On July 19th, 1936 the CNT, an anarcho-syndicalist union, and the UGT, a
union affiliated with the Spanish Socialist party, called a general strike
in response to a Fascist coup led by General Francisco Franco. The
left-wing socialists tried to get the government to release arms to the workers
so they could put down the coup, but the government refused. So the
workers broke into the barracks and took the weapons themselves. After
the workers had put down the coup the government decided to release arms
to them. Franco's coup was defeated in two-thirds of Spain. A
civil war was waged between the Fascists and the anti-Fascists for the next
three years, which the Fascists eventually won. In the aftermath of
the defeat of Franco's coup the non-Fascist parts of Spain underwent an anarchist
social revolution, which was later suppressed by a counter-revolution led
by the Spanish Communist party. This revolution shows an alternative
to capitalism (and Stalinist tyranny) and that anarchy is possible, it worked
in Spain. The counter-revolution is confirmation of the anarchist critique
of the state and shows the treachery of Marxist-Leninists.
State power collapsed in the aftermath of the defeat of the Fascist coup.
Parliament still existed, but it had no power. The army was in rebellion
against the government and the police had dissolved in the wake of the fighting.
Power lay in the streets. The result was not chaos, but anarchy.
Spain had a powerful anarchist movement organized mainly in the Iberian Anarchist
Federation (FAI), a federation of anarchist affinity groups, and the National
Confederation of Labor (CNT), an anarcho-syndicalist union. Anarcho-syndicalism
is a form of anarchism that focuses on unions and the labor movement.
Anarcho-syndicalists advocate forming revolutionary unions that would fight
for improvements in the short term (better wages, working conditions, etc.)
and revolution in the long term. This union would not be a normal bureaucratic
union like the AFL-CIO but would be run along non-hierarchical lines, without
a bureaucracy and based on decentralized direct democracy. Once this
union was large enough it would declare a general strike, bringing capitalism
to a halt, the government would be overthrown & abolished, and the workers
would take over the means of production (factories, mines, land, etc.).
This is basically what happened after the defeat of Franco's coup.
Throughout much of Spain workers seized the factories and peasants drove
their landlords off the land. Non-hierarchical collectives were formed;
workers ran the factories and peasants ran the farms. Self-management
was implemented. Takeover of factories initially began as a response
by workers to the abandoning of workplaces by their owners but soon spread
to workplaces that hadn't been abandoned and shut down by their owners.
Had this not happened the capital flight would have crippled the economy
but by taking over production the workers' were able to get the economy back
on its feet. Anarchists were not the only ones to carry out expropriation.
Many members of the UGT expropriated their workplaces, even though the leadership
of the UGT wanted nationalization not self-management. Thousands acted
like anarchists even if they didn't regard themselves as anarchists.
The specific organization of urban collectives varied from collective to
collective, but most followed a few basic outlines. A worker assembly
operating on directly democratic principles ran the factory or workplace.
Assemblies would usually elect a committee to take care of administrative
and coordination tasks. These factory committees were recallable and
mandated. They had to follow the instructions of their worker assembly
and had no power of their own. Members of the committee worked as ordinary
workers and had no more power or privileges than anyone else. All major
decisions were made in the worker assemblies; committees would only implement
those decisions. The collectives saved a good deal of money by abolishing
owners and bosses, since they no longer had to pay them huge amounts of money.
The wages of the lowest paid workers was usually increased to decrease inequality
between workers. The workers were able to quickly reorient much of
the economy to a war footing, converting production into a war industry.
Technicians and specialists (and sometimes former owners) were made advisors
whose expertise was valued but they didn't have any power over others.
Former owners who did not flee to the Fascist side were usually made workers,
equal to all the other workers.
The rural collectives tended to implement more radical policies than the
urban collectives. Peasant assemblies based on directly democratic
principles ran the collective. Most collectives elected a committee
to take care of coordination and administrative tasks. Committees only
carried out the decisions of the assemblies; the peasant assemblies made
all major decisions. Those who did not want to join the collectives
did not have to; they were given their own plot of land but no more then
they could farm themselves. Just as they could not buy slaves they
also could not employ wage-labor. Within the collectives land was cultivated
in common and the produce shared equally. Supplies and necessities
were usually stored in a common warehouse(s) from which things would be dispensed.
Some collectives abolished money and implemented distribution based on the
principle "from each according the ability to each according to need."
People could freely take goods of which there were plenty; goods that were
scarce were rationed. Most collectives that did not abolish money attempted
to approximate the same principle by paying individuals on an egalitarian
basis. Some collectives printed their own local money. Some started
building their own small agro-industries. Many local doctors joined
the collectives, providing their services for free and receiving the same
as all collective members. Many collectives had a retirement age, after
which members did not have to work, and some even set up special homes for
the retired. Many of the retired grew bored, however, and chose to
do some labor anyway. In most cases, the only external incentive to
do productive labor was peer pressure. And it worked - many collectives
produced even more than the old system.
Collectivization was not coerced and did not cover the whole economy, although
it covered most of it. Many small businesses were not immediately collectivized
but stayed under private ownership. Because collectivization was not
based on coercion the decision to collectivize or not was up to the workers
in each workplace and some of them didn't immediately expropriate their workplaces,
although the expropriation of big businesses was near universal. The
remaining petty bourgeoisie (small business owners) were fearful and paranoid
about collectivization, often bringing them into conflict with the anarchists.
Unlike full-blown capitalists, many small business owners are not ultra-rich
and actually aren't greatly harmed by collectivization. They go from
being a small business owner to being a worker equal to all others.
In many cases collectivization did not adversely affect the former small
business owners and may even have improved their lot. In Barcelona
both the workers and owners of all the hairdressing parlors voluntarily decided
to collectivize. At a general assembly they decided to shut down all
the unprofitable shops and modernize all the remaining ones. The distinction
between workers and owners was obliterated and, with the money saved, wages
were raised. Former owners were not negatively affected, the workers
were better off and the customers got better service. Despite the fact
that small business owners didn't lose much in collectivization many were
still paranoid and feared collectivization destroying their power over the
few subordinates they had. Those small business owners who remained
became significant backers of the counter-revolution led by the Communist
party. The anarcho-syndicalists could probably have done a better job
trying to win the petty bourgeoisie over to their cause and persuading them
of the benefits of collectivization.
Initially market relations continued to exist in Revolutionary Spain, markets
were used to coordinate production between collectives. Self-managed collectives
sold most of their products on the market, at first. Sometimes they
would barter with each other, other times money was involved. This
was a system of mutualism, not capitalism, because wage-labor was abolished
even though market relations continued to exist. There was some inequality
between collectives during this initial period, though this was much less
inequality than exists in any capitalist society. It also led to a
"factory patriotism" where members of different collectives tended to look
out mainly for their own collective instead of the whole system. This
was the case in the initial period; there were several forms of non-market
non-hierarchical coordination between collectives established in the months
following expropriation. This started on a local basis and later built on
a larger basis. Immediately after the civil war started forms of loose coordination
appeared to fight the war. Many collectives converted their workplaces to
war production and others sent either money or useful materials (such as
food) to both the militias fighting the war and the collectives on war production.
In some cases there were joint assemblies with the workers of multiple workplaces.
Sometimes industries were reorganized so as to be more efficient, shutting
down inefficient plants and using more efficient ones more fully. Later
greater coordination was established between collectives by establishing
confederations based on mandated and recallable delegates. Regional federations
were formed such the Levant Federation of Collectives formed just a few weeks
after the revolution began and in June 1937 a Plenum of peasant collectives
was held. Equalization funds were established to reduce the inequality
between collectives and sometimes there were direct transfers of resources
between collectives. There were even instances of large groups of people
moving from one collective to another in order to help out the poorer collectives.
These measures were successful in reducing factory patriotism and inequalities
between collectives. All of this was organized from the bottom up,
with decision-making power in the hands of the assemblies. All major
decisions were made in the popular assemblies running the collectives, delegates
and committees simply carried out the instructions of the assemblies.
Even during the initial period of mutualism the collectives were economically
productive as many eyewitness accounts attest. Overall the collectives
worked at least as well as private capitalism, in some cases much better.
Most of the cases where collectives were less productive than before expropriation
were caused by the war though being bombed, shortages of raw material, etc.
Even some opponents of the anarchists admitted that collectivization appeared
to be a success. Rodolfo Llopis, a leader of the Socialist party, admitted
that the collectives who were able to get the economy going after the defeat
of Franco's coup. Luis Portela, a leader of the Party of Marxist Unity
(POUM), admitted that the collectives saved the economy at the start of the
civil war.
Militias were organized to fight the civil war against the Fascists.
The militias were based on military democracy. Officers in the normal
sense were abolished; instead all commanders were elected and recallable.
Commanders had no special privileges. There were no uniforms. Where
ever possible decisions were made directly democratically, using soldier
assemblies and federations of soldier assemblies. The militias were
a revolutionary people's army based on participatory democracy. One
of the major organizers of the militias was Buenaventura Durruti, who died
defending Madrid from the Fascists, a defense in which anarchists played
a significant role. These militias succeeded in liberating much of
Aragon and defending the revolution from the Fascists.
In addition to these economic aspects of the revolution, there was also a
cultural and social aspect. Many new schools were set up based on the
ideas of Francisco Ferrer and libraries proliferated. Stratification
in all areas decreased. Women's rights increased dramatically.
Anti-Fascist Spain at the time probably had greater equality between the
sexes than any other country in the world. Women were involved in all
parts of the revolution - the collectives, the militias and elsewhere.
Attitudes towards women changed greatly, no longer were women viewed as inherently
inferior to men. Women could talk to strangers without being thought
loose. This was brought about as much by the sense that the destruction
of the class system should naturally lead to the end of women's subordination
as by the organized women's movement. Although the rural collectives
were more radical economically, the urban collectives went further in destroying
patriarchy. The CNT and other anarchist organizations had paid lip
service to women's liberation for a long time, but many male "anarchists"
prior to the revolution continued to harbor sexist behavior. Shortly
before the revolution female anarchists had begun organizing Mujeres Libres
(Free Women) in response to male sexism to fight for women’s' freedom and
anarchy. This organization played a significant role in attacking patriarchy.
At one point it had around 30,000 members. Although there were great
strides made for women's equality the revolution was crushed before it could
achieve total equality.
The Spanish anarchists were faced with a difficult situation. They
had defeated the Fascist coup but were now in a civil war with the Fascists.
Although the anarchist movement was very strong there were still many anti-Fascist
Spaniards who were not anarchists and the revolution risked igniting a three-sided
civil war between the Fascists, anarchists, and Republicans. They were
faced with a choice: either complete the revolution now and wage a revolutionary
war or form an alliance with other anti-Fascists and put the revolution on
hold. They opted for the later. The CNT compromised their anarchist
principles and allowed the state to be gradually restored in order to form
an alliance with other anti-Fascist groups. A coalition government
was formed, with anarchist members. Anarchist ministers entered the
new government in September 1936; collaboration with local governments had
already begun before that. At first the state existed in name only,
it had no real power, but over the months that followed it gradually restored
its authority.
The CNT hoped that collaborating with the state, and basically putting the
revolution on hold, would enable them to defeat the Fascists with the help
of their statist (republicans, Marxists, etc.) allies. It was also
hoped to obtain support from the western 'democracies' by doing this since
they obviously would not provide aid to an anarchist revolution. But
this support never materialized - western governments were more worried about
a workers' revolution than another Fascist victory. The only alternative
to this collaboration was to divide the anti-Fascists camp against each other
by launching a civil war within a civil war, with anarchists vs. Fascists
vs. the republic. This decision to collaborate was a violation of anarchist
principles; had they been followed to their logical conclusion the CNT &
FAI would have launched such a multi-sided civil war and not collaborate
with the state. They believed that circumstances required they compromise
- first defeat the Fascists, then finish the revolution. The decision
to collaborate and restore the state was supported by a majority of the Spanish
anarchists, but there was a minority opposed to it. Anarchists such
as Camillo Berneri, Buenaventura Durruti, and the Libertarian Youth (a federation
of anarchist youth organizations) argued instead for a 'revolutionary war'
strategy to fight against fascism, the republic and any interference by the
imperialists.
Every major Marxist group supported the decision to collaborate with the
state. Both the Socialist party and the Communist party participated
in the coalition government. The Party of Marxist Unity (POUM) applauded
the CNT's decision to collaborate, calling it a move towards a more Marxist
conception of power. POUM is sometimes misidentified as Trotskyist
but they weren't, although they were very close to Trotskyism. Many
of the founders of POUM, Andres Nin and Andrade for example, were Trotskyists
until 1934 when they broke with him. Trotsky wanted them to join the Socialist
party and form it's revolutionary wing; they refused. Andres Nin, etc. then
merged with the Bloque Obrera y Campesino, another Marxist group, to form
the Partido Obrero de Unificacion Marxista or POUM. They were anti-Stalin
Leninists with politics close to Trotskyism, though not identical.
The new government was headed by Largo Caballero as Prime Minister and was
a left-wing coalition of Anarchists, Revolutionary Marxists, Communists/Stalinists,
reformist socialists and Republicans. The appointment of this left
government saved the Republic, without it the state would have been destroyed.
In the short term, worker self-management continued under Caballero but his
government took many actions to limit worker and peasants’ power and to push
the revolution back. Caballero was a reformist and member of the socialist
party for most of his life. He was a minister in the Republican government
that ruled Spain in the early '30s and persecuted anarchists. The right
won elections in 1934 and he, along with much of the Socialist party, became
revolutionaries now that they were no longer in power. He was arrested
after the revolts in 1934. In prison he became radicalized and adopted
a Revolutionary Marxist position, coming to the conclusion that 'the reformist
and parliamentary democratic socialism of the Second International' was as
dead as 'the Moscow-inspired revolutionary socialism of the Third.'
Once out of prison he called for a dictatorship of the Proletariat and became
the leader of the left wing of the Socialist Party. He enjoyed a large amount
of popularity and confidence from the working class, which was a big part
of why he was chosen to head the new government.
As a result of their entrance into the government the CNT became more hierarchical
and centralized. The higher committees pursued their own policies,
became isolated from the membership, and sometimes interfered with the creative
work being done by the rank and file. This was closer to representative
democracy being practiced by the CNT, rather than the system of direct democracy
using mandated & recallable delegates they advocated, although there
were still strong elements of direct democracy involved (this varies depending
on what period in the civil war you are talking about). This centralization
of the CNT actually confirms anarchist theory about the state and representative
'democracy.' Both are forms of minority rule, even when anarchists
are the ones in power.
After the "anarchists" entered government the state gradually restored it's
power, rebuilding the police and bureaucracy. The remnants of the capitalist
class, and the petty bourgeoisie (small business owners), began gathering
their forces against the revolution. The Spanish Communist Party (PCE)
was a small party at the start of the civil war but grew by leaps and bounds
by riding this growing counter-revolutionary wave. The PCE opposed
the revolution and called on the workers and peasants to respect private
property. This position won them the support of the more conservative
elements in the Republic, including the petty bourgeoisie, who joined and
supported the party in droves. The international Communist press even
claimed that there was no revolution, that it was simply a civil war between
Fascism and democracy. Stalinist Russia was the only foreign power
to aid the Republic; Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy aided Franco with weapons,
supplies and troops. In exchange for all of Spain's gold reserves the
USSR sent weapons and supplies to assist the Republic. The PCE used
this as leverage to give themselves greater power. Militias were required
to adopt a traditional military hierarchy, a hierarchy increasingly dominated
by the PCE, or they would not receive any arms. Stalinist propaganda
portrayed Russia and the PCE as fighting to defend democracy from Fascism,
but the opening of the Soviet archives has conclusively disproved this.
The actual goal of Russia and the PCE, acting under Russia's orders, was
to impose a one-party dictatorship controlled by Russia, not to defend democracy
let alone support the working class revolution then underway.
At first the state was very week but in the months that followed it gradually
consolidated it's power. As this happened the right, including the
Communist Party, Republicans and the right wing of the Socialist Party, gained
power and campaigned against the collectives. They pressured Caballero
to outlaw the POUM, suppress the anarchists and attack the collectives but
Caballero refused. The consolidated state clashed with the collectives
in the famous Maydays in May 1937. Open fighting broke out in Barcelona
with anti-collaborationist anarchists and POUM against government forces.
A virtual civil war within the civil war existed. Many of the Anarchists
who had been appointed to government positions had been co-opted into supporting
the system and were able to prevent a large number of fellow Anarchists from
joining the revolutionary opposition. A new anarchist group, the Friends
of Durruti, played a significant role in the Maydays. The FoD were
opposed to the collaboration with the state and advocated revolutionary war
instead. POUM, the Libertarian Youth and the Friends of Durruti were
in virtual control of the Catalan Capital for a while. However, the CNT regional
committee opposed this move and the situation was eventually diffused in
favor of state authority. The PCE took advantage of this to force Caballero
out of power and put in power a new government headed by Juan Negrin.
Negrin was a right-wing socialist and a member of the capitalist class.
He believed in a welfare state because he believed it was necessary to decrease
unrest and prevent an anti-capitalist revolution.
The new government was dominated by those opposed to the collectives, including
Republicans, right wing Socialists and especially Stalinists. It launched
a full-fledged counter-revolution. Militant revolutionaries were jailed
and/or killed, revolutionary organizations were suppressed, revolutionary
publications were censored and the collectives were forcibly destroyed.
Torture chambers were set up. POUM was outlawed and it's leaders murdered.
Many anarchist militants, including Camillo Berneri, were murdered and anarchist
publications were censored. The left wing of the socialist party was
purged and Caballero put under house arrest. Troops and resources were
diverted away from the front to break up the collectives by force.
In some collectives private property was restored, in others nationalization
was used as a weapon against the workers - smashing the collectives and putting
part of industry under state control. The destruction of the collectives
caused morale to drop and the economy to get worse. They even had to
slow the destruction of the collectives because it was hurting the economy
too much. Once the left was suppressed the Stalinists started suppressing
other opposition groups one by one. In 1939 this culminated in a virtual
one-party state, with the Communist party monopolizing political power.
Shortly before the civil war ended a coup deposed this dictatorship, but
by then it was too late. The Stalinists and their liberal allies claimed
that implementing a traditional military hierarchy, not waging a revolution,
etc. would enable them to defeat the Fascists and save (bourgeois) 'democracy.'
They did this but were unable to win the civil war. The Fascists won
and wiped out all remnants of the revolution. The Stalinist/liberal
strategy was incapable of defeating the Fascists and as a result Franco's
dictatorship ruled over Spain for nearly four decades.
This counter-revolution was the outcome of the restoration of the state.
The state is an organization with a monopoly of legitimate violence based
on centralization of power. This inevitably makes it the organ through
which a small minority dominates the majority. It is the minority in
the upper levels of the state hierarchy who hold actual power, the rest have
to obey them. The authority of the state was threatened by the collectives,
who challenged its power. Once the state had cemented its rule it smashed
the collectives. The CNT ministers were first used to restore the state
and then, once they had done that, discarded and thrown out of the government
as it suppressed the revolution. Although the Communist party played
a major role in the counter-revolution, it would probably have happened even
if the PCE had not existed, although it might have taken a different form
and/or taken longer. Some other group would have organized it, perhaps
the right-wing socialists.
The decision of the anarchists to collaborate with the state was a huge mistake
that cost them the revolution. The 'revolutionary war' strategy advocated
by Durruti and others would have been a better option. The strategy
of 'beat the Fascists first, then finish the revolution' obviously didn't
work. Had they immediately seized the state's gold reserve they could
have used it on the international market to buy arms prior to the embargo
by the western 'democracies.' Morocco, a Spanish colony, was a major
base for Franco. It should have been declared independent to disrupt
Franco's rear. The Republic didn't do this and instead choose to appease
French & British imperialism - the example of independent Morocco would
have encouraged other nations to fight for independence. A revolutionary
war strategy would have declared Morocco independent and thereby hurt Franco
even more. In addition, the destruction of the collectives demoralized
the population, enabling the Fascists to win with little in the way of popular
resistance. The places where significant guerilla activity continued
the longest after Franco's victory were also places where collectivization
had lasted the longest. The anarchists didn't get any of the advantages
they thought they would get from collaboration - western aid did not arrive
and the Stalinist counter-revolution ended up creating a virtual civil war
within the civil war. Collaboration was complete failure, the Fascists
won anyway. The only chance at success they had was a revolutionary
war; by making half a revolution they dug their own graves. By stopping
the revolution halfway they insured it would be defeated. Their only
hope for victory lay in completing the revolution, disbanding the parliament,
and waging a revolutionary war against the Fascists.
The Spanish revolution shows that it is possible to organize society without
classes or the state. State power was smashed; workers took over the
factories and peasants the land. Anarchy was implemented and it worked.
Not surprisingly, most histories portray the Spanish Civil War as merely
a battle between fascism and democracy, a prelude to World War Two, and ignore
or downplay the libertarian revolution that occurred. In the rare cases
where it is mentioned it is often slandered or lied about, with little evidence
to support such smears (see Noam Chomsky's "Objectivity and Liberal Scholarship"
for a good analysis of this). The victors write history, and the victors
happen to be strongly opposed to anarchism, so it's not surprising that this
revolution is ignored. Many people ask radicals what our alternative
is. Look at the Spanish revolution, there is our alternative.
Recommended Readings
This is just a short overview of the Revolution & Civil War, a lot
has been left out. For a more in-depth understanding, please see any
of the following:
The Spanish Civil War by Antony Beevor - a good introduction to the
Civil War/Revolution by a non-anarchist historian
Spanish Revolution
Index - An excellent & large online collection
Anarchists in the Spanish Revolution by Jose Peirats - an anarchist
history of the revolution
CNT in the Spanish Revolution by Jose Peirats - an anarchist history
of the revolution focusing on the CNT's role
Homage To Catalonia by George Orwell - an eye-witness account, Orwell
fought in a POUM militia
Anarchist Collectives edited by Sam Dolgoff - an anthology on the
collectives
"Objectivity and Liberal Scholarship" by Noam Chomsky - Chomsky's take on
the revolution
Spain Betrayed edited by Ronald Radosh, Mary Habeck, & Grigory
Sevostianov - Soviet archive documents that prove the treachery of the Communist
Party
Does revolutionary
Spain show that Libertarian Socialism can work in practice? - the Anarchist
FAQ on the revolution
Free Women of Spain by Martha Ackelsberg - the role of women in the
revolution
Anarchists in the Spanish Civil War by Robert Alexander - A two-volume
study by a non-anarchist historian
Spain
1936 - Anarchosyndicalism.org's index on the revolution
Lessons of the Spanish Revolution by Vernon Richards - Richards'
analysis of the revolution
We, The Anarchists by Stuart Christie - A study of the FAI
Anarchist Organization by Juan Gomez Casas - A history of the FAI
To Remember Spain by Murray Bookchin - Bookchin on the revolution
Collectives in the Spanish Revolution by Gaston Leval -
an account of the collectives by someone who was there
The Spanish Cockpit by Franz Borkenau - an interesting eyewitness
account, very hostile towards anarchism & socialism
With the Peasants of Aragon by Augustin Souchy - A first hand account
of rural collectives in Aragon
The Spanish Anarchists: The Heroic Years by Murray Bookchin - A history
of the Spanish anarchist movement before the civil war
Anarchism by Daniel Guerin - Has a good section on the revolution
No Gods, No Masters (book two) edited by Daniel Guerin - contains
many documents on the revolution and other things