"On the contrary, history generally confirms that the more conscious and the better you are organized in vanguard organizations, the more constructively you operate in the mass organizations of the working class"
About this Quote
Mandel is trying to rescue the much-mocked idea of the “vanguard” from its worst caricature: the secretive sect that mistakes its own purity for politics. His claim is almost managerial in tone, but the wager is high. Discipline, consciousness, and organization aren’t presented as a substitute for mass struggle; they’re framed as the condition that makes mass work less erratic, less ego-driven, less vulnerable to sudden turns in the line.
The phrasing “on the contrary” signals a polemic with two audiences at once. First, labor militants wary of small revolutionary groups parachuting into unions and movements with canned answers. Second, leftists who romanticize spontaneity and treat structure as inherently authoritarian. Mandel flips both suspicions: the better the cadre is trained and coordinated, the less it needs to grandstand inside unions, councils, parties, or rank-and-file formations. “Constructively” is doing quiet work here. It implies coalition-building, patience with uneven consciousness, and a willingness to fight for partial demands without losing the long view.
Context matters: Mandel wrote in the long shadow of both Stalinist bureaucratization and Western European mass parties and unions that could mobilize millions yet often absorbed radicals into parliamentary routines. Trotskyism, his political home, was constantly accused of being a self-referential micro-party. Mandel’s line is a rebuttal: organization is not the enemy of democracy; unorganized politics is.
The subtext is a warning: without a conscious center, mass organizations drift toward the “common sense” of the moment - usually the common sense of the bosses’ world, repackaged as realism.
The phrasing “on the contrary” signals a polemic with two audiences at once. First, labor militants wary of small revolutionary groups parachuting into unions and movements with canned answers. Second, leftists who romanticize spontaneity and treat structure as inherently authoritarian. Mandel flips both suspicions: the better the cadre is trained and coordinated, the less it needs to grandstand inside unions, councils, parties, or rank-and-file formations. “Constructively” is doing quiet work here. It implies coalition-building, patience with uneven consciousness, and a willingness to fight for partial demands without losing the long view.
Context matters: Mandel wrote in the long shadow of both Stalinist bureaucratization and Western European mass parties and unions that could mobilize millions yet often absorbed radicals into parliamentary routines. Trotskyism, his political home, was constantly accused of being a self-referential micro-party. Mandel’s line is a rebuttal: organization is not the enemy of democracy; unorganized politics is.
The subtext is a warning: without a conscious center, mass organizations drift toward the “common sense” of the moment - usually the common sense of the bosses’ world, repackaged as realism.
Quote Details
| Topic | Equality |
|---|
More Quotes by Ernest
Add to List



