Thursday, 17 October 2013

Rosa Luxemburg and the Mass Strike

This Thursday's branch meeting was on the topic of Rosa Luxemburg and her pamphlet The Mass Strike. It was prepared fairly hurriedly so please forgive any glaring omissions.


Rosa Luxemburg and the Mass Strike

Who was Rosa Luxemburg?

Early Life

Rosa Luxemburg lived an extraordinary, if cruelly foreshortened life. From her birth to her early political activity, to her leadership and activism for socialism, to her murder by agents of the German state at the age of 47, she did remarkable things and was a tireless revolutionary.

Rosa was born into a Jewish family in Poland in 1871. At the time the area now in Poland was divided between imperialist powers and Rosa was a Russian Polish Jew. As if life was not hard enough already, as a child she had a severe illness which left her with a deformity in her leg that gave her a permanent limp. So she started from a pretty difficult position in society. The Tsarist regime was extremely anti-Semitic and Poles occupied a subservient position within the Russian empire.

However, she received a good education. She used her time when she was ill to read, and her father who was a petit bourgeois, moved to Warsaw at least partly so that his children could have an education. She excelled at school, but was drawn towards revolutionary politics from a young age, being known in the underground by the time she was 15. In fact she was denied a medal for academic excellence when she graduated high school on the grounds of her revolutionary associations.

Revolutionary Politics

She became involved initially with anarchist politics but soon gravitated towards socialism and when she had to flee to Geneva under threat of arrest became one of the very few women who attended university.

So from a very young age she was familiar with extreme repression, she showed an incisive intellect and was a committed activist and revolutionary. By the time she was 23 she was a leading figure in the SKDPiL, a socialist party in Poland that opposed the nationalist agenda of the much larger PPS (Polish Socialist Party) in favour of an internationalist view.

In 1898, at the age of 27, Luxemburg moved to Berlin. Berlin was an important centre for any socialist at the time. It was home to the world’s largest communist party, the SPD, which had a million members. For many socialists at the time, if there was to be a communist revolution the natural starting point was Germany, and Rosa wanted to be where the action was.

The SPD, however, posed problems for revolutionaries. It was a sprawling party that encompassed trades unions, scores of newspapers, and parliamentary politics. It was a communist party in name, but in practice was largely reformist, with a significant revolutionary minority inside it. This was not, by the time Rosa arrived, a new problem. Marx and Engels had criticised the turn towards reformism in a pamphlet called ‘Critique of the Gotha Programme’ in 1875. However, Rosa threw herself into the party. She began a speaking tour around Germany to whip up support for the party in forthcoming elections.

Within a year, Luxemburg was involved in a huge debate between herself and Eduard Bernstein, a leading intellectual within the SPD and an advocate of reformism. Reformism, in a nutshell, is the idea that workers can gradually reform the capitalist system from within, fighting to give workers a greater share of capitalist profits, until socialism is constructed in a piecemeal fashion. Rosa was a revolutionary, and argued that the system is fundamentally unstable and prone to crisis, which would always result in an attack on workers’ living conditions. Further she argued that the state is not an independent entity, but that it reflects the needs of capital rather than labour – socialists cannot take over the institutions of such a state and use them for socialist ends.

This is not to say that workers and their organisations should not fight for reforms and improvements. These activities bring improvements to workers’ lives and build confidence to fight. It is to say that socialism cannot be achieved through them. These arguments won her support within the SPD, but also enemies, especially within the bureaucratic and reformist elements that were steering the practical direction of the party. This tension between reformists and revolutionaries, both across Europe and within the SPD would define a lot of Luxemburg’s focus, especially in her pamphlet The Mass Strike, which is the focus of tonight’s meeting.

The 1905 Russian Revolution
Before going into what Luxemburg argued in The Mass Strike, I need to briefly explain the context in which she was writing. This context is the 1905 revolution in Russia, so I need to explain some of what was going on in Russia at the time.

In 1905, 140,000 people marched to the Winter Palace in St Petersburg to hand a petition to the Tsar. The petition demanded various reforms, including free universal education, universal suffrage and an eight-hour day. The march was led by a monk and many of the demonstrators carried pictures of the Tsar. It was the essence of a reformist demand. The Tsar ordered troops to open fire, and hundreds were killed in what became known as Bloody Sunday.

Bloody Sunday sparked off mass strikes across Russia and the Empire. Chris Harman, in his A People’s History of the World, puts the 1905 revolution like this:

After the shootings the tone of the strikes became increasingly revolutionary. Socialists produced openly revolutionary newspapers. There was mutiny in the Black Sea fleet, led by the Battleship Potemkin. And there was an attempted uprising in Moscow in December led by the militant ‘Bolshevik’ faction of the Social Democratic Party … A new sort of organisation, based on elected delegates from the major workplaces [the soviets] … became the focus for the revolutionary forces in St Petersburg … it represented a new way of organising revolutionary forces.

208:401

The 1905 revolution failed, however. Tony Cliff explained:

Petersburg was in the grip of a total strike. And the general strike spread from the capital to many cities hundreds or even thousands of miles away. The economic demands of workers led to political demands, economic struggle led to political struggle and vice versa. The two were not separated.

Finally, on 6 August, the Tsar made a concession. But instead of giving the long promised National Assembly, nothing was given but a consultative body – the Duma – with no power to legislate. The Duma was at the mercy of the Tsar. Out of the 1,400,000 Petersburg citizens only 13,000 had the vote. This roused the popular passion to fever heat, and led to the second great wave of strikes in October, in which the demands were overwhelmingly political.

At the same time the demand for the eight-hour day was central. The strike started in Moscow and from there it spread to Petersburg. The Petersburg soviet was established. By 13 October the number of strikers throughout Russia exceeded one million. Practically all the railway lines were stopped? The post stopped, schools were closed, water and gas supplies ceased, the country, the cities and the communications between them were practically at a standstill. Poland was completely paralysed by the strike, as was Finland.

On 17 October the Tsar signed a proclamation giving a constitution to the Russian people. This manifesto pledged civil liberty with inviolability of the person, freedom of speech and association. It promised facilities for spreading electoral rights throughout the nation, leaving the details to the new Duma. Finally it agreed that no law would be enforceable without the approval of the state.

The workers were not satisfied. The Tsar’s proclamation whetted workers’ appetite for more. The revolutionaries demanded the dismissal of General Trepov, head of the police and Cossacks in Petersburg, the removal of the troops twenty miles from the city, a general amnesty and the formation of a national citizen’s militia. They also demanded a political amnesty.

They declared that while there was freedom of meeting, the meetings were still surrounded by troops. While there was freedom of the press, the censorship remained. While there was freedom of learning the universities were occupied by troops. The inviolability of the person was given, but the gaols were filled with political prisoners. A constitution was given but the autocracy remained.

A third wave of strikes followed in November. The heart of these were economic demands. The unifying demand for the eight-hour day now dominated the strike. There was a total strike in Petersburg. On 3 November the whole town was practically shut down.

Outside St Petersburg there was a different picture. In the provinces the strike call was not answered, and in Petersburg itself the employers reacted by mass lockouts affecting tens of thousands of workers. By the beginning of December the Tsar felt strong enough to take massive repressive measures. The whole Executive Committee of Petersburg trade unions was arrested, the National Railroad Union was dissolved, new anti-strike regulations were promulgated.

On 7 December a strike broke out in Moscow in protest against these repressive measures. It spread to St Petersburg where about 125,000 people came out on strike. This was the springboard for an armed insurrection in Moscow. Alas, after a week of struggle the insurrection was bloodily crushed by the Tsarist army.

Socialist Worker Review, 1985:1, January 1985, pp.15-17.

The Mass Strike

It was against this backdrop that Luxemburg wrote The Mass Strike, The Political Party and the Trade Unions in August 1906. As the full title suggests, she was interested in the way that political parties and trades unions should approach a mass strike.

In the Mass Strike, Luxemburg takes on a host of opponents. She condemns the ‘romantic’ anarchists, ‘Mr Gradgrind’ trades unionists, and Engels’ position on strikes.

Engels had said, in 1873, that strikes could not be a way to win socialism. He believed, in Luxemburg’s words, that

Either the proletariat as a whole are not yet in possession of the powerful organisation and financial resources required [to win], in which case they cannot carry through the general strike: or they are already sufficiently well organised, in which case they do not need the general strike.

1986:14

There is something to be said for this view – carrying through a mass strike is a huge organisational undertaking that requires a powerful working class organisations if it is to be victorious. However, Luxemburg’s understanding of recent events led her to say ‘The Russian Revolution has now effected a radical revision of the above piece of reasoning. For the first time in the history of the class struggle it has achieved a grandiose realisation of the idea of the mass strike and … even matured the general strike and thereby opened a new epoch in the development of the labour movement.’ (ibid.) She goes on ‘the mass strike in Russia has been realised … as a means, firstly, of creating for the proletariat the conditions of the daily political struggle and especially of parliamentarism.’ (ibid.: 16) So for her, the mass strike was a means of creating the organisation that would help them to win.

Luxemburg thought that the mass strike was a potentially powerful tool. However, she did not believe it could simply happen at the urging of a few revolutionaries, or that it would automatically succeed. She criticised ‘revolutionary romanticists’ and anarchists: ‘if it depended on the inflammatory ‘propaganda’ of revolutionary romanticists or on confidential or public decisions of the party direction, we should not even yet have had in Russia a single serious mass strike.’ (ibid.: 20)

Luxemburg believed that a general strike could not be called through propaganda, but it was purely a historically inevitable occurrence arising from a particular set of social conditions. The mass strike she saw as a culmination of waves of economic strikes that had built up over several years, and Bloody Sunday was merely a trigger that unleashed the power of a proletariat whose confidence to act had been rising through activity and which had been politicised by Tsarist oppression, which included several massacres of workers and socialists..

When the mass strike did break out, Luxemburg says ‘the appeals of the parties could scarcely keep pace with the spontaneous risings of the masses’ – the revolutionary parties could not lead that which was the spontaneous, organic result of independent working class activity.

The sudden general rising of the proletariat in January … expressed itself forthwith in the circumstances that the proletarian mass … quite suddenly and sharply came to realise how intolerable was that social and economic existence which they had patiently endured for decades in the chains of capitalism. Thereupon there began a spontaneous general shaking of and tugging at these chains. All the innumerable sufferings of the modern proletariat reminded them of the old bleeding wounds. Here was the eight-hour day fought for, there piece-work was resisted, here were brutal foremen ‘driven off’ in a sack on a handcart  … all these suddenly awakened by the January lightning bethought themselves of their rights and now sought feverishly to make up for their previous neglect.

(Ibid.: 33)

Luxemburg goes on to note that the Russian proletariat went on to create the things that had been denied in it by Tsarism, such as trades unions, but also a new form of organisation – the workers’ council (soviet). To Luxemburg, the organisation created by the shaking and tugging at chains showed the limitations of the political party in creating and sustaining the mass strike. However, this is not to say that she did not believe that a party had a role to play. She goes on to say ‘even during the revolution mass strikes do not exactly fall from heaven. They must be brought about in some way by the workers. The resolution and determination of the workers also play a part and indeed the initiative and wider direction naturally fall to the share of the organised and most enlightened kernel of the proletariat.’ (ibid. : 53) Part of the context of the Mass Strike is that Lenin at the time had been ‘bending the stick’ towards the party in the Bolshevik wing of the Social Democratic party, moving the Bolsheviks towards a cadre system and closing the ranks of the party. Luxemburg argues against this kind of separation in her polemic, stressing the spontaneity of revolutions and her belief that it is impossible to steer them; or as she put it, ‘revolutions do not allow anyone to play the schoolmaster with them.’ (Ibid.: 54)

The role of a revolutionary party, then, is to give direction to the spontaneous mass strike. Resolute determination on the part of the party, Luxemburg believed, gave confidence to workers involved in mass struggle, whereas vacillation and weakness would undermine the mass strike and lead it only to defeat.

Much of The Mass Strike is aimed at opponents within the SPD and attempting to apply lessons from the Russian revolution to the German situation. It might be tempting to see the SPD as similar to the Labour Party in the UK, but there were substantial differences. Firstly, at least in theory, the SPD was committed to revolutionary change in Germany. Secondly, the SPD had the support of sections of the army, and many of its large demonstrations would be armed – something which one can scarcely imagine of a Labour Party conference today. Thirdly, the SPD had its own, separate trades unions rather than, as the Labour Party was intended to be, being the representative of the interests of the trades union bureaucracy. In theory, the SPD was committed to workers’ struggles to bring about socialism.

In practice however, there were fewer differences between the SPD and an organisation like the Labour Party. In The Mass Strike, one of Luxemburg’s chief aims is to explain the deficiencies of the SPD approach to strike action, which she believed was cautious, mechanistic, bureaucratic and pessimistic. When the Russian Revolution broke out, there was a burst of enthusiasm and the party began to discuss the mass strike. As the revolution was crushed and the energy of the workers seemed to ebb, however, Luxemburg felt that the party was looking for excuses to avoid a mass strike.

In the endlessly spun out press debates which ensued, the idea was more and more watered down. The understanding reached between the Party Executive and the General Commission of the trade unions [returned the mass strike to] the mechanistic formulae haunting everyone’s mind with the living experiences of the Russian struggles.

Writes her biographer, Paul Frolich. So Luxemburg again and again opposes her ideas of the spontaneity of the Russian Revolution to a mechanised, bureaucratised SPD which is profoundly pessimistic because it does not want even to call a mass strike that would grow beyond its control, let alone win one. This is a phenomenon familiar to anyone who knows about the 1926 general in strike in Britain or the unwillingness of other union leaders to back the miners in 1984.

 

Lessons for Today

It is important to recognise that although Luxemburg had many insights and contributions towards Marxist politics, there is no coherent ‘Luxemburgism’ in the same way that we think of Marxism. Her ideas changed and developed both in response to debate with figures such as Lenin and also as she learned from the events she was a part of. For example, in chapter 7, she says ‘the Russian Revolution has for its next task the abolition of Absolutism and the creation of a modern bourgeois constitutional-state.’!

The Mass Strike was written in the aftermath of an astonishing period in working class politics and much of what was written is specific to the period she was writing in. However, the way in which Luxemburg generalises from the experiences of the Russian Revolution still have pertinence – and her criticisms of the Social Democratic parties’ role in the Russian Revolution were borne out by the way in which Lenin’s Bolsheviks adapted to respond to the 1905 revolution. The party ‘threw open the doors’ in the years following 1905, and by 1917 had a massively expanded membership of hundreds of thousands. By maintaining ideological and practical unity of purpose but having a larger social base, the Bolsheviks were able to have a far greater influence on the next wave of struggle. This suggests that Luxemburg was correct in much of her analysis.

All of this suggests of course that we should not counterpose a Luxemburgian spontaneity of the masses to a bureaucratic party. Luxemburg thought that both organisation and spontaneity were needed to make a successful revolution.

Of course today we are at an historically low level of working class struggle in the UK. Workers have not had a significant, large-scale victory in over 40 years. However, as the recent public sector strikes, and the highly political recent strike at Hovis, where workers won the fight for the abolition of zero hour contracts and agency staff are to be offered full-time permanent positions, shows, struggle may again be on the rise. The fundamental antagonism between capital and labour means that struggle can only be kept down for so long, and if in the future we are experiencing an upturn in struggle – and with so many of the strikes being connected to austerity, any upturn must have a highly political content – the role of revolutionaries, wary of bureaucratism (and especially the bureaucratism of the trades unions) on the one side, and yet having sufficient organisation to give direction to spontaneous struggles, will be of enormous significance. It is something that we in the SWP must get right.

All these are points which we may want to open up for discussion, but the last thing I would like to say before we throw the meeting open is a quote from the last chapter of The Mass Strike, of which we may want to consider the application to Derby (and which I hope we may take some issue with):

Amongst the wider section of the masses in the … provinces, in the smaller and smallest towns where local political life is not an independent thing but a mere reflex of the course of events in the capital, where consequently party life is poor and monotonous, and where finally, the economic standard of life for workers is, for the most part, miserable, it is very difficult to secure the double form of organisation [of party and trade union]

(ibid.: 84)

A lively discussion followed, which included a discussion of anarchism in relation to mass strikes, the role of spontaneity in workers' movements, how Luxemburg came to break with the SPD because of their support for World War One, the differences between a general strike and a mass strike, and the links between political struggle and economic struggle.

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