I already feel guilty about it. For all intents and purposes he was a good comrade. The problem is that he wasn’t a communist, he’d occasionally opposed a communist agenda, and he stood in the way of someone that is not only a communist, but has agreed to push my line.

For context, today was the AGM in my local union branch. I had prepared in advance to push a slate of candidates composed principally of good communists who I believe will advance an effective communist agenda in my branch. The man I pushed out of the role he stood for was a fellow traveller who was an alumni of the British labour party. He had occasionally walled off my proposals at critical moments, which prompted me to make a maneuver against him to ensure the important role he was running for was instead filled by a key ally of mine. My plot succeeded, and my opponent is now out of the branch leadership and reportedly taking it quite badly.

I thought I was prepared for the hard realities of the class struggle in the labour movement, but I can’t help but feel guilty about this. He was a good, we’ll intentioned and mostly effective leader, but I swept him aside. I wouldn’t take my decision back, but it does make me think about how I will manage more difficult decisions in the future.

  • @201dberg
    link
    92 years ago

    Most of the leadership of the Soviet Union after Stalin were “good, well intentioned, and mostly effective leader(s)” but in the end their policies brought ruin to the USSR. If they had been ousted for proper communists from the get go we’d be living in a very different world right now.

    You never know what that guy could have been the start of. If they weren’t a true communist at heart then I wouldn’t feel safe with them at the reigns of a union which is like, a fundamentally socialist/communist construct.