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Title: Workers’ Organisation
Author: PĂ«tr Kropotkin
Date: 10th and 24th December 1881
Language: en
Topics: organization, labor organizing, workers
Source: Le Revolté
Notes: Translation by James Bar Bowen.

PĂ«tr Kropotkin

Workers’ Organisation

Part I

As bourgeois society becomes more and more chaotic, as States fall

apart, and as one can sense a coming revolution in Europe, we perceive

in the hearts of the workers of all countries an ever increasing desire

to unite, to stand shoulder to shoulder, to organise. In France

particularly, where all workers’ organisations were crushed, dismantled

and thrown to the four winds after the fall of the Commune, this desire

is ever more visible. In almost every industrial town there is a

movement to reach agreements and to unite; and even in the villages,

according to reports from the most trusted observers, the workers are

demanding nothing less than the development of institutions whose sole

purpose is the defence of workers’ rights.

The results that have been achieved in this area over the last three

years have certainly been significant. However, if we look at the

enormity of the task incumbent on the revolutionary socialist party, if

we compare our meagre resources with those available to our adversaries,

if we honestly face up to the work that we still have to do, in order

that, in four or five years’ time, on the day of the revolution, we can

offer a real force capable of marching resolutely towards the demolition

of the old social order—if we take that into account, we have to admit

that the amount of work left to do is still immense and that we have

scarcely begun the creation of a true workers’ movement: the great

working masses are still a long way removed from the workers’ movement

inaugurated three years ago. The collectivists, in spite of the fact

that they give themselves the pretentious name “Workers’ Party,” are

still not seeing the rush of workers to their organisation that they

envisaged when they first launched their electoral campaign; and, as

they lean more and more towards the Radical Party, they lose ground

instead of gaining it. As for the anarchist groups, most of them are not

yet in sustained daily contact with the majority of workers who, of

course, are the only ones who can give the impetus to and implement the

action necessary for any party, whether in the field of theoretical

propaganda and ideas or in the field of concrete political action.

Well, let us leave these people to their illusions, if that is what they

want. We prefer to face up to the task in all its enormity; and, instead

of prematurely announcing our victory, we prefer to propose the

following questions: what do we need to do to develop our organisations

much further than at present? What do we need to do to extend our sphere

of influence to the whole of the mass of workers, with the objective of

creating a conscious and invincible force on the day of the revolution,

in order to achieve the aspirations of the working class?

---

It appears to us that an essential point that has been ignored up till

now but which needs to be explored before we go any further is this: for

any organisation to be able to achieve wider development, to become a

force, it is important for those at the forefront of the movement to be

clear as to what is the final objective of the organisation they have

created; and that, once this objective has been agreed upon—specify a

proposed course of action in conformity with the ends. This prior

reasoning is clearly an indispensable precondition if the organisation

is going to have any chance of success, and essentially all of the

organisations have, up to now, never proceeded differently. Take the

Conservatives, the Bonapartists, the Opportunists, the Radicals, the

political conspirators of previous eras—each one of their parties has a

well-defined objective and their means of action are absolutely in

accordance with this objective.

It would take too long to analyse here the goals and methods of each of

the parties. Therefore, I will explore just one illustrative example

here and let it stand as an example for all. Let us take, by way of

example, the Radical or intransigent party.

Their goal is well defined: the Radicals tell us that they wish to

abolish personal government and to install in France a democratic

republic copied from the US model. Abolition of the Senate, a single

chamber, elected by the simple means of universal suffrage; separation

of Church and State; absolute freedom of the press, of speech and of

association; regional autonomy; a national army. These are the most

important features of their programme. “And will the worker be happier

under this regime or not? And as a result, will he cease to be a

wage-earner at the mercy of his boss?…” These questions do not really

interest them; these things can be sorted out at a later date, they

reply. The social question is reduced in importance to something that

can be settled some time in the future by the democratic State. It is

not a question for them of overturning existing institutions: it is

simply a matter of modifying them; and a legislative assembly could,

according to them, do this easily. All of their political programme can

be implemented by means of decrees, and all that needs to happen—they

say—is that power needs to be wrenched from the hands of those who

currently hold it and passed into the hands of the Radical Party.

This is their goal. Whether it is achievable or not is another question;

but what is important to us is to establish whether their means are in

accordance with their ends. As advocates of political reform, they have

constituted themselves as a political party and are working towards the

conquest of power. Envisaging the realignment of the centre of

governmental power towards a democratic future, with a view to getting

as many Members as possible elected to the Chamber, in local councils

and in all of the government institutions and to become the bigwigs in

these positions of power. Since their enemy is the current

administration, they organise against this administration, boldly

declaring war on it and preparing for it to fall.

Property, in their eyes, is sacrosanct, and they do not wish to oppose

it by any means: all their efforts are directed towards seizing power in

government. If they appeal to the people and promise them economic

reforms, it is only with the intention of overturning the current

government and putting in its place a more democratic one.

This political programme is very definitely not what we are working for.

What is clear to us is that it is not possible to implement real social

change without the regime of property undergoing a profound

transformation. However, while having strong criticisms of this

programme, we have to agree that the means of action proposed by this

party are in accordance with its proposed goals: these are the goals,

and that is the organisation proposing to achieve them!

---

What then is the objective of the workers’ organisation? And what means

of action and modes of organisation should they employ?

The objective for which the French workers wish to organise has only

ever been vaguely articulated up until now. However, there are two main

points about which there definitely remains no doubt. The workers’

Congresses have managed to articulate them, after long discussions, and

the resolutions of the Congresses on this subject repeatedly receive the

approval of the workers. The two points are as follows: the first is

common ownership as opposed to private property; and the second is

affirmation that this change of regime regarding property can only be

implemented by revolutionary means. The abolition of private property is

the goal, and the social revolution is the means. These are the two

agreed points, eloquently summed up, adopted by those at the forefront

of the workers’ movement. The communist-anarchists have honed these

points and have also developed a wider political programme: they believe

in a more complete abolition of private property than that proposed by

the collectivists, and they also include in their goals the abolition of

the State and the spread of revolutionary propaganda. However, there is

one thing upon which we all agree (or rather did agree before the

appearance of the minimum programme) and that is that the goal of the

workers’ organisation should be the economic revolution, the

socialrevolution.

A whole new world opens up in the light of these resolutions from the

workers’ Congresses. The French proletariat thus announces that it is

not against one government or another that it declares war. It takes the

question from a much wider and more rational perspective: it is against

the holders of capital, be they blue, red or white, that they wish to

declare war. It is not a political party that they seek to form either:

it is a party of economic struggle. It is no longer democratic reform

that they demand: it is a complete economic revolution, the social

revolution. The enemy is no longer M. Gambetta nor M. Clemenceau; the

enemy is capital, along with all the Gambettas and the Clemenceaus from

today or in the future who seek to uphold it or to serve it. The enemy

is the boss, the capitalist, the financier—all the parasites who live at

the expense of the rest of us and whose wealth is created from the sweat

and the blood of the worker. The enemy is the whole of bourgeois society

and the goal is to overthrow it. It is not enough to simply overthrow a

government. The problem is greater than that: it is necessary to seize

all of the wealth of society, if necessary doing so over the corpse of

the bourgeoisie, with the intention of returning all of society’s wealth

to those who produced it, the workers with their calloused hands, those

who have never had enough.

This is the goal. And now that the goal has been established, the means

of action are also obvious. The workers declaring war on capital? In

order to bring it down completely? Yes. From today onwards, they must

prepare themselves without wasting a single moment: they must engage in

the struggle against capital. Of course, the Radical Party, for example,

does not expect that the day of the revolution will simply fall from the

sky, so that they can then declare war on the government that they wish

to overthrow. They continue their struggle at all times, taking neither

respite nor repose: they do not miss a single opportunity to fight this

war, and if the opportunity to fight does not present itself, they

create it, and they are right to do so, because it is only through a

constant series of skirmishes, only by means of repeated acts of war,

undertaken daily and at every opportunity that one can prepare for the

decisive battle and the victory. We who have declared war on capital

must do the same with the bourgeoisie if our declarations are not to

constitute empty words. If we wish to prepare for the day of the battle

[and] our victory over capital, we must, from this day onward begin to

skirmish, to harass the enemy at every opportunity, to make them seethe

and rage, to exhaust them with the struggle, to demoralise them. We must

never lose sight of the main enemy: capitalism, exploitation. And we

must never become put off by the enemy’s distractions and diversions.

The State will, of necessity, play its part in this war because, if it

is in any way possible to declare war on the State without taking on

capital at the same time, it is absolutely impossible to declare war on

capital without striking out at the State at the same time.

What means of action should we employ in this war? If our goal is simply

to declare this war, then we can simply create conflict—we have the

means to do this: indeed, they are obvious. Each group of workers will

find them where they are, appropriate to local circumstance, rising from

the very conditions created in each locality. Striking will of course be

one of the means of agitation and action, and this will be discussed in

a later article, but a thousand other tactics, as yet unthought-of and

unexpressed in print, will also be available to us at the sites of

conflict. The main thing is to carry the following idea forward:

The enemy on whom we declare war is capital, and it is against capital

that we will direct all our efforts, taking care not to become

distracted from our goal by the phony campaigns and arguments of the

political parties. The great struggle that we are preparing for is

essentially economic, and so it is on the economic terrain that we

should focus our activities.

If we place ourselves on this terrain, we will see that the great mass

of workers will come and join our ranks, and that they will assemble

under the flag of the League of Workers. Thus we will become a powerful

force which will, on the day of the revolution, impose its will upon

exploiters of every sort.

Part II

In the last issue, Le Révolté showed that a party which proposes a

social revolution as its goal, and which seeks to seize capital from the

hands of its current holders must, of necessity, and from this day

onwards, position itself at the centre of the struggle against capital.

If it wishes that the next revolution should take place against the

regime of property and that the watchword of the next call to arms

should necessarily be one calling for the expropriation of society’s

wealth from the capitalists, the struggle must, on all fronts, be a

struggle against the capitalists.

Some object that the great majority of workers are not sufficiently

aware of the situation imposed upon them by the holders of capital: “The

workers have not yet understood,” they say, “that the true enemy of the

worker, of the whole of society, of progress, and of liberty is the

capitalist; and the workers allow themselves to be drawn too easily by

the bourgeoisie into fighting miserable battles whose focus is solely

upon bourgeois politics.” But if this is true—if it is true that the

worker all too often drops his prey in order to chase shadows; if it is

true that all too often he expends his energies against those who, of

course, are also his enemies, but he does not realise that he actually

needs to bring the capitalist to his knees—then we too are guilty of

chasing shadows, since we have failed to identify the workers’ true

enemies. The formation of a new politicalparty is not the way to bring

the economic question out into the open. If the great majority of

workers is not sufficiently aware of the importance of the economic

question (a fact about which we anarchists remain in no doubt), then

relegating this question itself to the background is definitely not

going to highlight its importance in the eyes of the workers. If this

misconception exists, we must work against it, not preserve and

perpetuate it.

---

Putting this objection to one side, we must now discuss the diverse

characteristics of the struggle against capitalism. Our readers of

course realise that such a discussion should not take place in a

newspaper. It is actually on the ground, among those groups themselves,

with full knowledge of local circumstances and spurred on by changing

conditions that the question of practical action should be discussed. In

The Spirit of Revolt, we showed how the peasants in the last century and

the revolutionary bourgeoisie managed to develop a current of ideas

directed against the nobility and the royals. In our articles on the

Agrarian League in Ireland, we showed how the Irish people have managed

to organise themselves to fight on a daily basis a relentless and

merciless war against the ruling class. Taking inspiration from this, we

must find the means to fight against the boss and the capitalist in ways

appropriate to each locality. What may work perfectly in Ireland may not

work in France, and what may give great results in one country may fail

in another. Moreover, it is not through following the advice of a

newspaper that groups of activists will manage to find the best ways to

fight. It is by posing questions in the light of local circumstances for

each group; it is by discussing in depth; it is by taking inspiration

from events which, at any given moment, may excite local interest, and

by looking closely at their own situation that they will find the

methods of action most appropriate for their own locality.

However, there remains one tactic in the revolutionary struggle about

which Le Révolté is willing to give its opinion. This is not because

this is a superior method, much less the only valid tactic. But it is a

weapon that workers wield in different contexts, wherever they may be,

and it is a weapon that can be drawn at any time, according to

circumstance. This weapon is the strike!

It is, however, even more necessary to speak of it today because, for

some time now, the ideologues and the false friends of the workers have

campaigned covertly against the use of the strike, with a view to

turning the working class away from this form of struggle and

railroading them down a more “political” path. The result of this has

been that recently strikes have broken out all over France, and those

who have inscribed upon their banners that the emancipation of the

workers must be achieved by the workers themselves are now maintaining a

healthy distance between themselves and the struggle being undertaken by

their brothers and sisters; they are also maintaining for themselves a

distance from the subsequent privations suffered by the workers, be

these in the form of the sabres of the gendarmes, the knives of the

foremen or the sentences of the judges.

It is fashionable these days to say that the strike is not a way to

emancipate the worker, so we should not bother with it. Well, let us

just have a closer look at this objection.

Of course, going on strike is not, in itself, a means of emancipation.

It is [only] by revolution, by expropriating society’s wealth and

putting it at the disposal of everyone, that the workers will break

their chains. But does it follow that they should wait with folded arms

until the day of the revolution? In order to be able to make revolution,

the mass of workers must organise themselves, and resistance and the

strike are excellent means by which workers can organise. Indeed, they

have a great advantage over the tactics that are being proposed at the

moment (workers’ representatives, constitution of a workers’ political

party, etc.) which do not actually derail the movement but serve to keep

it perpetually in thrall to its principal enemy, the capitalist. The

strike and resistance funds provide the means to organise not only the

socialist converts (these seek each other out and organise themselves

anyway) but especially those who are not yet converted, even though they

really should be.

Indeed, strikes break out all over the place. However, isolated and

abandoned to their own fate, they fail all too often. What the workers

who go on strike really need to do is to organise themselves, to

communicate among themselves, and they will welcome with open arms

anyone who comes and offers help to build the organisation that they

lack. The task is immense: there is so much work to do for every man and

woman devoted to the workers’ cause, and the results of this

organisational work will of course prove enormously satisfying to all

those who put their weight behind the movement. What is required is to

build resistance associations for each trade in each town, to create

resistance funds and fight against the exploiters, to unify

[solidariser] the workers’ organisations of each town and trade and to

put them in contact with those of other towns, to federate across

France, to federate across borders, internationally. The concept of

workers’ solidarity must become more than just a saying: it must become

a daily reality for all trades and all nations. In the beginning, the

International faced national and local prejudices, rivalry between

trades, and so on; and yes—and this is perhaps one of the greatest

services the International has done for us—these rivalries and these

prejudices were overcome, and we really did witness workers from distant

countries and trades, who had previously been in conflict, now working

together. The result of this, let us not forget, was achieved by

organisations emerging from and owing their very existence to the great

strikes of the time. It is through the organisation of resistance to the

boss that the International managed to gather together more than two

million workers and to create a powerful force before which both

bourgeoisie and governments trembled.

---

“But the strike,” the theoreticians tell us, “only addresses the selfish

interests of the worker.” In the first place, it is not egotism which

drives the worker to strike: he is driven by misery, by the overarching

necessity to raise wages in line with food prices. If he endures months

of privation during a strike, it is not with a view to becoming another

petty bourgeois: it is to avoid dying of starvation, himself, his wife,

his children. And then, far from developing egotistical instincts, the

strike serves to develop the sense of solidarity which emerges from the

very heart of the organisation. How often have we seen the starving

share their meagre earnings with their striking comrades! Just recently,

the building workers of Barcelona donated as much as half their scant

wages to strikers campaigning for a nine-and-a-half hour day (and we

should acknowledge in passing that they succeeded, whereas if they had

followed the parliamentary route, they would still be working eleven or

twelve hours a day). At no time in history has solidarity among the

working classes been practised at such a developed level as during

strikes called by the International.

Lastly, the best evidence against the accusation levelled at the strike

that it is purely a selfish tactic is of course the history of the

International. The International was born from strikes; at root, it was

a strikers’ organisation, right up until the bourgeoisie, aided by a few

ambitious types, managed to draw a part of the Association into

parliamentary struggles. And, at the same time, it is precisely this

organisation, by means of its local sections and its congresses, which

managed to elaborate the wider principles of modern socialism which

today gives us our strength; for—with all due respect to the so-called

scientific socialists—until the present there has not been a single idea

on socialism which has not been expressed in the Congresses of the

International. The practice of going on strike did not hinder different

sections within the International from addressing the social question in

all its complexity. On the contrary, it helped it as well as

simultaneously spreading the wider ideas among the masses.

---

Others have also often been heard to say that the strike does not awaken

the revolutionary spirit. In the current climate, we would have to say

that the opposite is true. There is hardly a strike called these days

which does not see the arrival of troops, the exchange of blows, and

numerous acts of revolt. Some fight the soldiers, others march on the

factories; in 1873 in Spain, the strikers at Alcoy declared the Commune

and fired on the bourgeoisie; [in 1877] at Pittsburgh in the USA, the

strikers found themselves masters of a territory as large as France, and

the strike became the catalyst for a general uprising; in Ireland, the

striking farm workers found themselves in open confrontation with the

State. Thanks to government intervention, the factory rebel becomes a

rebel against the State. Today, he finds ranged before him soldiers who

will tamely obey the orders of their officers to shoot. But the use of

troops to suppress strikes will only serve to “demoralise,” that is to

say, to moralise the soldier; as a result, the soldier will lay down his

arms and refuse to fight against his insurgent brothers.

In the end, the strike itself, the days without work or bread, spent in

these opulent streets of limitless luxury and the vices of the

bourgeoisie, will do more for the propagation of socialist ideas than

all manner of public meetings in times of relative social harmony. Such

is the power of these ideas that one fine day the strikers of Ostrau in

Austria will requisition all the food in the town’s shops and declare

their right to society’s wealth.

---

But the strike, we must be clear, is not the only engine of war in the

struggle against capital. In a strike, it is the workers as a whole who

are taking up the fight; but there is also a role for groups and even

individuals; and the ways in which they may act and be effective can

vary infinitely according to local circumstances and the needs of the

moment and the situation. It would be pointless to analyse these roles

here since each group will find new and original ways to further the

workers’ cause as it becomes active and effective in their own part of

the great labour movement. The most important thing for us to do here is

to agree upon the following principles:

The goal of the revolution is the expropriation of the holders of

society’s wealth, and it is against these holders that we must organise.

We must marshal all of our efforts with the aim of creating a vast

workers’ organisation to pursue this goal. The organisation of

resistance [to] and war on capital must be the principal objective of

the workers’ organisation, and its methods must be informed not by the

pointless struggles of bourgeois politics but the struggle, by all of

the means possible, against those who currently hold society’s

wealth—and the strike is an excellent means of organisation and one of

the most powerful weapons in the struggle.

If we manage, over the course of the next few years, to create such an

organisation, we can be sure that the next revolution will not fail: the

precious blood of the people will not be spilled in vain, and the

worker, currently a slave, will emerge victorious from the conflict and

will commence a new era in the development of human society based on

Equality, Solidarity and Labour.