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Title: United Proletarian Front
Author: Errico Malatesta
Date: 1920
Language: en
Topics: left unity, proletariat, Popular Front
Source: The Method of Freedom: An Errico Malatesta Reader, edited by Davide Turcato, translated by Paul Sharkey.
Notes: Translated from “Fronte unico proletario,” Umanità Nova (Milan) 1, no. 35 (8 April 1920).

Errico Malatesta

United Proletarian Front

Sad to say that even today, on the eve of battle, with the old world

already wobbly and when it will require just a determined push to topple

it once and for all, there are still some workers fighting and nearly

hating other workers merely because these belong to different, rival

organizations and parties.135

Today the bourgeoisie’s and government’s only hope of salvation is such

division in the workers’ ranks, and so whoever, for whatever reason,

fans the fires of discord rather than striving to bring all the forces

of revolution together under a single umbrella is a traitor to the cause

of human emancipation.

We are anarchists and we fight solely for the success of our ideal. But

the first step along the way that is to lead us towards our radiant

ideal is the overthrow of established institutions, and so all who fight

those institutions are our comrades-in-arms.

Whereas others, driven by a spirit of rivalry and a lust for hegemony,

may try to portray us as sectarians, we still reach out a hand to all

men of sincerity and combat only those methods that seem to us to run

counter to the revolution, and such men whenever they turn up, are

plainly betraying the cause they purport to serve.

In Italy there are two major proletarian organizations that ostensibly

have their sights set on destruction of the capitalist system: the

Confederazione Generale del Lavoro and the Unione Sindacale Italiana.[1]

Most of our sympathies certainly lie with the Unione Sindacale, since

there are lots of our comrades among its leaders and its direct-action

methods suit our tactic best.

That said, there are many comrades of ours in the Confederazione del

Lavoro and the masses affiliated to the Confederazione are—and this is

what matters most—genuine workers actually prompted by the very same

spirit as the mass membership of the Unione Sindacale. Above all else,

the masses from both organizations must fraternize with one another and

fight as one.

If the Confederazione’s regulations are such as to thwart the honest

expression of the wishes of the membership, those regulations need to be

fought against and an effort made to change them; if many of the

Confederazione’s leaders are, as they appear to us to be,

collaborationists busily snuffing out any suggestion of revolt,

smothering any movement, then those leaders have to be fought against

and steps taken to ensure that the masses do not let themselves be led

like sheep by bad shepherds.

But the masses need to be united and it would be a lethal error to try

to dissolve one organisation in order to bolster the other. All

organisations need to be pushed forward by our entering them and

bringing our spirit to them.

Let the workers bear this in mind:

When the bosses exploit them, they pay no heed to party distinctions and

starve them all the same; when the carabinieri pepper their chests with

the king’s lead, they do not bother to ask first what sort of membership

card they carry in their pockets.

Let that at least be a lesson.

[1] The membership and leadership of the older and larger Confederazione

Generale del Lavoro significantly overlapped with those of the socialist

party, while the Unione Sindacale Italiana, founded in 1912, had a

revolutionary syndicalist orientation.