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Texts :: analysis
A New Syndicalism?
01 Jun 2006
Anarcho-syndicalism has changed a lot from it's origin in workers'
movements of the late 19th century. It saw many of its practices
adopted by reformist institutions, and other practices rendered
illegal by the repressive hand of the state. Criticisms have grown
outside of workplace related issues, and failures have been revisited
time and again. I'd like to constructively address some of those
criticisms to develop a revolutionary strategy for tactical
intervention with the economic struggles of our class.

Organizing around economic means is not enough

Anarcho-syndicalism has changed a lot from it's origin in workers'
movements of the late 19th century. It saw many of its practices
adopted by reformist institutions, and other practices rendered
illegal by the repressive hand of the state. Criticisms have grown
outside of workplace related issues, and failures have been revisited
time and again. I'd like to constructively address some of those
criticisms to develop a revolutionary strategy for tactical
intervention with the economic struggles of our class.

Organizing around economic means is not enough, there are more
struggles than class warfare, but any revolution that doesn't abolish
class isn't a revolution (1). We need to not try to resurrect old
models of anarcho-syndicalism, but reincarnate the ideals for a new
life in our changing world.

A criticism common these days is the claim that anarcho-syndicalism is
dominated by a positivist productionalist idea. Indeed, at one time
there were many syndicalists that emphasized the parasitism of the
rich, and encouraged that science and syndicalism could create a more
productive and efficient system. This idea, however, co-existed with
the opposition to long work hours, celebrated the free existence of
the migrant worker, and shopfloor battles against the deskilling and
taylorization of crafts. Much worker resistance is not just a
resistance to capitalism, but a resistance of work in general,
particularly when labor is alienated through domination and
exploitation.

It is not simply a question of production, but of the kind of
production we are involved in. Increasing the amount of junk we have
is not beneficial. Having all of our needs and a good number of our
desires met with miminal effort and ecological cost, is close to an
economic utopia. Quality of life issues like a reduction in working
hours and safety protections are old anarcho-syndicalist issues.
However, some of the important environmental issues can not relegated
to only what workers do at work, or to the wanton demands of
consumers, but also whether there is going to be a toxic waste dump in
your backyard (or toxix waste at all!) or to build a dam.
Bio-regional, libertarian municipalist(2) or other communal approaches
might offer us a direction to look for additions to workers' and
consumers' councils.

Another criticism of anarcho-syndicalism is that it has generally been
viewed as primarily being concerned with organizing workers as a labor
union (3). This focus on only organizing with workers at the place of
confrontation with their employer limited anarcho-syndicalists to
fighting isolated, defensive battles. The old utopian economic
solution of "workers' control" through a union "administration of
things" or workers' councils is very limiting since the interests of
workers and consumers can be different. Everyone participating in an
economic social relationship is a consumer; though everyone is not a
worker. As human beings, we are so much more than these economic
roles, but we are these things as well; and in fact, it is these roles
that are the only ones capitalism addresses.

The problem of workers' councils having a monopoly of economic
decision-making is addressed in Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel's work
on participatory economics. Parecon basically advocates federation of
workers' councils based in the workplaces and consumers' councils
based in the neighborhood. Parecon lacks a revolutionary praxis; they
have no way to get there proposed federation. I think there is a
way... and that is a worker and consumer syndicalism. We need to
organize not only at the point of production, but also along the lines
of transportation and communication, as well as at the point of
consumption.

Consumers, like workers, need to organize for their own interests, and
while more difficult to organize than workers, organizing one can
greatly support the other. There are many similarities between
organizing a labor union, and organizing a tennants' union(4) or a bus
riders' union. Workers and consumers have more in common with each
other than they do with the capitalists and bosses.

Syndicalism should be thought of as the practice of organizing along
principles of direct action and direct democracy by the exploited for
economic action against their exploiters. It's primary weapon being
refusal--refusal to work, and refusal to buy. From slow down on the
job, to sabotage, from putting your rent in escrow until the leak is
fixed, to a mass rent revolt until rent is lowered. As struggle
increases, we move from refusal to occupation and expropriation.

Probably the most useful criticism coming from council communist
influenced groups like the Anarchist (Communist) Federation is that
unions are defined by their mediation between workers and capitalism.
The union bureacracy becomes separated from the interests of workers
as the professional staff acts as mediators and negotiators between
workers and employers. The union comes to exist as a permanent
economic organization with interests separate from the rank and file.
The union bureacracy attempts to control the workforce through
discipline to fullfill contracts, as much as it confronts the
employers for a better contract. The union must deliver a docile and
stable workforce to the boss or lose its power to bargain; and to do
so it must work to reduce the militancy of spontaneous worker struggle
against the employer. The union is your pimp.

While some of this needs to be taken with a grain of salt since many
unions do not behave this way,(5) and many of these problems point to
a lack of democracy in current unions, or show the difficulty of
staying within labor law during struggle, I do think they make an
important point. Unions alone can not be the vehicle for revolution.
They are designed as confrontational organizations within a
hierarchial economy. They might be good tools for surviving in this
environment, but that doesn't mean they are the best tools for
destroying capitalism.

Some neo-council communists forget, going so far as to oppose any kind
of political organization or even any form of activism, that many of
those workers who particpated in the spontaneous formation of workers'
councils also participated in unions and political factions before
struggles became large enough to form councils. Anarcho-syndicalists
believe that the unions can be schools for revolution. It gives
workers confidence, resources and time so that they can prepare for a
revolution. It develops a web of solidarity, mutual aid, and trust
that can be developed no other way than through participating
collectively with our class in struggles that are reducing the rate of
exploitation.

Unfortunately, until there is a revolution, there is always going to
be some degree of negotiation between the exploited and the
exploiters. If our class organizations refuse to negotiate an eventual
return to a rate of exploitation, then the bosses and state will
construct an organization with whom they they can negotiate.
Eventually they will find enough scabs or break the struggle forcing
us to accept the deal negotiated by a fake union. If we deny ourselves
the ability to have at the very least a democratic control over the
negotiation process, then we are sure to get fucked by it. (5)

It's a common myth that if we all belonged to the best revolutionary
organization, we would gain the critical mass that is in agreement on
the correct theoertical and tactical unity and we would then have a
revolution! The debate becomes, which revolutionary organization is
best, and thus which organizations aren't then revolutionary at all.
It doesn't take long to see where this will go. It would create a
horde of rival sectarian organizations sqabbling over whether the
Confederacion Nacional Trabajo (CNT) was revolutionary in 1936,
before, afterwards, or not at all.

The idea of "One Big Union"(OBU) here is taken out of context. The
appeal to OBU is a notion of solidarity in action, not a monopoly of
revolutionary activity by one body of organized labor. The Industrial
Workers of the World(IWW) was very critical of "union scabbing" at the
time where one union would continue work (and even increase work with
overtime and job loading) while another union was on strike. The idea
was that all workers in an industry should strike together. That was
the intent of OBU. Workers would support each others' strikes
regardless of craft, political party, union affiliation, race,
ethnicity, etc...

I think we witnessed this during the general strikes in which the IWW
agitated and participated. The IWW contest for the membership of
workers with the American Federation of Labor obscured this point. In
some ways this is uniquely a phenomenon of the United States labor law
which only allows one union to represent workers. This method of
election for official recognition by the government of one body of
workers' representatives, certainly did much to weaken radical labor
unions while giving advantages to reformist and business unions.

Unions vary. They vary alot. Even in the U.S. you have a spectrum of
unions that include: hierarchical, state-collaborationist,
mafia-controlled, corporate, pro-capitalist, sexist, racist, and
nationalist unions, some are moderate social-democratic reformers,
some are radical anti-capitalist democratic direct action unions, and
even others are small formal anarcho-syndicalist groups. All unions
are not the same, whether they are offically recognized by the
government or not. Whether the government recognizes a body of
organized workers isn't really up to us, but rather the government and
the employers. When you've got a successful strike, the bosses are
desperate to negotiate and grant recognition. Unions, though, are made
by the collective actions of the workers, not the paper endorsement of
the state or the permission of the capitalists.

If all unions are not the same, then some are better than others. We
should do everything we can to encourage better unions. In the better
unions we should encourage the support of revolutionary struggle, even
if the revolution means the destruction of the organizations (or at
least its role as negotiator with the bosses).

In most places, a majority of the workers are not organized into any
but the most informal of work resistance organizations. There is
plenty of space for a radical union that operates according to
anarcho-syndicalist principles to grow without ever having to
challenge the officaldom of the business unions. Perhaps the IWW can
today be a banner in which similar efforts can gather.

For those workers who already have a "union" at work, they have to
figure out their own strategy. Does it make more sense to try and
reform the union toward a revolutionary goal, or does it make more
sense to form an alternative and challenge the business union's role?
One problem for us from a class perspective is that many vital
industries are already in the domain of business unions. Those
industries would be essential for the creation of general strikes and
revolution. However, the onslaught of neo-liberalism has launched its
war against even reformist unions, breaking the decades of
"cooperation" between labor unions and capitalists. The AFL-CIO is
changing under the strain of assault from the capitalists,
increasingly wild-catting workers, local autonomy, rank & file
democratic movements. Other strains include radicals involved as
organizers for those portions of the unions that are growing; the
class collaboration of some union bosses more interested in acting as
pimps; and the fragmentation being created by the United Brotherhood
of Carpenters and the withdraw of local unions from central labor
councils to setup their own progressive labor councils. As much as we
have an opportunity to organize with the unorganized, we also have
opportunities for radicalization in the reformist unions.

We need specifically anarchist groups which spread syndicalist ideals
among our class and can provide a perspective, history and theory for
our fellow workers to consider. This is to be a leadership of ideas,
not a vanguard. These probably need to be no larger than a successful
publication group, such as Anarcho-Syndicalist Review; though
undoubtly if they are confederated with similar organizations they can
increase their reach and ability to intevene.

We need solidarity organizations that build support for workers across
lines of industry, craft, locality, nationality; and where the need is
across racial, tribal and gender lines. These organizations need to be
open to anyone as long as they are willing to working in a directly
democratic matter taking direct action in the interests of supporting
workers in struggle. A good example here would be the New York City
based Direct Action Network Labor group. It's groups like these that
will probably do much of the work in spreading the solidarity that
will be needed for successful general strikes.

We need workplace organization. I'm talking about on the ground bread
& butter organizations that help workers survive day-to-day. The kinds
of organizations that get us coffee breaks or a pay raise. Sometimes,
it will mean negotiation with the State and the Bosses; which means a
contract even if all it is is a verbal understanding. Ideally, these
would be direct action, directly democratic orgnizations of workers.

We need organizations pushing for the radicalization of reformist and
business unions. These can be networks of rebel workers in the
construction trades plotting a wild cat strike, or the activities of
militants with a newsletter and alternate slate for the next
elections, with a proposal to change the union's constitution to allow
more democracy. Hopefully, they will either succeed in changing the
union, or in gaining enough supporters to break away and form a rival
union that is a better model of workplace organization than the
business union.

We need a seed for a new society. For that space we manage to carve
out for ourselves through alternative economic organizations, communes
and cooperatives, we need to encourage those to grow as an economic
rival to capitalism. Much like unions, they are not the revolution
unto themselves for they have not escaped the market economy
completely, only mitigated it. They do provide important models and
can provide employment for the black listed, and cost effective
services for our class that objectively improve their income and
resources. Workers cooperatives, consumer cooperatives, mutual
insurance, credit unions and people's banks are all examples of these
kind of alternative economic orgnizations. They must become
confederated with each other, and support each other and the
revolutionary movement in general or they will be isolated and
destroyed by the competiveness of capitalist exploitation or the
repression of the state. Cooperatives can also learn much from the
directly democratic nature of the radical labor and consumer
movement--many cooperatives have failed in being cooperative by
centralizing decision-making or trying to "compete" in the global
market.

By using a multi-organizational economic approach, we can confront the
existing power structure and builds an alternative through dual power.
We can advance from isolated class struggles to a revolutionary
movement united in action and solidarity.

While focusing on our class organizations is a good thing, we should
always keep in mind that the revolution is not just the organization
of unions and their activities. When revolution comes, it is going to
be much more spontaneous, chaotic and massive than any of the formal
organizational forms in which we participate. Will we be ready?

1) The lead editorial by Nicholas Phebus in this issue on
revolutionary strategy.

2) There are some deep criticism of the local electoral strategy of
some libertarian muncipalists, but the idea of organizing directly
democratically in municipalties to build dual power is a valid one.
Perhaps a revolutionary strategy involving neighborhood committees
like the Popular Commitee Saint Jean-Baptiste in Quebec City can be
developed? It would be interesting to see if popular committees could
develop in the United States.

3) Anarcho-syndicalism in practice often had a communal aspect. But
increasingly anarcho-syndicalism is thought of only in terms of
workplace organizing. This has been one of the anarcho-communist
criticisms of syndicalism from the very beginning.

3) Becky has an article on tennants' organizing in this issue.

4) The Industrial Workers of the World often refused to sign
contracts. The some CNT locals struck only for libertarian communism
and not for any negotiation in modifying the rate of exploitation.

5) An excellent example of the union bureacracy selling-out the
membership is the recent struggle at Jeffboat ship-building yard along
the Ohio River. The Teamster local president tried to sign a sweet
heart deal with the boss, ignoring the voted opposition to the
contract from the rank & file, as a result the workers (including a
group of IWW members) held a short wildcat strike. In the case of
Jeffboat, the wildcat strike gained support from the Teamster
international. The international forced the corrupt local president
out office, calling for a new election and putting all future
contracts to be decided by vote of the membership.
See also:
http://www.nefac.net

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