There are many good articles in the Libcom library about the strikes during WW2 in the USA, but there seems to be none about the rest of the countries (at least not articles solely about them, maybe some more general articles mention independent workers actions too, don't know, haven't read them all.)
At first I was curious about the UK because from somewhere I had got the impression that there was relative labour peace in the UK and thought that maybe US workers were more militant because the war was further away from them and there was no real risk of invasion so they were more willing to fight and that workers in the UK and Europe were way more patriotic because the war happened at their doorstep. Fortunately I as wrong - a quick googling and I found these 2 articles:
Until 1941 when the Soviet Union entered the war, communists in Britain, having little commitment to the war effort, refused to be bound by the national unity consensus and in particular the ban on strike action. During the first few months of the war, there were over 900 strikes, almost all of them very short but illegal nonetheless. Despite the provisions of Order 1305 there were very few prosecutions until 1941 since Bevin, anxious to avoid the labour unrest of the First World War, sought to promote conciliation rather than conflict. The number of strikes increased each year until 1944, almost half of them in support of wage demands and the remainder being defensive actions against deteriorations in workplace conditions. Coal and engineering were particularly affected. A strike in the Betteshanger colliery in Kent in 1942 prompted the first mass prosecutions under Order 1305. Three officials of the Betteshanger branch were imprisoned and over a thousand strikers were fined. Such repression and the general 'shoulders to the wheel' approach to industrial production in support of the war effort (strongly backed by the Communist Party after 1941) did not stop strikes. The fact that so many strikes took place in the mining industry was due in the main to the fact that the designation of coal mining as essential war work entailed the direction of selected conscripts to work in the mines ('Bevin boys'). This was very unpopular among regular miners.
In 1943 there were two major stoppages, one was a strike of 12,000 bus drivers and conductors and the other of dockers in Liverpool and Birkenhead. Both were a considerable embarrassment to Bevin since they involved mainly TGWU members. 1944 marked the peak of wartime strike action with over two thousand stoppages involving the loss of 3,714,000 days' production. This led to the imposition of Defence Regulation 1AA, supported by the TUC, which now made incitement to strike unlawful.
from here: http://www.unionhistory.info/timeline/1939_1945.php
Glasgow: Rolls Royce Hillington women workers equal pay
Many thousands of women were recruited to wartime industry. In 1940, the engineering federation agreed that women would receive equal pay after 32 weeks in post. 20,000 women were employed at the Rolls Royce Hillington site in Glasgow. Rolls Royce evaded the 1940 equal pay formula and were challenged by the AEU in 1943. They settled. But 16,000 women (and some men) refused to accept the deal and walked out for over a week. They won a new agreement which specified every machine in the factory, the work done on it, and the rate for the job, regardless of who was operating the equipment.
Miners payIn 1944 underground miners were earning £5 per day and their wage tribunal refused to raise piece rates. When the Government announced that the national average industrial manual wage had reached £6 10s, miners came out on unofficial strike in South Wales, Kent, Lancashire, Yorkshire, Durham, and Scotland - some 220,000 in South Wales and Yorkshire alone. With the invasion of France looming, the press attacked the miners.
A South Wales miner of 30 years standing commented “... The argument that a strike would let our soldiers down was countered by men who had brothers and sons in the forces who, so they claimed, had urged them to fight and maintain their customs or privileges. They argued that they must retain something for those absent ones to come back to, while the suggestion that we should wait for further negotiations was swamped by the reply that we had already waited a long while...”
In fact the Government was compelled to intervene, restored differentials, and the miners won the highest minimum wage in Britain. Their average earnings ranked 81st in 1938, but rose to 14th after the strikes.
Kent: Betteshanger Colliery bonus payments
On 10 July 1940 the government introduced Defence Regulation 58AA allowing the Minister of Labour to ban strikes and lockouts, and force compulsory arbitration. Order 1305 then allowed the Minister to refer any dispute to existing arbitration structures or the National Arbitration Tribunal - either alternative was to be binding. But as the Chief Industrial Commissioner recognised “The Order has a substantial deterrent effect but it is an instrument which would probably be shown to be useless if any considerable body of workpeople chose to defy it.” He was right.
On 9 January 1942 miners at Betteshanger Colliery in Kent struck over the level of allowances for working difficult seams. The Ministry of Labour decided to prosecute 1,050 miners for contravening Order 1305. Three local union officials were imprisoned, the men working difficult seams were fined £3 each, and 1,000 other miners were fined £1 each. Betteshanger continued their strike and other pits came out in sympathy. On 28 January they won, and in February the Home Secretary dropped the prison sentences. By May, only 9 miners had paid their fines. Most fines were never paid.
Tyneside: closed shopOn Tyneside at the beginning of 1943 workers at the Neptune ship repair yard came out for six weeks over the refusal of five men at their firm to join the Amalgamated Engineering Union. They received massive support from workers in other firms and trades, and forced their employers to concede a ‘closed shop’ agreement, setting a national precedent.
London: aircraft engineersWorkers at the former Chrysler factory converted to make Halifax bomber tail fins were subject to Essential Works Orders banning all industrial action. In 1943 they challenged management policy of locking the gates at 8:30 for the morning by threatening to turn up en masse at 8:31. Management threatened to use the Order, but then capitulated.
The workforce went on to challenge management attempts to control union representation on the works committee, and after winning that forced an increase in the minimum wage for maintenance workers.
Many of the women workers had partners in the Forces. One commented: “If I don’t fight for conditions and wages or let them get worse, my husband will kill me when he comes home”.
Engineering Apprentices: payThe first major wartime dispute took place in 1941. It involved engineering apprentices, first on Clydeside and then in Coventry, Lancashire and London.
An Apprentices’ Charter, developed by the Clyde strike committee in 1937, called for higher pay, district-wide age-wage minimum pay scales, a right to part-time technical education on day release, a reasonable proportion of apprentices to journeymen, and a right to union representation. An Engineers’ Charter had been put forward by the AEU in 1929 in pursuit of improved terms and conditions in the industry.
The unions had previously submitted a succession of claims to the Engineering Employers Federation without success. Now the apprentices marched from factory to factory bringing out their workmates. In Coventry they included women at the local munitions factory in the campaign. The strike wave finally destroyed the log-jam in national negotiations. In weeks, agreement was reached on higher age-wage scale rates.
As the war progressed, the number of strikes skyrocketed to reach a record 2,194 stoppages with 3,700,000 days lost in 1944. Of course not all such strikes ended in victory - but neither do all strikes in peacetime.
During the Spring of 1943, soldiers serving in the 8th Army responded to pressure to denounce strikes back home. The 8th Army News ran an article headlined “The Right to Strike is one of the Freedoms we fight for”.
from here: http://www.labournet.net/ukunion/0305/wartime1.html
So firstly I had the question, does anybody know more about independent workers action during the war years and right after the war in the UK? A more comprehensive article somewhere perhaps from a more radical perspective?
Also, I couldn't find anything on other warring countries, maybe such material exists mainly in their native languages as a quick google search in English came up with nothing.
I know there was a strike wave in Italy in '43 (?) which was after the collapse of the fascist government and I remember from some article sth about a strike after the Soviets occupied Hungary in '45 by some workers from a rather militant factory in Budapest (?) who were at the forefront of the class war in '18 and '56 as well. Other than that I have to admit I don't know much.
I would appreciate if somebody could point me to some articles about strikes etc during or right after WW2 in Europe and the rest of the world - I'm especially interested in USSR and the territories it occupied after the war, Japan and Germany.
As this didn't seem like the
As this didn't seem like the most popular thread ever I decided to do a bit of research myself and chose France to be the first country. First googled in french with the help of google translate, but then found an English article about the 1941 strikes in Nord-Pas-de-Calais by 100,000 miners in German-occupied France.
from here: http://sas-space.sas.ac.uk/3086/1/strike.pdf
This kind of militancy was certainly not what I expected to find, especially not under Nazi occupation. Though, of course, the importance of coal gave the miners much more leverage than other workers had. The same region, for example, had a big textile and metalworking industry, but in the former unemployment was high and in the latter workers were afraid of being sent to Germany to work, so that obviously decreased their militancy.
It was really heartening to see that workers didn't develop any kind of nationalist illusions and rejected class peace with their bosses, though there was some patriotism, it seems, which was a bit disheartening, on the other hand.
Also, as I understood, the miners took action again in '43 and '44 (in french: http://www.fndirp.asso.fr/mineurs.htm).
"In the first months of the German occupation work stoppages and strikes developed, partial but repetitive, leading to significant reduction in production."
"Confronted with a new strike at Escarpelle in March, the Germans occupied the pit with their troops. All conditions [of the strikers] are met and the first day of May became a landmark. Inscriptions, tricolor flags and red flags appear, circulate tracts. The strike spread to Belgium, where 100,000 miners and steelmakers stopped work. The textile industry is also affected."
from here, in french again, as you probably guessed from the robust wording: http://www.cheminsdememoire.gouv.fr/fr/la-greve-des-mineurs-du-nord-pas-de-calais-27-mai-9-juin-1941
----------------------------------------------------
Got some information on Canada also.
from here: http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/articles/fr/greves-et-lockout
I know the first part doesn't make too much sense, but that's all google translate managed.
Hey, thanks for researching
Hey, thanks for researching this stuff, really interesting so far! (I saw this thread title but haven't had time to read it until now)
this article has a bunch of information about class struggle generally during the war: http://libcom.org/history/world-war-class-war
although doesn't have much about strikes specifically.
As you say, I think there is a real dearth of information about this in English on the web. If you wanted to pull together some of these examples you have found into an article, giving just a snapshot of workers' struggles internationally during the war that would be really useful and we would love to host it in our history section. Do you think you might be able to pull something like that together?
One bit of class struggle which is often mentioned around World War II in the UK is the wave of squatting, often by returning soldiers following the war which is credited with pushing the government into massively expanding social housing.
PS, just found this article
PS, just found this article after a quick Google. Not had time to read through it yet but looks interesting. Libertarian communist piece about class struggle during the war:
http://selfnegation.wordpress.com/2011/06/13/hello-world/
looks like this would be good in our history section as well…
Thanks for those two
Thanks for those two articles, the one from the selfnegation blog was just what I was looking for - a well researched article which refuted the labour peace myth. Haven't read the other yet.
As to writing an article myself - I don't think I have the time to write a well researched article atm. I will, however, keep updating this thread with new info I find - everyone else is free to do that also - and hopefully, when I have more time, this will eventually culminate in an article.
In the meantime, I found some more information about France, this time from the aircraft industry. Namely a book called 'State Capitalism and Working-Class Radicalism in the French Aircraft Industry' which is online here: http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft9m3nb6g1&chunk.id=0&doc.view=print
As I was copying and pasting it here while I was reading it it got a bit lengthy. :p
This should've given a rather thorough overview of the conditions and life of the aviation industry workers and their struggles, plus the general political situation.
The last bit was quite depressing imo with the "productivism" and "industry pride" and shit, especially it's popularity among workers.
This is a very worthwhile
This is a very worthwhile line of research. The only article we've on our website got that springs to mind is this one on the '43 strikes in Italy:
http://en.internationalism.org/ir/075_1943.html
The Gauche Communste de France also mentions somewhere about hunger riots etc in Germany: the allies were particularly worried about proletarian uprisings there at the end of the war. This was certainly an element in the terror bombing aimed at industrial centres: not just depleting the war industries, but terrorising and demoralising the working population. The obvious example is Germany. Despite all this there was some unrest, but records are scarce.
http://libcom.org/library/ant
http://libcom.org/library/anti-parliamentary-communism-mark-shipway-8
There was of course the
There was of course the general strikes in Denmark during their occupation.
http://www.aforcemorepowerful.org/films/afmp/stories/denmark.php
In March 1943 the Germans allowed a general election to be held that i was unaware of until i looked up wiki.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupation_of_Denmark
The voter turnout was 89.5%, the highest in any Danish parliamentary election, and 94% cast their ballots for one of the democratic parties behind the cooperation policy while 2.2% voted for the anti-cooperation Dansk Samling.[38] 2.1% voted for the Nazi party, almost corresponding to the 1.8% the party had received in the 1939 elections.
Chapter 10 (Industrial
Chapter 10 (Industrial relations [in Bristol] during rearmament, war and reconstruction 1935-48) of Mike Richardson's article Trade Unionism and Industrial Conflict in Bristol: A Historical Study.
I was occupied with other
I was occupied with other stuff for a while, so sorry for neglecting this thread for so long. And thanks to wojtek, Alf and ajjohnstone for those links, I haven't read them all yet but they seem really interesting.
I came across a mention of strikes in Greece during WW2 the other day while I was browsing the internet, so I chose Greece as the next country for being researched.:
From Greek Resistance wiki, source is this book: Mark Mazower (2001). Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941-44. United States: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-08923-3.
More about the strikes:
http://www.ahistoryofgreece.com/worldwarII.htm
From Greek wiki about the resistance, googletranslated:
From a source in the Greek wiki (http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.article&id=154729), googletranslated:
From another source in the Greek wiki (http://www.ime.gr/chronos/14/gr/1940_1945/resistance/04.html), googletranslated:
From another source in the Greek wiki (http://www2.rizospastis.gr/story.do?id=369988&publDate=), googletranslated:
From yet another source in the Greek wiki (http://www.tovima.gr/relatedarticles/article/?aid=151719), googletranslated:
I cba'd to analyse all the sources so I copy-pasted pretty much all (relevant) information I could find about the strikes here atm, so they overlap a bit.
But tbh I'm more interested in cases where workers striked against "their" governments, because a factor in strikes in a lot of the occupied territories was nationalism or at least patriotism. But one of the reasons I started this thread was to find cases of workers willing to fight for their class interests even in "their" countries during wartime ignoring the bourgeoisie's nationalist/patriotic propaganda.
This post will still be about
This post will still be about the Greek strikes during WW2, but it will be from this book on libcom - Revolutionary defeatists in Greece in World War II - Aghis Stinas - and thus from a more political and personal viewpoint (from a Greek internationalist communist) so I wanted to post it separately.
Only selected chapters of the book are translated into English and on libcom and while I haven't read even all of those chapters as I just came across the book, it seems very interesting, especially to those who have the "revolutionary deafeatist" position on WW2 - and all other wars - so I really recommend it. It seems to give a rather good overview of class struggle in Greece starting from the end of WW1 to the end of WW2.
This seems to sum up Stinas' politics well:
But now to the parts of the book that are more relevant to this thread:
(Btw, if anybody has any more information on Aghis Stinas and the Internationalist Communist Union, I'd really appreciate if you'd share it.)
There had been a two-day
There had been a two-day strike, 25 and 26 February 1941, in Amsterdam and surrounding parts of the Netherlands, against pogroms and mass arrests of Jews. the so-called Februari Staking (February strike), yearly commemmorated as an example of anti-nazi-resistance, but with the class struggle mostly sanitizes out of view; and there hve been strikes an towdy demonstrations in the East and South of the Netherlands in april-may 1943, as e protest against the re-arrest of Dutch soldiers who had been imprisoned and released quickly after the beginning of the nazi occupation in May 1940. I only have Dutch-language sources for these kind of things.
Sorry for such a long absence
Sorry for such a long absence again, got pissed the other day when I wrote a post about strikes in Australia, New Zealand, a nazi prison camp and demobilisation strikes and my computer crashed so I lost my text and all the sources.
And thanks for that rooieravotr. If the sources are on the internet you can post them here even if they are in Dutch. I can google-translate them if I need more details or something.
Anyway, this isn't a post about the aforementioned subjects on which I wrote before but then lost the text (can't muster enough strength to rewrite that atm, people who have lost a text know how depressing it is to rewrite the exact same thing, especially if it is rather long :p), but about an interesting discovery I stumbled across when reading about the 80s in the UK (due to Thatcher dying).
http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/lms/labour-market-statistics/march-2013/index-of-data-tables.html#tab-Productivity-and-Labour-Disputes-tables
The second file from there (LABD01: Labour disputes. (109 Kb Excel sheet)).
The file contains strike statistics from '31 to '13 in the UK. And quite clearly - without having to refer to second-hand accounts like newspaper articles and books etc - demolishes the myth of class peace during the war. If before I was under the impression that strikes were few and far between during WW2 the statistics show something completely different. But I'll let the facts speak for themselves:
year days lost stoppages
_____in 1000s__________
31. _ 6983 _ 515
32. _ 6488 _ 516
33. _ 1072 _ 447
34. _ 959 __ 578
35. _ 1955 _ 704
36. _ 1829 _ 969
37. _ 3413 _ 1275
38. _ 1334 _ 996
39. _ 1356 _ 997
(UK declared war on Germany on 03.09.39, there were 311 work stoppages and 407 (000) days lost from 01.09.39 to 31.12.39, so no significant reduction)
40. _ 940 __ 920
41. _ 1079 _ 1276
42. _ 1527 _ 1381
43. _ 1807 _ 1921
44. _ 3714 _ 2374
45. _ 2837 _ 2494
(Germany surrendered on 08.05.45, Japan on 02.09.45, there were 1674 strikes and 1501 (000) days lost from 01.01.45 to 31.08.45, so the war again seemed not to have influenced the strikes significantly)
46. _ 2160 _ 2431
47. _ 2432 _ 1897
48. _ 1945 _ 1907
49. _ 1807 _ 1569
50. _ 1388 _ 1490
51. _ 1695 _ 1907
52. _ 1792 _ 1913
53. _ 2183 _ 1909
54. _ 2458 _ 2164
55. _ 3782 _ 2634
56. _ 2083 _ 2868
57. _ 8413 _ 3117
58. _ 3464 _ 2837
(in the file the number of strikes was given for every month of every year, but I added all the strikes of every year together for clarity, it is possible this resulted in strikes being counted twice if the strike lasted during 2 months, but I presume this doesn't change the overall picture much, because as you can see strikes are shorter during the war so it is more likely this skewed prewar statistics more which means the difference should be even greater and there was an even bigger rise (in percentages) compared to the war)
As you can clearly see the number of strikes rose during the war compared to each previous war year and the prewar period average (only the first full war year, 1940, had less strikes than the most militant year of the prewar period, 1937). Also there were more strikes during the most militant war year (1945) than during any of the years of the period from 31-39 and 46-54. There were no pre-1931 statistics so I can't say how this compares to the period before that. Also, days lost due to strikes seemed to decline during the war in relation to the number of strikes which means most were rather short work stoppages (though that continued after the war too, it seems).
Actually these statistics shouldn't be a surprise as during a war there is almost no unemployment which means workers have way more leverage as there aren't many people who could act as strike breakers.
Also, these statistics should refute the myth that 50s and early 60s were rather peaceful.
This also seems to be about all strikes not only legal ones, as there were no legal strikes during the war iirc. So it should give a rather objective overview.
Good post, thanks! Sorry
Good post, thanks!
Sorry about losing the other one. I would say that for any lengthy post you should write it in word and save it as you go, then just copy and paste it onto libcom. Too late for this one obviously, but a note for the future!
Did some googling, found two
Did some googling, found two articles on the commune website which may be interesting, didn't read them yet myself, just posting here so I can find them later :P
http://thecommune.co.uk/2009/09/06/workers-in-uniform-class-struggle-and-world-war-ii/
http://thecommune.co.uk/2011/03/11/a-hope-unfulfilled-communists-in-world-war-ii/
Also found some other stuff while googling.
This seems to suggest some strikes during WW2 in America were organised by German spies who made deals with the Mafia. It's not really a credible source, but considering the influence the Mafia had in the American union movement I thought I'd ask does anybody know whether this could be true or is it just wartime propaganda?
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_was_the_Mafia%27s_role_in_World_War_2
Also, this seems to be about a strike in a German POW camp by Russians. The translation is bad, so I can't understand it very well, maybe somebody who knows Russian can correct me.
http://oborona.org/vov/voennaya-zabastovka-v-sssr.html
Steven. wrote: Good post,
Steven.
Yeah, that's probably a good idea.
Btw, I was thinking of posting this article you linked to earlier (http://libcom.org/forums/history/strikes-during-ww2-19112012#comment-502180) in the library as it is a very good analysis of the war from a class perspective, but I wanted to ask does there have to be a permission from the author to do that or can I just post any article I run across on the internet to the library?
Anyway, some new inf on Canada. First I'm going to post some smaller texts I found that are not that relevant but in the next post I'm going to take a more statistical look at Canadian labour unrest during the war.
This is right after the war:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Strike_of_1945
Also:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/strike/index-old.html
And:
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/articles/strikes-and-lockouts
Have people seen
Have people seen this?
http://www.zero-books.net/books/unpatriotic-history-of-the-second-world-war
Now that I have discovered
Now that I have discovered the wonderful world of strike statistics I'm going to put more emphasis on the big picture (for those countries that have statistics from that period) not single incidences and passing-by mentions of strikes.
I tried to find some inf on the US, but I couldn't find statistics that go further back than 1947. And as we have quite a lot of inf on the US already, I decided to look at other countries for the moment. So this post will be about Canadian labour unrest during the war.
Taken from this superb article here.
These tables were originally given by year, I, however, thought it'll be better to get an overview if they were given by decade, so I averaged them myself.
Table 4
Strike Issues, 1891-1950 1
Issues_____________________Percentage of Total Issues
________________91-00_01-10_11-20_21-30_31-40_41-50_(33-38)_(39-45)_(46-50)
Earnings
*For_change_______28.5__37.7__40.2__28.9__29.8__36___34.8___35.7___34.4
*Against_change___16.2___6.7___7.2__16.2___9.8___1.5___5_____2.1____1.6
Working_Conditions
*Hours___________7.9___11.3__12.5____9.4___8.7___5.8__10.8___4.3____8.4
*Other___________25____20.3__16.2___20____23.6__25___19.3___34.1__16.2
Unionism________15____17.2__17.5____21.3__24.5__23___27.2___18____28
Other&Indefinite___7.9____6.9___6.8_____4____3.7___8.8___3_____5.1___12.2
1 Issues articulated at the beginning of each strike. More than one issue for some strikes.
Table 5
Methods of Strike Settlement, 1891-1950
Methods ___________________________Percentage of Total Strikes
__________________1891-00_01-10_11-20_21-30_31-40_41-50_(33-38)_(39-45)_(46-50)
Negotiations__________30.4__38.3___40___43.8__44.8__28.7__49.5___25.7___34.8
Third_Party____________5.8___7.3___12.2__10.9__19.6__40.3__20.5___42____31.4
Return_of_Workers______18.6__14.4__12.5__16.7__16.5__20.5__11.7___24____19
Replacement_of_Workers_15.2__17.5__13.3__17.1__13___4.6___12.3___4.9____5.6
Indefinite_______________29.9__22.5__22.4__11.3__5.1___6.1___6.2____3.7____9.2
Table 6
Strike Results, 1851-1950
Results_____________________________Percentage of Total Strikes
______________1891-00_01-10_11-20_21-30_31-40_41-50_(33-38)_(39-45)_(46-50)
Workers'_Favour___16.2__25.2___25___25___30.9__23.4___35.2___24.6___20.8
Compromise______14.2__19____22.1__21.7__29.2__30.2__29.3___28.6___34.8
Employers'_Favour_37.8__33.6___27.8__39.5__31.8__33.4__27.5___38.6___26.8
Indefinite_________31.8__22.4___25___13.6___8.1__12.8___8_____9.5____17.2
Thank you
Thank you
Another one - the 1942
Another one - the 1942 Chinese seaman's strike: http://www.halfandhalf.org.uk/sww.htm
They were stationed in Liverpool. As soon as WWII finished, the Labour government mass deported them - including people who were married and/or had kids with British women - literally grabbed people off the street without informing anyone in some cases.
Would be great to get some more of this in the library.