ONTD Political

TW: Sexual Assault and Victim Blaming

3:46 pm - 01/13/2013
What does the SWP's way of dealing with sex assault allegations tell us about the left?

How do we deal with sexual violence on the left? Here's a case study.

The Socialist Workers' Party, for those who aren't familiar with it already, is a political organisation of several thousand members which has been a prominent force on the British left for more than 30 years. They are at the forefront of the fight against street fascism in Britain, were a large organising presence in the student and trade union movement over the past several years, and are affiliated with large, active parties in other countries, like Germany's Die Linke. Many of the UK's most important thinkers and writers are members, or former members.

Like many others on the left in Britain, I've had my disagreements with the SWP, but I've also spoken at their conferences, drunk their tea, and have a lot of respect for the work they do. They are not a fringe group: they matter. And it matters that right now, the party is exploding in messy shards because of a debate about sexism, sexual violence and wider issues of accountability.

This week, it came to light that when allegations of rape and sexual assault were made against a senior party member, the matter was not reported to the police, but dealt with 'internally' before being dismissed. According to a transcript from the party's annual conference earlier this month, not only were friends of the alleged rapist allowed to investigate the complaint, the alleged victims were subject to further harassment. Their drinking habits and former relationships were called into question, and those who stood by them were subject to expulsion and exclusion.

Tom Walker - a party member who walked out this week in disgust - explained that feminism "is used effectively as a swear word by the leadership’s supporters.... it is deployed against anyone who seems ‘too concerned’ about issues of gender."

In a brave and principled resignation statement published yesterday, Walker said that:

". . . there is clearly a question mark over the sexual politics of many men in powerful positions on the left. I believe the root of this is that, whether through reputation, lack of internal democracy or both, these are often positions that are effectively unchallengeable. Not for nothing have recent sex abuse allegations in the wider world focused on the idea of a ‘culture of impunity’. Socialist Worker has pointed to the way that institutions close up to protect powerful people within them. What is not acknowledged is that the SWP is itself an institution in this sense, with its instinct for self-protection to survive. As previously mentioned, its belief in its own world-historic importance gives a motive for an attempted cover-up, making abusers feel protected."

Members are now leaving the organisation, or being expelled, in large numbers after the case came to light at the party's conference and transcripts of the discussions were leaked online.

The writer China Mieville, a longstanding member of the SWP, told me that, like many members, he is "aghast":

"The way such allegations were dealt with - complete with questions about accusers' past relationships and drinking habits that we would instantly, rightly denounce as sexist in any other context - was appalling. It's a terrible problem of democracy, accountability and internal culture that such a situation can occur, as is the fact that those arguing against the official line in a fashion deemed unacceptable to those in charge could be expelled for 'secret factionalism."

Mieville explained that in his party, as in so many other organisations, the power hierarchies which have facilitated problems such as this have been controversial for a long time.

"Many of us have for years been openly fighting for a change in the culture and structures of the organisation to address exactly this kind of democratic deficit, the disproportionate power of the Central Committee and their loyalists, their heavy-handed policing of so-called 'dissent', and their refusal to admit mistakes ," he told me. "Like the current situation, a disaster catastrophically mishandled by the leadership. All of us in the party should have the humility to admit such issues. It's up to members of the SWP to fight for the best of our tradition, not put up with the worst, and to make our organisation what it could be, and unfortunately is not yet."


The British Socialist Worker's Party is hardly atypical among political parties, among left-wing groups, among organisations of committed people or, indeed, among groups of friends and colleagues in having structures in place that might allow sexual abuse and misogyny by men in positions of power to continue unchecked. One could point, in the past 12 months alone, to the BBC's handling of the Jimmy Savile case, or to those Wikileaks supporters who believe that Julian Assange should not be compelled to answer allegations of rape and sexual assault in Sweden.

I could point, personally, to at least two instances involving respected men that have sundered painfully and forever friendship groups which lacked the courage to acknowledge the incidents. The only difference is that the SWP actually talk openly about the unspoken rules by which this sort of intimidation usually goes on. Other groups are not so brazen as to say that their moral struggles are simply more important than piffling issues of feminism, even if that's what they really mean, nor to claim that as right-thinking people they and their leaders are above the law. The SWP's leadership seem to have written it into their rules.

To say that the left has a problem with handling sexual violence is not to imply that everyone else doesn't. There is, however, a stubborn refusal to accept and deal with rape culture that is unique to the left and to progressives more broadly. It is precisely to do with the idea that, by virtue of being progressive, by virtue of fighting for equality and social justice, by virtue of, well, virtue, we are somehow above being held personally accountable when it comes to issues of race, gender and sexual violence.

That unwillingness to analyse our own behaviour can quickly become dogma. The image is one of petty, nitpicking women attempting to derail the good work of decent men on the left by insisting in their whiny little women's way that progressive spaces should also be spaces where we don't expect to get raped and assaulted and slut-shamed and victimised for speaking out, and the emotions are rage and resentment: why should our pure and perfect struggle for class war, for transparency, for freedom from censorship be polluted by - it's pronounced with a curl of the upper lip over the teeth, as if the very word is distasteful - 'identity politics'? Why should we be held more accountable than common-or-garden bigots? Why should we be held to higher standards?

Because if we're not, then we have no business calling ourselves progressive. Because if we don't acknowledge issues of assault, abuse and gender hierarchy within our own institutions we have no business speaking of justice, much less fighting for it.

"The issues of democracy and sexism are not separate, but inextricably linked," writes Walker. "Lack of the first creates space for the second to grow, and makes it all the more difficult to root it out when it does." He's talking about the SWP, but he could be talking about any part of the left right now, in its struggle to divest itself of generations of misogynist baggage.

Equality isn't an optional add-on, a side-issue to be dealt with after the revolution's over. There can be no true democracy, no worthwhile class struggle, without women's rights. The sooner the left accepts that and starts working the enormous stick of priggishness and prejudice out of its collective backside, the sooner we can get on with the job at hand.

source I'm not from the UK, so I know nothing about this particular group. However, I am on the board for a socialist group in the US and uggg the stories I could tell about some of the dudes I deal with who are so goddamned clueless about feminism
aznlax39 13th-Jan-2013 09:05 pm (UTC)
...wow that's disgusting.

But nhf a socialist party. If we're going to go with a multi-party system, then it's better to make one that's "socially liberal/fiscally conservative" as most independents I know claim to be that anyway.
violetrose 13th-Jan-2013 09:22 pm (UTC)
Fiscal conservatives suck just as much as social conservatives, lbr; just because you support the right of a woman to have an abortion, doesn't mean you're excused from being an arse because you also don't want to provide affordable healthcare for her if she decides to continue the pregnancy.

Supporting the rights of marginalised groups goes beyond being 'socially liberal' - it goes with acknowledging that said groups are disproportionately affected by poverty; lack of healthcare and health problems, including disability and mental illness, and that conservative/anti-welfare policies further their marginalisation.

Unless you mean fiscally conservative in the sense that they don't agree with massive military expenditures and the funding of wars that are often illegal, or at the very least, highly questionable with their motivations. But frankly, that's not what I think of when I hear 'fiscally conservative'.
aznlax39 13th-Jan-2013 09:46 pm (UTC)
I fully support buffing up the health care system with diverted funds from military expenditures (most of which we simply don't need as the methods of defense and warfare is changing) in the forms of revamped health insurance and free clinics for the poor, but I also expect a modicum of personal responsibility from people do have access to affordable care and still make poor life decisions--ie an upper middle class couple who spend beyond their means and decide to have 10 children because they don't believe in birth control. I'd also spend a shit ton more on auditing the quality of foster homes.

Also finding more ways to streamline existing public services with fewer employees--that would help a whole fucking lot with the budget.

I don't believe in raising taxes without equal spending cuts, sorry. And, if we do cut, I prefer it to be done in military spending first, then on streamlining social services. If that fails, then yes overall spending on social services must be on the chopping block as a last resort and everyone's quality of life is going to have to take a hit.
aznlax39 13th-Jan-2013 09:52 pm (UTC)
Side note: when I mention taxes, I do support the expiration of the bush tax cuts etc, but some people need to understand that taxing the upper class > 50% harms executive talent. Maybe a mix of ordinary income tax raises and capital gains tax raises to strike a balance between wealth creation and the government coffer.
eversofar 13th-Jan-2013 09:15 pm (UTC)
as much as i don't trust the police to adequately handle sexual assault cases, i also don't trust leftist men to handle these cases internally because they're often more concerned with protecting rapists than justice and actively discourage victims from going to the police when they choose to do so.
violetrose 13th-Jan-2013 09:25 pm (UTC)
I agree. A lot of supposedly left-wing men can be just as misogynistic as any conservative man. But for them, it can often come with the notion that they can't possibly be sexist, because they support abortion rights or whatever else.
redstar826 13th-Jan-2013 10:02 pm (UTC)
didn't this shit pop up in at least one occupy camp? I vaguely recall a post here about victims being told that they shouldn't go to the police



Edited at 2013-01-13 10:03 pm (UTC)
wikilobbying 13th-Jan-2013 10:33 pm (UTC)
yep. whether they're left-wing or right-wing, they still spew rape apologism and victim blaming.
valkeakuulas 13th-Jan-2013 10:01 pm (UTC)
Yep, many otherwise really liberal men don't give a fuck about women. Even if they believe in otherwise noble causes, no respect for them from me.
ebay313 13th-Jan-2013 10:03 pm (UTC)
It is so extra frustrating when this shit happens in left-wing organizations. Not only because ideally they should fucking know better, but often IME speaking out against such gets you cast as being against the overall goals of that organization- as is clearly happening in this situation as well. Really need to make it so that women (and other oppressed groups too) can talk about rape and other abuses without fear of being outcast or accused of trying to undermine the goals of left-wing organizations.
mary_pickforded OT, kind of13th-Jan-2013 10:10 pm (UTC)
Since this is in the feminist category, I was wondering if anyone could possibly help me. I have to do a project where I talk about "key information" on this concept: "Gender expectations are learned and culturally imposed through a variety of social mechanisms, including socialization, situational constraints, and commercialization of gender ideals." I was wondering if anyone knew of any good/legitimate websites that may provide me with some information that I can use? I have to create a few slides on Powerpoint and write up a sheet of other information and, being that I can't use Tumblr blogs on my bib sheet, I'm kind of at a loss as to how I can find information. Thank you in advance!
thelilyqueen Re: OT, kind of13th-Jan-2013 10:48 pm (UTC)
Don't have specific websites, but there's definitely material out there you could probably find with Google about experiments where different descriptors were applied by adults to the same infant based on whether the infant was dressed as a boy or girl, the parental tendency to help infant and toddler girls when they struggle to do something while the boys are allowed to work it out themselves, and how while the physical abilities of school-age children are virtually equal girls and boys already agree the boys are faster, stronger, etc.
redstar826 Re: OT, kind of14th-Jan-2013 12:23 am (UTC)
if you have time to find books, Cinderella Ate My Daughter has a lot of stuff about how toys are marketed to girls and about the whole princess/everything for girls must be pink trend, which might give you some useful info about what little girls learn about gender
violetrose 13th-Jan-2013 10:10 pm (UTC)
Sexism from left-wing men can sometimes be even more frustrating, because I expect more from them. I expect them to at least 'get it' on some small level.

I completely agree with one of the points the article makes that in some left-wing circles (usually those populated by white men) tend to act like focusing on issues like sexism or racism is detracting from the 'real issues' like poverty. Ignoring, of course, that poverty disproportionately affects already marginalised people, and that addressing these issues as well will also help the issue of poverty.
madwitch 13th-Jan-2013 10:18 pm (UTC)
Sadly, reading this didn't surprise me in the least. The left has as much of a problem with sexism as the right no matter how much they like to pretend otherwise, and the SWP have always been particularly awful.
maynardsong 13th-Jan-2013 11:37 pm (UTC)
Liberal guys can be disgusting about women too. News at 11.
ginger_maya 13th-Jan-2013 11:37 pm (UTC)
Personally I am hardly surprised by sexism and misogyny coming from left-wing men. Men are men and they've all been brought up in the same sexist, patriarchal, misogynistic society as everyone else.
cellared 14th-Jan-2013 12:33 am (UTC)
does anyone know if the ISO (in the states) has made a comment about this yet?
kyra_neko_rei 14th-Jan-2013 12:35 am (UTC)
Socialist Worker has pointed to the way that institutions close up to protect powerful people within them. What is not acknowledged is that the SWP is itself an institution in this sense, with its instinct for self-protection to survive. As previously mentioned, its belief in its own world-historic importance gives a motive for an attempted cover-up, making abusers feel protected."

And nobody's that important. No organization is that important. Nobody's important enough that anyone owes it to them to let them get away with rape.

When an organization or a person starts using their importance to justify a demand that their victims "shut up and take one for the team," they have functionally entered the pay of the enemy---specifically, the enemy concept that status and power equal entitlement to sex, regardless of the target's willingness.

This rapist, his friends that "investigated" him, whoever made or supported the decision to not call the police in, and everybody who's looking for ways to blame the victims instead of their attacker---they've all gone over to the enemy for a bribe of "making abusers feel protected," which carries an inherent promise that they will be protected too, once they climb high and decide to become one.

Edited at 2013-01-14 12:35 am (UTC)
suzycat 14th-Jan-2013 12:59 am (UTC)
Doesn't surprise me.

I don't know from the SWP but I had friends involved with the RCP back in the day and the RCP was extremely negative towards people with mental illness. Just because it's the left doesn't make it liberal.
angry_chick 14th-Jan-2013 01:37 am (UTC)
Water is wet.

Seriously, some of the worst anti-woman bigotry that I've seen has come from the left. In case we forgot, Anonymous champions a lot of leftist things, but also is one of the most anti-female, anti-PoC organizations that I've come across.

Some of the worst bile can come out of leftist organizations, and it's worse with them because they are aware of how NOT to do these things and have to pretend as though they care. Furthermore, with conservative men, you know where they stand.
girly123 14th-Jan-2013 08:59 pm (UTC)
Water is wet.

Basically. I wish I could be surprised by this.
yeats 14th-Jan-2013 05:04 am (UTC)
reading the comments of another blog post on the matter, i was blown away with how blinkered some of these people are. i honestly didn't realize that there were still people who believe that issues of social justice -- lgbt rights, women's equality, racial justice -- are just panacea from the capitalist system. no fucking wonder the revolution hasn't come, if you're so hellbent on alienating everyone else.
mingemonster 14th-Jan-2013 08:23 am (UTC)
I feel your pain, OP. I've been "complimented" by socialist men for not being like other women more times than I can count, and that was in a party that put a huge emphasis on feminism.
apostle_of_eris don't slander me15th-Jan-2013 01:13 am (UTC)
This is not about "the left" or "socialists". I'm a socialist, and if anything like this had gone on in my hearing, I would have gotten violent.
This is about Bolshevism and especially Trotskyites. Bolshevism is about maximizing power; something like this, threatening the most powerful, will of course be suppressed.
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