New left unity in the Philippines

Thursday, August 13, 1998 - 10:00

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New left unity in the Philippines


By Reihana Mohideen

MANILA — The "State of the Nation" address is an important day
in the Philippine left's calendar, demonstrations being held outside the
opening of Congress in the new financial year. On July 27, around 12,000
workers, urban poor, students and peasants rallied against the policies
of the newly elected administration of President Joseph Estrada.

 

This year, however, there was a united mobilisation of several left
political blocs which in past years have held separate demonstrations.

The organisations which united on the day include the socialist organisation
BISIG and several forces that had their roots in the pro-Maoist Communist
Party of the Philippines (CPP): the MR, a section of the Manila-Rizal regional
leadership which split from the CPP in 1993, and the Movement for National
Democracy (KPD), which includes the CPP's central Luzon leadership and
base, who opposed the party's sectarian politics and left it this year.

A new addition to the united left contingent was Liga Sosyalista (Socialist
League), a revolutionary socialist organisation formed on July 19, four
months after launching the newspaper Progresibo. Since March, the
forces of the Liga had been the "Progresibo tendency" within the Komiteng
Rebolusyonaryo ng Manila-Rizal (KRMR) headed by Popoy Lagman.

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Socialist League


According to a founding member of Liga Sosyalista, Sonny Melencio, "The
Liga groups together organisations and individuals who have resigned or
declared independence from the KRMR. They include the revolutionary council
of the socialist youth organisation Kamalayan, and individuals from the
various front organisations of KRMR, such as the broad democratic front
Sanlakas, the labour group BMP and the urban poor group KPML. In recent
weeks, the Liga has also joined individuals outside the KRMR grouping.

"The formation of Liga Sosyalista was the culmination of a period of
intense debates and struggles within the KRMR group. The debates centred
on the Stalinist and sectarian policies being implemented by the Lagman
group and the continuing drift of its politics [called 'pragmatic politics'
by Lagman] towards the right."

Melencio said, "The Lagman group has a stated position against the
unity of the socialist forces in the Philippines. They refuse even to participate
in tactical unity efforts with others on the left. Their view is that they
are the only true revolutionaries.

"Given the fragmentation that has racked the left, this is not only
very sectarian, but also an absurd position to have. We need to understand
that ... no one organisation encompasses all of the class-conscious vanguard
forces. This is the starting point of the Liga's position on the urgent
need to unite the left forces in the country."

Melencio says that the Liga considers itself as only one of the pre-party
working-class formations in the Philippines. "It aims to push for the
unification of the Philippine left through a socialist front to be composed
of revolutionary socialist groups and individuals. One of the reasons for
its 'split' from the KRMR is to be able to free itself from the sectarianism
of the Popoy Lagman group."

Discussions are now under way amongst BISIG, MR, Liga Sosyalista and
the revolutionary forces in the KED on the formation of a socialist front.
The aim is to unite the left blocs around a political platform, at the
centre of which is a common analysis of the political situation in the
Philippines and the tasks of the left.

The editorial board of Progresibo has been opened up to include
other left groups, an important step in the unity process. There is also
agreement on the need to set up a Marxist-Leninist school for the socialist
front's members.


Economic and social crisis


This unity process has also been driven by economic and social factors.
The economic crisis is taking its toll. Large sections of industry have
collapsed (in manufacturing and agriculture), and manufacturing output
is down by 50%. In agriculture, the crisis is threatening food security.

Unemployment is soaring to unprecedented levels (according to government
data, around 10 million people are unemployed and 15 million are underemployed).

The number of urban poor is exploding as more and more unemployed rural
workers move to the cities looking for work. Criminality is rampant. Young
people cannot find jobs, and many end up victims of drug abuse and prostitution.

The middle class is also suffering. Many have joined the ranks of the
unemployed and the working class. The number of students is dwindling as
the cost of education increases.

The economic crisis has led to increased social unrest. The number of
strikes is growing as companies resort to closures and lockouts.

Urban poor communities facing demolition threats are pitching tents
in front of government offices and setting up barricades (in some instances
armed) around their communities. Mass actions are staging a comeback, a
series of demonstrations, rallies, pickets and other protest actions taking
place in the last few months.

The ruling class remains united around its program to "solve" the
economic crisis. The new government's economic program is no different
from those of previous regimes.

It is the same neo-liberalism, carried out according to the dictates
of the International Monetary Fund and the big foreign banks. Its hallmarks
are continuing trade liberalisation, privatisation of government corporations
and assets, and deregulation of local industries and the finance sector.

Estrada has already declared his government bankrupt. The government
forecasts a P70 billion deficit this year. Foreign debt has reached P1.9
trillion (US$45.6 billion), while domestic debt is P2.3 trillion.

The government candidly admits there are no solutions in sight, no way
of halting the slowdown, the double-digit inflation, the rising interest
rates, the free-falling peso or even deeper economic depression.

The government is taking unpopular measures to raise revenue, including
settlement of the "frozen assets" of the Marcos family and the soon-to-be
signed Visiting Forces Agreement, which opens the way for US bases in the
Philippines. The incapacity of the regime to solve the economic crisis
and to deliver on its "pro-poor" program will only fan the mass unrest.

According to Melencio, "An intensification of the class struggle is
inevitable. The situation demands that the left unite its forces and maximise
its striking capacity. A socialist front will enable us to achieve this
in the short term."

The July 27 rally also included a large youth contingent organised by
the broad youth and student coalition Youth Arise. The main forces behind
the Youth Arise contingent were Kamalayan and the BISIG youth organisation,
MASP.

The rally was some 7000 strong. The Lagman-controlled BMP and the CPP
held separate rallies numbering around 2500 each.

From GLW issue 328