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Title: No More Fake Strikes Author: Joe Burns Date: August 12, 2019 Language: en Topics: strike, syndicalism, criticism Source: Retrieved on 11th July 2021 from https://organizing.work/2019/08/no-more-fake-strikes/
In recent years, middle-class activists with little relationship to
unions, workers or workplaces have routinely called for general strikes.
Over the last decade, there have been a dizzying number of general
strikes announced. The ones that I can remember are: in the wake of the
Wisconsin uprising, in San Francisco following the Occupy movement, on
May Day for most of the last decade, a whole spate of general strikes in
the wake of Trumpâs election, earlier this year around the TSA shutdown,
and a recent call for a reproductive rights strike. There is also a call
for a global climate strike, which may or may not be a call for a strike
as opposed to a protest.
That I am sure I am missing some should be a bit of a tip-off. If you
have to struggle to remember a call for a general strike, then it
probably was not successful.
The bulk of this article will focus on the general strikes called on
social media back in the wake of Trumpâs election, in the spring of
2017. The Spring 2017 calls included a call for an immigrant worker
strike on February 16, calls for a February 17 general strike in the
wake of the momentum around Trumpâs inauguration, a widely publicized
Womenâs Strike on International Womenâs Day, and a strike on May 1.
There were so many calls for general strikes it was hard to keep them
straight. None of them resulted in general strikes, and other than the
immigrant worker strike, none resulted in any appreciable number of
workers actually going on strike.
Unlike real strikes, which take a ton of work, calling a general strike
is apparently a simple affair. A date is picked, a Facebook post is
created, the labor liberal press picks it up, and a general strike is
born. This raises the question of under whose authority they are being
called.
By and large, you see very few unions participating in these so-called
general strikes. There are a couple of instances of unionists syncing up
strikes around specific issues, such as the Chicago Teachers Union
threatened strike on May Day 2017. How is it possible to have a general
strike with virtually no union participation?
Most union constitutions have detailed rules and procedures for
striking, including rules on when and how strike votes should be
conducted. While some may dismiss this as mere bureaucracy, strike votes
are taken seriously by most unions because the stakes are so high for
the affected workers. By voting to strike, a group of workers commits
themselves to a battle which has major repercussions for their
individual and collective futures. A failed strike can mean the loss of
a job, and even a winning strike may mean months of hardshipâthis is not
a decision to be made lightly.
As a democratic decision, once the decision to strike has been made, all
workers, whether they voted yes, no, or did not vote, are expected to
honor it. Everyone must honor the picket line and go on strike â or be
deemed a scab. Most union constitutions call for fining or expelling
strikebreakers, and back in the day scabs would be ostracized for years
after the conclusion of a strike.
Having been involved in many strike votes over the years, they usually
involve lots of collective discussion in the workplace, answering
questions and what-ifs. Legal strategy and possible repercussions are
talked about, and strategy is debated. Striking is a collective
decision, and typically the work group solidifies around the idea. When
the group does decide to go on strike, folks began to act collectively
and labor and management become polarized.
Certainly there are situations where workers have not voted to go on
strike, as with wildcat strikes, which are strikes without the support
of, or typically in opposition to, the union apparatus. Such initiatives
typically are rooted in the âshop floorâ (workplace) and led by
rank-and-file organizers. Like all strikes, true wildcat strikes are
rare today, with the last big wildcat wave in the early 1970s, when shop
floor workers resisted a management offensive to gut longstanding work
rules in the name of productivity. But even though these strikes do not
involve a formal vote, to be successful, these wildcat strikes take
workplace organizing and popular support from the workers involved.
Workers, in effect, vote with their feet.
Leading up to the 2017 Womenâs Strike, a liberal critique claimed that
striking was a privilege. The article provoked a quick response that
working-class women can and do strike, and that opposition to the strike
was coming from liberal democrats. A widely circulated rebuttal by Kate
Aronoff gave four historical examples of strikes by woman. These
examples were meant to show that womenâs strikes are not a privilegeâbut
struggles of oppressed workers using the best tool they have available
to improve their lives.
Yet, there are a number of differences between the strikes discussed by
Aronoff and the âstrikeâ on International Womanâs Day. The most obvious
is that these historical examples were real labor-withdrawing strikes
involving tens of thousands of women. And they flowed from decisions
from the women workers involved. Aronoffâs article quotes the dramatic
scene, well known in labor history, when garment worker Clara Lemlich
made an impassioned call for thousands of garment workers to strike. But
unlike these strikes, that was the garment workers themselves deciding
to strike. That is far different from these general strikes by
proclamation.
With the exception of the immigrant worker strikes, it is clear that not
many of the proclaimed strikes were actually strikes, let alone general
strikes. The Womenâs Strike on International Womenâs Day, March 8, 2017
did not appear to happen. The most reported areas of actual work
stoppages that day were school districts in Arlington and Chapel Hill,
liberal, high-income areas which shut down their schools preemptively
based on an abnormal number of requests for the day off.
An employer cancelling classes because employees request the day off
does not constitute a strikeâunless, like the 2006 immigrant worker
strike, when entire industries shuttered, the employers believing
workers would not show up. Regardless, closing a couple school districts
and some progressive restaurants out of a working class of tens of
millions does not make a general strike.
Honestly, it was hard to even remember the call for a general strike on
February 17, 2017. Hopefully, people will see this as a problem. If we
canât even remember the âgeneral strikes,â then perhaps too many are
being called. Almost 100 years later, we are still talking about the
Minneapolis Truckers Strike and the Seattle General Strike. So I guess
that is another way to assess these: if we remember them in ten years,
they were real, e.g. the 2006 immigrant worker strike. If they are too
hard to even remember a few months later or years later, then not so
much.
As the exception, the February 16, 2017 immigrant worker strike had real
participation although exact numbers of striking workers is hard to
calculate from media accounts. Labor Notes estimates tens of thousands
of immigrant workers and students participated in the strikeand over 100
workers were fired nationwide. While participation does not appear to be
at the level of the historic May 1, 2006 immigrant worker strike, the
effort was nonetheless impressive.
The flipside of the lack of accountability in calling these strikes is
that there is no accountability on the back end. When a union goes out
on strike in a defined workplace, the stakes are high and worker
participation is immediately known. Did any workers scab? How are picket
lines holding up? What is the impact? Whether to strike or not, when to
settle, and the propriety of the actions can be judged and debated for
years to come.
In contrast, with these amorphous general strikes, there is also no
accountability in summing up the action. In several instances, when the
strikes have not gained traction, they have been rebranded as just âtake
off work if you canâ or a more generalized day of action â do something,
anything. Thatâs great but it is not a general strike. To repeat, if you
have to ask your employer for the day off, it is not a strike â itâs a
leave day.
To return to the discussion above, typically union strike votes are
treated as serious affairs and come from some decision-making process by
the workers involved. Certainly, if unions were to endorse calls for a
general strike, we can be sure the decision would not be made
cavalierly. For union leaders to call a general strike would entail, at
a minimum, an expectation that a portion of their membership would
actually go on strike. And on the back end, if workers did not
participate in the strike, presumably there would be some responsibility
assigned for making a bad call.
These calls for a general strike, however, attempt to take the allure
the general strike without the organization or responsibility such a
true initiative would involve. Back in 2011, in the wake of the Occupy
movement, Occupy Oakland put out a call for a general strike to shut
down the West Coast ports.
Cal Winslow, a long time labor activist and supporter of union democracy
wrote an excellent critique of the initiative, which is still
instructive today. Winslow advanced a number of critiques of the
action: 1) that he was not aware of any workers actually striking, and
2) that this effort was opposed by the ILWU, which has a long history of
militant unionism, and 3) the effort did not appear to come from, or
have any significant participation by, dockworkers. Winslow took offense
to this effort on basis of the principle of worker control:
Strikes, even the bureaucratic, involve mobilizations from below â
implicitly they raise issues of power and control. And the fundamental
place of self-activity â and isnât that the point? âThe emancipation of
the working class must be the act of the workers themselves.â No one can
do it for you; you have to do it yourself. Not the politicians. Not the
bureaucrats. Not the church. And not Occupy Oakland.
âŠSo this is not just definitional â âWhat is a strike?â This project has
become an issue of appropriation â and substitution, the substitution of
Occupy Oakland for the workers themselves, no matter what the intentions
of the organizers. It has become a challenge to the basic principles of
workersâ democracy â to all notions of workerâs self-activity, workersâ
empowerment, workersâ control; it suggests the opposite of democracy and
is, in my mind, contrary to the best and deepest traditions of socialism
â and anarchism. It needs to be abandoned.
In research for my next book, I am finding that one of the key
differences between the class struggle unionism promoted by previous
generations of labor leftists, and the social unionism/labor liberalism
popular for the last decade, is the belief in worker self-activity.
None of this is to say that all strikes will come from the formal union
process. There is a strong history of strike waves happening outside of,
or in opposition to, the union hierarchy. But in all of these instances,
these strikes stemmed from folks organizing in the working class and not
from the minds of leftists.
None of this is to say that general strikes should not be discussed. But
how we discuss it is important. An example is AFA-CWA President Sara
Nelsonâs widely reported remarks during the government shutdown earlier
this year. It is important to note her choice of words, which was that
we need to have a discussion in our unions about a general strike.
Having a discussion in our unions is very different than taking it upon
yourself to call a general strike on Facebook. Likewise, activists in
Wisconsin agitating for a general strike in 2011 did so by leafleting
the crowd to get the discussion going and promoting a discussion in the
Madison Central Labor Council. Again that is raising the discussion
point within the movement rather than taking it upon themselves to just
call a general strike.
Contrast the arrogance of some liberal outsiders who decided to demand
that government workers go on strike. During the shutdown, the New York
Times of all places published an opinion piece by author Barbara
Ehrenreich and former union organizer Gary Stevenson, in which they
argued that TSA workers should go out on strike. Neither have any
particular base among TSA workers or government workers in general, nor
ties to any of the public employee unions.
While the authors criticized the TSA workersâ union the American
Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), there is no indication they
talked to those unions. Nor, in advocating for a TSA agent strike, did
they mention even one discussion with a TSA agent.
Itâs pretty clear that after decades of austerity and right-wing
government policies, many middle-class liberals are looking for a way
out of the morass. One obvious place to look is the working class, which
is the one class which has the power to grind society to a halt. Thatâs
understandable. But at a certain point, you are asking for working
people to fight your battles on your issues. That rarely works.
Thatâs probably why the only example of calls for generalized strikes
which actually worked were the immigrant worker strikes, including the
2006 strike. These essentially political strikes came from within the
immigrant rights community and thus had a very different character than
these other general strike calls.
Much of the debate around the idea of a general strike is divorced from
reality. Much of the commentary appears to be focused on defending
strikes or general strikes, noting they have been important in history,
that if we could do one it would be very effective, etc. Missing from
the discussion is what about the workersâ movement today that makes this
the appropriate tactic, or what it would take to make these proclaimed
strikes a reality. The hallmark of idealism is that ideas are divorced
from reality.
The appeal of calling a general strike is that, should it happen, it
would be incredibly powerful. A one-day strike by all women in the
United States would have an estimated $21 billion impact on the economy.
A general strike would shut the country down and be a powerful blow
against Trump. A general strike, however, must be embraced by workers.
If we had a powerful workersâ movement capable of carrying out general
strikes, the pros and cons of the tactics would be a worthy subject of
debate.
Itâs time to put some standards in place. These are incredibly weak
standards, but standards nonetheless. The test of whether to promote a
call for a general strike is whether you individually can get at least
ten of your co-workers to commit to striking. Certainly, in calling for
a general strike shutting down the whole of society, committed activists
should be able to do at least that. If the presumably most conscious
organizers cannot do this, then they either lack connection to workers
through a workplace or a union, or they have a lot more work to do.
Collectively, any initiative that is calling for a nationwide general
strike should be composed of hundreds if not thousands of such
individuals or organizations, with deep ties in the working class.
One response to this whole argument may be, âWhatâs the harm in calling
for general strikes?â That was my initial inclination. Itâs hard to
criticize people excited about general strikes and the very idea that
workers can stop society in its tracks. The source of wealth, power and
privilege in society stems from capitalâs control of the workplace.
The allure behind the idea of a general strike is that without human
labor, society grinds to a halt. As laborâs anthem Solidarity Forever
goes, âwithout our brain and muscle not a single wheel can turn.â In
true general strikes, power relations in society are laid bare and the
very foundations of capitalist rule are shaken. As Francis Fox Piven has
written, in such periods of upheaval, the ruled are no longer willing to
be ruled.
There are benefits to raising the discussion of general strikes. It
highlights the role of striking in general and points activists towards
the workplace. As I have long argued, strikes have been the heart and
soul of trade unionism, and until we in labor confront the issue of how
to develop an effective strike, the labor movement will continue our
death march. And without a powerful workersâ movement, the progressive
forces in this country will prolong our current weakness.
The notion of the general strike also helps us think outside the box in
regards to striking. To develop a truly effective strike means breaking
free from the legal and ideological quagmire of the modern labor
relations system, which forbids cross-workplace solidarity and other
forms of effective strike activity. The idea of a general strike
dispenses with legalisms, and in its true form, relies on solidarity and
worker self-activity. During the Wisconsin uprising of 2011, raising the
idea of a general strike offered an alternative to the trajectory of
electoralism and defeat.
Despite these potential positives, how to build a general strike is not
even remotely the key question facing the labor movement. The left wing
of the labor movement does not have a coherent set of ideas for union
revival. The labor movement is dying, captive to a system of labor
control calculated to prevent effective union activity. Unlike
generations past, we lack a coherent and widespread agenda to reverse
union decline. Repeated calls for general strikes will do little to
address the crisis.
As Kim Moody has pointed out, true general strikes are often not called
but grow out of extensions of solidarity based on individual groups of
workers striking. Other groups of workers put out a call for solidarity
and the dispute expands. Building a labor movement based on struggle,
solidarity, militancy and rank-and-file democracy should be key areas of
our attention.
The question we need to grapple with is not what date to call a general
strike but what sort of workerâs movement is capable of carrying out a
general strike or, probably more realistically, industry-wide or
sectoral strikes.
One reason I wrote my book Strike Back was to understand how millions of
public employees were able to violate labor law in the 1960s with little
repercussion and great gains. As we saw during the Red State Revolt by
teachers earlier in the year, when workers get in motion it is truly
incredible.