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Tuesday, 31 March 2009

How socialists fought unemployment in the 1930s

How socialists fought unemployment in the 1930s (a guest post)

This is not just a history lesson. As the author notes at the end, there are lessons we can learn for building resistance in repsonse to the current economic crisis.

Here's how the article ends:

'There is a college or university in every locality – ready-made bases, perhaps, for a modern unemployed workers movement, where campaigns could be mounted to provide the food and accommodation to support protest marches. Socialists facing a new great depression need to learn the lessons of working class history and at the same time think imaginatively about adapting to new conditions. But above all, we must act, and act fast, to shape history. The story of Wal Hannington’s NUWM is a beacon lighting the way.'


Here is the article in full (by Neil Faulkner):


By two o’clock in the afternoon of 27 October 1932, there were 100,000 London workers, employed and unemployed, gathered around Marble Arch. They were there to greet hundreds of hunger marchers coming in from all the industrial areas of Britain.


It was a Thursday, but many employed workers had taken the day off to show solidarity with the unemployed. When mounted and foot police launched a series of truncheon charges, the workers fought back with banner poles and torn-up park railings.


Three days later, a second demonstration of 150,000 assembled in Trafalgar Square. Again, the police attacked, the workers fought back, and speeches continued from the platform.


Two days after that, a third demonstration battled police cordons to reach Parliament and present a million-signature petition. 80,000 workers broke through. Running battles continued across the West End into the night.


The protests were called to reverse a 10% cut in unemployment benefit, to abolish the hated Means Test, and to guarantee decent benefits for all the 3 million made jobless by the depression.


The protests were organised by the National Unemployed Workers Movement. Its leader was Communist Party member Wal Hannington.


British Prime Minister Lloyd George had presided over the trench slaughter of the First World War. He had promised soldiers they would return ‘to a land fit for heroes to live in’. He was a lying wind-bag.


By November 1919, a third of a million ex-soldiers were unemployed. During 1921, total unemployment soared to more than 2.5 million. It hardly ever fell below a million in the entire interwar period. For a time, after the 1929 crash, it reached well over 3 million: one in five British workers.


Numerous reports catalogued the devastating effects – the poverty, the starvation, the despair, the social decay. George Orwell’s The Road to Wigan Pier (1937) is only the most famous of many accounts of the misery of the depression.


It made no difference to the ruling class. Again and again, British governments, while doing nothing to create jobs, attempted to cut back the pitiful benefits on offer, and the press ran endless ‘red scare’ stories whenever the unemployed tried to fight back.


Labour governments were as vicious as Tory. In 1931, as unemployment rocketed to its peak, it was Labour Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald who cut unemployment benefit by 10%.
The TUC leaders were no better. They threatened trade unionists who supported unemployed protests with expulsion, and a ‘Black Circular’ was issued banning communists from holding trade union office.


But in 1920, Wal Hannington, an unemployed engineering worker and member of the newly formed Communist Party of Great Britain, had launched the London Council of Unemployed.



The following year, this evolved into a national organisation, later known as the National Unemployed Workers Movement. It continued campaigning until 1939, when war production finally ended mass unemployment.


From the start, the NUWM was a militant organisation. Its central demand was ‘Work at union rates or full maintenance’. Rejecting the logic of capitalist crisis, Hannington argued that workers were not blame, that the government should fund public works to provide jobs, and that otherwise the unemployed were entitled to an income sufficient to cover all basic needs.


More important – and unlike the official leaders of the labour movement – Hannington was a class fighter. He developed a strategy of direct action, hunger marches, and self-defence against police violence.


The NUWM was open to all unemployed workers, who paid a minimal subscription for membership. It established local branches, undertook case-work, and organised local protests against attempts to cut back or withhold benefits. Links were built with employed workers, and NUWM members joined picket-lines to stop the unemployed being used as scabs.


But the real problem was government policy, and the hunger marches were a brilliant initiative for creating a national protest movement. Volunteers would be selected from the NUWM membership to form contingents departing from different industrial areas. Campaigns would be mounted in towns on the planned routes to ensure provision of food and accommodation.



Demonstrations would be organised to greet the marchers as they arrived. The hunger marches would be carefully timed so that they converged as they approached London, where a series of great rallies and demonstrations would continue over many days.


As well as the great national marches of 1922, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1934, and 1936, there were many local marches and protests. Threatened benefit cuts were beaten back by a wave of local protests in 1935, when an estimated 300,000 marched in South Wales, 160,000 in Glasgow, and tens of thousands of Sheffield workers fought a three-hour battle with police as they attempted to reach City Hall.


Savage police violence became routine. One night in September 1932, lorry-loads of police rampaged through Birkenhead, smashing down doors, clubbing working class residents, and dragging off unemployed men. The following month, police in Belfast opened fire on demonstrators and drove armoured cars through the streets, while troops were held in reserve.


The treachery of trade union and Labour leaders made it easier for the ruling class to cut benefits and unleash police terror. Even so, the NUWM’s militancy, which built a mass movement of the unemployed and won the sympathy of millions of employed workers, forced major concessions.


Again and again, NUWM campaigns stopped threatened cuts or won significant increases. In 1935, for example, the notorious 10% cut in benefit introduced by MacDonald in 1931 was reversed, while the Distressed Areas Act made provision for government-funded employment in some of the worst-hit areas.


By contrast, the famous ‘Jarrow Crusade’ was a flop. This is the hunger march that right-wing labour leaders prefer to remember – because it is the only one that was not organised by the NUWM. Chaperoned by official leaders, no demonstration greeted the Jarrow marchers’ arrival in London or their departure. By contrast, the day after they left, on Sunday 8 November 1936, the NUWM demonstration was 250,000-strong.


The NUWM won real gains for the unemployed. The threat of militant resistance maintained a floor to benefit levels, preventing the ruling class driving whole communities down into actual starvation. But its 20-year history of struggle achieved much more.


In May 1926, the TUC sold out the miners and ensured their eventual defeat by calling off the General Strike. In August 1931, the leaders of the Labour Party destroyed their own government by forcing through cuts in unemployment benefit with Tory votes. These betrayals were disasters. Trade union membership and the Labour vote collapsed.


The official leaders henceforward collaborated openly with the bosses, witch-hunted socialists, and sabotaged workers’ struggles. It was left to the Communist Party to galvanise resistance.


The militancy of the NUWM under communist leadership radicalised the entire working class movement, encouraging employed workers to resist pay cuts during the worst of the depression, and feeding a mood to fight back in many workplaces as the level of unemployment fell somewhat in the mid to late 1930s. Former NUWM activists re-entering the workforce often played leading roles in rebuilding union organisation – in the South Wales coalfield, for example, on Clydeside, and on the London buses.


The NUWM provided leadership, organisation, and dignity to its members. Unemployment atomises workers. Without the collective experience and strength of workplace organisation, the combination of isolation and despair can be exploited by the far right. Though funded by big business and led by the middle class, Hitler’s Nazi Party turned the unemployed into a street-fighting militia – the Brownshirts – with which to smash the unions and the left. Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists tried to do the same in Britain. Wal Hannington was clear about why they failed.


‘The British fascists made strenuous efforts at labour exchanges and elsewhere to recruit the unemployed into their organisation, but they could not break through the powerful organisation of our NUWM branches. I regard it as one of the outstanding political achievements of that period.’


Because the NUWM dominated the politics of the unemployed, the BUF hit a wall. The Blackshirts remained a minority on the streets. That is why they were smashed at the Battle of Cable Street in 1936 as they attempted a march through London’s solidly working class East End.


The Communist Party, on the other hand, recruited heavily. Party membership rose from 2,500 to 10,000 between 1920 and 1926. Though membership fell back to 2,500 in the years of demoralisation following the General Strike, it climbed again to 6,000 by 1931, and no less than 16,000 by 1939.


Why did the CP grow six-fold in the ‘Hungry Thirties’? Most of the new members, especially in the early 1930s, were unemployed, attracted to the party by its fighting lead in the struggle for jobs and maintenance, and by the real gains won through struggle.


NUWM work was closely linked with two other initiatives. The National Minority Movement was an attempt to organise networks of workplace union militants to resist the sell-outs of official leaders. And the CP was also central to the struggle against fascism – mobilising huge numbers to fight the BUF at home, and building support for the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War.


Could we build a national unemployed workers movement today? The daily signing-on and the queues outside labour exchanges no longer exist. The network of labour halls and local activists that supported the hunger marchers in the 1930s is much weaker. So a modern Right to Work Campaign would certainly be different.


But benefits have been slashed through the years of neoliberalism, and the Job Centres could break down this summer as hundreds of thousands sign on. And instead of labour halls, we have the colleges.


Wal Hannington had to be protected by a bodyguard of dockworkers when he attempted to address hostile students in the 1930s. Students then were a small middle class minority. Today, the student body is huge and largely working class. Thousands have been involved in demonstrations and occupations in solidarity with the Palestinians. A new student protest movement has emerged.


Hundreds of thousands of young people will be leaving school, college, and university this summer – and there will be no jobs for them. In Scotland alone, 300,000 young people will be chasing 70,000 vacancies.


There is a college or university in every locality – ready-made bases, perhaps, for a modern unemployed workers movement, where campaigns could be mounted to provide the food and accommodation to support protest marches.


Socialists facing a new great depression need to learn the lessons of working class history and at the same time think imaginatively about adapting to new conditions.


But above all, we must act, and act fast, to shape history. The story of Wal Hannington’s NUWM is a beacon lighting the way.

Sunday, 29 March 2009

recession and resistance - what can we do?

The Put People First demo made it clear there is a mood for political and economic resistance in response to the crisis. It is also obvious by now that the union leaders, though they backed yeserday's demo, are unwilling to lead a fightback.

A small but significant local example is the failure of Northern Region TUC - or any of the unions - to put on transport from Tyneside to the demo. It was left to the North East Shop Stewards Network (NESSN) to organise a coach, which enabled over 30 people from the area to get to the march in London at short notice.

The network is one way we can develop the independent strength of the rank and file in the unions, and also initiate more resistance to job losses and other manifestations of the crisis, while continuing to demand the union leaders do more. NESSN is organising a major public meeting called Recession and Resistance: how can North East workers fight back against the employers' offensive?

This should be an interesting discussion of why the unions so far have done little to resist, but also point to the potential for something better in the future. It should bring a very wide range of union activists and others together to map out what we CAN do to defend jobs, pay and services.

Royal Station Hotel, Newcastle, Wednesday 8 April at 7.15pm. Speakers include Graham Turner (author, The Credit Crunch) and a representative of Keep Metro Public.

photos - Put People First

















Tyneside activists join 35,000 people on the march for jobs, justice and climate in London. Like many others on the demo, they helped make anti-war slogans and Palestinian solidarity part of the event too.




Put People First demo

Yesterday's demo was notable for a number of reasons. It was the biggest protest on economic issues in this country since the crash of last September. It got better than usual media coverage and, astonishingly, the police gave an accurate report of the numbers, saying there were 35,000 people. It had official backing from TUC and major unions, and represented the re-engagement of NGOs with mass mobilisation after a quiet period since their high watermark in summer 2005 (with Make Poverty History in Edinburgh). There were loads of union banners, strengthened further by international delegations of trade unionists.

The mood on the demo - and at the rally - varied, but the Stop the War contingent (which I was part of) was very lively, vibrant and radical. It was a serious weakness on the part of organisers that they refused to incorporate anti-war slogans, speakers etc into the event. We could have had an even bigger and more political event if they'd tapped into the recent upsurge of anger and protest about Gaza.

Not far behind us on the march was a magnificent banner displaying the names of Scottish universities which had occupations for Gaza, surrounded by students whose energy and ceaseless chanting of anti-war and anti-capitalist slogans represented the best things about the event. There was at least a glimpse of what we can achieve if students and trade unionists are brought together, if we join the dots between various issues, and if we move beyond the moderate NGOs and union leaders in the demands we make.

Friday, 27 March 2009

SOAS to Sheffield - student solidarity for Gaza


The student occupations for Gaza began on 15 January at SOAS and ended on 26 March at Sheffield - a full term of student militancy in solidarity with Palestine. Many occupations won all or most of their demands - all in all it represents the rebirth of student protest and a militant shot in the arm for the anti-war movement too.

anti capitalista

There's a certain amount of media hype in the run up to the anti-capitalist direct actions planned for the middle of next week in London. Any radical activist reading the right-wing press would be forgiven for feleing extremely cheerful - it appears we're on the brink of a near-insurrectionary situation.

Sadly, this bears little relation to the truth. There are, however, two genuinely welcome developments. Firstly, as the G20 leaders arrive in town we are at least glimpsing the rebirth of a serious, angry, militant anti-capitalist movement. After all, this is surely the time for anti-capitalism. The system's crisis is far more profound - and it's plain for all to see - than at the time of the great Seattle and Genoa mobilisations. The potential for a movement responding to the crisis - and debating exciting, egalitarian alternatives too - is amazing.

Secondly, Wednesday sees the first visit to this country by Obama since becoming President. The Stop the War protests (organised with others in the anti-war and pro-Palestinian movements) are not getting the media treatment, but are very important. They can show a movement for change can be both broad and radical. They come after a whole term of militant student protests with the brilliant wave of uni occupations for Gaza solidarity.

Just as importantly, with the slogan 'Jobs not Bombs' they start to link the issues of war abroad and unemployment at home. It's a pity tomorrow's Put People First demo won't have an anti-war theme integral to it - though some of us will be raising anti-war slogans of course - as it could have been an opportunity to bring all the big issues together.

We also surely need to connect the breadth of Put People First with the dynamism and anger of the smaller anti-capitalist actions to follow in coming days. Seattle's great achievement, almost a decade ago, was the uniting of 'Teamsters and Turtles', i.e. trade unionists with environmental (and other direct action) activists.

That's what we need to work to renew - and in conditions more volatile, and more open to left-wing arguments about the capitalist system, than we had several years ago.

Thursday, 26 March 2009

Miners' Strike - day by day

This is an ingenious idea: a miner who was highly active in the 84-85 Strike uploads his diary of the time, day by day, to a blog. We are still in the first month of the Great Strike and it's already uncovered a treasure trove of first-hand archive material. It will be fascinating to dip into as the year-long strike goes through its twists and turns.

http://normanstrike.wordpress.com

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

No2EU?

There has for some years been great potential for a left-of-Labour electoral alternative, uniting socialist and progressive forces around a common platform. Respect had considerable success for a time, but ended badly. The same conditions, however, still exist - indeed more so, considering the crisis of capitalism and disillusionment with Brown's premiership.

It is sad, therefore, to see the Communist Party of Britian, Socialist Party and RMT union using semi-nationalist rhetoric in its No2EU campaign for the European elections this June. What a wasted opportunity. While moves towards electoral unity on the left are welcome, the platform they advocate is confused. It echoes the opportunism many of the same people had in response to the wildcat strikes in the construction industry, when they adopted a largely uncritical position despite the 'British Jobs for British Workers' slogan.

It is also a peculiar approach to unity to deliberately exclude the largest left-of-Labour party in the country - the Socialist Workers Party - from negotiations. And surely, by now, we should have learnt that electoral success requires starting early and getting roots - leaving it until two months or so before the elections will not help anyone rise to the challenge.

Sunday, 22 March 2009

Robeson, culture and the movement


The Paul Robeson show on Friday night was magnificent. Tayo Aluko has a remarkable voice - combined with such an amazing and inspiring life story to tell, it would be hard to go wrong.

It's a shame that Robeson isn't better known today, for both artistic and political reasons. He was immensely courageous and principled, with a long-lasting commitment to radical causes. He refused to capitulate to the anti-Communist witch hunts, despite enormous pressure. And he was astonishingly talented.

Discovering radical cultural figures and traditions is one of the best things about being an active socialist. Being part of the Left involves encountering all sorts of otherwise hidden treasures in our history. Interestingly, Tayo commented (in a brief post-performance discussion) that he was 33 when he first heard of Robeson, despite being (in his words) "a politically conscious black man".

We could surely have more cultural events on the Left and in the anti-war movement. It's been a growth area in recent years, but still very patchy. It would be good to have more film showings, gigs, plays etc - as events in themselves and as ways of reaching out to people and involving them in the movement.

http://cmr.tayoalukoandfriends.com/

Thursday, 19 March 2009

Call Mr Robeson

I'm looking forward to the Paul Robeson-inspired performance in Newcastle this weekend - it's part of a series of fundraising dates for Stop the War. Here are the details (and there's some good material on the website):

Fundraiser for Stop the War – Friday 20th March, 7.30pm, People’s Theatre
TayoAluko and Friends with Stop the War present CALL MR ROBESON: A life, with songs
The People's Theatre, Stephenson Road, Heaton, Newcastle
£10/£8 Tel: 0191 265 50 20

http://www.callmrrobeson.com/

last week's occupation at Newcastle University




Newcastle and Sheffield occupations

Last week Newcastle occupied, and now Sheffield students have occupied too. Just when everyone assumed the wave of student action for Gaza was over, Newcastle and Sheffield have kept the momentum going. Newcastle students WON a number of demands, just as many of the occupations elsewhere have done.

Sheffield's occupying students are apparently having a tough time from authorities and security. There are updates at http://www.sheffoccupied.blogspot.com/ They need solidarity and support urgently.