703 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
703 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Workers Solidarity Movement position paper
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THE TRADE UNIONS
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WHO CAN CHANGE SOCIETY
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1.1 Anarchists know that "the history of all previously
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existing societies has been the history of class struggle".
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At every stage in the development of society - from
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ancient times through feudalism to the present day -
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there has been an oppressed class whose labour has
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created the wealth of society, and a ruling class which
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controlled that wealth. At almost every stage the
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oppressed have not accepted their lot without fighting
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back. There were the slave revolts of Greece and Rome,
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the peasant risings of the middle ages, the revolutions of
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the 1600s and 1700s.
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1.2 But all these struggles ended with the old parasitic
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rulers being replaced with a different gang of parasitic
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rulers. The failure of the oppressed classes to keep control
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of the revolutions they fought in can be explained by these
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main factors:
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(a) the generally low level of wealth in society,
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(b) the fact that the everyday life of these people
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did not prepare them to run society.
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The majority were illiterate peasants who had no idea
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what things were like outside their own locality. Their
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everyday life divided them from each other. Each peasant
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had to worry about his own plot of land, and hoped to
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enlarge it. Each craftsman had to worry about his own
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business, and hoped to enlarge it. To varying degrees each
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peasant and craftsman was in competition with his
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fellows, not united with them. He couldn't think in terms
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of class.
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1.3 The workers who create the wealth under capitalism
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differ from all previously oppressed classes. Firstly, they
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create enough wealth to feed and clothe the world and still
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have plenty to spare for science, culture, luxeries and so
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on. Secondly, and more importantly, their everyday life
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prepares them to take over the running of society. Under
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capitalism we are brought together in large workplaces,
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into towns and cities. Capitalism makes us co-operate
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everyday at work. Each person has to do their bit so that
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the person at the next stage of production can do theirs. In
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the services it is the same, from the office to the
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hospital, workers have to co-operate with each other in
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order to get their jobs done. This means that the modern
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working class can be a force capable, not only of rebelling
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against the existing set-up, but of taking over and
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recreating society in its own interests - and not as in the
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past merely help a different section of the ruling class in
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its battles against the more backward sections of that
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class.
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1.4 Why then don't workers use their numbers, their
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collective power and take over? Mainly because we are
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told that we are not able to do just that. It is a message
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hammered into us, from school to the newspapers to the
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television. We are being constantly told that workers can
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only follow orders and that is the natural order of things.
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1.5 But there is one point, in particular, at which workers
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no longer feel powerless and at which they see in a much
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clearer way the reality of class rule. That is when they
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use their collective power that runs the factories, offices,
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schools, transport, etc. - to stop them. They can get a
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glimpse of the potential of their own power.
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THE NATURE OF THE TRADE UNION MOVEMENT
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2.1 From their early beginnings back in the 1600s one thing
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is very clear - for a worker to join a trade union means
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having to recognise, to some degree, that he or she has
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different interests from the boss. There is no way to
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explain the survival of the unions other than the reality
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that there are different class interests, and workers have
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understood that to promote their own interests they have
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to organise on class lines. No amount of conservatism,
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bureaucracy or backwardness within the unions can
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obliterate this essential fact. The very existence of the
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unions testifies to the existance of some level of basic
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class consciousness.
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2.2 Trade unions are not revolutionary organisations. They
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were formed to defend and improve the lot of workers
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under capitalism. Trade union struggle is an absolute
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necessity. In the course of these struggles workers begin
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to see their potential power, they can be radicalised and
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can be brought into the revolutionary movement.
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2.3 After all, what is anarchism? When we get down to
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basics, it is workers collectively running a free society.
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Instead of taking orders from the boss and serving his/her
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mad rush for profit at any cost, it is about working
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together for the common good. This doesn't mean that
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strikers set out with clear anarchist goals in mind. They
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don't. But collective action is the only way to win a strike
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- so the logic of the workers' position: collective action in
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production, collective action in struggle; takes us in an
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anarchist direction. And once in struggle peoples' ideas
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can change. They gain confidence, a sense of their ability
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to take control of their own lives. This is why many
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workers who go on strike with faith in the "impartiality"
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of the police or with sexist ideas (to give but two
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examples) can find these ideas challenged by their
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experience in struggle. That is why we in the WSM get
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involved in workers' struggles, though it is not the only
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reason - we also act from a position of solidarity with
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other members of our class. It is in struggle that large
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numbers of people can be won to anarchist politics. As our
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forerunners in the First International said "the
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emancipation of the working class can only be brought
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about by the working class themselves".
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2.4 Central to our politics is the position that the working
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class will lead the fight for anarchism. It is only the
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self-activity of masses of workers that is capable of
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mounting an effective challenge to the bosses and their
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state. The trade union movement is the most important
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mass movement the working class has built and no matter
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how progressive or reactionary the attitudes of its
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members, no matter how conservative they can become, it
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does not alter the fact that they are the most important
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mass organisations of the working class. For the WSM, as
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anarchists, activity within them is our most important
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ongoing activity.
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THE BUREAUCRACY
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3.1 The unions are dominated by a bureaucracy, a collection
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of (usually unelected) full-time officials with too much
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power and undue influence. They are not responsible to the
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membership except in the most formal way, not in any real
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sense. They may take the side of their members but the
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point is that they do not have to. They are not under the
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control of the members, they earn much more than those
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they 'represent', they often sit alongside bosses and the
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government on commissions and the boards of semi-state
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companies, they enjoy all sorts of perks. In short they
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enjoy a lifestyle quite different than that of the people
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they are supposed to be working for. Most of the newer
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officials have never even worked in an ordinary job.
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They see their union work as a career. More than a few of
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them change sides and take jobs with the employers'
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organisations. Their career is that of an arbitrator, a
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fixer, a conciliator, a negotiator.
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3.2 What is important to them is proving their skills as
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smart negotiators, not pulling out all the stops to win
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their members' demands. They have narrow sectional
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interests, they only look after their own patch regardless
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of the general intertests of workers. These people rarely
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lead or initiate strikes. Instead they will have you running
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back and forth to the Labour Court, Rights Commissioners,
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the Employer-Labour Conference and every other talking
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shop they can find. They will negotiate "until the cows
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come home", and it is all aimed at finding a "reasonable"
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solution. They see striking as very much a last resort, and
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condemn - without hesitation - unofficial action (i.e.
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action that has not been sanctioned by them).
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3.3 These people do not usually lead strikes but sometimes
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will, as when employers are refusing to negotiate or the
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negotiation procedures are being threatened. Most of the
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time, however, they will go to almost any length in order
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to cobble together a deal ....any deal, rather than opt for
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industrial action.
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3.4 These people are not nasty individuals. They behave as
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they do because they have too much power and are
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unaccountable, in any real way, to their members. Power
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corrupts, no matter who you are. This behaviour is
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inevitable, no matter how radical or left-wing they are at
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the beginning, their role sucks them into the business of
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conciliation. Furthermore they have to be able to control
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their members - which usually means stopping them
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fighting the boss - if they are to have anything to bargain
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with at the negotiation table. This may sound odd but the
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point is that the union official has to sell the employer
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labour discipline and freedom from unofficial strikes as
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part of its side of the bargain.
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3.5 It is self-evident that the more power, initiative and
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control that lies with the bureaucracy - the less it will lie
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with the rank & file membership on the shopfloor.
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3.6 As a whole, the bureaucracy swings between the
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position of mediator and that of open defender of the
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status quo. But as a grouping they can not go over
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completely to defending the bosses' interests; to some
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degree they have to respond to their members' demands
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because they are working in workers' organisations.
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Likewise they cannot become totally responsive to to their
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members' demands as that would see the end of their role,
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power and careers. There are individual exceptions to this
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but, as a collective grouping, this remains the case.
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3.7 This bureaucracy, not just because of the individuals in
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it but because of its objective position in relation to the
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membership, has to be opposed to workers' self-activity on
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most occasions. It is, by its nature, authoritarian.
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ONE STEP FORWARD, ONE STEP BACKWARDS
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4.1 The response of the left social democrats, Stalinists
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and mainstream Trotskyists is that we have to elect
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and/or appoint 'better' officials. They see the problem
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primarily in terms of the individuals who hold the posts.
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This stems from their conception of "socialism" as some
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sort of giant state enterprise bureaucracy where things
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are done "for the workers". Workers' self-activity occupys
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no leading role in their scheme of things, just as real
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workers' control is not part of their plan for a "socialist"
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society. Their ideas are rooted in an authoritarian view of
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the world.
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4.2 A problem which, from time to time, has manifested
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itself in other countries is the view that workers should
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leave the unions and destroy them; that no permanent
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organisation of workers under capitalism can avoid
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becoming totally integrated into the state and a tool in the
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hands of the bosses. The people who promote this
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nonsense claim that the unions are holding workers back
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from making a revolution ....now! As these people claim to
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have made a serious and scientific study of the needs of
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workers under capitalism, the forces required for a
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revolution and the way in which workers gain the
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confidence and political will to change society - we are
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very easy on them when we dismiss their position as
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childish, infantile and ultra-leftist.
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4.3 A third position we come across is that of breaking
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away and forming new unions. The effect of this is to take
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the minority of combative and radical workers out of the
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old union, leaving it totally at the mercy of the
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bureaucracy whose antics had provoked the split. We urge
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those workers to remain and fight within the union, to win
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over the membership - not to leave them without a
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combative focus.
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Breakaway unions offer no alternative in the long run as
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the problems that led to their formation will develop in
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the new union. Ireland's labour history is littered with
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examples of this. The ITGWU and FWUI (which merged to
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form SIPTU), and the National Busworkers Union, to name
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but a few of the main unions, were all born as "left"
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breakaways.
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While we refuse to advocate breakaways, except possibly
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in the most exceptional cases, we ultimately stand for the
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right of workers to make the decision themselves.
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SYNDICALISM
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5.1 Syndicalism, and especially anarcho-syndicalism, has
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been an important current in many countries - particularly
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in Southern Europe and Latin America. Its basic ideas
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revolve around organising all workers into the "one big
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union", keeping control in the hands of the rank & file, and
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opposing all attempts to create a bureaucracy of
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unaccountable full-time officials. Unlike other unions
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their belief is that the union can be used not only to win
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reforms from the bosses but also to overthrow the
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capitalist system. They hold that most workers are not
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revolutionaries because the structure of their unions is
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such that it takes the initiative away from the rank & file.
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Their alternative is to organise all workers into the "one
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big union" in preparation for the revolutionary general
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strike. They see the biggest problem in the structure of
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the existing unions rather than in the ideas that tie
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workers to authoritarian, capitalist views of the world.
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5.2 Syndicalism does not create a revolutionary political
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organisation. It creates industrial unions. It is a-
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political, arguing all that is necessary to make the
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revolution is for the workers to seize the factories and the
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land. After that it believes that the state and all the other
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institutions of the ruling class will come toppling down.
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They do not accept that the working class must take
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political power. For them all power has to be immediately
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abolished on day one of the revolution.
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5.3 Because syndicalist organisation is the union, it
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organises all workers regardless of their politics.
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Historically many workers have joined, not because they
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were anarchists, but because the syndicalist union was the
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most militant and got the best results. Because of this
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tendencies always appeared that were reformist.
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5.4 Syndicalists are quite correct to emphasise the
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centrality of organising workers in the workplace. Critics
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who reject syndicalism on the grounds that allegely it
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cannot organise those outside the workplace are wrong.
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Taking the example of anarcho-syndicalism in Spain it is
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clear that they could and did organise throughout the
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entire working class as was evidenced by the Iberian
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Federation of Libertarian Youth, the 'Mujeras Libres' (Free
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Women), and the neighbourhood organisations.
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5.5 The weakness of syndicalism is rooted in its view of
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why workers are tied to capitalism, and its view of what
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is necessary to make the revolution. Spain in 1936/7
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represented the highest point in anarcho-syndicalist
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organisation and achievement. Because of their a-
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politicism they were unable to develop a programme for
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workers' power, to wage a political battle against other
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currents in the workers' movement (such as reformism and
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Stalinism), and to give a lead to the entire class by
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fighting for complete workers' power.
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Instead they got sucked into support for the Popular Front
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government, which in turn led to their silence and
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complicity when the Republican state moved against the
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collectives and militias. The minority in the CNT,
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organised around the Friends of Durruti, was expelled when
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they issued a proclamation calling for the workers to take
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absolute power (i.e. that they should refuse to share power
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with the bosses or the authoritarian parties).
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5.6 The CNT believed that when the workers took over the
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means of production and distribution this would lead to
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"the liquidation of the bourgeois state which would die of
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asphyxiation". History teaches us different. In a situation
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of dual power it is very necessary to smash the state.
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5.7 In contrast to this the Friends of Durruti were clear
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that "to beat Franco we need to crush the bourgeoisie and
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its Stalinist and Socialist allies. The capitalist state
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must be destroyed totally and there must be installed
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workers' power depending on rank & file committees. A-
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political anarchism has failed". The political confusion of
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the CNT leadership was such that they attacked the idea of
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the workers seizing power as "evil" and leading to an
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"anarchist dictatorship".
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5.8 The syndicalist movement, organised in the
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International Workers Association and outside it, refuses
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to admit the CNT was wrong to "postpone" the revolution
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and enter the government. They attempt to explain away
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this whole episode as being due to "exceptional
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circumstances" that "will not occur again". Because they
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refuse to admit that a mistake of historic proportions was
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made, they are doomed to repeat it (should they get a
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chance).
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5.9 We recognise that the syndicalist unions, where they
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still exist, are far more progressive than any other union.
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But the anarchist-communist organisation will organise
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within its ranks and everywhere else workers are
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organised. We will not liquidate our specific politics and
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organisation into the a-politicism of syndicalism.
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PARTY POLITICS AND THE UNIONS
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6.1 In Ireland, as in many other countries, there are formal
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links between social-democratic (in some countries
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nationalist or liberal) Parties and the unions. The largest
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general unions in Ireland are affiliated to the Irish Labour
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Party. Far from providing a "political voice" or "weapon"
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for workers it helps to disarm them politically. In the
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unions; where we have real, if unused, strength; the
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bureaucrats can argue against taking up issues outside the
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workplace on the grounds that "that is what the Labour
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Party is there for". Political affiliation attempts to put
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the political struggles of workers under the control of
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professional 'representative' politicians. It aids passivity.
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6.2 In Ireland the Labour Party does not even enjoy the
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electoral support of most trade unionists. Properly
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speaking it is not the Party of the unions - it is the Party
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of the union bureaucracy.
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6.3 We support the concept of a political levy but urge the
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unions to disaffiliate from the Labour Party. Instead we
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seek to mobilise the strength of the unions to take direct
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action on political issues. The first step towards this is
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the raising of political issues at section and branch level
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through arguing for sponsorship of specific
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demonstrations, for the passing of resolutions on issues
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such as repressive legislation and gay rights. All such
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resolutions should be linked to some action, no matter how
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minimal it may be at the beginning.
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WSM ACTIVITY IN THE UNIONS
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7.1 Our perspectives for activity within the unions are
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centred on encouraging workers themselves to take up the
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fight against the bosses, state interference and the TU
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bureaucracy. Our most important area of activity is on the
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shopfloor.
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7.2 We encourage 100% union membership and all WSM
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members are members of their appropriate trade union.
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7.3 No WSM member will accept any unelected position
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that entails having power over the membership.
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7.4 Members elected as shop stewards consider their
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position as that of a delegate rather than that of a
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'representative' who can act over the heads of the
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members.
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7.5 When going forward for elective positions we make it
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clear that we are not accepting the structure as it now
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exists. We will fight for more accountability, mandation,
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information for members, etc.
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7.6 The following points serve as guidelines for our day-
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to-day activity and link it to our goal of anarchism,
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because of the method that lies behind them.
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WAGES
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(a) Opposition to centralised wage bargaining. Defence of
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free collective bargaining.
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(b) Encouragement of joint claims and action across union
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and craft divides.
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(c) For cash claims, in preference to percentage ones, on
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the basic with no strings attached.
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(d) For equal pay without job evaluation.
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(e) For a national minimum wage.
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JOBS
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(a) Opposition to all job losses through strikes and
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occupations backed up by the greatest possible solidarity
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action throughout the TU movement.
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(b) That all closures be met by the demand for continued
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employment with no reduction in pay, or worsening of
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conditions or union rights. We are not concerned whether
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this is done by bringing in a new owner or by
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nationalisation.
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(c) We point out that nationalisation is not a cure-all, and
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that state ownership brings us not one inch nearer to
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socialism.
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(d) Opposition to all productivity deals that involve job
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losses.
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(e) Opposition to 'natural wastage' of jobs, forced early
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retirement and attacks on married womens' right to work
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outside the home.
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(f) Full membership rights in the unions for unemployed
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workers, for unemployed sections within the branches.
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(g) Where possible, organisations of the unemployed should
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be set up. These should keep in close contact with those
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still in work by helping on picket lines and building links
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with the unions. They should also aim for closer links
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with bona-fide tenants' and residents' associations.
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(h) For trade union support for the demands of the
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unemployed, e.g. providing facilities, refusing to cut off
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services such as ESB and gas, etc.
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(i) For putting pressure on the state to inject money into
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industry that is both labour intensive and socially useful.
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For a programme of public works paying union rates. For a
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crash programme of housebuilding using direct labour
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employed by the local authorities.
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(j) For unionisation of people on schemes, for TU rates of
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pay.
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(k) We reject the idea that unemployed people should be
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thankful for any 'job' they are offered. We call for decent
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jobs - ones that are well paid and socially useful.
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STATE INTERFERENCE
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(a) Opposition to all laws restricting the right to strike,
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and all laws which seek to interfere in the internal affairs
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|
of the unions. Opposition to "union bashing".
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(b) We are opposed to schemes for "worker directors" and
|
|
"workers participation". They are a confidence trick to
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|
deny the reality of class rule by the bosses. Workers'
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interests are opposed to the interests of the bosses.
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(c) When possible, we encourage workers not to use the
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Labour Court and other supposedly "impartial" institutions.
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Instead we call for solidarity action.
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(d) We argue for the withdrawal of the ICTU
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|
representatives from the Employer-Labour Conference, the
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|
N.I. Police Authority, state and semi-state boards. We are
|
|
against participation in all bodies that try to destroy the
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independence of the unions by involving them in "social
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partnership".
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(e) We are against the "sweetheart deals" negotiated by
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some unions and the Industrial Development Authority
|
|
which grant negotiation rights to a single union without
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the agreement of the workforce. We stand for the right of
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|
workers to join the union of their choice.
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(f) We are for 100% trade union membership.
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WOMENS' RIGHTS
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(a) For positive encouragement of women to participate in
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the unions, and to take lay office.
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(b) We are against the concept of "reserved places" on
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union committees for women. It is undemocratic and
|
|
tokenistic. The real alternative for the unions to seriously
|
|
take up womens' issues.
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(c) For equal rights and benefits for all members
|
|
regardless of sex, age or whether they are full-time or
|
|
part-time workers.
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(d) For six months paid maternity/paternity leave.
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(e) Opposition to the use of maternity leave as a
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|
disentitlement to pay related benefit.
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(f) In order to enable women to attend union meetings we
|
|
call for childcare provision at the expense of the union.
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(g) To defend womens' right to work we call for childcare
|
|
provision at the expense of the bosses, and under the
|
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supervision of the workers using it.
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(h) For 'flexitime' arrangements where workers with
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|
children desire it.
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(i) To commit the unions to support a woman's right to
|
|
control her own fertility, including the right to avail of
|
|
contraception and abortion, and to give moral and material
|
|
support to campaigns seeking to achieve this end.
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|
UNION DEMOCRACY
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(a) We fight to change the role of the full-time officials -
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|
not to change the individuals who occupy the positions.
|
|
Their decision-making powers have to be removed and
|
|
returned to the rank & file membership. They should be
|
|
elected and paid no more than the average wage of the
|
|
people they represent. They should only serve for a fixed
|
|
period of no more than five years after which they they
|
|
return to ordinary work. The unions will have to win the
|
|
demand for jobs to be kept open in order for this to be
|
|
realistic.
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(b) All officials to be subject to mandation and recall.
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(c) We are totally opposed to the ICTU "two tier" picket.
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(d) For regular branch and workplace meetings, in working
|
|
hours where this is possible.
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(e) For direct elections to all committees, conference
|
|
delegations and national officerships, subject to
|
|
mandation and recall.
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(f) All strikes to be automatically made official as long as
|
|
they do not contradict trade union principles.
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(g) Support for all disputes, official or unofficial, in
|
|
pursuit of higher wages, better conditions, jobs, trade
|
|
union principles or any issue in the interest of the class.
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|
(h) For the publication of minutes of all union meetings.
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|
(i) Where revolutionaries can gain enough support to win
|
|
election to national officerships in large unions, or indeed
|
|
small ones, this support should not be used to merely elect
|
|
a candidate. Instead it should be used to fundamentally
|
|
change the structure of the union in such a way as to
|
|
return power to the membership and turn the officers into
|
|
administrators and resource people rather than decision
|
|
makers.
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RANK AND FILE MOVEMENT
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|
8.1 The rank and file movement is that movement within
|
|
the unions of militant workers who are prepared to fight
|
|
independently of the bureaucracy, and against it when
|
|
necessary.
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|
8.2 The form it has taken in Ireland has been that of
|
|
combative shop steward committees, inter-factory
|
|
committees, and groupings of activists within particular
|
|
unions and/or trades.
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|
|
8.3 Such a movement arises when workers go into struggle
|
|
and are attacked not only by the boss but also by their own
|
|
union officials. It requires the confidence to fight on both
|
|
these fronts, and to be generalised to the degree where it
|
|
can appeal for solidarity action over the heads of the
|
|
bureaucrats.
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|
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|
8.4 In the case of building around a programme or list of
|
|
demands, it should be broad enough to attract workers who
|
|
are militant but would not see themselves as having a
|
|
particular political outlook. The basis for building is (as a
|
|
general guide): 1. for union democracy, 2. for womens'
|
|
rights in the workplace and in the union, 3. against wage
|
|
restraint, 4. for a fight for jobs, 5. support for strikes.
|
|
|
|
8.5 Within the rank & file movement we fight for our
|
|
politics, we never hide them. But we do not want to take
|
|
over, the movement should be independent of any one
|
|
political organisation. While we seek to convince as many
|
|
workers as possible of the need for anarchism, we do not
|
|
do this in an opportunist manner at the expense of the
|
|
growth of the movement. It should never be made a front
|
|
belonging to the revolutionary organisation. Its role is to
|
|
provide a focus for workers moving to the left and wanting
|
|
to fight.
|
|
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|
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|
|
AID FOR WORKERS IN DISPUTE
|
|
|
|
9.1 In line with our recognition of the need for solidarity
|
|
the WSM, within the bounds of its resources, offers to aid
|
|
workers in dispute. In this we do not seek to "provide a
|
|
service" but to encourage self-activity among the strikers.
|
|
We push them to pressurise the union into providing
|
|
material help. Only when this is not forthcoming do we
|
|
provide leaflets, etc. We will put our organisation at their
|
|
disposal in terms of help with fundraising, collections,
|
|
publicity, contacts for blacking and other solidarity
|
|
actions - but we do it WITH the strikers, not FOR them.
|
|
|
|
9.2 Our most immediate aim in any strike is to win a
|
|
victory. But it is not our sole aim. We are political
|
|
militants and not just good trade unionists, we argue our
|
|
politics. We seek to win support for our politics, we seek
|
|
to win members to our organisation.
|
|
|
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|
|
THE CLOSED SHOP
|
|
|
|
10.1 When we say we are in favour of 100% trade unionism
|
|
we mean just that. A fighting union will gain the support
|
|
of the vast majority of workers. But there will be that
|
|
small minority, from whose ranks hardline parasites and
|
|
scabs appear, who will refuse to join. As they
|
|
automatically benefit from every claim the union wins
|
|
they should not be allowed to opt out of the struggle for it.
|
|
Where the majority of the workforce decide they want a
|
|
closed shop agreement we support them. However we do
|
|
not support single union agreements that are forced on
|
|
workers from above. The important thing is that everyone
|
|
is in a bona-fide union, it is less important which union
|
|
they join.
|
|
|
|
|
|
UNIONS AND REVOLUTION
|
|
|
|
11.1 Trade unions will not become revolutionary
|
|
organisations, they were never set up to be that. However
|
|
from within trade union struggle will arise the embryo of
|
|
the workers' councils of the future. The early beginnings
|
|
of this are seen wherever workers create their own rank &
|
|
file organisation (without mediation or "all-knowing"
|
|
leaders) to pursue their class interests.
|
|
|
|
11.2 Towards this end we push as hard as we can for
|
|
independence from the control of the bureaucracy.
|
|
|
|
11.3 The role of the WSM within these struggles is to unify
|
|
the different sectional struggles into an awareness of the
|
|
overall struggle between the classes; to act as a
|
|
"collective memory" for the movement (i.e. able to explain
|
|
the lessons of past struggles); to take on the politics of
|
|
reformism and Leninism within the movement; to explain
|
|
and popularise the anarchist-communist idea. Essentially
|
|
our role is that of a "leadership of ideas" - as opposed to a
|
|
leadership of elitist individuals.
|
|
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|
|
January 1991
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