In authors or contributors

Communism and the Canadian Working Class During the Great Depression: The Workers' Unity League, 1930-1936

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Communism and the Canadian Working Class During the Great Depression: The Workers' Unity League, 1930-1936
Abstract
The Communist Party of Canada's (CPC) attempts to operate the United Front tactics laid down by Lenin and the Comintern in 1920-22 foundered on the CPC's failure to come to terms with the profound character of labour's post-war defeat or with its own marginality. The task of creating a mass party capable of leading, in the not-too-distant future, a revolutionary struggle for power encouraged the CPC to ignore the laborious and modest process of building support around small workplace issues and to prefer working through a spurious united front organization, the Trade Union Educational League, which was little more than a mouthpiece for a succession of abstract propaganda campaigns. When none of these propelled the party to mass status, but rather drove a wedge between it and the Trades and Labour Congress, the ground was prepared for acceptance of the diametrically opposite tactics of the "Third Period", which with much justice have been criticised for their political stupidity. The tardiness with which the CPC applied them underlined the fact that, however much the leaders of the labour movement might have "betrayed" the rank and file, it was hard to see them as "social fascists" who had to be combatted with even more vigour than that usually reserved for the bosses. From the beginning, when they terminated an interesting alliance between the CPC and national unionism, to the end, when they retarded the CPC's recognition of the possibilities opened up by the emergence of the CIO, these tactics had negative consequences. Yet they also helped bring limited political gains for the CPC, which entered the latter half of the 1930s stronger than it had ever been, and organizational advances for the Canadian working class, in the shape of at least the first few bricks in the foundations of mass industrial unionism. In addition, the complementary unemployed movement mobilized tens of thousands of workers and their families against the asperities of the depression. By 1936, the CPC had undeniably "carved out" for itself, a decent niche in the labour movement.
Type
Ph.D. (History)
University
Dalhousie University
Place
Halifax, N.S.
Date
1984
# of Pages
650
Language
English
Accessed
1/15/16, 9:54 PM
Library Catalog
ProQuest
Rights
Copyright UMI - Dissertations Publishing 1984
Citation
Manley, J. (1984). Communism and the Canadian Working Class During the Great Depression: The Workers’ Unity League, 1930-1936 [Ph.D. (History), Dalhousie University]. http://dalspace.library.dal.ca/handle/10222/54859