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Title: The Bakuninists at Work Author: Punkerslut Date: April 9, 2007 Language: en Topics: Mikhail Bakunin, Karl Marx, marxism, critique, Spain Source: Retrieved on 22nd April 2021 from http://www.anarchistrevolt.com/critiques/marx/bakuninist.html
When Karl Marx wrote this piece in 1873, it was only eight months after
the formation of the First Spanish Republic. It would continue to exist
until its official collapse in December of 1874. The contention of Marx
was that the activity of the Anarchists during this period contributed
to the fall of this government. Since the Spanish Republic existed for
at least a year after Marx offered his opinions and predictions, there
was still a bit of history left to be played out before one could
absolutely place blame on one group or another for the weakening of the
First Spanish Republic. Now that we are over a century away from these
events, one can analyze the opinion of Marx and Engels on these power
struggles and compare them to what we now understand from history. The
allegation made here by Marx is quite a serious one. For too long, the
Spanish people were under the yoke of an ambitious, Imperialist
monarchy. The First Spanish Republic was the first hope of a Spanish
government elected by the people. Even the Anarchist Mikhail Bakunin
will grant, "It is true that the most imperfect republic is a thousand
times better than the most enlightened monarchy, for at least in the
republic there are moments when, though always exploited, the people are
not oppressed, while in monarchies they are never anything else." [1]
Both of the programs of Marx and Bakunin focused around the liberation
of people from their oppressive conditions. An authoritarian monarchy
was considered among the greatest evils by both of these philosophers.
Marx chose to support the political action of the workers, while Bakunin
organized the workers into a general strike. The accusation of Marx in
this piece was that the actions of the Anarchists in the First Spanish
Republic are responsible for the weakening of those opposing rule by
monarchy.
That is what Bakuninist "abstention from politics" leads to. At quiet
times, when the proletariat knows beforehand that at best it can get
only a few representatives to parliament and have no chance whatever of
winning a parliamentary majority, the workers may sometimes be made to
believe that it is a great revolutionary action to sit out the elections
at home, and in general, not to attack the State in which they live and
which oppresses them, but to attack the State as such which exists
nowhere and which accordingly cannot defend itself. This is a splendid
way of behaving in a revolutionary manner, especially for people who
lose heart easily; and the extent to which the leaders of the Spanish
Alliance belong to this category of people is shown in some detail in
the aforementioned publication.
-- Karl Marx [Part 1]
Abstention from politics is the natural base of Anarchist theory. If we
are going to fully and completely participate in governments and states,
on the grounds that we are sacrificing principle for the instrumental
value of increasing our movement, then what will happen come the day
when we have this enormous, powerful government, now defending its
existence and strength on the argument of supposed "anti-autonomists"
allegedly found everywhere. Authority cannot be destroyed by authority.
Marx's suggestion is that the state can best be attacked "at the voting
polls," but there is little change that occurs from reinforcing the
legitimizing institute of authoritarian corruption. The Anarchist
position is not to attack the state where it does not exist, but to
attack the state, something markedly different from the Marxian program.
It is almost absurd to hear the argument of a Statist, "If you, as
Anarchists, really want to abolish the government... then you'd come to
the elections and vote." Does it sound like an honest philosopher,
seeking to establish theories for the prediction of future events based
on collected data, or does it sound like a cloak-and-dagger politician,
fleecing the herd before modest ambitions?
It would be an interesting world to live in, if the state only existed
at the polls, as Marx asserts. If it were true, that all of government,
that all of this oppression, these wars, these international conflicts
-- all of this exists on that small piece of paper that says,
"Tweedledum or Tweedledee?" After all, according to the Marxian
propositions, besides the voting booth, Marx limits where humanity can
find its government: "the State as such which exists nowhere." Such a
profound contradiction, that at the same time that the Communist
International seeks to establish offices of power in various countries,
they are all under the interesting assumption, that the state simply
does not exist. I am curious what Mr. Marx and his fellows spent decades
trying to capture. Political power naturally does not exist; once a
person votes, the government ceases to operate within their lives. It
would be impossible to take an anti-state action where the government
does not exist. I suppose, then, that Anarchists have only thrown bombs
at voting tents and the like, seeing as this is the sole existence of
the state?
It only takes a second or two to realize that Marx's arguments, and
their conclusions, are ridiculous and contradictory, not only in this
piece, but to the countless multitudes of works this political theorist
has composed. The Anarchists sought to abolish the state where it does
directly effect their lives. This entailed a program of direct action
against any social entity that sought to establish either political,
social, or economic injustice. In order to accomplish this, Anarchists
do what is necessary to put the means of production into the hands of
the workers. The greatest action that can be taken against a corrupt,
but established, state, is to organize the people into autonomous,
mutual cooperatives; when the benefits of civilization can continue to
be realized without the appendage of social injustice, then it is the
people who lose faith in their government and finally end in tearing it
down. That has been the program of the Anarchists, in Spain and
elsewhere. By these actions, are we involved in an area of social life
where the state does not exist, where we cannot take anti-state actions,
where our ability to oppose the government is non-existent? Marx's
assertion, however, is that the state can only be attacked by a vote --
what an absurd contention.
But the Bakuninist members of the International, who were obliged to
reject even the most revolutionary measures if they emanated from the
"State", preferred to support the most preposterous swindlers among the
Intransigents rather than a minister.
-- Karl Marx [Part 2]
The comment made here by the authors Marx and Engels is in reference to
Spain's ruling state, that of Prime Minister Francisco Pi y Margall. Of
particular interest to me, there was the phrase used "even the most
revolutionary measures," inferring that the First Spanish Republic was
breaking every tradition on behalf of human happiness. A revolution
cannot measured in other terms. Pi y Margall's platform included some
Socialist reforms: "a stricter separation of church and state, the
reorganization of the army, reduction of the working day to nine hours,
regulation of child labor, enhancements to the relationship between
business and labor, new laws regarding the autonomy of the regions of
Spain, and a program of universal education." [2] Perhaps to Marx,
regulating child labor can be considered "the most revolutionary
measure." The abolishment of child labor, in the United States, came
about through the publicity attempts of the muckrakers, such as Lewis
Heine. Even though Marx would regard such reformers as Conservative
Socialists,[3] they are responsible for abolishing child labor in the
United States and creating the public consensus against it. It is now
the staple of these bourgeois politicians of the 21st century to abolish
domestic child labor, while Marx's "most revolutionary" party would only
seek to regulate it.
Before any of these platforms could see realization, Pi y Margall
resigned from office under pressure from the Spanish Constituent Cortes,
a committee with the intentions of writing the Federal Constitution. On
June 11, 1873, Estanislao Figueras abdicated his position as prime
minister to Pi Y Margall. The tenure of his office lasted until July 18,
less than a month. In further defense of the "most revolutionary
measures" of Margall, Marx writes that this prime minister "was replaced
by pure republicans like Castelar, undisguised bourgeois, whose primary
aim was to crush the working-class movement." [Part 3] The prime
minister taking power directly after Pi y Margall was Nicolás Salmerón y
Alfonso, who ruled the First Spanish Republic from July 18, 1873 to
September 6, 1873. He resigned in protest of the military's policy of
executing rebels, only to be re-elected several days later. With the aid
of militia and partisans, Emilio Castelar y Ripoll seized control of the
Cortes in Madrid, disarming opposing factions. Salmeron appealed to many
of the reactionary generals, like Pavia, Sanchez, Bregna, and Moriones;
a victory would have been guaranteed, but much of his government was
showing indecision with its loyalties. Castelar assumed the role of
dictator in September of 1873, suspending the Cortes. His primary
concern was militarism; after suppressing cantonal uprisings in Spain,
he struggled to retain control of the revolting colonies. [4] Castelar
resigned on January 2, 1874, when the first, new sitting of the Cortes
refused to listen to his ideas. In Madrid, General Pavia pulled a coup
d'etat, seizing control of the Cortes. Francisco Serrano y Domínguez is
sent for and becomes the new Prime Minister. When General Martinez
Campos entered Valencia in the name of King Alfonso XII of Spain,
Serrano resigned from his position, officially giving power to the
Bourbon Families again. Absolute authority would rule Spain for the
following decades.
The picture of the ruling body for the First Spanish Republic is quite
bleak. Through a series of abdications, transfers, and resignations, all
at the pressures of various political elements, Spain had returned to
its Monarchical origin. In 1873, the greatest threat to the autonomy and
democracy of the Spanish people was the restoration of its previous
political system. The new state, however, failed to enforce the will of
the people. Its operation was strictly a matter of power struggles
between different, opposing forces, few of which had an adequate program
to deal with the serious economic and political turmoil of 19th century
Spain. The greatest block to the emancipation of the Spanish working
class was the failure of this new government to express the will of the
people, the most common flaw of the state. According to the Marxian
program, it should have been enough to capture state power; even though
this happened multiple times on behalf of the people, it wasn't enough
to liberate them. It was the new government that simply handed their own
land and people over as slaves to a minority of privileged elite. The
struggle against an oppressive state and capitalism did not fail in
Spain because the Anarchists somehow failed to support the "republican
government," but it failed because too few were allowed a voice in their
government. This provisional government had been given the simple task
of drawing up a Republican Constitution; after a year of in-fighting, it
surrendered completely and unconditionally to the throne. The Spanish
government was unconnected to the will of the people, allowing this
tragedy to happen.
The workers of Barcelona -- Spain's largest industrial city, which has
seen more barricade fighting than any other city in the world -- were
asked to oppose the armed government force not with arms in their hands,
but with a general strike, that is, a measure directly involving only
individual bourgeois, but not their collective representative -- the
State power....
What the activities of the false International did achieve, however, was
that Barcelona took no part in the cantonal uprising. Barcelona was the
only town whose participation could have provided firm support for the
working-class element, which was everywhere strongly represented in the;
movement, and thus held out the prospect of the workers ultimately
controlling the entire movement. Furthermore, with the participation of
Barcelona, victory would have been as good as won. But Barcelona did not
raise a finger; the workers of Barcelona, who had seen through the
Intransigents and been cheated by the Alliance, remained inactive, thus
allowing the Madrid government to secure the final victory.
-- Karl Marx [Part 2]
At first, Marx declares that the First Spanish Republic has issued the
"most revolutionary measures" concerning the social, economic, and
political condition of the Spanish people. Only one page away, and Karl
Marx radically changes his position: "...Barcelona did not raise a
finger; the workers of Barcelona, who had seen through the Intransigents
and been cheated by the Alliance, remained inactive, thus allowing the
Madrid government to secure the final victory." Should the Anarchists
support the Madrid government and its so-called revolution of the
proletariat? Or on the contrast, when this government is ridden with
police brutality and military rule, should they have raised the call for
violent revolution with the cantonal uprisings? Marx shouldn't have any
disappointment for this group of Bakuninists. The Anarchists of
Barcelona did not side either with the First Spanish Republic when they
opened fire on public crowds, nor did they side with the Cantonalist
uprisings, where in-fighting between republicans lead to many violent
atrocities. In both cases, as admitted by Marx, they sought to voice an
influence in the operations of these provisional governments. It wasn't
long until they realized that the cantonalists and the Spanish
Republicans held no ideals compatible with the Anarchists'. The
Bakuninists did not use armed revolution during the period of the First
Spanish Republic; instead, they appealed to the workers to use social
unrest and disobedience as a means of achieving the interests of the
people.
When the Cantonalist uprisings were holding out at Valencia, should the
workers of Barcelona have come to their aid? The Marxian program
dictates so. After it became apparent that the Cantonalist held no
sympathy for the social revolution, they did more than just expel the
Bakuninists. "...the Intransigents in Seville, during the battle with
the government troops, fired also on their Bakuninist allies." [Part 3]
The cantonal uprisings sought to establish every Spanish county as its
own sovereign state. Anarchists can only support a social reorganization
if the change means less power in authority and more autonomy in the
people. This is the reason why they held sympathies for the cantonalist
uprisings. As Marx quoted Bakunin...
"On the second Sunday in August a Congress was to be held in Valencia,
which, among other things, was to determine the attitude the Spanish
International Federation was to adopt towards the important political
events taking place in Spain since February 11, the day the Republic was
proclaimed. But this nonsensical cantonal uprising, which was such an
abject failure and in which members of the International eagerly took
part in almost all the insurgent provinces, has not only brought the
work of the Federal Council to a standstill by dispersing most of its
members, but has almost completely disorganised the local federations
and, what is worse, exposed their members to the full measure of hatred
and persecution that an ignominiously started and defeated popular
insurrection always entails...." [Part 4]
The Anarchist tendency will align itself with all Libertarian efforts
when it comes to limiting the reigns of authority. This is what drew the
Bakuninists to the Cantonal uprising, but it quickly became clear that
allying with this new military effort would only further debilitate the
political development of Spain. Rousing the workers to violence wouldn't
have accomplished the desired ends. Far from Marx's criticism, the
Cantonalist uprising had very little chance of reclaiming all of Spain.
The only city that was reclaimed by the Cantonalists was Murcia; it
wasn't long until they were fully defeated. To have plunged another city
into the arising Civil War, before the city itself demonstrated a strong
consciousness in cantonalism or armed insurrection, would have been a
planned disaster.
On July 26, Martinez Campos began the attack on Valencia. The revolt
there had been raised by the workers. When the split in the Spanish
International occurred, the real International had the majority in
Valencia, and the new Spanish Federal Council was transferred there.
Soon after the proclamation of the Republic, when revolutionary battles
lay ahead, the Bakuninist workers of Valencia, mistrusting the Barcelona
leaders who cloaked their appeasement policy with ultra-revolutionary
phrases, offered the members of the real International their
co-operation in all local movements. When the cantonal movement started,
both groups, making use of the Intransigents, immediately attacked and
ejected the troops. Who formed the Valencian junta remains unknown, but
from the reports of the English newspaper correspondents it appears that
workers definitely predominated in the junta, just as they did among the
Valencian Volunteers. The same correspondents spoke of the Valencian
insurgents with a respect which they were far from showing towards the
other rebels, who were mostly Intransigents; they praised their
discipline and the order which prevailed in the city, and predicted a
long resistance and a hard struggle. They were not mistaken. Valencia,
an open city, withstood the attacks of Campos' division from July 26 to
August 8, that is longer than the whole of Andalusia.
--Karl Marx [Part 3]
To describe the events which led to the fall of Valencia: "At the end of
the year, when Marshal Serrano left Madrid to take command of the
northern army in the Carlist War, Brigadier Martinez Campos, who had
long been working more or less openly for the king, carried off some
battalions of the central army to Sagunto, rallied to his own flag the
troops sent against him, and entered Valencia in the king's name.
Thereupon the president of the council resigned, and the power was
transferred to the king's plenipotentiary and adviser, Canovas del
Castillo." The Spanish Republic, which had issued "the most
revolutionary measures," transferred power to King Alfonso XII; the
members of the Republican government were unmoved as the monarchy
regained its political power without resistance. The Cantonalist
uprising in Valencia sought to win their war by outliving the siege
Having added a half-hearted Barcelona to the struggle would have been
catastrophic.
As soon as they were faced with a serious revolutionary situation, the
Bakuninists had to throw the whole of their old programme overboard.
First they sacrificed their doctrine of absolute abstention from
political, and especially electoral, activities. Then anarchy, the
abolition of the State, shared the same fate. Instead of abolishing the
State they tried, on the contrary, to set up a number of new, small
states. They then dropped the principle that the workers must not take
part in any revolution that did not have as its aim the immediate and
complete emancipation of the proletariat, and they themselves took part
in a movement that was notoriously bourgeois. Finally they went against
the dogma they had only just proclaimed -- that the establishment of a
revolutionary government is but another fraud another betrayal of the
working class -- for they sat quite comfortably in the juntas of the
various towns, and moreover almost everywhere as an impotent minority
outvoted and politically exploited by the bourgeoisie.
This renunciation of the principles they had always been preaching was
made moreover in the most cowardly and deceitful manner and was prompted
by a guilty conscience, so that neither the Bakuninists themselves nor
the masses they led had any programme or knew what they wanted when they
joined the movement. What was the natural consequence of this? It was
that the Bakuninists either prevented any action from being taken, as in
Barcelona, or drifted into sporadic, desultory and senseless uprisings,
as in Alcoy and Sanlúcar de Barrameda; or that the leadership of the
uprising was taken over by the intransigent bourgeois, as was the case
in most of the revolts. Thus, when it came to doing things, the
ultra-revolutionary rantings of the Bakuninists either turned into
appeasement or into uprisings that were doomed to failure, or, led to
their joining a bourgeois party which exploited the workers politically
in the most disgraceful manner and treated them to kicks into the
bargain.
--Karl Marx [Part 4]
There are quite a few things to respond to here. Marx states that the
cantonal uprising was directed by the Bakuninists, when this uprising
occurred in southern Spain and the Anarchists were active during
Barcelona's General Strike. Everything up to that statement, as has been
verified by various independent encyclopedias, including everything that
Marx has stated thus far, leads one to believe that the Cantonalist
armed insurrection in the south was led by different people and
attitudes than those of the Anarcho-Syndicalists who declared a General
Strike. Marx cites them as directing the uprising and finally, being the
cause of its failure, and when that's not enough, he will blame them for
not being active enough in their campaigns. The Bakuninists had good
reason to vocalize the opinion of autonomy in these newly formed
governmental bodies. The First Spanish Republic was formed out of the
public mistrust for the monarchy, and the Cantonalists sought sovereign
cantons in Spain, giving each county the right to act as though it were
its own nation state. Both of these movements were remarkably young, and
both would die as such. To state that there would be no reason or
purpose to cooperate with these other movements, if there would be
promising results, is simply overly fanatical. Like all of the people's
movements, Anarchism can progress better in a republic than it can in a
dictatorship or aristocracy.
At the founding of the International Workingmen's Association (aka: the
First International), Marx worked with an enormous variety. Followers of
Mazzini, who held a strong, religious patriotism, as well as Blanquists
and Mutualists. Only ten years after its founding, Marx would write of
his previous comrades, "From Blanqui's assumption, that any revolution
may be made by the outbreak of a small revolutionary minority, follows
of itself the necessity of a dictatorship after the success of the
venture. This is, of course, a dictatorship, not of the entire
revolutionary class, the proletariat, but of the small minority that has
made the revolution, and who are themselves previously organized under
the dictatorship of one or several individuals." [5] The Mutualists were
admirers of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, an Anarchist; Marx's opinion of that
group is already clearly demonstrated. The followers of Mazzini had no
interest in a class war, nor did they recognize that there are economic
antagonisms between the classes. Despite this, they were shaking hands
with Karl Marx at the founding of the First International. Marx's
alliance with these to-be political enemies lasted nearly a decade. When
Anarchists cooperated with Republicans and Federalists in Spain, it was
too achieve common and mutual ends. Those relationships were severed
when it became clear that they were not beneficial to the liberation of
the people.
As we know, at the time the split in the International occurred the odds
were in favour of the members of the secret Alliance in Spain; the great
majority of Spanish workers followed their lead. When the Republic was
proclaimed in February 1873, the Spanish members of the Alliance found
themselves in a quandary. Spain is such a backward country industrially
that there can be no question there of immediate complete emancipation
of the working class. Spain will first have to pass through various
preliminary stages of development and remove quite a number of obstacles
from its path. The Republic offered a chance of going through these
stages in the shortest possible time and quickly surmounting the
obstacles. But this chance could be taken only if the Spanish working
class played an active political role.
--Karl Marx [Part 1]
The working-class Spanish that did play an active political role in
Spain ended up handing their government over to the monarchists. Their
new Republic invited King Alfonso XII to return the monarchy to Spain
and the revolution was crushed. It was not a matter of instituting a new
government or a new provisional order. The workers needed to develop
their organization so as to effectively respond to threats to the
community, either by the capitalist class or by authoritarian states. It
was social and economic activity that was going to liberate the workers
from their tyrants. The so-called "obstacles" that blocked the path to
freedom could not be overcome by granting more power to the state. At
best, the First Spanish Republic was nothing more than a military junta,
established on these grounds "for its survival," and the only conclusion
of this amassed power was the return tot he Bourbon Monarchy. The people
do not need heavy industrialization, or the ingrained slavery culture
that comes with capitalism, in order to achieve a social situation where
they are free from economic, social, and political inequity.
Great importance was also attached to the general STRIKE at the Geneva
Congress of the Alliance held on September 1, 1873, although it was
universally admitted that this required a well-formed organisation of
the working class and plentiful funds. And there's the rub. On the one
hand the governments, especially if encouraged by political abstention,
will never allow the organisation or the funds of the workers to reach
such a level; on the other hand, political events and oppressive acts by
the ruling classes will lead to the liberation of the workers long
before the proletariat is able to set up such an ideal organisation and
this colossal reserve fund. But if it had them, there would be no need
to use the roundabout way of a general STRIKE to achieve its goal.
--Karl Marx [Part 2]
First, we are to demand the expansion of the state, and next, we are
asked to fear it. If we can throw revolutionary syndicalism and unionism
out the window on the string that "the governments will not allow it,"
why would any peoples' movement promise actual social change? If Marx
admits that the governments will not allow the people themselves to
organize, then perhaps our battle should not be waged only against the
possessors of capital, but also against the masters of the state.
Socialism alone can validate the war on political economy, but it does
not provide the basic structure of social organization -- just an ideal
to organize upon. Anarchism is the greatest champion of practically
implementing what Bakunin has regarded as Stateless Socialism.
Albors, who had originally promised the workers to remain neutral,
issued a proclamation in which he "insulted and slandered the workers
and sided with the manufacturers thus destroying the rights and the
freedom of the strikers and challenging them to fight". How the pious
wishes of a mayor can destroy the rights and the freedom of the strikers
is not made clear.
--Karl Marx [Part 2]
Marx wrote this piece in 1871 and after three decades of studying
political philosophy, he has no idea how a government might make its
wishes known.
The committee was turned away and as it was leaving the town hall, the
police opened fire on the peaceful and unarmed people standing in the
square. This is how the fight started, according to the report of the
Alliance.
--Karl Marx [Part 2]
At this point, I was perhaps expecting some honesty. Marx could have
redeemed himself with something along the lines of, "For the entirety of
my life, how force and coercion were used by the government in order to
control the population was completely unknown to me. This mayor, denying
the strikers have any rights, and then ordering his police to open fire
on them, is the greatest exception to all of the rules of political
power that we have ever seen. At no point in history has a mayor, or an
elected or appointed authority, has sought to oppress public
organizations, so this shall be the first." The whole of Marx's theory
comes crashing down with the realization of this new fact -- governments
can use force! Only words ago, Marx's philosophical outlet on the state
was government by one hypothetical scenario, "How the pious wishes of a
mayor can destroy the rights and the freedom of the strikers is not made
clear." On the contrary, I'm apt to believe that Marx would have wrote
anything, if it would have discredited the Bakuninists, which at that
time was demonstrating a very strong following apart from the Marxists.
Perhaps the problem with the republic was that it did not grant more
authority, fewer checks, and fewer civil rights, it did not create a
stronger government, as Marx had desired? If history was changed and an
authoritarian regime had been adopted, this alone would not have been
enough to prevent the ruling body from cooperating with the nation's
previously-established, monarchist state. It wouldn't have stopped the
natural corruptibility of power and the behavior patterns of the ruling
elites. The Marxian program for First Spanish Republic would have done
nothing to prevent it from collapsing the way it did.
[1] "Marxism, Freedom, and the State," Bakunin, chapter 3.
[2] Wikipedia, "Francisco Pi y Margall."
[3] Communist Manifesto, Part 3.
[4] Wikipedia, "Emilio Castelar y Ripoll."
[5] "The Program of the Blanquist Fugitives from the Paris Commune,"
First published: in Der Volksstaat, No.73, 26 June 1874.