Ingilizce|Haber Ana Sayfa


Hamamboculeri.org: Alternatif Haber,Ingilizce, 24 Agustos 2002
Andrej Grubacic and Michael Albert

European Left

This interview was taken from Zmag (www.zmag.org).

Albert Interviews Grubacic Regarding the European Left 


1) The European Social Forum is coming up in early November. Broadly,
what is its relation to the WSF. And what positive promise does it
hold for a growing and unified European Left?

 

The European Social Forum is a chapter of the WSF and a part of what
it is now being called a " Porto Alegre process". It is a part of a
collective effort on the left--well, some parts of the left--to give a
sort of European articulation of the social movement. Yes, it is
coming in the first week of November and I hope that it is going to
provide a space for some interesting debate, and an autonomous space
for the grassroots radical movements coming from Europe.

 

Attending will be a wide range of groups and individuals ranging from
trade unions and catholic activist groups up to more radical minded
people. ATTAC is going to be there, of course, and Italian groups such
as ARCHE, which are going to lead the show. There is a lot of
confusion in the European activist scene right now. There is a
posibillity that this Forum will clarify things. There is an official
presentation of the Forum on www.fse-esf.org. On the other side of the
activist spectrum you have an European People's Global Action meeting
going on in Leiden as we speak, from 29. of August (www.agp.org). The
"hosts" of the meeting are the Euro Dusney collective from Holland and
the left libertarian MRG from Spain. So there are lots of conferences
and important conversations, mostly related to the structure of
PGA. We have also had an important No Border Camp in Strasbourg
(www.noborder.org).

 

 

 

(2) What is the European Consulta?

 

It is something I feel much more enthusiastic about then European
Social Forum, I have to admit. ESC has emerged from a social movement
that is challenging neoliberal globalization (it's origins are in
Spain) and it could be situated within three broad contexts:

 

1. The process of the convergence among the multitude of social
movements fighting against neoliberal globalization. These movements
include groups coming from Spain, Italy, Germany , England , the
Balkans and so on. Promoter groups are a very important part of this
process.

 

2. The necessity of creating a common space for sustained
coordination, in the atmosphere of informed social debate, collective
participation, and mobilization.

 

3. The idea of questioning the established democracy through acts of
participatory democracy.

 

As the European Social Consulta has as its goal the transformation of
society, it stresses a few important objectives:

 

1. To deepen the analyses and critique of our current economic,
political and social system while building alternatives and
proposals. Alternatives which are anti capitalist, of course.

 

2. To reinforce the work of local groups and networks fighting against
the neoliberal globalization in Europe. You see, the process like ESC
is very much needed in Europe, because it offers a chance to
crystalize social movement in a network-based organizing system,
shaped by grassroots and operating in a participatory, horizontal, and
decentralized fashion.

 

 

(3) What can you tell us broadly about the basic hallmarks of the Consulta?

 

I can be precise. A few official hallmarks to guide this process: 

 

- A clear rejection of capitalist-neoliberal- globalization. 

 

- A rejection of all systems of domination and discrimination
including, but not limited to, patrirachy, racism, classism, and
religious fundamentalism of any creed.

 

- A call for critical debate, direct action, and development of the
alternatives to the current system as tools of social emancipation.

 

- An affirmation of direct and participatory democracy and the
capacity of all human beings to create the world in which they want to
live and actively participate in the decisions that most affect them.

 

- An organizing philosophy based on decentralization, horizontalism,
autonomy and a will to coordinate.

 

 

(4) Would the European Social Forum deny any of these points you
raise? How is the ESC different in these respects from the ESF?

 

I honestly do not know. We will have to wait and see how things are
going to unfold in Florence. European Social Consulta is much more
grassroots in it's way, yes, and it's essence, as I have told you
already, is anti-capitalist. European Social Forum includes many
different groups with many different agendas. Some of them are very
reformist. Some of them are more radical. Again, I hope that ESF is
going to help the social movement in Europe to resolve many of the
divisions now weakening it.

 

 

(5) What is the essence of European Consulta process?

 

The best example we currently have at this moment is without doubt the
network of Argentine Popular Assemblies
(www.caceroleando.8m.com/asampopu.htm). These assemblies are the
equivalent of the local assemblies proposed in the European Social
Consulta. The way they are networking with a different and diverse
alternative projects that are already operating helps inspire what I
have mentioned above. For example, in Argentina the number of people
participating in the "Global Trueque Network" ( www.trueque.org.ar),
which promotes alternative, moneyless economy has grown in the past 6
months from 1 to 7 milion people. In Europe, of course, we are still
very far from the situation in Argentina where the more advanced level
of social precariousness has helped to radicalize the
majority. However, the idea of ESC is to make experiments and to
embrace new political and cultutal practices which point in the same
direction.

 

So, this Internal Consultation process is already under way and the
first groups who begin working on it developed a tool for collective
discussion called the internal Consultation Guide . This document is a
questionnaire accompanied by a few basic proposals. You can find it,
translated to several lenguages, on www.consultaeuropea.org. Promoter
Groups, which are giving the direction to this consultation process
are open to openminded people from different political cultures and
backgrounds. In terms of the agenda, there will be a gathering of
European Promoter Groups this October in Barcelona. The idea is to
exchange experiences and proposals about how to move the International
Consultation forward and, concretelly, to decide how to prepare for
the first European Gathering , which is currently set for the end of
February 2003.

 

 

 

6) What can you tell us broadly about the state of the left in Europe
-- are there generalizations that can be made? On the other hand, are
there sharp differences from region to region or country to country?

 

Yes, I think so. There were many attempts on conceptualization of the
alter-globalization movement in Europe. Cristophe Aguiton was arguing
about the distinction between "radicals, reformists, internationalists
and nationalists". Waterman is speaking about the "celebration,
rejection and criticism" which could be found among the
participants. Hardt recently sketched a division between radicals
(grassroots networks) and reformists (political parties). I am arguing
for a slightly different conceptualization, the one which would
distinguish "traditionalism", including many old style reformists,
radicals, but even traditionally minded libertarian marxists and
anarchists, from what I am calling "contemporary radicalism" which
would embrace all the individuals and groups who are trying to adapt
their strategy of social change to the new situation and who are
influenced, in the first place, by anarchism and "zapatista"
ideas. PGA and European Social Consulta are the perfect example of
this merger of libertarian marxist and anarchist ideas. I see these
two as a way to resolve a dilema which is strangling the left in
Europe, and to stand, so to say, on the other side of reformism (folks
who find the word revolution itself, abhorrent) and irresponsible
radicalism (folks who decry fighting for anything but revolution now).

Ingilizce|Haber Ana Sayfa