Реферат: General Strike Of 1926 Essay Research Paper
strike along the traditional ‘labourist’ view, which emphasised the separation
of the political and the industrial sphere, as a purely industrial act. This
notion was supported the developments in the 1920s when the depression and the
employers offensive weakened the militant and revolutionary forces , whereas the
success of the Labour Party and the reorganisation of the TUC General Council
further strengthened these ‘labourist’ forces.
The government’s and the employer’s view, of course, was a different one.
Since the French syndicalists in 1906 had drawn up the Charter of Amiens,
reaffirming their belief in direct political action and the general strike as a
means of overthrowing the Parliamentary system, governments and industrialists
all over Europe saw a general strike as a revolutionary challenge for the
constitution and the economic system. Although the British Labour movement had
never been really committed to this idea, during the post-war boom when it was
on the offensive, there were two examples of semi-syndicalist conceptions
concerning the use of industrial action against the war and British intervention
against the Soviet Republic. Government and employers were warned and did not
hesitate to condemn every notion of nation wide industrial action as
unconstitutional and revolutionary.
The mining dispute which caused the General Strike emerged after the First
World War when the triple alliance broke and the miners were left to fight alone
against the government’s plans to privatise the mines. As a result the mines
suddenly returned to their private owners and the miners faced demands for very
substantial wage cuts of up to 50 per cent . The dispute escalated because the
crisis was seen by all the key players -the government, the em-ployers and the
Trade Union Council (TUC)- as an example for future industrial relations in
Britain. The trade un-ion movement saw its opportunity to challenge the notion
that wage reduction could solve Britain’s economic diffi-culties and decided
therefore that a future united action in support of the miners would take the
form of a general strike. But as Margaret Morris emphasised. "It was the