Used pejoratively,
ultra-left is used to label positions that are adopted without taking notice of the current situation or of the consequences which would result from following a proposed course. The term is used to criticize leftist positions that, for example, are seen as overstating the tempo of events, propose initiatives that overestimate the current level of
militancy, or which employ appeals to violence in their activism. The mainstream Marxist critique of such a position began with
Vladimir Lenin's
"Left-Wing" Communism: An Infantile Disorder, which critiqued those (such as
Anton Pannekoek or
Sylvia Pankhurst) in the nascent
Communist International who argued against cooperation with
parliamentary or
reformist socialists. Lenin characterized the ultra-left as a politics of purity—the doctrinal "repetition of the 'truths' of pure communism". Leninists typically used the term against their rivals on the left: "the
Communist Party's Betty Reid wrote in a 1969 pamphlet
Ultra-Leftism in Britain that the
CPGB made 'no exclusive claim to be the only force on the left', but dismissed the groups to the left of the CPGB as the 'ultra-left', with Reid outlining the ultra-left as groups that were Trotskyist, anarchist or
syndicalist or those that 'support the line of the
Communist Party of China during the
Sino-Soviet Split' (pp. 7–8)", the latter of which is associated with
anti-revisionism.
Trotskyists and others saw the Communist International as pursuing a strategy of unrealistic ultra-leftism during its
Third Period, which the Communist International later conceded when it turned to a
popular front strategy in 1934–35. The term was popularized in the United States by the
Socialist Workers Party at the time of the
Vietnam War, using it to describe opponents in the
anti-war movement, including
Gerry Healy. Ultra-leftism is often associated with leftist
sectarianism, in which a socialist organization might attempt to put its own short-term interests before the long-term interests of the working class and its allies. The term was used by the established currents of the Communist movement against "self-indulgent ultra-leftism [that] could only make it more difficult for the revolutionary left to win rank and file PCF members away from their leaders″. For example, during the May 1968 events in France, ultra-leftism was initially associated with the opposition to the
French Communist Party (PCF). == See also ==