Durgan is closely linked to Britain’s Socialist Workers
Party (SWP) and has historically contributed to its media publications,
including Socialist Worker and its main theoretical journal, International
Socialism. He specialises in the Spanish Civil War and is particularly noted
for his research on POUM (Workers’ Party of Marxist Unification). His
background includes political activity with the SWP in the UK, academic
research on the origins of POUM, and teaching modern history in Spain.
Additionally, he served as a historical adviser for Ken Loach’s film Land and
Freedom, which illustrates the POUM’s involvement in the Spanish Revolution.
However, as Ann Talbot notes, "Durgan’s conception of
the relationship between class and society is derived ultimately from the
anti-Marxist conceptions of the sociologist Max Weber, who developed an
ahistorical view of society as a series of static ideal types. This approach
proved influential for self-declared Marxists such as Louis Althusser, who
developed structuralism, a major theoretical influence on the SWP. This
theoretical background allows Durgan to adopt Graham’s theory of modernisation
without as much as a hiccup. The Spanish Civil War, according to Helen Graham,
was one of many European civil wars that reflected differing responses to
modernity.[1]
Talbot believes that Durgan’s political affiliation is of
minor significance when compared to his political approach, which is deeply
rooted in the IST/SWP tradition. The publication of The POUM through Resistance
Books in 2025 confirms that the institutional link between Durgan and that
tendency remains. The SWP tradition provides the platform, distribution
channels, and political support for his revival of POUM centrist views.
Any Marxist writer who has engaged with Durgan’s work has
observed that, while he was willing to engage critically with Trotskyism in
earlier writings, by 2007, he had fully embraced the Popular Front framework,
disguised as "modernisation theory." As Dave Hyland detailed in a
three-part WSWS critique in November 2012, Durgan consistently downplays the
role of the PSOE and anarcho-syndicalists in the defeat of the 1934 Asturian
uprising, neglects the Stalinist GPU's campaign of murder against Spain’s
revolutionary opposition, and most importantly, fails to address Trotsky’s
actual positions on the POUM seriously.[2]
Durgan's 2025 book on the POUM represents his most sustained
effort to rehabilitate that organisation and to counter the Trotskyist
critique. The POUM (Workers' Party of Marxist Unification) was established in
1935 through the merger of the Communist Left of Spain led by Andreu Nin, a
former Left Oppositionist and former secretary of the Red International of
Labour Unions, and the Workers and Peasants Bloc, led by Joaquín Maurín. Nin
had distanced himself from Trotsky in 1930, refusing to endorse the Fourth
International and instead forming an opportunist alliance with Bukharin's Right
Opposition. This was more than a tactical disagreement; it was a profound
political mistake with disastrous repercussions.
Trotsky’s assessment of the POUM differs sharply from
Durgan’s and, contrary to Durgan’s suggestion, was not a retrospectively harsh
judgment. It was a direct political intervention made in the midst of events.
In The Class, the Party, and the Leadership, written in 1940 and
published on the WSWS, Trotsky wrote:
“To the left of all the other parties in Spain stood the
POUM, which undoubtedly embraced revolutionary proletarian elements not
previously firmly tied to anarchism. However, it was precisely this party that
played a fatal role in the development of the Spanish revolution. It could not
become a mass party because, in order to do so, it was first necessary to
overthrow the old parties, and it was possible to overthrow them only by an
irreconcilable struggle, by a merciless exposure of their bourgeois character. However,
the POUM, while criticising the old parties, subordinated itself to them on all
fundamental questions. It participated in the “People’s” election bloc; entered
the government, which liquidated workers’ committees; engaged in a struggle to
reconstitute this governmental coalition; capitulated time and again to the
anarchist leadership; conducted, in connection with this, a false trade union
policy; took a vacillating and non-revolutionary attitude toward the May 1937
uprising. From the standpoint of determinism in general, it is possible, of
course, to recognise that the policy of the POUM was not accidental.
Everything in this world has its cause. However, the series
of causes engendering the Centrism of the POUM is by no means a mere reflection
of the condition of the Spanish or Catalonian proletariat. Two causalities
moved toward each other at an angle, and at a certain moment, they came into
hostile conflict. It is possible, by taking into account previous international
experience, Moscow’s influence, the impact of several defeats, etc., to explain,
politically and psychologically, why the POUM developed into a centrist party. However,
this does not alter its centrist character, nor does it alter the fact that a
centrist party invariably acts as a brake upon the revolution, must each time
smash its own head, and may bring about the collapse of the revolution. It does
not alter the fact that the Catalan masses were far more revolutionary than the
POUM, which in turn was more revolutionary than its leadership. In these
conditions, to unload the responsibility for false policies on the “immaturity”
of the masses is to engage in sheer charlatanism frequently resorted to by
political bankrupts.”
A significant political distortion in Durgan's earlier work,
which persists in this new book, is the consistent underestimation of Stalin's
role in the GPU in Spain. As Hyland's 2012 critique observes, Durgan
"remains silent about the part played by Stalin's murderous secret police,
the GPU, and its impact on the Spanish workers' movement."
This silence is deliberate, aiming to rehabilitate the
Popular Front framework by downplaying its realities, including the torture and
murder of Andreu Nin, the framing of POUM leaders as
"Trotskyite-Fascist" agents of Franco (mirroring Moscow Trials
slanders), and the physical elimination of those opposing Stalinist class
collaboration. Hyland’s work is further elaborated by Alejandro López's 2025
lecture writing “The Stalinist bureaucracy intervened to forestall revolution
in Spain, launching a murder campaign against anyone even suspected of
political links to Trotsky. The machinery of repression built in Moscow and
refined in the Comintern was exported to Spain.[3]
Ramón Mercader, who would later assassinate Trotsky, was specifically trained
in Spain for this purpose. The GPU's activities in Spain were not an anomaly;
rather, they exemplified Stalinism's core principle: repressive efforts to
quash socialist revolution in order to protect the Soviet bureaucracy's
privileges and maintain its diplomatic ties with the so-called
"democratic" imperialist powers.
The SWP's stance on the POUM has gradually shifted to the
right, revealing a clear trajectory. Ann Talbot's two-part WSWS review of
Durgan's 2007 book reports that Britain's SWP supports the Stalinist
perspective on the Spanish Civil War. In his earlier work, especially his 1990
article "The Spanish Trotskyists and the Foundation of the POUM" in
Revolutionary History, Durgan and the SWP tradition indulged in what Talbot
describes as "hero worship" of the POUM. They idealised its political
mistakes while only superficially criticising the Popular Front. The POUM was
portrayed as a brave, tragically defeated revolutionary group, martyred by
Stalinist repression. This narrative aimed to conceal the POUM's own
significant political role in the revolution's failure.
Durgan's new book should be understood within a broader
context. It stands as the SWP tradition's most comprehensive, book-length
effort to offer a sympathetic portrayal of the POUM — likely more nuanced than
a simple apology, yet still based on the same core political evasions that Marxists
have identified over the years. Publishing it via Resistance Books, the IST's
own imprint, is a political statement: it represents the official account of
its preferred historical perspective. For workers and young people looking to
understand the Spanish Revolution, the key resources are Trotsky's writings
— The Lesson of Spain — A Last Warning (1937) and The Class, the
Party, and the Leadership (1940) — along with the WSWS's historical
analyses.
Notes
En Lucha’s Andy Durgan: Historical distortions to justify
political betrayal of Spanish workers- A Three-Part Article by David Hyland https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2012/11/dur1-n07.html
Britain’s SWP lends credence to Stalinist line on Spanish
Civil War—Part 1 Ann Talbot- www.wsws.org/en/articles/2008/09/swp1-s16.html
The Spanish Revolution, 1931-39 by Leon Trotsky (Author),
George Breitman (Editor), Naomi Allen (Editor
Homage To Catalonia-George Orwell April 25, 1938.
Review: Andy Durgan, The Spanish Civil War: The Journal of
Contemporary History-published online June 25, 2009
[1]
Britain’s SWP lends credence to Stalinist line on Spanish Civil War—Part 1-https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2008/09/swp1-s16.html
[2]
En Lucha’s Andy Durgan: Historical distortions to justify political betrayal of
Spanish workers- A Three-Part Article by David Hyland
www.wsws.org/en/articles/2012/11/dur1-n07.html
[3]
The Stalinist counterrevolution during the Spanish Civil War-https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2025/09/26/opjp-s26.html






