Anticapitalistas

(Redirected from Anticapitalist Left)

Anticapitalistas (Catalan: Anticapitalistes, Basque: Antikapitalistak, English: Anticapitalists), known as Izquierda Anticapitalista (Anti-Capitalist Left, IA) until January 2015 and as Espacio Alternativo (Alternative Space, EA) from 1995 to November 2008, is a socialist political organisation that works as a confederation in Spain. Anticapitalistas is defined as a revolutionary socialism, anti-capitalist, proletarian internationalist, republican, and eco-socialist organisation, assuming Marxism in an open, plural, and critical sense. Its stated objective is the rebuilding of the revolutionary project through the creation of a unitary, anti-capitalist political expression sustained by the anti-globalisation movement, the labor movement, and the social movements at large. It is a member of the Fourth International (post-reunification), a Trotskyist international organisation reformed in 1963.

Anticapitalists
Anticapitalistas
Founded1995
NewspaperPoder Popular[1]
IdeologySocialism
Anti-capitalism
Republicanism
Trotskyism[2]
Political positionFar-left[2]
National affiliationUnited Left (1995–2008)
Podemos (2014–2020)
Regional affiliationZaragoza en Común (2019–2022)
Adelante Andalucía (2020)[a]
Adelante Andalucía (2021–present)
European affiliationEuropean Anti-Capitalist Left
International affiliationFourth International (post-reunification)
Colours  Green
Parliament of Andalusia
1 / 109
Website
anticapitalistas.org

On 23 February 2009, IA entered in the register of political parties of the Interior Ministry, and presented candidacies to several elections. In January 2015, IA decided to become the Anticapitalistas political association and join Podemos,[3] which lasted until 2020.[4]

History

edit

Espacio Alternativo

edit

Anticapitalistas was founded in 1995 under the name Espacio Alternativo (Alternative Space) by former militants of the Revolutionary Communist League (LCR), after its failed union with the Communist Movement, in the project Alternative Left, joined United Left (IU). By then, EA also had the support of some ecosocialists. Subsequently, the organisation gained members in and out of IU. However, EA progressively lost weight as an internal current of IU, mainly due to the rupture with the ecosocialist sectors that originally participated in its foundation. Some prominent leaders of IU linked to EA abandoned the current in the early 2000s, for example, Julio Setién, Oskar Matute or Concha Denche. EA was, de facto, an external organisation towards IU.

EA held the 5th confederal meeting in December 2007, abandoning IU.[5]

Creation of the party and European Parliament elections 2009

edit

Organisation

edit

Anticapitalistas is an organisation composed of various territorial organisations, the majority federated and three confederated: Esquerda Anticapitalista in Galiza, Antikapitalistak (in the Southern Basque Country) and Revolta Global-Esquerra Anticapitalista (in Catalonia and the Balearic Islands).

Publications

edit

Its organ of expression is the Corriente Alterna magazine, The youths of Anticapitalistas periodically publish a magazine called Combate Estudiantil. Several members also have a strong presence on the editorial board of the Marxist analysis magazine Viento Sur.

Summer University

edit

Every year, Anticapitalistas organises the Summer University of the Anticapitalist Left, which brings together hundreds of people, including members and sympathisers. The 2013 edition was attended by Juan Carlos Monedero, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Martiño Noriega, Sabino Cuadra, Esther Vivas and Jaime Pastor. The 2015 edition was attended by the Anticapitalistas European MPs Miguel Urbán and Lola Sánchez Caldentey, Katerina Sergidou, Pedro Santisteve (mayor of Zaragoza), José María González Santos Kichi (mayor of Cádiz), Albano Dante Fachín (leader of Podemos in Catalonia), Jaime Pastor, Beatriz Gimeno, Teresa Rodríguez, Teresa Forcades, Antón Sánchez and Rommy Arce (member of the Municipal Council of Madrid, of Anticapitalistas and Ahora Madrid).[6]

Relation with other movements

edit

Anticapitalistas prioritizes working in left-wing citizen platforms and in the anti-globalization movement. Its field of political intervention lies in the social movements, environmentalist, student movement, decent housing and the anti-evictions movement), in the trade union movement (in the mareas that defend public and common services and in Comisiones Obreras and other unions) and also works in neighborhood associations and popular assemblies.

Prominent members

edit

International relations

edit

Anticapitalistas is a member of the European Anti-Capitalist Left, a heterogeneous network of socialist political groups of various tendencies that have a Marxist inspiration. Anticapitalistas also participates in the United Secretariat of the Fourth International (post-reunification), considered itself the heir of the former LCR and the historic POUM.

The technological platform created by Nodo50 was its way of communicating with other movements.

Notes

edit
  1. ^ 2018 coalition

References

edit
  1. ^ "Poder Popular". Revista Poder Popular. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  2. ^ a b Giulio Ferraresi (2016-12-15). "Left populism, Laclau, and the case Podemos". eurovision.eu..
  3. ^ EFE (16 January 2015). "Izquierda Anticapitalista decide dejar de ser un partido político para integrarse en Podemos". eldiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  4. ^ Santaeulalia, Inés (13 February 2020). "Anticapitalistas abandona Podemos". El País. Prisa. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  5. ^ ""Dirigentes de IU abandona la coalición para "construir una nueva fuerza anticapitalista""". Europa Press (in Spanish). 22 October 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  6. ^ Allué, Adolfo (5 July 2015). "La sexta edición de la Universidad de Verano Anticapitalista se volverá a celebrar en La Granja (Segovia)". Arainfo (in Spanish). Archived from the original on July 5, 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2020.