sight of all, the Communist International alone
leads the working-class struggle. In this situation even
the Second International is compelled hypocritically to
recognise the necessity of "revolutionary" methods and
the "error" of its past policies. German Social
Democracy in its latest Executive Manifesto of January
1934, proclaims the "error" of its path in 1918: The
political transformation of 1918 ended up in a counter-
revolutionary development. . . . The Social Democratic
Party . . . took over control of the State without
opposition, sharing it as a matter of course with the
bourgeois parties, the old bureaucracy and even with the
reorganised military forces. That it should have taken
over the old machinery of government virtually unchanged
was the great historical error committed by a German
Labour Movement which had lost its sense of direction
during the war. ("The Battle of Revolutionary Socialism
and its Objective": Manifesto of the Executive of the
German Social Democratic Party, published in the
Karlsbad Neuer Vorwarts, January 28, 1934.)
304 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
"The great historical error." Fifteen years ago the
centre of controversy of the Second and Third
Internationals, expressed in the controversy of Kautsky
and Lenin, turned precisely on this point, when Lenin,
with Marx, declared that it was necessary for the
workers' revolution, not to take over, but to smash the
existing capitalist state machine and establish its own
dictatorship instead, and the Second International
denied this. Now fifteen years too late, after the harm
is done, after the German working class is reduced to
the uttermost limit of subjection by their methods, the
Second International blandly proclaims that its policy
was an "error"-and then proceeds again in fact to
recommend the path of bourgeois democracy, "the new
Organisation of the State on the basis of freedom by the
convening of a National Assembly elected by universal,
equal, direct and secret suffrage." Once again, despite
all the attempts to make a show of a great "change of
heart," this is in reality the old Weimar path. But the
German workers have had their experience of the Weimar
path and its outcome and have no intention to repeat it.
Similarly, the Second International in its Paris
Resolution of August 1933, on "The Strategy and Tactics
of the International Labour Movement during the Period
of Fascist Reaction," admits the necessity of
"revolutionary struggle" after Fascism: Where the
bourgeoisie has renounced democracy in order to throw
itself into the arms of Fascism and has deprived the
working class of the democratic means of struggle, the
only means of emancipation left is that of the
revolutionary struggle. . . . In the countries in which
Fascism has prevailed, the dictatorship can only be
overthrown by a revolution of the people. When they have
gained their victory over Fascism, the revolutionary
forces will not confine themselves to breaking its
power; they will destroy the great capitalist and
landowning forces which are its economic foundation. By
this declaration the whole line of the 1918 Revolution,
of Weimar democracy, is implicitly condemned. In the
controversy of those days between Kautsky and Lenin,
between the line that the revolutionary working class in
the moment of victorious overthrow of the old regime
must confine itself to setting up "pure" democracy and
then await a majority in the Constituent Assembly or
Parliament before proceeding further, and the line that
the revolutionary working class in
THE FIGHT AGAINST FASCISM 305
the moment of victory must at once use its power,
without waiting for parliamentary majorities, to
overthrow capitalism, the Second International is now
compelled, fifteen years late, in a half -hidden unclear
fashion, to admit that Lenin was right. The
revolutionary working class, it is now declared, in the
moment of overthrow of the old regime must at once,
without waiting for Constituent Assemblies or
parliamentary majorities, proceed to "destroy the great
capitalist and landowning forces." Excellent. If this
were seriously meant, it would mean the workers'
dictatorship. But in fact this phrasethrown in as a sop
because in relation to Germany to-day it would be
impossible openly to advocate the return to the
completely exposed Weimar democracy-is used as a
fine-sounding phrase without any attempt to face what it
practically involves, and is made completely meaningless
by the rest of the resolution. Further-notable
precaution-it is to be applied only to countries where
Fascism has already conquered. What, therefore, does
this line mean in practice? First, the working class
must let itself be bull-dozed by Democracy, paralysed
and divided by reformism, smashed and butchered by
Fascism. Then, when their forces have been thus heavily
broken up and weakened, when Fascism has completely
organised and established without resistance its
apparatus of armed pretorian guards over the disarmed
workers, then the workers are graciously permitted by
the Second International to carry through the socialist
revolution (though if there were the slightest signs
appearing of their succeeding in this, these gentlemen,
as the Karlsbad Manifesto of German Social Democracy has
made clear, would be the first to hurry forward to wave
again the banner of "pure democracy" and thus endeavour
again to save the bourgeoisie as in 1918). But where
"democracy" still exists, the workers must still tread
the fatal path of "pure democracy," abstaining from any
revolutionary initiative, until Fascism has conquered
them. Such are the final confusions and contortions of
the leadership of the Second International in the
present epoch. It is abundantly clear that Social
Democracy by this line is in fact only disorganising the
working-class fight against Fascism, and thus in
practice still fulfils its role, also in the countries
of open Fascist dictatorship, of the support of the
bourgeoisie in the working class. Against this line the
revolutionary working class line of
306 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
communism declares: The workers' dictatorship is the
only alternative to the capitalist dictatorship, which
at present is increasingly passing from the older
"democratic" to Fascist forms. The workers' dictatorship
is the only guarantee against the victory of Fascism,
against the victory of the capitalist counter-revolution
and the unlimited subjection of the working class. The
path of bourgeois democracy ends in Fascism. The battle
for the workers' dictatorship must be fought, not merely
after Fascism, but before Fascism, as the sole means to
prevent Fascism. Social Democracy says: First Fascism,
then Revolution. But Communism says: Revolution before
Fascism, and preventing Fascism. Fascism is not
inevitable. Fascism only becomes inevitable if the
working class follows the line of reformism, of trust in
the capitalist state, of refusal of the united front,
and thus lets itself be struck down by the class enemy.
But if the working class follows the line of the united
front, of the rising mass struggle, of the building of
its Communist Party and fighting mass Organisation to
the final victory of the revolution and establishment of
the workers' dictatorship, then the working class can
defeat and crush Fascism and pass straight to the
socialist order with no costly and shameful Fascist
interlude. This is the path to defeat Fascism. Equally
in those countries where the Fascist dictatorship has
won the temporary upper hand, the only path forward and
object of the workers' struggle requires to be, no
longer the restoration of the old illusory "democracy"
which only prepared the way for Fascism, but the
workers' dictatorship and the establishment of the
Soviet regime. The German workingClass revolution is not
defeated, despite the temporary retreat of 1933 made
inevitable by the whole role of Social Democracy. On the
contrary, Germany is nearer to the final victory of the
proletarian revolution than any country in the
capitalist world. The fact that the German workers are
going through the extremest hell of Fascism is the
reflection of the fact, not that their movement is more
backward, but that it is relatively more advanced and
closer to the revolution. The liberals and reformists
see only the surface completeness of the Fascist
victory. They can never understand the dialectical
process. They see the immediate victory of Fascism. But
they do not see the negative side. They do not see the
disintegration of all capitalist stability that that
represents. They do
THE FIGHT AGAINST FASCISM 307
not see that the very ferocity of the capitalist
attack is the measure of the growing revolutionary
advance. They do not see the significance of the
crushing exposure of the line of reformism and laying
bare of the real battle. They do not see that the
Communist Party of Germany-with unbroken ranks and
organisation, and over one hundred thousand members
active under the most extreme terror, a record without
parallel in working-class history-is in reality stronger
than it has ever been, closer to the winning of the
unquestioned leadership of the majority of the working
class, closer to the victory of the proletarian
revolution. The mournful pessimists and fainthearts who
see a long period of Fascist dictatorship and unshaken
reaction in front do not understand the whole character
of the present period of the destruction of capitalist
stability, a period in which rapid changes throughout
the world and gigantic revolutionary struggles are
before us. The bourgeoisie dream through Fascism to
exterminate Marxism, that is, to exterminate the
independent workingclass movement and the fight for
Socialism. The attempt is not a new one. A hundred years
ago "all the Powers of old Europe have entered into a
holy alliance to exorcise the spectre of Communism: Pope
and Czar, Metternich and Guizot, French Radicals and
German police-spies." The collapse of 1848 was heralded
as the collapse of Socialism. In the decade after the
Commune, on the basis of thirty thousand corpses, Thiers
boasted that "we have heard the last of Socialism." In
the following decade Bismarck set himself to stamp out
Marxism in Germany with all the power of the most highly
organised Prussian police and bureaucratic system, and
after twelve years had to recognise that he had met his
master. Down the long gallery of the years the ghosts of
the past, Cavaignac and Gallifet, Thiers and Bismarck,
Pobiedonostsev and Stolypin, Kornilov and Kolchak, the
hangmen and butchers and jailers of bourgeois rule, may
welcome with a spectral sneer the new accessions to
their ranks, Hitler and Goering and Goebbels, taking
their place alongside Horthy and Tsankov and Dyer and
Chiang Kai-shek. But the older attempts were against a
still early and newly rising movement. To-day the
attempt is against a powerful and developed movement on
the eve of power. That it will fail
308 FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
like every previous attempt and end in ignominious
collapse requires no demonstration. whatever, in
whatever shape, and under whatever conditions the class
struggle obtains any consistency, it is but natural that
members of our Association should stand in the
foreground. The soil out of which it grows is modern
society itself. It cannot be stamped out by any amount
of carnage. To stamp it out, the Government would have
to stamp out the despotism of capital over labour-the
condition of their own parasitical existence. (Marx,
Civil War in France.)
What is in question now is not the inevitable future
collapse of Fascism. What matters now is the speed with
which the international working class can gather its
forces and drive back this offensive, before it has
developed further, before it has developed to the point
of world war and the direct attack on the Soviet Union,
can prevent the enormous losses and sacrifices which a
prolongation of this struggle will mean, and can rapidly
transform the present situation into the revolutionary
offensive. The issues which are confronting the world at
the present moment are heavy issues. Fascism in Germany
lays bare to all where capitalist civilisation is
inevitably developing, if the workers' revolution is
delayed. Germany is not a backward country. Germany is
the most advanced, highly organised capitalist country
in the world, the last word, which shows to other
countries the picture of their future development. What
is that picture of the future of capitalism thus
revealed? Barbarism and the return of the Dark Ages; the
systematic destruction of all science and culture; the
enthronement of Catholic Christian, and even
pre-Christian, obscurantism, racial persecution and
torture systems; the return to a system of isolated,
self-sufficient warring communities. This is the final
working out of the most advanced capitalism, with the
Pope conferring his blessing upon it and decorating the
murderer Goering with his Gold Medal of the Holy Year.
Marx and Engels long ago pointed out the inevitable
working out of capitalism in barbarism and decay, if the
working-class revolution should fail to conquer in time.
Stage by stage, through imperialism and its world orgies
of brutality and destruction, through the slaughter of
the world war, and to-day through Fascism, we are
tasting the first beginnings of this alternative.
THE FIGHT AGAINST FASCISM 309
It is time to end this chapter of human history,
before we have to tread this path still further, and to
open the new one throughout the world which has already
begun over one-sixth of the world. Only the
working-class revolution can save humanity, can carry
humanity forward, can organise the enormous powers of
production that lie ready to hand. The working-class
movement in the first period after the war was not yet
ready outside Russia for its world historic task. The
organised working-class movement was still soaked with
reformist and pacifist illusions, with opportunism and
corruption in its upper strata. Fascism is not only the
punishment of history for this weakness; Fascism is the
weapon of history for purging and burning out this
weakness. In the fires of Fascist !error and of the
fight against Fascism the revolutionary working class is
drawing close its ranks, steeled and hardened and
clear-seeing, for the final struggle; and the
revolutionary working class, thus steeled and
strengthened, will rise to the height of its task, and
win and save the world. Whatever the black hells of
suffering and destruction that have still to be passed
through, we face the future with the certainty and
confidence of approaching power, with contempt for the
barbarous antics of the doomed and decaying
parasiteclass enemy and its final misshapen progeny of
Fascism, with singing hearts and glowing confidence in
the future. "The last fight let us face. The
Internationale unites the human race."