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KARL MARX

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192 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

revolution.' 60 But Marx now despaired of the impetus for such a socialrepublican<br />

revolution arising from inside Germany: it could only be<br />

produced by an external shock. This was the programme for 1849 that<br />

he sketched out on 1 January:<br />

The liberation of Europe ... is dependent on a successful uprising by<br />

the French working class. But every French social upheaval necessarily<br />

founders on the English bourgeoisie, on the industrial and commercial<br />

world-domination of Great Britain. Every partial social reform in<br />

France and on the European continent in general is and remains, in as<br />

far as it aims at being definitive, an empty pious hope. And old England<br />

will only be overthrown by a world war, which is the only thing that<br />

could provide the Chartists, the organised party of the English workers,<br />

with the conditions for a successful rising against their gigantic<br />

oppressors. The Chartists at the head of the English government -<br />

only at that moment does the idea of a social revolution leave the realm<br />

of Utopia for that of reality. But every European war which involves<br />

England is a world war. And a European war will be the first result of<br />

a successful workers' revolution in France. As in Napoleon's time,<br />

England will be at the head of the counter-revolutionary armies, but<br />

will be precipitated to the front of the revolutionary movement by the<br />

war itself and thus redeem its guilt against the revolution of the 18th<br />

century. Revolutionary uprising of the French working class, world war<br />

- that is the programme for the year 1849. 61<br />

But however much Marx might see world war as the solution to<br />

Germany's problems, there was still the more immediate question of the<br />

elections to be held under the new Constitution at the end of February.<br />

The problems of the previous May arose again: to participate or not to<br />

participate. And Marx's answer, despite his drastically changed attitude<br />

to the bourgeoisie, was still the same. When Anneke proposed in the<br />

committee meeting of 15 January that the Workers' Association put up<br />

its own candidates, the minutes record Marx as saying that<br />

the Workers' Association as such could not run any candidates at the<br />

present moment; nor was it a question for the present of maintaining<br />

certain principles, but of opposing the government, absolutism and<br />

feudal domination; and for this even simple democrats, so-called<br />

liberals, were sufficient as they were in any event far from satisfied with<br />

the present government. One had simply to take matters as they were.<br />

The important thing was to create as strong an opposition as possible<br />

to the present absolutist regime; it was therefore common sense, since<br />

they could not secure the victory of their own principles in the elections,<br />

to unite with another opposition party to prevent the victory of their<br />

common enemy, absolute monarchy. 62

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