The
Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival is held every July to remember six Dorset
farm labourers who in 1834 were sentenced to seven years
transportation to Australia for the crime of organising a combination
of workers to protect and attempt to improve their wages and
conditions. These were years of
considerable trade union activity where the Grand National
Consolidated Trades Union was formed. Its aim was to coordinate
movements for advances in wages and assistance for strikes especially
those against a reduction in wages. The same year saw also much
unrest amongst agricultural labourers including forms of direct
action such as machine-breaking and rick-burning.
As
usual the master class were unconcerned with the causes of the misery
and discontent but rather to make an example of the activists in the hope that
this would destroy any idea of union organisation amongst farm
labourers. The
trial was a travesty. The justices were local landowners and
employers with outspoken prejudices against the accused; the jurymen
were fearful for their livelihood; the judge put words into the
mouths of witnesses. Thus six farm
labourers from the Dorset village of Tolpuddle were arrested and
charged with the administering of unlawful oaths for seditious
purposes which was unlawful under an Act of 1797. Their real crime
was that they had the audacity and courage to try to form a trade
union.
Socialist
Party members have attended this event on Saturday July 20th and Sunday July 21st, organising a stall to offer a
wide variety of socialist literature, and generally explaining the
case for world socialism to interested visitors. What then can we
achieve by attending the Tolpuddle event? Whenever workers gather,
and particularly at events where ideas are being discussed and
exchanged, socialists have to be involved in putting forward the
basic fact that capitalism cannot be reformed to work in our
interests and that alternatives are no alternative at all. Unclear
and unsound ideas cannot be defeated by ignoring them.
The
events that the Tolpuddle Festival commemorates took place almost 180
years ago but despite that, many similar problems still remain today.
The trade union movement is under great pressure. The struggle for
trade union rights is a vital one so long as society is
divided into two classes: those who produce but do not possess and
those who possess but do not produce.
However,
trade union organisation needs to be more about working class
self-organisation and democratic control from bottom to top and less
about letting leaders make decisions on our behalf. Secondly, trade
unions have attached and affiliated themselves to the Labour Party
which support capitalism and have risked having their effectiveness
being reduced when that particular party is in government. Thirdly,
trade union organization although necessary for working class industrial
self-defence, it is not an end in itself. Our fellow-workers also
need to organise consciously and politically to abolish the system
which is the root cause of the need to engage in this endless
day-to-day struggle. Workers have been distracted from engaging in
all-out struggle against the root cause of their problems by becoming
involved in fruitless diversions and worthless causes. What will be
achieved at Tolpuddle this year is that the case for socialism is being put forward and that we see a socialist party for the
working class active and engaged in putting forward the choice to our
fellow-workers.
The
socialist message is loud and clear. Don’t waste any more time or
effort attempting to reform capitalism or in the delusion that in
some part of the world state ownership has proved itself to be a more
effective or humane system than the private variety of capitalism.
Instead campaign for a social system based on common ownership and
democratic control of the means of producing and distributing the
things we need to live, production directly for use. and free access
to all goods and services on the basis of self-determined need: in
short, a world-wide system run by human beings for human beings.
To
really pay tribute to the Tolpuddle Martyrs and many others like
them, we need to rediscover the spirit of early trade unionism with
the emphasis on self-organisation rather than waiting for leaders to
act on our behalf. The story of the Tolpuddle martyrs is about how
ordinary working people joined together to protect the well-being of
their families. Class solidarity is a Socialist
Party demand.
Perhaps
present trade unionists should heed the advice of their predecessors.
“Although
the design of the Union is, in the first instance, to raise wages of
the workmen, or prevent any further reduction therein, and to
diminish the hours of labour, the paramount rights of Industry and
Humanity by...bringing about A DIFFERENT ORDER OF THINGS, in which
the really useful and intelligent parts of society only shall have
the direction of its affairs.” - Rule XLVI of the G.N.C.T.U
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