The term parliamentary cretinism was originally coined by
Karl Marx in chapter five of his 1852 political book, the
Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, published in 1852 following
Louis Napoleon's coup d'état in
France. Marx and Engels considered this a fatal delusion for the socialist movement, believing it would only waste time and allow
reactionary forces to grow stronger. Marx, particularly, held the view that parliaments are indirectly representing the interests of classes but resolve problems superficially, with its politics ideologically displaced and abstracted from social conditions. This means, for Marx, that parliamentary cretinism creates an imaginary world without sense, memory, and understanding of the real world. This condition perpetuates parliamentarism by defending it against the proletariat through the destruction of the Parliament itself to reinforce the executive branch.
Friedrich Engels wrote: ==References==