Committee for a Workers' International
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The Committee for a Workers' International (CWI) is an international association of Trotskyist parties. Members include the Socialist Party of England and Wales, the Socialist Party (Ireland), the Socialist Party (Australia) the Democratic Socialist Movement in South Africa and Nigeria and groups using the name Socialist Alternative in the United States, Canada and New Zealand along with parties in Sweden, Germany - representatives in 40 countries worldwide making the CWI the second largest Trotskyist international after the United Secretariat of the Fourth International.
The CWI was founded in 1974 by supporters of what was then called the Militant Tendency in Britain, Sweden, Ireland and several other countries. Until the early 1990s CWI sections generally pursued a policy of entrism into social democratic or labour parties. This strategy ended in that decade as the CWI developed an analysis that these parties had changed in nature and had become simply capitalist parties. This was strongly resisted by Ted Grant, Militant's founder, who was expelled in 1992 after he and his supporters stopped paying dues in preparation of founding their own organisation which became the International Marxist Tendency.
Grant dismissed the leadership of the CWI, especially Peter Taaffe, as sectarians because they had deserted, in his view, the mass parties of the working class. Grant cited the success of the Militant/RSL in Britain, which as entryists had secured Dave Nellist, Terry Fields and Pat Wall as MPs. However this was countered with the argument that the clear determination of the Labour leadership under Neil Kinnock to destroy Trotskyist influence in the party as well as Labour's move away from socialist policies had changed the situation in the party and it was no longer possible for Militant to carry out activity in the way it had been done up to the late 1980s.
Since their open turn CWI sections have, in a number of countries, run candidates under their own name electing Joe Higgins to the Irish parliament Dáil Éireann as a Socialist Party candidate as well as several councillors in Britain, specifically in London and Coventry, and the Irish Republic. The CWI also has elected members of regional legislatures or local councils in Sweden, Germany, Australia, the Netherlands (members of the Dutch Socialist Party who are also CWI members), Pakistan, Sri Lanka and in the former Soviet Union. In the 2005 Sri Lanka presidential elections the CWI affiliate, the United Socialist Party, came third while gaining the highest left vote.
CWI members also played a leading role in founding the Scottish Socialist Party though, due to a split, leading SSP members such as Tommy Sheridan are no longer in the CWI. Both the CWI and Tommy Sheridan have now left the SSP however. CWI members stood as National Conscience Party candidates in the 2003 Nigerian elections, gaining the best results that the NCP achieved. In Germany CWI members have been active in the new WASG since its foundation in 2004 and in December 2005 were elected part of the new leadership of its Berlin district that wants to run candidates on a clear anti-cuts programme in the 17 September 2006 Berlin regional election. In Brazil CWI members helped found the P-SOL Socialism and Freedom Party after left wing parliamentarians were expelled from the PT.
[edit] List of CWI sections
- Australia - Socialist Party ([1])
- Austria - Sozialistische LinksPartei (Socialist Left Party, [2])
- Belgium (Flemish) Linkse Socialistische Partij (Socialist Left Party) / (French) Mouvement pour une Alternative Socialiste (Movement for a Socialist Alternative) [3]
- Brazil - Socialismo Revolucionario (Revolutionary Socialism[4])
- Chile - Socialismo Revolucionario (Revolutionary Socialism)
- Cyprus - CWI Cyprus
- Czech Republic - Socialistická alternativa Budoucnost (Socialist Alternative the Future)
- England & Wales - Socialist Party of England and Wales
- France - Gauche Révolutionnaire (Revolutionary Left)
- Germany - Sozialistische Alternative (Socialist Alternative)
- Greece - Xekinima - Socialist Internationalist Organisation
- Ireland - Socialist Party
- India - Dudiyora Horaata (New Socialist Alternative[5])
- Israel- Maavak Sozialisti (Socialist Struggle) ([6])
- Italy - Lotta per il Socialismo (Struggle for Socialism)
- Japan - Kokusai Rentai
- Kazakhstan - Socialist Resistance of Kazakhstan ([7])
- Netherlands - Offensief
- New Zealand - Socialist Alternative
- Norway-Sosialistisk Offensiv
- Nigeria - Democratic Socialist Movement ([8])
- Pakistan - The Socialist Movement
- Poland - Grupa na rzecz Partii Robotniczej (Group for a Workers Party)
- Portugal - Alternativa Socialista (Socialist Alternative)
- Russia - Sotsialisticheskoye Soprotivleniye (Socialist Resistance[9])
- Scotland - International Socialists (Scotland), CWI platform in Solidarity (Scotland)
- Spain - Manifiesto (Manifesto)
- Sri Lanka - United Socialist Party
- South Africa - Democratic Socialist Movement
- Sweden - Rättvisepartiet Socialisterna (Socialist Justice Party)
- Ukraine - Robitnichi Sprotiv (Workers Resistance)
- United States - Socialist Alternative
[edit] External links
- SocialistWorld.net CWI News and analysis
- Marxist.net CWI Theoretical site
- Socialist Party publications and Socialist Alternative literature - Two sites containing links to many publications of the CWI.
[edit] See also
nl:Comité voor een Arbeidersinternationale sv:Committee for a Workers International

