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Speech given at the 27th National Convention of the CPUSA The Structure and Organization Convention
Committee included Marc Brodine (WA), Bill Davis (NY), Rosita Johnson
(E. PA), Steve Noffke (MI), Brian Steinberg CT), Shelby Richardson (Ill)
and Mark Almberg (ILL). After having met six times, we submitted our proposals to the National Board and then National Committee. The National Committee agreed with the direction of proposals in the report and then it was submitted for pre-Convention discussion. This report was placed on our Web site, not only available to our members but the public at large. It was also printed in a special Convention bulletin, which included all reports to the last National Committee. This was sent to all clubs and Districts. In addition, the report was printed as a separate discussion document on its own, which was also sent to the entire Party for discussion. The Committee met an additional two times after the NC meeting to continue to discuss clubs. I will make a proposal based on that as part of this report. In five minutes it is not possible to summarize the original 16-page report. What I will do is to present a few goals of the report and then make proposals. The transition of leadership over the last year and a half launched a process of improving our organization and structure, adopting innovations to improve the work. The call for wiring every club on the Internet has created a new and faster method of communication and exchange between the Party and the base of the Party. National phone conferencing, which was never more used than in preparing for this Convention, allowed for the first time for representation from the whole country from coast to coast in political and organizational preparations for every aspect of this Convention. Literally hundreds of people in and out of the Party participated in lively pre-Convention discussion on the Internet. The working groups on a wide range of subjects, while not accomplishing all that we had hoped, really laid the groundwork for broadening our discussion on questions that we had not given enough attention to, like gay and lesbian rights and our work in the religious community. These changes have revolutionized our ability to connect with the whole Party. The ability to draw from the experience and thinking of the Party base across the country on a quick and regular basis, is one of the main reasons for the success and unity of this Convention. Our Committee discussion and proposals are part of a process which will continue after this Convention because it is clear that we could not take up all questions. And many questions require more thought, more exchange, than the time that we had to consider them. Our goal was to make proposals that would help us to be better organized, more streamlined to allow for more connection to the upsurge of the labor and people's movement, more action based, more responsive in a timely way, more results oriented, more based on our Party reality, more transparent, more democratic, but at the same time collective and responsible. We discussed that democratic centralism should not be seen as a static set of structures, but as a flexible concept that communist parties have applied in ways that fit their specific circumstances. Our Committee concluded that generally we have been overbalanced on the centralism side. So we made proposals for democratizing the structure and organization. At the same time, we think that as we move to democratize the Party we should try to be balanced, not swinging too far, especially related to "internal processing" versus action orientation. We also made proposals related to check up and accountability. A number of our Committee proposals were put into action by the National Board and National Committee as we worked towards this Convention. That included the idea for a national pool of comrades to be proposed from the Districts for consideration to the National Committee and other national bodies. We proposed that timely exchange between the Districts and the national center on proposals for the National Committee was crucial. By and large the response to the proposals in this report have been extremely positive. That which received the most enthusiasm were the conclusions about how our National Committee needs to be more collective and deliberative and open for debate and disagreement as part of the process of arriving at conclusion. That opened up the question of how to be structured to have more genuine exchange at every level of the Party. The report also emphasized that our national decisions should be based on genuine consultation with the entire base of the Party. That means much better organization and preparation at the national level to insure District and club input and experience before arriving at decisions. It also means our national bodies need to be more District- and club-conscious overall. There was also a welcoming to the proposal that NC members have to be more responsible in terms of attendance of NC meetings and the implementing of decisions in their given Districts. In general, there was a positive response to the whole idea of review and improvement at every level. Because time is short, I now want to focus on what our Committee proposes for adoption by the Convention without going into all the thinking that was in the 16-page report. Our Committee's proposals focused on the national bodies of the Party, especially the functioning of the National Committee.
I move that we adopt these proposals as a whole. This is a package proposal. Each part relates to the whole. It only works if adopted in sync with one another. Thank you. |
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| CPUSA: cpusa@cpusa.org 235 West 23rd Street New York NY 10011 ph: 212-989-4994 |
Related websites: People's Weekly World Political Affairs Young Communist League |
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