Italian Syndicalist Union

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Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:Anarcho-syndicalism sidebar The Italian Syndicalist Union (Template:Langx; USI) is an Italian anarcho-syndicalist trade union. Established in 1912 by a confederation of "houses of labour", the USI led a series of general strikes throughout its early years, culminating with the Red Week insurrection against the Italian entry into World War I. During the Biennio Rosso, the USI was at the forefront of the occupation of factories, which saw hundreds of workplaces throughout the country brought under the control of workers' councils. The USI also led the establishment of the International Workers' Association (IWA), which became the main international organisation of anarcho-syndicalist trade unions.

After the rise of Italian fascism, the USI was banned and its members were either arrested, driven underground or forced into exile. By the late-20th century, the USI was eventually reconstituted and once again involved itself in radical strike actions. Expelled from the IWA in 2016, together with the Spanish CNT and German FAU, it established the International Confederation of Labour (ICL), a new international of anarcho-syndicalist trade unions.

History

Background

Syndicalism first arose in Italy at the turn of the 20th century, after the houses of labour (Template:Langx) were established throughout the country.Template:Sfnm A series of general strikes from 1904 to 1906 brought Italian workers together into the first trade union confederations,Template:Sfn including the General Confederation of Labour (CGL), although this was soon taken over by a reformist leadership affiliated with the Italian Socialist Party (PSI).Template:Sfnm Disillusioned with the reformist leadership, by 1907, a syndicalist faction had emerged within the CGL, establishing the National Resistance Committee.Template:Sfn In 1908, the syndicalist rank-and-file broke away from CGL,Template:Sfnm after its leadership refused to support a number of strikes.Template:Sfn Syndicalists subsequently led their own strikes in a variety of sectors throughout the country,Template:Sfnm culminating in a mass strike against the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911.Template:Sfn

Establishment

In 1912, syndicalist organisations united into the Italian Syndicalist Union (Template:Langx; USI),Template:Sfnm which was formed as a federation of self-managing unions.Template:Sfn As workers defected from the CGL to the USI en masse,Template:Sfn it counted 80,000 members at the time of its constitution.Template:Sfn In its first year of existence, the USI organised numerous general strikes, including by workers employed in marble production, metalworking, construction, agriculture, rail transport and sailing. By the outbreak of World War I in mid-1914, the USI counted 124,000 members, who led the anti-militarist mobilisation that became the Red Week insurrection.Template:Sfn

War

Following the Italian entry into World War I, the USI split into internationalist and interventionist factions.Template:Sfnm The revolutionary interventionists, led by USI general secretary Alceste De Ambris, favoured participation in the war as a means to prepare the country for a social revolution.Template:Sfn But they were opposed by the majority of the USI's membership, which deposed De Ambris, expelled the interventionists and elected Template:Ill as the new general secretary.Template:Sfnm The USI subsequently called for an anti-militarist general strike, although they were ultimately incapable of putting it into practice.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, the expelled interventionist faction established the Italian Labour Union (UIL), which moved towards national syndicalism.Template:Sfn

Revolution and Reaction

After the war ended, the USI launched a general strike movement that involved the mass occupation of factories by workers. At the USI's Third Congress, which took place in Parma in December 1919, the union proposed the creation of a system of workers' councils that could establish workers' control over the Italian economy and manage the transition to a stateless society.Template:Sfn In February 1920, syndicalist metalworkers brought the factories of Sestri Ponente under workers' self-management; in March, syndicalist workers were rising up in Turin; in April, the workers' uprising had swept Piedmont and Napoli, while workers took over the city of Piombino; by July 1920, metalworkers of the USI were taking over factories throughout the country. In August and September 1920, workers throughout the country took up arms and formed detachments of Red Guards, which took over 300 workplaces in Milan alone.Template:Sfn By this time, although the USI counted over 500,000 members, it was still much smaller and less powerful than the CGL.Template:Sfnm Reformists ultimately halted the factory occupation movement, in an effort to stem social revolution.Template:Sfnm In October 1920, the government of Giovanni Giolitti arrested the USI's entire leadership.Template:Sfn

The USI was briefly able to continue its activities, organising a general strike in Milan in March 1921, but before long it came under attack by the rising fascist movement, which broke up its trade unions and harassed its members.Template:Sfn The USI resolved to take direct action against the fascists; it formed armed anti-fascist detachments known as the Arditi del Popolo and reinforced its labour centres.Template:Sfnm By July 1922, the anarcho-syndicalists of the USI had formed a Labour Alliance with other anti-fascist trade unions and parties.Template:Sfnm In an attempt to stop the March on Rome, the alliance called an anti-fascist general strike,Template:Sfnm but this was ultimately halted by the reformist factions. The new Fascist regime immediately carried out political repression against the left-wing, including the USI.Template:Sfn

During this period, the USI also led the founding of the International Workers' Association (IWA), an international of trade unions established as an alternative to the Bolshevik-controlled Red International of Labour Unions (RILU).Template:Sfn

Repression

The rise of Benito Mussolini's National Fascist Party to power brought a wave of political repression against the USI. By April 1924, the union's legal activity was paralysed; it consequently reorganised itself into an underground organisation and led a number of wildcat strikes by miners and marble producers in Tuscany. The USI was finally eliminated by 1927, as its members were arrested en masse or forced into exile.Template:Sfn

Refoundation

In the wake of World War II, the anarcho-syndicalist movement went into a period of sustained decline, which reached its lowest point during the 1960s.Template:Sfn But following the Protests of 1968 and the subsequent Spanish transition to democracy, renewed interest in anarcho-syndicalism led to the reconstitution of the USI in 1978.Template:Sfn The reconstituted USI has since led a series of general strikes.Template:Sfn

Following an internal crisis in the international anarcho-syndicalist movement, in 2016, the USI, along with the Spanish National Confederation of Labour (CNT) and German Free Workers' Union (FAU), was expelled from the IWA. Together, in 2018, they established the new International Confederation of Labour (ICL).Template:Sfn

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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