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Will
Belgium survive?
No
permanent
government has emerged from the elections held in June last year.
Does
this matter to the working class there?
Belgium
is a
patently artificial state inhabited by people speaking two different
languages. It survived for many years with one of them (French) as
the dominant language because it was the language of the ruling
class. Now that this has ceased to be the case, and Dutch (Flemish)
has also become a language of a part of the capitalist class as well
as of the state, Belgium is beginning to show signs of coming apart
at the seams. Revision of the constitution — How much autonomy
should the regions be given? Should or should not Belgium become a
federal state? How far out should the limits of Brussels (basically a
French-speaking city surrounded by Dutch-speaking communes) go? —
has become an issue preventing other issues being dealt with.
Belgium
is a state
which the then Great Powers allowed to be set up in 1830. Before that
the territory that is now Belgium had formed part, first, of the
territories of the King of Spain, then of those of the Emperor of
Austria. After the French Revolution Belgium became, in 1792, part of
France and remained so until after the defeat of Napoleon in 1815.
While part of France the Napoleonic code of law, which swept away
feudal remnants, was introduced and manufacturing industry began to
develop in the South. This, together with strategic considerations,
was one of the main reasons why in 1815 Belgium was detached from
France: not only were the frontiers of France to be moved further
back from the Rhine, but France was also to be deprived of a nascent
industrial base. Belgium became part of a kind of Belgian-Dutch
federation under King William of Holland.
In 1830,
in what
Belgian history books refer to as a "national revolution",
the wealthy classes of Belgium broke away from those of Holland and
set up an independent State. Though Holland protested, the Great
Powers let this change happen as it still left the territory of
Belgium detached from France.
The
circumstances
which led to the establishment of Belgium are worth recalling in that
they have shaped the Belgian political scene to this day. Holland was
essentially a trading and agricultural country and as such its ruling
groups tended to favour free trade. The nascent industrial capitalist
class in the south of Belgium, however, wanted tariff walls as a
protection against British competition. The Dutch government did make
some moves to accommodate them but not enough. In the end the Belgian
capitalists decided to break away. This was not too difficult in view
of the loose, almost federal character of the Belgian-Dutch State; in
addition, the population of Belgium was greater than that of Holland.
But the nascent Belgian capitalist class in the South needed support
in the Dutch-speaking Northern part of the territory. This they
managed to do, despite being French-speaking and anti-clerical in the
tradition of the French Revolution, by an opportunist alliance with
the Catholic Church over the schools issue. The Dutch government
wanted to introduce a system of universal state education. The
Catholic Church, (the majority religion in Belgium, unlike Holland
which was a Protestant State),vehemently opposed this, insisting on
its exclusive right to "educate" Catholic children.
The
capitalists got
their state. The Belgian constitution of 1831 was a model of
bourgeois-liberal government. Power was in the hands of a parliament
elected only by wealthy property-owners; the king (a minor German
princeling imported specially to fill the post) was a mere
figurehead. Their language, French, became the official language of
the new State, despite the fact that a majority of people in its
territory spoke Dutch.
But there
was a
price to pay: the power of the Catholic Church, and its control of
its own schools, had to be respected. From a short-term point of
view, the lack of a modern education system had certain advantages
for the Belgian capitalists: they were able to extract very long
hours of work for very low rates of pay, to such an extent that Marx
once described Belgium as “a capitalists' paradise”.
The
industrialisation of Belgium, apart from Antwerp and Ghent in the
Dutch-speaking North, almost exclusively in Wallonia, the
French-speaking Southern part, brought into existence an industrial
working class and, inevitably, working class attempts at political
and industrial organisation. A Belgian Labour Party (Parti Ouvrier
Belge) was set up in 1885, along the same lines as was later the
British Labour Party except that the co-operatives rather than the
trade unions provided the bulk of the members and funds. A deliberate
decision was taken not to call it the “Belgian Socialist Party"
on the grounds that the word "socialist" was unacceptable
to many workers. With a start like this, the POB was destined for a
pitiful career of gradualism and reformism. The POB was never really
even a social-democratic party in the sense that the German SPD was;
it never accepted Marxism as its ideology; in fact it had a contempt
for theory altogether, concentrating on trying to get piecemeal
social reforms for the working class; it was in short a simple
"Labour" party.
In its
early years
the POB was at least militant on one issue of importance to the
working class: the right to vote. The general strike of l893, which
forced the Belgian parliament to extend a vote to adult males, was a
magnificent episode in the history of the Belgian working class. The
strike did not achieve "one man, one vote", since the rich
and educated were given more than one vote, but it did force the
members of the Belgian parliament, in which there was not a single
POB representative, to do what most of them were opposed to: grant a
vote to adult (male) workers. Later strikes to try to get plural
voting abolished were less successful, but by then the POB had its
own members of parliament and had begun to get involved in
parliamentary manoeuvres with its new-found
allies, the radical
bourgeois Liberals.
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