 WHICH WAY FORWARD IN THE FREE STATE....... ?      In the wake of Sinn Fein successs in the North ,  republicans are increasingly having to confront the problem of building a realistic strategy for the very different political situation that exists in the 26 Counties . In this controversial analysis ,  Sinn Fein ard comhairle  ('National Executive')   member   Paddy Bolger ,   argues that the Sinn Fein concept of an 'Economic Resistance Movement' , put forward in 1971 and expanded eight years later , is seriously over-optimistic , and that the national question remains the central revolutionary issue on which Free State workers can be mobilised in a painstaking and gradualist approach . From 'IRIS' magazine , November 1983 .
WHICH WAY FORWARD IN THE FREE STATE....... ?      In the wake of Sinn Fein successs in the North ,  republicans are increasingly having to confront the problem of building a realistic strategy for the very different political situation that exists in the 26 Counties . In this controversial analysis ,  Sinn Fein ard comhairle  ('National Executive')   member   Paddy Bolger ,   argues that the Sinn Fein concept of an 'Economic Resistance Movement' , put forward in 1971 and expanded eight years later , is seriously over-optimistic , and that the national question remains the central revolutionary issue on which Free State workers can be mobilised in a painstaking and gradualist approach . From 'IRIS' magazine , November 1983 .How can we make progress , then , given that we rule out 
 (as in commonsense we must)    revolutionary armed struggle in the Free State ,   and given that economic and social circumstances are not hopeful ?
I believe that  
 the central economic question in Irish history is the national question :   sometimes in the South 
  the national question   can be lost sight of by 
  republicans who see the ending of partition as a future goal   to be accomplished by building a mass republican organisation on social issues . In fact , apart from its centrality to 
  Irish political life , the 'national question' is the only question in the Ireland of today with a revolutionary political potential . And so , while we cannot fail to be socialists in all areas of work identified in 
  the economic resistance programme in 1979,   we may err too far in a direction that is only superfically revolutionary unless 
  the 'national question' is at all times kept to the fore.......(MORE LATER). TROUBLESOME BUSINESS .......    The book - 'Troublesome Business-The Labour Party and the Irish Question', by GEOFFREY BELL , was published by Pluto Press  in 1982.Reviewed here by Ciaran Dowd. From 'IRIS' magazine , November 1982 .
TROUBLESOME BUSINESS .......    The book - 'Troublesome Business-The Labour Party and the Irish Question', by GEOFFREY BELL , was published by Pluto Press  in 1982.Reviewed here by Ciaran Dowd. From 'IRIS' magazine , November 1982 . There have always been progressive pressure groups in 
  the British Labour Party,   such as the early 1960s'  
  'Campaign for Democracy in Ulster'   (sic) but , in Office , 
  the British Labour Party has uncompromisingly toed the imperialist-unionist line .  To the left of the Party there have been several campaigns since 
  1969   committed to 
  British withdrawal from Ireland :   in the early 1970's there was 
  the Anti-Internment League,    which was superceded in 1976 by 
  the Troops Out Movement (TOM).  Geoff Bell   concludes that 
 " ...the inability of TOM to build the 'mass campaign' it hoped for was due to the hostile environment it had to work in.." This is obviously true , but it did not prevent a powerful 
  anti-war movement  materialising in 
  the United States at the time of Vietnam:   however that may be , by 1980 these forces had shifted their attention to 
  the Labour Committee on Ireland (LCI)  which operates essentially within 
  the British Labour Party....... (MORE LATER). GLOSSARY OF THE LEFT IN IRELAND : FROM 1960 TO 1983.......      These notes attempt to record the left-wing organisations which have existed in Ireland since 1960 .  No attempt has been made to record purely local organisations outside Dublin and Belfast , or microscopic groups which never reached double figures . The larger organisations have been presented in more detail . From  'GRALTON' magazine,  1983.  By John Goodwillie. (NOTE : Links in the following article are as accurate as possible - not all the groups mentioned left a discernible 'footprint' .) SOCIALIST LABOUR PARTY:
GLOSSARY OF THE LEFT IN IRELAND : FROM 1960 TO 1983.......      These notes attempt to record the left-wing organisations which have existed in Ireland since 1960 .  No attempt has been made to record purely local organisations outside Dublin and Belfast , or microscopic groups which never reached double figures . The larger organisations have been presented in more detail . From  'GRALTON' magazine,  1983.  By John Goodwillie. (NOTE : Links in the following article are as accurate as possible - not all the groups mentioned left a discernible 'footprint' .) SOCIALIST LABOUR PARTY:  Formed in 1977 following the 
  Independent (Anti-Coalition) Labour   election campaigns . Attracted much uncommitted support from members of 
   the League For A Workers' Republic,  the Irish Workers'  Group,    part of 
 the Movement For A Socialist Republic   and 
   the Socialist Workers'  Movement.   These groups departed over the period 1978-1980 . 
 The 'SLP'   has been fissiparous from the beginning , alienating its members for diverse reasons , and eventually dissolved in 1982 . 
 THE SOCIALIST PARTY:  This group changed its name from 
  The Socialist Party Of Ireland  in 1976 , following its adoption of a  
 'two-nations theory':   it achieved some localised working-class support before it merged into 
  the Democratic Socialist Party in 1982 .   THE SOCIALIST PARTY OF IRELAND:  Formed in 1971 as a breakaway from 
  Official Sinn Fein  on the grounds that they were still too much of an all-class alliance and that a consciously socialist organisation was necessary .  After an effort to build itself as a replacement for 
  the Communist Party Of Ireland,  it changed its name to 
  the Socialist Party   in 1976 .
(MORE LATER).