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From New Militant, Vol. II No. 15, 18 April 1936, p. 4.
Transcribed & marked up by Einde O’ Callaghan for the Encyclopaedia of Trotskyism On-Line (ETOL).
The analysis of the recent strike in the Goodyear Tire and Rubber plants in Akron centers about three points: the role and temper of the strikers themselves; the role of union officials and in particular John L. Lewis’s Committee for Industrial Organization; and that of the working-class political parties and groups.
In tackling the Goodyear Company, the strikers were pitting their
forces against the biggest of the tire and rubber companies, which
had one of the oldest, and until the recent strike most “successful”
company unions, and which had very important connections with big
corporations in steel and other industries. Thus Tom Girdler of
Republic Steel is on the Goodyear board of directors and offered his
strike-breaking troops to Goodyear. On the other hand; the intensely
competitive situation existing in the industry was favorable to the
strikers in that Goodyear could not afford to lose business to other
companies. From another standpoint it was this very competitive
situation leading the companies to devise means to cut labor costs
which brought the combination of wage-cuts, speed-up, increased hours
and lay-offs by the Goodyear Company against which the workers
revolted.
The militancy and solidarity of the Goodyear strikers marked the
high point in the class struggle for 1936 and in some respects for
the entire recent period in American labor history. Before the
Goodyear men were assured of support even from their own local and
international union, they closed down the Goodyear plant and
militantly and successfully defied an injunction. Immediately
thereafter the workers in the Firestone and Goodrich plants and in
most of the other industries in Akron as well as the Project Workers
Unions were mobilized. They were set to pour out of the plants en
masse and institute a general strike at any attempt by any agency
to break the Goodyear picket line by force. When in one of the last
weeks of the strike, the company inspired the organization of a
vigilante organization on a large scale and publicly appealed for
violence against the strikers’ and their leaders, six thousand
strikers gathered on the picket line openly armed with clubs and
other weapons and challenged the vigilantes to do their worst. After
all their loud talk, the so-called “forces of law and order”
decided that their aim was simply to rally public opinion for an
early settlement of the strike. The strikers maintained their ranks
and their spirit to the very end. Whatever was gained, in the strike,
and that was considerable, was gained because of this.
The role of Lewis’s Committee for Industrial Organization in the Akron strike, as in other situations in this period, was not a simple one and no simple and completely final estimate of it is possible. There is, on the one hand, no question that the C.I.O. made contributions to the strike. The moral influence of its support counted for a good deal. The trained organizers sent into Akron by the Committee had an important share in building up the excellent strike organization. The fact of C.I.O. endorsement doubtless helped in getting financial support from union bodies throughout the country, though that given by the C.I.O. and the unions affiliated with it was utterly insignificant.
There is, however, much to be said on the other side. The C.I.O.
came out in support of the strike only after the workers had shut
down the plant. It made no effort, although repeatedly urged to do so
by militant strikers, to extend the strike to Goodyear plants in
other cities, an elementary step. By speech and action C.I.O.
representatives sought to tone down rather than capitalize to the
utmost upon the militancy of the Akron workers. They agreed to permit
tires to be moved out of the plant though the strikers were against
it and there is every reason to believe that railroad men would not
have moved any freight cars if a picket line had been maintained
across the tracks.
That the C.I.O. is an agency for rallying Roosevelt support from among the unions and the workers generally has been openly demonstrated since the close of the Akron strike with the organization by Lewis, Hillman, Berry etc., of the Non-Partisan Labor Committee. The Akron strike furnished an illustration of the equivocal role to which this leads in strike situations, It is generally understood that the “influence” of Lewis and other trade unionists with Roosevelt had an important bearing on keeping the militia out of Akron – in an election year in a key state. But this means, for one thing, that in “gratitude” votes are to be corralled for Roosevelt and for another thing that the strikers must be restrained so that the politicians may plausibly contend that there is really no need for calling out the militia. Obviously, too, it is fantastic to suppose that labor leaders who base themselves upon Roosevelt can possibly push employers in the basic industries to a settlement that costs them anything. And this point is of crucial importance in considering the strike settlements which the C.I.O. will support or be “forced” to make in situations like Akron.
Now the C.I.O. was prepared to accept the McGrady arbitration proposed at the beginning of the strike. The effect of accepting it would unquestionably have been a betrayal of the strike. The role of- the C.I.O. representatives in the March 14 “settlement” which was rejected is not wholly clear. That is not the case with regard to the March 21 terms, the acceptance of which brought the strike to an end.
Admittedly these terms were an improvement on those of the previous week. Admittedly also they did not offer the strikers even that minimum (of assurance, for example, that Goodyear would no longer finance the company union, nor recognize its representatives) which they had laid down in a compromise proposal, from which already certain important demands had been eliminated, the previous week. It is also a matter of public record that the C.I.O. representatives suddenly launched the most vigorous, even feverish, public activity in order to get the strikers to vote for the acceptance of these terms and so wind up the strike. If the C.I.O. opposed acceptance of the March 14 terms, it has to explain what induced it to make such frantic efforts to put over only slightly improved terms a week later. There is not the slightest indication of any important change during that interval either in the general objective situation or in the temper of the strikers. In the effort to put over the March 21 terms the C.I.O. representatives who had themselves been the object of C. Nelson Sparks’s “red scare” campaign during the week put on a “red scare” against the Workers Party, Communist Party, “radicals” generally and the present writer by name, stooping lower than A.F. of L. reactionaries have ever gone in similar situations in which I have been involved by saying to reporters that I must be acting for a strike-breaking agency which just wanted the strike prolonged so as to make money by cracking workers’ heads. It was in such an atmosphere of hysteria that the strikers voted to accept the March 21 terms and ended the strike, after the more militant elements among them had criticized the terms and indicated their preference for continuing the fight, but stated their readiness to accept loyally whatever decision might be taken by the majority.
Now in the first place any child can see that the terrific effort
that was required, the barrage that had to be laid down in public and
private, to put the settlement over disposes completely of the
argument that either the general run of strikers or the more
conscious, militant elements were tired or discouraged or for
whatever reason wanted to get back to work on pretty much any
terms.
Secondly, it disposes of the argument that the terms themselves were so clear and so desirable from the strikers’ point of view that any criticism or opposition could spring only from dense ignorance or actual treason to the union. The Rubber Workers officials and the C.I.O. were able to put them over only by taking a vote in an atmosphere of hysteria and without giving the strikers a minute for real study of the terms. Two large sheets of mimeographed material of a very complicated nature were handed them as they came to the meeting where the vote had to be taken, and this in spite of the fact that the strikers had been told two days before that they would be given several days to study the proposals.
One argument that has been presented by defenders of the C.I.O.
role is that funds were low, money for feeding strikers was running
out and the strikers were afraid to go on under these circumstances.
One unwillingly admits the audacity of the cynicism that is implied
here. It is generally agreed that the C.I.O. with some of the
mightiest unions in the country attached to it gave a paltry few
thousand dollars to the strike fund. Let us restrain any indignation
which the situation might occasion, and simply observe that no group
which thinks that the employers in the basic industries in this
country can be licked on the basis of putting a few thousand dollars
into a strike against Goodyear Tire and Rubber involving fifteen
thousand workers can expect to be taken seriously.
Still another argument used by the defenders of the C.I.O. role is that the local and national officials of the Rubber Workers Union were weak and timid, did not want a vigorous and large-scale struggle, would not ask for money which had virtually been put at their disposal. If they had only followed the wishes and the lead of the C.I.O. much more might have been won. It taxes our credulity to pretty near the breaking point to believe this. An organization with prestige and money offers a victory and a union to a group of new and ambitious union leaders on a silver platter, and the latter decline the gift!
But let us assume there is some basis for the argument, then what follows? That these weak-kneed leaders and their course must be backed up by the kind of red-baiting campaign Germer of the C.I.O. along with Burns of the Rubber Workers launched in the closing hours of the strike? That the “heat” must be turned on as was done, on the militants among the strikers to force them against their will to accept this situation? Obviously, if the job of organizing the basic industries is to be taken seriously, then in such a crisis a (supposedly) genuine and competent leadership must find means of rallying the masses as against a false and incompetent leadership. We may surmise that John L. Lewis who still maintains arbitrary provisional presidencies under his own direct control in most of the soft coal districts of the U.M.W. is not likely to see eye to eye with the rank and file or insurgents as against officials in such situations. But that is another reason for concluding that he cannot be relied upon to see the job of organization in the basic industries through.
There is but one logical conclusion. Whether in so many words or
not, Lewis’s real master, i.e., Roosevelt and the interests and
forces which he represents made it clear: “This thing has gone
far enough. Goodyear is giving all it will give without a regular
fight. That we will not stand for. We will not hold back the militia
any longer. Wind it up at any cost.” And when it was wound up
the rubber companies, Goodyear included, had the 36- to 40-hour week
although only a month before a U.S. Department of Labor Committee had
stated flatly that there was no excuse for the abandonment of the
30-hour week. Furthermore, the companies laid the basis for recouping
any losses and fattening profits by an increase in the price of their
product!
Finally a word about the role of political parties and groups. The local S.P. in Akron is small and attempted no distinctive role. The S.P. leaders in Akron were attached to the C.I.O. and played no independent part.
The Stalinists had some influence on some of the militant rank and filers. When the “red-baiting” started in the closing hours of the strike, the Stalinist representatives took to crawling on their bellies before the union bureaucrats in the abject manner which has become so familiar by now and so easy for them. They declared uncritically for the settlement terms before seeing them and laid any opposition that was being voiced at the door of “crazy Trotskyists.” This, despite the fact that one who reads between the lines of the Daily Worker articles following the strike, gets even there a confirmation of every criticism we have made in this article. In exchange the C.P. received an “apology” from Vice President Burns of the Rubber Workers Union for having included them among the critics of his course. To date they seem not yet to have gotten a similar public vote of confidence from John L. Lewis or even from Adolph Germer but perhaps these will also be obtained eventually – for a price!
The Workers Party group in Akron has for two years been in close touch with the militants among the rubber workers. Through them they played a highly creditable part in the strike in line with the policies sketched in this article. The Akron strike, like all the recent strike struggles, demonstrated the key position of a group of progressives and militants including conscious revolutionary elements. The better organization of these elements is a crying need.
To summarize: Militants must make every use that can be made of the C.I.O. They rightly support any specific correct measure for which the C.I.O. may stand, for example industrial as against craft unionism. At no time can they simply uncritically identify themselves with the C.I.O. or foster the illusion that the C.I.O. as such can be trusted to carry through the terrific struggles which we are bound to see in the basic industries.
The solidarity and militancy displayed by the Goodyear strikers and their fellow-workers in Akron achieved substantial results. They tied up the great Goodyear plants. They smashed an injunction. They made a farce out of the vigilante movement. They forced Goodyear to negotiate with a union committee. They won some concessions in the settlement. They laid the foundation of a union, having proved to themselves that they could stick together and fight. They are carrying their struggle forward now in the plants – well aware that the fight has not ended but has just begun in real earnest.
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