Socialist Faces In High Places: Syriza’s Fall From Grace And The Elusive Electoral Road by Enrique Guerrero-López and Adam Weaver - Black Rose Anarchist Federation (BRRN)

anarkismo.net: Socialist Faces In High Places: Syriza’s
Fall From Grace And The Elusive Electoral Road by Enrique
Guerrero-López and Adam Weaver - Black Rose Anarchist Federation
(BRRN) (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)

A note from the authors: “Socialist faces in high places” will be part of an ongoing 
series looking at the left in relation to the electoral path and state power. ---- As 
various segments of the US radical left begin planting their flags in the e²

Yet “the sun of hope” began to set on Greece almost as quickly as it rose. Shortly after 
taking office, Syriza, the “Coalition of the Radical Left,” formed a coalition government 
with the right-wing, anti-immigrant Independent Greeks (ANEL) party, followed only months 
later by the predictable surrender of the government to a new round of harsh austerity 
imposed by Greece’s creditors.

Syriza’s precipitous fall from grace echoes a long line of dashed hopes and broken 
promises on behalf of the Greek left in parliament. In 1981, seven years after the 
collapse of military dictatorship, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (Pasok) rose to 
power in a landslide victory, capturing 48 percent of the vote, with the motto “National 
Independence, Popular Sovereignty, Social Emancipation, Democratic Process.” Under the 
charismatic leadership of Andreas Papandreou, Pasok established a modern welfare state – 
raising wages, improving union rights and creating a national health system. After two 
consecutive terms in office, however, the popularity and left character of Pasok dwindled 
as it passed a series of austerity measures. Today, after multiple terms in power, Pasok 
is a shadow of its former self, widely blamed for the current economic crisis, rampant 
clientelism and political corruption.

The inevitable degeneration of the left in political power is often couched as a betrayal, 
as a “sell out” narrative of politically compromised leaders and parties falling victim to 
forces outside of their control. But the problem isn’t that an individual politician or 
party has sold out; it’s that they’ve bought into a project of political alchemy – the 
quixotic quest for the right mix of key ingredients that can magically transform the state 
into a vehicle for socialism.

However revolutionary the party, program or politician may be, no matter who you vote for, 
the capitalist state always gets in. To maintain their legitimacy and control, those who 
take state power effectively assume the role of general manager of capitalism.

The ability of the state to carry out its activities – whether it’s a “socialist” state, 
neoliberal democracy or a dictatorship – depends on the health of the economy, where the 
state draws its revenue through taxation. In other words, the state makes sure the right 
conditions are in place for capitalism to thrive, protecting and preserving private 
property, regulating capital flows, incentivizing certain businesses over others, and so on.

For those who dare disrupt this social order, the state also maintains a monopoly on the 
legitimate use of violence, both domestically and internationally. Syriza’s deployment of 
riot police to quell protesters only a month after taking office is one of many examples 
of the left using state violence to maintain social order. As Mikhail Bakunin once noted, 
“When the people are being beaten with a stick, they are not much happier if it is called 
‘the People’s Stick.'”

Socialist parties and politicians are not immune or exempt from fulfilling this role of 
the state. Greece is not a historical anomaly. In fact, the historical record is rife with 
socialist forces taking state power – by ballot or bullet – with high hopes and big 
promises, only to replicate many of the conditions they so adamantly opposed.

Once in power, socialist governments are particularly vulnerable to the disciplining 
forces of international monetary bodies and capital flight (as took place in Greece and 
other countries), an internal military coup, outside intervention by imperial powers or 
all of the above. These forms of power are unelected and generally operate independently 
of whomever happens to be in government.

Yet, despite the glaring limitations of taking state power, the lure of electoralism has 
not lost its luster on the radical left.

In the wake of Occupy and amid the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement, a growing 
chorus of US leftists is beginning to sing the familiar song of electoralism, albeit in 
different keys. Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain and the election of Kshama Sawant to 
Seattle’s City Council have sparked a new round of calls for an independent “mass party of 
the left” in the United States, with some calling for a tactical engagement with the 
Bernie Sanders presidential campaign.

Advocates for a “mass party of the left” often point to the ability of electoral campaigns 
to shift public discourse. Yet recent history shows that our resources would be better 
spent influencing the terms of public debate through social movements. Within a matter of 
months, both Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter radically transformed public 
debates on capitalism, white supremacy and state violence – something decades of third 
party campaigns have failed to achieve.

Promoters of electoral strategies also claim that third party campaigns can and should 
complement social movements. While certain issues and movements are elevated by third 
parties that would otherwise be ignored by establishment parties, the demands of running 
left candidates tend to funnel limited resources from social movements into fleeting and 
mostly unsuccessful bids for public office. Also, what little infrastructure gets built on 
the campaign trail tends to dissipate quickly after Election Day.

For those who manage to win, the reality is that the vast majority, if not all, left 
parties that take state power become increasingly reformist, bureaucratic and ultimately 
concerned with preserving their position in power, which typically has the effect of 
demobilizing, defanging and developing a dependency relationship with social movements, 
not strengthening them.

While we need to struggle on many fronts, not all sites of struggle are created equal. The 
state is a shifting and contested site of power, one that plays a critical role in shaping 
the conditions under which we all fight, but ultimately it is a bureaucratic structure of 
top-down rule over society, not a vehicle for liberation.

The dismal record of putting “socialist faces in high places” shows that there are no 
shortcuts or quick fixes on the long road to liberation. Only by building power from below 
– in our schools, workplaces and communities – do we create the building blocks of a new 
world.

Enrique Guerrero-López and Adam Weaver are both members of the Black Rose Anarchist 
Federation / Federación Anarquista Rosa Negra (BRRN) and participants in Solidarity 
Networks in their respective cities of Austin, Texas and San Jose, California.

Related Link: http://www.blackrosefed.org/

Links at: http://www.anarkismo.net/article/28435