August 25th, 2009
A Pamphlet Titled, On Strikes
On Strikes
by V.I. Lenin
Written: Written at the end of 1899
Published: First published in 1924 in the magazine Proletarskaya
Revolyutsiya, No. 8-9. Published according to a manuscript copied by an
unknown hand.
----
In recent years, workers’ strikes have become extremely frequent in
Russia. There is no longer a single industrial gubernia in which there
have not occurred several strikes. And in the big cities strikes never
cease. It is understand able, therefore, that class-conscious workers
and socialists should more and more frequently concern themselves with
the question of the significance of strikes, of methods of conducting
them, and of the tasks of socialists participating in them.
We wish to attempt to outline some of our ideas on these questions. In
our first article we plan to deal generally with the significance of
strikes in the working-class movement; in the second we shall deal with
anti-strike laws in Russia; and in the third, with the way strikes were
and are conducted in Russia and with the attitude that class-conscious
workers should adopt to them.
I
In the first place we must seek an explanation for the outbreak and
spread of strikes. Everyone who calls to mind strikes from personal
experience, from reports of others, or from the newspapers will see
immediately that strikes break out and spread wherever big factories
arise and grow in number. It would scarcely be possible to find a
single one among the bigger factories employing hundreds (at times even
thousands) of workers in which strikes have not occurred. When there
were only a few big factories in Russia there were few strikes; but
ever since big factories have been multiplying rapidly in both the old
industrial districts and in new towns and villages, strikes have become
more frequent.
Why is it that large-scale factory production always leads to strikes?
It is because capitalism must necessarily lead to a struggle of the
workers against the employers, and when production is on a large scale
the struggle of necessity takes on the form of strikes.
Let us explain this.
Capitalism is the name given to that social system under which the
land, factories, implements, etc., belong to a small number of landed
proprietors and capitalists, while the mass of the people possesses no
property, or very little property, and is compelled to hire itself out
as workers. The landowners and factory owners hire workers and make
them produce wares of this or that kind which they sell on the market.
The factory owners, furthermore, pay the workers only such a wage as
provides a bare subsistence for them and their families, while
everything the worker produces over and above this amount goes into the
factory owner’s pocket, as his profit. Under capitalist economy,
therefore, the people in their mass are the hired workers of others,
they do not work for themselves but work for employers for wages. It is
understandable that the employers always try to reduce wages; the less
they give the workers, the greater their profit. The workers try to get
the highest possible wage in order to provide their families with
sufficient and whole some food, to live in good homes, and to dress as
other people do and not like beggars. A constant struggle is,
therefore, going on between employers and workers over wages; the
employer is free to hire whatever worker he thinks fit and, therefore,
seeks the cheapest. The worker is free to hire himself out to an
employer of his choice, so that he seeks the dearest, the one that will
pay him the most. Whether the worker works in the country or in town,
whether he hires himself out to a landlord, a rich peasant, a
contractor, or a factory owner, he always bargains with the employer,
fights with him over the wages.
But is it possible for a single worker to wage a struggle by himself?
The number of working people is increasing: peasants are being ruined
and flee from the countryside to the town or the factory. The landlords
and factory owners are introducing machines that rob the workers of
their jobs. In the cities there are increasing numbers of unemployed
and in the villages there are more and more beggars; those who are
hungry drive wages down lower and lower. It becomes impossible for the
worker to fight against the employer by himself. If the worker demands
good wages or tries not to consent to a wage cut, the employer tells
him to get out, that there are plenty of hungry people at the gates who
would be glad to work for low wages.
When the people are ruined to such an extent that there is always a
large number of unemployed in the towns and villages, when the factory
owners amass huge fortunes and the small proprietors are squeezed out
by the millionaires, the individual worker becomes absolutely powerless
in face of the capitalist. It then becomes possible for the capitalist
to crush the worker completely, to drive him to his death at slave
labour and, indeed, not him alone, but his wife and children with him.
If we take, for instance, those occupations in which the workers have
not yet been able to win the protection of the law and in which they
cannot offer resistance to the capitalists, we see an inordinately long
working day, sometimes as long as 17-19 hours; we see children of 5 or
6 years of age overstraining themselves at work; we see a generation of
permanently hungry workers who are gradually dying from starvation.
Example: the workers who toil in their own homes for capitalists;
besides, any worker can bring to mind a host of other examples! Even
under slavery or serfdom there was never any oppression of the working
people as terrible as that under capitalism when the workers cannot put
up a resistance or cannot win the protection of laws that restrict the
arbitrary actions of the employers.
And so, in order to stave off their reduction to such extremities, the
workers begin a desperate struggle. As they see that each of them,
individually, is completely powerless and that the oppression of
capital threatens to crush him, the workers begin to revolt jointly
against their employers. Workers’ strikes begin. At first the workers
often fail to realise what they are trying to achieve, lacking
consciousness of the wherefore of their action; they simply smash the
machines and destroy the factories. They merely want to display their
wrath to the factory owners; they are trying out their joint strength
in order to get out of an unbearable situation, without yet
understanding why their position is so hopeless and what they should
strive for.
In all countries the wrath of the workers first took the form of
isolated revolts—the police and factory owners in Russia call them
“mutinies.” In all countries these isolated revolts gave rise to more
or less peaceful strikes, on the one hand, and to the all-sided
struggle of the working class for its emancipation, on the other.
What significance have strikes (or stoppages) for the struggle of the
working class? To answer this question, we must first have a fuller
view of strikes. The wages of a worker are determined, as we have seen,
by an agreement between the employer and the worker, and if, under
these circumstances, the individual worker is completely powerless, it
is obvious that workers must fight jointly for their demands, they are
compelled to organise strikes either to prevent the employers from
reducing wages or to obtain higher wages. It is a fact that in every
country with a capitalist system there are strikes of workers.
Everywhere, in all the European countries and in America, the workers
feel themselves powerless when they are disunited; they can only offer
resistance to the employers jointly, either by striking or threatening
to strike. As capitalism develops, as big factories are more rapidly
opened, as the petty capitalists are more and more ousted by the big
capitalists, the more urgent becomes the need for the joint resistance
of the workers, because unemployment increases, competition sharpens
between the capitalists who strive to produce their wares at the
cheapest (to do which they have to pay the workers as little as
possible), and the fluctuations of industry become more accentuated and
crises[1] more acute. When industry prospers, the factory owners make
big profits but do not think of sharing them with the workers; but when
a crisis breaks out, the factory owners try to push the losses on to
the workers. The necessity for strikes in capitalist society has been
recognised to such an extent by everybody in the European countries
that the law in those countries does not forbid the organisation of
strikes; only in Russia barbarous laws against strikes still remain in
force (we shall speak on another occasion of these laws and their
application).
However, strikes, which arise out of the very nature of capitalist
society, signify the beginning of the working-class struggle against
that system of society. When the rich capitalists are confronted by
individual, propertyless workers, this signifies the utter enslavement
of the workers. But when those propertyless workers unite, the
situation changes. There is no wealth that can be of benefit to the
capitalists if they cannot find workers willing to apply their
labour-power to the instruments and materials belonging to the
capitalists and produce new wealth. As long as workers have to deal
with capitalists on an individual basis they remain veritable slaves
who must work continuously to profit another in order to obtain a crust
of bread, who must for ever remain docile and inarticulate hired
servants. But when the workers state their demands jointly and refuse
to submit to the money-bags, they cease to be slaves, they become human
beings, they begin to demand that their labour should not only serve to
enrich a handful of idlers, but should also enable those who work to
live like human beings. The slaves begin to put forward the demand to
become masters, not to work and live as the landlords and capitalists
want them to, but as the working people themselves want to. Strikes,
therefore, always instil fear into the capitalists, because they begin
to undermine their supremacy. “All wheels stand still, if your mighty
arm wills it,” a German workers’ song says of the working class. And so
it is in reality: the factories, the landlords’ land, the machines, the
railways, etc., etc., are all like wheels in a giant machine—the
machine that extracts various products, processes them, and delivers
them to their destination. The whole of this machine is set in motion
by the worker who tills the soil, extracts ores, makes commodities in
the factories, builds houses, work shops, and railways. When the
workers refuse to work, the entire machine threatens to stop. Every
strike reminds the capitalists that it is the workers and not they who
are the real masters—the workers who are more and more loudly
proclaiming their rights. Every strike reminds the workers that their
position is not hopeless, that they are not alone. See what a
tremendous effect strikes have both on the strikers themselves and on
the workers at neighbouring or nearby factories or at factories in the
same industry. In normal, peaceful times the worker does his job
without a murmur, does not contradict the employer, and does not
discuss his condition. In times of strikes he states his demands in a
loud voice, he reminds the employers of all their abuses, he claims his
rights, he does not think of himself and his wages alone, he thinks of
all his workmates who have downed tools together with him and who stand
up for the workers’ cause, fearing no privations. Every strike means
many privations for the working people, terrible privations that can be
compared only to the calamities of war—hungry families, loss of wages,
often arrests, banishment from the towns where they have their homes
and their employment. Despite all these sufferings, the workers despise
those who desert their fellow workers and make deals with the
employers. Despite all these sufferings, brought on by strikes, the
workers of neighbouring factories gain renewed courage when they see
that their comrades have engaged themselves in struggle. “People who
endure so much to bend one single bourgeois will be able to break the
power of the whole bourgeoisie,”[3] said one great teacher of
socialism, Engels, speaking of the strikes of the English workers. It
is often enough for one factory to strike, for strikes to begin
immediately in a large number of factories. What a great moral
influence strikes have, how they affect workers who see that their
comrades have ceased to be slaves and, if only for the time being, have
become people on an equal footing with the rich! Every strike brings
thoughts of socialism very forcibly to the worker’s mind, thoughts of
the struggle of the entire working class for emancipation
from the oppression of capital. It has often happened that before a big
strike the workers of a certain factory or a certain branch of industry
or of a certain town knew hardly anything and scarcely ever thought
about socialism; but after the strike, study circles and associations
become much more widespread among them and more and wore workers become
socialists.
A strike teaches workers to understand what the strength of the
employers and what the strength of the workers consists in; it teaches
them not to think of their own employer alone and not of their own
immediate workmates alone but of all the employers, the whole class of
capitalists and the whole class of workers. When a factory owner who
has amassed millions from the toil of several generations of workers
refuses to grant a modest increase in wages or even tries to reduce
wages to a still lower level and, if the workers offer resistance,
throws thousands of hungry families out into the street, it becomes
quite clear to the workers that the capitalist class as a whole is the
enemy of the whole working class and that the workers can depend only
on themselves and their united action. It often happens that a factory
owner does his best to deceive the workers, to pose as a benefactor,
and conceal his exploitation of the workers by some petty sops or lying
promises. A strike always demolishes this deception at one blow by
showing the workers that their “benefactor” is a wolf in sheep’s
clothing.
A strike, moreover, opens the eyes of the workers to the nature, not
only of the capitalists, but of the government and the laws as well.
Just as the factory owners try to pose as benefactors of the workers,
the government officials and their lackeys try to assure the workers
that the tsar and the tsarist government are equally solicitous of both
the factory owners and the workers, as justice requires. The worker
does not know the laws, he has no contact with government officials,
especially with those in the higher posts, and, as a consequence, often
believes all this. Then comes a strike. The public prosecutor, the
factory inspector, the police, and frequently troops, appear at the
factory. The workers learn that they have violated the law: the
employers are permitted by law to assemble and openly discuss ways of
reducing workers wages, but workers are declared criminals if they come
to a joint agreement! Workers are driven out of their homes; the police
close the shops from which the workers might obtain food on credit, an
effort is made to incite the soldiers against the workers even when the
workers conduct themselves quietly and peacefully. Soldiers are even
ordered to fire on the workers and when they kill unarmed workers by
shooting the fleeing crowd in the back, the tsar himself sends the
troops an expression of his gratitude (in this way the tsar thanked the
troops who had killed striking workers in Yaroslavl in 1895). It
becomes clear to every worker that the tsarist government is his worst
enemy, since it defends the capitalists and binds the workers hand and
foot. The workers begin to understand that laws are made in the
interests of the rich alone; that government officials protect those
interests; that the working people are gagged and not allowed to make
known their needs; that the working class must win for itself the right
to strike, the right to publish workers’ newspapers, the right to
participate in a national assembly that enacts laws and supervises
their fulfilment. The government itself knows full well that strikes
open the eyes of the workers and for this reason it has such a fear of
strikes and does everything to stop them as quickly as possible. One
German Minister of the Interior, one who was notorious for the
persistent persecution of socialists and class-conscious workers, not
without reason, stated before the people’s representatives: “Behind
every strike lurks the hydra [monster] of revolution.”[4] Every strike
strengthens and develops in the workers the understanding that the
government is their enemy and that the working class must prepare
itself to struggle against the government for the people’s rights.
Strikes, therefore, teach the workers to unite; they show them that
they can struggle against the capitalists only when they are united;
strikes teach the workers to think of the struggle of the whole working
class against the whole class of factory owners and against the
arbitrary, police government. This is the reason that socialists call
strikes “a school of war,” a school in which the workers learn to make
war on their enemies for the liberation of the whole people, of all who
labour, from the yoke of government officials and from the yoke of
capital.
“A school of war” is, however, not war itself. When strikes are
widespread among the workers, some of the workers (including some
socialists) begin to believe that the working class can confine itself
to strikes, strike funds, or strike associations alone; that by strikes
alone the working class can achieve a considerable improvement in its
conditions or even its emancipation. When they see what power there is
in a united working class and even in small strikes, some think that
the working class has only to organise a general strike throughout the
whole country for the workers to get everything they want from the
capitalists and the government. This idea was also expressed by the
workers of other countries when the working-class movement was in its
early stages and the workers were still very inexperienced. It is a
mistaken idea. Strikes are one of the ways in which the working class
struggles for its emancipation, but they are not the only way; and if
the workers do not turn their attention to other means of conducting
the struggle, they will slow down the growth and the successes of the
working class. It is true that funds are needed to maintain the workers
during strikes, if strikes are to be successful. Such workers’ funds
(usually funds of workers in separate branches of industry, separate
trades or workshops) are maintained in all countries; but here in
Russia this is especially difficult, because the police keep track of
them, seize the money, and arrest the workers. The workers, of course,
are able to hide from the police; naturally, the organisation of such
funds is valuable, and we do not want to advise workers against setting
them up. But it must not be supposed that workers’ funds, when
prohibited by law, will attract large numbers of contributors, and so
long as the membership in such organisations is small, workers’ funds
will not prove of great use. Furthermore, even in those countries where
workers’ unions exist openly and have huge funds at their disposal, the
working class can still not confine itself to strikes as a means of
struggle. All that is necessary is a hitch in the affairs of industry
(a crisis, such as the one that is approaching in Russia today) and the
factory owners will even deliberately cause strikes, because it is to
their advantage to cease work for a time and to deplete the workers’
funds. The workers, therefore, cannot, under any circumstances, confine
themselves to strike actions and strike associations. Secondly, strikes
can only be successful where workers are sufficiently class-conscious,
where they are able to select an opportune moment for striking, where
they know how to put forward their demands, and where they have
connections with socialists and are able to procure leaflets and
pamphlets through them. There are still very few such workers in
Russia, and every effort must be exerted to increase their number in
order to make the working-class cause known to the masses of workers
and to acquaint them with socialism and the working-class struggle.
This is a task that the socialists and class-conscious workers must
undertake jointly by organising a socialist working-class party for
this purpose. Thirdly, strikes, as we have seen, show the workers that
the government is their enemy and that a struggle against the
government must be carried on. Actually, it is strikes that have
gradually taught the working class of all countries to struggle against
the governments for workers’ rights and for the rights of the people as
a whole. As we have said, only a socialist workers’ party can carry on
this struggle by spreading among the workers a true conception of the
government and of the working-class cause. On another occasion we shall
discuss specifically how strikes are conducted in Russia and how
class-conscious workers should avail themselves of them. Here we must
point out that strikes are, as we said above, “a school of war” and not
the war itself, that strikes are only one means of struggle, only one
aspect of the working-class movement. From individual strikes the
workers can
and must go over, as indeed they are actually doing in all countries,
to a struggle of the entire working class for the emancipation of all
who labour. When all class-conscious workers become socialists, i.e.,
when they strive for this emancipation, when they unite throughout the
whole country in order to spread socialism among the workers, in order
to teach the workers all the means of struggle against their enemies,
when they build up a socialist workers’ party that struggles for the
emancipation of the people as a whole from government oppression and
for the emancipation of all working people from the yoke of
capital—only then will the working class become an integral part of
that great movement of the workers of all countries that unites all
workers and raises the red banner inscribed with the words: “Workers of
all countries, unite!”
Notes
[1] We shall deal elsewhere in greater detail with crises in industry
and their significance to the workers. Here we shall merely note that
during recent years in Russia industrial affairs have been going well,
industry has been “prospering,” but that now (at the end of 1899) there
are already clear signs that this “prosperity” will end in a crisis:
difficulties in marketing goods, bankruptcies of factory owners, the
ruin of petty proprietors, and terrible calamities for the workers
(unemployment, reduced wages, etc.). —Lenin
[2] Lenin wrote “On Strikes” for Rabochaya Gazeta when he was in exile
(see the “Letter to the Editorial Group,” p. 207 of this volume). Only
the first part of the article is in the archives of the Institute of
Marxism-Leninism; it is not known whether the other parts were written.
[3] Frederick Engels, The Condition of the Working Class in England
(Marx and Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, Moscow, 1958, p. 260).
[4] Lenin quotes a statement made by the Prussian Minister of the Interior, von Puttkamer.
