this post was submitted on 12 Sep 2023
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So as some of you might know, I'm a member of a marxist party, maybe one of the biggest of Western Europe currently.

The party is not ML. It takes part in electoral politics, though its main focus is building class consciousness at the work places and in the local communities. Getting into parliament is beneficial because 1) money and 2) raising awareness.

The party gets criticized by groups on the margin. They sometimes specifically criticize the MLs in our party for joining, because we are not part of what Lenin described as a Vanguard Party. I guess they are not entirely wrong, I'm not going to call my party ML even though there is (increasing) room for ML sentiment.

My problem is, I don't really know what to do with these critics. Leaving the current party, with tens of thousands of active members and actual political influence, for a 'true ML party' with several dozen people who struggle to organize a book club, does not sound like the way to go. Stop calling myself a ML? That would seem weird as well.

How do you guys look at this?

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

Hey there! Someone who lives in a country with sixteen different communist parties here. My advice is to simply join the party you see has more chances to achieve the goals you have in mind for society (those being in your case a ML state, I suppose). Neither a large socdem party with zero interest in revolutionary politics nor a minuscule hardline communist party with zero influence will do, so it is up to your judgement to find the goldilocks party in that spectrum.