The following article is loosely based on the notes for a pre-discussion
talk by an AF member to a libertarian socialist discussion meeting in
Leicester, 25 January 2017. To comment on or discuss this article, visit HERE.
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It is probably safe to say that over the last 30-40 years, there
have been dramatic changes in what many socialists, communists or
anarchists would recognise to be the working class movement. This is
certainly the case in Great Britain, the main focus of this article, but
similar changes have also taken place around the globe.
So, is the workers’ movement dead? In short: no, but it is on life
support. Since the early 1980s there has been a marked decline in class
consciousness, class cohesion and solidarity. Now, rather than being
what can be termed a class for itself
(that is, a working class in some way aware of itself of having
markedly different interests and in opposition to the capitalist class),
we have a working class that has become de-educated, de-politicised,
atomised and individualised. Rather than seeing itself more-or-less in
opposition to the ruling class, there is now a greater degree of
perceived commonality with our oppressors and a passive acceptance of
the status quo. This has gone hand-in-hand with an increase in
nationalism, populism, rugged-individualism, popular entrepreneurialism,
a vapid celebrity culture and the tendency to either wear one’s
ignorance like a badge of honour or hold the view that we should rise above our class rather than rise with our class. In terms of class struggle politics, it is as if we are starting from scratch.
A bit of nostalgia
The 1970s was very much the post-war high point in terms of class
struggle and the activities of the organised working class. The decade
featured significant struggles from widespread wildcat miners’ strikes
in 1969 to the “winter of discontent” of 1978-1979 in which there were
mass strikes across the public sector, road haulage, the motor industry
and others. The decade also saw miners’ strikes in 1972 (which included
folkloric episodes such as the Battle of Saltley Gate) and 1974
(culminating in the fall of Edward Heath’s Conservative government after
it had earlier imposed a three-day working week in order to conserve
coal stocks) as well as countless strikes, both official and unofficial,
taking place across many industries.
That such strike action was known on the continent as “the British
disease” seems hard to believe when we look at the situation today. I
recently received a document from a comrade in the Communist Workers’
Organisation which quoted from the UK Office of National Statistics (1)
and noted that in 1979, 29.5 million working days were lost to strike
action. You may wish to read that figure again as it’s a little hard to
grasp. That’s 29.5 – almost thirty million days – lost because of strike action in 1979.
Fast forward closer to the present and the same Office of National
Statistics gives the figures for 2015 as 170,000 strike days – a mere
fraction but slightly better than I would have thought. But what that
more recent figure doesn’t tell you is the quality
of the action taken. I am assuming that the vast majority of the
170,000 strike days taken in 2015 were official actions, one day strikes
and often token “days of action” that cause little inconvenience to
management and have negligible effectiveness – unless the objective is
to make us in some way feel morally right compared to our unscrupulous
dastardly employers.
Contrast that with the wildcat nature of many strikes in 1979, actions that were often taken in spite of or against the
trade union bureaucracies. With such actions, it was generally
acknowledged that the objective was to cause maximum disruption to
business as usual, and this is generally what we did. I would also
suspect that a good number of industrial actions taken in 1979 were not
necessarily listed in the official statistics. From my own experience,
working at the time in a factory with low union density, where we all
sat down on the job until our demands were met, it is doubtful that such
an action would have appeared in any government statistics. Nor do I
think we were alone in that kind of spontaneous action, as there really
was something in the proletarian air that year.
Currently, we are a world apart from the level of class consciousness
and solidarity that allowed such militant activity to take place. Yes,
there are exceptions such as the struggles of the rail and London
Underground workers, or the mass wildcat strikes by building workers a
couple of years back. But by and large, what stands for a working class
movement today in no way reflects working class reality and where
anything resembling a “workers’ movement” does exist, has mostly
retreated into crass reformism and identity politics – where we are
defined by our differences and where more radical workers place their
trust in the likes of Len McCluskey and Jeremy Corbyn; trust in a Labour
left that seems comparatively radical compared to the
Blairite-Thatcherite brand of neo-liberalism we’ve all been spoon-fed
for years. Meanwhile, sites of genuine class resistance appear today as
tiny oases in the vast capitalist desert.
That said, it’s possible I’m offering a somewhat rose-tinted view of the
past. After all, while the 1970s saw inspiring acts of working class
activity, it was also a period of chronic racism at all levels of
society, where sexist attitudes were endemic and violent homophobia more
or less the norm. Those were the days of The Black and White Minstrel Show, Miss World and Love Thy Neighbour
on TV. A woman’s place was generally considered to be pretty much in
the kitchen. Enoch Powell maintained a level of popularity, while the
fascist National Front had an increasing presence. And back then, being
part of what we now call the LGBT community was all you really needed to
get yourself either roughed up by the cops or a good kicking from those
who believed they had a licence to queer-bash. Thankfully, such
reactionary views became increasingly unacceptable over the years –
although, more recently, it looks as if there’s something of a backlash
with racist, xenophobic and conservative attitudes apparently on the
increase.
As for the mass industrial action and wider class consciousness of the
70s, yes it was often militant and often wildcat in nature, but it was
also solidly tied to Labourism, or to a declining Communist Party which
was being supplanted by the Trotskyist left. Whatever the position, it
was all basically reformist, connected to the various strands of left
capitalist politics and the orthodoxy of the trade union bureaucracies.
Importantly, the 1979 high point of class struggle was quickly followed
by a Thatcher government that was not simply elected by the rich but by
swathes of the traditional working class. In response, there has been
over the last 30-odd years the open collusion of the trade unions
themselves with the collapse of their own movement – whether this was to
protect funds from sequestration by the courts, to play it safe, not
rock the boat and wait for an eventual Labour government (in those dark
Thatcher days), or whether it was simply to not “go back to the 70s”
when unions had lost control over their more militant membership. Either
way, it’s now 2017 and we are in a culture where scabbing is no longer
considered shameful, where younger workers often don’t know what a
picket line is for and where UKIP is seen by many as more relevant than
unions (2).
While I have looked at the changes that have taken place in the
workers’ movement in Great Britain, as I mentioned earlier, workers in
most other countries could probably relate a similar experience. But
there are also occasional differences. For example there have been
significant movements in East Asia, for example with textile workers in
Bangladesh. There are also other expressions of resistance on-going in
many countries – from time to time, including the UK. Nevertheless, we
are a million miles away from a class conscious “class for itself” type
movement, even in those areas of the globe where our class may be
considered more “advanced” in terms of its revolutionary consciousness.
But the purpose of this article isn’t to take a walk down Memory
Lane, it’s to look at and more fully appreciate where we are now as a
class, and to think about what is possible and what we can do.
So if it’s all so dire, is it worth reviving?
Yes, because class struggle is what we experience every single day of
our lives; what we as workers all have in common, whether we realise it
or not. More than that, class struggle is the fundamental basis, the
only way to ever abolish capitalism, should we as a class ever decide to
do so. This is because, if we ever want to see a revolution, it will
not be a revolution carried out by the well-meaning or the indignant of
whatever class (though they would certainly have a role to play) but by
those who have the actual power to shut down all industry and halt
business as usual. Ultimately, capitalism can only be abolished by the
workers of the world collectively taking control of the means of
production, administration and distribution and establishing a society
based on need not profit. And while such a scenario may seem highly
unlikely in the here and now, we live in a world that is highly
susceptible to change. What may seem impossible today may be the only
realistic possibility tomorrow.
So what should be the role of pro-revolutionaries? All those years ago, the First International declared that the emancipation of the working class was the task of the workers themselves,
and this still holds true today – however far away the notion of the
working class emancipating itself may currently seem. Nevertheless,
there are no short cuts to this goal. Well, no short cuts that won’t end
in disaster in one way or another.
I say this because these desperate times make it feel as if we should
be applying desperate measures. We shouldn’t. It’s not about us – and
by us, I mean those who wish to see the revolutionary overthrow of the
capitalist system and the abolition of the state. It’s about the workers
of the world doing exactly that. So that means we need to oppose
substitutionism – in other words, substituting one’s particular group,
party or political movement for the working class itself. This may
appear to be basic common sense but we’ve seen the tendency to
substitute in various left sects that see their own organisation or
group as the be-all and end-all, the one sure road to revolution, the
voice of the proletariat.
While Trotskyism, Maoism, Stalinism or any other Jacobin-derived
Leninist variant should be given a wide berth for the obvious reasons,
so-called insurrectionism (whether “anarcho-” or otherwise) is also best
avoided. Granted, any potential revolution would be highly likely to
include an insurrectionary element in the face of a ruling class which
refuses to give up its power and privilege but instead unleashes
increased repression. But the notion that a small and secretive group
can encourage an alienated and generally de-politicised working class to
action or can even help bring about the downfall of capitalism is a
delusion of grandeur and reeks of cultish substitutionism. All of the
above examples, in their own particular way, aim to act for, or in the
name of, the working class rather than the working class acting for (and
eventually emancipating) itself. They are all every bit as much a dead
end as the hopeless reformism of those former anarchists who have
recently opted to throw in their lot with Corbynism and the Momentum
group.
The alternatives, however, may not be very exciting but they are
essential. Those of us who advocate a revolution to establish a society
based on the principle of from each according to ability to each according to need,
whether we call ourselves anarchists, communists, socialists or
whatever, need to maintain a level of revolutionary intransigence in the
face of ever-prevalent reformism and opportunism. At the same time, we
need to serve as a class memory that learns the lessons of our past, our
mistakes, our triumphs and our inspiring moments. In other words, we
need to be part of the “thin red line” that defends a solid
revolutionary position.
But maintaining a revolutionary position is not enough. The best
revolutionary ideas mean nothing if we are incapable of applying them to
on-going struggles. So, we need to be practically engaged in struggles
as and when they arise; involved, whether active within or supportive
externally to those “oases” of class struggle I mentioned earlier. This
also means being proactive in any attempts to organise autonomous
workplace activity, organisations such as residents’ groups, claimants’
groups; and establishing or re-establishing such organisations but
without repeating our past mistakes. And while I say this, I’m also
aware that these days, such types of organisation are few and far
between. I’m also aware that involvement in everyday activities
(especially in these decidedly non-revolutionary times) can be easily
channelled or co-opted in a reformist direction. It’s important that we
recognise this danger and remain vigilant, participating as
pro-revolutionaries and maintaining a level of revolutionary
intransigence.
Finally, where we are active (whether actively participating within
struggles or offering solidarity from outside) we need to engage with
action that is meaningful. And when I say meaningful, I’m minded of the quote from the old group, Solidarity:
Meaningful action, for revolutionaries, is whatever increases the
confidence, the autonomy, the initiative, the participation, the
solidarity, the equalitarian tendencies and the self-activity of the
masses and whatever assists in their demystification. Sterile and
harmful action is whatever reinforces the passivity of the masses, their
apathy, their cynicism, their differentiation through hierarchy, their
alienation, their reliance on others to do things for them and the
degree to which they can therefore be manipulated by others - even by
those allegedly acting on their behalf.
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(1) See also Smith, S.W. (2003), Labour Economics (2nd ed), London: Routledge, p206
(2) This should not in any way be taken as an endorsement of trade unionism by the author.