Italian Syndicalist Union | |
Unione Sindacale Italiana | |
Established |
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Dissolved |
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Type | Trade union |
Headquarters | Via Testi 2, Parma, Italy |
Membership (2016) | 1,000 |
Publication | Guerra di Classe |
Affiliations |
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Website | usi-cit |
Part of a series on |
Anarcho-syndicalism |
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The Italian Syndicalist Union (Italian : Unione Sindacale Italiana; USI) is an Italian anarcho-syndicalist trade union. Established in 1912 by a confederation of "houses of labour", the USI led a series of general strikes throughout its early years, culminating with the Red Week insurrection against the Italian entry into World War I. During the Biennio Rosso, the USI was at the forefront of the occupation of factories, which saw hundreds of workplaces throughout the country brought under the control of workers' councils. The USI also led the establishment of the International Workers' Association (IWA), which became the main international organisation of anarcho-syndicalist trade unions.
After the rise of Italian fascism, the USI was banned and its members were either arrested, driven underground or forced into exile. By the late-20th century, the USI was eventually reconstituted and once again involved itself in radical strike actions. Expelled from the IWA in 2016, together with the Spanish CNT and German FAU, it established the International Confederation of Labour (ICL), a new international of anarcho-syndicalist trade unions.
Syndicalism first arose in Italy at the turn of the 20th century, after the houses of labour (Italian : Camere del Lavoro) were established throughout the country. [1] A series of general strikes from 1904 to 1906 brought Italian workers together into the first trade union confederations, [2] including the General Confederation of Labour (CGL), although this was soon taken over by a reformist leadership affiliated with the Italian Socialist Party (PSI). [3] Disillusioned with the reformist leadership, by 1907, a syndicalist faction had emerged within the CGL, establishing the National Resistance Committee. [4] In 1908, the syndicalist rank-and-file broke away from CGL, [5] after its leadership refused to support a number of strikes. [2] Syndicalists subsequently led their own strikes in a variety of sectors throughout the country, [6] culminating in a mass strike against the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911. [2]
In 1912, syndicalist organisations united into the Italian Syndicalist Union (Italian : Unione Sindicale Italiana; USI), [7] which was formed as a federation of self-managing unions. [8] As workers defected from the CGL to the USI en masse, [9] it counted 80,000 members at the time of its constitution. [10] In its first year of existence, the USI organised numerous general strikes, including by workers employed in marble production, metalworking, construction, agriculture, rail transport and sailing. By the outbreak of World War I in mid-1914, the USI counted 124,000 members, who led the anti-militarist mobilisation that became the Red Week insurrection. [11]
Following the Italian entry into World War I, the USI split into internationalist and interventionist factions. [12] The revolutionary interventionists, led by USI general secretary Alceste De Ambris, favoured participation in the war as a means to prepare the country for a social revolution. [13] But they were opposed by the majority of the USI's membership, which deposed De Ambris, expelled the interventionists and elected Armando Borghi as the new general secretary. [14] The USI subsequently called for an anti-militarist general strike, although they were ultimately incapable of putting it into practice. [13] Meanwhile, the expelled interventionist faction established the Italian Labour Union (UIL), which moved towards national syndicalism and eventually joined the Italian fascist movement. [15]
After the war ended, the USI launched a general strike movement that involved the mass occupation of factories by workers. At the USI's Third Congress, which took place in Parma in December 1919, the union proposed the creation of a system of workers' councils that could establish workers' control over the Italian economy and manage the transition to a stateless society. [16] In February 1920, syndicalist metalworkers brought the factories of Sestri Ponente under workers' self-management; in March, syndicalist workers were rising up in Turin; in April, the workers' uprising had swept Piedmont and Napoli, while workers took over the city of Piombino; by July 1920, metalworkers of the USI were taking over factories throughout the country. In August and September 1920, workers throughout the country took up arms and formed detachments of Red Guards, which took over 300 workplaces in Milan alone. [17] By this time, although the USI counted over 500,000 members, it was still much smaller and less powerful than the CGL. [18] Reformists ultimately halted the factory occupation movement, in an effort to stem social revolution. [19] In October 1920, the government of Giovanni Giolitti arrested the USI's entire leadership. [20]
The USI was briefly able to continue its activities, organising a general strike in Milan in March 1921, but before long it came under attack by the rising fascist movement, which broke up its trade unions and harassed its members. [21] The USI resolved to take direct action against the fascists; it formed armed anti-fascist detachments known as the Arditi del Popolo and reinforced its labour centres. [22] By July 1922, the anarcho-syndicalists of the USI had formed a Labour Alliance with other anti-fascist trade unions and parties. [23] In an attempt to stop the March on Rome, the alliance called an anti-fascist general strike, [24] but this was ultimately halted by the reformist factions. The new Fascist regime immediately carried out political repression against the left-wing, including the USI. [25]
During this period, the USI also led the founding of the International Workers' Association (IWA), an international of trade unions established as an alternative to the Bolshevik-controlled Red International of Labour Unions (RILU). [26]
The rise of Benito Mussolini's National Fascist Party to power brought a wave of political repression against the USI. By April 1924, the union's legal activity was paralysed; it consequently reorganised itself into an underground organisation and led a number of wildcat strikes by miners and marble producers in Tuscany. The USI was finally eliminated by 1927, as its members were arrested en masse or forced into exile. [27]
In the wake of World War II, the anarcho-syndicalist movement went into a period of sustained decline, which reached its lowest point during the 1960s. [28] But following the Protests of 1968 and the subsequent Spanish transition to democracy, renewed interest in anarcho-syndicalism led to the reconstitution of the USI in 1978. [29] The reconstituted USI has since led a series of general strikes. [30]
Following an internal crisis in the international anarcho-syndicalist movement, in 2016, the USI, along with the Spanish National Confederation of Labour (CNT) and German Free Workers' Union (FAU), was expelled from the IWA. Together, in 2018, they established the new International Confederation of Labour (ICL). [31]
Syndicalism is a revolutionary current within the labour movement that, through industrial unionism, seeks to unionize workers according to industry and advance their demands through strikes and other forms of direct action, with the eventual goal of gaining control over the means of production and the economy at large through social ownership.
Anarcho-syndicalism is an anarchist organisational model that centres trade unions as a vehicle for class conflict. Drawing from the theory of libertarian socialism and the practice of syndicalism, anarcho-syndicalism sees trade unions as both a means to achieve immediate improvements to working conditions and to build towards a social revolution in the form of a general strike, with the ultimate aim of abolishing the state and capitalism. Anarcho-syndicalists consider trade unions to be the prefiguration of a post-capitalist society and seek to use them in order to establish workers' control of production and distribution. An anti-political ideology, anarcho-syndicalism rejects political parties and participation in parliamentary politics, considering them to be a corrupting influence on the labour movement. In order to achieve their material and economic goals, anarcho-syndicalists instead practice direct action in the form of strike actions, boycotts and sabotage. Anarcho-syndicalists also attempt to build solidarity among the working class, in order to unite workers against the exploitation of labour and build workers' self-management.
The International Workers' Association – Asociación Internacional de los Trabajadores (IWA–AIT) is an international federation of anarcho-syndicalist labor unions and initiatives.
The General Confederation of Labour is a Spanish trade union federation. Formed as a faction of the National Confederation of Labour (CNT) during the Spanish transition to democracy, its support for participation in union elections led it to split from the organisation, which prohibited participation. After losing a lengthy legal battle for the name, the pro-electoral faction renamed itself to the CGT and reorganised itself as an independent trade union center.
Grigorii Petrovich Maksimov was a Russian anarcho-syndicalist. From the first days of the Russian Revolution, he played a leading role in the country's syndicalist movement – editing the newspaper Golos Truda and organising the formation of factory committees. Following the October Revolution, he came into conflict with the Bolsheviks, who he fiercely criticised for their authoritarian and centralist tendencies. For his anti-Bolshevik activities, he was eventually arrested and imprisoned, before finally being deported from the country. In exile, he continued to lead the anarcho-syndicalist movement, spearheading the establishment of the International Workers' Association (IWA), of which he was a member until his death.
Anarchism in South Africa dates to the 1880s, and played a major role in the labour and socialist movements from the turn of the twentieth century through to the 1920s. The early South African anarchist movement was strongly syndicalist. The ascendance of Marxism–Leninism following the Russian Revolution, along with state repression, resulted in most of the movement going over to the Comintern line, with the remainder consigned to irrelevance. There were slight traces of anarchist or revolutionary syndicalist influence in some of the independent left-wing groups which resisted the apartheid government from the 1970s onward, but anarchism and revolutionary syndicalism as a distinct movement only began re-emerging in South Africa in the early 1990s. It remains a minority current in South African politics.
The Central Organisation of Swedish Workers is a Swedish syndicalist trade union federation. The SAC organises people from all occupations and industries in one single federation, including the unemployed, students, and the retired. The SAC also publishes the weekly newspaper Arbetaren, owns the publishing house Federativ and ran the unemployment fund Sveriges Arbetares Arbetslöshetskassa (SAAK).
The National Confederation of Labour is a French trade union centre. Established in 1946 as an anarcho-syndicalist alternative to the main trade union centre, the General Confederation of Labour (CGT), it brought together tens of thousands of workers around the country. After the establishment of another trade union centre, Workers' Force (FO), it sought to collaborate with other autonomous trade unions, with the intention of forming a larger confederation. Over time, many of its members began to withdraw from the organisation and join the FO, which caused division between the CNT and its erstwhile allies. Its political sectarianism during this period provoked most of its members to leave the organisation, either joining the FO or other autonomous unions. By the 1970s, the CNT's membership had declined to less than 100 members and other anarcho-syndicalist initiatives attracted focus from rank-and-file trade union members.
The Revolutionary Syndicalist General Confederation of Labour was a French national trade union centre. It emerged out of the libertarian faction of the Unitary General Confederation of Labour (CGTU) and split away after it came under the control of the French Communist Party (PCF). The CGT-SR was established in 1926, largely on the basis of artisanal unions in southern France, and became the country's third and smallest trade union confederation. Its driving ideology was revolutionary syndicalism, which rejected political parties and upheld decentralisation as an organisational model.
The General Confederation of Labour was a Portuguese trade union confederation. Established in 1919, as the successor to the National Workers' Union (UON), the CGT was the only national trade union centre in Portugal throughout the early 1920s. The organisation was led largely by anarcho-syndicalists, who declared the CGT to be independent of all political parties and proclaimed its goal to be the abolition of capitalism and the state. Opposed to Bolshevism, it refused to join the Red International of Labour Unions (RILU) and instead joined the International Workers' Association (IWA), which was aligned with anarcho-syndicalism. An internal schism between the syndicalist leadership and members of the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) followed, as unions aligned with the latter broke off from the CGT. Following the establishment of a military dictatorship in Portugal, the CGT led a workers' uprising against it, but they were defeated, the organisation banned and many of their members exiled to Africa. After the establishment of the fascist Estado Novo regime, the CGT attempted to resist the creation of a corporatist economy and led a general strike against it, but this too was suppressed. The CGT's secretary general then attempted to assassinate the dictator António de Oliveira Salazar, but was unsuccessful. The CGT was ultimately driven underground and eventually disappeared, as the fascist regime was consolidated in Portugal.
The Norwegian Syndicalist Federation is an anarcho-syndicalist group in Norway. Established in the 1910s, the NSF worked within existing Norwegian trade unions in order to radicalise them towards revolutionary syndicalism. It was a founding member of the International Workers' Association (IWA) and historically maintained close connections with the Central Organisation of Swedish Workers (SAC). The NSF was politically repressed during the German occupation of Norway and, in the wake of World War II, experienced a dramatic decline. In the 1970s, the organisation was reconstituted as a propaganda group and continued its activities into the 21st century, with a much smaller membership.
Pierre Besnard was a French anarcho-syndicalist. He was the co-founder and leader of the Confédération Générale du Travail-Syndicaliste Révolutionnaire (CGT-SR) and its successor the Confédération Nationale du Travail (CNT), and the principal theoretician of anarcho-syndicalism in France during the early 20th century.
A general strike is a strike action in which participants cease all economic activity, such as working, to strengthen the bargaining position of a trade union or achieve a common social or political goal. They are organised by large coalitions of political, social, and labour organizations and may also include rallies, marches, boycotts, civil disobedience, non-payment of taxes, and other forms of direct or indirect action. Additionally, general strikes might exclude care workers, such as teachers, doctors, and nurses.
Anarchism in Portugal first appeared in the form of organized groups in the mid-1880s. It was present from the first steps of the workers' movement, revolutionary unionism and anarcho-syndicalism had a lasting influence on the General Confederation of Labour, founded in 1919.
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The Trade Union Opposition Federation was a Danish trade union federation. Established in 1910 by syndicalist opponents of the social-democratic dominance over trade unions, the FS pursued a strategy of dual unionism and worked within existing trade unions with the intention of radicalising them. The membership of the FS consisted largely of industrial workers in Copenhagen, where they carried out a series of strike actions, including wildcat strikes, to improve working conditions.
The Syndicalist Defense Committee, also known as the Committee for the Defense of Revolutionary Syndicalism, was a French anarcho-syndicalist trade union centre of the United General Confederation of Labour (CGTU). The CDS was formed to oppose the influence of the French Communist Party (PCF), which quickly took over the leadership of the CGTU and brought it into the Red International of Labour Unions (RILU). Despite its conflict with the CGTU leadership, the CDS remained within the organisation, as it sought to preserve working class unity. While still within the CGTU, the CDS participated in the founding of the International Workers' Association (IWA), in which it called for a conciliatory stance towards the RILU. After the murder of two libertarian activists by a PCF member, the CDS broke away from the CGTU. In 1924, the CDS formed the short-lived Federative Union of Autonomous Trade Unions; and in 1926, they established the Revolutionary Syndicalist General Confederation of Labour (CGT-SR).
The National Workers' Union was a Portuguese trade union federation. Established by a coalition of syndicalists and socialists, in the wake of a strike wave that followed the 1910 revolution, the UON was the first trade union centre to unite workers across different industries from throughout the country. The UON launched a series of strike actions following the Portuguese entry into World War I, which radicalised the union towards anarcho-syndicalism. By 1917, the UON was calling for revolution, backed by its powerful construction workers' union. In November 1918, the UON carried out a national general strike, but it was defeated by the state. The following year, the UON was reorganised into the General Confederation of Labour (CGT), which took over its structures and activities.
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