Just
as the people of the world owe a debt of gratitude to the
masses in the Arab World who have stood up against tyranny,
we in the USA
owe a debt of gratitude to the thousands of people in Wisconsin who stood up against the domestic tyranny of the Scott Walker
administration. The
courage and determination of those who occupied Madison
for day after day in protest against the anti-worker, anti-union
attacks by the Republican throw-backs has few precedents
- at least in the USA - for years.
Despite
that courage and determination, the Republican juggernaut
has continued forward and, in the case of Wisconsin,
the state Supreme Court has permitted the administration
to go forward with its attacks on workers. The union movement
and its allies in Wisconsin are not asleep and quickly began moving a counter-attack,
focusing on recall elections against Republicans. This is
an excellent tactic which will hopefully disrupt the Republicans�
plans.
Yet
nationally, the Republicans are advancing their �final offensive�
against unions and, in the words of noted columnist, Harold
Meyerson, seek to repeal the 20th century, that is, to move
against all the progressive legislation that improved conditions
for working people from the end of the first decade of the
20th century forward. Rather than throwing our hands into
the air and falling into despair, it is worth considering
the outlines of a response. I would like to offer a few
suggestions.
First,
the �uprising� in Madison,
Wisconsin pointed out some critical lessons. Among these lessons was
that it was not just the unions that were fighting against
the attacks. The unions were able to demonstrate that there
was an assault on democratic rights underway and that other
sectors of society needed to respond. There was a �big tent�
and others joined in, whether students or farmers. Nationally,
we need just such a big tent. The attacks on Medicaid and
Medicare, the Ryan budget proposals, the playing around
with the debt ceiling by the Republicans, etc., all demonstrate
that the attacks are not against one particular segment
of society; for all intents and purposes, these are attacks
on society itself.
Second,
resistance demands persistence. Wisconsin
was not one big rally, but it was the fact that people stayed
in the streets. The Walker
administration was not anticipating that and indications
seem to exist that their offensive might have collapsed.
Third,
combining electoral and non-electoral activism increases
the pressure on our opponents by several magnitudes.
Fourth,
even with what was done in Wisconsin,
much more is needed. At the time of the Madison
�uprising,� there were calls for a general strike, that
is, workers across craft, trade and industry to cease work.
In the context of Wisconsin, this was not an unreasonable tactic and I believe could
very well have succeeded. In the USA as a whole, we are not
ready to pull it off. But this is a tactic that can and
should be considered in various locales. We have to keep
something in mind, however: it is one thing to make the
call for such a strike; it is another thing to pull it off.
To have any chance of success, workers need to be won to
the idea as making sense, having a chance of success, and
tied in with their desire to fight back. They also have
to understand the risks.
The
idea of a general strike must be thought of as part of a
larger question of raising the tempo of the fight back.
When the Tea Party movement emerged in 2009, they actively
disrupted healthcare hearings and suffered, as a result,
no negative consequences. If anything, they built their
profile. It is time to flip the script. This can mean anything
from counter-rallies, to picketing the offices of reactionary
politicians, to selective boycotts of products tied to reactionary
sponsors of the Tea Party and white nationalist movements.
One excellent tactic carried out in Wisconsin
by fire fighters was removing their funds from a bank associated
with supporting the political Right.
Finally,
and to reiterate, combining this mass activity with electoral
action is essential. The Democratic legislators in Wisconsin
who left the state would probably never have done that had
it not been for the mass action, but their actions also
helped to inspire further mass actions. We need elected
officials who have that courage, but more importantly, have
a vision that puts working people at the forefront.
To
pull off any of this, we need that �big tent� referenced
in the beginning of this essay. No one social movement can
pull this off, but it is also the case that we cannot sit
around and wait for every social movement to agree to each
detail. This is a time to fight back and to hit our opponents
very hard.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with
the Institute for
Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfricaForum and co-author of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University of California Press), which examines
the crisis of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.
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