People's Democracy (Ireland)
People's Democracy (PD; Irish: Daonlathas an Phobail)[2] was a political organisation that arose from the Northern Ireland civil rights movement. It held that civil rights could be achieved only by the establishment of a socialist republic for all of Ireland. It demanded more radical reforms of the government of Northern Ireland than the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association.
People's Democracy Daonlathas an Phobail | |
---|---|
Founded | 1968 |
Dissolved | 1996 |
Ideology | Socialism Trotskyism Irish nationalism Irish republicanism Factions: Anarchism (1968-1974)[1] |
Colours | Green and red |
Foundation
It was founded on 9 October 1968 at a meeting held in the Queen's University Belfast debating hall. A catalyst for its foundation had been the attack on a Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) march in Derry on 5 October by the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC).[3]
The group consisted mainly of students who were involved with the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association or left wing groups such as the Labour Clubs and Young Socialist Alliance.
At the meeting the group decided on five aims:
- One man, one vote
- Repeal of the Special Powers Act
- An end to gerrymandering of electoral boundaries
- Freedom of speech and assembly
- Fair allocation of jobs and housing
It was initially led by a committee of ten members which consisted of Queen's University students Malcolm Miles, Fergus Woods, Anne McBurnley, Ian Godall, Bernadette Devlin, Joe Martin, Eddie McCamely, Michael O'Kane and Patricia Drinan, as well as Kevin Boyle, a law lecturer at QUB. Other prominent members included Cyril Toman, Eamon McCann and Michael Farrell.[4]
The name of the group was selected by accident, according to Bernadette Devlin.
The next evening our leaflet and poster were approved by a mass meeting of the students, and taken off to be printed. John D. Murphy, our printer, got the material late at night and only then noticed that our organisation had no name. To comply with the law, he had to put up the name of the organisation responsible at the bottom of the leaflet, and, the story goes, he read through it, decided it was all about people's rights and christened us People's Democracy.[5]
After marches in Belfast, in imitation of Martin Luther King Jr.'s March 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches, about 40 People's Democracy members held a four-day march between Belfast and Derry starting on 1 January 1969. The march was repeatedly attacked by loyalists along its route, including an incident at Burntollet bridge on 4 January where the marchers were attacked by about 200 unionists, including off-duty special constables, armed with iron bars, bottles and stones, while the RUC stood by and watched.[6]
PD became increasingly radicalised as a result of these events. They also attacked the censorship laws in the Republic — earning a rebuke from Ruairi Quinn and Basil Miller, then leaders of Students for Democratic Action, a revolutionary socialist student organisation, for letting British imperialism off the hook. In later years, members of the PD either quit politics altogether or became independent left-wing activists (such as Devlin and Farrell).
Development
In 1971, PD became a founder of the Socialist Labour Alliance.
In the mid-1970s, the experience of the Ulster Workers' Council strike led to PD predicting a loyalist takeover in Northern Ireland, but it later came round to the view that this perspective was incorrect, giving loyalism a degree of autonomy from imperialism which it did not possess.[7] The minority which clung to the old perspective left to form the Left Revolutionary Group, becoming the Red Republican Party in 1976, which was moribund by 1978.[8]
During the 1970s, PD evolved towards Trotskyist positions and, by merging with the Dublin-based Movement for a Socialist Republic, was recognised by the reunified Fourth International as its Irish section.
PD was especially active around the issues of internment and prisoners' rights. Following the formation of the National H-Block/Armagh Committee in 1979 to build support for the Republican prisoners then on the "blanket protest" in support of political status and the subsequent death of Bobby Sands and nine of his comrades during the H-Block hunger strikes, a number of members of the organisation, led by Vincent Doherty - then a member of the Political Committee and a former party general election candidate - argued that PD should join Sinn Féin, which had moved openly to the left in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
In 1981, two members of People's Democracy were elected to Belfast City Council. John McAnulty and Fergus O'Hare were elected in a joint campaign with the IRSP. Fergus O'Hare won the council seat of Gerry Fitt, a sitting Westminster MP. O'Hare had been a founding member of the National H-Block/Armagh Committee and had previously been chairperson of the Political Hostages Release Committee which spearheaded the campaign against internment in the early 1970s. He subsequently went on to found the first Irish-language secondary school in Northern Ireland Meánscoil Feirste.
When Sinn Féin ended its boycott of elections and gained mass support among the republican community, PD entered a political crisis. From 1982 on, a number of activists left them and joined Sinn Féin. At a PD national conference in 1986, a group including Anne Speed proposed the dissolution of the group and that the members all join SF as individuals. This position was defeated by 19 votes to five. A few weeks later the minority of five resigned from PD followed by their supporters and joined Sinn Féin. The remaining members who continued to oppose this view maintained PD as a small propaganda group.
Socialist Democracy
In the early 1990s the remaining members of People's Democracy initiated the Irish Committee for a Marxist Programme as an attempt to regroup socialists and left-wing republicans. This project ended in 1996 when PD dissolved and reconstituted itself as Socialist Democracy, adopting the programme put forward by the ICMP.
The party is opposed to the Good Friday Agreement which is regards as "...an attempt to strengthen imperialist rule, reinforce partition and bolster the sectarianism that helps prevent the unity of the working class.".[9]
Socialist Democracy has a small membership mainly based in Belfast. In 2004 it fused with the International Socialists, a group of former members of the Socialist Workers Party in that city.
It has not often contested elections, but one of its members stood in the Northern Ireland Assembly election of May 2011. It remains affiliated to the Fourth International. It is the sympathising Irish section of the International, within which it has been critical of tactics undertaken by its sister organisations in Brazil and France. Like the majority in the Fourth International, it was critical of the evolution of the Socialist Democracy current of the Workers' Party in Brazil. It was also critical of the Revolutionary Communist League's call for a vote against Le Pen in the 2002 French presidential election, rather than for a boycott.
The party is opposed to Transgender rights and Queer Theory.[10][11][12]
Socialist Democracy (Ireland) left the Fourth International in December 2022.[13]
Pamphlets
Socialist Democracy also publishes a series of pamphlets on left-wing subjects, including:
- Ireland: The Promise of Socialism by Joe Craig, John McAnulty and Paul Flannigan (1996).
- The Real Irish Peace Process by Joe Craig, John McAnulty and Paul Flannigan (1998).
- Worker's Briefing (2000)[14]
- Prisoners of Social Partnership by Joe Craig (2002)
- Marxism and the National Question by Pietro Tresso (Blasco) –(Introduction and Notes by D. R. O'Connor Lysaght (2006)).
- The Soul of Man under Socialism by Oscar Wilde (Introduction and Notes by Lysaght (SD 2005)).
- The Great Irish Revolution: Myths and Realities by D.R. O’Connor Lysaght (A Marxist critique of R. F. Foster and other Irish historians in the revisionist movement (2006)).
- Ireland's Credit Crunch by Kevin Keating, Jonathan Morrison, Joe Corrigan. (2010). Publisher: IMG Publications
- Fighting for a Nurses Victory (2019)[14]
Election history
General Elections
Election | First Preference Vote | % | Seats |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | 23,645 | 4.2% | 0 / 52 |
1982 | 442 | 0.07% | 0 / 78 |
Local Elections
Election | First Preference Vote | % | ± | Seats | ± |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1981 | 4,734 | 0.71% | N/A | 2 / 526 |
N/A |
1985 | 131 | 0.02% | 0.69 | 0 / 565 |
2 |
Dáil Éireann
Election | First Preference Vote | % | Seats |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | 370 | 0.02% | 0 / 166 |
See also
Footnotes
- Hall, Michael (October 2019). "A History of the Belfast Anarchist Group and Belfast Libertarian Group" (PDF). Island Pamphlets. No. 117. Island Publications. Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 June 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
- Roibeaird, Fionnghuala Nic (29 June 2016). "Tabhair dúinn an rogha! Léirsiú mór i mBéal Feirste Dé Sathairn".
- Devlin 1969, p. 101.
- Devlin 1969, p. 102.
- Devlin 1969, p. 103.
- The IRA by Tim Pat Coogan (ISBN 978-0312294168), page 626
- John McAnulty A People Undefeated
- Peter Barberis, John McHugh and Mike Tyldesley Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations
- "What we stand for". socialistdemocracy.org. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
- "Gender ideology in Ireland - the role of the trans activists".
- "On the Reactionary Roots of Queer Theory".
- "Gender Identity Ideology, the Trans Rights Movement, and homophobia".
- "Socialist Democracy Ireland Leaves the Fourth International". 8 December 2022.
- "Socialist Democracy". Irish Left Archive. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
References
- Devlin, Bernadette (1969). "Chapter 7". The Price of my Soul. Pan Books Ltd, London. p. 101. ISBN 0330-02453-1.