Revolutionary Socialist Party | |
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Leader | John Percy |
Founded | 2008 |
Headquarters | Sydney, Australia |
Ideology | Revolutionary socialism Marxism Leninism Marxism-Leninism Trotskyism |
Website | |
rsp.org.au | |
Politics of Australia Political parties Elections |
The Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP) is a small socialist organisation in Australia, formed in 2008 by a split from the former Democratic Socialist Perspective (DSP). Members of the split were expelled from the DSP over debates about the organisation's participation in the Socialist Alliance.[1] While the RSP sees the project of the Alliance as liquidationist, it still maintains the basic politics of the DSP.[2] Van Thanh Rudd, the nephew of former Labor Party (ALP) Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is a member and unsuccessfully ran against ALP Prime Minister Julia Gillard in the Victorian seat of Lalor in the 2010 federal election.[3]
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On 13 May 2008, The DSP National Executive expelled 39 members of the Leninist Party Faction (LPF) of whom went on to form the RSP.[2] They claim to have established branches in Brisbane, Canberra, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney.[4] Unfortunately because of slow growth six members left the party in September 2011 and called for broad left support instead behind Green Left Weekly [5]-- a journal which supports the Socialist Alliance.
The RSP claim to stand against greed, exploitation, war, oppression and environmental destruction and for a revolutionary overthrow of capitalism based on the ideas of Karl Marx, Frederick Engels and other socialists. They support what they call "the Bolivarian socialist revolution now unfolding in Venezuela."[6] Like the former DSP who broke with Leon Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution in the 1980s, the RSP are advocates of the two stage theory, as Doug Lorimer of the RSP outlines in In Defence of Lenin's Marxist Policy of a Two-Stage, Uninterrupted Revolution:
Other Australian socialist organisations have labelled this theory "Stalinist" and in contrast with classical Marxism. The Socialist Party, affiliated with the Committee for a Workers International claims the theory is "a policy of deception, consistent misquotation, [and] half quotations of Trotsky’s ideas and innuendo".[8] Socialist Alternative, who follows the core politics of (but not formally affiliated with) the International Socialist Tendency claims of the same theory "[a] capitalist hell-hole by any other name is just as shit, surely!"[9]
On Australia Day 2010, RSP members, Van Thanh Rudd and Sam King, dressed in Ku Klux Klan outfits holding signs "Racism - Made in Australia", outside the Rod Laver Arena during the Australian Open to protest what they said was the refusal of the Australian Government "to acknowledge that attacks on Indians were racist and that locking up asylum seekers was wrong."[10] Rudd and King were arrested within 10 minutes and charged with inciting a riot.[11] Rudd also told the Indian weekly newsmagazine Outlook that the "dominant culture in Australia is a racist culture."[12]
Although the split within the former DSP and the current RSP was due to the electoral project of the Alliance,[2] the RSP still ran candidates in the 2010 federal election.[13] However, as both candidates, Van Thanh Rudd contesting the Victorian seat of Lalor against Julia Gillard[14] and Hamish Chitts contesting the Queensland seat of Griffith against Kevin Rudd,[15] were not registered with the Australian Electoral Commission as RSP candidates, this signifies the RSP's failure, unlike the Alliance,[16] to generate the 500-member minimum required to register as an official political party.[17] Both candidates polled very poorly. Rudd garnered a total of 516 votes, scoring 0.50% of the overall vote, with a +0.50% swing, placing him as the second least preferred candidate, ahead of regional tourism developer, Marc Aussie-Stone, compared to Gillard as first preference, who garnered 66,060 votes, scoring 64.26% of the overall vote, with a +4.37% swing.[14] Chitts garnered a total of 600 votes, scoring 0.75% of the overall vote, with a +0.75% swing, also placing him as the second least preferred candidate, ahead of far-right Citizens Electoral Council candidate, Jan Pukallus, compared to Kevin Rudd as first preference, who garnered 35,286 votes, scoring 44.06% of the overall vote, with a -9.03% swing.[15]