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Title: The Myths of Syndicalism Author: Larry Gambone Date: 1995 Language: en Topics: syndicalism, critique, anarcho-syndicalism, history Notes: Originally published by Red Lion Press
Syndicalism died after WWI. Syndicalism was done as a revolutionary
movement by 1910. Syndicalism was finished off by Franco during the
Spanish Civil War. Syndicalism was a primitive millennial movement which
evolved into modern social democratic unionism. Or so many academic
labor historians will tell you. (Although the situation has improved
since this was first written in 1994.) The purpose of this pamphlet is
to show that these conceptions are myths.
Before going any further however, syndicalism should be defined. In
France, where the term originated, syndicalism simply means trade
unionism and has no particular radical or anarchistic connotations.
French speakers refer to libertarian syndicalism, revolutionary
syndicalism or anarcho-syndicalism when distinguishing the radical
current from traditional trade unionism.
This pamphlet uses the term in its English sense — libertarian trade
unionism — unions stressing self-management and direct action rather
than parliamentary lobbying. Direct democracy and the maximum of local
autonomy are also characteristic of the day to day life of a syndicalist
organization. While all syndicalists share these attitudes, they are
divided ideologically. Those who call themselves anarcho-syndicalists
are inspired by anarchist theorists. Some of those who derive their
views from a form of libertarian marxism are called revolutionary
syndicalists or revolutionary industrial unionists. There are also
divergent opinions on revolution which stretches all the way from from
insurrectionists to the moderate reformist followers of P.J. Proudhon.
The oft-stated opinion that syndicalism flourished in the years prior to
WWI is the myth of the “golden age of syndicalism”. As with many myths,
a certain grain of truth exists. During the first decade of the 20^(th)
Century a form of syndicalism having faith in insurrection dominated in
some areas. By 1910 this tendency had run out of steam and continued to
have some influence only in Spain. In North America and Northern Europe
the insurrectionists were never influential.
Nor were the unions particularly large organizations. Membership tended
to be small and fluctuating. The CGT which claimed 360,000 members in
1910 may have had as few as 4000 members four years later. By 1913 the
Canadian IWW had almost ceased to exist.
These figures are an underestimate as they do not include the British
movement, other Latin American countries and Eastern Europe. However, as
you will see, far from being a Golden Age, overall membership was small,
and this was only a formative period.[1]
WWI was a set-back for syndicalism. Unions split into pro and anti-war
factions and in some countries such as Canada and the US, syndicalist
organizations were proscribed and persecuted. But the movement came out
of the war stronger than ever. More than two million workers joined the
CGT in 1919 and the Italian USI had about 500,000 members. Unions
mushroomed and syndicalism spread throughout Latin America and Eastern
Europe.
For some unions like the CGT and the USI, this year marked the high
point of their strength, as the former split into two factions and the
latter was crushed by the fascists. The Bolsheviks also destroyed the
burgeoning Russian syndicalist movement. But for the rest of the world,
the early 1920’s marks syndicalism’s zenith.
Even with close to two million members, this list grossly underestimates
syndicalist strength worldwide. Statistics on the Australian and
Brazilian movements are fragmentary and inconclusive, yet the majority
of Australian workers were members of the One Big Union and the
Brazilian anarcho-syndicalist movement was strong enough to support a
daily newspaper. There were also federations in all the South and
Central American countries as well as in Eastern Europe. The Swedish SAC
is not included, nor any of the other Nordic unions. Many syndicalists
also stayed outside of the federations in independent unions. Others,
such as those in Great Britain, worked as radical caucuses within the
social democratic unions.
A word on the inclusion of the French CGT. About this time, the
revolutionaries within the federation were pushed out and formed the
CGT-U, having about the same number of members as the old CGT. The
CGT-U, was, however, controlled by the Communists and hence cannot be
considered syndicalist, even though many militants remained faithful to
the cause. Within two years the anarchist faction of the CGT-U had had
enough of their Leninist “allies” and broke away to form a third CGT,
the CGT Social Revolutionary. The old CGT, while purged of its
revolutionary faction, did not opt for social democracy, but for
Proudhonism. Hence, it still represented a form of syndicalism. The
post-war, post-split CGT progressively evolved in a more “moderate”
direction as the years went by, and while revolutionary syndicalists
still belonged to the organization, the CGT itself could no longer be
considered syndicalist, in the sense that the term is generally used.
The year 1922 also marked the formation of the syndicalist
international, the International Workers Association, which formed a
libertarian counterweight to the Communist and Social Democratic
Internationals. Most of the national federations joined except the
Canadian and Australian OBU, the North American IWW and the Proudhonist
CGT.
Early-on in the Great Depression, the syndicalist movement had lost some
of its influence and membership. The Argentine FORA, in the middle of an
internal wrangle in 1931, was suppressed by the military, never to
regain its importance within the trade union movement.
The Mexican CGT split into fragments. The Spanish CNT stagnated after
the bleeding it took from the employer-sponsored gun thugs (pistoleros)
and the Primo de Riviera dictatorship. The Portuguese CGT was crushed by
the Salazar dictatorship. But the social democratic unions did not fare
much better. (In Great Britain the TUC had 6.5 million members in 1919
and only 3.7 million in 1928.) This situation was similar in other
countries.
Against these losses also came some gains. Though the Chilean IWW was
beaten into the ground by the Ibanez dictatorship, the remnants created
a new federation called the CGT with 25,000 members. During the Spanish
Civil War, the CNT rose to more than two million members. The growth of
the CNT had positive effects for the French syndicalists, increasing
their number.
As the 1930’s dragged on, the situation worsened for syndicalism, The
German movement was liquidated by the Nazis and a left-right combination
of Stalinists and Falangists destroyed the Spanish CNT in 1938–39.
Brazilian syndicalists felt the lash of the Vargas regime. The French
CGT Proudhonists united with the Communist CGTU and were eventually
swallowed up by them.
The following list underestimates syndicalist forces in the post-1939
period. The Dutch NAS still existed and the Cuban syndicalists were a
major force on the island. In France, about 280,000 workers were
enrolled in unions led by revolutionary syndicalists – in spite of
Communist and “moderate” efforts. Syndicalism remained an influence in
Bolivia, Peru and other Latin American countries. But even after taking
this into account, there is little doubt that the global movement had
been fatally weakened.
After WWII, the Communist unions benefited most from labour militancy.
The countries liberated from Fascism did not see a mass return to the
syndicalist unions. Those that did re-form were mere shadows of the
past. The IWW had a brief and minor renaissance only to lose all its
organized shops by 1950. In France, the old Proudhonists split from the
Stalinist CGT in 1947 to form Force Ouvrier, and by no stretch of the
imagination could this union be considered syndicalist, though it clung
to some syndicalist concepts.. In 1956 the Canadian OBU joined the
AFL-CIO dominated Canadian Labour Congress.
In Chile in 1953 syndicalists elected 4 members to the directorate of
the CUT and were instrumental in its formation. Cuban syndicalists
controlled a number of important unions and were part of the
revolutionary process that was unfolding on the island. They even had a
daily newspaper, El Libertario, in 1958.[2] Three years later, the
Castro government finished off the Cuban syndicalists — something
neither the Machado nor the Batista regimes were able to do.
The last functioning unions were the Swedish SAC and the Dutch OVB.
Possibly, some small unions remained in Latin America, most probably in
Chile and Bolivia. For the rest of the world the syndicalists were
reduced to tiny caucuses or aging remnants of once proud organizations.
Labour historians are at last challenging the cliche that syndicalist
were violent, impractical millenarians. One of the best examples of this
trend is Barbara Mitchell’s, “The Practical Revolutionaries”, an
analysis of French anarcho-syndicalism. Professor Mitchell shows how
most descriptions of syndicalism have been tainted by a hostile Marxist
bias and that far from being woollyheaded utopians the French unionists
were extremely practical.
The “revolution now or nothing” types were few in number,regarded as
“fanatics”, and were mainly intellectuals. (Exemplified by Georges Sorel
who had almost no influence on the membership.)
Syndicalism grew out of the history, needs and aspirations of the
working population and was not a set of ideas imported from outside by
an intellectual elite. Militants were not particularly interested in
philosophy or ideology, but sought practical means to improve the lot of
the working class. This was best accomplished through direct action. had
little to do with violence and was a way of uniting workers who would
otherwise be divided by trade or creed. Workers, whether Catholic or
atheist, Socialist or Republican, tended to unite around practical
matters such as forming a co-operative, joining a boycott or supporting
a union, whereas they would be divided by an ideology or party.
Direct action also made immediate changes possible, for French
syndicalists rarely made the mistake of splitting reform and revolution
into two water-tight compartments. Unlike parliamentary reforms which
empowered the state, direct action empowered the workers and therefore
each successful action was like a little revolution.
Syndicalism’s apparent demise did not come about through evolution from
“primitivism” to “sensible” business unionism. The major reasons for its
defeat were external. Communist, fascist and military dictatorships
crushed the movement in Argentina, Brazil, Russia, Germany Italy,
Bulgaria, Spain and Portugal. Government repression also played a part
in the weakening of the Chilean and American IWW and the Mexican CGT. It
is important to point out that the syndicalist unions which survived
into the 1950’s only did so in countries with democratic governments —
such as Holland, Sweden and Canada. Tyranny killed syndicalism.
A second reason was the Communist Party. It attempted either to destroy
or take over syndicalist unions and the result was a weakening of these
organizations. Everywhere the Communist Party harmed syndicalism. Some
unions suffered more than others at their hands. In France the CGT was
split in two and in Brazil they used strike-breaking and violence
against the syndicalists. The Communists role in Spain undermining the
CNT is well known.
In countries where syndicalists were a minority faction of the workers’
movement, conservative unions were a major source of opposition. This is
especially true of Canada and the United States where the AF of L.
worked day and night to destroy the One Big Union and IWW. The
Australian OBU found a stumbling block in the right-wing and racist
Australian Workers Union.
Another factor; all trade unions, syndicalist, communist, and social
democratic, suffered major defeats in the 1920’s and early 1930’s.
Syndicalism’s decline was part of a tendency which effected all trade
unions. Employer and governmental opposition played a major role in
this, but other reasons existed as well. One was the decline of older
industries such as coal mining — a major area of trade union support. So
too, was the continuing decline of the skilled trades and the resulting
losses for the craft unions. The migratory workers upon which the IWW
depended to a large degree were largely replaced by a sedentary work
force.
Two other factors helped undermine syndicalist influence. One was
co-optation by corporatism, as seen in the Chilean situation where the
Ibanez regime’s “legal unions” split the “moderate” and “militant”
syndicalists. The other was a difficulty in resolving the dilemma
between daily “bread and butter” demands and revolutionary goals. The
“moderates” tended to water down the movement, eventually abandoning the
long-term goals of syndicalism. The more ideological, on the other hand,
tended to turn a movement into a marginalized sect.
Anarcho-syndicalism suffered from the problem of being out of step with
history. Centralisation of political and economic power was the tendency
of the 20^(th) Century. Scientism proclaimed the rule of experts and
ordinary people were dismissed as too incompetent to run their own
affairs. Other than anarchists, almost everyone else deemed society “too
complicated” for direct democracy and decentralization, let alone
self-management. Stalinism and Fascism were only the most brutal aspects
of this authoritarianism.
Although syndicalist unions were at their lowest ebb by the 1960s,
paradoxically, many of their ideas were being taken seriously for the
first since the 1920’s. The concepts borrowed from syndicalism were
direct action and autogestion. (workers control.) Several national
federations such as Quebec’s CSN and the French CFTD adopted these
concepts.
There were several reasons for this. One was the decline in Communist
influence and the anti-authoritarian feeling among the youth. But one
must not discount the work of anarchist militants, who though few in
number, were effective in promoting the idea of workers’ control in
Great Britain and France in the early 1960’s.
The harsh economic and political environment of the 1980’s dampened the
enthusiasm for syndicalism. (Autogestion was even abandoned by the CFTD
as early as 1974.) The Solidarnosc Movement in Poland incorporated many
syndicalist ideas but most of this was lost. The democratization of
Spain after the death of Franco saw the rebirth of the CNT, which
briefly gave hope for a return to strength of traditional syndicalism.
In 1979 they had 300,000 members, but within two years most of these
were gone and the CNT faced a serious faction fight. By the early-1990’s
recession, the Spanish membership figures are probably lower than in
1987.
The collapse of the Eastern Bloc brought about an influx of syndicalist
activity in Eastern Europe, but this was confined to very small groups.
All things considered, there was been no real rebirth of syndicalist
unions in the 1980’s and 1990’s, since the nadir point of the early
1960’s. These groups remained a small fringe of the trade union
movement.
Thus, a revitalization of traditional syndicalism (i.e. separate
revolutionary unions) seemed an unlikely future prospect. The best one
could say was that as long as capitalism existed syndicalist ideas would
still have influence.
With the resurgence of the class struggle world-wide, as exemplified by
the Argentine piqueteros in the late 1990’s and the factory-occupation
movement soon after, has come a re-birth of syndicalism. While the
membership of syndicalist unions does not number in the millions like in
the 1920’s and 30’s, there must be several hundred thousand syndicalists
world-wide. The movement has certainly not been in this good a shape
since the end of the Second World War, if not before that time.
The most spectacular syndicalist advance is in Spain. After the CNT
split in the 1980’s, one group changed its name to the CGT. Since then,
it has grown to about 70,000 members and is supported by about one
million Spanish workers. The CGT is now the third largest labor
federation in Spain.[3] The CNT still exists with maybe 5000 members.
The COBAs (Base Committees) of Italy, of which several are overtly
syndicalist, and though I have no membership figures, they influence
hundreds of thousands of workers. (The old Italian anarcho-syndicalist
union, the USI, works with the COBAs and is experiencing growth.) While
other union federations are small by CGT or COBA standards (or any
standards for that matter) the point must be made that they are
functioning unions and not mere propaganda groups made up of students or
aging remnants from the “old days.” Furthermore, syndicalism has a
growing, and not a declining influence, unlike the years following WWII.
The CNT-F of France, down to a couple of hundred militants in 1994,
reorganized and is now a vibrant union with 4000 members.[4] Sweden’s
SAC has organized white collar workers and has about 10,000 members. THE
US IWW is organizing workers again and has about 2000 members. The IWW
is also involved in the UK (500 members) and in Germany and Austria.
Ireland has its Independent Workers Union with 1,000 members. In Greece,
syndicalists grouped about 10 years ago in the ASE. They are still a
small group but are also expanding their influence and membership.[5]
Syndicalist unions now exist in many of the former Eastern Bloc, and
some of them are no longer propaganda groups but functioning unions.
Workers Initiative of Poland is organizing in a dozen cities. The
Siberian Workers Confederation and the Anarcho-Syndicalist Federation
are active in Russia
Another phenomenon is the development of class struggle or “alternative”
unions, allied with, and influenced by, syndicalists. These include
France’s SUD unions and Chile’s CGT-Mosicam. Many African and Asian
radical trade unions sent delegates to the 2007 Paris Syndicalist
Conference and have become attracted to the ideas they found there, so
the movement is spreading to areas where it has never been before.
Indeed, never in history has syndicalism been as wide-spread as it is
today.
Membership statistics were taken from the following:
Bercuson, David, Fools And Wisemen
Canadian Labour Gazette, 1931, 1940
Dulles, John W., Anarchists And Communists In Brazil Ehrmann, H.W.,
French Labor From Popular Front To Liberation Horowitz, Daniel, The
Italian Labor Movement Ideas And Action No. 5,6,
Jewell, Gary, History of IWW In Canada
Munck Ronaldo, Argentina, From Anarchism To Peronism Rocker, Rudolf,
Anarchism And Anarcho-syndicalism
Saposs, D.J., Labor Movement In Post-War France
Simon, Fanny, “Anarcho-syndicalism In S. America”, Hispanic
Historical Review, Feb. 1946
Stearns, Peter, Revolutionary Syndicalism And French Labor
Tamarin D., The Argentine Labor Movement
Thompson Fred, The IWW, Its First 70 Years
[1] The British movement is an example of the difficulties encountered
when trying to compile statistics on syndicalist strength. (British
syndicalists worked within existing unions) Nevertheless they were
responsible for the formation of the shop stewards movement, the South
Wales Miners’ movement and the 1913 Dublin General Strike.
[2] Interview with Cuban Anarchist, Frank Fernandez
[3] Rojo y Negro Sept 2404, p 11 “Ia CGT se consolida como tercera
fuerza sindical”
[4] http://www.cnt-f.org/ Section, La Confederation, Pt 4, “CNT; de 1995
a aujourd’hui.”
[5] Email discussion with Patrick Murtagh after meeting with Greek
anarchists.