Max Shachtman

Max Shachtman (September 10 1904 - 1972) is best known as an American Trotskyist theorist. After leaving the pro-Soviet Communist Party, Shachtman was a leader of the Socialist Workers Party and was the editor of its theoretical journal New International. In 1940 Shachtman led nearly half the members of the SWP in a factional struggle concerning the party's internal regime, a dispute which also involved questions as to the class nature of the USSR and questions of Marxist philosophy. Leon Trotsky debated Shachtman on the question of whether the Soviet Union was a degenerated workers state and whether the position of Marxists should be to defend the Soviet Union against foreign aggression. Shachtman's view, influenced by his ally James Burnham, was that the USSR was a bureaucratic collectivist state and that Marxists should be in neither the camp of Washington or Moscow but they should support a third camp. Shachtman and his supporters left the SWP and founded the Workers Party which became the Independent Socialist League in 1948. Initially the League described itself as an anti-Stalinist, Marxist-Leninist organization. However, Shachtman ultimately became disillusioned with revolutionary socialism and the League shifted its philosophy to a more "democratic socialist" (i.e. bourgeois) orientation. While the ISL would always remain a small organization, it benefited from a very dedicated core of activists which would come to include such notables as Hal Draper and Michael Harrington within its ranks. In 1958 the ISL merged with the Socialist Party. Shachtman greatly influenced the American Socialist movement by encouraging socialist participation within the left-wings of the Democratic Party and the American labor movement. This strategy proved surprisingly successful. To some extent, the social programs proposed by the Lyndon Johnson administration were inspired by the writings and activism of intellectuals associated with Shachtman and the Socialist Party. Within the SP, Shachtman's followers were referred to as the Shachtmanites. The ambition of the Shachtmanites energized the Socialist Party, which became an important though largely unacknowledged participant in the US civil rights movement, anti-poverty activism, and other issues. Ultimately, however, the Shachtmanite tendency to affiliate with large, powerful institutions came at a price. The ties established with the Johnson administration made criticism of the Vietnam War very difficult. Many on the left felt that Shachtman and, by extension, the Socialist Party had abandoned the peace camp. In the end many Shachtmanites openly championed the Cold War, which they saw as a showdown between democracy and totalitarianism. In the early 1970s, the increasingly right-leaning Shachtmanites seized the leadership of the party and changed the organization's name to "Social Democrats, USA." After the name change many of the older socialists of the Norman Thomas generation left the Party, as did the former Shachtmanite Michael Harrington. After Shachtman's death in 1972, many Shachtmanites rose to prominent positions in government and organized labor. Their legacy has been very ambiguous from the perspective of the left, Shachtmanism is regarded by many as an extreme example of revisionism and the total abandonment of all remnants of Marxist Socialism, let alone Marxism-Leninism. Generally the Shachtmanites have promoted pro-labor policies while continuing to unconditionally support unbridled US military intervention abroad. In the AFL-CIO they often focused their attention overseas, working within the State Department to support so-called "liberal" trade unions organizing in socialist countries, like Solidarity in Poland. In 1976. Shachtmanites supported the presidential candidacy of Henry "Scoop" Jackson due to his hardline foreign policy. The most lasting legacy of Shachtman may be the intellectual contribution that Shachtman's followers and colleagues made to neoconservatism. Their disgust with Carter's "peacenik" agenda led many Shachtmanites to support Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. More generally, many of the founders of neoconservatism, such as Irving Kristol, Nathan Glazer, and Sidney Hook, developed their thinking in the anti-Stalinist milieu of the Trotskyist left of the 1930s and 1940s. Jeane Kirkpatrick was a member of the Shachtmanite dominated Young People's Socialist League when she was a university student in the 1960s and the influence of Shachtman's thinking on her can be seen in her liberal views on domestic policy and staunchly conservative anti-Communist views on foreign policy. In the 1970s Paul Wolfowitz was a speaker at Social Democrats, USA conferences. Indeed, the enthusiasm with which many neoconservatives championed the U.S. invasion of Iraq may reveal some of the same "idealistic" and "internationalist" spirit of their Trotskyist predecessors.

External links

Max Shachtman Internet Archive Shachtman, Max Shachtman, Max Shachtman, Max Shachtman, Max

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
antonio machado
yars' revenge
miguel ngel asturias
ok go
beny alagem
in god we trust
hydrazone
imesh
jane stanford
john berryman
gift (gnu)
caribbean stud poker
chromic acid
juan ramn jimnez
the ballad of halo jones
bowel obstruction
john mcenroe
wanyan wuyashu
infliximab
ben mulroney
remission
from ritual to romance
colonoscopy
american renaissance
jane bowles
canadian idol
mortar (masonry)
mortar (artillery)
lek dukagjini
suctoria
institute professor
angel dust (album)
kanuni i lek dukagjinit
midgetman missile
eyvind kelve
isadore singer
academic publishing
rock 'n' roll (john lennon album)
copper oxide
cormac mccarthy
huelva
coral dive sites
army of republika srpska
torremolinos