The
concept of the existence of a trade union and labour movement
bureaucracy goes back more than 100 years, and, along with it, the
idea that, in response, it was necessary to build rank and file
movements, such as the Minority Movement. In the period since,
revolutionaries have put considerable effort into the building of
such rank and file organisations. But, there is a strong correlation
between the basis on which these movements have been constructed, and
the general outlook of those revolutionaries, about how Socialism is
to be constructed.
In
the 1950's and 60's, as the Long Wave Boom raised the demand for
labour-power, which placed workers on firmer ground, as far as their
economic and social position is concerned, one reflection of this was
an increased level of confidence, which meant that workers were
prepared to take matters directly into their own hands to resolve
problems. In other words, a form of workers' self-government of the
type that Marx describes. This was not manifest in the establishment
of co-ops, but in a spontaneous development of shop-floor
organisation, whose clearest representation was the growth of the
shop stewards movement.
This
shop-floor organisation was geared to workers taking direct action,
usually via short duration, unofficial (wildcat) strikes. In the
early 1970's, as a shop steward, I organised such action, and, because
of the building of such workplace organisation, I was able, on one
occasion, even to get non-union members to agree to join in, with the
result that the management quickly conceded. The Bolsheviks placed
considerable importance on such workplace organisation, via Factory
Committees, which brought together union and non-union workers, and
Trotsky also emphasises such organisation, for example, in his Action Programme for France. It is an illustration of the need to build
appropriate structures of workers self-organisation and
self-government.
But,
there is an important difference between these kinds of rank and file
organisations, and the kinds of “rank
and file”
and “broad
left”
organisations that the sects have devoted attention to. In the main, the latter have not been structures aimed at developing workers
self-government, and self-activity, but instead have reflected the
privileging of ideas over material conditions. The organisations
that the sects have constructed – where they have not simply been
fronts for an individual sect – have been little more than
electoral vehicles, designed to get this or that slate elected, this
or that resolution passed at conference. The ephemeral gains made by
the Left in the Labour Party in the early 1980's, were based largely
on the same weak foundation.
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