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The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

An increasing array of socialists, anarchists and anti-capitalists are turning to the Green Party as the choice in the coming general election. Guest blogger John Moore argues that these leftists are either being naive or acting to deceive. He suggests that the old New Left ‘tripod’ approach of trying to combine the issues of class, race and gender have now been extended to a ‘quadpod’ approach that includes environmentalism as also having equal status in the broader leftwing struggle.
Left wing obscurantists

At a recent election meeting at the University of Auckland, the prominent anarchist Omar Hamed of the Auckland Anarchist Network presented ‘an anarchist view on elections’ but then admitted he would be voting for the Greens. This was a good example of how the leftwing friends of what is increasingly a party of the Establishment must construct a false reality to justify their misfit between theory and practice. Like Christian obscurantists who, despite surmounting evidence, continue to present their creationist themes, anti-capitalists who present the Greens as some form of progressive force not only obscure the facts but present an overwhelmingly deceptive image of reality.

The political nature of the Greens

To discover the truth of what the Green Party is all about, who better to go to than its fresh new leader. Russel Norman, a former anti-capitalist associated with the Democratic Socialist Party of Australia, has made explicit his desire not to just save the planet but to save the capitalist system. He has compared the role of the modern day Greens to that of social democrats of the 1930s who introduced counter-measures against capitalism self-destructive tendencies. In a revealing blog posting in 2007 on Frogblog, Russel Norman presented his thesis on the role of the Greens:

It’s a funny position we find ourselves in. Just as the social democrats (Europe), labourists (UK, Oz, NZ) and new dealers (US) of the 1930s and 1940s had to save capitalism from its own destructive tendencies by introducing a range of modifications and interventions on the market system, so now the Green Parties of the world find ourselves in possibly a similar position. The best of the old social democrats like Michael Cullen are too locked in the old paradigm to understand it, and the sectional interests like the business roundtable and employers federation are too narrow to see it, but we have to intervene on the market system to place a price on resource use and pollution so that we can save the planet. And in the process we will quite possibly save the market system from its natural tendency to destroy or consume all resources leading to its own demise as well as the demise of the planet and all of us living on it.

Norman’s comparisons between the Greens and social democratic saviours of capitalism is relevant, however it needs to be stressed that the Greens are significantly to the right of the old social democratic parties of the 1930s. Traditional social democratic parties, with their working class base and socialist rhetoric, offered an array of social reforms, partly to dampen growing social divisions and radical sentiments amongst the masses. The Greens’ lack of any substantial social program show that they are similar to all other parliamentary parties in operating within the limits set by the reality of modern capitalism. ‘Oh, but you just don’t know what our economic policies are,’ is one reply of the leftwing friends of the Greens. Shall we have a look then?

The Green Party put forward their leftwing MPs, Keith Locke and Sue Bradford, alongside a number of progressive sounding policy platitudes. For students they offer moves towards ‘establishing a public ‘fee-free’ tertiary education system’ in the unspecified future while, for the moment, they will kindly cap and maybe reduce fees. For workers faced with the draconian restrictions on the right to strike with Labour’s industrial legislation they dispense with detailed policy and offer support for ‘a complete review of the Employments Relations Act’.

Like Labour, the Greens do not presently call for reversing the savage benefit cuts enacted by the Bolger-led National Government in the 1990s. Instead they offer beneficiaries ‘benefit amounts at a level sufficient for all basic needs of the individual/family’ and for protecting all benefit levels ‘by linking rates to a fixed percentage of the average wage’.

All this vagueness serves a purpose. Specific policy details can be problematic when moving towards the reigns of power and working in the realm of realpolitik. With vague policy statements coupled with statements of long term desires and principals, this allows Norman and co to enter negotiations post-election with no ‘bottom-lines’ and awkward specific policy commitments that hinder their chances of gaining precious cabinet seats. Of course the Greens are no different to the other parliamentary parties with their non-specific policy platforms and flexible maneuvering to stay in the political centre. However, this jars against the attempts by the party to pretend that they are some sort of fresh alternative to political ‘business as normal’.

With the Green Party’s latest billboards deliberately obscuring what political programme they have, the party conveniently offers it left wing friends a blank canvas to paint their desires of what the Greens stand for. That the Greens don’t explicitly distance themselves from their radical supporters points to the usefulness of having a bunch of anarchists and radicals providing them with a left wing cover. This left wing cover is particularly important as the Greens move to the right. For example, whereas leftwing supporters of the Greens do occasionally point to capitalism as an anathema to an environmentally sustainable economy, the Greens have adopted a controlled market approach to the environment. As pointed out previously on this blog, the Greens are increasingly adopting a pro-capitalist orientation towards environmental issues:

Note, for example, the Greens’ new climate change plan announced recently called Kicking the Carbon Habit. In this, the Greens propose that global warming can be averted by making use of an international emission trading market in which New Zealand businesses essentially buy and sell permissions to emit pollution. This market approach has been welcomed by everyone from Labour and National through to the forestry industry. Rightwing and business interests are starting to realise that they can actually do business with the Greens.

The Green Party distance from progressive politics is most strongly exposed with its statements on immigration and economic nationalism. In these areas they have often competed with the xenophobic New Zealand First party for appealing to reactionary ideas about economic nationalism. In 2006 the Green Party reacted strongly to proposals from a visiting Chinese minister who put forward the position for allowing increased numbers of Chinese workers here on temporary vistas. A Dominion Post article of 5 October 2006 said, ‘but the Green Party says it would trigger a “race to the bottom” for New Zealand wages and conditions.’ Also: ‘Dr Norman said there would have to be a genuine shortage of New Zealand workers and the Government would have to prove it had made efforts to offer training to local workers to fill vacancies.’ Such statements are not only remnant of Peter’s revolting racists rhetoric directed against Asian immigrants in the 1990s, but also of the White New Zealand policy implemented for much of the last century.

The German Greens

The experience of the German Greens offers a sobering reading of where the New Zealand Greens could be heading. The German Green Party formed in the mid-1970s and drew in a number of activists including many active in the anti-nuclear movement. In the early 1980s they won seats in the West German parliament. In the late 1990s they formed a coalition with the Social Democratic Party of Germany in a so-called Red-Green Alliance and were a partner in the federal government from 1998 to 2005. The Greens’ leader, Joschka Fischer, acted as Germany’s foreign minister.

Like the Greens here, the German Greens shifted to the right as they moved closer to the reigns of power. In contrast with the New Zealand Greens, this opportunist political shift caused a split in the German Greens between the ‘fundis’ who held some attachment to the party’s radical-pacifist traditions and the ‘realos’ who were maneuvering the Greens into being a mainstream capitalist party. The formal break from its past came when the party, at a Green conference in Bielefeld, endorsed foreign minister’s Fischer’s support for NATO’s bombing of Yugoslavia. Also, the German Greens as part of the coalition government took part in comprehensive attacks on social services and working class living conditions.

The Green Party in Germany rapid move to the right can be seen as partially a result of the social make-up of the party. Like the Green Party here, the German Greens have a predominantly ‘middle-class’ make up. With little ties to organised labour in the form of unions, the party could easily swing from being one focused on concerns of the liberal middle class such as with nuclear proliferation, to being a party promoting right wing austerity measures. Although the German Green’s shift away from pacifist politics certainly disquieted many of their supporters, its participation in attacks on social services and working class conditions can’t really be seen as a betrayal as the Greens never had a working class base or significant working class support.

The Greening of the left

What has led to anarchists, socialists and anti-capitalists embracing the Greens, or at least giving them some form of ‘critical’ support? Is it a matter of the party being viewed as a lesser evil, whose elevation will alleviate some of the suffering caused by the all embracing capitalist system. Certainly the presence of former radicals Sue Bradford and Keith Locke provide hope for left Green supporters. Yet the presence of former anarchists, Maoists and Trotskyists in the German Greens equally excited many on the left. Does their support go even further than this, is there an honest belief in the transforming possibilities of the Greens. In the way Barack Obama, with his vague calls for change, has become a blank campus for the American electorate to paint their hopes and fears, the New Zealand Greens is a broad church accommodating to many. Take the Green Party caucus. The Caucus, rather than being a cohesive unit, appears as a collection of single issue individuals, held together by an implicit pact to be accommodating, or maybe neutral, towards each others pet projects – workers rights, anti-imperialism, consumer issues, etc. That this pact extends out into the wider party is partly an explanation for the accommodation towards anarchists and other anti-capitalists who have made the Greens their home. That these anti-capitalist Greens feel no need to engage in any serious reflection on the rightward drift of the party points to them at least subconsciously buying into this pact.

Another explanation for the greening of the left is to see this process as an extension of the tripod theories that become fashionable in the 1980s. The tripod theories held that class should no longer be the primary concern of the left. Gender, race and class where to be given equal status in terms of analysing society and in terms of engagement in political action. Disillusioned Stalinists and Maoists, who were desperate to discard their unfashionable baggage, enthusiastically embraced this new approach. Tripod theories can be seen as a variant of post-modern approaches to struggle, with no form of oppression or identity given primacy and a tolerant, non-critical approach given to various avenues of struggle. That most of these struggles, although progressive, not only do not challenge the capitalist paradigm, but also have been actually embraced by the Establishment is telling (e.g. – anti-racism, gay rights, anti-sexism). Has the tripod approach extended out to be a quadpod approach, with environmentalism having equal status alongside class, race and gender? Does this offer some explanation for the lefts embracing of the Green cause?

Taking the red pill

In the Matrix film, Neo, the protagonist faces a seminal moment when he is offered a chance to see the truth. Neo is taken to Morpheus, a resistance leader, who explains that he lives in a false reality, that what appears as ‘real’ is a constructed mirage to hide the truth. Morpheus presents Neo with two pills. If he takes the blue pill Neo will wake up and ‘believe whatever you want to believe’. Neo takes the red pill and faces an epiphany where he is shown the world as it is, ‘the desert of the real’.

Metaphorically taking the blue pill and waking up to ‘believe whatever you want to believe’ is often the less painful option. Being faced with reality can hurt. Many seek comfort within constructed realities. For those who recoil from the mystery and growing uncertainties of capitalist existence, what better comfort than a party that offers an easy panacea to the nightmare of the real.

The Green Party in New Zealand has openly reconstructed itself as a party of the centre, willing to do deals with any other capitalist party with no ‘bottom lines’. Despite the deceptive image various leftists hold up of the party, the scenario played out in Germany with the Greens may prove not to be a unique one.

So, will the Green Party’s left wing friends dare to take the red pill and see this party for what it is? The truth can be painful.
 
 
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Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

So what evidence, other than one statement by a confused 20 year-old do you have for your theory that the radical left supports the Greens?
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

The Government needs the Greens and unions because they give the workers a faux sense of hopeful existance where there isn't any and keeps them from uncontrollably rebelling.
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

I've seen heaps of suggestion on this site that the Greens are some sort of radical option and I once used to think that way myself. The facts show the Greens are not an anticapitalist option. The won't even support the modest workingclass demand to take GST off food. They support "our police". They support "our troops" fucking round in other peoples coutries and endorse the false notion that these troops are "peacekeepers".
The Greens foster the narrow divisive political con trick of New Zealand nationalism as eagerly as Helen Clark.
Rod Donald's last political action was to host a Green function for business leaders with the specific aim of showing them the Greens were business friendly.
There have been and still are a lot of good folks in the green movement, but the party is a fully fledged part of the capitalist club.

Don Franks
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Think you're basically right about the Greens, but I don't see a whole heap of radicals being supportive of them, outside of a very cynical "probably better than anybody else likely to get into parliament" attitude from a few people.

Cheers
Sam Buchanan
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

If you stand too close to shit, it will eventually rub off on you and you will eventually smell of shit. Parliament has a way of doing that and only the most resilient survive with a shadow of their former beliefs, the rest reek of shit.

George Rangiaho
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Couldn't agree more.
"People will swim through shit if you put a few bob in it." - Peter Sellars, The Magic Christian
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Take your point about parliament George, but maintain it is possible to stand close to shit all day and not come away smelling of shit.
I manage that in my cleaning job.

Don
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

False argument. In a cleaning job you don't have to socially interact with the filth or be paid to identify with it.
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Yup. There's a big difference between cleaning out a cess pit and living in one.
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Note the complete failure of the groups like the Alliance and RAM to create a viable parliamentary block to the left of the Greens. This suggests that to the degree that any useful leftish reform can be won through parliament, leftists and radicals are happy to let the Greens try to achieve them. Some of us don't mind giving them a 10 minute leg-up every 3 years to have a go at it.

But this does not mean we see a Greens government as the solution to the problems caused by capitalism. I encourage people to work in the Greens if I can't convince them it wouldn't be. Personally I hope Green activists' experience at the parliamentary coalface will eventually convince them to participate in a movement towards an antistate, anticapitalist society. If we're wrong and the Greens somehow "fix capitalism" through parliament, I won't complain, it'd sure cut down my workload. Either way, it's a win-win scenario.

Even if I was a deluded Greens cheerleader, I wouldn't find Moore's article very convincing. For example, linking benefit rates to a fixed percentage of the average wage, is a lot less vague than 'reversing Labour's benefit cuts', which proposes precisely what? Even if benefits were lifted to 1984 levels (adjusted for inflation), would that protect them from further erosion by inflation? The Greens policy whose vagueness John sneered at, explicitly does that.

Also he's plain wrong on a number of points:
"this allows Norman and co to enter negotiations post-election with no ‘bottom-lines"

Actually the Greens have recently announced 12 bottom lines.
www.stuff.co.nz/4721621a23917.html
"protect workers' rights and raise the minimum wage" too vague for you? All political rhetoric has a degree of vagueness, but the Greens has something a lot more specific (albeit limited) to offer people than "get rid of capitalism and replace it with something nice" which is the level of vision most of the revolutionary left works on.

Greens oppose to allowing workers to be imported from other countries, and sent home again when work dries up, like so much leased machinery. Generally countries with overtly authoritarian regimes, which they can be threatened with being returned to at any time if they don't behave. This puts them on par with Peter's?!? Please. Get real. I think you'll find the Greens policies on *permanent* immigration are based on the population this country can sustainably carry, not racism (a la Winston First) or business (a la National/ Labour's skills or cash for entry approach).

As for the suggestion that ties to union bureaucrats makes for a working class party, this is clearly delusional. Labour has such ties. Are they a working class party? Moore and other critics of the Greens "rightward drift" (say it enough times and people will believe it?) find it convenient to forget that it was a private member's bill introduced by Sue Bradford that raised the minimum wage, and dealt a major blow to youth rates. I think Sue would agree that her bill would not have passed without the work of the activists, including many from the Greens, who supported campaigns like SupersizeMyPay, but credit where it's due for effort.

The majority of workers in this country are no longer organized in the traditional union sense. While I support the rebuilding of a fighting union movement (preferably along syndicalist lines, rather than the traditional Stalinism of the CTU old school), workers now organize through a wide range of non-government, non-profit structures as well as unions, eg religious organizations, single-issue campaigns, societies and parties, ideological groupings etc I argue that respectful working relationships with a wide range of such groups is the mark of being integrated with the working class today.

The most common evidence used for the Green's supposed "rightward drift" is the participation of businesspeople. People running their own sole trader/ partnerships small businesses are self-exploiting workers, not capitalists. Most of the organic farmers, natural medicine practitioners etc who run businesses and support the Greens fall into this category. Besides, radical lefties have often participated in popular fronts with people who are traditionally classified as 'right wing'. It is precisely through such non-sectarian work that a non-dogmatic, grassroots revolutionary theory and practice evolves. Not by putting a left-right dividing line down the population and getting one half to shoot the other half (white or not).

Anti-Greens rhetoric like Moore's, Chris Trotter's and those of the Workers Party, and the Alliance, are quite clearly based on the fact they see the Greens as competitors for a 'left-wing' vote they would like to see go elsewhere (ie to them or their favoured party). Sure, be cautious of those in the Greens taking the parliamentary road seriously. Be just as cautious of those attacking the Greens (and just as often groups in the radical and revolutionary movements) "from the left".

Love and Rage
Strypey
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

BTW In fact it is precisely Greens activists' willingness to work with marxists, anarchists etc on shared concerns like climate change, mining on conservation land etc that shows they are open to meaningful participation by, and co-operation with, the organized working class.

Strypey
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

The original post implicitly asks 'who speaks for the left', then offers some rather dodgy reasons for it not being the Greens. Maybe so, but its also not 'the left' as represented by the argument of the poster, that speaks. What speaks is absence. The absence of people and the absence within the left.

I find Strypey's arguments to be much more persuasive, with a better grasp of the historical and current situation. But since it doesnt focus on absences, I'll add my bit also.

It will be very interesting to see how the original poster deals with the relationship between the Maori Party and 'the left'. Surely the Maori party, with its potentially large mass vote, and its significant connection to many workers and marginalised people, is where 'the left' should be concerned, and theorising, more than over those terrible but limited in numbers networking Greens.

Or are the Greens considered much more threatening ideologically, as representing the dreaded triangles or even quadrangles, that supposedly threaten the unity of correct left thought? Arguments based on unities and simplistic binaries sound very patriarchal to me. I think the Greens have a reputation for promoting womens' empowerment, and women are the workers most represented in the core forms of labour, these being reproductive and caring work. The exploitation of womens' labour is currently worsening relative to men, so as a man I am very aware that analyses that talk only about the left, and not about concurrent patriarchal exploitation, are more the problem than the solution.

Perhaps these absent guests at the table are the actual point of the post. The post seems to promote the isolation of the left, (in its own metaphor, the left as portrayed has already taken both of Morpheus' manipulative pills), far more than it makes a convincing case for any 'Green dilution' of the left.

cheers
Steve L
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

John has obviously hit a nerve here.

It was a nice comfy option for a lot of unthinking protesters to vote Green and now he's gone and spoiled it with some unwelcome home truths.
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Steve - While the Maori Party certainly have some left wing flaxroots activists (as do the Greens, for that matter), it is by no means a left wing party (neither are the Greens, of course). See the social conservatism present in some of their MPs / policies, and their policy (seen on yesterday's news) of abolishing the unemployment benefit for just two examples.
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

"See the social conservatism present in some of their MPs / policies, and their policy (seen on yesterday's news) of abolishing the unemployment benefit for just two examples."

This is a dishonest argument, ignoring *enormous* gaps between the Greens (who support social welfare) and the Māori party who have just caved into workfare. But let's not forget the Māori Party started out supporting Mapp's 90-day-sacking bill, and ended up opposing it. Some oliticians, like some extra-parliamentary activists, are capable of changing their positions if a counterposition is argued convincingly. Others in both arenas are ideologically fixed and wouldn't know a rational argument if it bit them on the head.

As for social conservatism? The left is shot through with it. Three words - cannabis law reform. A serious political issue that disproportionately affects the poor, the coloured, and the young, who end up with criminal records and mental health issue from the trauma of being harrassed by cops and imprisoned. The CLR campaigns challenge a failed social policy that increases police powers to spy on these people, invade their homes, and take their few belongings (much like the Activism Suppression Act does).

Some on the left support reform. Others make sneering comments about stoners and hippies. Social conservatism is as much a problem in the extra-parliamentary left as it is in the Māori Party and more than in the Greens.

As for the anonymous coward talking about hitting nerves, let's hear some rational rebuttal of the points I made against John's piece, and I'll give you some more examples of the factual mistakes and misinterpretations it's shot through with.

I have criticisms of the Greens, their organizational style, and their policies, but I like to think they are intellectually honest, and based roughly in *reality*.

Peace
Strypey
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Hi Asher,

Ooops, I didnt mean to imply that the Maori Party currently is a left wing party, in the sense of being significantly class/worker oriented. I meant that it seems roughly no more or less so than the Greens. So I wonder about this supposed support by radical left for the Greens, but not the Maori Party? Especially considering the 'tripod' explanation should also create radical left support for the Maori Party?

Since the Greens seem to have a more middle class support base and perspective, the Maori Party seems to have more potential than the Greens for moving to the left, either from internal pressures, or from some form of external competition.

But that doesnt look like its happening with the Greens. And the current leadership of the Maori Party would seem to need to be challenged from the ground for any significant change in direction.

But thats strategic thinking once again. It doesnt seem justified in this situation, because I assume radical left people voting for the Greens will be voting tactically (well, why vote at all if taking a purely strategic approach).

Such tactics might make equivalent sense with the Maori Party, regardless of how the strategic significance, including class, was understood.

The Maori Parties potential electoral support seems currently much greater than the Greens. So I think any useful analysis of voting from a left perspective needs to also include the Maori Party, or seem largely irrelevant, even though the Maori Party isnt currently a left party.

cheers
Steve L
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

"The CLR campaigns challenge a failed social policy that increases police powers to spy on these people, invade their homes, and take their few belongings (much like the Activism Suppression Act does)."

This should be read to mean that the War on Some Drugs has similar ruling class ideology and police tactics to the War on Activism. Obviously I'm not saying that the campaign for drug law reform is like the TSA :P Oops!

Oh and Asher, in case you took offence, that comment about ideological fixation was a scatter-shot, not a personal pot-shot. I didn't actually notice you'd made that comment until just now.

Strypey
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Ah, sorry for the misunderstanding Steve.

There has been left support for the Maori Party - notably Matt McCarten and some other remnants of the Alliance not long after its founding, and more recently Grant Morgan and RAM/SW have been kissing the ground the Maori Party walks on. I'd agree that there has been more support for the Greens though, of course.

Strypey - will respond to your comment later - gotta go out and do a Katipo Books stall now.
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

Not SURE that I get the point. The Green Party is SUPPOSED to be, well green. Not left, not right, GREEN. Just because it isn't NECESSARILY a "left party" doesn't make it "capitalist". Just because many (most?) greens don't believe that there are any possible solutions within capitalism doesn't make them "socialist" (it's us on the "left" who tend to think that there are ONLY two possible systems).

If the "leftists" want the "greens" to ally with them (on the issues dear to leftists but perhaps irrelevant as far as the environment is concerned) then the left has to actually support some environmantal planks -- has to do MORE than simply say nonesense like "capitalism is destroying the environment -- we'll destroy capitalism -- vote for us" (in case you really don't get it, the left has to actually make a case that they WILL be better for the environment. With no evidence presented (actual models) there is no GOOD reason for "environmentals" to think them two peas in a pod --- it's "industrial civilization", stupid.
 

Re: The Greens and Their Left Wing Friends

 

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