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Title: Reclaiming Syndicalism Author: Lucien van der Walt Date: May 2014 Language: en Topics: syndicalism, history, Spanish revolution, South Africa, labor movement Source: Retrieved on 26th June 2021 from https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/issue/view/121 Notes: van der Walt, Lucien (2014) âReclaiming Syndicalism: From Spain to South Africa to Global Labour Today,â Global Labour Journal: Vol. 5: Iss. 2, p. 239â252. Available at: http://digitalcommons.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/vol5/iss2/10
ABSTRACT: Events like the 2012 Marikana police massacre of miners in
South Africa bring into sharp relief core features of todayâs
crisis-ridden, inequitable world order, wherein labour and human rights
abuses multiply in a vicious race-to-the-bottom. Union politics remain
central to developing responses to this system. But unions, like other
popular movements, face the core challenge of articulating an
alternative, transformative vision â especially given the crisis of
social democratic, Marxist-Leninist and nationalist approaches.
This paper engages debates on options for the broad working class â and,
showing the limitations of business unionism, social movement unionism,
and political unionism â suggests much can be learned from anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalism, both historic and current. This is a
tradition with a surprisingly substantial, impressive history, including
in the former colonial world; a tradition envisaging anti-bureaucratic,
bottom-up trade unions as key means of educating and mobilising workers,
and of championing the economic, social and political struggles of the
broader working class, independent of parliamentary politics, party
tutelage and the state; and aiming, ultimately, at transforming society
through union-led workplace occupations that institute self-management
and participatory economic planning, abolishing markets, hierarchies and
states â a programme substantially and successfully implemented in the
remarkable Spanish Revolution of 1936â1939, also discussed in the paper.
The paper closes by suggesting the need for labour studies and
industrial sociology to pay greater attention to labour traditions
besides business unionism, social movement unionism, and political
unionism.
Union politics remain central to the new century. It remains central
because of the ongoing importance of unions as mass movements,
internationally, and because unions, like other popular movements, are
confronted with the very real challenge of articulating an alternative,
transformative vision. There is much to be learned from the historic and
current tradition of anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism. This is a
tradition with a surprisingly substantial and impressive history,
including in the former colonial world; a tradition that envisages
anti-bureaucratic and bottom-up trade unions as key means of educating
and mobilising workers, and of championing the economic, social and
political struggles of the broad working class, independent of
parliamentary politics and party tutelage; and that aims, ultimately, at
transforming society through union-led workplace occupations that will
institute self-management and participatory economic planning,
abolishing markets, hierarchies and states.
This contribution seeks, firstly, to contribute to the recovery of the
historical memory of the working class by drawing attention to its
multiple traditions and rich history; secondly, to make a contribution
to current debates on the struggles, direction and options for the
working class movement (including unions) in a period of flux in which
the fixed patterns of the last forty years are slowly melting away;
thirdly, it argues that many current union approaches â among them,
business unionism, social movement unionism, and political unionism â
have substantial failings and limitations; and finally, it points to the
need for labour studies and industrial sociology to pay greater
attention to labour traditions besides business unionism, social
movement unionism, and political unionism.
To do this, this paper considers what progressive trade unions can learn
from an engagement with the anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist
tradition â especially given the current crisis of social democratic,
Marxist-Leninist and nationalist approaches. Worldwide, unions are
grappling with the challenges posed by todayâs crisis-ridden,
inequitable world, in which labour and human rights abuses multiply in a
vicious race-to-the-bottom. On the other hand, however, unions are
haunted by the failure of the Keynesian welfare state, by the collapse
of nationalist models like import-substitution-industrialisation, and by
the implosion of the Soviet model.
This situation was recently brought into sharp relief in post-apartheid
South Africa, where much hope had been placed in the ruling African
National Congress (ANC), to which the Congress of South African Trade
Unions (COSATU), and the South African Communist Party (SACP), are
formally allied. Strikes in a mining sector based on cheap labour were
marked by union schisms and, in August 2012, by the police massacre of
34 workers at Marikana.
Events such as these, and ongoing frustration with ANC policies, were
the backdrop for momentous decisions by COSATUâs biggest affiliate, the
335,000-strong, radical National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa
(NUMSA). In December 2013, it rebelled against COSATU resolutions by
breaking with both parties, its general-secretary Irvin Jim stating âIt
is clear that the working class cannot any longer see the ANC or the
SACP as its class allies in any meaningful senseâ (Letsoalo and
Mataboge, 2013). NUMSA, with roots in the independent 1980s trade union
left (the âworkeristsâ), and, more recently, a formal commitment to
Marxism-Leninism, has supported the ANC programme since 1987.
In charting a way forward for 2014, however, NUMSA has stopped short of
simple answers, choosing instead an open-ended process of building a
âmovement for socialismâ and a âunited frontâ of popular movements.
NUMSA has started to pay more attention to its âworkeristâ past, while
leaving its future options open. This openness signals, at least in
part, a cautious and potentially innovative approach: post-apartheid
South Africa is littered with failed attempts to form left alternatives.
Significantly, however, the union has rejected ties with the new
Economic Freedom Fighters party: its âcentralised, commandistâ structure
and corrupt leaders were deemed incompatible with NUMSAâs traditions of
bottom-up decision-making and anti-capitalism (âEconomic Freedom
Fighters,â in NUMSA, 2013).
But what does a âmovementâ for radical change mean in the 21^(st)
century? If the state, including the nominally leftwing ANC state, has
proved so dangerous and unreliable an ally for organised labour, is it
possible to recover union traditions that are radical, even
anti-capitalist, yet autonomous of state power? Answering such a
question requires, I would suggest, critically examining a broad range
of experiences, and I would further suggest that an engagement with
syndicalism would be especially fruitful.
The syndicalist tradition has recently been the subject of several
important works and a rapidly growing scholarship (notably Damier, 2009;
Darlington, 2008; Ness, 2014), which has also made some important
organizing breakthroughs. It influences, for example, sectors of the
Solidarity-Unity-Democracy unions in France (SUD, Solidaires Unitaires
DĂ©mocratiques) and parts of the Italian COBAS (Comitati di Base,
âcommittees of the baseâ). In Spain, meanwhile, the anarchosyndicalist
General Confederation of Labour (CGT) represented in 2004 around two
million workers through the workplace elections (Alternative
Libertariare, 2004), making it that countryâs third largest federation.
Todayâs CGT is one of the several important heirs of the classical
Spanish anarchist movement which, centred on the National Confederation
of Labour, or CNT, launched in the 1930s one of the most ambitious
attempts to reshape society ever undertaken. This experience, which
built upon decades of building a counter-hegemonic consciousness and
movement, and years of careful reflection, planning and militant
struggle, saw thousands of workplaces and millions of acres of land
placed under worker and peasant self-management, the radical
democratisation of the economy and a transformation of daily life,
including gender relations. As a concrete example of this syndicalist
praxis and its relevance to current union renewal, this paper will pay
close attention to the Spanish Revolution of 1936â1939.
A core reason for reclaiming the syndicalist tradition is that it helps
address the great challenge of today, for unions as for other popular
movements. The great challenge is not developing better organising
strategies. It is the great challenge of developing a vision of social
change that fundamentally shifts wealth and power to the popular
classes, and a commensurate strategy to achieve this vision above all.
It is at the level of vision that organized labour currently flounders.
In terms of numbers and organising, unions viewed globally are actually
doing fairly well â this despite major challenges and some real defeats.
Union density remains substantial in many Western countries, especially
in the state sector (Connolly, 2008: 18). Unions have also shown
resilience, even growth, of Africa, Asia, and Latin America (Pillay and
van der Walt , 2012), where they are often âone of the very few societal
organisationsâ with a âsizeable constituency, country-wide structures
and the potential for mobilizing members on social or political mattersâ
(Schillinger, 2005: 1). Many unions can mobilise substantially more
people than their formal membership (for example, The Economist, 2006).
The new International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) and the
creative use by unions of International Framework Agreements (IFAs) show
innovative approaches to organising neglected sectors. Militant,
left-wing trade unionism continues to exist, including formations
influenced by anarchism and revolutionary syndicalism, and by other
traditions including classical Marxism.
The very successes of unions in winning gains in wages and working
conditions, and in areas of civil and political rights and social
justice, inevitably pose a larger question: how to move from defensive
and partial struggles to a larger, transformative project that can
fundamentally change the balance of power and wealth in society? Without
such a change, every gain by working and poor people is under continual
threat, for the simple reason that they are a subordinate, disempowered
class in a social order geared against them â a system that does not
operate in their interests, and that only makes concessions when forced
to do so.
But what, exactly, does a progressive project mean, after the failures
of the big projects of social democracy, Marxism-Leninism, and
import-substitution-industrialisation? For example, given its numbers,
its power and its deep popular roots, NUMSAâs commitment to a âmovement
for socialismâ has enormous potential, unmatched by previous left
projects in South Africa, yet faces the same challenge as its
predecessors â and indeed, of unions elsewhere.
Generally organised labour has struggled to develop a clear alternative
to the current order â a problem that unions share with many other
popular class sectors. The Arab Spring is the latest example of a series
of struggles against the impact of neo-liberalism, and against
authoritarian governments, that has been defined and limited by largely
negative aims: anti-globalisation, antiprivatisation, anti-oligarchy,
anti-dictatorship. But without a positive programme, space created by
successful struggles is quickly captured by neo-liberal parties (witness
one-time trade unionist Frederick Chilubaâs Zambia in the 1990s),
business oligarchies with empty slogans (âYes, We Canâ: Barrack Obamaâs
Democrats, with their war and austerity), and religious and nationalist
fundamentalists (Egyptâs resurgent Muslim Brotherhood, and its tussle
with the military is a case in point).
Union responses to the larger challenge of vision have often fallen into
three broad categories, none of which has proved satisfactory
historicallyâ and certainly, none is satisfactory today. Firstly, there
is economism, or business unionism, which seeks to avoid larger issues
altogether by focusing on immediate bread-and-butter issues of wages and
workplace conditions. The problem is that the wages, conditions and
employment itself are deeply shaped by the larger social order, and
working and poor people face challenges at work, and outside work, that
go far beyond wages and conditions. Business unionism certainly cannot
address these issues.
A second approach, dubbed âsocial movement unionismâ, has sought to
forge alliances and campaign beyond the workplace, stressed democratic
unionism, and played a role in fighting against repressive governments
and employers. The problem is that social movement unionism stops short
of a clear programme for systemic change, beyond demands for democratic
reforms. The content of those reforms, and of that democracy, is left
opaque; its politics tends to the problem of being defined by what it
opposes, rather than what it proposes.
In most cases, unions in the social movement union tradition have moved
fairly quickly into the third approach, political unionism. This
involves unions allying with a political party aiming at state power, in
the belief that this will provide working class access to, and benefits
from, state power and policy-making. Variants of political unionism
include social democracy, in which unions ally with mass parties seeking
to capture parliament; Marxism-Leninism, in which unions are led by
vanguard parties aiming at the creation of revolutionary dictatorships;
and nationalism, in which unions join a national bloc aiming at wielding
a national state.
A core problem has been that such alliances, rather than strengthen
unions, have often subordinated unions to states and ruling parties,
enmeshing them in networks of patronage, institutions of class
collaboration and political alliances that have limited their autonomy,
vision and, often, their internal democracy, meanwhile, workers and
unions are divided into rival blocs of party loyalists.
One version of this problem is a continual exodus of unionists into
prestigious state employment, which has few effects on state policy, yet
damages union capacity and promotes careerism amongst unionists. The
2014 South African elections saw 12 senior COSATU figures rewarded with
senior state appointments (Musgrave, 2014; for more on this process and
its effects: Buhlungu, 2010). In more extreme cases, unions have been
transformed into âtransmission beltsâ between the âvanguardâ and âthe
massâ, relaying demands for more output while disciplining recalcitrant
workers (e.g. Lenin, [1920] 1965: 21, 31â32).
The other core problem is that the project of political unionism, with
its statist project, is faced with the general crisis and failure of the
leftâs statist projects. Keynesian and related social democratic
strategies still exercise a certain fascination, but their viability is
questionable. Besides the problem that such strategies have had little
success outside of the advanced industrial countries, it is difficult to
deny that the regulatory institutions, relatively closed economies,
economic booms and insurgent working class movements that forced the
emergence of the classic Keynesian welfare state no longer exist.
Even at its (rather impressive) best, the Keynesian welfare stateâs real
gains for working people were marred by substantial inequalities in
wealth and power and massive union and societal bureaucratisation:
initial opposition to the model came not from the right but the left,
with demands around self-management, gender equity and environmental
issues (Wilks, 1996: 97). Its existence was to a large extent contingent
on its compatibility with the goals of capitalists and state managers:
as those goals changed, in the face of factors like capitalist crisis
and globalisation, the system was phased out (for variations on this
theme: Pontussen, 1992; Swenson, 1991; Wilks, 1996).
Although classic Marxist regimes retain some attraction, including in
unions like NUMSA, their record raises serious questions. It is marked
indelibly by massive repression (not least, of labour and unions),
economic inefficiency and crisis, and inglorious collapse (precipitated
in substantial part by deep working class discontent). Even their
achievements in social welfare must be viewed with some scepticism.[1]
This has drastically undermined the old confidence that these
represented a compelling, superior ânew civilizationâ (e.g. Webb and
Webb, 1937). A growing literature, in fact, demonstrates that these
Marxist regimes were always deeply shaped by global capitalist dynamics
(e.g. Sanchez-Sibony, 2014) and confirm, in many respects, the old
anarchist and syndicalist argument that they represented a form of
âstate-capitalismâ (e.g. Sergven, [1918] 1973: 122â125).
Writers who wish to insist that such experiences were not the ârealâ
Marxist project, or misrepresented Marx, have to deal with the
unpleasant reality that this was the dominant Marxist project, including
for the great majority of Marxists, and provides the only historic cases
of revolutionary Marxist rule.
Meanwhile, nationalist import-substitution-industrialisation has faded
as a policy option (Waterbury, 1999). Its legacies are uneven, and
sometimes positive, but the project itself is no longer viable. Even at
its most successful, however, the model was typified by authoritarian
regimes and by substantial labour repression and union cooptation (e.g.
Freund, 1988: chapter 5): cheap labour was, after all, one of the major
subsidies to ânationalâ capital provided by state intervention in
capital-poor countries.
This brings us to the fourth approach, syndicalism. There is,
admittedly, much confusion regarding what syndicalism encompasses. This
is, for example, true in the South African context where syndicalism is
often misleadingly used as a term for militant but apolitical unionism.
This follows the tendency of Lenin, Poulantzas and others to dub
syndicalism a form of âleft economismâ (Holton, 1980: 5â7, 12â13,
18â19), a proposition that is itself rooted in the notion that unions
are, by their nature, reformist and narrow unless subordinated to a
political party (e.g. Toussaint, 1983).
Such labelling errs in two main ways: on the one hand, the record of a
union like NUMSA, which is playing a decisive role in rebuilding the
left project, without party tutelage and, indeed, in defiance of the
SACP, completely confounds notions that unions are inherently reformist,
left to their own devices; on the other hand, they manifestly fail to
grapple with the ideology and history of actual syndicalism.
Syndicalism promotes a vision of a society free of social and economic
inequalities, with a participatory democratic economy and society that
extends into the direct control of the workplace and a bottom-up planned
economy; in this society, hierarchy and elite control over economic and
other resources is removed.
In speaking of the working class, too, it hsd an expansive approach,
including all wage earners, skilled as well as unskilled, urban as well
as rural, and their families and defenders: this was not a narrow
project for men in hard-hats alone. For example, todayâs syndicalist
unions like the CGT include many white collar workers, technicians and
professionals; the 1930s CNT included not just industrial workers, but
âpeasants and field-workersâ and the âbrain-workers and the
intellectualsâ (Rocker, [1938] 1989: 98â99).
Also of especial interest is the prefigurative approach of the movement,
that is, the strategy of developing, in its daily life, the basic moral,
political and organisational infrastructure and daily practices of the
new society. Rather than embrace an instrumentalist approach, in which
ends justify means, syndicalism, like the anarchist movement in which it
is rooted, stresses that means shape ends and, therefore, that todayâs
politics must foreshadow tomorrowâs future.
Consciousness, developed through struggle, education and participation â
a revolutionary counter-culture â wedded to a flat, decentralized,
inclusive, pluralist and pragmatic, yet militant and autonomous style of
union organisation â a counter-power, opposed to the institutions of the
ruling class â are to be forged in daily struggles, until ready and
prepared for the final assault.
But in the final assault there would be both rupture â the removal of
the old regime â and continuity â in that the unions, and their allies,
already carried within themselves the basic framework of the new
society, including the means of occupying workplaces and placing them
under self-management. Syndicalist unions thus combine âthe defence of
the interests of the producers within existing societyâ, including in
political struggles, with âpreparing the workers for the direct
management of production and economic life in generalâ (Rocker, [1938]
1989: 86). Or, in the words of the old South African revolutionary
syndicalist paper, The International, it involves (1917):
âŠ. One Big Union of all wage workers⊠aggressively forging ahead âŠ.
gaining strength from each victory and learning by every temporary
set-back â until the working class is able to take possession and
control of the machinery, premises and materials of production right
from the capitalistsâ hands, and use that control to distribute the
product entirely amongst the workers ⊠It takes every colour, creed and
nation. Revolutionary Industrial Unionism is âorganised efficiencyâ.
Every worker in every industry; every industry part and parcel of one
great whole.
With this ethos, syndicalism envisages a militant class-struggle
unionism that empowers members while minimising internal hierarchy, and
actively opposing domination and oppression by nation, race and sex â
within the larger society, but within the union too. Historically, it
promoted political education and struggle around larger social and
political issues, and forged alliances with a range of other popular
movements, including neighborhood, youth and political groups, while
steering sharply clear of alliances with all political parties aiming at
state power.
To use the state, with its hierarchical character and deep alliance with
capitalists and landlords, contradicts the basic syndicalist project of
constituting, from the bottom-up, a militant and autonomous working
class movement able to replace hierarchy and exploitation (including by
the state). Moreover, the state is no ally of the working class,
providing a place of power and wealth for a political elite that is
allied, structurally, to the corporations, themselves a place of power
and wealth for an economic elite. Reliance on electoral parties is
viewed as futile, serving mainly to deliver the unions up as voting
cattle, while promoting passive reliance on officials, bureaucrats and
the (hostile) capitalist state (Spitzer, 1963: 379â388). Allying with
vanguard parties to create revolutionary dictatorships is also
incompatible with a bottom-up movement for self-management; such regimes
can only repress, never emancipate, the popular classes.
Syndicalist anti-statism does not, it must be stresssed, mean
disinterest in political issues, for syndicalism fights for âpolitical
rights and libertiesâ just as much as it does for better wages (Rocker,
[1938] 1989: 88â89, 111). However, it does not do so through parliaments
and the state, but outside and against both, with the trade union,
âtoughened by daily combat and permeated by Socialist spiritâ and
bringing to bear the power of workers at the point of production, the
âlance headâ of these and other broader working class battles (Ibid.).
To what extent was syndicalism ever an important tradition, worthy of
serious consideration? And to what extent can its project be seen as one
that is more than merely rhetorical i.e. to what extent did it achieve
both its immediate and ultimate objectives?
A complete answer to the first question exceeds the scope of this paper,
suffice it to say that the view that anarchism and syndicalism were
ânever more than a minority attractionâ (e.g. Kedward, 1971: 120) has
been widely challenged by a âsmall avalancheâ of scholarship (Anderson,
2010: xiii) demonstrating the existence of mass anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalist unions in the Caribbean, Latin America and
parts of Europe, in countries as diverse as Argentina, Bolivia, France,
Cuba, Peru, Portugal, The Netherlands as well as of powerful syndicalist
movements elsewhere, including Britain, Czechia, Hungary, Italy, Japan
and Russia, and the lasting imprint of both on popular and union
culture. In colonial and postcolonial countries, including Bolivia,
Egypt and South Africa, these formations played an important part in
struggles against imperialism and national oppression; they pioneered
unions in countries as diverse as China, Egypt, Malaysia, and Mexico.
Syndicalist unions were also involved in major uprisings and rebellions,
including in Mexico (1916), Italy (1913, 1920), Portugal (1918), Brazil
(1918), Argentina (1919, 1922), and Spain (1909, 1917, 1932/3).
Nor did the story of these movements end in 1914 (or 1917): many
syndicalist movements and currents peaked in the 1920s and 1930s, as in
Peru and Poland, and a number survived â sometimes undergoing big bursts
of growth, as in postwar France (Damier, 2009: 193) and Chileâ in the
years that followed. For instance, syndicalism remained an influence in
Argentinean, Brazilian, Bolivian, Chilean and Cuban unions into the
1960s, and among Uruguayan workers and students in the 1970s (Mechoso,
2002), with a massive revival in Spain in the 1970s and early 1980s;
other notable cases include the guerrilla war of the anarchist Chu
Cha-pei in Yunan, China, against the Maoist regime in the 1950s (H. L.
Wei interview in Avrich, 1995: 214 et seq.). The 1960s revolts and the
New Left, the post-Berlin Wall era, and in contemporary and Occupy
movements (for anarchists in Occupy Wall Street: Bray, 2013) and radical
unions (Ness, 2014) have all provided vectors for new anarchist and
syndicalist influence and growth.
Regarding the second question, the extent to which syndicalism achieved
its immediate and ultimate objectives, a growing literature generally
indicates that syndicalist formations generally had and have an
impressive record of promoting oppositional working class movements, of
organising durable movements with pragmatic yet principled programmes
and democratic practices, of winning real economic, political and social
gains, and in providing space for the elaboration of radical
alternatives and human dignity. âEmbedded in larger popular movements
and countercultures, linked to other organised popular constituencies,
taking up issues that went well beyond the workplace, playing a central
role in community struggles, and at the heart of a project of
revolutionary counterculture, including the production of mass
circulation daily and weekly newspapers, the historical syndicalist
unions were social movements that never reduced the working class to
wage earners, or the aspirations of the working class to wagesâ (van der
Walt and Schmidt, 2009: 21).
What, then, of the ability to move from prefiguration to figuration,
from counter-power to taking power, from revolutionary preparation to
revolution? There are a number of important cases of the concrete and
positive anarchist and/or syndicalist programme being implemented in
various degrees, including in Macedonia, Mexico, the Ukraine, and
Manchuria. But the case in which syndicalist unions played the most
central role remains that of the Spanish Revolution of 19361939.
The most important union federation in Spain was the 2-million strong
CNT, in a population of around 24 million: if we keep the proportions,
and translate them onto todayâs larger South African population, the CNT
would have been 4-million strong i.e. twice as large as COSATU. The CNT
organised in a wide variety of sectors, with a major presence in the
industrial region of Catalonia, but it also had a rural presence and
important strongholds elsewhere in the country (for material on the CNT
and the Revolution, see inter alia Ackelsberg, 1985; Ackelsberg, 1993;
Amsden, 1978; Bosch, 2001; an overview can be found in Hattingh, 2011;
contemporary accounts and oral histories can be found in Dolgoff 1974;
Fraser, 1979).
The CNT was strong but bottom-up, well-organised but decentralised, and
very, very militant. Its union structure was relatively flat, with a
minuscule full-time staff, with decisions centred on the local
membership, which met regularly in general assembly and appointed
mandated delegates, roughly equivalent to shopstewards. In terms of
struggles, emphasis was placed on direct action, rather than the use of
industrial courts and arbitration, or parliamentary politics, as a means
of promoting self-confidence, self-reliance and self-activity.
CNT activities were ambitious and wide-ranging. It had a history of
partial and general strikes, and had actively joined rent strikes and
other protests; it had cells working within the armed forces; and it had
an enormous presence in many working class neighbourhoods, running
centres that provided meeting spaces, classes and a range of cultural
activities; it was closely linked to anarchist youth, womenâs and
propaganda groups. In addition the CNT published and distributed vast
numbers of books and pamphlets: by 1938, it ran more than 40 newspapers
and magazines, including many mass circulation dailies (Rocker, [1938]
1989: 146), and had a radio service.
In short, the CNT had an enormous impact on working class and peasant
consciousness, stressing revolution as direct working class and peasant
control of society, including self-management of workplaces through CNT
structures. The most radical CNT militants organised in the
semi-clandestine Anarchist Federation of Iberia (FAI): not a
parliamentary party or a Leninist vanguard, the 30,000-strong FAI was an
anarchist political organisation that aimed to promote the CNT project
and the revolutionary struggle. It is, finally, worth noting that the
CNT and FAI vastly overshadowed the Spanish Communist Party, which
struggled to move to get above 10,000 members.
In July 1936, there was an attempted military coup, backed by the most
conservative sectors of the ruling class. Armed CNT militants stopped
the coup in most of Spain; sections of the armed forces came over to the
CNT, as did members of the moderate unions. A large CNT militia,
numbering around 120,000, defended much of the country.
In the cities, CNT structures quickly took over large parts of industry.
In Catalonia province, workers within hours seized control of 3,000
enterprises, including all public transportation, shipping, electric and
power companies, gas and water works, engineering and automobile
assembly plants, mines, cement works, textile mills and paper factories,
electrical and chemical concerns, glass bottle factories and
perfumeries, food processing plants and breweries. Most of these were
placed under direct workers self-management through assemblies and
committees. Where employers remained at the company, they were either
made to report to workersâ control commissions, or to join the
commission â in which case they were paid the same wage as everyone
else, and decisions were made democratically. The workersâ control
structures emerged directly out of CNT structures: crudely, CNT
assembliesnow ran the factories, and the âshopstewardsâ committees acted
as the control committees. Then factories were linked up, first by
industry and then by region: so, for example, the CNT metal union
provided the means of coordinating the metal industry, and through the
CNT, coordinated this with other industries.
The CNT also had an important impact, in this period, on the
rank-and-file of the rival social democratic union, the General Union of
Labour (UGT), who were also drawn into collectivisation en masse,
especially in the countryside; in a number of cases, joint CNT-UGT
collectives were established. In the countryside, perhaps two thirds of
farmland came under various forms of bottom-up collectivisation: by some
estimates, a further five to seven million people were involved here,
besides the two million in the urban collectives.
This was not a system of nationalisation, in which the state took over,
nor yet of privatisation, but of collectivisation, the roots of which
lay deep in decades of preparation. The revolutionary period saw
substantial changes in many areas of daily life. Income, in the
collectives, was delinked from ownership, and to a large extent, from
occupation: in urban areas, especially, people were âpaidâ on the basis
of family needs; in many rural areas, money was completely abolished.
Divorce was made available, and CNT halls were sometimes used for
revolutionary weddings. The CNTâs allies, Mujeres Libres (or âfree
womenâ) meanwhile ran further education and mobilisation campaigns among
women.
There was a general effort to restructure work, to make it more
pleasant, more healthy and less stressful: as an example, small and
unhealthy plants were replaced by large, airy ones, which were cheaper
as well as healthier. The unemployed were given work, with unemployment
dramatically reduced while output increased and hours decreased. The
collectives were not, it should be added, âownedâ by the workers â they
were run by them; they could not be sold or rented out. It was the
larger network of collectives, born of the CNT, that had possession; it
was through congresses and conferences that changes could be made.
The larger project of the revolution stalled, however, for a range of
reasons. One myth, that should be disposed of at once, was that the CNT
and FAI lacked a concrete plan to remake society, or to defend, with
coordinated military force, the revolutionary society. The CNT had
organised a series of armed uprisings in the early 1930s, and developed
a clandestine military structure coordinated through local, regional and
finally, national, defence committees; its May 1936 congress reaffirmed
the need for coordinated military action, based on the unions, in the
event of revolution (for the CNTâs 1936 programme: CNT [May 1, 1936]
n.d.; for a fuller critique of the claim that the CNT lacked a concrete
programme or military perspectives, see van der Walt, 2011: 195â197).
The CNT militias formed in 1936 emerged directly out of the earlier
clandestine CNT military (GuillamĂłn, 2014), just as the CNT collectives
emerged directly from the CNT union branches.
First and foremost, the revolution stalled following a tactical decision
in late 1936 to form a broad anti-fascist bloc against the (by no means
defeated) army plotters. Significant moves towards planning the economy
from the bottom-up did not develop far beyond the provincial level; the
collectivisation of the financial sector was aborted; the CNTâs Popular
Front allies sabotaged its collectives, slowly destroying the Revolution
and demobilising the revolutionary spirit that had halted the coup of
1936; in the end, the Popular Front, now abandoned by the CNT
syndicalism or anarchism, was itself crushed by the plotters of 1936,
who instituted four decades of dictatorial repression.
The point of the above exposition is not to present the CNT as perfect,
but to underline, rather, a core part of the constructive history of
syndicalism: it showed that industry and agriculture could be run
effectively without the profit motive, and without bureaucratic
hierarchies, and that a working class, inspired by a great ideal, can
remake the world.
To prove the CNT was flawed is possible; to draw critical lessons on its
history is necessary; however, to dismiss the possible contribution of
this and other syndicalist experiences to current labour challenges is,
however, mistaken. Syndicalism has historically played a very important
role in the history of the working class movement, not just in Spain,
but elsewhere; it is a tradition that bears close scrutiny, for to
ârecall anarchismâ, and anarcho-syndicalism, âwhich Leninist Marxism
suppressedâ, is, as Arif Dirlik argued, in his study of the Chinese
movement, to rethink the very meaning and possibilities of the left
tradition, and ârecall the democratic ideals for which anarchism âŠ
served as a repositoryâ (1991: 3â4, also pp. 7â8).
This anarchist and syndicalist repository is one that bears
investigation, not as a simple cure-all for all difficulties, but as a
basis for reflection and renewal in labour movements and in scholarship.
As part of confronting the challenges facing todayâs unions, there is
everything to be gained from broadening our understanding of the history
and traditions of the labour movement. For scholars of labour studies
and of industrial sociology, too, there is a need to pay greater
attention to traditions like anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism,
both in theorising labour, and in understanding its pasts, presents, and
possible futures.
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LUCIEN VAN DER WALT is a Professor of Industrial and Economic Sociology
at Rhodes University, in Grahamstown, South Africa. He has published
widely on labour and left history, political economy, and anarchism and
syndicalism. He is also involved in union and working class education.
[email: l.vanderwalt@ru.ac.za]
[1] The much-lauded Cuban healthcare system is in fact deeply segmented:
official statistics and observations of its tourist and elite sectors
obscure the serious inequities and shortages experienced by most Cubans
(e.g. Hirschfeld, 2001). Repression of dissident doctors is also well
documented (e.g. Reiner, 1998).