Review: The Party is always right

Alex Steiner 03.21.2025

From left to right: Aileen Jennings, Gerry Healy, Mike Banda, Cliff Slaughter


Aidan Beatty’s book, The Party is Always Right, is the first comprehensive historical investigation of the Workers Revolutionary Party (WRP) as well as its long-time founder-leader Gerry Healy. There have been other historical accounts, mostly by former members of the WRP such as Alex Mitchell and Clare Cowen,  but those were personal memoirs rather than  comprehensive histories. Beatty did a great deal of original research pulling together material from all the available memoirs as well as numerous documents located in various archives in the UK, the US, and Ireland.  In addition, he conducted dozens of interviews with former members of the WRP and others who had personal interaction with Healy, the party, and its international affiliates.  Given that many of the events depicted were never officially recorded at the time these interviews contribute an important dimension to Beatty’s historical account, providing an oral history to complement the documentary narrative. The inclusion of this oral history has come under severe criticism from the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS), whose editors claim to represent the legacy of Gerry Healy. I will address this and other objections from that quarter in a follow-up article.

My overall assessment of Beatty’s work is that he has made a positive contribution in bringing a wealth of factual material before the reader that wipes away much of the mythology subscribed to by both opponents and supporters of Healy.  This is a welcome addition to the literature that has up till now been dominated by very one-sided and distorted historical narratives.  Beatty’s account is not likely to dissuade those who today claim to be the heirs to Healy’s legacy, but it should be welcomed by anyone who is capable of thinking objectively. In addition to the purely historical questions surrounding Healy and the Workers Revolutionary Party, Beatty raises a number of important questions about how to go about building a socialist movement.  While I strongly disagree with his own response, they are nevertheless legitimate questions that should be discussed, and Beatty deserves credit for raising them.  

On the negative side, there are huge problems in the way Beatty deals with theoretical and political issues that characterize  Trotskyism in general and the peculiar form those questions took on in the Workers Revolutionary Party.   The first problem is that Beatty does not engage with the theoretical issues in a serious way. In the best of cases, he describes the issues in a few sentences and makes no attempt to delve into them in any but the most perfunctory manner. In the worst case, he trivializes them.

Another problem is that he conflates Trotskyism with the Workers Revolutionary Party, and since he also  – to some extent - conflates the Workers Revolutionary Party with the individual Gerry Healy, we wind up with a very distorted account. If you are looking for insights into Trotskyism, you will not find them in Beatty’s account of Healy and the WRP. 

Before delving into the more problematic areas of Beatty’s book, I will comment on his strictly historical narrative of Healy and the WRP, particularly in areas where I can provide insights from my personal experience as a leading member of the Workers League in the 1970’s.

Beatty’s nuanced account of the Workers Revolutionary Party

As a participant in the movement Beatty discusses and someone who was personally acquainted with Healy and interacted with him and many of the leaders of the WRP, I can attest that the facts Beatty presents are for the most part accurate. Before proceeding any further, I should add that my assessment is in sharp disagreement with the modern-day self-proclaimed guardians of Healy’s legacy, namely the World Socialist Web Site and its related institutions.  The latter have painted Beatty as departing from the norms of a biography and instead demonizing Healy as some kind of “monster.”  I will deal with the WSWS attacks on Beatty and his book elsewhere but suffice it to say for now that I found the WSWS allegations to not only lack merit but to be positively repulsive in that they constitute a campaign of ad hominem attacks. To be sure Beatty does not hide his repugnance toward Healy.  But at the same time, he provides a mostly fair and impartial account of Healy and the WRP in situations in which it would have been easy enough to trash them if that was his real agenda.

To take one example, Beatty devotes an entire chapter to an interrogation of the validity of the charges about the infiltration of police and intelligence agents into the WRP and how much that may have contributed to the split in 1985 rapidly followed by the demise of the WRP.  He quotes Ken Livingstone, the former Labour Party mayor of London - and one-time personal friend of Healy - who said at an event commemorating Healy,

I haven’t the slightest doubt that the upheavals that split apart the Workers Revolutionary Party, were not some accident or some clash of personalities. They were a sustained and deliberate decision by MI5 to smash that organization, because they feared it was becoming too pivotal in terms of domestic politics, linking too many international struggles with progressive elements both inside and outside the British labour movement. [1]

Healy’s followers have latched onto Livingstone’s allegations as evidence that the sexual abuse charges against Healy were spurious. But the vast majority who repudiated Healy have also dismissed  Livingstone’s suspicions.  Were Beatty just doing a hatchet job on Healy, as the WSWS has alleged, he would have dismissed Livingstone’s comments as well, arguing that the dissolution of the WRP was solely the doing of Healy.  But Beatty does not do that. Instead, he does a creditable job of going through all the  evidence either confirming or refuting Livingtone’s statement. His conclusion is a well-balanced and nuanced judgement. Livingstone’s suspicions of infiltration of the WRP by MI5 and other intelligence agencies have some basis in the evidence uncovered in recent years, but it is also a mistake to attribute the collapse of the WRP to those actions. Beatty writes:

In the most narrow sense, Livingstone’s claim was absurd; the WRP was a paranoid entity, riven by personal animosities. And the immediate catalyst for the 1985 split, Gerry Healy’s sexual abuse of female party members, was undeniably horrific. In such a situation, there is no need for a deep state deus ex machina to explain how and why the organisation fractured. Even if there is scant evidence that MI5 played a stealthy role in splitting the WRP, though Livingstone’s claims do have a certain basis in reality. [2]

But perhaps  an even more nuanced view is required? While we can agree that the infiltration of MI5 agents was not the cause of the fracturing of the WRP, the existence of agent provocateurs within the WRP undoubtedly fed the flames of the factional and personal conflicts that were unleashed with the revelations of Healy’s abuse of female comrades.  Just how much of an impact the work of the agent provocateurs had on the fate of the WRP is something we will likely never know for sure, but it would be naïve to completely dismiss their significance.

In going through all the documentation that has become available in the last few decades concerning the infiltration of left wing groups and the WRP in particular by the forces of the state, Beatty concludes, correctly in my opinion, that whereas nothing like a “smoking gun” has ever surfaced showing that the WRP split in 1985 was caused by MI5 agents within the WRP – the sexual scandal outing Healy was more than sufficient reason on its own – it was likely that MI5 agents had infiltrated the WRP at the time of the split.

Abuse in the Workers Revolutionary Party

It is important that Beatty documents the  truly repressive nature of Healy and his organization, especially as there have been attempts by some of the inheritors of Healy's legacy to downplay the darker side of “Healyism.” The WRP was an organization that normalized the abuse of party members. Most notorious was the sexual abuse of young female party members by Healy personally, but there was also widespread physical abuse of comrades within that organization. When I was a member, I was not aware of the sexual abuse at all and was quite shocked when I learned of it in 1985.  In a scandal that hit the tabloid press, it was revealed that Healy was a sexual predator who had abused dozens of female comrades over the years. A WRP Control Commission report listed 26 individuals who had been so abused by Healy, but the real number was likely much higher.  And this had been going for over two decades! [3]

But while sexual abuse was mostly, if not exclusively,[4] a private affair confined to Healy, physical abuse, particularly the beating of comrades, was not confined to Healy but was also carried out by other members of the WRP.  I personally never witnessed an incident of physical abuse. However I did hear stories about such practices.

One thing I did witness first-hand was the psychological and verbal abuse  of party members.  I was present at some of the Central Committee meetings presided over by Healy where longtime comrades were practically forced to confess their various sins in the face of a public browbeating by Healy.  Those “sins” generally consisted of giving into middle class idealism and the various evils that flow from it. This was a regular ritual, and it was to some extent replicated in the American group that was sympathetic with the WRP, the Workers League – although not to the extremes that I witnessed in the UK.  I never saw anything quite like what I witnessed in the Central Committee meetings of the Workers Revolutionary Party. These meetings would go on for hours and hours, and they invariably consisted of a political report by Mike Banda or another WRP leader that was then employed to reinforce the message of a deepening crisis that required all members to redouble their efforts to build a mass revolutionary party.  This somewhat perfunctory political report was then used like a hammer to browbeat the “middle class” members of the Central Committee. Healy would select someone to explain how he or she had failed to fulfill their revolutionary responsibilities.  Several hours of browbeating would follow.  Inevitably, the subject of Healy’s ire would then “confess” to his or her sins. Even so the harangues would continue. As the meeting dragged on, comrade after comrade would rise to demonstrate their indignation, each trying to outdo the denunciations of other members in this star chamber proceeding. I was a witness at several Central Committee meetings in which Cliff Slaughter, Cyril Smith, and Bill Hunter were abused and humiliated in this way.

Simon Pirani, a former leader of the WRP’s youth movement, provided a vivid account of another Central Committee meeting,

At a CC meeting, Healy shouted at C, slapped him on the face and kicked him. C was not being beaten up; he was being humiliated by a very unfit man nearly three times his age. I sat there with the other fit young members of the CC and said nothing. A few months later C was beaten up, when, having been expelled, he tried to enter a meeting to question leading WRP members openly.

Pirani goes on to explain the connection between the acceptance within the WRP of the public humiliation and physical abuse of party members to the secretive sexual predation that Healy practiced for many years,

Unlike the sexual abuse, C’s humiliation and expulsion took place in broad daylight. Many of us knew about it. In my view, our acceptance of such bullying in public created the sort of organisation within which Healy felt the confidence to practice serial sexual abuse in private. [5]

Encounters with Gerry Healy

I first met Gerry Healy a few months after I joined the Workers League and had a number of personal encounters with him in the years that followed. He was certainly a very impressive person, especially to a young neophyte. He could speak to workers in a language they understood, and he was able to convey revolutionary ideas in a way that they could grasp. This was impressive as the party intellectuals were never able to have that kind of bond with workers. He had an understanding of the history of the English working class that he was able to bring out in the historical consciousness of his audience.

He was a powerful speaker.  But one shouldn't make more of that than it was.  I would not go so far as David North who said Healy “was one  of the genuinely great working-class  orators of the 20th century.” [6]  Really, the entire 20th century? One should not forget that Trotsky was considered one of the greatest orators of all time and he also lived in the 20th century! One should also keep in mind that Healy’s initial political training was in the Communist Party before he became a Trotskyist and that the Communist Party was known for training its working-class cadre in the art of oratory. So while Healy was certainly adept as an orator, there is no evidence that he was a more exceptional orator than others trained in the CP.

Healy and ‘the practice of cognition’

But if Healy did exhibit some positive qualities as a political leader, he also exhibited weaknesses that eventually undermined all his positive contributions. He was never an original thinker. Even worse, his ego would not let him accept his limitations, and, given the complete lack of feedback from leading comrades who were fearful of challenging him, he became convinced of his own unique greatness. So he covered up his deficiency in the area of philosophy by essentially creating his own philosophical language. By the early 1970’s, this unique pseudo-philosophical language, what Heally called “the practice of cognition,” became a substitute for a Marxist understanding of philosophical issues.  That was something many of us grew up with as every member was required to participate in these exercises.

Diagram of Healy's 'practice of cognition' from Corinna Lotz's book, Gerry Healy: A revolutionary life


Healy created a ritualized reading of Lenin's Volume 38 (Lenin’s Philosophical Notebooks ) that was foisted on all the comrades.  It was a reading of Hegel that reflected Healy’s own confused thinking rather than anything Hegel or Lenin actually said.[7] In time Healy’s “practice of cognition” replaced practically all the educational work that had previously been undertaken by the WRP.    Classes on Marx’s Capital at the College of Marxist Education in Derbyshire – taught by party intellectuals like Peter Jeffries or Cyril Smith -  were invariably cancelled by Healy and replaced with sessions on “the practice of cognition”.  

Cyril Smith

Beatty covers this area of Healy’s legacy in the chapter of his book called “Healyism.”  In it, he quotes Alisdair MacIntyre, a well-known philosopher who was briefly a member of the Socialist Labour League before running afoul of Healy. In response to Healy’s accusation of “idealism,” MacIntyre responded:

You charge me with idealism. It is time to call your intellectual bluff. Frankly from your letter, I do not think you know what idealism is. I think that you are throwing a piece of vocabulary about in the hope of impressing the membership. [8]

Alasdair MacIntyre

Beatty aptly comments about this episode,

Healy seemed to have an inferiority complex in relation to actual intellectuals within the party and certainly was not a serious intellectual himself. [9]

Achievements of the Workers Revolutionary Party

Given the distorted internal culture prevalent in the WRP, it would be wrong to completely dismiss the achievements of the WRP and its predecessor organizations under Healy’s leadership. Perhaps most notable was the intervention of the Socialist Labour League in the crisis that wracked the Communist Party following the revelations of the crimes of Stalin in Khruschev’s secret speech of 1956 as well as the Hungarian Revolution.  An important layer of Communist Party intellectuals, including Cliff Slaughter, were won over to Trotskyism as a result of that intervention. Nothing similar had ever been achieved by any Trotskyist group anywhere.

Another important achievement was winning over a majority of the Labour Party youth movement, the Young Socialists, to the program of Trotskyism and the capturing of the editorial board of its publication, Keep Left.  The SLL/WRP was also able to win over an important cadre of working-class members during the tumultuous decade of the 1960’s and early 1970’s. Neither should the recruitment of an important layer of cultural workers from the film and the theater industry, including celebrities such as Vanessa Redgrave, be dismissed.  Many of those who joined the SLL/WRP or its sister organizations during those years saw in them  a serious movement that, unlike the propaganda groups that were typical of Trotskyism,  could pose a genuine challenge to the rule of capitalism. Admittedly, there was an element of self-delusion in all this as the SLL/WRP never even came close to becoming a mass revolutionary party. And in the end, all of these achievements were undone with the implosion of the Workers Revolutionary Party. But it would still be an affront to the many comrades who worked tirelessly for decades in the SLL/WRP not to recognize those achievements even if they were of a transitory nature.

Vanessa Redgrave campaigning for the WRP

Let us now examine what I consider the highly problematic side of Beatty’s book.

The WRP was not only Gerry Healy

The other side of the story is that the Workers Revolutionary  Party was not only Gerry Healy. It was more than Gerry Healy.  This is often obscured in Beatty’s book.  I was first attracted to the movement because of the ideas it expressed before I heard of Gerry Healy.  It happened when I read about Trotsky’s analysis of fascism in an article in the Bulletin,  the newspaper of the Workers League.  At that time, the late 1960’s, it was fashionable among New Leftists to label everything about “Amerika” as fascist, and, having been around New Left radicalism at that point, I tended to go along with that outlook without thinking much about it.   But when I opened the copy of the Bulletin I had purchased, I read an article about the Black Panthers and how their mistaken assessment of America as being “fascist” can only lead to a politics of despair because of what it implied - that the working class has already been defeated when in fact that was not the case.  This opened my eyes to the possibility of Marxism as a method of critical and scientific analysis that has important implications for one’s political practice.

I didn't join the Workers League immediately after I read that article, but I recalled it when I came into contact with comrades from the Workers League a year later.

What further attracted me to the Workers League and the politics that came along with it was the emphasis on ideas, particularly on philosophy. I always thought that having a proper philosophical approach was absolutely necessary in order to develop a proper political perspective and a proper political practice and, having myself come from a background as a philosophy student, I was strongly attracted to the emphasis on philosophy. I did not realize at the time that this emphasis was mostly a matter of paying lip service to a goal they never actually implemented.

A superficial approach to theoretical questions

I have indicated that one of the big problems of Beatty’s book is its trivialization of some of the key theoretical issues that were being contested in the Trotskyist movement. One particularly egregious example is Beatty’s discussion of the theory of permanent revolution. In explaining the difference between Trotskyism and Stalinism, Beatty writes,

Trotskyists positioned themselves as the true heirs of the Russian Revolution, which they argued Stalin and parties like the CPGB had degraded and sullied.

and,

In opposition to the Stalinist position that the USSR should develop Socialism in One Country, Trotskyists advocated  Permanent Revolution, in which Communism would be spread rapidly and globally. [10]

Here no attempt is made to explain Trotsky’s theory of permanent revolution and the immense theoretical heritage behind it dating back as far as Marx’s address to the Communist League in 1850 wherein he declared:

…it is our interest and our task to make the revolution permanent, until all more or less possessing classes have been forced out of their position of dominance.[11]

Instead we are presented with a caricature of the issues that were debated in the Communist International in the 1920’s and 1930’s without any definition of what the issues really were other than two competing slogans and no clue as to how that debate could be adjudicated. The reader is left with the impression that whether one chooses ‘permanent revolution’ or ‘socialism in one country’ is largely a matter of taste.

Is democratic centralism inherently authoritarian?

If we go to the fundamental moral lesson  Beatty is pushing throughout his book, it is that democratic centralism necessarily leads to an authoritarian party structure. Beatty cites the Workers Revolutionary Party as perhaps the most extreme example of this authoritarian tendency.

Now it is true that the Workers Revolutionary Party was an extreme example of an authoritarian party structure.  It was a party in which it was impossible to raise differences  with the leadership and one in which factions had to work in secrecy whenever differences over program or policy arose.  The expulsion of a group of about a hundred working class cadre led by Alan Thornett in 1974 served  as a warning of the consequences to be expected if one dared participate in a faction challenging the leadership. [12] Members couldn't openly challenge the leadership and do what one would normally expect - to engage in discussions, conferences, votes on various proposals so as to formulate a political program binding on all party members.  That kind of give and take simply did not exist in the Workers Revolutionary Party, and it  didn't exist in its offshoots in the Workers League and later the Socialist Equality Party either.[13]   

Beatty’s use of the fate of the Workers Revolutionary Party as evidence that a democratic centralist party structure inevitably leads to an authoritarian internal regime is an example of what has been called a Whiggish interpretation of history. He is winding history backwards, in other words, and claiming to find seeds of the future in choices one makes in the present. The obvious fallacy here is that one cannot demonstrate the necessity of the choices one makes leading to one outcome rather than another. The fact that something happened does not mean that it had to have happened that way because something else happened previously.  There are many reasons why parties can degenerate, democratic centralist or not.  So while we can agree with Beatty’s conclusion that “The Workers Revolutionary Party remains a cautionary tale for the modern left,”[14] we strongly disagree with what this cautionary tale tells us.

Are social democratic parties more democratic?

Elsewhere, Beatty muses that perhaps a “looser” party structure, such as those that are characteristic of social democratic type parties, would be more conducive to a democratically run organization. But the history of social democratic-type parties does not bear out such a rosy evaluation. There is hardly a more typical example of the social democratic type than the British Labour Party.  Yet Beatty documents how, when it came to the growth of a revolutionary left faction within its midst, the British Labour Party quickly moved to expel the group.  Beatty writes:

Labour youth members associated with their in-house newspaper, Keep Left, defected to the SLL and became the youth wing of the latter. Keep Left had a circulation of perhaps as high as 10,500 but was proscribed by the Labour Party in May 1962 and three SLL supporters were removed from the National Committee of the Labour Party’s Young Socialists towards the end of that year. [15]

A more recent example is the witch hunt against Jeremy Corbyn and his supporters by the Blairites, which is yet another example of the highly undemocratic nature of the British Labour Party.

One could also cite the  SYRIZA party in Greece. In 2015, when SYRIZA was in power at the height of the economic crisis, the government held a referendum to determine whether Greece should agree to the austerity measures demanded by the European Union. Even though 61% of their population said NO, the prime minister and head of SYRIZA, Alex Tsipras, capitulated to the EU’s demands. So much for listening to the will of the people!

I personally had a similar experience, though on a much smaller scale, with the DSA (Democratic Socialists of America), which is the closest thing that exists in the US to a social democratic-type party. It occurred at a meeting of the DSA branch in Brooklyn years ago when the DSA was trying to decide whether to endorse the candidacy of the well-known actress Cynthia Nixon, who was running for governor of New York. Nixon was running as a “progressive” Democrat of the Bernie Sanders variety, and a number of people at the meeting opposed endorsing her on the grounds that she refused to call herself a socialist. A vote was taken and two-thirds of the people at the meeting said, no, we should not support her.  Other branches in the New York area said the same thing.  Nevertheless, the leadership of the DSA endorsed Nixon regardless.  What one can take from such episodes is that, when it comes to social democratic-type parties, there is a disconnect between what is discussed and voted on by the rank and file and the policy adopted by a tiny elite that actually run the party behind the scenes.

If you go back to the original discussion of democratic centralism in What is to be done?, all Lenin was saying was that a serious political party needs to be “democratic centralist”  in the sense that it must maintain a democratic environment in which members can debate and discuss issues and vote on policies, but that once those policies are agreed upon, then everyone is obligated to adhere to them and fight for them in public.  That's what defines a party as opposed to a loose bunch of individuals.  This, of course, is a general definition that leaves open many details as to implementation. Certainly the kind centralism required of a party operating in secrecy under conditions of illegality, as were Lenin’s Bolsheviks, is not the same as what can be expected from a party functioning openly whose members do not have to fear immediate imprisonment.

Trotsky’s statement ‘The party is always right.’

As part of Beatty’s indictment of democratic centralism, he gives great weight at the beginning of his book to a statement Trotsky once made:

The party in the last analysis is always right because the party is the self- historical instrument given to the proletariat for the solution of its basic Problems. [16]

Beatty makes no attempt to provide any historical context for that quote. Yet the statement as it stands is untenable. One cannot say a party is always right if there are differences within that party, as there were when Trotsky made that statement. After all, what determines which faction in the party is correct? After a free vote, the majority position becomes the one publicly defended by the party.  But that doesn’t necessarily make it “right.”  Is what is “right” determined by the fact that the party makes a decision, or does the party necessarily make a decision because something is in and of itself “right”? When posed in this way, the self-contradictory nature of a statement to the effect that “The party is always right” becomes evident.

If we examine the historical context behind the quote cited by Beatty, we gain a different understanding of its significance.  Beatty cites John Medhurst’s book,  No Less than Mystic: A History of the Russian Revolution,[17] as the source for this quote.  Medhurst in turn cites Robert V. Daniels’s The Conscience of the Revolution: Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia as the source of the quote. Daniels in turn cites the stenographic transcript of the Thirteenth Party Congress, published in Moscow in 1924.  Daniels, unlike Beatty, or for that matter Medhurst, provides some historical context for the quote.  He writes:

The only course open to the Opposition was to recant and to acknowledge the unqualified supremacy of the party. Trotsky undertook to do this, though possibly with sarcastic intent… [18]

Daniels statement points to the precarious position that the nascent Left Opposition found itself in during the Thirteenth Party Congress.  It was conducted during Lenin’s last illness just days before his death, and it followed the so-called “Lenin Levy,” a maneuver by the emerging bureaucracy that brought in hundreds of thousands of new party members whose only loyalty was to the party machinery, immediately changing the character of the party from one of dedicated revolutionaries to one dominated by careerists and yes-men.  Given this unfavorable alignment of forces at the Thirteenth Party Congress, Trotsky made a tactical decision not to openly challenge the majority led by Stalin, a decision that has been debated ever since.  But while it is perfectly reasonable to debate whether Trotsky made the right decision at that time, it is clearly a distortion of Trotsky’s overall position to cite this quote in isolation from the context in which it was made. It’s a good example of cherry-picking quotations to build a case, something that, ironically, is one of the legacies of Healy that Beatty correctly identifies elsewhere.  

Rather than selecting the “The party is always right” as the exemplification of Trotsky’s attitude about the role of the party,  a far more accurate portrait of Trotsky’s mature thinking on this matter can be found in his book on Stalin.  There he wrote,

The Sisyphean labours of those who try to reduce all subsequent developments to a few allegedly fundamental original sins of the Bolshevik Party are both sterile and absurd, as if a political party were a homogeneous entity and an omnipotent factor of history. A political party is only a temporary historical instrument, one of very many instruments and schools of history [my emphasis]. [19]

Developing this thought further Trotsky explained how it was possible for the Bolshevik Party of Lenin to become the bureaucratic dictatorship of Stalin:

The limitation of the party as a historical instrument is expressed in the fact that at a certain point, at a given moment, it begins to disintegrate. Under the tension of external and internal pressures, cracks appear, fissures develop and organs begin to atrophy. This process of decomposition set in, slowly at first, in 1923, and rapidly increased in tempo. The old Bolshevik Party and its old heroic cadres went the way of all flesh; shaken by fevers and spasms and excruciatingly painful attacks, it finally died. In order to establish the regime that is justly called Stalinist, what was necessary was not a Bolshevik Party, but the extermination of the Bolshevik Party.  [20]

Elaborating on this argument Beatty writes:

The heritage that Trotskyists sought to defend was the victorious if also authoritarian party after the Russian Civil War and after Lenin’s death in 1924, rather than the earlier, relatively more democratic party from before 1917 in which factions were allowed form and some criticism of the party leadership was tolerated.[21]

It is not clear who are the  “Trotskyists” Beatty has in mind, but if we examine what Trotsky himself defended, it was not “the victorious and also authoritarian party after the Russian Civil War and after Lenin's death in 1924.”  Rather it was the earlier, far more democratic party prior to 1924, in which factions were allowed to form and  criticism of the party leadership was not only tolerated but even encouraged. The party after Lenin’s death  began to degenerate under the leadership of the incoming Stalinist bureaucracy, when for the first time all manner of careerists were introduced into the party.

In fact, Trotsky addressed this very question in his book, The Revolution Betrayed, in which he explicitly delineated the contrast between the Bolshevik Party before and after its degeneration.  In depicting the democratic soul of Bolshevism prior to its degeneration, he wrote:

The inner regime of the Bolshevik party was characterized by the method of democratic centralism. The combination of these two concepts, democracy and centralism, is not in the least contradictory. The party took watchful care not only that its boundaries should always be strictly defined, but also that all those who entered these boundaries should enjoy the actual right to define the direction of the party policy. Freedom of criticism and intellectual struggle was an irrevocable content of the party democracy. The present doctrine that Bolshevism does not tolerate factions is a myth of [the] epoch [of] decline. In reality the history of Bolshevism is a history of the struggle of factions. And, indeed, how could a genuinely revolutionary organization, setting itself the task of overthrowing the world and uniting under its banner the most audacious iconoclasts, fighters and insurgents, live and develop without intellectual conflicts, without groupings and temporary factional formations? [My emphasis -- A.S.] The farsightedness of the Bolshevik leadership often made it possible to soften conflicts and shorten the duration of factional struggle, but no more than that. The Central Committee relied upon this seething democratic support. From this it derived the audacity to make decisions and give orders. The obvious correctness of the leadership at all critical stages gave it that high authority which is the priceless moral capital of centralism. [22]

By way of contrast to this portrait of lively debate, Trotsky points to the authoritarian structure of the party that gradually took shape under the whip of Stalinism:

The regime of the Bolshevik party, especially before it came to power, stood thus in complete contradiction to the regime of the present sections of the Communist International, with their “leaders” appointed from above, making complete changes of policy at a word of command, with their uncontrolled  apparatus, haughty in its attitude to the rank and file, servile in its attitude to the Kremlin.[23]

To sum up, Beatty’s book falls down in many ways with respect to democratic centralism, Trotskyism, or Trotsky himself. Beatty does ask some relevant  questions as to what kind of movement can be built today that avoids the pitfalls that have dogged movements of the past several generations.  His response to those questions, however, does not flow out of a serious consideration of the topic.  He berates the rigidity and lack of openness and curiosity in parties like the late WRP and the current SEP. But the lesson is not that there is something inherently wrong with democratic centralism or with Trotskyism, but that groups that began under the banner of Trotskyism can degenerate even if they initially held a “correct” position. How such degeneration occurs is a complex topic that is only hinted at in Beatty’s book. Certainly having an abusive leader with sexual pathologies whose leadership goes unchallenged for decades is a formula for eventual chaos, but that  can only provide part of the answer. There is also a web of philosophical, political and historical issues involved.  I have diagnosed some of them in my previous writings. [24]

Nevertheless,  Beatty does a positive service in bringing together a great deal of historical material to provide an account of the authoritarian and abusive nature of the Workers Revolutionary Party and the pathological state to which it was reduced by Healy.  This is not to deny that the WRP, and Healy, also had their moments. But whatever positive achievements the WRP can be credited with, and there were some genuine achievements, these were more than undone by the abuse of the many party members who dedicated their life to the communist future of mankind and were so terribly mistreated.

Healy leading a march of the WRP to free the Shrewsbury Two


[1]  Aidan Beatty, The Party is Always Right: The Untold Story of Gerry Healy and British Trotskyism, Pluto Press, London, 2024, p. 109.

[2] Ibid. p. 111

[3]  Beatty covers the story of Healy’s sexual abuse in Chapter 7 of his book. First-hand accounts are available in Norman Harding’s and Clare Cowen’s memoirs.

[4]  Beatty, op. cit., p. xi. Allegations of sexual abuse were lodged against other members of the WRP but were never confirmed. There have been sexual abuse scandals in other Trotskyist groups such as the British Socialist Workers Party. However none of those scandals came close to matching the extent of sexual abuse practiced by Healy.  I would also agree with Beatty that the WRP nurtured a culture that made sexual abuse possible and in that sense the problem went beyond the pathology of the individual Healy. I just don’t agree with Beatty that it was the democratic centralist structure of the WRP that created the conditions for sexual abuse.

[6]  From a transcript of North’s remarks at a Webinar on Beatty’s book on Dec. 2, 2024.

[7]  For a critique of what Healy called “the practice of cognition” see the essay by David Bruce, A Charlatan Exposed.  David North’s critique of Healy’s “practice of cognition” goes astray when he characterizes it as “crude Hegelianism which is thinly disguised with occasional references to the material world”.  See North’s essay, A Contribution to a Critique of G. Healy’s “Studies in Dialectical Materialism”. There is nothing “Hegelian” about it, crude or otherwise.  See my remarks in the foreword to David Bruce’s article.

[8]  Beatty, op. cit., p. 24.

[9]  Ibid. p. 24.

[10]  Ibid. p. 4-5.

[11]  MECW, Volume 10, Address of the Central Authority to the League, p. 281.

[12]  Beatty, op. cit., p. 62.

[13]  For a recent example of how the Socialist Equality follows in the footsteps of the authoritarian structure of the WRP, see Anatomy of a sect: ICFI expels a leading member of French section

[14] Beatty, op. cit., 135.

[15] Ibid. p. 39.

[16] Beatty, op. cit.,  p. xi

[17] John Medhurst, No Less than Mystic: A History of Lenin and the Russian Revolution for a 21st-Century Left, Repeater Books, London, 2017, p. 526.

[18] Robert V. Daniels, The Conscience of the Revolution: Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1960, p. 240.

[19] Leon Trotsky, Stalin: An Appraisal of the Man and his Influence, Well Red Publications, 2016, p. 680.

[20]  Ibid. p. 681.

[21]  Beatty, op. cit., xix

[23] Leon Trotsky, Revolution Betrayed, https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1936/revbet/ch05.htm#ch05-1

[24]  One of several critiques of the WRP can be found in Chapter 8 of my book long polemic, The Downward Spiral of the International Committee of the Fourth International, https://permanent-revolution.org/polemics/downward_spiral_ch08.pdf.  I wrote at the time (2008),

 

The abusive atmosphere within the internal life of the WRP, including, as we were to learn in 1985, the sexual abuse of female comrades, while owing much to the warped nature of Healy’s personality, was not just a problem of Healy the individual. It affected the way comrades were trained in the movement and colored their view of what it meant to be a revolutionary leader. After the split with the WRP in 1985 and the expulsion of Healy, that kind of abusive treatment of the members ended. However, what persisted, and what persists in the IC under North’s leadership to this day, was Healy’s notion that the way to build a revolutionary movement is to encourage “hardness” and loyalty toward the leadership, and conversely a fear of discussing differences...

 

For North, the methods for achieving the goal of the “ideal Bolshevik” may have changed, but the goal is indeed the same. Rather than physical abuse, North employs the methods of ostracism, character assassination, and for some the use of financial pressure. Thereby North has succeeded in forging a party of aging hand-raisers who go along with his every turn even when they know better, surrounded by a newer layer of younger, mostly middle-class students, who have been trained to believe that every article they write for the WSWS brings the party closer to the working class when just the opposite is the case. What is clearly missing in the ranks of the WSWS is any semblance of the working class or any spirit of independent thought.

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I am delighted to revisit this site after such a long time. The time gap has been considerable, and the site’s design has become neat that I hardly recognized it as the same platform I once visited.

Above all, this one particular review immediately caught my attention. As I read through it with deep focus, I found myself reflecting on a similar pattern of liberals in my country. Many, including me, have felt a sense of betrayal toward those who once resisted the established system. How does they, if not all, become 'monsters'? How do individuals who stand against injustice and exploitation gradually become what they once opposed?

Is this degeneration a matter of personal moral failure, or does it stem from deeper, systemic forces, perhaps the inner dynamics of an organization or the outer pressure from the broader historical and social structures? And most importantly, is there hope? Can we recognize, prevent, or counteract this tragic cycle before ideals are swallowed by the very forces they seek to challenge?

I eagerly look forward to the follow-up review.
Thank you.

Alex Steiner said...

No we are not fated to always collapse and become what we once fought against. But neither can we simply step out of the times in which we live. It is a lot easier to be for revolution in a period of rising class struggle and where the consequences are not so severe if one fails. It is much harder to sustain a revolutionary spirit in a period of reaction such as we are living through today where the consequences can be severe for individuals as well as groups.

Healy was not just a severely flawed individual but the times in which he lived exacerbated his theoretical weaknesses and also nurtured his psychological disorder. The years - and now generations - of isolation of Marxists from the working class, the dearth of leadership, all combined to create conditions in which someone who should have never been the leader of a movement came into that position. Sometimes history selects the right individual for the historical task at hand. Hegel cites Napoleon as "the world spirit on horseback". Lenin and Trotsky were fated to play a unique role in the Russian Revolution and without them it would not have succeeded. But more often an individual falls into a position of leadership due to the contingencies of the time and that individual is not the right person for the task at hand. It becomes a tragedy when such individuals have the capacity to inspire others while taking them down a path that betrays everything they have fought for. That is how I see the tragedy of Healy and the WRP. Healy thought he could find a shortcut through history to the promised land of revolution. That's what the daily newspaper was all about. That was what the opportunistic deals with the bourgeois nationalist leaders of Libya and Iraq were all about. His narcissistic personality drove him to think he was unique and above the normal ethical standards of others. But you cannot really take shortcuts in history. The idea that you can skip past the long and painful process of building a revolutionary party and training its cadre proved to be a fatal illusion.

Yet we remain revolutionary optimists based not on some quasi-religious conviction of the ultimate victory of socialism but because our rational understanding of historical processes tells us that capitalism creates the conditions for its own passing. And what we can learn from the few victories and many failures of the past prepare us to to intervene in the historical process. At the same time we also recognize that nothing is guaranteed and there is also a great danger of decades of barbarism and perhaps even nuclear annihilation. So we soldier on because we have no choice.

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