Solidarity, UK



         


Solidarity was a revolutionary syndicalist organisation in the United Kingdom. Solidarity were known for their workerism and heavy emphasis on organising workers at their places of work.

Solidarity was founded in 1960 as a split from the Socialist Labour League and was intially known as Socialism Reaffirmed. This group published a journal, Agitator, which was later renamed Solidarity, from which the organisation took its new name. It became strongly influenced by Cornelius Castoriadis and the French Socialisme ou Barbarie group, and its numerous pamphlets were widely circulated.

In the late 1970s, Solidarity became increasingly divided into three tendencies, and in 1981 the group decided to disband.

[Top]

What made Solidarity different

2 During the past century the living standards of working people have improved. But neither these improved living standards, nor the nationalisation of the means of production, nor the coming to power of parties claiming to represent the working class have basically altered the status of the worker as worker, Nor have they given the bulk of mankind much freedom outside of production. East and West, capitalism remains an inhuman type of society where the vast majority are bossed at work and manipulated in consumption and leisure. Propaganda and policemen, prisons and schools, traditional values and traditional morality all serve to reinforce the power of the few and to convince or coerce the many into acceptance of a brutal, degrading and irrational system. The ?Communist? world is not communist and the ?Free? world is not free.
6 A socialist society can therefore only be built from below. Decisions concerning production and work will be taken by workers' councils composed of elected and revocable delegates. Decisions in other areas will be taken on the basis of the widest possible discussion and consultation among the people as a whole. This democratisation of society down to its very roots is what we mean by ?workers power'. --

Solidarity attacked Capitalism in the West and "Socialism" in the East, and advanced an understanding of repressive desublimation in the process of work and life. They advocated strongly for workers councils, from an industrial perspective. Most importantly, Solidarity bridged the schizm between anarchism and Marxism in a meaningfully organised way. During the 1960s and 1970s Solidarity was a breath of fresh air in the stale climate of the British left.

[Top]

Disagreement with other left-wing forces

Solidarity harshly criticised "trad-revs" or traditional communists, social democrats, trade unions, Trotskyist parties, the social movements and lifestylist anarchism for avoiding the central issue of the boss-worker relationship. Solidarity claimed that the traditional communist parties, social democrats and trade unions had made a devil's deal with the national bourgeoisie--that the traditional parties of the left supported the boss against the worker. Solidarity claimed that the critical support given by most Trotskyists for the Soviet Union (or China, Vietnam, Albania, Yugoslavia, etc.) or for "national liberation struggles" lead by nationalist bourgeoisie in the third world was a betrayal of the working class. Solidarity additionally claimed that the social movements and life-style anarchists were falling into the same trap of ignoring the working class and supporting nationalist bourgeoisie in the third world, or increasingly engaging in silly cult-like behaviour.

Solidarity (UK)'s criticism of the Soviet style societies was in the tradition of Council Communism and stated that the Bolshevik party was not a workers' party, and seized state power in the interests of a new class of bureaucrats and party functionaries. Solidarity (UK) perceived the October 1917 revolution as being a genuine revolution by the working class, but like the 19th century revolutions, it was high-jacked by a group of revolutionary bourgeoisie and rapidly crushed.

[Top]

Account of actual lived experience in Solidarity

Solidarity was initially formed by people leaving Trotskyist traditions, and the traditions of the day dictated that physical violence would be used against "splitters."

Soldarity was formed by ex-members of the Healyite Socialist Labour League. People leaving the SLL could expect a dose of 'proletarian justice'. Rumour had it that Solidarity members kept a load of incriminating SLL central committee papers which they threatened to publish if needed. Strangely enough nobody in Soly got a pasting from the SLL heavies.

Influenced by changes in French revolutionary pratice, Solidarity published a varied series of works. Controversial views about class structure was always a tension within the group. The mixture of industrial workers and intellectuals proved fruitful in this case.

Solidarity was heavily influenced by Socialisme ou Barbarie amongst other things. Actually, looking back, the influences were probably more eclectic. Solidarity published many pamphlets, they fell into a number of categories which probably reflect the different influences on and within the group. One effort was to republish the works of Castoriadis into English (under the name Paul Cardan). Some of these were fascinating, most were concerned with his attacks on what he saw as Marxism.
...
It was from this trend that Solidarity's ideas of society being divided into order givers and order takers came, rather than a working and a capitalist class. This was not a view held by everyone and anyway many simply seemed to see the ideas of order givers and order takers as being another way of talking about the working and a capitalist class. Others took it far more seriously and I think that these ideas still linger on in the anarchist movement in the politics of Class War and 1972] Solidarity had autonomous groups in a number of British cities and was bringing out more than one paper. ... It was a time of mass industrial struggle and each issue carried fascinating commentaries and analysis of what was going on, combined with what workers were saying. I first went to one of their meetings in 1973, I think. It was in London and they were in the process of having a split.
...
At that time [mid 1970s] membership fluctuated around the 80 to 100 mark. There were groups in London, Aberdeen, Manchester, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Oxford and probably some other places too. We held conferences every quarter and brought out the magazine Solidarity for Social Revolution at the same interval. Whilst we were never a membership organisation as such, people still had to be known by others and be accepted into membership which depended on agreement with As We See It.
[Top]

Splits and fusions with other organisations

Like most left wing organisations, Solidarity faced regular fusions with other groups, and regular splits by dissatisfied or dissident members. Unlike other groupings, these splits did not break the organisation, and were not a consciously used to eliminate dissidents.

The group that were to form World Revolution (subsequently part of the ICC ) started off as members of Solidarity. The arguments centred around the Castoriadis views, and as so often happens ideas became polarised. As it turned out Solidarity were probably better off without them.
As the seventies went on a group of us in the Socialist Party of Great Britain SPGB became more influenced by Solidarity and eventually were kicked out and formed what became Social Revolution . We were never very big, we had 12 - 15 members, but we began to meet Solidarity more and eventually Wildcat eventually emerged. Other ex-Solidarity types started Socialisme ou Barbarie texts. A brief list of the most important pamphlets follows (most of these pamphlets are available online, or through WCML):
[Top]

Further Reading





  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License