<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[the commune]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[internationalcommunist]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com/author/internationalcommunist/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[ukraine&#8217;s &#8216;new left&#8217; and the russian &#8216;gas&nbsp;war&#8217;]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p style="text-align:left;"><strong>by Milan Lelich,  Maxim Nechiporenko, Kyiv</strong></p>
<p align="justify">The gas conflict  between Russia and Ukraine attracted more attention to the latter country  than it had received since the times of the so called &#8216;Orange Revolution&#8217;.  Despite a great number of various interpretations of what has happened,  both in the Ukrainian and European media, the main reason for the conflict  seems to be quite clear: Russia&#8217;s attempt to take political control  of Ukraine using economic methods.</p>
<p align="justify">One must notice  that the conditions for Russian imperialism&#8217;s intrusion turned out  to be very auspicious. The Ukrainian financial system is highly dependent  on foreign investment and is now going through difficult times because  of the world economic crisis. The rate of the Ukrainian stock market  fall is one of the highest in the world &#8211; about 75%. Industrial production  started to decline rapidly. The greater part of Ukrainian exports &#8211;  metallurgical complexes&#8217; output &#8211; shortened up to 50%. Chemical  plants (the second important export line) had to stop because of the  lack of natural gas (about 80% of the costs). As a result there were  about 1.5 million unemployed people in the country at the end of 2008  and this number keeps on increasing. Ukraine has already come very close  to mass unemployment.<!--more--></p>
<p align="justify">This lower  level of financial and industrial capital concentration makes the Ukrainian  economy vulnerable to the highly developed Russian big capitalism. In  Russia the process of amalgamation of different corporate elites into  a united ruling class is already complete, and this class acts as a  single whole in its aspiration for economic and consequently political  expansion. The goal of the expansion consists in undermining the viable  branches of Ukrainian economy which compete with Russian ones (in the  case of gas conflict &#8211; chemical and metallurgical plants).</p>
<p align="justify">Political factors  are important as well. So called Ukrainian political &#8216;elites&#8217; are  very dissociative and unable to rule the country in an efficient way,  which suits Russian capitalists well. Some of the representatives of  Ukrainian big capital tried to use the gas conflict in their own political  and economic interests, leading to its further aggravation.</p>
<p align="justify">In this difficult  situation the ruling class started a full-scale offensive on the rights  of the working class. A bill for a new Labor Code was put to the parliament.  In fact it turns an employer into a real slaveholder, allowing him to  increase considerably the length of the working day, cut down or even  not pay wages, extremely easily fire the employees and so on. The bill  was unanimously approved at the first stage by almost the whole second  chamber (no wonder &#8211; the Ukrainian parliament is totally controlled  by  big capital). Only the recurrent political crisis in fact prevented  the project from final approval, but still there is no guarantee it  will not happen in the future.</p>
<p align="justify">Under difficult  economical conditions, unstable national currency, mass dismissals demand  for leftist ideas in Ukrainian society has a tendency to increase. But  paradoxically the only left political power represented in the parliament  is the Communist Party of Ukraine (actually the successor of the USSR  Communist party) where it has the second minor fraction. But even this  party is communist only by word of mouth; its real character is as much  bourgeois as the political system of the country in general. More ready-to-act  leftist organizations are now at the margin of public attention. There  are several reasons for such a situation. They are: the almost official  state policy for superficial discrediting of communist ideology, a bulk  of polittechnological left projects aimed at blowing up the faith in  the left worldview, and especially the usage of populist mottos and  leftward rhetoric by different national-liberal parties that disorganize  the workers and transform them into their electorate.</p>
<p align="justify">It  is logical to suppose that such actions of the ruling class face the  serious resistance from the trade unions. But once again we meet a paradox.  The leaders of the biggest and semi-official trade union organization  are among the authors of the aforementioned new Labor Code that greatly reduces workers&#8217; rights. So instead of defending the interests  of the working people, the major trade unions are accomplices of   big capital. But new independent trade unions (like &#8216;Direct Action&#8217;  or &#8216;Labor Protection&#8217;) that are just starting to gain own importance,  are the exception from the rule. In particular these trade unions took  very active part in the struggle against the new Labor Code.</p>
<p align="justify">The  real vanguard of the working class in Ukraine nowadays is the &#8216;New Left&#8217; movement. It not very numerous yet, but the interest to left ideas  is increasing, especially amongst the young people. &#8216;New Left&#8217; include  the representatives of various social initiatives, trade union activists,  Marxists and anarchists. Several campaigns against the offensive on  the workers&#8217; rights were held by the &#8216;New Left&#8217; in cooperation  with friendly organizations, like the Revolutionary Confederation of  Anarcho-Syndicalists. Among them: the rock concert and some manifestations  against the new Labor Code, a protest action against the four-time increase  in fare for public transport in Kyiv (by the way, this action was brutally attacked by the militia, several activists were beaten and arrested).  The &#8216;New Left&#8217; also take part in trade union struggle, closely cooperate  with independent trade unions.</p>
<p align="justify">The  &#8216;New Left&#8217; enjoy the confidence of Ukrainian workers and have great  prospects of becoming a powerful centre of the leftist movement in Ukraine.  Now most activists are focused on preparing for the  expected mass demonstrations of the Ukrainian working class in spring.</p>
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