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Title: Anarchism, Syndicalism and Workers Councils Author: Anarcho Date: June 13, 2019 Language: en Topics: anarcho-syndicalism, workers councils, Soviets, Russian Revolution, Mikhail Bakunin, Pëtr Kropotkin, Source: Retrieved on 24th April 2021 from https://anarchism.pageabode.com/?p=1111
This is a write-up of a talk I gave in Edinburgh in April 2019 on
anarchist ideas on social change and organisation. I have used the
slides I created for the talk as the basis of this write-up, although as
usual I am sure this is not the same as what was said on the night but
close enough. Hopefully this talk gives a useful summary of anarchist
ideas on organisation and their development from the birth of anarchism
to around 1920.
---
First, thank you for coming. As you know, this talk was advertised as
follows:
We know what anarchists are against: capitalism and the State. We know
what anarchists are for: libertarian socialism.
But how to get from one to the other, by means compatible with the ends?
Anarchy is organisation, organisation, organisation.
Here I was sketch the origins of anarchist support for workers’ councils
– a new form of socialist democracy based on elected, mandated and
recallable delegates in both the social and economic spheres. This will
involve discussing various anarchist thinkers along with key
organisations – primarily the First International – and events – such as
the Paris Commune and the Russian Revolutions.
While some like to portray anarchism as dating back many centuries, this
I think misunderstands both its origins and nature. Yes, before 1840
many thinkers and movements had ideas which can be described as
anarchist. This is to be expected, for it would be staggering if those
subjected to the evils produced by the state and property would not
conclude the need to get rid of both and act accordingly.
However, as a named socio-economic theory anarchism dates from the 1840s
and the works of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, the first person to
self-identify as an anarchist. This is where we must start to be
historically accurate – for earlier movements can now respectively be
claimed as anarchist (although a few were attacked as such by their
enemies!) because of Proudhon and that part of the labour and socialist
movement he helped to create. Not, of course, that he was an isolated
intellectual for he was a worker who took an active part in the
socialist movement, with a mutual influence and interaction.
So what is anarchism? These comments from an unpublished 1847 manuscript
by Proudhon summarise its basics well:
“We want legislation of the people by the people, without
representatives;
“government of the people by the people, without that supernatural
person called the prince or the state;
“industrial centralisation, administrative, without hierarchy;
“guarding of the people by the people, without any other army than a
citizen militia;
“justice of the people by the people, without unremovable magistrates;
“education of the people by the people without university monopolies and
without Jesuits;
“finally we want the organisation of labour by the workers, without
capitalists or masters”
While some of the terminology changed – most obviously, the use of
“federalism” to better describe the idea of an “administrative, without
hierarchy” centralisation – the vision remains the foundations of both
Proudhon’s anarchism and subsequent forms.
In What is Property?, Proudhon called his aim the “universal
association” and association – “the organisation of labour by the
workers, without capitalists or masters” – remained a key aspect of his
ideas and those who followed him. Thus we discover him arguing for what
could be now called social and economic dual-power in 1846:
“a war of labour against capital; a war of liberty against authority; a
war of the producer against the non-producer; a war of equality against
privilege […] to combat and reduce power, to put it in its proper place
in society, it is of no use to change the holders of power or introduce
some variation into its workings: an agricultural and industrial
combination must be found”
Thus capitalism had to be challenged and replaced by means of an
economic (non-political) organisation, “an agricultural and industrial
combination.” He repeated this call during the 1848 Revolution, arguing
that “a body representative of the proletariat be formed in Paris […] in
opposition to the bourgeoisie’s representation […] a new society be
founded in the heart of the old society” for the “organisation of
popular societies was the pivot of democracy, the cornerstone of
republican order […] Under the name of clubs […] it is a matter of the
organisation of universal suffrage in all its forms, of the very
structure of Democracy itself.”
This would be the means to create a society of “possessors without
masters” in which “leaders, instructors, superintendents […] must be
chosen from the workers by the workers themselves, and must fulfil the
conditions of eligibility”. He even coined the phrase “Industrial
Democracy” (1857) to describe this vision of workers associations within
an “agricultural-industrial federation”. (1863)
This would now be labelled federal market socialism and would be based
on social-economic association to ensure the “abolition of capitalism
and wage labour, the transformation of property […] governmental
decentralisation, the organisation of universal suffrage […] the
substitution of the contractual regime for the legal regime”. In such a
system, democratic rights would extend to all aspects of life, including
economic relations, for there would “no longer be nationality, no longer
fatherland […] only places of birth. Whatever a man’s race or colour, he
is really a native of the universe; he has citizen’s rights everywhere.”
Thus an anarchist society would be based on free association and free
access, for genuine freedom needed social equality:
“Free association, liberty — whose sole function is to maintain equality
in the means of production and equivalence in exchanges — is the only
possible, the only just, the only true form of society.”
This would be a functional self-management as “each citizen in the
sphere of his industry, each municipal, district or provincial council
within its own territory, is the only natural and legitimate
representative of the Sovereign […] workers to form themselves into
democratic societies, with equal conditions for all members”. Such an
association would be based on the election of delegates and not
representatives for the “choice of talents, the imperative mandate, and
permanent revocability are the most immediate and incontestable
consequences of the electoral principle. It is the inevitable program of
all democracy”
Which raises an obvious question, why not use the State as many
socialists – both then and now – assert? Proudhon was quite clear that
this was not possible for two reasons.
First, the modern State was a bourgeois body which cannot be captured.
It was “nothing but the offensive and defensive alliance of those who
possess, against those who do not possess; and the only part played by
the citizen is to pay the police”. It was structured as it was – a
centralised, unitarian body – for a reason:
“And who benefits from this regime of unity? […] the upper classes […]
bourgeois exploitation under the protection of bayonets. […] the
cornerstone of bourgeois despotism and exploitation”
In short, as he put it in 1846, the State was “inevitably enchained to
capital and directed against the proletariat.”
Second, it was power apart with its own interests. Thus we “do not want
the State, because the State […] no sooner exists than it creates an
interest of its own, apart from and often contrary to the interests of
the people […] it makes civil servants its own creatures, from which
results nepotism, corruption, and little by little to the formation of
an official tribe, enemies of labour as well as of liberty”. The State
was “that alienation of public power for the profit of a few ambitious
men” and so to “concentrate all public powers in the hands of a single
authority […] only created despotism”. It did not empower the many but
always the few for the “President and the Representatives, once elected,
are the masters; all the rest obey.”
So even if the current State was somehow captured or replaced by a new
self-described people’s or workers’ State, then liberation would be
short-lived as a new set of masters – the State officialdom – replaced
the old bourgeois ruling class.
It is perhaps unnecessary to note every “successful” so-called
“socialist” revolution has confirmed this, as has the failure of every
elected so-called “socialist” government to go beyond managing
capitalism.
For those with an appreciation of irony, Proudhon is described as a
“Statesman” in Montparnasse cemetery. He was, after all, an elected
representative in 1848 – before having his parliamentary immunity
stripped due to his prophetic criticisms of President Louis-Napoleon
seeking to become Emperor like his uncle. His account of the 1848
revolution, entitled Confessions of a Revolutionary, summarises his
experiences of isolation and ignorance within the Chamber:
“Since I first set foot on this parliamentary Sinai, I ceased to be in
contact with the masses: by absorbing myself in my legislative work, I
had completely lost view of current affairs […] One has to experience
this isolation called a national assembly to understand how the men who
are the most completely ignorant of the state of a country are nearly
always those who represent it.”
Thus the State, even if we ignore its class and hierarchical nature, was
simply not up to the task of social transformation, new organs were
needed which were better suited – organisations created by the working
class itself.
This confirmed his earlier critique of the State and he reaffirmed the
need for a socialism from below. Indeed, he seems the first to embrace
the term and stress its importance:
“From above […] signifies power; from below signifies the people. […]
the initiative of the masses. […] Revolution on the initiative of the
masses is a revolution by the concerted action of the citizens, by the
experience of the workers, by the progress and diffusion of
enlightenment, revolution by the means of liberty.”
He also critiques those on the left who seek to utilise the state, so
“Louis Blanc represents governmental socialism, revolution by power, as
I represent democratic socialism, revolution by the people. An abyss
exists between us.” This was because “the organisation of labour must
not emanate from the powers-that-be; it ought to be SPONTANEOUS”. It was
only by moving beyond bourgeois (political) democracy and bourgeois
(economic) tyranny can a genuinely free system be created, one in which
“the masses are actually, positively and effectively sovereign: how
could they not be when the economic organism — labour, capital, property
and assets — belongs to them entirely”.
It was with these ideas that French trade unionists travelled to London
and, with British ones, create the International Workers’ Association –
now often called the First International.
I have deliberately put the full name of the First International in
French, as you really cannot understand anarchism and its development
unless you are familiar with the ideas raised by the non-British –
particularly the French-speaking – sections. Indeed, many of the debates
have not been translated and the little which has usually suffers in
translation. So, for example, the official English-translation of the
1868 resolution on collective property completely misses out certain
phrases which show the very obvious influence of Proudhon on its
authors.
This is important, for it is in the French-speaking sections of the
International – France, Belgium, the Jura – that we see the idea of
system of workers’ councils arise. Thus the Report to the Basle Congress
on Resistance Societies in 1868 argued:
“resistance societies be established to prepare for the future and to
ensure as far as possible the present […] how the ideas we have on the
organisation of labour in the future can help us to establish resistance
societies in the present […] labour is organised for the present and the
future, by eliminating wage-labour […] grouping of different trade
unions by town and by country […] forms the commune of the future […]
Government is replaced by the councils of the assembled trades unions
[…] regulating the labour relations that will replace politics”
These ideas soon became the majority perspective within the
International, being championed elsewhere, such as in Spain and Italy.
This also reflected a development in economic perspectives, a change
which is somewhat misrepresented by Marxists seeking an inflated role
for Marx within the Association.
One of the key debates within the International was over collective
ownership, a debate which has all-too-often been portrayed as one in
which Proudhon’s influence is replaced by Marx’s. In reality, these
debates were primarily between those influenced by Proudhon
(“mutualists”) and focused on extending collective ownership to land.
Collective ownership for workplaces was the common position, as noted by
leading collectivist César de Paepe in 1868:
“I am just as much a mutualist as Tolain […] but I do not see that the
collective ownership of land is opposed to the mutualist program”
Tolain, usually considered an orthodox mutualist, was as in favour of
workers’ associations to run industry as de Paepe but hesitated over
applying workers’ associations to the land due to fear of a peasant
backlash similar to that experienced under the Second Republic. Other
mutualists shared this perspective, although Proudhon himself repeatedly
indicated support for collective ownership of both industry and land –
as he put it in 1848:
“under universal association, ownership of the land and of the
instruments of labour is social ownership […] handed over to
democratically organised workers’ associations”
The key difference between the collectivists and Proudhon – other than
their opposition to Proudhon’s patriarchal notions – was that they saw
trade unions as Proudhon’s “agricultural and industrial combination”
while he opposed both strikes and unions. Thus we find Parisian trade
unionist Jean-Louis Pindy arguing in 1868:
“Resistance Societies have already defined the practical application of
the principle of solidarity between workers. It is again to their
influence that emancipation must be achieved through the takeover of
tools, the abolition of bosses, the organisation of credit and exchange,
and the transformation of the social order”
The Belgium section of the International likewise popularised this idea,
with César de Paepe reiterating the next year that the International
“bears social regeneration within itself […] the International already
offers the model of the society to come, and that its various
institutions, with appropriate modifications, will form the future
social order […] the International contains within itself the seeds of
all the institutions of the future”. Eugène Varlin stressed the
importance of this perspective in 1870:
“Unless you want to reduce everything to a centralising and
authoritarian state […] the workers themselves must have the free
disposal of their instruments of labour […] trade associations […] are
the natural elements of the social construction of the future; it is
they who can easily become producer associations”
Sadly, these perspectives are often ignored in favour of the conflict
between Bakunin and Marx, although the former’s influence was very much
dependent on championing the collectivist ideas already raised in the
International before he joined.
So this is the intellectual context for the Bakunin and Marx conflict,
with Michael Bakunin championing Direct Action, Unions and Workers
Councils while for Marx the focus was Political Action, Political
Parties and Parliament. Thus we find Bakunin arguing for a syndicalist
or councilist position:
“Workers, no longer count on anyone but yourselves […] Abstain from all
participation in bourgeois radicalism and organise outside of it the
forces of the proletariat. The basis of that organisation is entirely
given: the workshops and the federation of the workshops […] instruments
of struggle against the bourgeoisie […] The creation of Chambers of
Labour […] the liquidation of the State and of bourgeois society.”
In contrast, Marx sought to move the International into embracing
social-democratic tactics, as summarised later by Engels:
“In every struggle of class against class, the next end fought for is
political power; the ruling class defends its political supremacy […]
its safe majority in the Legislature; the inferior class fights for,
first a share, then the whole of that power, in order to become enabled
to change existing laws in conformity with their own interests and
requirements. Thus the working class of Great Britain for years fought
ardently and even violently for the People’s Charter, which was to give
it that political power.”
Bakunin rightly predicted that such Social Democratic tactics would
produce reformism for “worker deputies, transferred into bourgeois
surroundings and an atmosphere of entirely bourgeois political ideas,
ceasing in fact to be workers by becoming Statesmen, will become
bourgeois […] For men do not make situations, on the contrary it is
situations that make men”. Moreover, Marx ignored the dangers associated
with centralised power for the State equals minority rule, not people
power:
“No state, however democratic […] can ever give the people what they
really want, i.e., the free self-organisation and administration of
their own affairs from the bottom upward […] because every state […] is
in essence only a machine ruling the masses from above, through a
privileged minority of conceited intellectuals, who imagine that they
know what the people need and want better than do the people themselves”
Echoing Proudhon, Bakunin stressed that the State “has always been the
patrimony of some privileged class” and if economic classes are
abolished it simply “becomes the patrimony of the bureaucratic class”.
This meant that Marx’s socialism would be, in reality, the rule of
officialdom, “concentrating in their own hands all […] production […]
under the direct command of state engineers, who will form a new
privileged scientific and political class.” A regime in which the State
would become the sole capitalist, state-capitalism in short.
Thus Bakunin’s opposition to Marx’s “workers’ State” had nothing to do
with not recognising the need for defending a revolution. Indeed, he was
very clear that “to defend the revolution” it was necessity to “form a
communal militia” and “federate […] for common defence.” I mention this
simply because so many Marxists have suggested otherwise.
So, as Kropotkin later noted, modern – revolutionary – anarchism was
born in the International. It was based on three key ideas.
First, direct action and not political action. The International must
have, as Bakunin put it, “at first as its sole basis the exclusively
economic struggle of labour against capital […] only a single path […]
emancipation through practice […] the struggle of the workers in
solidarity against the bosses. It is trades unions, organisation and the
federation of resistance funds.” This meant socialism would be created
“by the development and organisation, not of the political but of the
social (and, by consequence, anti-political) power of the working masses
as much in the towns as in the countryside”.
Second, unions as a means to both fight and replace capitalism. Bakunin
reiterated the position of the Federalist-wing – that is, the majority –
of the International by stressing that the “organisation of trade
sections, their federation […] and their representation by Chambers of
Labour” meant “uniting practice with theory” and “carry the living seeds
of the new social order that is to replace the bourgeois world. They
create not only the ideas but the very facts of the future.”
Third, the general strike as a means to start the revolution. For
Bakunin, as “strikes spread from one place to another, they come close
to turning into a general strike” and this “can result only in a great
cataclysm which forces society to shed its old skin.” However, he also
recognised the need to go beyond simply the withdrawal of labour:
“Liberty can only be created by liberty, by an insurrection of all the
people and the voluntary organisation of the workers from below upward.”
While debates about revolutionary strategies took place in the
International, an actual revolution took place in Paris. It began on
18^(th) of March, after troops refused to fire of civilians on the Butte
of Montmartre. The government evacuated the city and the Central
Committee of the National Guard called elections. Thus the Paris Commune
was created.
Was it a soviet (workers’ council)? Well, the short answer is no but
that has not stopped some who you would think would know better claiming
otherwise. Thus we find John Rees, then of the British SWP, proclaiming
in a so-called theoretical journal that “since Marx’s writings on the
Paris Commune, a cornerstone of revolutionary theory” is “that the
soviet is a superior form of democracy because it unifies political and
economic power.” Sadly, Marx suggested no such thing in The Civil War in
France:
“The Commune was formed of the municipal councillors, chosen by [male!]
universal suffrage in the various wards of the town, responsible and
revocable at short terms.”
So, no, it was not a soviet but it was federalist and bottom-up. As its
famous Declaration to the French People put it, the Commune wanted the
“absolute autonomy of the Commune extended to all the localities of
France, and assuring to each one its full rights, and to every Frenchman
the full exercise of his faculties and abilities as man, citizen and
worker […] Political unity, as Paris wants it, is the voluntary
association of all local initiatives”. As feminist mutualist
Internationalist and communard André Léo put it at the time:
“it affirms more than ever, against Jacobin doctrines, the revolutionary
principle: FEDERATION […] We, citizens of Paris, want to govern,
administer, organise our city as we wish”.
In short, it was a libertarian Revolution. This is why Marx’s The Civil
War in France is his most appealing work, for he is reporting upon a
revolution heavily influenced by Proudhon. We can show this by comparing
Marx’s account from 1871 with Proudhon’s earlier writings:
mandat imperatif (formal instructions) of his constituents”
imperatif], and permanent revocability are […] the inevitable program of
all democracy”
executive and legislative at the same time.”
its committees, to exercise executive power, just the way it exercises
legislative power”
contrary, to be organised by Communal Constitution”
quite restricted part […] concerning federal services […] subordinate
and entrusted to an Assembly […] of delegates”
the means of production, land, and capital, now chiefly the means of
enslaving and exploiting labour, into mere instruments of free and
associated labour.”
that vast federation of companies and societies woven into the common
cloth of the democratic and social Republic […] property restored to its
proper limits […] free disposition of the fruits of labour”
Needless to say, Marx made no mention of the awkward fact almost all of
the Internationalists active within the Commune, whether elected to the
municipal council or not, were mutualists or collectivists. Little
wonder that Bakunin proclaimed that “Revolutionary socialism has just
attempted its first demonstration, both splendid and practical, in the
Paris Commune.”
Yet Bakunin did not simply uncritically embrace the Commune. Like later
anarchists – most obviously, Kropotkin – Bakunin sought to learn lessons
from the revolt.
The key one was that while it was federal outwith, it was centralised
within. It was essentially the municipal council and so the rebels had,
as Bakunin noted, “set up a revolutionary government and army” and
“organise[d] themselves in a Jacobin manner, forgetting or sacrificing
the first conditions of revolutionary socialism.” This caused problems
from the start as the centralised body was unable to meet the challenges
the revolution faced. Thus we find Donny Gluckstein, another member of
the British SWP, admit that the Commune’s council was “overwhelmed” by
suggestions from other bodies, the “sheer volume” of which “created
difficulties” and it “found it hard to cope with the stream of people
who crammed into the offices.” Sadly, he mentioned this confirmation of
the anarchist critique in passing and made no attempt to draw any
conclusions from this.
The second lesson was related to the first, namely the failure of the
Commune within bureaucratic processes. This can best be seen by the
Commune’s Decree on workers associations:
“Workers trade councils are convened to establish a commission of
inquiry […] To compile statistics on abandoned workshops, as well as an
inventory […] To present a report on the practical requisites for the
prompt restarting of these workshops […] by the co-operative association
of the workers who were employed there […] must send its report to the
Communal Commission on Labour and Exchange, which will be required to
present to the Commune […] the draft of a decree […]”
This was written by the person closest to being a Marxist within the
Commune, namely Leó Frankel acting as the Delegate for Labour and
Exchange. So in the face of a major economic crisis which had caused
numerous workshops to close, the Commune’s official response was… a
commission of inquiry to look into drafting a decree so that, at some
stage in the unspecified future, closed workshops may have been reopened
as co-operatives.
Unsurprisingly, anarchists concluded the pressing need for direct action
to expropriate the means of production. As Kropotkin later stressed,
workers will “not wait to expropriate the holders of social capital by a
decree […] They will take possession on the spot and […] organise
themselves in the workshops to continue the work”.
The third lesson was the need for workers’ councils. While there were
community organisations (the clubs) these were pressurising the Commune
Council rather than directly managing public affairs. Economically,
workers needed to take over not just the closed workplaces, but all of
them. In this way the municipal council would be replaced by a
organisation better suited to building socialism, based on the
organisations created by the workers themselves in struggle. Thus, as
Bakunin stressed, the “future social organisation” must be “from the
bottom upwards, by the free […] federation of workers, firstly in their
unions, then in the communes, regions, nations and finally in a great
federation, international” in scope.
The conflict in the International intensified after the bloody
destruction of the Paris Commune by French troops. Communard refugees
fled into exile, with many ending up in the Jura and joining – like
André Léo – the emerging Federalist revolt against the structural and
political changes Marx was pursuing within the International. The most
famous response was the Sonvillier Circular of 1871:
“The future society must be nothing else than the universalisation of
the organisation that the International will give itself. We must
therefore take care to ensure that this organisation is close as
possible to our ideal. How could an egalitarian and free society emerge
from an authoritarian organisation? It is impossible. The International,
embryo of the future human society, must from now on be the faithful
reflection of our principles of federation and liberty, and reject from
its midst any principle tending towards authority, towards
dictatorship.”
The following year saw the Saint-Imier Congress and whose resolutions
reflected the core conclusions of the libertarian-wing of the
International:
“the establishment of an absolutely free economic organisation […] this
federation can only be the outcome of the spontaneous action of the
proletariat itself, of trades unions and autonomous communes […] the
worker can never free himself from age-old oppression unless he replaces
[…the State] with the free federation of all producer groups based upon
solidarity and equality […] The strike […] a product of the antagonism
between labour and capital […] strengthening the workers’ organisation,
and preparing, as a result of ordinary economic struggles, the
proletariat for the great and final revolutionary struggle”
Ultimately, the tactics and structures of the bourgeoise cannot be used
by those seeking to end their rule. André Léo summarised it well: “If we
act like our adversaries, how will the world choose between them and
us?”
Which brings me to Peter Kropotkin, who joined the International in
1872. Rejoining it after escaping a Tsarist prison he soon became a
leading advocate for the ideas of its federalist wing. While he played a
key role in the rise of libertarian communism within anarchist circles,
in terms of both strategy and tactics he remained committed to the ideas
popularised by Bakunin. As he summarised in 1913’s Modern Science and
Anarchy:
“what means can the State provide to abolish this [capitalist] monopoly
that the working class could not find in its own strength and groups?
[…] Could its governmental machine, developed for the creation and
upholding of these [capitalist] privileges, now be used to abolish them?
Would not the new function require new organs? And these new organs
would they not have to be created by the workers themselves, in their
unions, their federations, completely outside the State?”
Like the Federalist-wing of the International, he advocated syndicalism
before the word.
Thus the expression “direct struggle against capital” appears repeatedly
in his works across the decades. He saw, to use his words from 1881, the
need to build “a force that will crush capital, come the day of
revolution: the revolutionary trades association. Trades sections,
federations embracing all the workers in the same trade, federation of
all the trades of the locality, of the region […] constitute the
structures of the revolutionary army”. This was key, for “to make
revolution, the mass of workers must organise themselves, and resistance
and the strike are excellent means by which workers can organise.” Thus
the need to “build resistance associations for each trade in each town
[…] federate across France […] federate across borders”.
Unsurprisingly, he also argued for the general strike to start a
revolution and expropriation to ensure its success. The London Dock
Strike of 1889 saw the power of the general strike and “the day when
those anarchists who exhaust themselves in empty discussions will act
[…] the day when they will work amongst the workers to prepare the
stopping of work” then “they will have done more to prepare the social,
economic, Revolution, than […] the socialist party.” This was to be no
passive withdrawal of labour, but an occupation for workers “will not
wait for orders from above before taking possession of land and capital.
They will take them first, and then ― already in possession of land and
capital ― they will organise their work.“
Like Bakunin, he exposed “the fallacy of a ‘One-day Revolution’” – not
least because we build the new world by fighting the old. Thus unions,
he noted in 1906, are “natural organs for the direct struggle with
capital and for the organisation of the future order — organs that are
inherently necessary to achieve the workers’ own goals”. Also,
revolutions are complex and difficult events – for the social revolution
was no overnight affair:
“an uprising can overthrow and change a government in one day, while a
revolution needs three or four years of revolutionary convulsion to
arrive at tangible results […] if we should expect the revolution, from
its earliest insurrections, to have a communist character, we would have
to relinquish the possibility of a revolution”
The revolution meant the creation of new forms of social organisation,
ones better suited that the State to involve the masses in the task of
transforming and running society. Indeed, to “make a revolution it is
[…] necessary that after the risings there should be left something new
in the institutions, would permit new forms of life to be elaborated and
established.” The need was to “smash the State and rebuild a new
organisation starting with the very foundations of society—the liberated
village commune, federalism, groupings from simple to complex, the free
workers union”
This would of course also mean the “mutual protection against
aggression, mutual aid, territorial defence” – a free society would
create both self-managed groupings to eliminate rule by the few (whether
they were elected or not) and the means to fight attempts to recreate
it, whether from within or outwith.
The next raising of the idea of workers’ organisations as the means to
fight and replace capitalism appeared in North America, with the
International Working People’s Association. As leading member Albert
Parsons put it:
“Trades Unions [are] the embryonic group of the future free society […]
an autonomous commune in the process of incubation. The Trades Union is
a necessity of capitalistic production, and will yet take its place by
superseding it under the system of universal free co-operation”
This was echoed by others in the association, including his wife Lucy
Parsons: “We hold that the granges, trade-unions, Knights of Labor
assemblies, etc., are the embryonic groups of the ideal anarchistic
society”.
The links with the libertarian wing of the First International are
clear. However, some claim that they were not Anarchists but
Syndicalists. Carolyn Ashbaugh, in her extremely flawed Lucy Parsons:
American Revolutionary, seems to be the first to claim this, asserting
that they were “syndicalists […] they had given up political work for
work in the unions which […] would provide the social organisation of
the future”. Given that this was the position of Bakunin and Kropotkin,
we can easily dismiss this claim as being based on little more than
ignorance of anarchism – as confirmed by Ashbaugh proclaiming in all
seriousness that Kropotkin was the “gentle anarchist theoretician of
non-violence”!
Some, not to be undone, go further and claim they were not Anarchists
but Marxists. For example, James Green in his book Death in the
Haymarket proclaimed that the Chicago Internationalists “turned away
from electoral competition and adopted Karl Marx’s strategy of
organising workers […] building class-conscious trade unions as a basis
for future political action.” Enough has been said to show that this was
Bakunin’s position, not Marx – an awkward fact which can be seen from
Marx’s own words:
“Bakunin’s programme […] The working class must not occupy itself with
politics. They must only organise themselves by trades-unions. One fine
day, by means of the Internationale they will supplant the place of all
existing states.”
So if you cannot bring yourself to believe Bakunin, you can fall back on
Marx and his mocking dismissal of the strategy later adopted by the
Chicago Anarchists.
So by the time revolutionary syndicalism (usually shortened to just
syndicalism in English) became better known internationally, most of its
key elements had long been advocated by anarchists. As such, the
all-too-common suggestion that it arose in the mid-1890s after the
failure of “Propaganda by the deed” is false. This flawed perspective
can, for example, be found in George Woodcock’s Anarchism:
“from 1881 to 1894 had been a time of isolation […] anarchists […]
sought the way to a millennium in desperate acts […] The period from
1894 […] saw a fruitful equilibrium between the visionary and the
practical […] Anarcho-syndicalism […] showed anarchism seeking
constructive solutions.”
Yet we find Kropotkin arguing for economic direct action in 1881:
“We have to organise the workers’ forces ― not to make them into a
fourth party in Parliament, but in order to make them a formidable
MACHINE OF STRUGGLE AGAINST CAPITAL. We have to group workers of all
trades under this single purpose: “War on capitalist exploitation!” And
we must prosecute that war relentlessly, day by day, by the strike, by
agitation, by every revolutionary means.”
He likewise argued for unions to organise production years before
syndicalism raised the same notion, for example in 1892 when he rightly
argued that “[n]o one can underrate the importance of this labour
movement for the coming revolution. It will be those agglomerations of
wealth producers which will have to reorganise production on new social
bases. […] They – the labourers, grouped together ― not the politicians”
Echoing Kropotkin’s words, Louise Michel in 1890 also argued for the
“general strike, whose purpose was to destroy capitalism and usher in
world liberty”.
Thus the ideas associated with syndicalism in the mid-1890s had been
raised by anarchists in the 1860s, 1870s and 1880s – that the
organisations created by workers in their economic and social struggle
against capitalism would form the structural base of the system which
would replace it.
The Russian Revolution of 1905 saw this idea develop in a new way, in
the shape of workers’ councils or soviets. These were made up of
elected, mandated and recallable delegates (or deputies) from workplaces
and organised the general strikes which brought the Tsarist regime to
its knees.
Faced with these spontaneous organs, the Bolshevik reaction is telling.
Simply put, they demanded that the soviet adopt a Social-Democratic
program or disband. In the words of the St. Petersburg group:
“only a strong party along class lines can guide the proletarian
political movement and preserve the integrity of its program, rather
than a political mixture of this kind, an indeterminate and vacillating
political organisation such as the workers council represents and cannot
help but represent.”
In other words, the soviets could not reflect workers’ interests because
they were elected by… the workers!
When Lenin returned from exile, he managed to get the Bolsheviks to
soften their hostility to the soviets. However, this was purely
instrumental for, as he put it in 1907, the Bolsheviks should
“participate […] provided this is done on strict Party lines for the
purpose of developing and strengthening the Social-Democratic Labour
Party […] if Social-Democratic activities among the proletarian masses
are properly, effectively and widely organised, such institutions may
actually become superfluous”.
The Anarchist reaction was completely different, with Kropotkin arguing
that “the workers’ Council […] very much reminds us of the Central
Committee which preceded the Paris Commune of 1871, and it is certain
that workers across the country should organise on this model […] these
councils represent the revolutionary strength of the working class.”
This is confirmed by historian Paul Avrich:
“Syndicalists [….] regarded the soviets […] as admirable versions of the
bourses du travail, but with a revolutionary function added to suit
Russian conditions […] the soviets were to act as nonpartisan labour
councils improvised ‘from below’”
Indeed, the soviet and the trades council (the British equivalent of the
bourses du travail or the Chambers of Labour advocated in the
International by Bakunin amongst others) had distinct similarities. Both
were councils made up of delegates elected from the workplace.
Moreover, while the Bolsheviks – like other Marxists – saw the immediate
goal of the revolution as political in nature (a bourgeois republic),
anarchists saw the need to raise socio-economic demands so that working
class people would made the most of the opportunity. To quote Kropotkin:
“The land ― to the peasant; the factory, the workshop, the railway and
the rest ― to the worker. And everywhere the Commune […] taking into its
hands the economic life of the people.”
It would take 12 years before the Bolsheviks came – or paid lip-service
– to similar conclusions.
After the women-led protests brought down the Tsar in February 1917, the
soviets were recreated – this time with delegates elected from the
troops. Both wings of the Social-Democratic party, Bolsheviks and
Mensheviks, repeated their positions of 1905, until Lenin returned from
exile and reformulated Marxism in the April Theses and State and
Revolution. He won over his party, in spite of opposition from its
bureaucracy, to the idea of the soviets as the basis of a new “workers’
State,” which would be modelled on the Paris Commune.
This new State would ensure the abolition of “parliamentarianism” by the
fusion of legislative and executive functions in soviets, with “all
officials, without exception, to be elected and subject to recall at any
time” and the abolition of the standing army by the “armed masses,” with
no “special bodies of armed men”. This would secure “an immense
expansion of democracy […] for the poor, democracy for the people”.
By October 1917, the party felt confident of enough support to seize
power (“the seizure of power through the soviets,” to use Trotsky’s
later summary of Lenin’s position in Lessons of October). Yet, this
event saw the immediate creation of the Council of People’s Commissars,
an executive over the Soviet Congress, which, four days later,
unilaterally gave itself legislative power. As a Bolshevik statement put
it, “a purely Bolshevik government” was “impossible to refuse” as “a
majority at the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets” had “handed
power over to this government”.
So much for “all power to the soviets” modelled on the Paris Commune –
the promises Lenin made in State and Revolution did not survive the
night! Subsequent events followed the same pattern, with the soviets
quickly becoming marginalised in new, centralised State built by the
Bolsheviks on the pattern advocated by Marx in 1850:
“a single and indivisible […] republic […] the most determined
centralisation of power in the hands of the state authority […] the path
of revolutionary activity […] can proceed with full force only from the
centre”
Unsurprisingly, as historian Carmen Sirianni summarised, “[e]ffective
power” in the soviets “relentlessly gravitated to the executive
committees, and especially their presidia. Plenary sessions became
increasingly symbolic and ineffectual.”
Simply put, it was the so-called “Soviet Power” versus the power of the
soviets, of the Bolshevik party and its State against the working class
and its ability to manage society. This is shown when the Bolsheviks
started to lose influence in the spring of 1918. While initially having
popular support (and so October can be classed as a revolution, of
sorts, rather than a coup), the failure of the new regime to tackle the
mounting problems facing Russia saw workers turn away from them. This
was expressed in soviet elections and – as historian Israel Getzler
recounts – “the Bolsheviks felt constrained to dissolve Soviets or
prevent re-elections where Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries had
gained majorities”. Historian Alexander Rabinowitch summarises events in
Petrograd:
“demands from below for the immediate re-election […saw] new regulations
[…] to help offset possible weaknesses [in] electoral strength in
factories […] the makeup of the new soviet was that numerically decisive
representation was given to agencies in which the Bolsheviks had
overwhelming strength […] Only 260 of roughly 700 deputies in the new
soviet were to be elected in factories, which guaranteed a large
Bolshevik majority in advance.”
Thus, to secure “Soviet power” (i.e., Bolshevik rule), the soviets were
systematically packed, gerrymandered and disbanded. This reached its
climax at the Fifth All-Russian Congress of Soviets at the start of July
1918, where Rabinowitch shows “electoral fraud gave the Bolsheviks a
huge majority of congress delegates […] Bolsheviks delegates whose right
to be seated was challenged by the Left SR minority in the congress’s
credentials commission.” Denied of their majority, the Left-SR
leadership assassinated German Ambassador to provoke “revolutionary war”
– they were quickly repressed, and joined the Mensheviks and Right-SRs
in being expelled from the soviets.
So while many anarchists stress the Kronstadt uprising of 1921 as
marking the end of the revolution, this is not the case. Indeed, the key
struggles over soviet democracy occurred three years earlier – as can be
seen from the fact that Kronstadt’s soviet was first disbanded by the
Bolsheviks on 9 July 1918 in the wake of the Left SR “revolt,” not after
its bloody crushing in March 1921.
The fate of the soviets reflects the fate of the Revolution.
By July 1918, the regime was a de facto one-party dictatorship and soon
this reality was reflected in the ideology of the ruling elite. Thus we
find ex-anarchist Victor Serge later lamenting that “at the start of
1919 I was horrified to read an article by Zinoviev […] on the monopoly
of the party in power.” It must be noted, as he failed to do, that at
the time he happily defended this as a necessity for every revolution in
the anarchist press, urging libertarians to join him in recognising
this.
The onslaught was not limited to the Soviets, for the armed forces
Trotsky proclaimed in March 1918 that “the principle of election is
politically purposeless and technically inexpedient, and it has been, in
practice, abolished by decree.” A secret police force, the Cheka, had
already been created in December 1917. Thus within a few months the new
regime had its own “special bodies of armed men,” something State and
Revolution had explicitly rejected. Unsurprisingly, these “special
bodies” were soon being used like all previous ones – a secure minority
rule by repressing the waves of worker and peasant protests and strikes
that occurred from the spring of 1918 onwards.
A similar authoritarian process occurred in the economy. The Bolsheviks
established the Supreme Economic Council which was, as libertarian
socialist Maurice Brinton notes, “widely acknowledged by the Bolsheviks
as a move towards ‘statisation’ […] of economic authority.” It began “to
build, from the top, its ‘unified administration’ of particular
industries”. It “gradually took over” the Tsarist state agencies such as
the Glakvi “and converted them […] into administrative organs subject to
[its] direction and control.” In the workplace, capitalist social
relations were imposed from April 1918 onwards, with Lenin arguing for
“[o]bedience, and unquestioning obedience at that, during work to the
one-man decisions of Soviet directors […] vested with dictatorial
powers.”
In addition, this political and economic centralisation simply resulted
in “All Power to the Soviets” becoming “All Power to the Bureaucracy” as
– in the words of historian Richard Sakwa – the “old state’s political
apparatus was ‘smashed,’ but in its place a new bureaucratic and
centralised system emerged with extraordinary rapidity […] As the
functions of the state expanded so did the bureaucracy”.
The creation of a party dictatorship on the ruins of the soviets was not
seen as an issue at the time by leading Bolsheviks. Indeed, they were
quite happy to proclaim that this was an inevitable aspect of any
revolution, one to be followed elsewhere. Thus Zinoviev at the Second
Congress of the Communist International in 1920 stated:
“Today, people like Kautsky come along and say that in Russia you do not
have the dictatorship of the working class but the dictatorship of the
party. They think this is a reproach against us. Not in the least! We
have a dictatorship of the working class and that is precisely why we
also have a dictatorship of the Communist Party. The dictatorship of the
Communist Party is only a function, an attribute, an expression of the
dictatorship of the working class […] the dictatorship of the
proletariat is at the same time the dictatorship of the Communist Party”
Lenin, likewise, argued this in ‘Left-Wing’ Communism: An Infantile
Disorder written expressly for that Congress. He praised the “non–Party
workers’ and peasants’ conferences” as these allowed the party “to be
able to observe the temper of the masses, come closer to them, meet
their requirements”. He also noted that the “district congresses of
Soviets are democratic institutions, the like of which even the best of
the democratic republics of the bourgeois world have never known,” yet
failed to ponder why, if that were true, the former were needed… Perhaps
unsurprisingly, as with the soviets in early 1918, these conferences
were soon disbanded when opposition started to be raised within them.
Not that Lenin was too bothered by the lack of genuine democratic
institutions, for he lectured the world’s revolutionaries that Russia
was “directed by a Central Committee of nineteen […] This, it would
appear, is a full-fledged ‘oligarchy’. No important […] question is
decided by any state institution […] without the guidance of the Party’s
Central Committee.” From this he concluded that “all this talk about
‘from above’ or ‘from below’, about the dictatorship of leaders or the
dictatorship of the masses, etc., as ridiculous and childish nonsense”.
Yes, when you are at the top it may seem “nonsense” but for those at the
bottom – the workers and peasants – the difference is vital. Still, even
the rise of Stalinism did not stop Trotsky proclaiming in 1936 that the
“revolutionary dictatorship of a proletarian party […] is an objective
necessity”!
Needless to say, anarchists and syndicalists across the world rejected
these lessons, agreeing with Kropotkin that the Bolsheviks had simply
shown “how not to introduce communism”. As Emma Goldman later
summarised, the regime was “absolute despotism politically and the
crassest form of state capitalism economically” – both under Stalin and
Lenin.
Goldman saw first-hand “the inefficiency of the centralised bureaucratic
machine […] Moscow had ordered [these products] made […] and six months
already had passed without the ‘central authorities’ making any effort
to distribute […] one of the countless examples of the manner in which
the Moscow system ‘worked,’ or, rather, did not work.” Thus, to use
Kropotkin’s words, the “usual vices of every centralised State gnaw away
at this administration, the mass of the people is excluded from
reconstruction, and the dictatorial powers of the communist bureaucrats,
far from alleviating the evils, only aggravate them.”
The cause of the problem lay not in civil war or foreign intervention
(Bolshevik authoritarianism had started long before either) but rather
in Bolshevik ideology and the structures it favoured. Thus, Goldman
argued, “the Communists began their process of elimination […] of all
independent organisations. They were either subordinated to the needs of
the new State or destroyed altogether.” This undermined “the Soviets,
the trade unions and the cooperatives — three great factors for the
realisation of the hopes of the Revolution.” Political and economic
centralisation combined with the Bolshevik desire for power ensured the
failure of the revolution, a failure not to create an immediate
socialist “utopia” – as some claim anarchists think – but rather a
failure to build the beginnings of socialism. As Goldman stressed, such
“criticisms [of her critique] would be justified had I come to Russia
expecting to find Anarchism realised […] I do not therefore expect
Anarchism to follow in the immediate footsteps of centuries of despotism
and submission” but rather the “hope to find […] the beginnings of the
social changes for which the Revolution had been fought.”
This had not happened. The promise of the revolution, its vision of a
council system in which working people could manage their own affairs,
was crushed under a regime which paid lip-service to it.
As can be seen, revolutionary Anarchism has always been “syndicalist”.
Hence Kropotkin’s comments from his justly famous article on Anarchism
from The Encyclopaedia Britannica:
“since the foundation of the International Working Men’s Association in
1864–1866, [the anarchists] have endeavoured to promote their ideas
directly amongst the labour organisations and to induce those unions to
a direct struggle against capital, without placing their faith in
parliamentary legislation.”
Anarchists had long seen workers’ councils – under various names – as
the means of both fighting and replacing capitalism and its State. They
would be the new organs required for the new functions a free society
needed. This a “Soviet State” is a contradiction in terms for, as
Kropotkin noted, the State “cannot take this or that form at will” for
it is “necessarily hierarchical, authoritarian—or it ceases to be the
State.” Hence the need for a new form of social organisation, one based
on the oppressed own groups created in our struggle against
exploitation. As Bakunin summarised:
“Alliance of all labour associations […] will constitute the Commune […]
delegates […] invested with binding mandates and […] revocable at all
times […] found the federation of insurgent associations, communes and
provinces […] organise a revolutionary force with the capacity of
defeating the reaction”
The history recounted above shows that Anarchism has been vindicated
time and again. The debates within the International between Bakunin and
Marx confirmed the former was correct.
Electioneering confirmed Bakunin’s predictions, as Rudolf Rocker
memorably summarised in his classic book Anarcho-Syndicalism:
“Participation in the politics of the bourgeois States has not brought
the labour movement a hair’s-breadth nearer to Socialism […] Socialism
has almost been completely crushed and condemned to insignificance […]
destroyed the belief in the necessity of constructive Socialist
activity, and, worse of all, the impulse to self-help, by inoculating
people with the ruinous delusion that salvation always comes from above”
The Russian Revolution likewise confirmed Bakunin’s critique, showing
the “dictatorship of the proletariat” in practice is simply “the
dictatorship over the proletariat.” The State evolved to secure minority
rule, it cannot be used to end it. A new form of social organisation is
needed.
In short, history shows that Rocker was right: “Everything for the
councils or soviets! No power above them!”