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The National Unemployed Workers' Movement, 1921–36
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2008
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Between the wars, the response of the British Labour Party and Trades Union Congress to the problem of the unemployed was extremely limited. Committed to gradualist philosophies, the leaders of the labour movement were unwilling to attempt genuine socialist remedies in office, and, in opposition, to provide a militant leadership for the protest movement. The National Unemployed Workers' Movement, begun in 1921 and not finally dissolved until after the outbreak of the Second World War, was the only body which attempted to mobilise unemployed discontent. After 1926, the Labour Party Executive and the General Council of the TUC consistently refused to have any contact with this organisation on the grounds that, like the National Minority Movement and the later Rank-and-File Movement, the NUWM was merely a subsidiary of the British Communist Party. This article is an attempt to show that by a process of induction the Labour leaders branded the unemployed movement as a whole on the basis of the known Communist allegiance of a number of its leaders, and to demonstrate that they allowed themselves to become so sidetracked by the issue of whether or not the NUWM was a Communist front that their own efforts on behalf of the unemployed suffered in consequence.
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- Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 1983
References
1 In this and similar areas historians have often accepted the position of the official labour movement without much question. Martin, R., Communism and the British Trade Unions 1924–1933. A Study of the National Minority Movement (Oxford, 1969), p. v,Google Scholar has noted that “The threat posed by the ‘Red Machine’ to the British trade union movement has been a permanent theme in both academic and popular discussion of British labour history. Yet the discussion has been stronger on invective than analysis”. Stevenson, J. and Cook, Ch., The Slump. Society and Politics during the Depression(London, 1977), ch. 9, devote a section to the origins of the NUWM. But even their otherwise excellent book does not deal as fully with the subject as this article attempts to.Google Scholar
2 House of Commons Debates, 15 April 1929.
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10 Rochdale Observer, 13 February 1932; Heywood Advertiser, 18 August 1933; Oldham Evening Chronicle, 9 and 25 March 1932.
11 See my article “The Voluntary Occupational Centre Movement, 1932–39”, in: Journal of Contemporary History, VI (1971), No 3, p. 156–71.
12 Report of the 65th Annual Trades Union Congress, 1933, p. 120; Report of the 66th Annual TUC, pp. 125–27. In some districts “a good deal of pressure” was placed on unemployed trade unionists not to join the centres. Mess, H. A., Voluntary Social Services since 1918 (London, 1948), pp. 51–52.Google Scholar
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18 Report of the 63rd Annual TUC, pp. 5–76.
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20 National Hunger March, 1936, Metropolitan Police Records, Mepol 2, 3091. At the same time, a third group of marchers were also converging on London, a contingent of 140 blind unemployed organised by the National League of the Blind, but this is also usually overlooked. National League of the Blind: March to London, 1936, Home Office Papers 45/16545, Public Record Office.
21 Almost all the men whom the author interviewed in the South-East Lancashire region were former engineers. Mr Edmund Frow, co-editor with M. Katanka of 1868 – Year of the Unions, and until 1971 District Secretary of the engineering union in Manchester, was one of the leaders of the Salford Branch of the NUWM in the 1930's. I am indebted to Mr Frow for many of the suggestions contained in this article, and for making available tome much of the NUWM material on which it is based.
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34 Report of the Sixth National Conference of the NUWM, 1929, 25 pp.; Report of the Seventh National Conference of the NUWM, 1931, 24 pp. Available at the University of Hull Library.
35 How to Fight Unemployment: Report of the Eighth National Conference of the NUWM, 1933, 20 pp.
36 The Fight against Unemployment and Poverty: Report of the Ninth National Conference of the NUWM, 1934, 16 pp.; NAC Report, September 1935, 9 pp.
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45 Interview with Harry McShane, Scottish organiser of the NUWM, at the University of Hull, March 1969. A tape recording of the interview is held by the University Library.
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