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Review
1926 General Strike - 9 days that shook Britain by Peter Taaffewww.socialistworld.net, 12/05/2006 website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI ;Nine days that shook British capitalism to its foundation.
The Socialist
To commemorate the 80th anniversary of the 1926 General Strike in
Britain and, more importantly, to draw out the lessons from this
movement, Peter Taaffe - the Socialist Party’s general secretary - has
written a book outlining the nine days that shook British capitalism
to its foundation.The book particularly deals with the revolutionary
possibilities of the general strike and the question of whether the
fledgling Communist Party had the right strategy, programme and
tactics to take full advantage of the strike and the period. To
coincide with the book’s launch The Socialist spoke to Peter about the
lessons of the strike movement for today’s generation of socialist
fighters.
1926 General Strike - 9 days that shook Britain by Peter Taaffe
Why have you written a book about the 1926 General Strike now?One reason
is in order to acquaint the new generation with these events, which are
in danger of fading from the memory, given that it is 80 years since the
General Strike. Also, while on the surface British society may appear to
be different from the events of the General Strike, the underlying
difficulties of British capitalism in this neo-liberal, globalised era
point towards a mighty collision between the classes at some stage in
the foreseeable future. Also, the issue of the ’general strike’ - in the
first instance, for one day - has come back onto the agenda of the
workers’ movement today. When local government workers went on strike on
28 March this year, union leaders warned that it "would be the biggest
since the General Strike", indicating that 1926 is still an important
reference point for the British labour movement. We have also seen
recently the convulsive movements in France, in which the need for a
general strike to defeat the Chirac government was raised.The 1926
General Strike is the most important event in the history of the British
working class. Not since the days of Chartism in the first half of the
nineteenth century had the British ruling class been so shaken. In the
titanic nine days of 3-12 May 1926 the organised working class came out
in their millions in a generalised stoppage which posed all the
fundamental issues of power.Out of five-and-a-half million workers
organised in trade unions, an estimated four million took strike action
in waves or ’stages’ and a million miners were locked out at any one
time. They were confronting the Tory government of Stanley Baldwin which
included in its ranks figures like Winston Churchill and Lord
Birkenhead. They were determined to crush the strikers in the hope that
this would defeat the working class as a whole. At the head of the
million-fold ’workers’ army’ stood the General Council of the Trades
Union Congress (TUC). The right wing of this body, which today would be
described as ’moderate’, was represented by trade union leaders like JH
Thomas of the rail workers’ union (NUR), Walter Citrine, general
secretary of the TUC, and the transport workers’ union leader, Ernest
Bevin. These figures in general stood for a policy of ’class
compromise’, which they believed could be achieved through negotiation
with the employers and the government. Strike action was considered as a
very last resort. In 1926, however, their approach was totally
ineffective. The gulf between the classes was too great. The mine owners
- with the Tory government at their back - were determined to inflict
savage reductions in wages and conditions. The systematic attacks on
workers in the whole preceding period prior to the General Strike had
radicalised significant sections of the working class which, in turn,
was reflected in a shift to the left in the unions. Baldwin had spelt
this out in 1925 in an interview with union leaders when he stated: "I
mean all the workers of this country have got to take reduction of wages
to help put industry on its feet." This led to the emergence of
left-wing trade union leaders like A.J. (Arthur) Cook of the
mineworkers, Alf Purcell of the furniture trades union and AB Swales of
the Engineers union (AEU). The right-wing trade union leaders were
dragged reluctantly into the General Strike but were forced to do so
because of the monumental pressure from below.When the strike began, the
response of the working class was immediate and massive. The wheels of
industry ground to a halt. The arteries of Britain - its roads and
railways - were choked and silent. All the carefully laid plans of the
government to defeat the strike lay in ruins as the working class, kept
in the dirt by capitalism, rose as in Shelley’s poem - "rise like lions"
- in a magnificent display of working-class power.Faced with a powerful
and embattled working class and unprepared for a showdown in 1925, the
Tory government bought time on ’Red Friday’ by proposing a nine-month
subsidy to the coal industry. Like the retreat of Thatcher in 1981, who
then took on the miners in 1984-85 when the Tory government was
prepared, so the ruling class also then temporarily backtracked while
they organised to crush the miners and thereby the working
class.sh;Could there have been a revolution in Britain at that
time?There were some elements of a revolutionary or pre-revolutionary
situation in 1926. The working class created a network of ’Councils of
Action’ or ’Strike Committees’. In significant parts of the country,
these bodies began to assume the role of a rival workers’ ’government’
to Baldwin and his local representatives - cars and lorries carried
notices "with the permission of the TUC". This terrified the ruling
class and the right-wing trade union leaders, particularly as with each
day the enthusiasm of the strikers, the numbers coming out on strike and
those clamouring to do so grew with an irresistible force. What was
missing, however, was a mass Marxist working-class party able to develop
working-class power and its organs as a step towards the socialist
transformation of societysh;What was the role of the newly-formed
Communist Party? Did the Communist International have any influence on
the strike?The role of the young Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB)
in these events is also an important aspect of this book. The Communist
Party was a small but important party in 1926. As the British section of
the Communist International (Comintern), its membership drew most of its
support from workers who defended the Russian workers’ state and who
considered themselves as revolutionaries. Only fragments of this party
now remain, with little influence inside the British labour movement.
The CP could have emerged from the General Strike greatly strengthened
both in numbers and in influence. They failed to do this because of
their mistaken policies. However, they were not entirely to blame for
this. By the time of the General Strike the young militants of the
Communist Party were misled by the mistaken policies of the Communist
International (Comintern), then under the direction of Stalin and
Bukharin. Impatient at the slow development of the young CP, they
exerted pressure which led to the formation of the Anglo-Russian Trade
Union Committee. This was a bloc between the Russian trade unions and
the General Council of the TUC, and particularly with its left wing.
Only mild criticism was made of the leading Lefts, which did not
adequately prepare the working class for the inevitable retreats that
these lefts made during and after the General Strike. sh;What part did
the Labour Party play?As with the right-wing trade union leaders, the
Labour Party leadership of MacDonald played a pernicious role. Ramsay
MacDonald, the Blair of his day, as Labour leader, strove might and main
to prevent the General Strike and, when this failed, did everything in
his power to sabotage it. He was assisted by those right-wing trade
union leaders such as JH Thomas, leader of the National Union of
Railwaymen (NUR). He was described by his rich admirers as "one of the
best waltzers in London" and lived on the Astor estate, often sharing
"Lord Derby’s box on Grand National Day". MacDonald attacked the
’extreme Left’, militants, combative trade unionism and socialism.
sh;Why did the TUC General Council betray the strike?Because of the
pressure of the working class, the TUC General Council could not avoid
putting themselves at the head of this mighty movement. But they did
this in order to call it off at the first convenient opportunity. The
right wing consciously prepared to sell out the General Strike. The left
on the General Council, with the exception of Arthur Cook, the
mineworkers’ union leader, went along with the betrayal of the strike.
They were reformists. They believed that society could be changed by
incremental changes rather than a social rupture, which is what 1926
represented. In a period of acute capitalist crisis, which Britain was
experiencing in 1926, this meant that these leaders would inevitably
capitulate. Inherent in reformism in such a period is betrayal. This
applies not just to the right but also to most of the left leaders. They
were politically inconsistent and unorganised against the right in the
run-up to the General Strike. Therefore they capitulated to the pressure
of the right during the General Strike. Most of the bitterness,
particularly in the militant heartlands of South Wales, Durham,
Scotland, etc, was directed against some of these lefts who the
Communist Party, unfortunately, had failed to seriously criticise. A
general strike in a period similar to 1926 poses the question of power.
In effect, two governments are established but this cannot last for
ever. This element of ’dual power’ had to be resolved either by a
victory of the propertied classes, represented by the Baldwin
government, or by the working class. Tied as they were to capitalist
society, the General Council of the TUC bent the knee to capital. sh;The
strike was defeated because the TUC general council capitulated - was it
a complete defeat for the working class?The General Strike was a defeat
and a serious one at that. The ruling class took their revenge; the mine
owners, without any pity, were determined to inflict brutal sacrifices
on the miners and sought in the process to crush union organisation in
the pits. The Tory Lord Birkenhead boasted in private: "The discredit of
the Miners’ Federation is now complete." The Economist put the total
trade loss during the strike at between £300 million and £400 million.
One hundred and sixty million working days were lost in strikes in 1926
as a whole.However, the more politically developed sections of the
working class began to draw far-reaching socialist or even revolutionary
conclusions from this defeat. Even after this defeat, if the Comintern
had broken with the Anglo-Russian Trade Union Committee and called for
an organised left and socialist resistance to the capitulators of the
General Council, then a powerful, conscious, Marxist movement could have
been built in preparation for future battles. This was not done as,
incredibly, Stalin and Co., along with the British CP, continued to rub
shoulders in the Anglo-Russian Trade Union Committee with the
capitulators. This was at a time when the miners were locked out and
starving.sh;Is the working class more powerful today than it was in
1926? Could there be a general strike today or are those methods of
struggle outmoded?If you look at articles and letters that have appeared
in The Guardian recently, the spokespersons of the capitalists are in no
doubt that "a general strike is impossible" today [22 April 2006]. But
Britain has gone to the brink of such a strike on a number of occasions
since 1926. In 1970, for instance, the newly elected Tory Prime
Minister, Edward Heath, threatened the trade unions and the working
class in a nationally televised broadcast with a ’general strike’ unless
they were prepared to come to heel and accept cuts in their rights and
conditions. In both 1972 and, particularly, in the 1974 miners’ strike,
the possibility of a general strike loomed. The strategists of capital
have pondered the events of the past, have seen what happened in 1926
and are prepared, if necessary, to deploy the same means to defeat the
working class. In the 1980s, under Thatcher, the issue of a general
strike to topple her government was again raised. In a similar
situation, which could occur in Britain and in Europe in the next stage,
the capitalists will be drawing on the lessons from the past. The
working class, for its part, must also explore the events like 1926 to
see how best to prepare for a similar situation in the future. We hope
that this book will be a step towards realising that goal.sh;The 1926
General Strike posed the question of who ran society, with local
workers’ committees controlling the distribution of goods etc. If there
was a general strike in Britain today, would it be similar?There are
some differences between the situations in 1926 and even France 1968,
and the situation today in Britain and Europe. This is particularly
evident on the issue of the political outlook, or consciousness, of the
working class, then and now. In both 1926 and 1968, there was a
widespread awareness and attraction to the ideas of socialism as the
alternative to capitalism. However, with the collapse of Stalinism, and
with it the planned economies of Eastern Europe, the capitalists were
able to pursue a huge campaign against ’socialism’. In the 1990s, this
coincided with an economic boom and the lurch to the right of the trade
union and Labour leaders. This has thrown back consciousness. Also, the
economic situation is not yet as severe as 1926, and 1968 took place,
paradoxically, when the economic boom in France and elsewhere had not
exhausted itself. On the other hand, the capitalists will pursue their
neo-liberal agenda relentlessly but they will be challenged by a
resurgent labour movement. Inherent in this situation is therefore the
possibility of a general strike. Because of all these factors taken
together, this will probably mean that power may not be posed
immediately in the minds of the working class. A ’general strike’ today
therefore could initially take the form of warning strikes to exert mass
pressure to extract concessions. But these would be staging posts along
the way towards strikes like 1926. This is why this event retains its
importance today.At the same time, recent events in Nepal show how an
almost classical general strike of the working class in the cities -
supported by a mass peasant revolt in the rural areas - can develop even
today. This strike posed starkly the question of power before the
masses. But the general strike could not be maintained indefinitely
unless power, including the formation of a workers and peasants’
government, passed decisively into the hands of the masses.sh;What would
be the most important lessons that we could draw from the 1926 General
Strike? The General Strike of 1926 was a magnificent display of
working-class power. The attempt to trivialise and belittle its
significance by references to strikers playing football with policemen
and other secondary features of the strike is meant to diminish it in
the eyes of the present generation. This is done quite consciously by
capitalist historians together with the right-wing trade union leaders.
They like to think that "never again" will a general strike occur in
Britain. On the contrary, the situation that is developing in Britain
will lead to a mighty collision, in fact a series of class conflicts
between the classes which will put the issue of the general strike back
onto the agenda.s;From The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party, cwi
in England and Wales
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