NCLC
and Its Extended Political 'Community'
by
Harvey Kahn
Public
Eye, Fall 1977
This article
appeared in 1977, when the ties between NCLC/LaRouche and NATLFED
seemed closer to many researchers. Now, although there is some disagreement,
most researchers feel NATLFED does not have close ties to NCLC/LaRouche.
There is not doubt, however, that for a period of several years NATLFED,
IWP and NCLC worked together on several projects, and carried out
friendly analyses of each other's activity and ideology. Also,
most researchers were critical of the Public Eye, for referring to
Union W.A.G.E. as a NATLFED "front." While there were NATLFED members
involved with Union W.A.G.E., the Public Eye now regrets the labeling
of the group as a "front." This article should be read in conjunction
with our update: Cadre or
Cult? Gino Perente, NATLFED & the Provisional Party - by
Jeff Whitnack, Public Eye, 1984
Couples of organizers,
one male and one female, have been touring the country over the last
several years trying to set up cadres to aid and organize unrecognized
farmworkers and the unemployed: America's poor. They represent the
National Labor Federation. These organizers then hustle to gather up
contacts, lists of key activists, and academics. All are pressured
to lend their names, host organizers in town, and give more names of
local people to contact-- according to some, a typical, though aggressive,
organizing drive. But before long, the organizers, who appear fatigued
from overwork and undernourishment, have assembled files complete with
3 x 5 index cards which show personal data on most of the community's
activists.
Suspected
Front
In response to questions
raised by community people all over the country, we began researching
a suspected NCLC front group, the National Labor Federation. Virtually
everywhere the organization has gone--they say they've launched organizing
drives in 24 areas since 1972--activists almost immediately recognize
the organization as NCLC-related. Either that or the members are dismissed
as police agents. Often, they are engaged in patented NCLC acts, that
is, simply collecting and filing names of activists and poor people
working for change. Usually, its organizing style or its political
goals set the suspicions in motion.
The true political
basis of the National Labor Federation (NATLFED) itself--an umbrella
for locals like Eastern Farm Workers Association (EFWA), California
Homemakers Association (CHA), Eastern or Western Serviceworkers Association
(E-WSWA), and Western Massachusetts Labor Action (WMLAC)--is a mystery.
Local NATLFED organizers tend to tease potential cadre with informational
tidbits, only to retreat while muttering about a loose coalition somewhere.
Later, the same organizer whispers of a party then smiles in response
to a battery of questions, verifying that no leadership actually exists.
NATLFED members have also aroused curiosity by claiming to have large
gun stockpiles. They promise to deliver all this and more.
In seeking answers
about the NATLFED, more than forty ex- members and others familiar
with the group's doings were closely questioned. What emerged was a
rough oral history of the political and social movements in the 1970's.
Moreover, wrestling with these issues sparked debates concerning organizing
strategies, and what it means for any group to completely conceal its
political practices and affiliations from the unrecognized, unorganized
and unemployed workers who are, allegedly, the object of organizing
efforts.
This sensitive research
effort proved to be a difficult task. Nonetheless, a series of fruitful
discussions internally resulted in this exposition. Here are the facts.
And theories. We hope additional information and further debates will
fill in the gaps.
In 1973, a man named
Eugenio (Gino) Perente, then the leader of EFWA, and now of NATLFED
as well, attended a Philadelphia convention of the National Unemployed
and Welfare Rights Organization (NUWRO). NUWRO is an NCLC-spawned group
which tried to destroy the National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO),
a legitimate national organization which, at its height in the early
70's, had chapters in nearly every state in the country. NUWRO demonstrated
its indifference as NWRO began falling apart, neither able to rescue
the collapsing local NWRO structures nor develop new ones in their
place. It did, however, score two successes: It unveiled its undefined "class-wise" organizing
theory; secondly, it began to form a phantom political community consisting
of Perente, members of the International Workers Party/Fred Newman
group, an NCLC split-off group, and NCLC itself. The issue was class-wide,
or so-called "strata" organizing, which targeted outside the existing
union structures.
The affiliation of
Perente and his organization with NCLC/NUWRO continued, though the
nature of the relationship isn't clear. Several years later Perente
was seen with NCLC top brass, according to one person interviewed.
A NATLFED member was quoted as saying: "We work with NCLC from time
to time on specific issues." Another NATLFED organizer said: "We're
not working with NCLC anymore." As NCLC failed to sustain working ties
with any other groups after the 1973 violence began, the relationship
between Perente and NCLC, immediately evoked questions concerning their
political aspirations.
Paul Goldman, an
NCLC press flak, said during a telephone interview that, "We (NCLC)
had no principle agreements with him (Perente). He must have been involved
with gun-running. He believed we must have armed struggle." Goldman
continued by charging that Perente is "essentially an agent." NCLC
often practices agent baiting, with or without the proof. Here, for
example, Perente's commitment to armed struggle and gun stockpiling
has been confirmed by a number of ex- NATLFED associates who were close
to him.
One version of his
past puts him in the Bay Area Radical Union. In the late 1960's the
group split: many got involved in the anti-war movement while others
went the terrorist route, some of whom formed the Symbionese Liberation
Army. In recounting his experiences in that period to a once close
comrade and NATLFED ideologist, he expressed regret at having rejected
the SLA path.
Perente, an intense,
compelling, charismatic Mexican- American, was elected president of
the now defunct Nationwide Unemployed League (NUL) while still the
leader of the Eastern Farm Workers Association, now a part of NATLFED.
NUL was organized
by the IWP, the 40-member NCLC splinter group. When Perente was elected
President, IWP member Al Goldstein, answering a question about their
departure from NCLC said only: "Theoretically, Marcus is of value,
and has input to left struggles." And from what can be observed, IWP
and it many front groups (Union W.A.G.E., New York City Unemployed
and Welfare Council, Lake County Coalition for Survival, School for
Progress in New York, and the recently formed New York Working People's
Party) have implemented much of the organizational structure they saw
in NCLC.
IWP leaders Fred
Newman and Hazel Daren wrote in Manifesto
on Method, a serious, detailed discussion of the polemics of Lyn
Marcus: "From the very beginning our contact with comrades from the
ICLC (NCLC international branch) we have worked hard to change that
organization while respecting its historically just claim to hegemony." Hazel
Daren at a speech last April on "Women in Struggle" said that, "God
created women to lead the struggle."
One activist on the
west coast claimed that "Daren caused more dissension on the west coast
among women's groups, and inside the People's Party." He compared Moon,
the USLP and IWP saying "similar psychological games manipulate all
of them."
IWP and NATLFED
have a continuing collaboration. Western Mass. Labor Action
(a NATLFED local) has passed out IWP literature including the IWP's
monthly publication, The Struggle, which reports on various
NATLFED locals; IWP never fails to included the work of NATLFED as
important. Perente has privately told members of his plans to take
over the IWP.
There are three entities
in question: the NCLC, intelligence vigilantes now operating on the
Right; the IWP, actively pursuing inheritance of the beleaguered People's
Party (through that affiliation, has one of two People's Party seats
for meetings of the People Alliance, a national coalition which emerged
out of the July 4th Coalition); and NATLFED, organizing local structures
under varying names in 24 targeted communities.
Besides the historical
link NCLC has to the other two, there are many similarities which could
point to ongoing collaboration. The groups have applied systems techniques
as a way of guiding internal structure. The three leaders dream of
hegemony. LaRouche/Marcus and Perente speak of social change around
the corner, and of a leadership ready to grab the reins of power. Moreover, the
three employ psychological techniques some call brainwashing,
to keep followers close at hand and tightly in line. The memberships
seem comparably devoted to and mesmerized by their group and its leader.
NATLFED hews to Communist
Party strategy in the depression years which, "in the summer of 1929,
had proclaimed the 'Third Period' of capitalist crisis and revolutionary
offensive," according to an article in Radical America (vol. 10 no.
4). The goal of the Third Period was "to set up Councils of Unemployed
Workers," the CP described. Briefly put, unemployment organizing at
that time became central to the CP program. It was part of a two-pronged
approach. While organizing within industrial unions they would be building
structures in the unemployed sector, representing a solid one-third
of the workforce. The CP strategy took a quantum leap further. It sought
to dominate and bring under CP leadership every labor or unemployed
organization in existence.
In this context,
the NCLC, IWP and NATLFED, whether conspiratorial or not, could exist
as the agenda for any of these organizations. NCLC discredits and disrupts;
IWP infiltrates and tries to organize the left; the NATLFED delivers
the unorganized.
To the extent that
NATLFED sees present conditions as comparable to the level of economic
turmoil in the early 30's, it is inclined to employ those strategies
and incorporate that criticism.
NATLFED Detailed
A social worker familiar
with NATLFED work said, "They are doing the work state agencies should
be providing. If they were interested in feeding or clothing people,
it's the state they should press, not themselves." And rather than
organize educational structures, which would nip the low or no wage
contradiction in the bud, NATLFED has formed volunteer-run "benefits
programs," which include, in its words: "Free dental care for members
and their families. In addition, USWA-CHA (California Homemakers Association)
provides free legal aid. Free emergency food and clothing are also
collected and provided to members in severe need." NATLFED explains
its "strata" organizing in its only public document, Sociology and
the Unrecognized Worker, as follows:
Our strata is made
up of people who circulate through many statuses during the course
of a lifetime or even in a single year. Sometimes our members work
in the fields, sometimes in domestic work, in a car wash, at service
work, in a laundry or restaurant, are unemployed or on welfare. This
demands that organizational emphasis be placed on the entire strata.
Poverty programs, educational systems, etc., have generally pulled
from our strata, the most beautiful, intelligent or healthy, others
have fallen into our strata, leaving the basic statistical contours
of the strata pretty much untouched. It is our aim to raise our strata
as a whole. This demands the organization of the entire strata.
Since 1972, NATLFED
has been involved in only a few union recognition battles, and, in
general, has not been organizing according to their claims. One labor
battle, on Long Island, New York, resulted in a sticky legal issue
concerning union recognition. "Though they've entrusted a lot of people," another
social worker explained, "the members don't do anything. NATLFED doesn't
build anything." And the relationships with members, from all accounts,
are very much like that of social worker to client; it's one to one,
and specifically concerned with immediate needs.
They claim to have
40,000 members in their various locals, such as Sacramento, New Brunswick,
Philadelphia, Bellport, Long Island, Binghamton, New York, and Western
Massachusetts, to name the larger ones. Members represent the fifth
and outer rung in NATLFED's systems-obsessive organization. The fourth
rung is volunteers or VOLS. All procedures and activities are coded.
At this level recruits are those most likely to accept their ultimately
cultic internal structure--usually young, naive college students, who,
once in, are expected to leave college--and placed into the cadre or
CDR level. The CDR is classified into two types: tabular on the third
rung and viable on the second. Viable CDR are considered candidates
for the inner circle, the party--there are between 30 and 50 in the
clandestine party--which has no name and is referred to cryptically,
by assumed members, like Perente, to keep viable cadre intrigued.
The members receive
social services from the locals. VOLS are engaged in organizing other
members, and going out to raise money, either by organizing bake sales,
or by passing the can in shopping centers. Cadre are the only ones
brought into the fold. They are told of gun stockpiles, the party,
and future plans, and they are the ones who are expected to "be on
duty 24 hours a day." CDR are almost completely occupied by clerical
work, which entails phoning, typing, and filing forms and 3 x 5 index
cards in the 12 or so boxes of files. For each contact made by a cadre,
there is a card made out in triplicate; one for the master file, another
for the FIIN (financial input) file, and the third in the VOL file,
for example.
Each time NATLFED
enters an area to set up OPS (operations) an organizer's first duty
is hassling key activist for names of all the people they know. And,
in some cases, without prior approval, they begin to use the activist's
name, thereby boosting credibility. Immediately systems and files are
created. The 3 x 5 cards begin accumulating: name, address, schooling,
activities and political background. Thus, before organizing efforts
were launched names go to cards and cards go in order. The master file
cards are then sent to POPS or permanent operations located in Perente's
brownstone house in Brooklyn. One ex-member charged: "Collecting names,
and keeping them on file is doing the work of the police. Look, it's
too obvious!" Another ex- member saw cards with social security numbers
on them.
Another piece of
evidence for the claim that NATLFED has been an intelligence outpost
was furnished last year in a memo from NATLFED Central Operations to
a member:
We request that
you conduct an inquiry into the groups and/or individuals who are
working in either the Joanne Chesmard Defense Committee or the
Phil Shinnick Defense Committee. Any information that you can find
out about these people would be very useful to us at this time.
What we want is an overview of who is involved and where these
groups are moving. This will enable us to get an idea of other
forces moving in the New Brunswick entity loco. Thanks.
The member withdrew
from the organization shortly thereafter. Over a year period in the
New Brunswick area, there were ten break-ins of organizations' offices
and homes of activists. In all cases, they were people close to or
involved in the NATLFED group. One TV was the only piece of property
stolen. Five of the break-ins occurred during a two week period, all
of which were NATLFED-connected. During the fifth break-in, a key NATLFED
field organizer was caught in the act.
Virtually everyone
we talked to who had contact with NATLFED confirmed that the inner
circle people, including Perente, have referred to gun stockpiles in
Sacramento. This information, which some found shocking, usually was
noted casually at parties and meetings. And it didn't seem to matter
who was told. One ex-member told of Perente's master plan: "He told
us that there was a plan to surround and takeover police stations,
as part of some sort of romantic revolutionary plot."
"This is the carrot
and stick principle," another ex-member described. "The carrot is that
there is a party, or that there are training camps all over the state.
The stick is his (Perente's) violent, intimidating manner. First, we
take you to Montauk Point; break your legs; then into the water; if
you fuck with us," the ex-member explained.
The question always
posed at this point is: "Why do people join these groups?" Apparently,
there are attractive elements. Their ideas, especially to naive political
ears, sound perceptive and fresh. NATLFED, like NCLC admits that, "We
don't rely on the Left." "We're organizing outside the Left," NATLFED
organizer Anthony County recited. This is new. Their energy is exciting.
A commitment to a cause is appealing. Replacing the pressure of late
adolescent, college life, the group guarantees a 24 hour-a-day routine
filled with predetermined commitments, chores, and ideas. One present
member says, "I was searching for some political ties. I had nothing
to give up. All I had was two years of college and a lot of hard work
in front of me."
In the no-alcohol,
no-sleep, bad-health, canned-food and cigarette-filled life of the
cadre, there is too much work and more than enough pressure to keep
members devoted to a cause they once understood conceptually from the
outside. An ex-member recalled "A lot of the time you wanted to go
up to somebody and ask them 'What are we doing?', but there was no
one to go up to."
And if the member
should venture a criticism, retaliation should be expected. One ex-member
explained that on several occasions she sat for 12 hours forced to
listen to Perente reading. "This is how they get you to stay. It's
like the Moonies. First they give you a meal with meat, which is real
special. Gino's (Perente's) three women make you comfortable, put you
in a room. When you're tired, he comes in and reads and talks to you.
After this long process, I felt trapped. I just knew that."
This review of NATLFED
shows that more information is needed before firm conclusions can be
made, though many of the suspicions seem justified. The historical
links between NCLC, IWP and NATLFED constitute only one chain of evidence
for the group's clandestine, unsavory connections. The penchant for "systems" theory,
along with the adoption of its jargon; the references to archenemy
Rockefeller; the focus on "strata" rather than masses--all these attributes
place NATLFED and similar organizations in a dubious political light.
Whether these groups work with NCLC directly or not, they are a distinct
coalition which, beyond their cultic trappings, form an intelligence
network whose effect is to destabilize structures all along the political
spectrum, while dreaming of hegemony.
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