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woensdag 23 augustus 2023

WORLD WORLDWIDE EUROPE UK News Journal Update - (en) UK, ACG: There may be trouble ahead... (ca, de, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

 A conference entitled Troublemakers at Work seemed like an obvious place

for anarchist communist workplace militants to be. So, some of us went.This is what we found. ---- The conference, which took place inManchester on the last weekend in July, was called by a number ofactivist groups focused either on struggle in the workplace or helpingto organise unions. The former included Strike Map and Notes from Belowwhilst amongst the latter, Organise Now!, which operates as a kind ofclearing house for people looking for a union. Co-sponsoring the eventwere the great and the good of the British left, from Trotskyist groupsthrough to trades councils and a number of individual union branches,mostly Unite and the National Education Union, via various campaigns andauxiliary labour movement organisations.Organisers put the numbers at 180 including a small number joining byZoom and the atmosphere was generally energised with a various Leninisttendencies being mostly on their best behaviour. Certainly, there was asense that this was a coming together of grassroots union activists plusThe Conference was organised into a series of sessions, the first beingBuilding the Rank and File Today, which featured trade unionists who hadrecently been involved in industrial action speaking from the top tablebefore the assembled were divided into sectors; health and social care;education; transport etc. to discuss the situation in their sector. ACGmembers took part in the education and health and social care'breakouts'. In the former, UCU and NEU members talked about thestrengths and weaknesses of their own struggles and the place of therank and file in them. These sector meetings felt informal and fluid.The Nurses' union, the RCN were the dominant presence in the health andsocial care group, grouped around the NHS Workers Say No! campaign. Somemention was made of the autonomous action the Greek healthworkers'assemblies but the meeting ended without much of a conclusion.Ever Fallen in Love with...ACG members then attended the Fallen Out of Love with your Union?Session. Now, we've never been in love with our trade union, so we werejust hoping to meet other workers who are angry or disillusioned withtheir unions and might want to think about alternatives. What we heardfrom the main speaker was a call for a return to the tactic of themid-1920s British Communist Party - the National Minority Movement,which attempted to organise militant workers and officials forrevolutionary class struggle and endorsed Industrial Unionism - oneindustry, one union. That the National Minority Movement was thebrainchild of an increasingly Stalinised Communist Party and entirelyunable/unwilling to challenge the TUC's leadership of the 1926 GeneralStrike...calling for All Power to the General Council i.e. thebureaucrats at the top of the unions, was not mentioned.Credence was put in the vague notion of a 'Combine' to facilitatepressuring Full Time Officers. Exactly how a combine would beconstituted and engage with the union proper was not explained. As muchcredence was given to electing "real" rank & file members to unionpositions - even though it was acknowledged that many "good" membersbecoming officials become enculturated into the union way of operating,casting off their previous commitment to their members and integratedinto the lower levels of the machine.This highlighted a stark contradiction of many attendees at this event:an acknowledgement that TUs are often an obstacle to representingmembers' interests but little in the way of an alternative as to howgrassroots networks and/or groupings should react to this. Other aspectscovered in the subsequent discussion was the role of Labour underminingunions in general and what is perceived as militancy in particular; thefunding of Labour of by the TUs; Labour's lack of appetite to address'Tory' anti-union laws. Again, much huffing but no puffing in the formof concrete suggestions to challenge any of this.The general feeling of this session was that working within existingunion structures was the only way to do things: "with the officials ifthey are on our side, and without them if they are not". This wasactually the slogan of the pre-WW1 syndicalist Miners' Next Step.Similarly, there was promotion of the idea that we must find a way to"use the bureaucracy". There was opposition to splits in the unions andbreakaways (Trotskyists have always opposed alternative unions) and abelief that the trade unions must be "captured" by the rank and file -again, an approach that failed dismally when the Trotskyist movement wasmuch, much stronger in the 70s and 80s.We attended two of the Post Lunch Sessions.The Solidarity, the Law and Co-ordinating actionThis session was addressed by a CWU activist and an eco-activist who isoriented towards class struggle and was involved in trying to link upindustrial action with climate activism, with some success. In the mixwere an assortment of older union activists, the proper old lefties whohave been around since the 80s and whose rhetoric hasn't changed muchand who seem to live in a lefty trade union bubble, younger middle classactivist types and some very disgruntled working class rank and fileunion members. The activist types spoke a lot, in what was a very smallroom with multiple conversations ensuing. The disgruntled Unite memberswere criticising two things: the failure of the union to give anymeaningful political training to members and also the narrow focus ofmost members on strike who don't see beyond the struggle for wages andwouldn't appreciate the 'intervention' of activists from othercampaigns. They were also very realistic about the democracy in their union.The discussion had actually started with the abject failure of Enough isEnough, the campaign launched by a number of trade unions, campaigngroups and Labour MP that gained almost aero traction. There was also astrong anti-Labour Party vibe and nobody who spoke in this sessionseemed to have any belief that the Labour Party could be expected to doanything but continue the work of the Tories. Which was a positive.Some people in the workshop complained that, in the recent strike wave,the unions had failed to meaningfully co-ordinate the industrial actionacross the various unions. Nobody was saying that the unions, beingsectional organisations, were uninterested in co-ordinating action orthat they were intentionally working against linking up the fights.There wasn't an explanation of why co-ordinations of the strikes hadn'thappened. Overall, the conversations in the room were rather ramblingand unfocused although there seemed to be some consensus that when thenew Minimum Service employment laws came into practice and the firstworkers were arrested for refusing to work, that the union movementwould respond with a mass movement in the streets and the workplaces.This seems like wishful thinking as the likelihood of there being aunion mobilisation seems very distant given the weakness of the rank andfile and the likelihood that the union bosses will not want to go beyond'legal challenges'. Whether a grassroots rank and file movement can bedeveloped to lead such a mobilisation 'from below' remains a moot point.In the parallel NHS Workers Say No session a number of questions wereput to the group:1. What are the Main Challenges to building a Rank & File network?2. How can a R&F Network be Built?3. How should R&F networks engage with the TUs?Health Trade Unions were identified as the main block to organising Rankand File workers - or indeed Rank and File workers organisingthemselves. The lack of accountability of officers and their negativeengagement with branches and branch officers was repeatedly highlighted.Additionally, geography, partnership agreements and outsourcing werealso identified as problematic to organising by fracturing/atomising theworkforce. Whilst there was general agreement in accepting the limitedmeans of pushing back against TUs or that workers have a stark choicebetween striking or accepting current working conditions: these notionswere challenged and examples provided (e.g. working to rule/ contractedhours, etc., forming different unions as per IWGB, etc) which were wellreceived by some.The final, 'Plenary', session was interesting. In a sense it was more ofthe same except for the speaker from the RMT speaker, Clayton Clive, aBranch Secretary. He began by saying that he had become lessconservative as he got older, rather he had become increasinglyanarchist. Subsequently, he recommended that we keep an eye on even the'left' leaders, that the best leaders were "dead leaders" and that theworking class had the capacity and must lead itself and not rely onleaders. This got some claps from the floor (ours included), but notmany. And when the discussion on the floor opened, he was attacked attedious length by a Workers Power Trotskyist. Other than this, the dayended with a certain, fuzzy, unfocused 'unity'.So, overall, what was there to take away from this gathering of would-beTroublemakers? Well, the gathering brought people together from the rankand file and the lowest ranks of the union movement (Branch level), manyof whom had recently been involved in actual struggles, including therecent strike wave to share experiences, whilst few drew useful lessons.Amongst those attracted it included some militants from groups likeNotes from Below (who were actually involved in the organisation of theevent) and individual anarchists and anarcho-syndicalists, Wobblies andthe Angry Workers -whose own report of proceedings is worth readingwww.angryworkers.org/2023/08/08/notes-from-the-troublemakers-conference-in-the-uk-the-problem-with-the-rank-and-file/It was, generally, conducted in an open and non-sectarian manner. Themood of the conference was that current TUs and Labour in particularcannot be trusted to support R&F members and there was an expressed viewthat this must change. However, there was little analysis, beyond theusual leftist mantra that the trade unions played a contradictory role,with some of the speakers defending the standard Trotskyist analysis ofthe trade unions: as organisations ripe to be transformed from below,through activism, into authentic workers' organisations/"fightingunions". This didn't come as a surprise; this current dominates theleft. There was some bemoaning of the demise of the influence of TradesCouncils. Our own experience is that Trades Councils are often talkingshops for low level trade union officials and have no real relationshipwith rank and file workers.It mostly reflected a sort of division between the older Leninists whohave been in the trade unions for decades and younger activists who areperhaps a little more critical of the unions and who favour buildingbroad alliances with social movements (particularly the eco movement)and want to support direct action. They seemed to be a minority andthere was a sense that the dominant voice in the hall was a moretraditional one, even if this perspective was not universally shared.#It was notable that the majority of those present worked in unionisedworkplaces and industries: generally, Education, Healthcare, Transport,and Manufacturing. There were some new initiatives such as the Amazonworkers in Coventry, the Pan African Workers Association, and theMigrant Agricultural Workers initiative. But they seemed to be theexception and there wasn't a sense of the syndicalist/industrialunionist movement being present - as unions the likes of the IndustrialWorkers of the World or the United Voices of the World were notinvolved. Nor was there even much greenfield organising or muchdiscussion of the fact that outside the sectors represented (and evenwithin some of them such as social care and hospitalities) unions barelyexist.Nor was there any indication of what means would be employed to changethe status quo beyond keep organising at grassroots level and electingmore Rank and File candidates: it seemed naïve to believe that TUs willnot attempt to hijack these movements or use their power -in either case- to neutralise them.Likewise, whilst there was a broad realisation that the strike wave ofthe last year was receding and that significant victories were few andfar between, there wasn't much in the way of discussion of a way out ofthe impasse, of how the struggles could be extended and generalised, orof just what will be required for workers to start to manage their ownstruggles. Perhaps those conversations were for a future time?What is clear is that there is a need for workers to come together,outside the trade union structures, and to start to build struggleorganisations of the base and that, in part, conferences like this, forall their limitations, may be part of what brings those workers together.https://www.anarchistcommunism.org/2023/08/11/there-may-be-trouble-ahead/_________________________________________A - I N F O S  N E W S  S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca

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