What is the link between the struggle to mitigate alienation (for
higher wages, shorter hours, more benefits, less work intensity etc.) and the
struggle against alienation itself? The answer to this question distinguishes
communist practice from merely leftist practice. In recent years, a number of
ex-autonomist and leftist groups have been trying to build a broad European-wide
movement around a common programme of radical demands concerning unemployment,
working-time reduction and a guaranteed minimum income. In the UK, too, such
demands as a 'basic income', seen as a strategy for undermining the relation
between work and human needs embodied in the wage, have been taken up not only
by (post-)autonomists but also by Greens and more traditional leftists. Such
strategies need to be judged in terms both of whether they come out of a real
movement (though this is still no guarantee of a communist content - vide
social democracy) and their historical context. In times of working class
strength, it is possible that achieving demands such as a reduction in
working-time might serve as a basis from which we could push on towards 'the
point of no return'. But when the working class is weak - as we are now - such
demands merely contribute to the dynamic of capital. The articles in this
pamphlet on reforms already taking place in Europe show very clearly how
apparently radical demands, such as working-time reduction, have been gratefully
co-opted as part of the post social democratic project.
We have put this collection of articles together because we feel that each of
them serves as an important contribution to a confrontation with and critique of
some of the prevailing currents in the political debate over how to take new
working class struggles forward. However, this collection does not necessarily
reflect a common project among the different groups; and nor do we necessarily
endorse every argument expressed here. Nevertheless, you will find some common
elements in the groups' perspectives - such as the refusal of work as a basic
element of working class struggle, and the conviction that working class
emancipation will come from working class self-activity not from mediators such
as trade unions which seek accommodation with capital and the state.
The critiques in this pamphlet refer to specific demands, but they also have
general applicability. The kind of radical-reformist strategies we are attacking
here are likely to re-emerge in different guises again and again until the link
between the struggle to mitigate alienation and the struggle against alienation
itself is finally realized and transcended, and human history can at last begin.
Aufheben
Summer 2000
1. Preface: Putting the Critique of Capitalism Back on the Table (Wildcat)
2. Considerations of the Agitations of Unemployed and Casual Workers (Mouvement Communiste)
3. Unemployed Recalcitrance and Welfare Restructuring in the UK Today (Aufheben)
4. Reforming the Welfare State to Save Capitalism (Wildcat)
5. Thirty-five Hour Week: Lower Incomes and More Work (Wildcat)
6. The Awkward Question of Times (Precari Nati)
7. 'Thirty-five Hours' against the Proletariat (Mouvement Communiste)