Spainās newest political party is also its most popular. With roots in theĀ 2011Ā indignadosĀ movementĀ (also called the 15-M movement), Podemos emergedĀ inĀ January with a petition launched by a few dozen intellectuals. In MayāsĀ European Parliament elections, just months after its formation, the leftistĀ partyĀ captured 8 percent of the vote. It is now the second largest political party in Spain by membership and the largest in the polls. Even theĀ Financial TimesĀ admits,Ā āthe new party appears to be on course to shatter Spainās established two-party system.ā
At a meeting held early this year in Valladolid, Spain, Podemos General Secretary Pablo IglesiasĀ offeredĀ his thoughts on how the Left can win. Below is an excerpt from that talk. The transcript and translation were prepared forĀ JacobinĀ by Enrique Diaz-Alvarez.
Iknow very well that the key to understanding the history of the past five hundredĀ years is the emergence of specific social categories, called āclasses.ā And I am going to tell you an anecdote. When the 15-M movement first started, at the Puerta del Sol, some students from my department, the department of political science, very political students ā they had read Marx, they had read Lenin ā they participated for the first time in their lives with normal people.
They despaired: āThey donāt understand anything! We tell them, you are a worker, even if you donāt know it!ā People would look at them as if they were from another planet. And the students went home very depressed, saying, āThey donāt understand anything.ā
[Iād reply to them], āCanāt you see that the problem is you? That politics has nothing to do with being right, that politics is about succeeding?ā One can have the best analysis, understand the keys to political developments since the sixteenth century, know that historical materialism is the key to understanding social processes. And what are you going to do ā scream that to people? āYou are workers and you donāt even know it!ā
The enemy wants nothing more than to laugh at you. You can wear a t-shirt with the hammer and sickle. You can even carry a huge flag, and then go back home with your flag, all while the enemy laughs at you. Because the people, the workers, they prefer the enemy to you. They believe him. They understand him when he speaks. They donāt understand you. And maybe you are right! Maybe you can ask your children to write that on your tombstone: āHe was always right ā but no one ever knew.ā
When you study successful transformational movements, you see that the key to success is to establish a certain identity between your analysis and what the majority feels. And that is very hard. It implies riding out contradictions.
Do you think I have any ideological problem with a forty-eight hour or a seventy-two-hour wildcat strike? Not in the least! The problem is that organizing a strike has nothing to do with how badly you or I want to do it. It has to do with union strength, and both you and I are insignificant there.
You and I may wish that earth were a paradise for all mankind. We can wish whatever we want, and put it on a t-shirt. But politics is about strength, it is not about wishes or what we say in assemblies. In this country there are only two unions with the ability to organize a general strike: theĀ CCOOĀ and theĀ UGT. Do I like that? No. But it is what it is, and organizing a general strike is very difficult.
Iāve manned the picket lines in front of the bus depots in Madrid. The people there, at dawn, you know where they had to go? To work. They were no scabs. But they would be fired from their jobs, because at their jobs there were no unions to defend them. Because the workers who can defend themselves, like those in the shipyards, in the mines, they have strong unions. But the kids that work as telemarketers, or at pizza joints, or the girls working in retail, they cannot defend themselves.
They are going to be canned the day after the strike, and you are not going to be there, and I am not going to be there, and no union is going to be there guaranteeing them that theyāre going to sit down with the boss and tell him: youād better not fire this person for exercising their right to strike, because you are going to pay a price for it. That doesnāt happen, no matter how enthusiastic we may be.
Politics is not what you or I would like it to be. It is what it is, and it is terrible. Terrible. And thatās why we must talk about popular unity, and be humble. Sometimes you have to talk to people who donāt like your language, with whom the concepts you use to explain donāt resonate. What does that tell us? That we have been defeated for many years. Losing all the time implies just that: that peopleās ācommon senseā is different [from what we think is right]. But that is not news. Revolutionaries have always known that. The key is to succeed in making ācommon senseā go in a direction of change.
CĆ©sar Rendueles, a very smart guy, says most people are against capitalism, and they donāt know it. Most people defend feminism and they havenāt read Judith Butler or Simone de Beauvoir. Whenever you see a father doing the dishes or playing with his daughter, or a grandfather teaching his grandkid to share his toys, there is more social transformation in that than in all the red flags you can bring to a demonstration. And if we fail to understand that those things can serve as unifiers, they will keep laughing at us.
Thatās how the enemy wants us. He want us small, speaking a language no one understands, in a minority, hiding behind our traditional symbols. He is delighted with that, because he knows that as long as we are like that, we are not dangerous.
We can have a really radical discourse, say we want to do a general wildcat strike, talk about the people in arms, brandish symbols, carry portraits of the great revolutionaries to our demonstrations ā they are delighted with that! They laugh at us. However, when you gather together hundreds, thousands of people, when you start convincing the majority, even those who voted for the enemy ā thatās when they start to be afraid. And that is called āpolitics.ā That is what we need to learn.
There was a fellow here who talked about the Soviets in 1905. There wasĀ that bald guyĀ ā a genius. He understood the concrete analysis of a concrete situation. In a time of war, in 1917, when the regime had crashed in Russia, he said a very simple thing to the Russians, whether they were soldiers, peasants, or workers. He said: ābread and peace.ā
And when he said āBread and Peace,ā which is what everyone wanted ā for the war to be over and to have enough to eat ā many Russians who had no idea whether they were āleftā or āright,ā but did know that they were hungry, they said: āThe bald guy is right.ā And the bald guy did very well. He didnāt talk to the Russians about ādialectical materialism,ā he talked to them about ābread and peace.ā And that is one of the main lessons of the twentiethĀ century.
Trying to transform society by mimicking history, mimicking symbols, is ridiculous. There is no repeating other countriesā experiences, past historical events. The key is to analyze processes, historyās lessons. And to understand that at each point in time, ābread and peace,ā if it is not connected to what people think and feel, is just repeating, as farce, a tragic victory from the past.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate