The police crackdown in Paris
and the drift towards dictatorship in France
30 November 2015
Yesterday, barely two weeks since the November 13 terror
attacks killed 130 and led to the closure of large sections of Paris around République Square , violence again erupted
in the streets of the city. With 120,000 soldiers and police forces deployed
across France, and fully 6,300 police and paramilitary riot police mobilized in
downtown Paris
alone, République Square
was again blocked off by a massive police cordon.
The target of this deployment, held under the state of
emergency imposed after the November 13 attacks by the Socialist Party (PS)
government of President François Hollande, was not, however, a group of
fighters loyal to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). Rather, it was a
domestic social protest mounted by ecological groups against the COP-21
ecological summit opening today in Paris .
The state of emergency bans all forms of public protest for
three months, and police seized upon this standing ban to stage a brutal
crackdown on a crowd of several thousand people. République Square , which had seen vigils
for the victims of the November 13 attacks and official appeals for national
unity, was filled with tear gas as police shot rubber bullets at peaceful protesters.
Citing acts of violence by a group of 80 masked protesters,
police then proceeded to arrest 289 protesters, detaining 174.
Even before the protests, police had used their emergency
powers to place two dozen ecological activists under house arrest without
trial. This was part of a broader crackdown across France since November 13 that has
seen over 100 unidentified people put under house arrest.
The crackdown on protests goes hand in hand with the broader
terrorizing of the public by the state. Anyone who goes into the streets is
soon confronted with men wearing body armor and carrying assault rifles.
Business groups have already called for employers to use the
state of emergency to monitor the workplaces and denounce “radicalized” workers
to police.
The World Socialist Web Site has repeatedly warned
that the police-state measures implemented internationally under the rubric of
the “war on terror” since 2001 were the expression of a fundamental breakdown
of democracy. Anyone who thought that these were empty words should examine what
has happened in France
since the November 13 terrorist attacks.
One must call things by their right names: what is being
established in France
is a police state dictatorship. Due to the activities of a handful of people
who carried out the November 13 attacks, social protest has effectively been
banned; police have received arbitrary powers to carry out searches and
seizures and the state has given itself enormous powers to detain individuals
and dissolve organizations. The PS aims to make this state of affairs
permanent, moreover, by passage of a constitutional amendment.
The multi-party organization of the bourgeois political
establishment and the maintenance, at least for the present, of the formal
routines of elections are no obstacle to the conversion of France into a
police state. As the virtually unanimous votes in favor of the state of
emergency and of stepped-up bombing of Syria in the French National
Assembly show, these policies enjoy the support of all the institutions of the
state and all the political parties, including nominally “left” organizations.
Nor has any criticism of the accelerating drift towards
authoritarian rule in France
emerged from the ruling establishments internationally. Rather, as Washington
directs the spying of the National Security Agency at the American people, and
Berlin and Tokyo dust off their plans to re-militarize their foreign policy in
the face of public opposition, all the major imperialist powers are watching
events in France and preparing their own versions of these measures.
This political crisis is uncovering the absence of any
constituency for bourgeois democracy in the capitalist class. The driving force
behind the PS’ assault on democratic rights is not the terrorist attacks of
Islamist opposition forces in Syria ,
who in any case serve the imperialist powers’ agenda of regime change against
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Rather, it is the extreme social polarization between a
super-rich financial aristocracy and broad masses of increasingly exploited and
impoverished working people. Austerity policies pursued over seven years of the
most devastating global capitalist crisis since the 1930s have thrown tens of
millions of people into unemployment and shredded basic social programs across Europe .
Only a month before the Paris attacks, the French
bourgeoisie was stunned and horrified when Air France workers confronted
executives and union bureaucrats planning mass layoffs and tore the shirts of
two Air France executives—an act that received broad support among workers
across France and Europe.
Broad popular opposition to austerity and to imperialist war
can find no expression in the political establishment, which views the
sentiments of the vast majority of the population with hostility and fear.
Under these conditions, the social basis for bourgeois democracy is collapsing.
The political dynamics of this process were described eight decades ago, at the
time of the rise of European fascism, by the great Russian revolutionary, Leon
Trotsky:
“By analogy with electrical engineering, democracy might be
defined as a system of safety switches and circuit breakers for protection
against currents overloaded by the national or social struggle. No period of
human history has been—even remotely—so overcharged with antagonisms as ours.
The overloading of lines occurs more and more frequently at different points in
the European power grid. Under the impact of class and international
contradictions that are too highly charged, the safety switches of democracy
either burn out or explode. That is essentially what the short circuiting of
dictatorship represents,” Trotsky wrote.
Today, as during the great struggles of the 20th century,
class tensions are building up that are overloading the circuit breakers of
bourgeois democracy.
A powerful constituency remains for democracy and democratic
rights: the working class. The fact that accumulating class tensions lead to
such drastic attacks on democratic rights is, however, a stark indication of
the revolutionary character of the situation and the urgent necessity of an
anti-capitalist struggle based on a revolutionary, socialist perspective.
Alex Lantier
Democracy breached
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