[NewPacifica] FW: [change-links] Venezuela: Revolution and the Struggle for Workers Control



Dedicated to the late Jim da M.  :)

I might note unlike Venezuela the US of Asses is not, judged as whole, a
Third World country.  One question is, is the Venezuelan experience
legitimate in that country as well as in other Third World settings.  Should
Pacifica support and encourage such activities or not.  Richard

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Subject: [change-links] Venezuela: Revolution and the Struggle for Workers
Control


  http://www.marxist.com/revolution-struggle-workers-control221205.htm

      Revolution and the Struggle for Workers' Control
      By Rob Sewell
      Friday, 23 December 2005

      Venezuela is in the forefront of world revolution. The mass movement
is advancing on all fronts, challenging the constraints of capitalism.
Within the working class, the question of workers' control ("co-management"
or "cogestion") has become a burning issue, as the Chavez government has
drawn up a list of over 1,000 idle plants that could be taken over by the
workers. This is no bureaucratic measure from on high, but is linked to the
expropriation of factories under workers' control.

      In October, workers' representatives and trade union activists met in
Caracas at the National Gathering of Workers towards the Recovery of
Companies. The main aim of this meeting, called by Venezuela's National
Workers' Union (UNT), was to bring together workers involved in experiences
of factory occupations and different forms of workers' control and
management.

      The issue of workers' control had been on the agenda in Britain in the
1970s. There was even a body set up  the so-called Institute of Workers'
Control  to study and promote the question. This was no accident. The 1970s
in Britain was a period of intense class battles and factory occupations. It
was during this time of militant class struggle and labour movement advance
that the idea of workers' control became popular. This was no abstract
question. Following the nationalisation of British Leyland, a heated debate
arose over what control the workers would have over the state-run
industries. The Marxists put forward the demand that management boards of
nationalised industries be composed of one third from the workers in the
industry, one third from the trade movement as a whole, and one third from
the government.

      There was, however, much confusion in the movement over the separate
questions of workers' control, workers' participation and workers'
management.

      The right-wing reformists had long been in favour of workers'
participation. This idea reached its height in Germany, where trade unions
after the war were drawn into close collaboration with the state and the
employers. From instruments of class struggle, the trade unions and factory
committees became increasingly organs for class collaboration. Workers'
participation drew workers onto the management boards, completely isolated
from the shop floor, and embroiled in decisions of how best to squeeze
greater unpaid labour from the workers. At a lower level, workers'
participation involved matters that had no real importance in the running of
the plant. In a famous cartoon, entitled "workers' participation", a bemused
worker is asked by a manager: what colour pen do you want to use - red or
blue?

      As Leon Trotsky explained in the early 1930s, "If the participation of
the workers in the management of production is to be lasting, stable,
'normal', it must rest upon class collaboration, and not upon class
struggle. Such a collaboration can be realised only through the upper strata
of the trade unions and the capitalist associations. There have been not a
few such experiments: in Germany ("economic democracy"), in Britain
("Mondism"), etc. Yet in all these instances, it was not a case of workers'
control over capital, but of the subserviency of the labour bureaucracy to
capital. Such subservieny, as experience shows, can last for a long time,
depending on the patience of the proletariat." (Workers' Control of
Production, 20 August 1931)

      This process of class collaboration reached its height in Britain in
the decade and half following the defeat of the 1984-85 miners' strike. It
took the name of "New Realism". "Partnership for us is about co-operation",
stated Bill Morris, the then general secretary of the Transport and General
Workers Union. He was subsequently knighted by the Establishment for his
"co-operation" in introducing new (harsher) terms and conditions in the car
industry and elsewhere. In the steel industry, "worker directors"
collaborated with mass sackings and the destruction of tens of thousands of
steelworkers' jobs.

      The concept of workers' control is fundamentally different from
"participation". As Trotsky explained: "The workers need control not for
platonic purposes, but in order to exert practical influence upon the
production and commercial operations of the employers? In a developed form,
workers' control thus implies a sort of economic dual power in the factory,
the bank, commercial enterprise, and so forth."

      Within every factory and workplace, the employers impose their own
regime. Through their managers, they determine the working conditions, the
shift patterns, break times and speed of operations. Through their time and
motion experts, they attempt to squeeze every drop of profit from the unpaid
labour of the working class. Over time, the workers organise themselves
against these pressures. Depending on the balance of forces, the degree of
organisation and resistance, the workers begin to influence the conditions
of work. The organisation of shop stewards committees become an important
expression of this. Through pressure from the shop floor, the workers can
win certain concessions from the bosses on a range of issues. They can win
control over hiring and firing ("first in, last out"), safety provision, the
pace of work, etc. The degree of concessions won will be determined by the
balance of forces within each industry.

      During the 1970s in Britain, the trade union movement was advancing.
They had built up a powerful position within industry and society. The shop
stewards committees grew in size and importance. Under these circumstances,
there were very high levels of workers' control in a whole number of sectors
and industries. However, during the 1980s, with the defeat of the miners'
strike and the capitulation of the TUC to the Thatcher government, the
balance of forces began to change rapidly. The anti-trade union legislation
served to bind the trade union leaders to the capitalist state. The
employers waged a ruthless offensive that swept away much of the elements of
workers' control. The bosses now had the upper hand and were determined to
impose their "right to manage" across the board.

      Workers' control has however a transitory character. Either it leads
to nationalisation and workers' management of industry, or it inevitably
falls back and the workers loose control of the limited powers they have
won. In the United States, the struggle for control reached its limits in
the sit-down strikes between 1935-38. The factories were in the hands of
workers, but without their expropriation, the workers were forced to
surrender this control at a certain point. In defining the contradictory
character of workers' control, Trotsky explained: "Control lies in the hands
of the workers. This means: ownership and right of disposition remain in the
hands of the capitalists. Thus, the regime has a contradictory character,
presenting a sort of economic interregnum." This cannot last indefinitely.
Sooner or later, the employers will reimpose their will over the workers as
they retain ownership of the enterprise.

      Workers' control develops from below. It reflects the yearning of the
workers to exercise control and impose limits over their exploitation. How
far they succeed will depend upon the balance of forces. However, a high
level of workers control also reflects the balance of forces within society
itself. The shift towards revolution inevitable reflects itself within the
workplaces. The struggle for workers' control represents elements of the new
society within the framework of the old.

      This is clearly what is happening within Venezuela. Following the
failed coup in April 2002, the capitalists reverted to a bosses' lockout and
sabotage of the economy, on the same lines as in Chile prior to the coup of
General Pinochet. The bosses, backed by US imperialism, got the support of
the corrupt trade union leaders of the CTV. The disruption was concentrated
in the giant oil industry, to maximise the damage to the economy as a whole.
However, the workers rallied to Chavez and smashed the lockout by their own
efforts. They seized the companies and began to run them by themselves. This
represented an extremely advanced form of workers' control. "Thus the regime
of workers' control", writes Trotsky, "can correspond only to the period of
the convulsing of the bourgeois state, the proletarian offensive, and the
falling back of the bourgeoisie, that is, to the period of the proletarian
revolution in the fullest sense of the word."

      October Revolution
      Before the October Revolution in Russia, there was an extensive
movement towards workers' control. This emerged from the sabotage of the
economy by the Russian capitalists. This workers' control continued even
after the revolution, when the economy still remained in private hands. The
Bolshevik government, given the backwardness and size of the Russian
proletariat, wanted the workers to learn through the school of workers'
control how to take on the responsibilities of management. It was not until
the summer of 1918 that the major industries were nationalised, when it was
forced upon the government by the civil war and sabotage.

      With the key sectors of the economy nationalised, this raised the
question of workers' management of industry. Factory committees were set up
which ran the plants. Managers were to be elected and under control of the
workers. Specialists were also drawn in to assist but always under the check
and control of the shop floor. This was the beginnings of genuine workers'
democracy. In other words, workers' control became a bridge to democratic
workers' management of the economy.

      Obviously, ownership of the factories is posed point blank. Who is
going to run society - the workers or the bosses? Workers' control has its
limits. Only when the ownership of industry is taken out of the hands of the
capitalists can the workers have genuine control. However, a nationalised
planned economy requires not only workers' control in the factories and
workplaces, but requires a system of workers' management. You cannot have
the old syndicalist idea of the miners running the mines, the rail workers
running the railways, etc, without any overall planning of the economy. The
integration of different branches of industry into the national planning of
the economy is essential. This requires workers' management at a plant,
district, regional; and national level.

      This means the expropriation of the capitalists and the organisation
of a democratic workers' state, where the running of society is in the hands
of the working class through democratically elected committees. It means the
involvement of the population in the drawing up of a national plan of
production, deciding the priorities and measures to be undertaken.

      The dangers of bureaucracy must be eliminated from the start. All
representatives must be subject to election, with the right of immediate
recall. No representative must be on a wage higher than a skilled worker.
All functions should be rotated to prevent any permanent bureaucracy. As
Lenin put it, "when everyone is a bureaucrat, nobody is a bureaucrat".

      The struggle for workers' control in Venezuela today is posing new
questions. Chavez has explained that there is no way forward on a capitalist
basis. Only on a socialist road can the problems of the masses be solved in
Venezuela as elsewhere. This means expropriating the power of the oligarchy
and placing power into the hands of the working class and oppressed layers.
It means sweeping away the old capitalist state apparatus and establishing a
democratic workers' state. Such a revolution cannot remain within the
confines of Venezuela, but must be taken throughout the whole of Latin
America. Only then can the continent be truly united. However, this will not
be the end of the matter. A continental socialist revolution would transform
the world and lay the foundations for a socialist world, where hunger,
poverty and war would be abolished once and for all.

      The struggle for workers' control and workers' management is the
necessary prerequisite for this perspective.
      ____











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