Platform of the Lutte Ouvriere-Ligue Communiste Revolutionnaire
list for the 1999 European elections led by
Arlette Laguiller and Alain Krivine


Introduction, by Martin Thomas (AWL)

The following is the text, published on 23 November, of the platform ("profession de foi") of the joint slate being run for the Euro-elections by Lutte Ouvriere and the Ligue Communiste Revolutionnaire, the two main revolutionary working-class organisations in France.

The fact of unity is important: although LO and the LCR have run joint election campaigns on many occasions since 1969, this move comes after several years in which they were unable to reach agreement to work together.

The slate is an important political fact. In 1995, Arlette Laguiller of Lutte Ouvriere, standing in the presidential elections on an "emergency plan for the workers and unemployed", won 1.6 million votes, over 5% of the total. It was probably the strongest electoral showing by a revolutionary in an advanced capitalist country since the rise of Stalinism. It is likely that the LO-LCR Euro-slate can top the 5% level required to elect Euro-MPs, and possible that this Trotskyist slate will win more votes than the decaying Communist Party - a development which could seriously change militant French workers' perceptions of which political forces they can look to for representation of their interests.

The content of the platform is important. Its core is constructed around the same basic ideas as Arlette Laguiller's "emergency plan for the workers and unemployed" in 1995. This is not an abstract call for revolution, or a catch-all listing of good causes, but a statement of what the revolutionaries stand for, immediately, to uphold the interests of the working class against the fake-Socialist government.

Moreover, instead of veering towards the nationalist course of blaming "Maastricht" or "Europe" for the evils of capitalism - a course unfortunately much pursued by the French Communist Party, and, sadly, flirted with in the past by the LCR and British left groups like the Socialist Party and the SWP - this statement makes it clear that the candidates are counterposing a united workers' and democratic Europe to the bosses' undemocratic and half-united Europe.


For Europe, radical measures against unemployment!

The future lies with a united Europe, without frontiers between the peoples. But the Europe that they claim to be building has nothing in common with the interests of the workers, the unemployed, and the youth. It serves the industrialists and the financial groups. Their Europe is the Europe of exploitation, a fortress of the multinationals like Elf, Shell, Bouygues, Thomson, Siemens and Alcatel. It is designed to increase profits on the backs of its own wage-workers and of the peoples of the poor countries.

Their Europe is not democratic. The European Parliament is only a screen for the arbitrary power of the European Commission, shaped by haggling between governments and subordinated to the powers of wealth. The Europe which the wage-workers, the unemployed, and the youth need is:

The Europe which is being built today, with more than 20 million jobless and 60 million people in poverty, is sick with unemployment, with inequalities, with poverty and with racism.

It is not, however, national frontiers that will save us from unemployment. Our governments did not wait for the euro and the European treaties to impose cuts policies. The policies flowing into the single currency, the European Central Bank, and the European treaties of Maastricht and Amsterdam, have generalised and coordinated the cutting of social budgets on a European scale.

They have made an agreement for a single currency, but in order to do it they have chosen to have the costs paid, not by the wealthy, but the working classes, to the detriment of jobs and wages, by privatising and dismantling public services and by imposing an agricultural policy which pays no regard either to the rural populations or to the famines world-wide.

On the Right, whether they are for more Europe or less, they are for the same pro-boss policy which hits the exploited and the oppressed. As for Le Pen, he is the worst enemy of us all: he wants to worsen that policy by attacking the workers even harder, beginning with the immigrants.

But the Jospin government, like its predecessors, refuses to dip into the enormous profits of big business, though that is the only way to finance the creation of useful new jobs in sufficient number to deal with unemployment and the drift to temporary and casual work.

It makes gift after gift to big business, while they continue to sack workers and extend temporary, casual and enforced part-time labour. Young people and women are the first victims. Pensions are taxed more and more, and social security contributions are increased, while, on the other side, the wealth tax raises less than TV licence revenue. Promises have not been kept. The government pushes on with the Juppe plan, it privatises Air France and France Telecom, it refuses to increase the minimum wage and benefit rates. Its policy, in line with the European economic "stability pact", is to impose never-ending cuts. It is not serious to pretend to "reorient Europe" while supporting the policy of this government, as does the Communist Party when it talks more militant, just for election time, but without really opposing the government.

The great strike of winter 1995, the movement of the unemployed and their European marches, have shown a rejection of the logic of capitalism and have aroused sympathy all across Europe. It is the collective struggle of the wage-workers and the jobless, with no national frontiers, on the basis of common objectives, which will defend the interests of the great majority of the population.

To put an end to the individual and collective tragedy which is the total or partial unemployment of more than five million workers in this country, we must take away from the bosses and the financiers the total control that they exercise over the economy. The profits accumulated by big business should be used to get rid of unemployment, rather than to feed into the financial circuits which threaten the economy with a major catastrophe.

It is necessary:

Taxes should be increased on high incomes and on speculative profits. The whole banking system and the European Central Bank should be put under control. And, so that these measures do not remain dead letters, it is necessary to make public the real accounts of big business and the bank accounts of their big shareholders, so that the wage-workers, consumers, and the whole population can check on what they currently do in secret. That would be, at the same time, the best way to put an end to the politico-financial scandals.

To vote for the Lutte Ouvriere-Ligue Communiste Revolutionnaire slate is:

By voting for the list led by Arlette Laguiller and Alain Krivine, you can elect to the European Parliament women and men who will defend the interests of the workers there, will be faithful to their commitments, and will be at your side to prepare the collective struggles of tomorrow.


To read more about the joint platform for the 1999 European elections (in French), including the main positions in a debate inside the LCR about the elections,
visit the sites of the groups involved:
The Ligue Communiste Revolutionnaire
Lutte Ouvriere