The
Pacifist Socialist Party (in Dutch:
Pacifistisch Socialistische Partij, PSP) was a
Dutch left-socialist political party. The PSP played a small role
in Dutch politics. It is a predecessor of the
GreenLeft.
Party History
Before 1957
In 1955 a group of "politically homeless" activists had formed. The
group mainly consisted of former members of the
Labour Party (PvdA) and the
Communist Party of the
Netherlands (CPN).
They had left the PvdA over the military intervention against the
Indonesian independence
movement and the Labour party's support for NATO
. Many
of them had a background in the orthodox Marxist wing of the
Social
Democratic Workers' Party or the
Christian Democratic
Union (CDU), which had merged into the PvdA. The member of the
CPN had left their party over the
Stalinist course of the CPN. Some of these
politically homeless had never been members of parties, while
others had been member of pre-war parties such as the
Independent Socialist Party.
These politically homeless individuals were a diverse group:
progressive Christians, leftwing socialists, orthodox
Marxists, anti-Stalinist
Trotskyists,
left
communists, liberal
pacifists and some
anarchists. Many of them were active in
the developing
peace movement.
The rise of the
Cold War, the 1956
French/English/Israeli
intervention in the
Suez and the Soviet
intervention in Hungary had
made this group skeptic of both the
Eastern
bloc and
Western bloc. They were
oriented at some
Third way between
communism and capitalism.
In 1956 the group asked the PvdA to put two candidates of these
politically homeless on their list for the next elections, one who
would certainly gain a seat and one who would need to be elected by
preference votes. These person would have an independent position
in parliament. The PvdA, although originally sympathetic to idea
rejected this. Thus the group felt forced to found its own party
and it founded the Action group for the formation of a Party on
Anti-militarist and Socialist principles in November 1956. It would
chart the possibilities of a new political party.
1957-1971

1963 poster reading the famous slogan
"For Socialism without Nuclear weapons"
On 27 January 1957 the PSP was founded by the Action group. The
first year was devoted to the organization of the party and the
preparation for the elections which were expected to be in 1960.
The party sought to expand its membership, its branches and its
electoral support. The founders were joined by members of the
Socialist Union, a group which had split unsuccessfully from the
PvdA in 1950. In 1958 it entered in the provincial elections and it
won two seats in the
North Holland
provincial legislative.
In the
1959 elections the
party won two seats in the House of Representatives
.
In the early years the party became known for its parliamentary and
extra-parliamentary opposition against the rising
Cold War, and especially the placement of
nuclear weapons. The
socialist revolution in Cuba and uprisings
against the South African system of
Apartheid led to considerable debate within the
party between groups who opposed all violence and groups who
opposed repressive violence (from the ruling class) and supported
liberating violence (against the ruling class). In 1961 the party
threw off its principled pacifism and advocated the minimization of
violence.
Extra-parliamentary action against
colonialism also became more important; the party supported
New
Guinean
and Algerian
independence.
In the
1963 elections
the party performed particularly well. It doubled its seats to
four. This success can be attributed to several developments: the
rising opposition to the Cold War, the party's appeal to the
developing students' movement and especially the anarchist
Provo movement, for whom the PSP was the
only acceptable party, and finally the CPN's internal conflicts -
in 1958 three MPs had left the CPN and formed their own
parliamentary party, led by
Henk
Gortzak, called the
Bridge Group (Dutch: Brug-groep)
and unsuccessfully competed in the 1959 elections. The group
subsequently founded the Socialist Workers' Party (Dutch: Socialist
Werkerspartij; SWP). This internal dissent had caused the CPN to
fall to only one seat in the 1963 elections.
In the mid-1960s the
Vietnam War became
an important issue. The PSP was heavily involved in opposition
against the American intervention. It was the first party to pay
attention to the war and it was involved in the organization of
demonstrations, rallies and
teach ins. The
monarchy also became an issue as
Crown Princess
Beatrix
would marry
Claus von Amsberg in
1966. The PSP used this opportunity to voice its support for a
republican constitution. In the same year the CPN-dissenters of the
SWP joined the PSP. The PSP held on to its four seats in the
1967 election. In 1969
Gortzak, previously leader of the SWP returned as MP: now for the
PSP.
1971-1981

famous and controversial 1971 election
poster
The 1970s were characterized by internal conflicts between moderate
and more radical members of the PSP. The most important reason for
this was the radicalization within the PvdA. A new, more radical,
generation had gained power with the PvdA. They wanted to form a
majority cabinet with only leftwing parties. To achieve this they
formed the Progressive Accord with the new left-liberal
Democrats 66 and the progressive Christian
PPR. The PSP also participated
in these talks but broke off, because the majority of the PSP
congress thought this alliance was neither pacifist nor socialist.
The cooperative minority clashed strongly with the isolationist
majority. In the
1971
elections the party lost two of its four seats, while the PvdA
won seats.
The party's political leader, Hans Wiebenga was replaced by the
younger
Bram van der Lek, who
emphasized the environment as an important issue. He was unable to
win seats in the
1972
elections. As party leader he would embrace extra-parliamentary
protest of all kinds of groups: the PSP was involved in the nascent
environmental, squatting, women's and students' movements.
Both the moderates and the most radicals left the party. Until 1974
a Trotskyist group, the Proletarian Left, led by
Erik Meijer, now MEP for the
Socialist Party
operated within the party they wanted to use the SP to electrify
the masses. In 1974 nearly all of them (except for their leader
Meijer) left the party to found what later became the group
Socialist Alternative
Politics. In 1975 the moderate so called
progressive
cooperatives left the party. Many members of them joined the
PvdA.
From 1975 on, the party membership exhibited strong growth and
doubled in the next five years. Nevertheless, the
1977 elections were especially
disastrous: the party lost all but one seat - this is attributed to
the political competition between the social-democratic
prime minister Joop den Uyl and his Christian democratic
competitor
Dries van Agt, which caused
many PSP-sympathizers to vote for Den Uyl. The internal dissent
within the party also damaged its popular appeal. After one year
Van der Lek left parliament, and he was replaced by
Fred van der Spek.
1981-1989

1986 election poster reading
"unprejudiced and disarming"
In the early 1980s the placement of American
nuclear weapons
became an important political issue. The PSP was involved in the
organization of national demonstrations against nuclear weapons and
more than 80% of the members of the PSP attended one of the two
mass protests against the placement nuclear
weapons of 1981 and 1983. In the
1981 election the PSP was
rewarded for its principled opposition: it won three seats. In the
subsequent
1982
election it kept its seats. The party membership nearly reached
10,000 in this period.
Since the 1980s the party began to cooperate more with the PPR,
which had broken with the PvdA, and the CPN, which had
destalinized. It cooperated mainly in
municipal and provincial elections and legislatures, because a
higher percentage of votes is necessary to gain seats in such
elections. In
1984 the PPR, CPN and PSP
formed the
Green Progressive Accord that entered with one
list in the European elections. They won one seat, which rotated
between the PSP and PPR. Party members also met each other in
grassroots extraparliamentary protest against
nuclear energy and nuclear weapons. The
cooperation led to internal conflicts. Before the election of 1986
the CPN and the PPR wanted to form an
electoral alliance with the PSP. This led to
a crisis within the party:
chair of
the parliamentary party, Fred van der Spek who opposed
cooperation was replaced by the party congress by
Andrée van Es, who favoured cooperation.
Van der Spek founded his own Party for Socialism and Disarmament
(Dutch:
Party voor Socialisme en Ontwapening; PSvO). The
1986 PSP congress however still rejected cooperation. In the
elections of 1986
nuclear weapons were no longer an issue: the party was left with
only one seat. The membership of the party rapidly declined. The
pressure to cooperate increased.
After 1989
In 1989 the PSP initiated talks with the PPR and the PSP. Their
initiative was supported by an open letter from members of
trade unions,
environmental movements and the
arts which called for one progressive formation
left of the PvdA. After long negotiations, which were pressured by
the fall of the
Second
cabinet Lubbers and the subsequent earlier elections, the party
entered in the
1989
elections as part of GreenLeft. Andrée van Es was second on the
list. In 1991 the PSP dissolved itself into GreenLeft. In 1992 a
group of former PSP-members who had refused to join GreenLeft
formed the PSP'92.
The PSP made a considerable mark on GreenLeft, although it has
moderated its pacifism and socialism. Especially the progressive,
tolerant and non-dogmatic ideals of the PSP still play an important
role. MPs
Kees Vendrik,
Ineke van Gent and
Leo Platvoet were active within the party, as
was MEP
Joost Lagendijk.
Name
The name Pacifist Socialist Party is an obvious combination of the
party two main issues: peace and social justice. Other proposals on
the 1957 foundation congress were
Radical Socialist Peace
Party (Dutch: Radicaal Socialistische Vredespartij),
League for General Welfare (Bond voor Algemeen Welzijn),
Progressive Party (Vernieuwingspartij) and
Dutch
Workers' Party (Nederlanse Arbeiderspartij).
Ideology & Issues
Ideology
The party's ideology was based on
pacifism,
socialism and
democracy. These three values were united by human
rights. In war, capitalism and dictatorship human rights are
infringed.
In its 1957 manifesto of principles the PSP advocated two major
societal renewals: Firstly, a spiritual renewal, which sought to
replace a society based on fear, division and power with a society
based on trust, unity and justice - this reflected the party's
pacifism. Secondly, an economic renewal, which sought to replace a
society based on classes by a
classless
society. This reflected the party's socialism. The PSP furthermore
advocated a democratic political system and a democratic economy,
it rejected the use of violence to solve international conflicts
and it proposed a federal
world state in
which wealth would be shared by both the former colonizing powers
and their former colonies.
In the 1970s and 1980s new issues were incorporated into the PSP's
ideology:
women's liberation,
gay rights and
environmentalism.
Issues
These radical principles are relfected in the party's concern for a
democratic socialist economy, a pacifist foreign policy, a directly
democratic political system and feminization of society.
The PSP advocated a democratic socialist society where
government planning and
workers' self-management played an
important role:
- The party advocated the nationalization of major parts of the
economy, including banks, transport companies, basic industries and
construction. These government companies should be controlled by
the workers;
- In other economic sectors such as agriculture, should make more
use of cooperatives;
- The government has to plan the economic development of the
Netherlands and control the development of prices and profits;
- The PSP wanted to attain full
employment by decreasing working
time, lowering thepensionable age to 60,
extending obligatory school attendance to 18 and increasing
part time work;
- Through progressive
taxation, which would have to be almost 100% after 50,000
euros (then 100,000 guilders, incomes should be made more equal;
- The PSP advocated government ownership of all the land, which
could then be rented by companies;
- The party wanted to increase the rights of tenants and squatters
and take government action against unoccupied buildings;
- The PSP opposed the use of nuclear
energy and advocated investing in alternative energy sources;
- The party wanted to invest in public transport, which would be owned by
the government;
- Environmental protection was an important issue for the party.
It wanted to but the burden of environmental protection at
companies and it opposed direct eco-taxes, which would have a
regressive effect.
The PSP advocated an anti-militarist and socialist foreign policy:
On the national level the party advocated radical democratization
of society and protection of civil rights:
The PSP wanted to radically feminize society, liberate other
oppressed groups and democratize society:
- The party wanted to better the position of women: it advocated
free child care, the legalization of
abortion and part
time work for both partners. It sought to make social security arrangements individual
instead of family oriented;
- It advocated the rights of sexual minorities: equal rights for same-sex
partnerships and legalization of transvestism;
- It supported the 1979 petition to lower the age of consent to
the age of 12
- The PSP paid special attention to the position of minority
cultures and languages in the Netherlands such as West Frisian;
- The party advocated the democratization of schools and
universities, better protection of the rights of students, smaller
class sizes, and more room for experimentation and alternative education. The party
opposed religious
schools;
- The PSP sought to ban all casinos and
smoking in public buildings on the
one side, but it also advocated the legalisation of soft drugs and government
controlled supply of hard drugs;
- The party was opposed to any form of discrimination and sought to expand the
rights of migrants;
- It sought to legalize of prostitution and increase
the protection of prostitutes;
- The PSP favoured individual choice for euthanasia;
- It wanted to democratize hospitals, better protect rights for
patients and create one healthcare insurance system for all.
Representation
This table shows the PSP's results in elections to the House of
Representatives (HoR), Senate (S), European Parliament (EP),
States-Provincial (SS) and municipalities (M), as well as the
party's political leadership: the fractievoorzitter, is the chair
of the parliamentary party and the lijsttrekker is the party's top
candidate in the general election, these posts are normally taken
by the party's leader. The membership of PSP and the party chair is
also represented.
| Year |
HoR |
S |
EP |
SP |
M |
Lijsttrekker |
Fractievoorzitter |
Party Chair |
Membership |
| 1957 |
0 |
0 |
n/a |
0 |
0 |
no elections |
extra-parliamentary |
Henk van Steenis |
858 |
| 1958 |
0 |
0 |
n/a |
2 |
17 |
no elections |
extra-parliamentary |
Henk van Steenis |
1986 |
| 1959 |
2 |
0 |
n/a |
2 |
17 |
Henk Lankhorst
and Nico van der Veen
|
Nico van der Veen |
Hannes de Graaf |
2497 |
| 1960 |
2 |
0 |
n/a |
2 |
17 |
no elections |
Nico van der Veen |
Piet Burggraaf |
2561 |
| 1961 |
2 |
0 |
n/a |
2 |
17 |
no elections |
Nico van der Veen |
Piet Burggraaf |
2852 |
| 1962 |
2 |
0 |
n/a |
13 |
77 |
no elections |
Henk Lankhorst |
Piet Burggraaf |
3624 |
| 1963 |
4 |
2 |
n/a |
13 |
77 |
Henk Lankhorst |
Henk Lankhorst |
Gerard Slotemaker
de Bruïne |
3786 |
| 1964 |
4 |
2 |
n/a |
13 |
77 |
no elections |
Henk Lankhorst |
Joop Vogt |
3779 |
| 1965 |
4 |
2 |
n/a |
13 |
77 |
no elections |
Henk Lankhorst |
Hans Wiebenga |
3888 |
| 1966 |
4 |
3 |
n/a |
24 |
122 |
no elections |
Henk Lankhorst |
Hans Wiebenga |
4857 |
| 1967 |
4 |
3 |
n/a |
24 |
122 |
Henk Lankhorst |
Henk Lankhorst |
Hans Wiebenga |
4849 |
| 1968 |
4 |
3 |
n/a |
24 |
122 |
no elections |
Henk Lankhorst |
Hans Wiebenga |
4462 |
| 1969 |
4 |
3 |
n/a |
24 |
122 |
no elections |
Hans Wiebenga |
Piet Burggraaf |
4325 |
| 1970 |
4 |
3 |
n/a |
5 |
30+39 (a) |
no elections |
Hans Wiebenga |
Piet Burggraaf |
4228 |
| 1971 |
2 |
3 |
n/a |
5 |
30+39 (a) |
Hans Wiebenga |
Hans Wiebenga |
Piet Burggraaf |
4445 |
| 1972 |
2 |
1 |
n/a |
5 |
30+39 (a) |
Bram van der Lek |
Bram van der Lek |
Piet Burggraaf |
4581 |
| 1973 |
2 |
1 |
n/a |
5 |
30+39 (a) |
no elections |
Bram van der Lek |
Paul Hoogerwerf |
4871 |
| 1974 |
2 |
0 |
n/a |
4 |
15+37 (b) |
no elections |
Bram van der Lek |
Paul Hoogerwerf |
4802 |
| 1975 |
2 |
0 |
n/a |
4 |
15+37 (b) |
no elections |
Bram van der Lek |
Lambert Meertens |
4333 |
| 1976 |
2 |
0 |
n/a |
4 |
15+37 (b) |
no elections |
Bram van der Lek |
Lambert Meertens |
4543 |
| 1977 |
1 |
1 |
n/a |
4 |
15+37 (b) |
no elections |
Bram van der Lek |
Lambert Meertens |
6506 |
| 1978 |
1 |
1 |
n/a |
4 |
23+18 (b) |
no elections |
Fred van der Spek |
Lambert Meertens |
8797 |
| 1979 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
4 |
23+18 (b) |
no elections |
Fred van der Spek |
Lambert Meertens |
9018 |
| 1980 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
4 |
23+18 (b) |
no elections |
Fred van der Spek |
Lambert Meertens |
8703 |
| 1981 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
4 |
23+18 (b) |
Fred van der Spek |
Fred van der Spek |
Lambert Meertens |
9595 |
| 1982 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
11+7 (b) |
40+77 (b) |
Fred van der Spek |
Fred van der Spek |
Bram van der Lek |
9979 |
| 1983 |
3 |
2 |
0 |
11+7 (b) |
40+77 (b) |
no elections |
Fred van der Spek |
Marko Mazeland |
8853 |
| 1984 |
3 |
2 |
1 (b) |
11+7 (b) |
40+77 (b) |
no elections |
Fred van der Spek |
Marko Mazeland |
7767 |
| 1985 |
2+1 (c) |
2 |
1 (b) |
11+7 (b) |
40+77 (b) |
no elections |
Fred van der Spek |
Marko Mazeland |
6450 |
| 1986 |
1 |
2 |
1 (b) |
11+7 (b) |
19+58 (b) |
Andrée van Es |
Andrée van Es |
Saar Boerlage |
6450 |
| 1987 |
1 |
1 |
1 (b) |
6+9 (b) |
19+58 (b) |
no elections |
Andrée van Es |
Saar Boerlage |
4992 |
| 1988 |
1 |
1 |
1 (b) |
6+9 (b) |
19+58 (b) |
no elections |
Andrée van Es |
Saar Boerlage |
4478 |
| 1989 |
2 (d) |
1 (d) |
0 (d) |
17 (d) |
77 (d) |
Andrée van Es
(#2 of GreenLeft)
|
Andrée van Es
(sole MP works with GreenLeft)
|
Joop Vogt |
3639 |
| 1990 |
2 (d) |
1 (d) |
0 (d) |
17 (d) |
77 (d) |
Andrée van Es
(#2 of the GreenLeft)
|
no elections |
Joop Vogt |
3591 |
|
(a): elected on combined PSP/PvdA/PPR lists
(b): elected on combined PSP/CPN, PSP/PPR or PSP/CPN/PPR lists
(estimate)
(c): PSvO split from the PSP
(d): cooperating in GreenLeft
parliamentary parties.
Municipal and Provincial Government
The PSP had a provincial stronghold in North Holland, which gave
the party more than half of its vote.
It had
some municipal strongholds in the Zaanstreek
and Amsterdam
, but also in some cities, where it had particularly
strong branches, such as Midwoud, Bussum
, Hoorn
and Goirle
.
Because of its isolated position it did not supply many
aldermen, though between 1974 and 1975 its
supplied one Amsterdam alderman.
In the following figure one can see the election results of the
provincial election of 1962 per province. It shows the areas where
the PSP was strong, namely the urban areas like North Holland and
South Holland. The party was weaker in rural Catholic provinces
like Limburg and North Brabant, but also strong in the rural
traditional socialist strongholds such as rural Groningen and
Friesland.
Electorate
The party's electorate was very heterogeneous, although most voters
could be seen as
intellectuals,
students, scientists, artists, while most socialist parties are
oriented at workers. The party was a refuge for people who no
longer felt at home in the social-democratic PvdA and the Communist
Party of the Netherlands. It was supported by progressive
Christians, especially
Mennonites. Most of
its voters lived in Amsterdam or Rotterdam.
The electorate of the PSP fluctuated; the changing appeal of the
PvdA and the CPN played a role, as did the events of he Cold War.
The rise of youth movements, like Provo, and the Vietnam war
boosted the electorate of the party in the 1960s. Internal
conflicts in the PSP and radical course of the social-democratic
PvdA cost the PSP votes in the 1970s. The mass demonstrations
against the placement of nuclear weapons boosted the party's
support in the early 1980s.
Organization
Organizational structure
The highest organ of the PSP was the
congress, formed by delegates from the
municipal branches. It convened once every year. It appointed the
party board and decided the order of the Senate, House of
Representatives and European Parliament candidate lists and had the
final say over the party program. For the months that the congress
did not convene, a party council took over its role. It consisted
out of representatives of all the municipal branches.
The party board consisted of 10 members: a
party chair, general secretary, treasurer,
political secretary, parliamentary secretary, international
secretary, youth secretary, education secretary, the secretary for
propaganda and a chair for the committee
for radio and television.
Linked organisations
The PSP published its own magazine which was called
Liberation (Dutch: Bevrijding) between 1957 and 1966 and
1978 and 1991 and
Radical: Weekly for Socialism and Peace
(Dutch: Radikaal: Weekbad voor Socialisme en Vrede) between 1967
and 1977. It was printed at the PSPs own printing company also
called Liberation.
The PSPs youth was organized in the
Pacifist Socialist Young
Working Groups (Dutch: Pacifistisch Socialistische Jongeren
Groepen, PSJG) between 1977 and 1991. Between 1985 and 1991 the
PSJG became more independent as it saw itself as the youth
organization of both the PSP and the PSvO which had split from the
party. It published
Keihard Tegengeweld (The title is a
pun as it means both strongly against violence as strong
counter-violence) and
Disaster (Dutch: RamPSPoed, which
spells PSP). In 1991 the PSJG merged into
DWARS GreenLeft youth, which continued publishing
Disaster until 1995.
In the 1980s the scientific institute of the PSP cooperated
strongly with the scientific institutes of the PPR and CPN. They
published
De Helling together since 1985. The
Rode
Draad was published since 1985 it was a magazine for municipal
and provincial councillors of the both the PSP, PPR and CPN.
Relationships to other parties
For a long time the party refused to cooperate with other parties
and preferred a position of
testimonial party, which resembles the
position of the Dutch orthodox Protestant parties, like the
Political Reformed
Party. The PSP's members of parliament, although isolated
because of their radical position, were often respected across all
parties for their principled position, commitment, rhetoric
abilities and demeanour.
Between 1956 and 1981 it was at "cold war" with the
Communist Party of the
Netherlands as many former communists had joined the PSP's
ranks. The PSP was highly critical of the CPN's Stalinist course.
After 1981 the CPN, which had destalinized and PSP, began to
cooperate more closely. The progressive Christian
Political Party of Radicals and
the
Evangelical People's
Party were also dismissed by the PSP as too supportive of the
PvdA and too moderate on important issues. After 1981 the PPR broke
its links with the PvdA and became more oriented toward PSP and
CPN. In the 1980s the four parties began to cooperate in municipal
and European elections, because less seats can be won there. In
1989 this intensive cooperation led to the formation of a new
party, the
GreenLeft.
The party was originally sympathetic to the Labour Party
PvdA. Before the party was founded, the
group of politically homeless activists had asked to have an
independent candidate on their lists. During the 1960s the relation
deteriorated, as the PSP rejected the PvdA's moderate course and
the PvdA the PSP's radical course. In 1971 the PvdA, which had
become more leftwing under pressure of a new generation of party
members, opened the door to the PSP. It wanted the PSP to cooperate
in the Progressive Accords together with left-liberal
Democrats 66 and the PPR. The PSP rejected as it felt
these accords would be neither socialist nor pacifist. This
decision let to considerable upheaval within the party. In the
1980s as the PvdA became more centrist, the PSP rejected the PvdA
even more.
International Comparison
There are very few parties, internationally, that resemble the PSP.
Scandinavian parties espousing
Popular
Socialism like the Danish
Socialist People's Party
and Norwegian
Socialist
Left Party come close. These parties also combine socialist
with new left ideals, and stand between United States-oriented
social democracy and Soviet Union-oriented communism. The
French Unified Socialist
Party which was formed by leftwing dissenters in the main
socialist
SFIO and
anti-stalinist dissenters in the
French Communist Party is also
similar in its opposition to both social democracy and communism.
The Australian
Nuclear
Disarmament Party shared its priority of nuclear
disarmament.
References
- Lucardie P. et al. Verloren Illusie, Geslaagde
Fusie? GroenLinks in Historisch and Politicologische
Perspectief 1999, Leiden: DSWO-press; p.45
- which can be found here
- Brongersma, Edward (1988). "Schutzalter 12 Jahre? - Sex mit
Kindern in der niederländischen Gesetzgebung ("Age of Consent 12
years? Dutch legislation on sex with children")", in Leopardi,
Angelo: Der pädosexuelle Komplex ("On the topic of pedosexuality")
(in German). Frankfurt/Main, Germany: Foerster Verlag, 214. ISBN
3-922257-66-6.