A number of wildcat strikes broke out in the UK during August.
The
wave of wildcat action kicked off at Cranswick Continental Foods in
Pilsworth. Next, wildcat strikes broke out at several Amazon warehouses
including Tilbury, Rugeley, Coventry, Bristol, Dartford, Coalville,
Belvedere, Hemel Hempstead and Chesterfield.
There were also more
wildcat strikes at Grangemouth oil refinery. Chemical plant workers also
took wildcat action at several sites across Teesside and at Humber
Refinery in North Lincolnshire as well as at Valero refinery in Milford
Haven. Train drivers at Avanti West Coast brought some services to a
halt by refusing shifts.
But what makes a strike ‘wildcat’?
Wildcat
strikes are a form of autonomous direct action. Autonomous because they
are not officially sanctioned by and are likely to be outside of the
control of the unions and left-wing political parties. Direct because
they short circuit the mediating and representative role of the trade
unions.
As the recent wildcat strikes spread like wildfire, media outlets were keen to describe the danger to businesses.
Share Talk website wrote:
"Businesses
cannot plan for wildcat strikes, making it difficult to manage them.
These strikes are dangerous for employees who abandon the legal
protections granted to them in collective bargaining."
The Evening Standard asked:
“What
is a wildcat strike?” Wildcat strikes don’t have the permission of
their union, and workers don’t go through the typical process a union
does when arranging industrial action, which sometimes challenges their
union’s authority."
Computer Weekly stated:
"Amazon workers
also have staged wildcat strikes (meaning they were conducted without
the involvement or support of a union) in Rugeley, Coventry, Swindon,
Rugby, Doncaster, Bristol, Dartford, Belvedere, Hemel Hempstead and
Chesterfield"
A couple of dictionary definitions of wildcat strikes are:
Wildcat strike: a strike that is started by a group of workers without the approval of their union.
Merriam-webster dictionary.
Wildcat
strike: a sudden strike (= act of refusing to work as a protest)
without any warning by the workers and often without the official
support of the unions.
Cambridge dictionary.
But council
communist Anton Pannekoek outlined the reason that anarchist communists
and libertarian communists emphasise the subversive potential of wildcat
strikes:
"In the wildcat strikes, we may see the beginnings of a new
practical orientation of the working class, a new tactic, the method of
direct action. They represent the only actual rebellion of man against
the deadening suppressing weight of world-dominating capital."
Wildcat
strikes are a form of direct action and the anarchist Emile Pouget
explained the significance for revolutionaries of this tactic of
militant working class action:
“Direct Action is a notion of such
clarity, of such self-evident transparency, that merely to speak the
words defines and explains them. It means that the working class, in
constant rebellion against the existing state of affairs, expects
nothing from outside people, powers or forces, but rather creates its
own conditions of struggle and looks to itself for its means of action.”
As
a form of autonomous action, wildcat strikes have the potential to go
beyond the narrow framework of trade unionism. Anarchist communists and
other communist revolutionaries offer criticisms of the limitations of
trade unions.
William Morris, the author of News from Nowhere and Lectures on Socialism, wrote in 1885 that:
Trade
unions [do not] "represent the whole class of workers as working men
but rather are charged with the office of keeping the human part of the
capitalists' machinery in good working order and freeing it from any
grit of discontent".
In a similar observation to William Morris, council communist Cajo Brendel described the role of unions:
"The
undeniable fact that from the very first day of their existence unions
have had the task of mediating between capitalists and workers,
mediating of course in order to extinguish the flames of conflict
between the two parties, not to kindle the fire by pouring oil into it,
mediating in order to stabilize the antagonistic relationship of workers
and capitalists, not to destroy it."
The wildcats in the UK have
been in mostly, though not entirely, in workplaces where there are
either no unions or they are unrecognised. The GMB are talking credit
for at least some of the Amazon actions, but they are, for the most
part, self-organised. What is important about these wildcat strikes is
that they show what workers can do for themselves. If they can be
extended and spread then they can overcome isolation and being picked
off.
Useful texts and pamphlets:
Goodbye to the Unions! Controversy About Autonomous Class Struggle in Great Britain
Direct Action. Emile Pouget:
libcom.org/article/direct-action-emile-pouget
France Winter 1986-87: The Railways Strike – Henri Simon:
libcom.org/article/france-winter-1986-87-railways-strike-henri-simon
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