Encyclopedia of Anti-Revisionism On-Line

U.S. Anti-Revisionism

The New Communist Movement: Initial Party-Building Campaigns, 1973-1974

Starting in 1973, a number of organizations in the New Communist Movement, with a few years’ experience and modest growth, and in the face of a sharp decline in the mass radicalism characteristic of the late 1960’s, positioned themselves to take on party building as their immediate goal (a previous effort to unite Marxist-Leninists, the journal Proletarian Cause, only lasted a single issue). They had began as local collectives and then successfully formed cadre organizations with operations in a number of cities. Unlike Progressive Labor in the 1960s, which moved from “Movement” to “Party” with a cadre core inherited from a factional split from the original CPUSA, the new communist groups came mainly from the more loosely organized radical student movements.

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The main groups – the Revolutionary Union (RU), the October League (OL) and the Communist League (CL) – initially engaged one another on various questions related to party building and communist theory and practice. These interactions found their main public expression in the 1973 “party-building” forums organized by the New York-based Guardian weekly, the main voice of the independent left since 1948. The Guardian began with an ecumenical attitude toward most of the groups, though it kept the CL at arm’s length (and it was not included in the forums). The paper’s staff at the time included supporters of both the RU and the OL. While the Guardian forums did not bring the participating groups closer together, it did bring the emerging Marxist-Leninist forces and their perspectives to the attention of the broader U.S. left.

However, interaction soon turned into competition between these “pre-party formations.” Each group initiated discussions with interested smaller groups and individuals, drew out points of unity and difference, and tried to win over participants to its own approach, line and agenda, while breaking with those it failed to bring in. Each in its own way tried to emulate the Bolshevik experience, many using Lenin’s “What Is To Be Done?” as key reference point.

The first major party-building organizational effort was the National Liaison Committee (NLC) initiated by the RU in 1972, which included the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization (formerly the Young Lords Party), the Black Workers Congress, and other new communist groups, but excluding CL and OL. Differences over the national question resulted in the collapse of the NLC in 1974.

During this same period, the CL began talks with the American Communist Workers’ Movement (M-L), the New Voice, and others, resulting in the calling of a Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists and the subsequent formation of the National Continuations Committee (NCC) in 1973. It, too, failed to hold together and after most of the participating groups departed the NCC, CL served as the core of the Communist Labor Party, which was launched in 1974.

The failures of the NLC and the NCC to take the New Communist Movement to a new stage of unity marked a turn toward increased in-fighting among U.S. Marxist-Leninists throughout the ’70s. The national papers of the major groups – the RU’s Revolution, the OL’s The Call, and the CL’s People’s Tribune – were a central site of these polemics, as was the Guardian through staff writers like Carl Davidson and Irwin Silber.

Party building efforts would continue in 1975-77, with the formation of the Revolutionary Communist Party in 1975, the rise and fall of the “Revolutionary Wing,” in 1975-76 and the creation of the Communist Party (Marxist-Leninist) in 1977 (documented in the next section of EROL). But these developments would occur in the context of a growing crisis inaugurated by changes in Chinese foreign policy, the reversal of the Cultural Revolution after Mao’s death, China’s turn toward an alliance with the U.S. against Soviet influence, and Albania’s rejection of China’s “three worlds theory.”

Index of organizations and subjects in this section (by alphabetical order)
Boston Busing Controversy
Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists
Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists
––––FBI Infiltration
Guardian Forums
Communist Labor Party
National Continuations Committee
––––Detroit Local Continuations Committee
National Liaison Committee
Proletarian Cause

Background Materials

Background Materials and General Surveys

Family Tree Chart of U.S. Anti-Revisionism, 1956-1977 by the Communist Workers Group (Marxist-Leninist)

Maoists Attempt To Form National Party by Bill Evers [from the Stanford Daily]

Maoist Fusion Fizzles by Young Spartacus

Where the Maoists Stand Today by Jon Hillson [Young Socialist Discussion Bulletin, Vol. 18, No. 6, December 1974]

History of Two-Line Struggle on Party-Building by the Committee for Scientific Socialism (M-L)

General Critiques and Polemics

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The Struggle for the Party by Charles Loren

Which Side Are You On? [On Loren’s The Struggle for the Party] by Carl Davidson

Reply to Davidson on party-building by Charles Loren

Reply to Carl Davidson [On Loren’s The Struggle for the Party] by the San Francisco Marxist-Leninist Organization

New Pamphlet Parrots Old Opportunism [On Loren’s The Struggle for the Party] by the Revolutionary Union

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Class Struggle vs. S.L.A. Terrorism: A Communist Analysis by Marxist-Leninist Study Group

Burning Questions of Party Building with An Outline for the Study of Marxism-Leninism by The Marxist-Leninist Education Committee (S.F. Bay Area)

Against Revisionism by Michael A. Miller, The League for Proletarian Revolution

Party Building, the Central Task of Communists in Uncompromising Struggle Against Opportunism by the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization

Line Struggle on Party Building in the U.S. Communist Movement by the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization

The Boston Busing Controversy

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Which Side Are You On? [on the RU’s Boston busing position] by Carl Davidson

Afro-American Self-Determination [on the RU’s Boston busing position] by the October League (Marxist-Leninist)

Boston Busing Struggle Sharpens by the Revolutionary Union

Stop Boston Racist Attacks, Defend Right of Self-Determination by the October League (Marxist-Leninist)

Reprinted from Struggle Newspaper: White Reactionaries in Revolutionary Trimmings

The Desperate OL Concocts Lurid Tales by the Revolutionary Union

Main Lesson of Boston Busing Struggle by the Revolutionary Union

March against Racism: Join Fred Hampton Contingent by the October League (Marxist-Leninist)

Progressive United Front on Education calls for: “Self-Determination and Quality Education in Boston” by the Congress of Afrikan People

Boston... Fred Hampton Contingent Gives Critical Support for Boston March by the Congress of Afrikan People

Monopoly Capitalists’ Anti-Busing Movement is an Attack on the Democratic Rights of the Black People and on the Unity of the Working Class by the Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists

500 attend busing forum in N.Y.

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20,000 March for Freedom: Hampton Contingent Provides Backbone by the October League (Marxist-Leninist)

The Boston Busing Crisis: Liberalism as the Breeding Ground for Fascism [from the Communist Labor Party journal, Proletariat]

Busing: A Fight for Equality [from the Communist Labor Party journal, Proletariat]

The Boston Forced Busing Plan: The Dialectics of Bourgeois Formal Democracy and Fascism by Workers Viewpoint

Fascism and Busing in Boston by the Progressive Labor Party

Boston, ’75 by the Progressive Labor Party

“It’s Not the Bus”: Busing and the Democratic Struggle in Boston, 1974-1975 by the Proletarian Unity League

Anti-Marxist Line: Workers Viewpoint Attacks Busing by the October League (Marxist-Leninist)

Boston Busing: Phase Two Phases Out Education by The New Voice

Oppose the Government’s Counter-Revolutionary Busing Plan. A Polemic Against the Idealist Essence of the “Material Base of Racism” Theories

Desegregation: Another look. One activist thinks that school desegregation is not always desirable, and can even hurt minorities by John Martin

Views Changing: Does Busing Fight Racism? by The New Voice

Debate on How to Fight Discrimination: Keep segregation under fire by Carl Davidson

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Proletarian Cause

The journal Proletarian Cause, of which only a single issue appeared, in September 1972, was initiated by Bill Epton in a effort to unite anti-revisionist Marxist-Leninists around the county in building a new Communist Party.

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Epton had been a prominent leader in the Progressive Labor Party, but was expelled from the organization in 1970 around issues of Black nationalism and PLP strategy and tactics in the Black Liberation Movement (for more on Epton’s expulsion and this struggle in PL see Chapter 3 of Jim Dann and Hari Dillon’s The Five Retreats. Thereafter, in the fall of 1971, Epton contacted a number of former PL members and Marxist-Leninist groups about participating in a new anti-revisionist theoretical journal – Proletarian Cause. While a number of meetings of journal participants were organized, after the first issue, the group was not able to agree on an editorial policy for the magazine and no further issues appeared.

Charles Loren, who participated in the Proletarian Cause project, described it in Chapter Six of his The Struggle for the Party:

In the fall of 1971, for example, the attempt began to organize a theoretical journal of Marxism-Leninism, later called Proletarian Cause. Organizing conferences were held with power to choose members of the editorial board of the magazine; the meetings were open to practically anyone. All one had to do was 1) to declare oneself an adherent of Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tsetung Thought, 2) be against Progressive Labor Party (the period in the stormy life of that organization did not matter, or rather, no distinction was made between the various periods of PL), and 3) it was necessary to have heard when and where the meetings would be held. From such a beginning some of the founders of this venture actually hoped to form the skeleton of a future communist party. In this particular case, one group of persons (including this author) pointing out the need for the centralist method of organization a-round people of proved Marxism-Leninism was frozen out fairly early; then the group split again on the issue of whether there were to be any editorial standards at all by which to choose what to put into the magazine! Finally, the project collapsed after one issue.

Primary Documents

Proletarian Cause

Southern Communists Meet

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The Guardian Forums

In 1973, the Guardian newspaper launched a series of public forums in New York, presenting the views of the some of the main groups in the early new communist movement. Cover

The Guardian was a national, New York-based weekly that represented the independent far left in the U.S. after WWII. It was founded in 1948 by professional journalists involved in the Progressive Party presidential campaign of New Dealer Henry Wallace. The ill-fated Wallace campaign came in response to the rightward shift of the Democratic Party under the Truman administration. The PP was supported by the Communist Party, but included many non- and ex-Communists, some of whom stood to the left of the CP.

The Guardian’s contributors included such figures as Anna Louise Strong and Felix Greene, strong supporters of the People’s Republic of China in the days when it was a pariah state in the west. After the Sino-Soviet split, the paper offered coverage of China that not available in either the liberal or the CP press. The Guardian’s independent, but generally non-sectarian stance helped it maintain a base of support among Old Leftists. New Leftists turned to it for sympathetic coverage of the civil rights, antiwar, student left and women’s movements, and struggles in the Third World.

After a series of leadership fights in the mid-to-late 60s, the Guardian’s political direction consolidated around two editors, Jack A. Smith and Irwin Silber, both of whom sympathized with the RYM II faction that formed at the end of SDS in 1969 [for RYM II’s background and documents, see “Revolutionary Youth Movement II”]. As Beijing began looking for an opening for interaction with the U.S. in 1970, the Guardian was a natural starting point. The paper became a major platform for China’s foreign policy, and launched some of the first U.S. tours since the Cultural Revolution. While not Maoists, Smith and Silber were interested in creating both a business and a political relationship with Beijing. They saw in the new communist movement a potential revolutionary, China-friendly party. Cover

Four forums were held in 1973: on “Which Road to Building a New Communist Party?”, the “Question of the Black Nation”, “Women and the Class Struggle”, and “Roads to Building a Workers’ Movement.” Two additional forums were held in 1974, on Watergate and on the Boston busing crisis.

The forums involved the two largest New Communist Movement groups: the Revolutionary Union and the October League (ML), as well as the Guardian itself, the Black Workers Congress, I Wor Kuen, the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization, and others unassociated with the CP, Progressive Labor or Trotskyism. The organizers shunned the Communist League, but included non-Maoist groups like Harpers Ferry Organization (affiliated with Sojourner Truth Organization), the Third World Women’s Alliance, the pro-Havana Puerto Rican Socialist Party, and the New American Movement.

The forums informed the broader movement about the new communists more directly than the groups themselves were able to do at that early point in its development. The first forum, on building a new communist party, was attended by more than 1,200 people, and transcripts and tapes of the events circulated nationally.

Background Materials

Unite the Many, Defeat the Few. China’s Revolutionary Line in Foreign Affairs by Jack A. Smith

Forum #1: Which Road to Building a New Communist Party?

1,200 at forum on new party

Published Versions of Presentations

Speech by Irwin Silber of the Guardian

Speech by Michael Klonsky of the October League

Speech by Mike Hamlin of the Black Workers Congress

Speech by Don H. Wright of the Revolutionary Union

Audio Recordings of Presentations and the Question-and-Answer Period

Introduction of speakers

Speech by Irwin Silber of the Guardian

Speech by Michael Klonsky of the October League

Speech by Mike Hamlin of the Black Workers Congress

Speech by Don H. Wright of the Revolutionary Union

Questions and Answers, Part 1

Questions and Answers, Part 2

Forum #2: The Question of the Black Nation

Guardian forum poses: ’Question of Black Nation’

Guardian Forum Correction

Forum #3: Women and the Class Struggle

Unity, struggle at Guardian forum: ’Women and Class Struggle’

Speech by Karen Davidson of the Guardian

Speech by Mary Lou Greenberg of the Revolutionary Union

A feminist replies to the Revolutionary Union by Rosario Morales

Role of Women’s Movement Debated at Guardian Forum by The Call

Forum #4: Roads to Building a Workers’ Movement

Road for workers: Debate at Forum

Editorial: Sectarian Attack at Guardian Forum by The Call

Forum on Watergate and Fascism

Hundreds attend forum on Watergate

United Front against Monopoly Capitalism or United Front against Fascism – Watergate and Fascism .... by Workers Viewpoint Organization

Bad Caricature [letter from Dave Davis to The Guardian]

Forum on Boston Busing

500 attend busing forum in N.Y.

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The National Liaison Committee

By the early 1970s, many currents within the New Communist Movement concluded that the time had come to consolidate into a new, multinational, anti-revisionist communist party. By then, a number of national organizations had developed analysis and theory on some basic issues. As a result, the movement was capable of an increasingly sophisticated interaction between actual organizations.

At the same time, the great upsurge of the late 60s and early 70s suddenly cooled out. Though it was not clear to everyone involved, a period of political ebb had arrived. In that context, some important radical forces (like the Black Panther Party) were suddenly shattering and retreating, while others more and more urgently felt the need to consolidate organizationally.

One of the most important attempts at party-formation in this period was the National Liaison Committee (NLC). Formed without publicity in 1972, it included the Revolutionary Union (RU), the Black Workers Congress (BWC), the Asian-American group I Wor Kuen (IWK), and the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization (PRRWO, formerly the Young Lords Party). A joint national speaking tour was organized, and a framework developed for conducting common political work at the local level.

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The NLC originally aimed at a negotiated merger based on a common party program and Marxism-Leninism, Mao Tsetung Thought. However, after some initial optimism and excitement, the project fell apart with bitter recriminations. Major differences remained over key political and organizational matters, and the participants were not able to overcome them.

These line differences concentrated around organizational matters of leadership. Those communists emerging from the Black and Puerto Rican liberation struggles held to the idea that, even in a future multinational party, there would have to be a special role for “third world leadership.” They expressed concerns about being overwhelmed (and simply absorbed) by the largest group in the NLC – the more consolidated, nationally organized, and largely-white Revolutionary Union.

The concerns stemmed from immediate experience. There had been a long struggle within the Black Liberation Movement for African American leadership – which included the expulsion of white people from SNCC. As a result, African American communists found it hard to accept “white leadership” within a new multi-racial party, and anticipated that the Black community would not accept such a party as the leadership of its struggles.

At the same time, the RU had, over the previous two or three years, submerged itself more and more in “rank and file organizing” among industrial workers in factories – and the politics of sections of the RU had increasingly moved toward the position that the 1960s dominance of internal national liberation struggles (i.e., the African American, Chicano, and Puerto Rican movements) in the U.S. movement was fading, and the coming revolutionary movement would now be defined by the common struggle of the multi-national working class.

Because of their concerns and line, the BWC and PRRWO insisted that the process of party formation should be postponed until the Black, Puerto Rican, Chicano and Asian-American communist organizations had developed significantly more heft (and partisan support in their communities), so that that Third World communists could better play a leading role within the future party and the future revolutionary leadership. They were opposed to having the RU leader, Bob Avakian, chosen as the future party chairman.

The collision over these two issues (of timing and chairmanship) resulted in a sharp eruption of mutual polemics over an RU document called “National Bulletin #13,” which argued that communists were fundamentally defined by internationalism and that even revolutionary forms of nationalism were (ultimately) bourgeois.

The final collapse of the NLC also involved a sharp struggle within the RU itself. The RU representative on the NLC, D.H. Wright, essentially went over to the BWC/PRRWO position and attempted to split the RU along racial lines. The attempt failed, and Wright left with only a handful of supporters. By May 1974, the NLC broke up.

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The RU argued that the problem had been “Bundism” – i.e. the inability of some communists to break out of a framework that combined communism uneasily with various forms of revolutionary nationalism, preventing the formation of a genuinely multinational and genuinely communist party. (“Bundism” was Lenin’s term for non-territorial Jewish nationalism in the pre-revolution Russian socialist movement, which manifested itself in the Jewish Labor Bund.)

From the other side, the RU was accused of white chauvinism and an inability to accept leadership from Third World forces – a charge that was soon amplified by the RU’s decision, in the summer of 1974, to oppose Boston’s affirmative action plan of busing Black public school students to segregated white schools, and to propose united working class resistance to that plan. It was a stark departure from the RU’s previous history of militant support for the Black Liberation struggle – and virtually guaranteed that they would be unable to unite with other communist forces in building a common party.

Historical Works

Marxism, Nationalism and the Task of Party Building. History and Lessons of the National Liaison Committee by D.B.

RCP Rewrites History of National Liaison Committee

How RCP Defends Chauvinism and Anti-Party Blocs. A Reply to ’The Communist’ on the National Liaison Committee by An Observer

On “The National Liason Committee” of the RU, BWC, PRRWO and IWK by I Wor Kuen

Two Letters from IWK to the National Liaison Committee by I Wor Kuen

The Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization and the National Liaison Committee by I Wor Kuen

Critiques and Polemics

Struggle In The RU: In Opposition to the Consolidation of the Revisionist Line on the Black National Question

The Black Liberation Struggle, the Black Workers Congress, and Proletarian Revolution by the Black Workers Congress

Red Papers 6: Build the Leadership of the Proletariat and its Party by the Revolutionary Union

Narrow Nationalism: Main Deviation in the Movement on the National Question by the Revolutionary Union

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Which Side Are You On? [On RU and “Narrow Nationalism”] by Carl Davidson

V.I. Lenin by the Revolutionary Union

Build the New Party To Lead the Masses! (Part 1) by the Revolutionary Union

’...fan the flames’ [On Party-Building] by Irwin Silber

Build the New Party To Lead the Masses! (Part 2) by the Revolutionary Union

An Analysis of the Revolutionary Union’s Incorrect Line on Party-building. (Excerpt) by Aileen Armstrong

The Revolutionary Union’s “New Turn” by the League for Proletarian Revolution

On Building the Party of the U.S. Working Class and the Struggle Against Dogmatism and Reformism: Speeches by Bob Avakian

Marxism or American Pragmatism? The Right Opportunist Line of the R.U. by Workers Viewpoint

May 1st Workers Movement Formed in Bay Area by the Revolutionary Union

Breaking with RU’s Ultra-’leftism’ by Steve Hamilton, Larry Harris and Danny Harris

Revolutionary Union: Opportunism in a “Super-Revolutionary” Disguise by the October League (M-L)

Critique of the RU Line on the Workers’ Movement by I Wor Kuen

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The Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists

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This party-building initiative began on November 19, 1972 with the issuance of a “Call for a Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists.” The call, initially signed by the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist) (CPC (M-L)), the American Communist Workers’ Party (Marxist-Leninist) (ACWM (M-L)), the Communist League (CL) and several smaller, local collectives, was accompanied by the creation of a Preparatory Committee to organize the conference and recruit additional groups.

Increasing differences between the two main U.S. participants in the Preparatory Committee – the ACWM and the CL – saw the conference process collapse in the spring of 1973 amid mutual recriminations, charges and counter-charges.

The CL and those forces associated with it proceeded to hold their Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists on May 24-28, 1973 in Chicago at which time the National Continuations Committee (NCC). (see below for more on the NCC)

The ACWM and those groups associated with it, on the other hand, held their own conference on August 13-28, 1973, at which time they united to constitute themselves as the Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists (COUSML). (See below for more on COUSML)

The Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists party building process was subject to FBI infiltration through a number of fake Marxist-Leninist groups set up for that purpose, including the Red Star Cadre (Marxist-Leninist) of Tampa, Florida, led by an FBI informant named Joe Burton.

Primary Documents and Polemics

Call for A Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists

Resolution in Support of the North American Conference of Marxist-Leninists by the American Communist Workers Movement (Marxist-Leninist)

Regina Conference, An Historic Turning Point in Party-building in North America

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Lexington Collective Supports Call

Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists. Marxist-Leninists Unite! by the Communist League

ACWM (ML) Breaks with Call by the Communist League

Resolution of the Second Meeting of the Preparatory Committee for the Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists – May 12, 1973

Resolution of the Third Meeting of the Preparatory Committee for the Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists – June 9, 1973

Red Banner (ML) Joins the Preparatory Committee and Hails the Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists, August 18 to September 2, 1973.

ACWM (ML) – The Ugly Face of Opportunism by the Communist League

The Dialectics of the Communist League: Double-Dealing, Intrigue and Conspiracy – An Attempt to Liquidate the American Communist Movement by Red Banner (Marxist-Leninist)

Dialectics of the Development of Nelson Perry’s Head. A Refutation of the Counter-Revolutionary Line of the So-called “Communist League.” Part One: The Leaders of the “Communist League” are the Real Splitters and Saboteurs of the Marxist-Leninist Movement Today! by the American Communist Workers Movement (Marxist-Leninist)

Part Two of: The Dialectics of the Development of Nelson Peery’s Head. A Refutation of the Counter-Revolutionary Line of the So-called “Communist” League. by Tim Hall, the American Communist Workers Movement (Marxist-Leninist)

The Real Splitters by Tim Hall

FBI Infiltration

Speech Delivered by Comrade Joe Burton on the Occasion of the First Anniversary of the Red Star Cadre (Marxist-Leninist)

U.S. Citizens Used by F.B.I. Abroad

Ex-Operative Says He Worked for F.B.I. to Disrupt Political Activities Up to ’74

’Maoists’: The FBI’s target

Former Provacateur sues FBI. Had posed as ’Marxist-Leninist’

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National Continuations Committee

The National Continuations Committee (NCC) was created at a Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists called by the Communist League and other forces associated with it on May 24-28, 1973 in Chicago. The NCC was formed to prepare the grounds for holding a congress to found a new anti-revisionist Communist Party in the United States. A series of resolutions were adopted at the conference, which was subsequently published in newspaper format under the title, “Marxist-Leninists Unite!” From the beginning, the CL, which argued that the study of Marxist-Leninist theory was a special task during this period, and had a greater percentage of cadre from oppressed nationalities than other large communist groups, was the leader and driving force in the NCC.

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The initial basis of unity of the NCC was the following three points:

1. That the primary task of Marxist Leninist organizations and advanced workers is to build an honest Multi-National, Marxist-Leninist Communist Party in the United States–“a Party of a New Type”–to unite and lead the struggles of the U.S. working class in the seizure of State power and establishment of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat. The Committee realized that this could be done only by strict adherence to and defense of the science of Marxism-Leninism, and by an all out assault against the CPUSA and all forms of revisionism and opportunism.
2. That a Party Congress should be called in about a year to organize such a Party within the U.S.
3. That the draft resolutions adopted at the Conference should be the minimum political line holding the committee together and enabling it to carry out the necessary organizational work for the Party Congress. Finally, that any organization or individual which agreed with these points and the draft resolutions should be encouraged to join both Local Continuation Committees and the National Continuations Committee.

The National Continuations Committee, staffed primarily by CL cadre, printed and distributed “Marxist-Leninists Unite!”; put out a newsletter “for political discussion and news in preparation for the Congress”; coordinated work between the various organizations on the NCC; helped organize and coordinate the work of Local Continuations Committees; and made preparations for the forth-coming Congress. Local CCs were established in a number of cities including the Bay Area, Chicago, Detroit, and Sacramento.

The NCC was created in a period when other major New Communist Movement organizations – like the Revolutionary Union and the October League – did not consider the formation of a new Communist Party to be on the immediate agenda. As such, the NCC was able to attract the interest of those anti-revisionist groups which did. These included national organizations like the Black Workers Congress (BWC), the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization (PRRWO), and the August 29th Movement (ATM), and local groups like the New Voice (California) and the League for Proletarian Revolution (Bay Area). The perspective of the NCC was further enhanced and disseminated nationally by the publication of The Struggle for the Party by the New Voice’s Charles Loren and the debates that followed it.

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However, the NCC process failed to hold these groups together. The attempt by the CL to impose democratic centralism within the NCC, together with its public articulation of certain positions, most notoriously, that capitalism had not been restored in the Soviet Union, resulted in the successive abandonment of the NCC by all the major national groups – BWC, PRRWO, ATM, and by the New Voice.

If the NCC was a failure at uniting Marxist-Leninists at the national level, it had more success in at least one local area – Detroit. Here the CL had previously incorporated important elements of the League of Revolutionary Black Workers (LRBW) around General Baker and Chuck Wooten, with their base among Black workers in the auto plants, in the same period that saw another former section of the LRBW form the BWC. The Detroit CL succeeded in bringing the Motor City Labor League (MCLL) into the Local CC. The MCLL, a former mass organization, created in 1970 by the LRBW to support local workers’ struggles, was a significant force in the Detroit left: “at one time or another in its development [it] contained all the active indigenous white radicals in the city.” (Dan Geogakas, Marvin Surkin, Detroit: I Do Mind Dying (St. Martin’s Press, 1975)). In 1972, the MCLL had undergone a major split; the majority elected to transform the group into a Marxist-Leninist organization, and in 1974 it joined the local CC.

Over the Labor Day weekend in Chicago 1974, the CL, the MCLL and the remaining elements of the NCC met and founded the Communist Labor Party (CLP). Attending the founding congress, in addition to the CL and MCLL, were the League for Proletarian Revolution (Bay Area), the Capital Collective (Detroit), Closer To It newspaper (Akron, Ohio), the San Jose Study Group, the Mateo County Marxist-Leninist Organization, and the Joe Stalin Study Group.

Thereafter, the CLP never recaptured the national prominence in anti-revisionist circles it had garnered during the NCC period. Detroit continued to be a center of CLP activity; in 1976 and again in 1978 it conducted “Vote Communist” campaigns running General Baker for the Michigan House of Representatives.

In 1993 the CLP changed its name, first to the National Organizing Committee, and then to the League of Revolutionaries for a New America.

The National Continuations Committee

Historical Works and Polemics

[Report on] The Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists by the Communist Collective of the Chicano Nation

Sham Congress Called by Communist League by the October League (Marxist-Leninist)

The Future is Bright: A Response to the Communist League by the October League (Marxist-Leninist)

The Struggle Against Revisionism and Opportunism: Against the Communist League and the Revolutionary Union by the Black Workers Congress

Which Side Are You On? [On the BWC Polemic Against CL] by Carl Davidson

IWK Statement on the Communist League and the National Continuations Committee by I Wor Kuen

Summary of the NCC Process, the Founding of the CLP, and the Role of the League for Proletarian Revolution by the Marxist-Leninist Collective

The Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization and the National Continuations Committee by I Wor Kuen

NCC Documents

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Marxist-Leninists Unite!

The National Continuations Committee Newsletters

Letter from the National Continuations Committee to the Detroit Local Continuations Committee

Materials of Participating Organizations

Political Statement of the League for Proletarian Revolution

Appalachia by the Communist League

Regional Autonomy for the Indian Peoples! by the Communist League

Proletarian Revolution and the Emancipation of Women. Two Speeches Given at a Forum on International Women’s Day in San Francisco, Sponsored by the Communist League, the San Francisco Marxist-Leninist Organization, and the League for Proletarian Revolution

Against Revisionism by Michael A. Miller, The League for Proletarian Revolution

Free the Negro Nation! by the League for Proletarian Revolution

Letter from the Staff of Closer To It

A Veteran Communist Speaks... On the Struggle Against Revisionism by Admiral Kilpatrick

Statement on the Expulsion of the Black Workers Congress from the National Continuations Committee by the Communist League

Differences within the NCC

Differences over Imperialism and the “Bribe”

Imperialism Today: An Economic Analysis by the New Voice

Comradely Polemics on Imperialism by the Communist League

Three Articles on the Bribe by the New Voice

Differences over Capitalist Restoration in the USSR

The International Significance of the Restoration of Capitalism in the USSR by the League for Proletarian Revolution

Class Struggle in the USSR by the Communist League

The International Significance of the Restoration of Capitalism in the USSR, Part II by the League for Proletarian Revolution

The Detroit Local Continuations Committee

Historical Works and Polemics

History of the Communist Labor Party – USNA, Detroit Section

Statement of the Cass-Trumbull Collective on Not Joining the National Continuations Committee

The Communist League: Class Struggle or Class Collaboration? by the Detroit Spartacist League

Uniting Theory and Practice by the Detroit Collective

DLCC Documents

Report from the Detroit Continuations Committee

Reply to the Anti-Party Bloc by the Detroit Local Continuations Committee

Materials of Participating Organizations – The Motor City Labor League (Marxist-Leninist)

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The Political Line of the Motor City Labor League (M-L)

From the Masses, To the Masses by A Study Group

Where We’re At; Where We’re Going by the MCLL Central Committee

Party of a New Type by the Motor City Labor League

The Building of Cadre as Political Leadership in the Process of Building the Multi-National Anti-Revisionist Communist Party by the MCLL Central Committee

Opportunism in the Formation of the Party: A Position Opposed to “A Study Group” Participating on the Continuations Committee by the Motor City Labor League

From Something, Through Something, To Something by the MCLL Central Committee

What road for party building? by the Motor City Labor League (M-L)

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The Communist Labor Party of the United States of North America

Primary Documents

Cover

CLP Holds Founding Congress

Documents of the First (Founding) Congress of the Communist Labor Party (1974)

What is the Communist Labor Party? [from Workers Vanguard, No. 56, November 8, 1974]

A Veteran Communist Speaks by Joe Dougher

China’s Revolution is the Continuation of the Great October Revolution – A Refutation of Lin Piao by T.S., Chicago

On the Situation in Cuba by Comrades in the Southwest

On Certain Theoretical Aspects of the Marxist-Leninist Analysis of Fascism; Dialectics of Revolution and Counter-Revolution by M.M., Chicago

The Boston Busing Crisis: Liberalism as the Breeding Ground for Fascism

Cover

Busing: A Fight for Equality

Support Busing–Not Fascism!

Smash the Nazi Party!! [demonstration flyer]

Youth in Struggle, Vol. 1, No. 1, July 1975 [Official Newsletter of the L.A. Young Communist League]

Proposal for the Formation of a National Film Organization [from Black Graphic International, No. 20, Fall-Winter 1975]

Report from the Secretariat [to the Second Plenary Session of the First Central Committee]

Materials in Preparation for the Second CLP Congress

Opening Remarks from the General Secretary to the Second Congress of the CLP

Documents of the Second Congress of the Communist Labor Party (1975)

Sample CLP “Shop” Papers

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Awaken [Vol. 1, No. 8, January 20, 1976]

Awaken [Vol. 2, No. 1, February 3, 1976]

The Plymouth Fury [Vol. 2, No. 1, January 1976]

Truck Tribune [January 20, 1976]

The Democratic Lawyer [political newspaper of the Communist Labor Party fraction of the National La Raza Law Students]

The Democratic Lawyer [political newspaper of the Communist Labor Party fraction of the National Lawyers Guild]

* * *

CPUSA Hails Reaction

Jobs, Peace, Equality – The Communist Labor Party

Jobs with Peace by J. Freed

The Comintern Position on the Negro Question. A Review of H. Haywood’s Negro Liberation by Nelson Peery [from Proletariat, Vol. 2, No. 1, Summer 1976]

USNA Imperialism and the Immigration of Mexican Workers into the USNA by K. R., Tucson [from Proletariat, Vol. 2, No. 1, Summer 1976]

Cover

The Equal Rights Congress

Equal Rights Congress Founded

What is the ERC?

National Report – Build the ERC

Equal Rights Congress – Resolutions of the Founding Convention

* * *

Fascism: The Cost American Cannot Afford! [draft pamphlet]

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Resolution on Mao Tsetung

Open Letter To US-China People’s Friendship Association

Repeal Section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act by General Baker, Jr.

Socialism in the Soviet Union by Jonathan Aurthur

The State of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat in China by Steven Miller [from Appeal to Reason, Vol. 5, No. 4, Winter 1979-1980]

The Dialectics of Chicano Political Development: A Political Economy Perspective by Richard Santillan [from Appeal to Reason, Vol. 5, No. 4, Winter 1979-1980]

The Road to Socialism: Documents, Third Party Congress, Communist Labor Party, November 1980

Documents of the Fourth Congress of the Communist Labor Party (November 1986)

African American Liberation and Revolution in the United States by Nelson Peery

Entering an Epoch of Social Revolution by Nelson Peery

League of Revolutionaries for a New America

Primary Documents

What is the League of Revolutionaries for a New America?

Political Report of the Steering Committee (1995)

Political Report of the Steering Committee (1996)

Documents of the 3rd League Convention (1998)

Cover

Political Resolution

Organizational Resolution

The Program of the League

* * *

Political Report of the Steering Committee (July 1999)

Political Report of the Steering Committee (November 1999)

The Future is Up to Us. A Revolutionary Talking Politics With the American People by Nelson Peery

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Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists

The Central Organization of US Marxist-Leninists was formed when the ACWM(ML), the Association of Communist Workers, and the Lexington Communist Collective united at the Conference of American Marxist-Leninists of August 1973. A small Bay Area collective, Red Banner (ML), also joined at the Conference and took part in the new organization for awhile, but then left. Two other participants in the Conference – the Red Star Cadre and the Red Collective – agreed to join COUSML and were listed as among its founders, but they never actually took part in the work of the organization; later, these groups would be revealed as fake collectives whose leaders Joe Burton and Jill Schafer were FBI operatives [see the documents in the sub-section “FBI Infiltration” in the section “Conference of North American Marxist-Leninists” above].

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The theoretical-political positions of COUSML evolved considerably over time. It started out ardently Maoist and ended up denouncing Mao Zedong Thought. While allied with the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist) internationally for nearly all of its history, it was eventually denounced in extreme terms by the late Hardial Bains, leader of the CPC (ML).

But while its views evolved, COUSML’s basic orientation remained the same: to rebuild a communist party on an anti-revisionist basis. In party-building, it emphasized revolutionary theory and, in particular, carrying out open communist agitation among the masses.

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Starting in late 1976, COUSML stressed the importance of opposing the “three worlds” theory promoted by the Chinese Communist Party and the line of “striking the main blow at Soviet social-imperialism”. It held that these positions were “lines of demarcation” within the US Marxist-Leninist movement and carried out a campaign in 1979 to unite communist activists opposed to “three worldist social-chauvinism” into a single anti-revisionist communist party. This led to the founding of the Marxist-Leninist Party of the USA on January 1, 1980.

Primary Documents

First Conference of American Marxist-Leninists Held August 18 to 28. A Conference of Unity, A Conference of Victory!

Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists Formed!

What is the Stage of the Proletarian Revolution in the U.S.?

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Announcement of the Formation of the National Committee and National Executive Committee of the Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists

Report of the Second Meeting of the National Committee of Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists

Afro-American People: Advance the Struggle Against Racial Discrimination and Violent Repression! by the Seattle Workers Movement under the leadership of the COUSML

Apply Marxism-Leninism Mao Tsetung Thought to problems confronting proletarian revolution in the U.S.

Communists Resist Anti-busing Fascists at Louisville Factory

Mao Tsetung Thought Versus Opportunism

MAO TSETUNG THOUGHT WILL SHINE FOREVER!

Once Again on the OL’s Social-Chauvinist Theory of “Directing the Main Blow at Soviet Social-Imperialism” by the Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists

Mao Tsetung and Mao Tsetung Thought are Anti-Marxist-Leninist and Revisionist

Periodical

Workers’ Advocate

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