Showing posts with label IRSP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IRSP. Show all posts
Orghan offers a critique of a recent IRSP 
document on immigration.

The response to migrant workers accepting abysmal working conditions as a consequence of their precarious position is not to limit immigration, but to fight alongside them in unions and on the streets, against our common enemy. 

It is our common enemy, the capitalist ruling class, that you correctly state has an interest in keeping wages low and conditions bad, which is something that they can achieve by employing migrant workers. Why then is your reaction to this to curry the favour of this ruling class that oppresses us all? Do you not dare dream bigger than to be allowed to do the precarious work that migrants are currently doing? You could be dreaming of a united working class, realising our power through sheer numbers. But saddeningly, you are giving in to this reactionary tendency which pits workers against each other.

This brings us to the most important part of this critique: At many points in your paper, you package what is obviously a reactionary position in leftist rhetoric. Firstly, this doesn't change that anti-immigration positions oppose the interest of the international working-class movement. Secondly, we see no other explanation for this than that you hope to gain support from working-class people who are unfortunately drifting off into reactionary politics more and more as a consequence of right-wing propaganda. We struggle with the same issue of especially working-class people falling for these talking points that obviously oppose their interest here in Switzerland as well. It is a trend that can be observed in all of Europe. But our response to this cannot be to jump on the same trend. Yes, leftist movements can gain supporters by adapting right-wing positions, but at what cost? Who would these new-found supporters be? Our comrades?

Surely not. They remain reactionaries if they enter our organisations due to us ceding our revolutionary position. We cannot grow our revolutionary movement by betraying it. We must grow it by focussing on the workers who are open to our leftist positions to join our cause. We must work on our propaganda in hopes of also reaching those who have already started going down the right-wing path and convincing them to turn around, instead of meeting them on the right side.

Furthermore, it is at least our local experience that migrant workers tend to have a lot more class-consciousness than local workers, especially if they hail from countries with strong labour movements.

The unions that make the effort to address them directly quickly find these migrant workers to form the frontline of their movement. You talk of "numbers" entering Ireland, but they are not numbers, they are people! The vast majority of them working-class, many from regions suffering from a history of colonisation, which often contributes to them being driven from their homes.

Resources like food, housing, etc. are not scarce, and this perceived scarcity is not a consequence of immigration but of how these resources are made available to the people. You even correctly state this yourselves in your paragraphs about landlordism. In capitalism, there is generally overproduction, the problem lies in how the products of our labour are distrubuted. As long as the working class is not in power, these resources are being distributed by capitalists.

They distribute them inefficiently and unfairly in order to sow dissent among workers. With the rhethoric you use in this paper, you are lending the capitalists a helping hand.

As an internationalist organisation, we have joined the IRSP's events in the past, as well as organised acts of solidarity with the Irish movement here in Switzerland. Under these new conditions, we will no longer be able or willing to participate in IRSP marches or events. Nor will we organise any actions of solidarity for the IRSP in the future. Some of us will be in Ireland for Easter, but we would not join the IRSP march.

We urge you not to give in to capitalist tactics of division and to stand for a strong, internationally united working class. Should this proposed paper become your official position, you are crossing a line which would no longer allow us in good conscience to support your organisation. While we remain unwaveringly committed to the cause of a free and united Ireland, we will find ways to put this position into practice that do not involve working with an organisation that is prepared to stab the international workers' movement in the back in exchange for short-term gains.

Orghan is a Swiss anti-capitalist collective.

IRSP Wrong On Immigration

Tina WoodsLast week, the Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP) released a policy document addressing immigration in Ireland.

However, sections of the Left, particularly those aligned with People Before Profit (PBP), swiftly criticized the IRSP's stance without fully engaging with the substance of their proposal. 

It appears that the primary detractors either failed to thoroughly review the document, lacked comprehension thereof, or hastily dismissed it based on superficial grounds. 

What exactly does the IRSP advocate in their proposal? In essence, the IRSP suggests that in a prospective Irish Socialist Republic, the future government could enact measures to regulate immigration, considering its potential economic benefits for the working class. However, the document refrains from delineating specific measures or endorsing a rigid stance on border policies. Instead, it asserts the prerogative of a socialist government to implement measures deemed appropriate. 

A notable critique of the document is its focus on the negative aspects of immigration without acknowledging its potential positive contributions, whether cultural or social. While the IRSP may argue that the document solely emphasizes the economic impact, it could benefit from a more comprehensive examination of immigration's broader implications. 

One pivotal aspect of the policy is its contrarian stance to the narrative propagated by PBP. This distinction is largely underscored by the defense mounted by IRSP members, rather than the policy's substantive content. The IRSP contends that dismissing the concerns of working-class individuals regarding immigration as inherently racist is a fallacious approach. This sentiment was conspicuously absent during the North Wall protests, where such concerns were summarily disregarded. Instead, the IRSP advocates for a nuanced understanding of these legitimate apprehensions among working-class communities. Rather than vilifying them, there is a call to empathize with their grievances and redirect their frustrations toward the systemic exploitation perpetuated by capitalistic structures, rather than scapegoating immigrants. 

Furthermore, the IRSP aptly highlights the peril of ignoring the grievances of significant segments of the working class, which could potentially fuel the ascent of far-right ideologies. This void could be readily exploited by extremist elements seeking to promulgate racist agendas, as evidenced by their adept utilization of social media platforms. 

In conclusion, the IRSP's perspective warrants consideration and merits commendation for its pragmatic approach to the issue at hand. By endeavoring to channel and address societal frustrations while engaging with marginalized communities, they aim to mitigate the risk of further polarization fueled by categorical denunciations from the political left.

Tina Woods is a North Antrim Trade Unionist.

Analyzing The IRSP Immigration Policy

Michael KellyThe Electoral Commission has until 8th April to decide whether or not they will allow the Irish Republican Socialist Party stand in May’s Stormont Assembly elections.

Back in January the party publicly announced two solid Republican Socialist community workers to put their program firmly into the public domain.

Dan Murphy a 27-year-old bar man and founder of the ‘Beechmount Resident’s Collective’ stood forward for West Belfast; while in Derry, 38-year-old Collie McLaughlin, a family man and founder of the equally effective ‘Galliagh Community Response’ group stepped up to the mark for the North West.

Dan Murphy

Both typified the recent re-growth of a party which many had written off many times in the past only to be proved wrong.

In recent years and against all the odds, the IRSP have taken the concept of community work to new heights in working class areas of the North. Fighting off poverty, evictions and social disenfranchisement with a vigour matched by no other party. In no small way they also took the lead on the issue of Irish Unity. Launching a tour of public meetings under the banner ‘Yes for Unity’; stating that a United Ireland should not be trusted to the interests of big business and instead encouraging working class people to seize border poll initiatives here, before they became monopolised by the right.

This activism came with an enthusiasm and practical effectiveness that soon attracted an impressive new wave of talented, ideologically driven younger people to the party. Just as encouragingly, many older, once disillusioned, members began also to return to the IRSP, convinced that the time was finally right. The return to the party of their former Newry branch was a case in point, deeply moving for all and celebrated by everyone.

And it was in recognition of just this renewal, that the IRSP moved to utilise the electoral system in an attempt to promote their program in just the way which Seamus Costello had directed them to back in the late 1970s. May’s Assembly elections would be the chosen platform.

Party registration papers were submitted to the Electoral Commission on January 20th, inside the deadline. And there they sat for a full two months, with no objections raised and no comment made by those who had received them.

The IRSP went on to fundraise, canvass and strategize, for Dan Murphy in Belfast and Collie McLaughlin in Derry.

Collie McLaughlin

A full two months later, on March 21st, the Electoral Commission replied that the IRSP application for party registration was rejected. The reason? An older digitally held version of the parties’ constitution (one which had been accepted by them in the past) had been mistakenly submitted instead of the updated model.

Within hours the party moved to rectify the situation and submitted the intended document; confident that with reason, rationality and common sense, their application to stand would move forward without any further delay.

They were wrong.

Now responding much more promptly than before (3 days, no less) the electoral commission informed the IRSP on 25th of March that they would not rectify the situation, regardless of our having applied well within the deadline and regardless of their own two-month silence as to the existence of an anomaly.

The IRSP were merely assured further that any re-application to register would be too late to meet the final election nomination deadline date of April 8th 2022.

The IRSP is now unashamedly suspicious of why the Electoral Commission – a state body tasked with the smooth running of elections - were so very slow to highlight a barrier to our participation, yet very quick to inform us (twice in the space of 3 days no less) that we could not stand candidates as the IRSP.

We reject their assertion that there is any real logistical barrier to their accepting our constitution between now and April 8th, and should they fail to make reasonable moves to rectify the situation, we can only assume that our party and our supporters, will have been deliberately disenfranchised by delay.

Whether under the banner of the IRSP or as independents; Collie McLaughlin and Dan Murphy will run for election on May 5th. Should their only option be the latter; the IRSP would ask all well-meaning Republicans, Socialists and progressives to show their support for reason and to stand against poorly hidden state censorship by giving them your vote.

⏩Michael Kelly is the Election Agent for Dan Murphy, IRSP

IRSP ✑ Disenfranchised By Delay

Sean Matthews  ✒ The Irish Republican Socialist Movement display of Soviet flags and support for Russian militarism covered in the media and the 'anti-fascist' facade they seek to propagate needs to be exposed and opposed.

Jumping into bed with Putin or any other tyrant should be an anathema to republican socialism as your enemy's enemy is usually not your friend. Unless of course, as a cynic might suggest, they and their offices are on the pay of Putin's cheque. 

The Euromaidan uprising in Ukraine in 2014 may have resulted in the neoconservative regime that it ended up with, but there is no one who is under any illusion that the non-acceptance of that regime came out of Russia's 'anti-fascist' sentiment or its 'need to protect Russian citizens'. After all, Putin's authoritarian regime in Russia has rewarded Nazis and fascists inside the country by imprisoning and killing anti-fascists (some of which I know), while the numerous interventions of Russian imperialism in areas of the former USSR needed no such justification.

It is the duty of those on the left and progressive circles to oppose both Russian militarism and NATO expansionism. The only losers from the war are the world working class, especially in Ukraine and Russia. They are the ones destined to be the cannon fodder of the states and the capitalists. 

This imperialist war is being waged for the sharing of spheres of influence, energy routes and the rearrangement of geopolitical power. This system gives birth to wars and is responsible for poverty, injustice, exploitation and oppression. It is therefore time to challenge it in an organised and dynamic way, organising its overthrow on an international scale.

⏩ Sean Matthews is an anarchist activist and writer.

Russia Has Rewarded Nazis And Fascists

 A report from the IRSP on the Kurdish YPG's struggle against the Islamic State.


YPG ‘Fighting for all humanity’! Belfast meeting urged to support the Kurdish resistance.

YPG ‘Fighting For All Humanity’!

The Irish Republican Socialist Party will be hosting an information evening with the intention of raising public awareness of the plight of the Kurdish people and their ongoing struggle against ISIS terror, and efforts to create a just society within the liberated zones of Rojava.

  • The mother of fallen YPG fighter, along with a visitor to the PKK stronghold in the Qandil Mountains, will speak on the fight against ISIS and the liberated areas of Rojava.

‘Viki Konstandinos' is the mother of YPG Volunteer Konstandinos Scurfield, a 25 year old native of Barnsley in Yorkshire who was killed in action in March of this year, defending the Kurdish frontline village area of Tek Khuzela, Syria.

A former Royal Marine Commando, Konstandinos or ‘Kosta’ is described by his mother, foremost as a humanitarian, who became increasingly politicised while hearing of the plight of the besieged Kurdish people. He drew natural comparisons between the YPG (Kurdish Protection Units) and the European Anti-Nazi partisans of the 1940s and having resigned from the British army, he initially worked providing Humanitarian and medical aid to struggling Kurdish freedom fighters inevitably being moved to action in late 2014 becoming a fighter with the ‘Lions of Rojava’ foreign YPG battalion.

By all accounts Kosta earned an exemplary military record displaying extraordinary commitment and bravery in combat, praised as a hero and a martyr by his comrades in the YPG, he was brought down by RPG fire during a ferocious battle with the so called ‘Islamic State’ while on the offensive against ISIS occupied positions around Til Hamis town in Hasakah province.

Since his death, Kosta’s mother Viki, has toured meetings across England raising support and awareness of the Kurdish cause and the efforts of the YPG. In recent weeks, her sons YPG comrades, having fought on and liberated further areas of Rojava, took a captured ‘ISIS’ flag and presented it to her as a token of their acknowledgement of her own sacrifice.

62 Year old Alan Brooke is an English historian, a former Archaeologist and a supporter of the Kurdish Struggle. This year he too took the decision to leave his native village in Yorkshire to travel and fight in defence of the Kurdish liberated areas. Making contact with comrades in the Kurdish capital of Sulaymaniyah, he was initially told he was "too old" to volunteer as a fighter. However, aware of his value in helping spread the message back home in England, he was smuggled through the Qandil mountain region. There he was introduced to the PKK leadership and shown around the guerilla camps.

Also in attendance will be members of the "Rojava Calling" group from Dublin, who have recently returned from the besieged Syrian town of Kobane.

Together, Vikki and Alan have toured around England on an independent (non-aligned) remit raising awareness of the Kurdish struggle, in this they have been joined by Long term left activist Matt Broughton who has initiated the Belfast and Derry meetings along with the IRSP.

Matt himself has been a long time friend of the Irish struggle and Republican Socialism in particular, a former member of Red Action, he took part in many political delegations to Ireland in the early 90s. In the late 90s he studied politics at Queens University and worked intensively for the rights of Republican Prisoners in Maghaberry, Portlaoise and in English gaols throughout the period.

All are welcome to attend and listen to what will be a meeting of historical significance. ‘Eyewitness from Syria’ will take place in The Belfast meeting will occur in the afternoon, Saturday 12st September in Conway Mill at 4pm.



For more information, contact Gerry Foster: 07871205565

Eyewitness Fron Syria