The union movement has proven itself to be a powerful instrument of a defensive character and as a potential force that poses the possibility of a fundamental transformation in socio-economic relations from wage labor to a free association of labor and common ownership of its product - socialism. The history of US labour has often been mythologised into a stereotype based on Jimmy Hoffa, the Teamsters and the Mafia, as portrayed by Sylvester Stallone in the movie FIST. The idea of a labor unions led by a corrupt and self-serving class collaborationist bureaucracy has been too simplistic and misleading. In the United States employers are often not merely above the law, they are the law. Hand in hand with industrial despotism goes political despotism. The master class controls everything, police, courts; the whole political and state power is in its possession and under its control.
On June 21, 1877 eleven “Mollie Maguires” were executed. The men who perished were early martyrs to the class struggle in the United States. In 1887 occurred the infamous judicial murder of the Haymarket Martyrs. In the seven years of 1890–97 an estimated 92 people were killed in major strikes, and from January 1902 to September 1904 an estimated 198 people were killed and 1,966 wounded. Over the years 1877–1968 state and federal troops intervened in labour disputes, almost invariably on behalf of the employers, on more than 160 occasions. Overall, a check of strike casualties actually reported in the national press over these same years gives a total of 700 dead and thousands more injured. 29 people were killed in major strikes between 1947 and 1962.
Capitalism feeds upon the blood of labour.
The employers, through their agents in control of government and the entire state apparatus, have erected a whole network of laws and regulations designed to hamstring the labor movement. These range from the various regulations designed to make it difficult for unions to establish the fact that they represent a majority of a specific group of workers, to those which only permit strike action after a long process of delay, that not only make it illegal to strike within the life of contracts, to the ever- increasing use of court injunctions forbidding or limiting pickets, and the extension of compulsory arbitration to ever wider areas of the work force. Organized labor has grown weaker in relation to the growth of the work force. Large layers of workers, poorly paid and helpless before the onslaughts of rising prices, the price of health-care, all the insecurities that are products of capitalist society, have fallen prey to the capitalist- inspired propaganda that the union movement is a narrow, a sectional power bloc, insensitive to their needs and concerned only with its own welfare. But think on. Do you find that the fatter the employer gets, the fatter also grows the employee? Or rather is it that the wealthier the boss becomes, the poorer his workers get.
Between the working class and the capitalist class there exists an irreconcilable conflict, a class struggle for life. No glib-tongued politician, no academic professor deny the fact. There are ranged on the one side all those who owned the tools of production, and on the other those who used them. It is a struggle that will not go away, and can only be ended by the abolition of the capitalist class. This is the natural order of the damnable and sordid economic system in which we live. This is the order which will remain until it is altered by one of these classes, and the class which will make the alteration will be the working-class or slave class. That is its mission. With the proper understanding of the economic system, the workers will soon find means to end that system, and to raise on its ruins a development of society having for its goal the benefit of the whole of the community instead of only the vested interests of a few.
The class struggle is the ceaseless struggle which goes on from day to day in every country. The struggle on all occasions is over some advantage which the one seeks to obtain over the other. It may take the form of more wages or shorter hours or the alteration of some working condition; but the particular point really does not matter, the opposing forces are always the same – the master class and the working class. Society is like a huge market where two commodity possessors come to sell their goods. The capitalist brings his commodity – money, and the worker his commodity – labor power. The worker sells his labor power in exchange for a wage which is what will bring him the subsistence of life, food, clothing and shelter. In return for their slavery they receive only sufficient pay to enable them to continue operating the machinery from day to day, and to perpetuate their class. It would be a catastrophe to the capitalist system if slaves did not breed more slaves. The supporters of a system are those who have gained control of it or control of the means of production, those whose interests are bound up in it. The system is capitalism, and those who control it are capitalists.
The State in a class-divided society can be nothing other than an instrument in the hands of the class owning the property and means of production in society. The talk of “reconciling class interests” is simple deceit. It is impossible to reconcile the interests of the slave owner and the slave, the exploiter and the exploited. Parliament grew out of feudalism and after the capitalist revolution developed as the natural custodian of the interests of capitalism. It was founded on private property foundations. Its laws are the laws of private property. The modifications that have taken place, the extension of the franchise and the growth of social legislation for the working-class are the reflection of the growing strength and power of the working-class.
The Socialist Party of Great Britain endeavours to convince the workers of the inadequacy of reformism and the necessity for revolution. We shall fight reformists to the end. Not by lies and slanders, not by violence, but through argument. We, socialists, refuse to join the reformists in leading the workers into the camp of capitalism. The intensity of the class struggle is greater today than at any time since the capitalists overthrew feudalism. Now it is the working class that must overthrow capitalism. Use the ballot against capitalism. Vote for socialism. Vote for the Socialist Party, the only party that keeps the revolutionary banner unfurled in unremitting struggle for a socialism.
Non-revolutionary political parties contest one another for votes and office. They represent different sections of the ruling class struggling for their share of profits and privilege, vying with eachother for control of the governmental bureaucracy, and perhaps presenting different theories of how best to keep the compliance of the people by securing this or that reform or concession for this or that section of the population. All promise material betterment, peace, prosperity and security yet none of these are possible under capitalism. These parties are dedicated to the maintenance and defense of capitalism and only differ in the ways and the manner of the “appeal” which they make to the voter.
All varieties of non-revolutionary politics PRESUPPOSE the continuance of the existing order in its fundamental structure: that is to say in capitalist society, its capitalist property relations, the exploitation of the majority by the propertied minority.
Socialists must break through the deceptions of politics. They must pose directly the central issue: the class struggle for socialism. Their success in an election campaign is not to be measured in votes won, but in the extent they have succeeded in bringing the central issue before the consciousness of the working class. The main issue for the worker is the CLASS issue. All of its propaganda, all its discussion must be attached to this issue. Now, more clearly than ever before, it must be the Socialist Party for socialism.