12) WINNIPEG GENERAL
STRIKE MARKS 90TH ANNIVERSARY
(The following
article is from the May 1-15, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist
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‑ Resolution
adopted by the Central Committee, Communist Party of Canada, January
31‑February 1, 2009
The labour movement across Canada,
and especially in Winnipeg, will mark the 90th anniversary of the
Winnipeg General Strike this year. The Communist Party of Canada
welcomes these celebrations and will work for the success of these
important tributes.
The 1919
Winnipeg General Strike
is one of the greatest working class struggles in Canadian history, a
strike that combined the militancy, enthusiasm and solidarity of the
overwhelming majority of Winnipeg's workers against the capitalist big
shots who still trample on the rights and lives of workers.
Years of
hunger and misery
brought about by a war‑time government wage freeze and the crushing
lack of rights had already created enormous grievances and rising
militancy in Winnipeg's rapidly growing working class.
Socialist
and working class
activists from many lands had already organized for decades throughout
the burgeoning cities of Western Canada, among which Winnipeg was the
largest.
Adding to
the spirit of
resistance was a long list of recent struggles by the Métis
people,
farmers, trade unions, women and others against encroachments by the
Eastern industrial magnates who were behind the colonization and
exploitation of Western Canada.
After
witnessing the shattering
bestiality of imperialism's First World War (1914‑1918), the majority
of trade union activists in Western Canada embraced the 1917 socialist
revolution in Russia as a giant beacon for humanity and international
solidarity.
In the
months leading up to the
strike, large trade union conferences in Western Canada resounded with
demands for the industrial form of union organization and for a
six‑hour working day to reduce the devastating effects of unemployment
at the end of the War. Delegates advocated a general strike to back up
their demands.
They
overwhelmingly passed
resolutions of solidarity with the Soviet government, demanding the
return of Canadian soldiers sent to Russia to crush the revolution, and
for working class power in Canada.
Not even the
brutal suppression
of socialist and working class political organizations by the Borden
government's War Measures Act in 1918 could stop the impending
explosion.
The strike
began with the
refusal by employers to recognize the Metal Trades Council and enter
negotiations for a collective agreement. The metal workers struck on
May 1. Other unions voted to strike in solidarity and on May 15, 35,000
workers began a general strike which lasted until June 26. The first
out were 500 women telephone operators who left work at 7:00 a.m.
Women,
immigrants and other
highly exploited workers were solidly behind the strike. Nearly half of
all strikers were not members of unions. Veterans returned from the War
actively supported the strike. The strike's broad support created fear
and anger in the hearts of the bosses who used reactionary terror,
arrests and the Mounted Police to crush the strike.
On "Bloody
Saturday", June 21,
mounted police attacked a rally, murdering two workers and wounding 40
others. The government sent machine gun‑equipped army patrols onto the
streets. Soon after the shooting, the strike committee ordered workers
to return to work.
The full
weight of the
capitalist state was used to crush the strike, but the metal workers
won a collective agreement. The Strike was the high point of a sharp
and temporary Canada‑wide surge in organizing workers and efforts to
achieve legislated union rights.
At least 34
smaller sympathetic
general strikes took place in cities and towns across Canada during the
Winnipeg General Strike, mainly in the Western provinces but also in
Toronto and Amherst, Nova Scotia. An upsurge of all kinds of strikes
took place in every province and Quebec.
The Winnipeg
General Strike had
a positive influence on the labour movement for many years. Not only
did it shape the key demands of the labour movement, it educated
workers about the true nature of the capitalist state.
It took
until the 1930s for the
first sustained advances in organizing workers into industrial unions
and until after the Second World War to achieve similar advances in
legislated collective bargaining rights across Canada, rights which are
under threat from right wing governments in Canada today.
Some of the
demands of the
labour movement in Western Canada leading up to strike, such as for a
six hour work day and working class power, have yet to be realized.
The Winnipeg
General Strike must
be counted among the many important global working class actions
sparked by the crisis at the end of the War and inspired by the
tremendous example of the Russian revolution.
The
explosion of international
working class militancy was of decisive importance for the survival of
the Soviet revolution; objectively, it worked to support the popular
demand "Hands off Russia!" Many of the strikers recognized that their
sisters and brothers in Russia were fighting a common enemy, the
capitalists of Russia, who no longer had power, and the capitalists of
Canada.
But it was
the immediate aim of
the General Strike to alleviate the intolerable conditions for workers
in Winnipeg that the made the strike such a powerful blow against
Canada's wealthy elite.
The strike
galvanized
revolutionary workers to overcome arrests, deportations and illegality
to form the Communist Party of Canada in 1921, an achievement that is
still vital for the many international and national challenges that
confront the working class today.