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NEW SOUTH AFRICAN ANARCHIST PAMPHLETS |
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The Organisational Platform of the Libertarian
Communists ...according to the Syndicalist view, the
trade union, the syndicate, is the unified organisation of labour and
has for its purpose the defence of the interests of the producers in the
existing society and the
preparing for and the practical carrying out of the reconstruction of
social life after the pattern of [libertarian] Socialism.
It has, therefore, a double purpose... Rudolph Rocker, Anarcho-syndicalism THE WORKPLACE STRUGGLE Because
of our position in society only we, as the producers of all wealth, are
capable of destroying the class system and other forms of oppression and
creating a free, stateless, classless society based on direct democracy,
and distribution according to need.2 As
the producers of wealth, only we, through workplace action are a force
capable of powerful mass actions against the present set-up even in the
pre-revolutionary period.3 So
why don’t we use our numbers and power and recreate society in our own
interests? The main reason
is that we are told that we are not capable of doing so, by the schools,
media etc. These teach us
that the workers can only follow orders and that this is the natural
order of things. However,
this pro-capitalist propaganda that teaches us to feel powerless and
that hides the truth of class rule is challenged by the experiences of
the masses when we struggle to force the capitalist system to meet our
needs for education, housing, jobs, wages, freedom from racism etc.
In particular, workplace action, the use of our collective power
that runs the factories, offices, mines, schools etc. to stop them gives
us a glimpse of our potential power.4 THE TRADE UNION MOVEMENT Trade unions are one of the most important
mass movements of the working class and one of the
main focuses of our activity as Anarchists.
We take this position for a number of reasons. The
trade unions are organisations based on the specific class interests of
the workers. There is no
other way to explain the formation of trade union movements except by
the need of workers to organise on class lines to defend and advance
their own particular interests in opposition to those of the bosses.5
No amount of bureaucracy, reformism or backwardness in the unions
can remove this essential fact. Because
of this fundamental feature of the trade union movement, it forms an
organisational stronghold of a specific class-consciousness that to some
extent cuts across race, gender, religion etc. The
trade unions are based at the point of production and hence wield the
strongest weapon of the workers under capitalism: the withdrawal of
their labour. They
therefore allow the workers to injure the bosses and they give the
workers an idea of their potential power and ability to run their own
lives. We
stand in solidarity with the mass organisations and progressive
struggles of the working class. We
must take up Anarchist arguments throughout the working class and its
structures. We oppose all
oppression, we stand in solidarity with our class.
We believe that mass struggle is the best strategy for social
change, gives the class confidence in its own abilities, and provides
the best forum to win Anarchist ideas.
Therefore we engage in grassroots union work. We reject the argument that all unions
inevitably end up “selling out” the working class. Workers
would not support the unions if the unions did not to some extent defend
and advance their class interests.
Even the most bureaucratic and deformed union must ultimately
respond to the needs of the rank-and-file membership if it is to retain
their support. Not
all reformist demands can be won in the framework of capitalism.
Therefore even the most bureaucratic union will in some
circumstances clash with the imperatives of capital and the State.
In other words the unions can never be totally “integrated”
into capitalism. All
unions depend in the final analysis on their ability to mobilise their
members in direct action against the bosses.
It is the threat of a withdrawal of labour power that gets the
bosses to recognise the demands of the workers and not some sort of
devious plot to co- opt the working class.
Therefore we say that unions are mass combat organisations of the
working class. The
bosses do not set up or support the unions as a means of fooling the
workers. The bosses will
attack and if possible destroy even the most moderate unions if they
have the opportunity (e.g. the recent attacks on Trades Union Congress
(TUC) in Britain; on AFL-CIO in the USA6).
It is nonsense to say that capitalism “needs” the unions for
stability, social peace or somesuch. The bosses will only grant some sort of recognition to unions
if there is mass struggle. The
bosses cannot always give in to workers demands to “buy off”
struggle. The existence of a union bureaucracy is not
inevitable. The
Spanish Anarcho-Syndicalist union the CNT (National Confederation of
Labour) had more than a million members in the early 1930s but at no
point had more than two paid officials.
Union work was done as much as possible by activists during work
hours, and leadership posts were regularly rotated.7 It
is not true that a bureaucracy always develops in the unions because the
bosses will only deal with “respectable” leaders who can be relied
on to get the membership to accept and abide by the deals negotiated
after mass actions. The
bosses negotiate because they are forced to, not because they “like”
or “approve” of the union leadership.
In addition, if the union is democratic, the negotiators
represent the interests of the membership, and are not prefects or
policemen for management. THE TRADE UNION BUREAUCRACY AND REFORMISM At
present most unions in South Africa are characterised by the dominance
of reformist ideas. These
hold that the bosses and the workers must co-operate to “save the
economy”, “reconstruct and develop the country” etc.
It is generally held that capitalism can be made into something
more humane. It is believed
that unions must reach some sort of accommodation with capitalism,
rather than overthrow it.8 A
bureaucracy of full-time, often unelected, officials increasingly
dominates the actions of the unions.
At the same time, the unions, particularly COSATU (Congress of
South African Trade Unions), have strong tradition of grassroots
democracy and accountability e.g. the shop steward system.
This leads to serious contradictions, as when the leadership
condemns the strike actions and ignores the concerns of the union
membership (e.g.) the truckers strike of 1994, and the nurse’s strike
of 1995.9 The
union bureaucracy is not responsible to the membership in any real sense
except in the most formal way. They
have far too much power and influence.
On top of this they earn much more than the rank-and-file, they
are able to avoid overtime and are also protected from short-time and
retrenchments in a way that ordinary workers are not.
In addition, they may sit on company boards, government
commissions, high-level negotiating structures such as NEDLAC (National
Economic, Development and Labour Council), and may enjoy a variety of
perks. The
privileges of the bureaucracy may even be set to increase in the larger
unions, as concern grows with preventing leaders from being lost to the
bosses and the government, both of whom are willing and able to offer
very attractive employment opportunities to skilled negotiators with
some sort of working class backgroun.10 In
short the union bureaucracy enjoys a way of life that is quite different
from the people that they are supposed to be working for. Some of them have never even worked in an ordinary job. As
a result of its privileges and power the union bureaucracy develops a
distinct set of interests.11
They generally put their own special interests before those of
the workers as a whole. Because
the bureaucrats privileges depend on their role as full- time
negotiators and mediators who can help the bosses avoid industrial
conflict they will rarely initiate or lead strikes.
Instead they are ready to negotiate until the cows come home to
reach a so- called “reasonable” solution.
They prefer conciliation to class warfare.
Their lack of accountability reinforces their tendency to
negotiate rather than pull out all the stops to secure the maximum
benefit for the union rank and file. The
full- time officials do not usually lead strikes but they sometimes
will, such as when employers are refusing to negotiate or when
negotiating procedures are threatened.
Generally however they will go to almost any length and accept
almost any deal in place of industrial action.
They will not hesitate to condemn unofficial and illegal strikes
(strikes that are not approved of by themselves). It
is important to remember that the bureaucracy behaves as it does because
of its privileges and power, and not because its individual members are
“sell- outs”, “bad people” etc.
The bureaucracy is by its very nature authoritarian and opposed
to workers self- activity on most occasions. The
opposition of the bureaucracy to mass actions, except in extreme
circumstances has many negative consequences.
It dampens the fighting spirit of the membership and leads to
demobilisation, and it reduces the extent of gains that could have been
won if mass action was used. However,
as we pointed out above, the bureaucracy in the unions can never become
totally unresponsive to the demands of the membership.
This would result in the end of their power, privileges and
careers, as ordinary people would leave the unions.
Within this constraint, however, the bureaucrats will still swing
between the role of mediator for workers, and defender of the existing
order. It
is self- evident that the more power, initiative and control that lies
with the full time officials, the less that lies with the rank-and-file
membership on the shop floor. CORPORATISM, TRIPARTISM AND “STRATEGIC UNIONISM” We
are totally opposed to the current drift of the unions into
collaboration with the bosses and the State (e.g.) forums such as NEDLAC
that deals with macro-economic policy.
We believe that tripartite and bipartite arrangements will not
bring any real benefits to the workers and the poor.
Instead they will serve to demobilise and weaken the unions.12 This
trend towards collaboration with the bosses and the rulers is most
noticeable in the growing involvement of the unions in a variety of
policy negotiation forums. Involvement
of the unions in “policy- making”: Basically this means that the
unions draw up complex proposals as the basis for negotiations with the
bosses and the State in order to formulate long-term policies binding on
all parties. In practice
these are drawn up by experts with no real worker input.
Because of the domination of nationalist ideas in the unions,
these proposals also tend to be reformist and aimed at creating a better
capitalism. Sitting in policy forums:
The unions try to get these policies accepted by the bosses and the
State, and as a result participate in various forums, both at national
level (NEDLAC- which deals with labour law and macro- economic policy-
e.g. tariffs, training, taxation), and at sub- national forums (like
“participatory management” schemes and “workplace forums”). These
forums are nothing but a trap for the working class, even though unions
(like COSATU) may see these forums as a way of gradually winning control
away from the boss and moving to socialism. These
forums create a pretence of democracy that ignores the massive and
systematic inequality between the bosses (who own everything and control
the State) and the workers (who have nothing but their numbers, fighting
spirit and ability to disrupt production).
These forums do not challenge this class inequality because they
are based on the idea the bosses and the workers are partners in
development and economic growth and that both are legitimate interest
groups. As a result they
cannot fundamentally change the balance of power between bosses and
workers that exists under capitalism. The
forums are a threat to the unions because they take control out of the
hands of ordinary members and place it in the hands of the full- time
leaders and “experts” who sit in the forums and draft “policy”.
By focussing on policy they shift the focus of union activity
from grassroots action and workers self- activity against the bosses
(the real source of workers power) to high- level negotiations, and
elite bargaining. These
various forums also promote the false idea that the bosses and the
workers share the same interests as each other, and that the bosses are
a good and necessary part of society.
In this way the forums help to teach workers to accept capitalism
in the name of “democracy”. While
there is an appearance that the agenda for negotiation is open and
democratic, in reality all that is discussed is how to make capitalism
run more smoothly. Lower
level forums like “participatory management” do not give the workers
power over the bigger capitalist economy; at most they give a little bit
of a say in hiring and firing, working conditions and improving the
efficiency and competitiveness of the firm in the capitalist economy.
Higher level forums like NEDLAC only deal with improving the
broader framework in which capitalism operates.
e.g. protection on
imports, worker training, improving productivity; because agreement must
be reached in order for policy to be implemented (usually on the basis
of consensus), anything that threatened the State and capital would be
rejected out of hand by the representatives of these groups and will
thus always be vetoed. This
is not to say that we are opposed to the struggle of workers to win
economic improvements in their lives and more control over their work
and the economy. The point
is that these gains must be won through mass actions organised through a
democratic, grassroots, militant and independent/ autonomous union
movement, and not through collaborating with the enemy in the naive
belief that we can be “partners in reconstruction and development”. THE REVOLUTIONARY POTENTIAL OF TRADE UNIONS We stand within that tendency within class
struggle Anarchism that believes that the unions can perform a double
role of firstly, mobilising workers for mass action on day-to-day
issues; and, secondly, providing the organisational structure through
which workers can collectively seize and self-manage the means of
production. Work in the
union movement is not only important as a means of winning workers to
Anarchism, but also as a means of laying the organisational basis for
the new society in the shell of the old.13 This
tendency (which accepts revolutionary unionism) originated with the
Anarchist-aligned Spanish, Swiss and other sections of the First
International Workingmens’ Association (in the 1860s and 1870s), and
the International Working Peoples Association in the USA in the 1880s.14 It
underwent a massive revival from the late nineteenth century.
Not only did it come to dominate the revolutionary left, but in a
number of countries, it became the dominant influence on the union
movement e.g. Spain, Portugal, Brazil, Argentine, France, Mexico,
Uruguay. In others it
formed a substantial minority current e.g. Italy, Britain, the United
States, Japan, Germany, Bulgaria, Australia. We
reject the idea that trade unions can only become revolutionary in “revolutionary
conditions”. This is
a one-sided and deterministic view.
Revolutionary conditions are not just something that happen to
workers. They are the
result of the actions of the workers themselves, and in turn these
actions are influenced by the strength of revolutionary ideology and the
level of self-activity that the workers engage in.
Therefore we say that revolutionary unions can themselves
directly contribute to the creation of revolutionary conditions. We
reject the claim that unions only exist to improve the conditions under
which workers are exploited, rather than put an end to the system of
exploitation itself. In
other words, we are opposed to the idea that the unions always and
everywhere cannot go beyond “partial
struggles” within capitalism and must always compromise with the
bosses at “the end of the day”. This
view is totally unhistorical. Just
because the balance of forces under capitalism generally favours the
bosses and the rulers, with the effect that many struggles (by unions as
well as other progressive formations) are only “partial” does not
mean that the unions will always be forced to compromise with
capitalism. It is necessary to examine both the objective and subjective
factors in existence at a particular time e.g. strength of revolutionary
ideology amongst the workers, existence of a crisis in ruling circles
etc. The logic of the
“partial struggle” position is that any fighting organisation that
is unable to overthrow capitalism whenever it feels like it is
inherently reformist. This
view is inaccurate. In
response to an attempted fascist coup in Spain in 1936, the
Anarcho-Syndicalist union the CNT (National Confederation of Labour)
successfully spearheaded the formation of workers militias that halted
the fascist coup, and led the movement by up to nine million workers and
peasants to seize and self- administer the land and factories.
The rank-and-file of the CNT literally tore down the capitalist
system.15 It
is wrong to see the outcome of every day workers struggle as a
“compromise”. Many such
struggles are an unconditional victory for the working masses in that
they forced totally obstinate bosses to give in against their will and
lose a bit of their power and wealth.
Such struggles may be limited in their effect but they are a
direct and successful attack on the rule of the bosses. Finally,
a compromise cannot always be reached.
In a number of circumstances, such as economic downturn, the
bosses may be unable to concede on the workers demands.
In these cases even a “partial struggle” brings the workers
into conflict with the very fabric of the capitalist system and moves
their demands from “partial” ones to objectively revolutionary ones.
It is not, however, inevitable that such situations will have a
revolutionary outcome. The
existence of a union bureaucracy is
not inevitable. The Spanish
Anarcho-Syndicalist union the CNT (National Confederation of Labour) had
more than a million members in the early 1930s but at no point had more
than two paid officials. Union
work was done as much as possible by activists during work hours, and
leadership posts were regularly rotated.
BASIC PRINCIPLES ON THE UNIONS As
Anarchists we believe that the unions can not only defend the workers in
the existing capitalist society, but prepare them for, and practically
carry out the reconstruction of society in the direction of Stateless
Socialism.16 In
practical terms, this means that the role of the unions must be expanded
from that of simply defending and advancing the interests of the workers
in the daily struggle, to preparing the workers to take control of the
economy by informing them about the technical management of production
and distribution, and by spreading among them the revolutionary ideas
needed to create a free, stateless, libertarian socialist society. The
unions are more suited to accomplishing these tasks than political
parties. They organise the
workers to use their economic power to fight injustice and help to make
the workers aware of their strength.
They help to create a spirit of solidarity and combativeness.
They can give the workers the ideological and organisational
preparation needed to reconstruct society. In
accordance with this outlook we emphasise mass/ direct actions by the
workers as a means of defending and advancing their political and
economic rights. Examples
of these immediate methods of struggle are boycotts, go- slows, strikes,
and work- to- rule. It
is not true that Anarchists believe that all that is necessary to make a
revolution is a General Strike lasting for a few days.
The General Strike is the strongest weapon of the workers and is
used in a variety of situations. In
some circumstances, it may be the prelude to the revolutionary uprising
of the working class. Our
tasks regarding the unions are thus two-fold. On
the one hand, we devote themselves to the Anarchist education of the
masses: that is, revolutionary propaganda work that links a criticism of
capitalist society to a vision of how society can be reorganised in the
interests of the masses. Such
work is of course aided by the experience of struggle at the workplace. On
the other hand, as opponents of centralisation and supporters of the
maximum self-activity of the masses, we oppose the existence of
bureaucratic and undemocratic structures in the union movement.
The unions should be structured as follows. The basic unit of the union is the workplace section (made up
of a general assembly of all workers in a particular part of a
workplace); these sections each elect a mandated delegate, together
making up the factory committee. The
different plants are then federated with each other in two directions.
Firstly, with all equivalent organisations in the same industry
and related trades (to form industrial and agricultural alliances e.g.
in transport). These
industrial unions are in turn federated into a Federation of Industrial
Alliances. Secondly, with
all such union structures in a given district or town (to form a Local
Chamber of Labour). These
are joined in a Federation of Labour Chambers.
Taken together, these federations constitute the General
Confederation of Labour. All
these structures are linked by mandated delegates and not by a
bureaucracy. The
point of this union structure is to unify the workers in a structure
that makes possible common action, keep initiative with the rank and
file, and lay the basis for the future economic order.
In addition, the Labour Chambers also act as centres for local
propaganda and education. We
reject the “a-political” version of Anarcho-Syndicalism that argues
that State and other institutions of the ruling class will automatically
collapse after the unions seize the means of production 17. The
State will not simply disappear following the revolutionary seizure of
the means of production. It
will actively organise counter-revolutionary activity in order to
repress the gains of the workers. The
working class must take power in its own name, and smash the State from
day one of the revolution. The
State must be smashed and power based on rank and file committees, in
the unions, the militias and the communities.
There must be no power centres in society other than the mass
organisations of the working class.
The mass organisations must be integrated and co-ordinated in a
“social power” or revolutionary committee at the national and
international level in a revolutionary situation. THE WAY FORWARD IN THE UNIONS * The Need For a Specific Anarchist Organisation The
question naturally arises at this point as to how we set about imbuing
the union movement with a revolutionary spirit and building in it a
decentralised structure. In
our view the precondition for such work is the creation of an Anarchist
organisation on the lines suggested by the Organisational
Platform of the Libertarian Communists by Makhno and others.
The Workers Solidarity Movement in Ireland is an example of this
type of political organisation. The
Platform argues that Anarchism
needs to become the “theoretical driving force” of the revolution of
the working class. In other
words the masses must make the revolution by and for themselves, on the
basis of a clear criticism of this society and a clear idea on what sort
of society should replace it. In
order for this to occur it is necessary to build a large and effective
Anarchist organisation that will spread Anarchist ideas through the
working class and its organisations.
This organisation must be based on shared ideological and
tactical positions and be organised on a federal basis. The
Platform explicitly endorses
revolutionary unionism, writing that “the ways and means of Anarchist
attitudes vis-a-vis trade
unionism” are “groups of Anarchists in companies, factories and
workshops, preoccupied in creating Anarcho-Syndicalist unions, leading
the struggle in revolutionary unions for the domination of libertarian
ideas in unionism, groups organised in their action by a general
Anarchist organisation” (p25). Endorsement
for revolutionary unionism is implicit in the arguments of the Platform. If Anarchist propaganda work wins over the majority of union
members, the unions will necessarily have been restructured on Anarchist
principles. What can this
mean but a union movement organised in a democratic and
anti-bureaucratic manner and filled with revolutionary purpose (i.e.)
revolutionary unionism? We
agree with the Platform that
Anarchist activists in the unions need to be united with each other in,
and co-ordinated with each other by the Anarchist organisation, that the
Anarchist organisation must retain its organisational independence from
the union, and that the Anarchists do not restrict their activities to
the unions (pp24-5). To sum up, the first step towards creating
revolutionary unions is to build an Anarchist organisation that aims to
spread Anarchist ideas as far and wide as possible in the working class
and its structures. Such an
organisation will obviously also take up the battle against the power
and privilege of the union bureaucracy. * Why We Need To Work Inside Existing Trade Unions
We believe that the Anarchist organisation
should aim to revolutionise the existing
union movement. We are
totally opposed to the idea of breaking away from the existing unions and setting up
new unions, or in the form of setting up new unions on purely
revolutionary principles to compete with the established unions.18 We take this
position for the following reasons. A
basic problem of breaking away to form new radical unions is that it has
the effect of taking the minority of fighting and radical workers out of
the old union, thus leaving it at the mercy of the bureaucracy and
reformist orientation that provoked the split in the first place.
We urge the militants to stay in the union and fight to win over
the membership. In
addition, the effect of a radical breakaway is often to create a small
sectarian breakaway that is isolated from the masses. The masses, knowing the merit of a large and powerful
organisation, generally prefer to gravitate to the large established
unions rather than the small dual unions and breakaways. The
working masses often lack a revolutionary political consciousness and
are thus not readily attracted to the radical slogans of dual unions.
In fact they may even be alienated by the rhetoric of these
unions. The workers also
trust and look to the established unions.
It is important that we organise wherever workers are organised,
and that we relate workers everyday concerns to the goal of Anarchism.
For these reasons, also, we work in the existing unions. The
existing unions also tend to attract a lower degree of hostility and
attacks from the bosses and the State than radical dual unions.
It is therefore easier to establish a basis for the initial
revolutionary work by action in the existing unions than by setting up
small dual unions. Most
importantly, the history of the union movement shows that small groups
of revolutionaries can achieve impressive results by working in and
building up the existing unions (e.g.) the Haymarket/Chicago Anarchist
International Working Peoples Association was able to help launch the
great 8 hour day movement in 1886 on this basis; the victory of the
Anarchists in the Argentinean Regional Workers Federation (FORA) in
1904; the victory in the General Confederation of Labour (CGT) in France
by 1906; the rise of the Spanish Anarcho-Syndicalists to pre-eminence in
Solidaridad Obrera, the predecessor of the CNT, in the 1910s.19 While
we oppose attempts to set up dual unions, we ultimately defend the right
of the workers themselves to make this decision.
Where dual unions are created, we will attempt to set up
Anarchist sections in both unions.
The Anarchist organisation will organise wherever workers are
organised. *Rank-and-File Movements It
is important to emphasise that work
in the existing unions, based on a militant fight for daily demands,
does not mean taking over the unions with an unchanged structure.
The privileges and undue power of the union leaders must be
removed, the unions must be decentralised and restructured in accordance
with our ideas, and different unions in the same sector should be
amalgamated together where possible. We
are more than willing to work alongside other rank and file members to
build a rank-and-file
movement of militant workers who are prepared to fight
independently of the bureaucracy, and against it where necessary. This
type of movement arises when workers go into struggle and are attacked
not only by the bosses but also by their own union officials. A program or set of demands for such a movement should be
broad enough to attract workers who are militant but would not see
themselves as having a particular political outlook.
A general guide could be (i) for union democracy (ii) for
women’s rights in the workplace and the union (iii) against wage
restraint (iv) for jobs (v) support for strikes (vi) fighting racial
discrimination. While
we will fight for our ideas in this movement, we want the movement (if
it arises) to be independent of any one political organisation.
We want to win as many workers as possible to our position but we
will not do so in an opportunist manner at the expense of the growth of
the movement. The role of a
rank-and-file movement is to provide a focus for workers moving to the
left and wanting to fight; it should never become a front for the
revolutionary organisation. In
the same way as the specific Anarchist organisation is vital to the
victory of revolutionary ideas in the unions, so too is the
rank-and-file movement a key force in the battle against the union
bureaucracy and for full union democracy.
What
should we do if we prove unable to remove the entrenched union
bureaucracy? Two scenarios
present themselves. If
it proves impossible to dislodge the bureaucracy in a pre-revolutionary situation despite
consistent and sincere efforts by the rank-and-file movement,
despite the actions of the Anarchist organisation, and despite the
support of the ordinary union members themselves, the call for a massive
majority split-off by the rank and file movement that basically brings
out almost all union members (excluding the bureaucracy) into a new
union federation may be acceptable.
This is a very serious decision and must not be taken lightly.
The rank-and-file movement and existing grassroots union
structures would in this case provide the nucleus of a new union
federation. If
in a revolutionary situation
the bureaucracy is still in place, then the rank-and-file movement and
existing grassroots union structures will themselves undertake the task
of the revolutionary general strike in defiance of the union bureaucracy
to take over the means of production and institute workers
self-management. These
are tactical issues that will have to be dealt with when they arise;
they are not and should not be
interpreted as a principled adoption of Break-aways, which is a strategy
that we argue cannot work (see elsewhere in this paper).
*Organising the Unorganised If
the existing unions do not organise sectors of the workforce, then we
should match our work within existing unions with organising drives
amongst the unorganised. These
drives should whenever possible get support from existing unions. If
possible, the newly organised workers should be incorporated into the
existing unions. Otherwise,
separate unions will have to be established.
In such cases, however, there must be a consistent promotion of
united front action (co-operation on specific issues) between the
established unions and the new unions.
This unity in action can serve as a basis for the unification of
the old and new unions. Such
unity must be a principled basis that opposes racism, sexism etc.
We should always hold the
“unification” of all unions into “One Big Union” as an end goal,
a goal as important as the work of “education” (ideas) and
“organisation” (restructuring the unions). This
organising work must be done on conjunction with revolutionary
propaganda work in the new unions with the aim of genuinely winning the
membership over to an Anarchist perspective.
Unless this is done, we can end up with a membership that
disagrees with Anarchism but joins the union anyway because it has no
real alternative if it wants to organise. Attempts
to establish a full-time bureaucracy in new unions must be opposed.
ORGANISING BEYOND THE WORKPLACE It
is necessary to organise throughout the whole working class (including
women, youth etc.) and to build an Anarchist organisation that will
fight for the leadership of the Anarchist idea throughout the working
class. We need to be active
in community-based campaigns such as rent strikes, always bearing in
mind the need for class struggle and for vigilance against middle class
opportunists posing as “community leaders”; we do not hide, but
highlight, the class differences in residential areas, addressing
ourselves to the exploited and the poor (the working class community)
rather than to shopkeepers, priests, businessmen, politicians.
We support struggles in the education sector.
We need to work out ways of organising amongst the poor in the
“informal sector” (the self-employed who do not employ others).20
We need to organise amongst the peasantry, although the union
form of organisation can often be applied to this sector with ease.
However,
we always seek to bring the power of the unions to the aid of other
progressive struggles. The
workplace is a repository of great power, and it is invaluable in aiding
other struggles. We must
link the workplace struggle of trade unions to the rural struggle of the
exploited masses (peasants, sharecroppers etc.). The
future Anarchist society will not be based purely on union structures
(syndicates). There will,
in addition, be community committees, which together with the syndicates
will make up the free self-governing city (commune).
The communes and syndicates will be federated together, along
industrial, bioregional and inter-regional lines.
There will also be a democratic workers militia to defend the
revolutionary society.21
IN DEFENSE OF ANARCHIST UNIONISM (ANARCHO-SYNDICALISM) We
reject the argument that revolutionary unionism (Syndicalism) is flawed
because it can supposedly only organise in the work place. The Spanish movement organised rent strike committees, the
libertarian Youth as well as community schools and centres.22 We
reject the argument that revolutionary unionism (Syndicalism) believes
that workers are tied to capitalism solely by bureaucratic union
structures that remove all initiative from the rank-and-file, and that
all that is needed to change this is to restructure the unions.
It does not neglect the role of ideas in revolutionary change. Revolutionary
unionism (Syndicalism) is correct in pointing to the importance of a
democratic, non-bureaucratic and decentralised union structure in
preparing workers for revolution. Democratic
participation in struggle is an essential part of changing people’s
consciousness of their capabilities.23
The call to return power to the union rank-and-file is also an
implicit critique of the capitalist- pro-State ideology of leaders,
centralisation, control from the top down. However,
revolutionary unionism (Syndicalism) also takes up the battle of ideas,
making revolutionary propaganda that links a criticism of this society
to a vision of how a future society could be organised.
This propaganda has been spread in a variety of ways e.g.
propaganda leagues inside the existing unions (such as the Syndicalist
League of North America); the Labour Chambers and workers schools
associated with revolutionary unions (for example in the Spanish case);
the press of revolutionary Syndicalist unions (e.g. the Spanish CNT
controlled thirty-six daily papers, including Solidaridad
Obrera, the largest of any paper in Spain, and published millions of
books and pamphlets).24
In other words, the revolutionary (Syndicalist) union once
established can aid the Anarchist organisation in its propaganda work. We
reject the argument that revolutionary (Syndicalist) unions, when
established, are always compromised by their method of organising (i.e.)
as unions they must organise all workers regardless of ideological
affiliation because this is necessary to be effective in the workplace. We
do not deny that this opens the door to reformist currents.
Such currents, sometimes calling themselves “pure
syndicalists”, emerged in anarcho- syndicalist unions in Italy, France
and Spain. This
situation, however, only points to the need to keep up the battle of
ideas in the union. These
reformist groups can be stopped. The
Anarchist organisation will clearly play a central role here.
We are opposed to the merger of Anarchist groups into
revolutionary (Syndicalist) unions once the latter have been established
because it is necessary to have an organised force to battle reformist
tendencies. This has a
precedent: the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI), set up in 1927 with
the aim of safeguarding the Spanish CNT’s commitment to Anarchist
principle.25 We
do not expect revolutionary (Syndicalist) unions to attract large
numbers of reformist elements, no matter how militant and effective they
are, as these unions usually bear the brunt of State and boss repression
as compared to moderate unions (e.g.) repeated banning of CNT in Spain.
Committed reformist workers will find a more comfortable, safer
environment in moderate unions. We
reject the argument that the rank-and-file of historically existing
revolutionary (Syndicalist) unions were not Anarchist.
If internal democracy existed, then a union that is openly
revolutionary in policies and structure could only be one where most
members do agree with Anarchist ideas; if reformist tendencies in the
union involved more than a minority this would be reflected in the
union’s activities, statements and structure (e.g.) the French CGT,
once the most famous Anarcho-Syndicalist union, was taken over by
Marxist and Social Democrat elements soon after World War 1. We
reject the argument that Anarcho-syndicalism is inherently
“a-political”. Organisations
such as the Anarcho-syndicalist International Workers Association (IWA)
explicitly recognise “violence as a means of defence against the
violent methods of the ruling classes in the struggle for the possession
of the factories and the fields by the revolutionary people... the
defence of the revolution [must] be entrusted to the masses themselves
and their economic organisations”.26 ANARCHIST ACTIVITY IN THE UNIONS General perspectives The
major obstacles to the unions playing a revolutionary role have already
been indicated above: the dominance of reformist ideas and the trade
union bureaucracy. In order
to revolutionise the trade unions we will work to build a section of the
Anarchist organisation within the existing unions. A
crucial activity of this group will be the struggle to win as many
workers as possible to an Anarchist position.
This will include the following: aiming to unify different
sectional struggles into an awareness of the overall struggle between
classes; to explain the lessons of past struggles; to take on the
politics of Marxism and reformism in the movement; and to spread the
Anarchist idea, including the view that the unions can become the
battering ram that destroys capitalism, and that the unions need to be
restructured in a decentralised and anti-bureaucratic manner. A
second crucial activity will be to fight for union democracy.
By this we do not mean that we want to elect new individuals to
the same bureaucratic posts. We want more accountability, mandating, elections,
information for members etc. Our
long-term goal is the restructuring of the unions on Anarcho-Syndicalist
lines. SEE BELOW. In
general, we aim to encourage the workers themselves to take up the fight
against the State, bosses, and union bureaucrats. Our focus of activity is the shopfloor. We
are in favour of 100% union membership and all Anarchist organisation
members must belong to their appropriate union. No
member of the Anarchist organisation will accept an unelected post in
the unions that gives power over the membership. Members
elected as shop stewards are to consider their position as that of a
delegate accountable to and mandated by the members rather than a
“representative” who can act over the heads of the membership. When
going forward for elective positions we make it clear that we are not
accepting the union structure as it now exists.
We will fight for more accountability, mandating, information for
members etc. Guidelines for day-to-day activities The
following points serve as guidelines for our day-to-day activity and
link it to our goal of Anarchism, because of the method that lies behind
them. PARTY POLITICS In
South Africa, like in other countries, there are formal links between
political parties and the unions (i.e.) the Tripartite Alliance between
COSATU, the African National Congress and the South African Communist
Party. We
are opposed to this, firstly, because it places the workers in a formal
alliance with capitalist and State interests (e.g. in the ANC) which
compromises their ability to fight.
We must be independent from the class enemy, particularly in our
key class organisations. Secondly,
it has the effect of encouraging workers to look to politicians (“our
comrades in government”) to solve their political issues, rather than
relying on their own strength. Thirdly,
it ties workers into the elections for parliament, which is a futile
strategy given the nature of the State.
We unconditionally support and defend the right to vote, and the
other civil and political rights that go alongside it in a
bourgeois/capitalist democracy. Rights
and gains are not won by participation in Parliament, they are forced on
Parliament by mass actions. But
the State is not some neutral tool at the disposal of the majority, but
a weapon of the bosses and rulers. We
are opposed to the call for the unions to establish a Mass Workers
Party. This is partly
because of the futility of parliamentary politics.
It is also because history has shown that participation in
Parliament turns worker leaders into a conservative, privileged and
elitist stratum with its own sectional interests, and because any
socialist politics that workers parties have is generally toned down so
that the party can attract the majority of the electorate. STATE INTERFERENCE We
are opposed to all laws that restrict the right to strike, and all laws
that aim to interfere in the internal affairs of the union.
We are opposed to “union bashing” by the State and bosses. We
are opposed to all schemes for “workers directors” and “workers
participation”. We call
for the withdrawal of the unions from all macro- economic policy forums
such as NEDLAC. These
schemes are a confidence trick that hides the rule of the bosses and the
fact that the workers and the bosses have absolutely different
interests. We are against
participation in all bodies that try to destroy the independence of the
unions by involving them in “social partnership.” We are opposed to
the unions buying stock in any company, no matter how this is justified. Where
possible, we encourage the workers not to use the Industrial Court and
other supposedly “impartial” institutions.
Instead we call for solidarity action. POLICE UNIONS The
police and prison warders are part of the repressive apparatus of the
State, exist to protect the ruling class from the workers and the poor.
We stand in opposition to this “army of the rich” and will
therefore not in any way support or do solidarity work with the police
unions. We are opposed to
the presence of the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union in COSATU. WAGES, JOBS, THE UNEMPLOYED, NATIONALISATION We
are for a national minimum wage. We
are opposed to the idea that the unemployed should be thankful for any
job that they are offered. Instead
we call for decent jobs (i.e.) ones that are well paid and socially
useful. We
oppose all job losses and believe that these must be fought through
workplace occupations and strike action backed up by the maximum
possible solidarity action throughout the union movement.
All closures should be met with the demand for continued
employment with no reduction in pay, or worsening of conditions and
union rights. We are not
concerned whether this is done by nationalisation or by bringing in a
new owner. We
point out that nationalisation is not a cure-all, and that State
ownership does not bring us one step nearer to socialism (given the
nature of the State, and our conception of grassroots socialism from
below). We are, however, totally opposed to the job losses associated
with the privatisation and “restructuring” of State assets. We
are opposed to all productivity deals that bring job losses. We
are opposed to forced early retirement, attacks on women’s right to
work outside the home, and the “natural wastage” of jobs. We
are for full membership rights in the unions for the unemployed, and for
unemployed sections within branches.
Where possible, organisations for the unemployed should be set
up. These should keep in
close contact with those still in work by helping on picket lines and
building links with unions. The
unemployed organisations should also build closer links with genuine
civic and tenants organisations. We
call for union support for the unemployed (e.g.) providing facilities,
refusing to cut off services like water etc. We
are for putting pressure on the State to inject money into industry that
is both labour-intensive and socially useful.
We call for a crash program of house building that uses direct
labour employed by the local authorities. WOMENS’ RIGHTS We
are for the positive encouragement of women to participate in the
unions, and to take elected office.
We oppose the idea of “reserved places” on union committees
for women. It is
undemocratic and tokenistic and it fails to address the real issue:
getting the unions to take up women’s issues seriously. We
are for equal rights and benefits for all members of the unions,
regardless of sex, age, or whether they are full- time or part- time
workers. We
are for six months paid maternity/ paternity leave. We are opposed to the use of maternity leave by the bosses to
disentitle workers to pay- related benefits. In
order to enable women to attend union meetings, we call for the unions
to provide childcare provision at their own expense. To
defend women’s right to work outside the home we call for childcare
provision at the expense of the bosses, and under the supervision of the
workers using it. We
support “flexitime” arrangements where workers with children desire
it. We
aim to commit the unions to support a women’s right to control her own
fertility, including the right to access to contraception and abortion,
and to give moral and material support to campaigns seeking to achieve
this aim. We
call on the unions to support the rights of gay and lesbian people to
live their personal lives as they see fit, free from discrimination or
harassment by workers or the employers. UNION DEMOCRACY We
fight to change the role of the full-time officials, and not just the
people sitting in these posts. Their
decision-making powers have to be removed and returned to the
rank-and-file. The number
of full-time officials should be reduced to the absolute minimum
possible. The officials
should earn no more than an ordinary salary and should, after a fixed
period, step down and return to ordinary work.
All positions need to be made elected and genuinely accountable
to (and mandated by) the rank-and-file membership.
Our ultimate aim is the restructuring of the unions on
revolutionary (Syndicalist) lines. We
are for regular branch and workplace meetings, in working hours where
this is possible. We
are for direct elections to all committees, conference delegations and
national offices, subject to mandating and recall. All
strikes should automatically be made official so long as they do not
contradict union principles. There
must be support for all disputes, official or unofficial, in pursuit of
higher wages, better conditions, union rights, or any other issue in the
interest of the working class. We
call for the publication of the minutes of all union meetings. Where
revolutionaries can gain enough support to win election to a national
office in a large union, or even a small one, they should not use this
support just to win an election. Instead
they should use it to fundamentally change the structure of the union in
such a way that will return power to the rank and file and turn the
officers into administrators and resource persons rather than decision
makers. SOLIDARITY WORK BY ANARCHISTS Because
we recognise the need for solidarity, the Anarchist organisation will,
within the bounds of its resources, offer aid to workers involved in a
dispute. But we will do
this solidarity work WITH the workers, not FOR them.
We are not aiming to “provide a service” but to encourage
self-activity among the strikers. We
push them to pressure the union for material help, and only when this
fails will we provide leaflets etc.
We will help with fundraising, collections, publicity and
contacts for solidarity actions. Our
immediate aim in any strike is to win a victory. But this is not our only aim.
We are also Anarchist militants and we argue our ideas.
We aim to spread our ideas and to win members for our
organisation. TO SUM UP (1) We defend,
support and work within, the unions.
We are for a revolutionary class struggle approach to unionism. (2) We are
opposed to the existence of a union bureaucracy and reformist ideas that
hamper the ability of the unions to defend and advance the conditions of
their membership (3) We call for
the withdrawal of the unions from participation in schemes for “social
partnership” between the unions, the bosses and the State as these
structures hide the rule of the bosses and undermine the unions (4) We call on
the unions to become wholly independent of all parliamentary parties (5) The unions
have the potential to overthrow capitalism and to lay the basis for an
Anarchist society, but in order for this to take place we must secure
maximum union democracy, and the leadership of the Anarchist idea
amongst the rank-and-file of the existing unions (6) The
precondition for revolutionising the unions is the construction of an
Anarchist organisation with ideological and tactical unity that will
fight to popularise the Anarchist idea (7) We do not
restrict our activities to the unions but organise throughout the entire
working class. We do not
just focus on those workers already in unions, but strive to organise
the entire working class into one big union.
NOTES 1. see, among
others, Makhno, Archinov et al, [1926], The
Organisational Platform of the Libertarian Communists, reprinted by
Workers Solidarity Movement. Ireland.
p14,16; R. Rocker, (1948), “Anarchism and
Anarcho-syndicalism”; A. Berkman,
(1989), What is Communist
Anarchism ? Phoenix
Press. London.
pp3,5-6,72-4; A. Berkman, (1964), ABC
of Anarchism. Freedom
Press. London.
p50. 2. “Any class
may be revolutionary in its day and time; only a productive class may be
libertarian in nature, because it does not need to exploit” (A.
Meltzer, Anarchism: Arguments For
And Against, pp14-15). 3. see A. Berkman,
(1989), What is Communist
Anarchism? Phoenix
Press. London. chapter
12; R. Rocker, (1948), Anarchism
and Anarcho- syndicalism. 4. Rocker makes a
similar point when he says: “Only as a producer and creator of social
wealth does the worker become aware of his strength” (1948: 371). 5. Berkman,
(1989), pp63-4. 6. see H. Pelling,
(1992), A History of British Trade
Unionism. Penguin
Books. chapter 15, for a discussion of the bosses assault on the
British unions in the 1980s; see M. Davis, (1986), Prisoners
Of The American Dream: Politics And Economy In The History Of The US
Working Class. Verso.
London for the American unions.
7. M.
Breitbart,
(1979), “Spanish Anarchism : an introductory essay,” in Antipode:
A Radical Journal Of Geography.
10 (3) & 11 (1). p65.
This is a good article but is very seriously marred by the
author’s totally inaccurate assumption that “Spain is the only
country in the twentieth century where Anarchist-Communism and
Anarcho-Syndicalism were adopted extensively as revolutionary theories
and practices” (p60). Anarchism
has been the dominant influence on the revolutionary left and union
movements of many countries in the twentieth century e.g. Spain,
Portugal, Brazil, Argentine, France, Mexico, Uruguay, China.
It formed a powerful Left and union current in others e.g. Italy,
Britain, the United States, Japan, Germany, Bulgaria, Australia. 8. For a critical
look at the shift to accommodation with capitalism by the Left in South
Africa Harris, L., (1993), “South Africa’s Economic and Social
Transformation: from ‘No Middle Road’ to ‘No Alternative’” in Review
of African Political Economy, no. 57.
For an example of the type of arguments that are being used to
justify the collaboration of the unions with the bosses and the State
see Joffe, A., Maller, J. and E. Webster, (1993), “South Africa’s
Industrialisation: the challenge facing labour,” History
Workshop and Sociology of Work Unit Symposium. University of the Witwatersrand. 9. The growing
power of the union bureaucracy is discussed in D. Collins, (July 1994),
“Worker Control,” in South
African Labour Bulletin. 18
(3); D. Keet, (May/ June 1992), “Shop stewards and Worker Control,” South
African Labour Bulletin. 16
(5); B. Marie, (May/ June 1992), “COSATU faces crisis,” South African Labour Bulletin. 16
(5). 10. This problem is
discussed in S. Buhlungu, (July 1994), “The Big Brain Drain,” South
African Labour Bulletin, 18 (3). 11. On the union
bureaucracy see Berkman (1989). pp64-5. 12. A helpful
summary of the problems that corporatist and tripartite arrangements
create for the unions is provided in B. Vally, (1992),
A Social Contract: The Way Forward?
Taj Printers. pp46-67. 13. Basic
statements of this idea are R. Rocker, (1948), “Anarchism and
Anarcho-syndicalism”; A. Berkman, (1964), ABC
of Anarchism. Freedom
Press. London. chapter
10-14. 14. For overviews
of the history of revolutionary (Syndicalist) unionism, see Rocker,
(1948), pp363-70, 381-6; W.
Thorpe, (1989), The Workers
Themselves: Revolutionary Syndicalism And International Labour 1913-23.
Kulwer Academic Pubs (Dordrecht, Boston, London) &
International Institute of Social History (Amsterdam); M. van der Linden
and W. Thorpe (eds.), (1990), Revolutionary
Syndicalism: An International Perspective.
Scolar Press (England). These
histories are marred by their incomplete focus, and by their occasional
failure to draw a sharp enough distinction between Anarcho-Syndicalism
in the true sense of the word, and reformist/revisionist forms of
syndicalism (sometimes called “pure” syndicalism).
An excellent history of the International Working People’s
Association is P. Avrich, 1984, The
Haymarket Tragedy. Princeton
University. 15. see E. Conlon,
(1993), The Spanish Civil War:
Anarchism In Action. Workers
Solidarity Movement. Dublin;
D. Geurin, (1971), Anarchism : From Theory To Practice.
Monthly Review Press. pp114-143;
Direct Action Movement. Anarchism
in Action: the Spanish Revolution.
Aldgate Press. London.
Also see Breitbart (1979). 16. This section is
based on Rocker (1948), pp370-81. See
also Berkman, (1964), esp. chapter 10; G.P. Maximov, (1985), The Program of Anarcho- syndicalism.
Monty Miller Press. Australia. 17. For example,
the Spanish CNT is reported to have argued that the seizure of the means
of production would automatically lead to the “liquidation of the
bourgeois State, which would die of asphyxiation” (in D. Geurin,
(1971), p128). 18. The tactical
issue of how Anarchists should relate to the existing unions has
historically been a point of contention.
See P.S. Foner, (1965), “The Debate over
‘Boring-from-Within’” in his The Industrial Workers of the World, 1905-17 (International Pubs.
New York. chapter
18) and William Z. Foster, (1936), From
Bryan to Stalin (Lawrence and Wishart.
London) for an example of how this issue split the US
Anarcho-Syndicalists. Foster,
the author of the second book, later became a Marxist and the reader of
his book is advised to keep this in mind. 19. For the
Haymarket/Chicago Anarchists see P. Avrich, (1984), The Haymarket Tragedy. Princeton.
esp. pp72-3 and John R. Commons et al. (1918), The
History of Labour in the United States, vol. 2.
New York. pp290-300.
On the FORA see R. Munck et al. (1987), Argentina:
from Anarchism to Peronism. Zed
Books. London and New
Jersey. chapters 4-6.
On the CGT see Thorpe, (1989), chapter 1 and Foner, (1965), p417.
On Solidaridad Obrera,
see Thorpe, (1989), chapter 1, and M. Bookchin, (1977), The
Spanish Anarchists: The Heroic Years 1868-1936. Harper Colophon Books.
New York. Hagerstown.
San Francisco. London. chapters
7&8. 20. Some
interesting initiatives in this area have been taking place in west
Africa, where the unions have begun to help organise the informal
sector. See P. Horn,
February 1997, “The Informal sector: West African Women Organise”,
in South African Labour Bulletin,
vol. 21, no.1.
21. On the theory
of the syndicates, communes and regions as developed by classical
Anarchism, see Guerin, Daniel, (1970),
Anarchism : From Theory To Practice.
Monthly Review Press. New
York and London. Chapter 2,
esp. pp56-60. See also G.P.
Maximov, (1985), The Program of
Anarcho- syndicalism. Monty
Miller Press. Australia.
pp42-8. The addition
of the bio-regional dimension is found in Purchase, Graham, (1991), Anarchist
Organisation: Suggestions And Possibilities.
Black Rose. and
Purchase, Graham, (1990), Anarchist
Society and its Practical Realisation.
San Francisco. See
Sharp Press. On the defence of the revolution, see Makhno et al, [1927],
pp29-31; Berkman, (1964), chapter 14; Maximov, (1985), pp 49-55. 22. On Anarchist
community organising, see N. Rider, (1989), “The Practice of Direct
Action: the Barcelona rent strike of 1931,” in D. Goodway (ed.), For
Anarchism : History, Theory And Practice.
Routledge. London
and New York. On Mujeres Libres Anarchist womens group in Spain) see M.A. Ackelsberg,
(1993), “Models of Revolution: Rural Women And Anarchist
Collectivisation In Spain,” Journal
of Peasant Studies, 20 (3); P. Carpena, (1986), “Spain 1936: Free
Women - A Feminist, Proletarian And Anarchist Movement,” in M. Gadant
(ed.), Women of the Mediterranean.
Zed Books. London and New Jersey; V. Ortiz, (1979), “Mujeres Libres:
Anarchist Women in the Spanish Civil War,” in Antipode: A Radical Journal Of Geography 10 (3) & 11 (1).
On storefront schools and cultural centres, see M.A. Acklesberg,
(1985), “Revolution and Community: mobilisation, de-politicisation and
perceptions of change in Civil War Spain,” in S.C. Bourque et al.
(eds.), Women Living Change.
Temple University Press. Philadelphia. 23. For a defence
of the idea that participation and self-activity in struggle and social
change (such as is made possible by decentralised and anti-bureaucratic
union structures) is an essential part of preparation for the
revolution, see M.A. Acklesberg, (1985), “Revolution and Community:
mobilisation, de-politicisation and perceptions of change in Civil War
Spain,” in S.C. Bourque et al. (eds.), Women Living Change. Temple
University Press. Philadelphia. 24. For example,
Foner, (1965), pp147-157 for an extensive discussion of the propaganda
work of the US Anarcho-Syndicalist organisation, the Industrial Workers
of the World; see Foster, (1936), chapter 6 for a discussion of the
propaganda work of the Syndicalist League of North America; on workers
education centres in Spain, see Acklesberg (1985); the figures for the
Spanish press come from Rocker (1948), p384. 25. Bookchin,
(1977), p213. 26. The quote is
from the Declaration of the
Principles of Revolutionary Syndicalism, adopted by the founding
congress of the IWA. See
Thorpe, (1989), Appendix D.
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