brian parkin: pop-ups through history – the dockworkers' nasd union
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Pop-up unions through history
Brian Parkin, Leeds SWP, August 2013
Pop-up dockers
The great Dock Strike of 1889 was probably the crowning glory of the period now celebratedas the New Unionism; a moment in which hitherto unskilled unorganised labour fought in
often insurrectionary struggles to secure employment security, regulated hours and pay, and
the recognition of independent trade unions to represent them.
The resulting general workers unions, although forged in a baptism of fire, soon gave way
to the authority of mostly unelected union bureaucrats much studied and derided by Beatrice
Webb and Sidney Webb in their famous caricature of 1894. In London, Ben Tillets Tea
Operatives Union gave rise to the Dock, Wharf, Riverside and General Labourers Union. In
Liverpool in the same yearJames SextonsNational Union of Dock Labourers organised
across the Mersey to Birkenhead as well as inland to the port of Manchester.
These new general unions outnumbered many of the traditionally craft based unions and
were soon to exert a considerable influence within the TUC. Despite repeated counter
attacks by employers, they were able through subsequent mergers to form the two great
general workers unions the Transport and General Workers Union and the National Union
of General and Municipal Workers, now part of the GMB.
The dockers unions were to merge as the Transport Workers Federation in 1910 which in
turn formed a major section of the TGWU in 1922. But in 1923, as an inaugural gesture to its
newly formed members, the TGWU struck its first national agreement with the dock
employers in the form of a cut in wages.
The stevedores, who had joined the initial surge into the TGWU, then split away in outrage
to form the National Amalgamated Stevedores, Lightermen, Watermen and Dockers, which
covered much of the port of London and the various wharfages and moorings in the south
east. Initially this defection involved over 40,000 workers.
In 1927, in further defiance of the TGWU, they divided further along craft lines and
renamed themselves theNational Amalgamated Stevedores and Dockers. Largely confined
to the port of London and the South East, the NASD did on occasion make forays into
northern ports but always in the teeth of a highly bureaucratised and often violently hostile
TGWU.
In terms of its organisation the NASD was a ramshackle affair compared with the mighty
TGWU and its appointed and superannuated full-time bureaucracy. NASD officials in the
main were periodically elected. As often as not they were expenses-only volunteers from the
ranks of victimised or disabled dockworkers. Despite the demands of all dockers for
compulsory registration of ports and an end to the casual labour system, dockyard owners
barely ceded recognition to even the TGWU.
But in 1932 in Scotland there was yet another challenge to the hegemony of the TGWU.
Dockers on the Clyde in Glasgow and Campbeltown left the union in disgust at yet another
negotiated wage cut and formed theScottish Transport and General Workers Union
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(Docks). This union obtained TUC recognition but remained separate from its English
counterpart until as late as 1972.
The war years
The protracted depression of 1929 onwards saw layoffs and casualisation wreak havoc in
dockland communities. Despite these pressures, and with over 60 per cent of its
membership either on short-time working or laid off at any one time, the NASD retained
4,000 members in London and around 2,000 on Merseyside.
It was with the outbreak of war in 1939 and with the threat of the German U-boat blockade
from May 1940 onwards that the UK docks were eventually (as a war emergency measure)
brought into regulation through compulsory registration. The TGWU with its boss Ernest
Bevin as minister for labour in the wartime coalition government became an early
beneficiary of this essentially corporatist development. However, with a grudging recognition
that the union did sometimes represent a majority of some work grades in some docks, the
NASD was able to obtain recognition within the new National Docks Labour Board.
But despite a burning hatred between the bureaucracies of rival docks unions, relations at
quayside level between the unions were remarkably good. Even before the war there had
been instances of sympathy strikes between the unions over job price disputes and
victimisations. The practice of one group of dockworkers blacking (not handling) a disputed
cargo had long been a nightmare for bosses and union officials alike.
In June 1940 the Dock Labour (Compulsory Regulation) Order ended the chaos of casual
labour in one swoop and extended bargaining recognition in return for labour discipline. This
emergency act was consolidated the next year with the Essential Work (Dock Labour)
Order. This effectively set up the National Dock Labour Corporation and its entrusted
operatives as a limited company covering over 40,000 dock workers in over 50 scheduledports and wharfs.
I will deal with the issues of the British left in relation to the dock union rivalries below, but
suffice to say that in June 1941, with Nazi Germany attacking the USSR, the Communist
Party had no difficulty in urging dockworkers to make sacrifices for the war effort.
Throughout the war years, regular work and a guaranteed minimum wage in exchange for
the promise to report each morning seemed to have conceded the conditions for which
generations of dockers had fought so long. Yet the terms on which these conditions were
struck were far from ideal. The abolition of casualisation was replaced by fall back pay in
return for reporting for work but to find no work. But the price required for this was in the formof compulsory overtime on demand and associated threats of suspension and deregulation,
ie loss of job and union ticket in the event of a second offence.
A further point of contention involved disciplinary panels. A TGWU official sitting on such a
panel would find almost instinctively against a NASD member on the carpet. Despite such
punitive clauses, the wartime industrial relations front held peacefully until April 1945.
The 1945 national dock strike
In the spring of 1945, after two years of refusals by TGWU officials to press for negotiationson basic pay, a rank-and-file strike wave hit the British ports. TGWU and NASD members
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struck side-by-side and without strike pay. With nothing but wartime rations to feed their
families, they stayed out on strike for six weeks.
Their action was condemned by Bevin and the TGWU as unpatriotic; an accusation
murmured too by the Communist Party, which still regarded convoy supplies to the USSR as
an essential proletarian duty. This was despite the fact that underArthur Deakins leadership
of the TGWU proscribed Communist Party members from holding office at any level in the
union a proscription upheld too by Bevin when he had been TGWU general secretary.
Clement Attlees Labour government took no time in calling troops into the docks to off-load
ships and effectively act as uniformed strikebreakers. And although the officials of the NASD
supported the strike throughout, their negotiating officials eventually succumbed to combined
pressure from the Labour government and the TGWU. It recommended a return to work
despite the strike holding solid.
Yet although a defeat, the terms on which a settlement was reached was by no means
unfavourable regarding the opportunities for further unofficial strike action in the years to
immediately follow. In an urgent bid to get the docks back to normal working, the government
strongarmed ports employers into accepting discussion of demands set out in the Dockers
Charter many of which (such as an end to the casual labour system) were to be eventually
incorporated into 1947 docks legislation.
The National Dock Labour Board of 1947
In 1946 the Dock Workers (Regulation of Employment) Act was brought in, supplemented in
1947 with the National Dock Labour Scheme. This required compulsory registration of all
port operators and all dock workers in all scheduled ports. A guaranteed weekly minimum
wage would be paid to every dock worker reporting for work.
A National Dock Labour Board was set up with an executive board comprising four
employers and four union officials. At the national level these positions would be by
ministerial appointment. NDLB local boards were set up to cover all major ports and groups
of smaller registered ports and wharfs. The local boards were to effectively operate as local
dock labour exchanges in order to ensure the most economic and effective deployment of
labour on a wherever needed basis. The overall scheme covered over 60 UK ports and the
local boards were charged with disciplinary power over men and masters alike.
In reality the NDLB provided the TGWU with a bureaucratic closed shop. TGWU officials
invariably sat on disciplinary panels and it was not unknown for a reinstatement to be
secured by a kick-back payment referred to coyly but knowingly as an overhead charge.This charge was usually exchanged with a receipt in the form of the accused leaving with a
white TGWU membership card despite the fact he may also hold a blue card as a member of
the NASD. This practice prompted one NASD steward to taunt the TGWU officials as having
no power other than to deprive men of their livelihood.
The 1950s: brothers in arms
At dock-side level the continued offensive of the TGWU machine against the NASD often led
to bitter demarcation disputes between members of the rival unions. Despite the continued
hostility of the TGWU the smaller dockers union had been admitted to the TUC on the
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grounds that it could rightfully claim to represent a majority of some grades of workers in
some ports.
And despite the constant invective from their own union on the NASD, it was beginning to
dawn on many TGWU dockers that the main enemy might not only be the ports employers
but also their own officials who seemed all too keen to uphold the letter of the NDLB
agreements.
But in September 1954 TGWU hegemony in the docks began to break down. In a period ofeight months some 10,000 members quit the union in the docks of Liverpool, Birkenhead ,
Manchester and Hull and defected to the NASD. Yet such was the chaos in the docks that by
April 1955 the pendulum had swung the other way with a strike of 13,000 TGWU members
in Liverpool against certain cargoes being awarded to NASD members. And then again in
Liverpool in September of the same year when 13,000 TGWU members went on strike
against the sacking of two NASD stewards!
Also on the other side of the Pennines in Hull on 22 August a year earlier the biggest prison
break-out in history had been recorded when over 4,000 dockers voted to defect to the
NASD over the practice of hand scuttling of grain from the holds of ships; a practice that
was notoriously dangerous and back-breaking but one that the TGWU officials insisted that
they do. And a month later on Merseyside the TGWU attempted to displace over 1,000
NASD members from off-loading on certain contracts. This massively backfired, with the
entire Merseyside workforce coming out on strike and the stoppage spreading inland to
Manchester.
But it was on 23 May 1955 that the TGWU in collusion with certain port employers attempted
to break outright the recognition and bargaining power of the NASD. This resulted in an
immediate walk-out of over 20,000 dock workers supported by many TGWU members in
sympathy. The TGWU officials then made an appeal for their members to break the strike
and at the same time boasted that they had amassed a campaign fund of over 9 million (!)to bankroll the strike-breaking campaign.
But in Liverpool when union officials arrived, one of whom had said he would see the
strikers reduced to eating crusts, they were pelted by loaves of bread and rescued by police
from a howling mob of over 3,000 dockers and their wives. And although the strike lasted a
full six weeks, the NASD eventually succumbed to appeals by the TUC to call it off in
exchange for reinstatement through mediation.
1955 proved to be a watershed for the NASDuin that a leadership hitherto more amenable to
the influence and control of the rank and file was to become drawn into the responsible
duties of a respectable union that all the burdens of recognition now demanded of it.Following the ending of the May1955 strike, the NASD executive attempted to discipline
some of its wilder lay officials in the northern ports by barring them from holding office.
When these (mainly branch secretaries) appealed against the ruling the leadership then
enacted expulsions on the grounds that these members had brought the name of the union
into disrepute. In protest thousands of dockers in the northern ports quit their union
membership.
With no other course of action open to them, the expelled members sought a judgement in
the High Court and after considerable deliberation, the judge ruled that in engaging in
unofficial action, the complainants had done no more than to legitimately uphold the interests
of their members! Noting that loss of union membership also carried with it the certainty of
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loss of livelihood, the ruling was that the expulsion action had been both malicious and
wrongful. As a result of the ruling it was reported that within days thousands of workers on
Merseyside and in Hull were flocking back into their union.
Then in January 1958 a bitter demarcation dispute erupted in Liverpool when TGWU officials
undercut a gang of NASD members for a job in off-loading a cargo of bulk sugar. The
resulting strike represented a low point in relations between the two unions with a TGWU
calling for the strikers to be sacked and urging his members to cross the picket line. This
was too much for the TGWU members to swallow with one of them famously commenting
that our officials are acting as cattle drovers rather than like trade union leaders.
The fortunes of the left
A significant factor in the improvement in relations between the TGWU and the NASD was a
major change in the fortunes of the left within the larger union. For many years Arthur Deakin
as general secretary had presided over an internal regime intolerant of left militants -
particularly those with membership of the Communist Party. Although the TGWU did not
have a rule book which contained proscriptions and bans on members of named politicalorganisations, Deakin made no bones about being an anti-communist and encouraged his
senior regional officials to be likewise.
The rise of a left - and in particular the growing popular support forJack Jones; himself a
former Liverpool docker, did much to repair relations between the TGWU and the NASD.
Following the publication of the Devlin Report in 1964, Jack Jones as the TGWU docks
national official made a deal with Dick Barrett of the NASD whereby they would secure the
smaller union a place on the new port of London negotiating committee.
This continued anarchy in the docks eventually inspired a special commission. Its report, the
Devlin Report, noted the absence of firm and responsible official leadership and becamean industrial relations template for the later Donovan Report, which formed the basis of the
Harold Wilsons ill-fated In Place of Strife blueprint for trade union legislation.
A parallel development from the early 1960s onwards was the increased use of productivity
bargaining by employers as a means of increasing profit margins through intensifying output
levels whilst at the same time, undermining the strength of workplace union organisation and
bargaining power.
In the docks and ports there was also the threat to workplace organisation looming in the
form of technical changes in the methods of unloading and loading larger vessels designed
to carry cargo in sealed containers using entirely mechanised handling systems. A trial berthat Tilbury on the Thames had demonstrated in 1968 that such a system in continuous
operation could cut the required workforce by at least 75 percent.
It was against this background of imminent threats that the dockworkers were required to
settle intra-union differences and turn to joint rank and file stewards committee representing
both unions across the UK ports. Such a level of organisation probably attained its most
developed level in the Port of London Royal group of docks with a joint stewards committee
in which three of the leading stewards Jack Dash, Mickey Fenn and Vic Turner were
members of the NASD.
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Containerisation was a catalyst that enforced changes to working practices and threatened
the imposition of massive job losses. It gave rise to a militant response, the kind of which
successive attempts at trade union legislation had attempted to stamp out.
Whatever the historic differences between (mainly the official leaderships) of the two docks
unions, the overarching threat of anti-union laws was enough to forge unity in the protests
against the government. And it was the extension of the same campaign in 1972 that was to
see the NASD in partnership with the TGWU nearly bring down a government over the
imprisonment offive rank and file dockers for militant unofficial picketing.
The National Stevedores and Dockers and the left
Formed as it was in the cauldron of the post-Russian Revolution period and the end of the
First World War, the TGWU as a newly federated general union incorporated a host of
smaller affiliates, many of whom had been for years locked in various disputes. The botched
docks pay (cut) settlement of 1922-23 instantly fractured the dockers membership and in
many ways reinstated the old pre-war rivalries.
A new but significant player entering this scene was the freshly minted Communist Party of
Great Britain (CPGB). Although the CP had only been formed some two years previously at
its founding congress in Leeds, a founding member present was Tom Mann who had done
so much to help Ben Tillet establish the DWRLU in 1894. And although the new CP had
attracted many seasoned trade union activists to its ranks, it was nevertheless in awe of the
advice on offer through the Communist International.
That advice, whilst insisting that communists everywhere seek to build in the trade unions,
was also that where possible they should build revolutionary unions in direct competition to
the existing unions that were under the leadership of rotten and discredited social
democrats. In the UK this attempt to build new unions, or get the better of the existing onesto affiliate to theRed International of Labour Unions, proved to be a sectarian disaster. Then
within months the line for the CPGB changed and a much more productive turn to build a
Minority Movement was undertaken. I have no intention of examining this period nor the
subsequent twists and turns that an increasingly erratic Moscow line inflicted on its Third
International affiliates.
The pop-up and the Communist Party
But what is interesting about this period and for the decade or so beyond, is that the CP did
not seem to have any clear line in relation to the NASD. What is clear is that throughout the
58 years of what at first might have seemed like a pop-up union when it first started, many
CP members were not only members of it but played prominent roles in the various disputes
it was engaged in.
And although the NASD does not seem to have acquitted itself as a political union, it did
throughout its history welcome into its ranks both members of the CP as well as other
socialists. Certainly the antipathy towards communists within the TGWU must have made
the blue union look much more inviting.
It is also true that in the period following the defeat of the 1926 general strike, the
subsequent victimisations would have taken a heavy toll on a small Communist Party with a
significant but modest industrial base. Certainly the ultra-leftist madness of the Third Period
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that was to follow would have done much to marginalise the CPs industrial influence further.
But with the Popular Front line that was to follow and the almost fawning position that its
members were required to adopt in relation to even the most reactionary of union
bureaucrats, the position in relation to the NASD undertook a change.
In a bid to appease the Deakin leadership of the TGWU and in the process hopefully get
some concessions out of it, Harry Pollitt in 1937 suggested that members engaged inside
the NASD were creating a diversion from the central task of democratising the Transport
Union and winning its leadership over to progressive ideas. Of course one of the
progressive ideas to which the Deakin leadership should be won to was maintaining trading
links with the Soviet Union and speaking out against any moves to blockade or isolate it.
Certainly the CP started to put more emphasis on the NASD being a blue union in a way
that might suggest that it was in some way less than an independent union and to some
extent more amenable to the employers.
The onset of the war in 1939 saw the CP take an anti-war stance in support of the Molotov-
Ribbentrop pact and although opposed to the various wartime measures, it found itself in
difficulties with the dock labour acts that had conceded (at least as a temporary measure)
many of the demands for a minimum weekly wage and an end to casualisation.
The entry of the USSR into the war in 1941, as we have noted, saw the CP fully committed
to the war effort to the extent that it not only failed to offer any leadership when a national
ports strike broke out in 1945, it fully endorsed the unofficial and highly irresponsible action
as undermining the war effort. And whilst making noises about the need to keep on
supporting the Soviet war effort, they at least held back from joining the Atlee government
and Deakin in condemning the strike as unpatriotic.
But it was in the post-war battles that we have noted above that the CPs line in relation to
the NASD finally unravelled. When the threat of derecognition of the NASD Merseyside wasrumoured in late 1954, Vic Marney, a Communist Party docker and delegate to the London
Dockers Liaison Committee, was reported in the Tribune of 31 December 1954 as saying in
no circumstances would they [the London committee] be involved in NASD actions for
recognition in northern ports.
Despite this invitation for CP dockers on Merseyside to scab, nearly all Liverpool and
Birkenhead dockers supported the strike when it broke out in May. Yet throughout the six
weeks strike the Daily Worker consistently refused to report on sympathy actions in other
northern ports. And when a meeting of the TUC Dispute Committee was held on 1July 1954,
it was a CP member who recommended the TGWU demand that the NASD strikers return to
work without conditions.
The Moscow line
The problem for the Communist Party (despite its reputation as being one of the more
supine of the CPs) was that it could never really adapt the Moscow line to its members on a
one size fits all basis. And despite having bigger ambitions in relationship to the TGWU and
the more progressive of its bureaucracy, it could never quite sell such a cynical perspective
to all of its membership all of the time. So hence the persistent contradiction in CP industrial
strategy where, insidiously at first, its rank and file approach began to lose grip on the from
below emphasis, only to become a drive to use those autonomous workers organisations it
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could influence into a chorus of cheerleaders for the machinations of ever more dilute broad
left and progressive causes.
In this example of a back to front approach to the rank and file there are important lessons
for revolutionaries today. And whilst there can be little doubt that the CPGB would have
wanted to subordinate all of its dockworkers to its TGWU centred perspective, it was the
determination of dockers to unite at port level and through joint stewards committees that
both contained the bureaucratic dead hand of the Deakin leadership, but also ensured a
place for the NASD as a counterbalance and alternative pole of attraction within the docks.
But it was the unstoppable influence of containerisation the same issue that brought the
two docks unions together in the heady revolt of the Pentonville Five collision and the defeat
of the Industrial Relations Act that eventually brought about the demise of the blue union.
In 1981 after nearly 60 years as a thorn in the side for employers and TGWU bureaucrats
alike, the two unions, faced with a massive loss in membership due to redundancies,
eventually merged.
But any photograph or filmed record of the glorious moments of the 1972 dock strike will
never be complete without sight of the banner of the London Dockers Joint Stewards
committee with its enduring message: Arise Ye Workers! This was a moment when a pop-
up union of 1922 vintage, still considered a breakaway by many, combined with the rank
and file of the biggest union in Britain and nearly brought down a government.
What can we learn?
Revolutionaries should never be surprised at the innovative and unorthodox methods and
forms of organisation that workers in struggle can sometimes resort to. As radicals in mid-
19thcentury England were taken aback by the independent ferocity of physical force
Chartism, so were the Russian Social Democrats amazed by the workers councils soviets, the autonomous organs of workers power that rose spontaneously from the heat of
intense class struggle.
Much of the epic history of class struggle is punctuated by events characterised by the
ingenuity and imagination of workers that sometimes occurred despite the so called
leadership of the working class rather than because of it. And as long as a bureaucratic
caste will seek to ameliorate the worst excesses of the status quo in ways that ensure the
perpetuation of its own sectional interests, then some workers will always look for alternative
ways of organising. That, after all, is the impulse that revolutionaries within our tradition
constantly try and channel into rank and file organisations, albeit within the existing
framework of a union.
The example of the NASD that I have drawn upon here is a reminder of the ways in which
most unions evolved in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by splits arising from
unacceptable compromises and betrayals of the incumbent bureaucracy, or alternatively, by
fundamental changes in the technical relations of production which in many cases led to
massive shifts in the relative power of certain skilled groups of workers.
The dockers blue union, like all of its general union contemporaries, arose during a period
of popular syndicalism a form of trade union consciousness that did much to build workers
independent unionism well beyond the ranks of the skilled. And the success of that
enterprise is that today we take as a given that workers irrespective of skill or tenure will
experience the impulse to combine.
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In the UK for 40 years following the Second World War, a social democratic consensus
prevailed during which time a largely corporatist climate allowed a single trade union
federation to assume certain responsible duties in the field of collective bargaining on
matters such as pay and conditions. But for the past 30 years that consensus has given way
to a neoliberal common sense, the ideological sentiments of which have increasingly
incorporated social democracy and its symbiotic manifestation in much of the trade union
bureaucracy.
Under the weight of an austerity onslaught which seeks to obtain legitimacy from the new
consensus, it is hardly surprising that many workers have abandoned hope in their trade
union leaderships in despair. But better that workers seek alternative collective solutions in
defence of their pay, conditions and jobs rather than vacate the field of class struggle
entirely. And of course, whilst it would be far better that workers seek solutions through rank
and file initiatives within their existing union, it may nevertheless be that given the
suddenness and ferocity of the assault they face that they simply feel that they have no
luxury of time required.
Perhaps the Unison members at Sussex University were wrong in their p op- u p initiative.
Perhaps their brave but misguided scheme will come to a sad end. But perhaps it is alsowrong for revolutionaries to assume an aloof and condescending critique of such an
initiative, that unless explained more patiently will seem like those who should know better
as giving aid and comfort to a trade union leadership we know to be rotten.
And finally, it is sad that those seeking to gain an understanding and learn from such
episodes are pilloried as heretics in an unnecessarily polarised debate that will only put off
the necessary discussion about all aspects of class struggle that is needed if we are to
navigate our way through the most turbulent crisis of capitalism in living memory.
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