(Redirected from Reforms)
Socialist 'Reformism' is the belief that gradual
democratic changes in a
society can ultimately change a society's fundamental economic relations and political structures. This belief grew out of opposition to
revolutionary socialism, which contends that
revolutions are necessary to fundamentally change a society.
Socialist reformism was first put forward by
Eduard Bernstein and
Karl Kautsky, two leading
social democrats. Reformism was quickly targeted by revolutionary socialists, with
Rosa Luxemburg condeming Bernstein's ''
Evolutionary Socialism'' in her
1900 essay ''
Reform or Revolution?''. While Luxemburg died in the
German Revolution, the reformists soon found themselves contending with the
Bolsheviks and their satellite
communist parties for the support of the
proletariat. After the Bolsheviks won the
Russian Civil War and consolidated power in the
Soviet Union, they launched a targeted campaign against the Reformist movement by denouncing them as "
social fascists."
Arthur Koestler, a former member of the
Communist Party of Germany, the largest communist party in
Western Europe in the
interwar period, confessed in
The God That Failed that communists aligned with the Soviet Union continued to consider the "social fascist"
Social Democratic Party of Germany to be the real enemy in
Germany--even after the
Nazi Party had usurped power.
[1]
In modern times, Reformists are seen as
centre-left. Some
social democratic parties, such as the Canadian
NDP and the Social Democratic Party of Germany, are still considered to be reformist.
Reformism in the United Kingdom's Labour Party
The term was applied to elements within the
United Kingdom Labour Party in the 1950s and subsequently, on the party's right.
Anthony Crosland wrote ''
The Future of Socialism'' (1956) as a personal manifesto arguing for a reformulation of the term. For Crosland, the relevance of
nationalization (or
public ownership) for socialists was much reduced as a consequence of contemporary
full employment,
Keynsian management of the economy and reduced
capitalist exploitation. In 1960, after the third successive defeat of his party in the
1959 General Election Hugh Gaitskell attempted to reformulate the original wording of
Clause IV in the party's constitution, but proved unsuccessful.
Some of the younger followers of Gaitskell, principally
Roy Jenkins,
Bill Rodgers and
Shirley Williams left the Labour Party in 1981 to found the
Social Democratic Party, but the central objective of the Gaitskellites was eventually achieved by
Tony Blair in his successful attempt to rewrite Clause IV in 1995.
The use of the term is distinguished from the
gradualism associated with Fabianism (the ideology of the
Fabian Society), which itself should not be seen as being in parallel with the revisionism associated Bernstein and the German SPD, as originally the Fabians had explicitly rejected
Marxism
See also
Reformist theorists and politicians
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Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
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Eduard Bernstein
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Antonio Gramsci
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Karl Kautsky
Reformist organizations
★ The
Fabian Society
Reformist ideology
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Kemalist Ideology
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Neosocialism
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Marxist revisionism
Competing ideologies
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Capitalism
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Communism
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Leninism
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Maoism
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Trotskyism
Other
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Reform movement
References
1. Koestler, Arthur. ''The God That Failed.'' Edited by Richard Crossman. Bantam Matrix, Tenth Edition. pp 41-42.
External links
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reform v. to improve (an existing institution, law, practice, etc) by alteration or by correction of abuses or malpractices; n. a principle, campaign, or measure aimed at achieving such change
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Reform or Revolution? by Rosa Luxemburg (1900)