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A workers' council or labor council[1] is a form of political and economic organization in which a workplace or municipality is governed by a council made up of workers or their elected delegates. The workers within each council decide on what their agenda is and what their needs are. The council communist Pannekoek describes shop-committees and sectional assemblies as the basis for workers' management of the industrial system.[2] A variation is a soldiers' council, where soldiers direct a mutiny. Workers and soldiers have also operated councils in conjunction (like the 1918 German Arbeiter- und Soldatenrat). Workers' councils may in turn elect delegates to central committees, such as the Congress of Soviets.
In such a system, the workers themselves are able to exercise decision-making power. Some socialists believe that workers' councils are necessary for the organization of a proletarian revolution and the implementation of a communist society. A works council is distinct from a workers' council in that it is organized by a firm to assist with shop-floor management, rather than organizing a socialist revolution. These organizations exist on a legal basis and are common among businesses in Germany.[3] The term has also been applied to unions such as the Nigeria Workers' Council.
Historical examples
Workers' councils originated in lands of the Russian Empire (including Congress Poland and Latvia) in 1905, with the workers' councils (soviets) acting as labor committees which coordinated strike activities throughout the cities due to repression of trade unions. During the Revolutions of 1917–1923, councils of socialist workers were able to exercise political authority. Communists such as Anton Pannekoek and Rosa Luxemburg advocated for the control of the revolution by the workers' councils. Several times in recent history, the socialists have organized workers' councils during periods of unrest. Examples include:
- Paris, France during 1871 (la commune)[4]
- Adrianople Vilayet, Ottoman Empire in 1903
- Russia in 1905 and during 1917-1921 (soviets);[5]
- Poland during 1905, 1918–1919, 1944–1947 and 1956, 1970, 1980–1981 (rady robotnicze);[6]
- Mexico during 1910–1920, 1994 and 2011 (comités trabajadores);
- Glasgow, Scotland during 1915[6]
- Austria during 1918
- Finland during the 1918 (Central Workers' Council of Finland)
- Germany during 1918–1919 (räte);[6]
- Ukraine during 1918–1921 (vilni rady, "free councils");
- Hungary during 1919 and 1956 (szovjetek);
- Italy during 1919–1920 and 1968 (consigli di fabbrica);
- Ireland during 1920–1921 (comhairle oibrithe);
- China during 1920–1927 and in 1967 (sūwéiāi);
- Korea during 1929–1931 (hyeob-uihoe) and 1945–1946 (inmin wiwǒnhoe) ;
- Spain during 1936–1937 (comités trabajadores);
- Indonesia during 1945–1946[6]
- Vietnam during 1930-1931 and 1945
- Algeria during 1962–1965[6]
- France during 1968 (comités d'entreprise);
- Czechoslovakia in 1968 ;
- Sri Lanka during the 1970–75 United Front government[7]
- Australia during 1971–1980 and 1990[8][9]
- Chile during 1973 (cordones);
- Argentina during 1973 and 2001[6]
- Northern Ireland during 1974
- Portugal during 1974–1976[6]
- Iran during 1978–1979 (shoras);[10]
- Canada during 1981[6]
- Rojava from 2012 onward[11]
- Libya during 1977-2011
Despite Lenin's declarations that "the workers must demand the immediate establishment of genuine control, to be exercised by the workers themselves", on May 30, the Menshevik minister of labor, Matvey Skobelev, pledged to not give the control of industry to the workers but instead to the state: "The transfer of enterprises into the hands of the people will not at the present time assist the revolution [...] The regulation and control of industry is not a matter for a particular class. It is a task for the state. Upon the individual class, especially the working class, lies the responsibility for helping the state in its organizational work."[12][13]
Organization details
In the workers' councils organised as part of the 1918 German revolution, factory organisations, such as the General Workers' Union of Germany (AAUD), formed the basis for organising region-wide councils. The council communists in the Communist Workers' Party of Germany advocated organising "on the basis of places of work, not trades, and to establish a National Federation of Works Committees."[14]
Councils operate on the principle of recallable delegates. This means that elected delegates may be recalled at any time through a vote in a form of impeachment. Recall of management committee members, specialist professionals such as engineers, and delegates to higher councils was observed in the Central Workers Council of Greater Budapest during 1956, where delegates were removed for industrial, organisational, and political reasons.[citation needed]
Workers' councils combine to elect higher bodies for coordinating between one another. This means that the upper councils are not superior to the lower councils, but are instead built from and operated by them. The national council would therefore have delegates from every city in the country. Their nature means that workers' councils do away with traditional centralized governments and instead give power indirectly to the people.[citation needed] The Central Workers Council of Greater Budapest occupied this role in the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, between late October and early January 1957, where it grew out of local factory committees. This type of democratic order is called soviet democracy.
Council Communism
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A workers' council is a deliberative assembly, composed of working class members, intended to institute workers' self-management or workers' control. Unlike a trade union, in a workers' council the workers are assumed to be in actual control of their workplace, rather than merely negotiating with employers through collective bargaining. They are a form of workplace democracy, where different workplaces coordinate production through their elected delegates.[citation needed]
Amongst both Marxists and anarchists there is a widespread belief that workers' councils a form of government that can implement socialism, through workers' control over production and distribution. Whereas parliaments are concerned with law and its application, workers' councils would concern themselves with social production, where there is no difference between politics and the economy.
Some left communists (particularly council communists) and anarchists[who?] support a council-based society; believing that only the workers themselves can spark a revolution and so workers' councils will be the foundation of the revolution. There are also Leninists (for example the Trotskyist International Socialist Tendency and its offshoots) who advocate a council-based society,[15] but maintain that workers' councils cannot carry out a revolution without the leadership of a vanguard party.[16]
During the May 1968 events in France, "[t]he largest general strike that ever stopped the economy of an advanced industrial country, and the first wildcat general strike in history",[17] the Situationists, against the unions and the French Communist Party that were starting to side with the de Gaulle government to contain the revolt, called for the formation of workers' councils to take control of the cities, expelling union leaders and left-wing bureaucrats, in order to keep the power in the hands of the workers with direct democracy.[17]
See also
- The Civil War in France
- Co-determination
- Council communism
- Kronstadt rebellion
- Factory committee
- Free association of producers
- Libertarian socialism
- Rosa Luxemburg
- Marxism
- Paris Commune
- Antonie Pannekoek
- Soviet democracy
- Soviet republic (system of government)
- Soviet (council)
- Supreme Soviet
- Works council
- Workers' control
- Workers' Council of the United States
References
- ^ Rocker, Rudolf (2004). Anarcho-syndicalism: Theory and Practice. AK Press. p. 63. ISBN 1902593928.
- ^ Pannekoek, Anton (1946). Workers' Councils. Wageningen, Netherlands: Communistenbond Spartacus. ISBN 9781902593562.
- ^ "POLYAS Company".
- ^ Rougerie, Jacques (2014). La Commune de 1871. Paris: Presses universitaires de France. pp. 58–60. ISBN 978-2-13-062078-5.
- ^ Maurice Brinton, pseud. (Christopher Agamemnon Pallis). The Bolsheviks and Workers' Control. (Orig: Solidarity UK, London, 1970), The Bolsheviks and Workers' Control introduction
- ^ a b c d e f g h Ness, Immanuel (2010). Ours to Master and to Own: Workers' Control from the Commune to the Present.
- ^ Goonewardena, Leslie (1975). "Employees Councils and Self Management in Sri Lanka". State. 1: 32–37.
- ^ Ness, Immanuel (2014). New Forms of Worker Organization: The Syndicalist and Autonomist Restoration of Class Struggle Unionism. pp. 184–203.
- ^ "Melbourne tram dispute and lockout 1990 – anarcho-syndicalism in practice". libcom.org. Retrieved 2019-03-12.
- ^ Poya, Maryam (2002) [1987]. "Iran 1979: Long live the Revolution! ... Long Live Islam?". In Colin Barker (ed.). Revolutionary Rehearsals. Chicago: Haymarket Books. pp. 143–149. ISBN 1-931859-02-7.
- ^ A Small Key Can Open a Large Door: The Rojava Revolution (1st ed.). Strangers in a Tangled Wilderness. 4 March 2015. According to Dr. Ahmad Yousef, an economic co-minister, three-quarters of traditional private property is being used as commons and one quarter is still being owned by use of individuals...According to the Ministry of Economics, worker councils have only been set up for about one third of the enterprises in Rojava so far.
- ^ Tony Cliff Lenin 2 Chapter 12 Lenin and Workers’ Control, section The Rise of Factory Committees
- ^ Amosov et al. (1927) Oktiabrskaia Revoliutsiia i Fazavkomy, vol. 1, p. 83. (published in Moscow)
- ^ Bernhard Reichenbach, The KAPD in Retrospect: An Interview with a Member of the Communist Workers Party of Germany
- ^ Molyneux, John (2003) [1987]. The Future Socialist Society. Chicago: Haymarket Books. pp. 5–6. "... the core institutions of the new state will be ... the network of workers' councils."
- ^ Molyneux, John (2003) [1978]. Marxism and the Party. Chicago: Haymarket Books. p. 79. "Only with the growth of the Bolsheviks into a mass party and with the emergence of a Bolshevik majority in the soviets were these embryos of workers' state power able to fulfil their potentiality."
- ^ a b "The Beginning of an Era", from Situationist International No 12 (September 1969). Translated by Ken Knabb.