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Will
Belgium survive?
Continued from previous page
16.the radical
bourgeois Liberals
In fact
the Belgian
Labourites tended to be, at this time the tail-end or left-wing of
the Liberal party. After more than twenty years of Catholic party
rule, the Belgian Liberals were feeling left out in the cold, but
they realised they were unlikely to get power again without support
from the POB. Accordingly, in preparation for the 1910 election they
launched a great anti-clerical campaign and attempted to get the
leaders of the POB involved. This was easy, as the POB leaders were
anticlerical themselves (and indeed many were freemasons). It is
quite clear that had the occasion arose (which it didn't, because the
Catholic party won the election) the POB would have supported a
Liberal administration and would probably have gone so far as to have
formed an anti-clerical coalition with them. This no doubt would have
caused a stir in the Second International, to which the POB was
affiliated along with other Labour and Social-Democratic parties.
After the First World War, of course, all the Social-Democratic
parties were prepared to take power within capitalism and accept
responsibility for running it, but it is a measure of the depth of
the reformism of the POB that they would have been prepared to do
this in 1910 when their fellow reformists still had some doubts.
The
Belgian Liberals
were, by and large, French-speaking and anticlerical. As in practice
their leftwing, the POB shared these characteristics, with
unfortunate results for the development of the Belgian trade union
movement, which took place mainly after the founding of the POB and
partly under its auspices. As the industrial centre of Belgium was in
the French-speaking South it was natural that the trade union
movement should be strongest there, but it was by no means inevitable
that this movement should have been dominated by an anti-clerical
political party, thus cutting itself off from workers of catholic
origin.
It would
be wrong to
put the entire blame on the POB for the present split in the Belgian
trade union movement into two main groups, each with about a million
members: the Labourite Fédération
Générale
du Travail de Belgique and the self-explanatory Confédération
des Syndicats Chrétiens (which is in fact the larger). The
Catholic Church shares an equal blame; they combatted the POB before
the first world war by organising rival co-operatives, sick clubs —
and trade unions. Their trade unions didn't have much success before
the first world war, but grew rapidly between the wars as
industrialization spread to the Northern part of Belgium. Employers
preferred to deal with the less militant Catholic unions than with
the “socialist” unions and their talk of the class struggle. But
the Catholic unions also took up a very real grievance which the
Labourite unions tended to neglect: the position of the Dutch
language, spoken by workers in the North of Belgium.
French
was the
official language of Belgium after 1830. It was the language of the
State and, even in the Dutch-speaking area, the language of the
bourgeoisie. Thus in Northern Belgium a Dutch-speaking working class
faced a French-speaking capitalist class. The Labourite unions,
perhaps for the very good reason of not wishing to split the working
class on linguistic lines, did not chose to exploit this situation,
but it was taken up to some extent by the Catholic unions.
Today
there is
virtually no difference except in ideology — the FGTB is, on paper,
committed to "the disappearance of the wages system”, while
the CSC denounces the class struggle— between the two rival trade
union groups. In practice both act as pure-and-simple,
bread-and-butter unions negotiating over wages and conditions of
work; on the political field their leaders are reformists, being
supporters either of the Belgian Socialist Party (as, unfortunately
for us genuine socialists, the POB has been called since 1945) or of
the catholic political party.
The other
great
division in the Belgian working class besides the
catholic/anti-clerical one is of course language. As stated, despite
being the minority language, French was made the official language of
the Belgian State set up in 1830. Dutch in fact has only been given
completely equal status with French since 1932. Since the last world
war the centre of economic gravity in Belgium has tended to shift
from Wallonia, the French-speaking South, to Flanders, the
Dutch-speaking North, and the numerical superiority of Dutch-speakers
has began to make itself felt on the political scene.
The man
who must
share a great responsibility for side-tracking the French-speaking
part of the Belgian working class on the language issue was a
militant trade union leader in the Liège engineering industry,
André Renard, who died in 1962 and who is still something of a
myth for many militant trade unionists in Belgium, Towards the end of
the grande grève, the general strike of 1960-1 over the
government's attempt to cut workers’ living standards, Renard
suddenly introduced the quite unrelated political issue of
"federalism". Claiming that the workers in the
French-speaking south, where the strike was virtually solid, had been
betrayed by the Dutch-speakers in the North (where the Catholic
unions, following a lead given by Cardinal Van Roey in his Christmas
message, urged their members to stay at work), Renard argued that if
Wallonia had the power to pass its own laws on economic matters it
would be able to carry out various "anti-capitalist structural
reforms". He called for Belgium to be converted into a loose
federation which would give Wallonia this power, virtually a demand
for independence of course. This demand, and the reformist strategy
behind it was supported by both the so-called Communist Party (which,
under proportional representation, had a handful of members of
parliament) and the Trotskyists (including, conspicuously, their
international leader, Ernest Mandel, who was from Belgium).
The
effect of this
appeal was to heighten language-consciousness amongst
French-speakers. In the years that followed French-speaking
federalist groups increased their representation in parliament. So,
on the other side, did the Dutch-speaking federalists, organised in a
series far right parties. Today, it is the Flemish federalists and
separatists who have been making the running, reflecting the fact
that Flemish capitalists don’ t want to continue to pay for the
state benefits received by workers in Wallonia where heavy industry
(coal, steel, engineering) has been considerably run down since
Renard’s day.
That the
working
class in Belgium should be divided on linguistic lines is, from a
socialist point of view a matter for regret, but it also confirms the
correctness of our opposition to ''leftwing” groups in that they
should be partly responsible for it.
Whether
Belgium will
eventually split up, or at least become a federal State of some sort,
remains to be seen, but one thing is clear: this constitutional issue
is of no consequence whatsoever for the working class of the area.
Whatever the constitution it will be that of a capitalist State and
the working class will remain propertyless sellers of labour-power to
the minority who own and control the means of production.
ADAM
BUICK
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