The social history of 1945 Europe remains mesmerized by what could have been. With workers left to their own devices as collaborating industrialists fled the advancing Allied armies, their collectivism in defending factories from looting by retreating Germans whilst at the same time keeping production going has captured the imagination of many social historians. In their view, the discipline and autonomy shown by the working classes carried the germs of true economic democracy: a participatory system of worker self-management fundamentally different from both Western market capitalism and Soviet state capitalism.Footnote 1 That these worker efforts to radically to reshape society failed to come to fruition is often attributed to the formidable coalition they were facing. Between communist leaderships obsessed with showcasing their moderate and patriotic credentials in the various “battles”Footnote 2 to raise industrial output, and occupying powers fearful of seeing any rival authority emerge under their watch,Footnote 3 there was little room for experiments bent on overhauling industrial relations.
One group is, however, by and large neglected in scholarship on the rise and demise of postwar worker initiatives. Notwithstanding that socialist workers were represented in the factory committees taking control of production upon liberation and that socialist leaders were right at the heart of coalition governments struggling to recentralize the reconstruction effort, there are no accounts of grassroots-leadership dynamics within the postwar European socialist parties. The underlying assumption seems to be that, whereas the sudden restraint practised by communist leaders caused real disillusionment amongst their rank and file,Footnote 4 socialist reformism was so self-evident that it should have come as a surprise to no-one.Footnote 5 This is a misconception for at least two reasons. In the first place, the socialist parties emerged much radicalized from World War II. Their first postwar party programmes often went further than those put forward by the communists, especially on such socio-economic issues as nationalizations and worker control in industry.Footnote 6 Secondly, postwar socialism was far from a unitary ideology. There was no socialist Moscow and reformism was certainly not the only denomination amongst the postwar European socialists.
To address this void in existing literature, this article explores the relations between rank-and-file workers and party leaders within two of the most outspoken socialist critics of reformism: the Italian Socialist Party (Partito Socialista Italiano di Unità Proletaria – PSIUP) and the Polish Socialist Party (Polska Partia Socjalistyczna – PPS). Historians of postwar reconstruction are nowadays increasingly realizing that the Cold War conceptual constructs of East and West might have “actually obscured the variety of national experiences in Europe immediately after the war”.Footnote 7 This is very much the case for the postwar Italian and Polish socialists. Often dismissed as mere fellow-travellers when weighed against the reformist and anti-communist socialist parties from their “own” bloc,Footnote 8 a more balanced picture transpires if we compare the PSIUP with the PPS. After all, both parties emerged from a generation of right-wing dictatorship convinced not only that a communist-socialist united front provided the only way forward, but also that their politically underdeveloped populations had been corrupted still further by two decades of fascist propaganda. It was the resultant perception that a thorough “moral re-education” of the people was prerequisite if democracy was to survive that shaped the parties’ attitudes towards the working classes.
The purpose of this article is two-fold. The first is to demonstrate that the PSIUP and the PPS ascribed grassroots participatory structures with a crucial role in their efforts to teach workers democracy. If workers were empowered to discuss, organize and co-decide matters of everyday concern at the local or factory level, they would gradually learn to appreciate what was in the collective good and that the populist solutions offered by reactionaries carried no substance. Worker participation in such bodies as factory councils and cooperatives was, then, to be the backbone of the “new democracy” PSIUP and PPS leaders envisioned.Footnote 9
The second aim is to show that (socialist) workers actually displayed little interest in participation, self-management, or any question of high politics for that matter. This was reflected in the concerns voiced by workers in the two working-class bulwarks under review in this article: Łódż for Poland and Sesto San Giovanni (the industrial commune on the outskirts of Milan) for Italy. Both had been major socialist strongholds during the interwar period and remained so in the face of much more potent communist competition after liberation.Footnote 10 They were home to an entrenched working-class community, where tradition, hierarchy, and skill were valued commodities.Footnote 11 But, only liberated in January and April 1945 respectively, Łódż and Sesto San Giovanni also bore the brunt of the atrocious final months of World War II and their workers entered freedom in a dismal material position.Footnote 12 It was this material misery that often trumped all other considerations amongst urban workers. An analysis of the matters raised by rank-and-file (socialist) workers within PPS factory circles in Łódż, cross-party factory internal commissions in the Milan area, and the PSIUP weekly in Sesto San Giovanni shows that their primary concern was not some longer-term political objective, but day-to-day survival. Despite all the best efforts of provincial and national party leaders to steer discussions in more politico-ideological directions, meetings, correspondence, and the local party press were dominated by the issue of the provision of such basic necessities as food, coal, and clothing.
That is not to say that the socio-economic demands formulated at the party grassroots were somehow not political. Yet, historians have exhibited a marked tendency to subordinate these bread-and-butter issues to worker protests more “relevant” to the political tug-of-war on the national level. “The first demonstration in postwar Poland”, Andrzej Paczkowski writes in his work on how strikes, riots, and manifestations shaped the Polish road to socialism, “is noteworthy mainly because it was the first, not because of its scope or cause”. Apparently, then, the people of Radom taking to the streets protesting against the lack of electricity supply in April 1946 was a less significant event than those student demonstrations commemorating the Polish warriors fallen to the Red Army one month later.Footnote 13 Similarly, Luigi Ganapini records two (out of many more, he argues) instances of postwar Milanese workers petitioning the reinstatement of purged (for collaboration) factory owners, who had promised the workforce they would bring in vital orders via their connections in the old boys’ network of industrialists or their good relations with the Allies.Footnote 14
Despite this clear indication that subsistence concerns outweighed moral and political considerations amongst postwar industrial workers, the remainder of Ganapini's account sticks to the familiar history of a strongly politicized working class seeking to wrest control of the workplace from the capitalist.Footnote 15 Rather than presenting the largely socio-economic agenda of the postwar working classes as secondary to the “real” political struggles of the day, this article places the two on an equal footing. It focuses on the tensions that permeated the PPS and PSIUP during the first postwar years: between rank-and-file workers demanding an immediate amelioration of their living standards, party leaders dreaming of a future workers’ democracy, and, caught in between, those middle-level functionaries who, while formally representing the party leadership at the grassroots, frequently sympathized with the plight of the average socialist worker.Footnote 16
Just what constituted the average worker, however, had changed considerably during the war. Conscription, forced labour in the Reich, and population transfers combined to transform the social composition of the working class by paving the way for such newcomers as women, peasants, or youngsters.Footnote 17 With these new arrivals came a new set of socio-economic concernsFootnote 18 and new forms of social protest,Footnote 19 which were often incompatible with the established practices of the organized Left. Socialist strivings to engage workers in grassroots participatory bodies were, then, in no small part directed at these fresh recruits of the industrial proletariat. It was this educational function of factory councils and cooperatives, especially towards those backward groups that had not been politicized by the experience of wartime resistance, that gave special meaning to worker self-management for the socialists. Unlike their communist counterparts, for whom worker self-management was just another economic policy to sacrifice at the altar of their grand coalition strategy, socialist leaders always viewed grassroots participation as a political question.Footnote 20 It was the future of democracy that was at stake.
In stressing a sharp dichotomy between grassroots and elite discourses, the article touches on a larger debate that goes to the very nature of postwar Europe. There is a still potent historical school, whose main tenets have often trickled down to textbook accounts, perceiving widespread popular radicalism in the immediate aftermath of World War II.Footnote 21 According to these historians, the moment of liberation saw a real window of opportunity for a root-and-branch transformation of society opening up, which might have been seized if it had not been for the hesitant and contradictory conduct by the political leaders of the working-class movement.Footnote 22 The strike wave that swept Europe's industrial centres between 1945 and 1947 is for them testimony of worker ardour to engage in direct action to achieve political objectives.Footnote 23 In recent years, however, this interpretation has come under sustained attack from scholars stressing that depoliticization and exhaustion took possession of the working classes after Depression, dictatorship, and war.Footnote 24 In their view, there was a marked tendency to recoil into private life as the traditional organizational structures of the working class had been severely weakened by years of persecution.Footnote 25 The key question is, then, whether an alternative to the restorationist Europe, bourgeois in the West and communist in the East, that emerged from the stormy postwar years was ever on the cards.
BREAD, BUTTER, AND EGALITARIANISM
In order to answer this question, we first need to establish the aspirations and demands of the working classes at the end of the war. The moment of liberation did not mark a radical rupture in the everyday life of the average worker. The extremely dire material situation of the last months of the war continued into liberation, with workers scrambling for such scarce commodities as food, fuel, or even jobs. The slogans shouted during a hunger march of Milanese and Sestese workers in July 1945 are most telling in this respect: reduction of the cost of living, bread and work, our children are hungry, price control, we want an immediate devaluation, protect our interests against those starving the people, struggle with the black market. Patience with those in power (including socialists) was already wearing thin, the local socialist weekly reported, as “all things human had a limit”.Footnote 26 But it soon emerged that the new rulers were unable to deliver upon even the most basic demands of the working classes. As one worker commented to the Milanese trade-union authorities in August, the hopes of the first months after liberation – including the levelling of the most evident income inequalities and providing state workers with a wage sufficient to avoid starvation – had not been realized. Seeing prices multiply relative to pay every day, it was an affront to the working classes to witness countless people still living in luxury. He called upon the government to tackle quickly the problems of speculation and unemployment, as winter was approaching fast.Footnote 27
The already harsh winter of 1945–1946 and the especially brutal winter of 1946–1947 drove the working classes to the edge both mentally and physically. In a situation where nearly everything was lacking, it should come as little surprise that workers were completely immersed in issues of central importance to their daily existence. First and foremost, this concerned the provision of basic necessities. Worker grievances during these first postwar years were dominated by the factory's or the state's failure to supply them with the essentials to keep themselves and their families afloat. Demanding compensatory payments to fill up the holes in his household budget, a socialist working in the Łódż public transport system illustrated the problem graphically. Where his newborn should be a source of parental joy, he argued, it was quickly developing into “a tragedy”. As his entire income was swallowed up by buying baby food on the free market, “what should he and the rest of his family live on?”.Footnote 28
Similar worries were voiced by workers of tractor-producing Motomeccanica in Milan. There was intense unease about the dropping confectionary level of bread, whereas the shortage of indispensable foodstuffs and especially of sugars for children “forced workers to sacrifice their already miserable purchasing power to satisfy their minimum needs”.Footnote 29 With most of the elementary requirements being rationed, the shortcomings of this system were another prime target for worker complaints. These ranged from general demands that rations should be larger (for example those of coal),Footnote 30 or extended (for example to include soap),Footnote 31 to more particular claims that coupons were taking over as currency – a meeting of socialist cells in central Łódż calling it a travesty that tram tickets could only be bought at prohibitively high prices or be paid for with food coupons.Footnote 32
Prices and the related problem of wages were the second main concern of workers in the immediate aftermath of the war. The common charge was that working-class wages were nowhere near a sustainable level.Footnote 33 There was much dissatisfaction that wages remained equal or even went down as prices were spiralling out of control.Footnote 34 According to the internal commission at Milan's tram manufacturing and repairing Teodosio, the continuous hikes in the cost of living had made the food situation so precarious that workers were no longer able to work productively. In these circumstances, even a 10 per cent pay rise would have been wiped out by price increases within a matter of days – a 40 per cent rise was what should be aimed for.Footnote 35 At the same time, however, the state was demanding ever more of its workers. The steady advance of piece-rates added further uncertainty to the material position of the working classes. When it was announced that bonuses would henceforth only be awarded if spinners managed to attain 115 per cent of the production target over all hours worked at one of Łódż's many textile factories, many socialist workers responded that this was unfair. If production was interrupted through a lack of electricity or machine breakdown, those hours should not be counted.Footnote 36
In both countries, the trade-union movement had been assigned the task of defending working-class interests in industrial disputes over pay and norms. But as socialist activists were soon to find out, postwar trade unions were weak players in negotiations with the state or with employers. By mid-1946, socialists in Łódż's textile industry were wondering where the trade unions were, asking who was fighting their corner, and petitioning trade unionists to show some interest in their lives.Footnote 37 Less than a year later, their counterparts in the city centre concluded that trade unions were powerless in the face of pay reduction.Footnote 38 When reflecting upon the subordinate role of trade unions, local Sestese socialists pointed to the political leaders of the Left. Where they might have the best of intentions towards the trade union movement, “the road to hell was paved with good intentions”. Concrete support was needed, as trade unions had grown into the “Cinderella” of present-day Italy. Never publishing any articles dealing with “the trade unions, their function, and above all their indispensability”, the national PSIUP daily, Avanti! (run by the party leadership), was severely criticized. After all, workers would happily forsake all treatises on political processes to read something that finally related to their vital problems. Was “it impossible to clear out half a column” for that?Footnote 39
Far from empowering the trade unions, however, socialist and communist leaders increasingly employed them as transmission belts for government policy.Footnote 40 Workers were quick to identify their unions with the authorities and worse. Claiming that everyone who spoke out against the fact that the collective agreements had only been to the benefit of the industrialists was censured, one Sestese socialist argued that it had been exactly this types of injustice that had created worker discontent with, and distrust towards, the fascist unions.Footnote 41 The negotiating positions taken by trade-union bodies were also a major source of dissatisfaction amongst Łódż socialists. Complaints focused on such diverse issues as the unfairness of collective agreements for simple workers,Footnote 42 on union inability to reach collective agreements in the first place,Footnote 43 and on union support for a prolongation of the working day.Footnote 44 That tensions between rank-and-file workers and trade-union officials could run high was attested to by the Milanese conflict over the imposta di famiglia (a local tax levied on families) in early 1947. After several failed attempts to convince the Milanese trade-union authorities that working-class families were hit unduly hard by the tax, the internal commission at the Montecatini mines published an open letter criticizing trade unionists for bowing to the (socialist-communist-run) city council. Trade unionists were reminded that they were representatives of the working classes and could not simply ignore a request from a considerable number of those whose interests they should be serving.Footnote 45
Feeling abandoned by their traditional organizations, the working class increasingly took matters into their own hands. Agitations, (wild-cat) strikes, but also theft were the order of the day in industry, as workers were desperate to improve their standard of living. According to workers, there was an intimate link between these activities and labour leaders’ (both political and trade-union) inability to provide for their basic needs. As one socialist employed in the Łódż public transport system remarked, the theft of coal by railway workers was a sign of their bitterness. The working class demanded not to be “treated like a beggar” by “its own comrades in leading positions”.Footnote 46 Similarly, a worker at Motomeccanica called upon the government to place orders no longer with firms laying off workers, as in the current situation of mass unemployment even “honest people become black marketers, thieves etc. to feed themselves and their families”.Footnote 47
Despair was also listed as the foremost reason for the strikes that hit both cities with increasing frequency. When the 250 workers at the Mazzarella weaving shop struck in protest at its directors’ refusal to increase pay, a solidarity strike broke out among the 15,000 workers at the neighboring Breda aeroplane works. Petitioning the Milan prefecture to intervene at Mazzarella, the internal commission at Breda indicated that it was not possible to live on a salary of between 20 and 22 lire per hour in a place like Sesto San Giovanni.Footnote 48 But whereas the working classes might occasionally show such internal solidarity, local support was often the best workers could expect. Striking against the introduction of multi-machine work, the workers at a Łódż textile factory were backed by the district committee of the PPS. Notwithstanding their claims that overhauling the worker–machine ratio made little sense if the poor electricity supply already had 70 per cent of spinners sitting idly by, the visiting trade-union officials threw their full weight behind the factory management.Footnote 49
If workers were already frustrated by their isolation in industrial disputes, there was still greater exasperation at the authorities’ continuing inability to tackle those “parasites and smoke sellers” operating on the black market.Footnote 50 Workers complained bitterly that speculators could live “a good life” not by working,Footnote 51 but by acting as “vampires sucking the last blood out of society”.Footnote 52 Just how widespread these practices were was experienced firsthand by those Breda employees living in Monza, who found local shops closed from 11am because bakers had sold all their bread on the black market.Footnote 53 Thus directly threatening their daily existence, the many abuses of the black market evoked fierce emotions amongst workers. In a resolution adopted by the socialist trade-union activists at Milanese train manufacturer TIBB, it was called for “a firm BASTA [enough] to the wild and greedy speculation that is running rampant and could drive us to wholly unintended actions”.Footnote 54
Grassroots socialists often lamented that government initiatives to deal with the black market were not only ineffective, but also fraught with hypocrisy. One socialist in Łódż expressed his surprise that, at a time when the government was claiming to be directing a “battle with high prices”, the prices of train tickets had been increased.Footnote 55 A local Sestese socialist was more comprehensive in his critique of government handling of the price issue. Referring to two workers who had courageously handed in a woman who had been knocking on doors to sell tobacco illegally, he wondered what their action counted for in the light of the new hikes in the price of state-provided cigarettes announced that very day. Between this woman and the state, “perhaps the woman was conducting social work” as the practices of the state “are more black than those of the black market”.Footnote 56
It is indicative of the profound sense of disillusionment the working classes felt towards the governments ruling in their name. Rank-and-file socialists considered themselves to be neglected by their national party leaders, whom they reproached for breaking promises and for showing no interest in their problems. This brought back bad memories of times gone by. Addressing the social ills of liberated Poland, one Łódż socialist compared current times to the period when the country was ruled by the Sanacja (the authoritarian dictatorship that had governed Poland between 1926 and 1939).Footnote 57 Similar sentiments were expressed in an open letter by the Sesto San Giovanni PSIUP to the national PSIUP leadership in August 1946. After providing an exposé of the many woes tormenting the working classes – the incessantly rising costs of living, raging speculation, and industrialists manipulating the markets by stockpiling their goods – it concluded: “The worker is patient and has been waiting for a year-and-a-half for someone or something to change this state of affairs. Nothing! Like before, worse than before. We cannot continue like this.”Footnote 58 In devoting all their energies to the peace negotiations, which were going to be decided by the imperialist powers anyway, political leaders had ignored “the harsh realities of our internal situation, the truth about the conditions of the working masses”. They should take an interest in the concerns of the working classes and remember that there was “a certain limit where people stop reasoning, close their eyes, and vent the anger that has been brewing in their hearts”.Footnote 59
Perhaps the most damning indictment of the new state was that it failed to deliver even basic fairness. When Prime Minister Feruccio Parri had indicated during a radio speech that many sacrifices still lay ahead for Italy, a worker writing to the local socialist press was quick to agree. But things should be proportional – someone who had amassed 10 million lire should at least give half of that to the state.Footnote 60 Over the years to follow, however, workers would often find just that proportionality lacking. In the above-mentioned conflict over the imposta di famiglia, the protesting internal commissions branded it “immoral and anti-social” that the burden of postwar reconstruction fell almost exclusively on the shoulders of the working classes, and instead called for a tax on “every form of luxury and extravagance”.Footnote 61 Manifestations of abundance also bred much bad blood amongst workers in Łódż. At a meeting of socialists in a textile factory, multiple speakers highlighted the continuing divide between poor and rich in Polish society – asking such questions as why there was a lack of milk, butter, and eggs for children while some people had everything, or why expensive goods such as lemons or oranges were imported while there was a shortage of bread.Footnote 62 In postwar Poland, such claims were particularly poignant, as they flew directly in the face of government rhetoric. In view of the official propaganda that there was no longer a bourgeoisie in People's Poland, one socialist worker wondered who it was “driving around in limousines at Piotrkowska [Łódż's main shopping street] and buying all the luxurious products a worker can only dream about”.Footnote 63
If the postwar (socialist) working classes ever had a political programme, it was definitely their egalitarianism. The inevitable pain of war and reconstruction was going to have to be divided evenly and, for the working classes, first and foremost that meant the rich contributing more. Amid widespread calls for a requisition of war profits, a Milanese worker exhorted that it could not be the case that the worker was paying for a war created by capital whilst capitalists were making billions each month.Footnote 64 Yet it was not only industrial fat cats that were the targets of working-class demands for a more equitable division of income. There was all sorts of indignation over disparities across craft and regional boundaries,Footnote 65 but perhaps the most grievous resentments were those within factories. Milanese workers repeatedly demanded a levelling of white-collar and blue-collar pay,Footnote 66 whereas a Łódż socialist asked how it was possible that a manager earned 120 per cent of what his subordinates made.Footnote 67
This was part of a more general backlash against those who had climbed the ranks of the workers’ movement in postwar Poland. There were bitter remarks about the “arrogance” of workers-turned-managers, who felt superior and did not even meet their erstwhile co-workers.Footnote 68 Similar feelings of resentment were harboured against middle-level party functionaries. Referring to working-class indignation that speakers of the Łódż PPS provincial committee (who regularly addressed factory circle meetings) did not travel with them on the public transport system, a district committee leader recommended that speakers would henceforth use the urban means of transport – only if these were unavailable they should come by car or horse carriage.Footnote 69
DEMOCRACY FROM BELOW
This particular suggestion incurred an irritated response on the part of Łódż PPS leader and PPS Central Committee member Henryk Wachowicz. Apparently, he argued, his comrade was “interested in horses rather than in the speech”. Calling for a distinction between personal and business matters, he claimed that taking equality to such extremes would amount to anarchism.Footnote 70 A similar repudiation of blanket egalitarianism is discernible in the observations that PSIUP trade union leader Fernando Santi put on paper upon his return from a visit to the Soviet Union. Noting how the basic wage of the Soviet worker could be supplemented with a whole range of bonuses if production targets were met, he concluded that the levelling of incomes in the Soviet Union had definitely not taken the proportions that “many fear and some naively hope”.Footnote 71 That is not to say that socialist leaders were perfectly fine with remaining income inequalities, but they were always more concerned with the political fallout for their parties and governments. Speaking in the PPS Central Committee, party chairman Kasimierz Rusinek listed the reasons for worker opposition to the government. In his view, little had changed since the war – the administrative apparatus in industry was distrusted and whereas industrial managers had made no concessions regarding their living standards, workers got nothing. Yet, his focus was firmly on winning the elections, not on any schemes to come to a more equitable division of income.Footnote 72 That worker demands for greater fairness also played second fiddle within the PSIUP is attested to by a letter the socialist vice-president of the Italian Trade Union Confederation (Confederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro – CGIL) wrote to his party leadership. Lamenting that the government had thus far treated salary agitations solely as “a public order problem”, he called upon socialist leaders to “actually do something for workers”.Footnote 73
Often, however, party leaders claimed there was very little they could do to improve the lot of the working classes. Sweeping pay rises were out of the question, as these would only further fuel already rampant inflation. As late as 1947, PSIUP Finance Minister Rodolfo Morandi painted a grim picture for his fellow party leaders of the socio-economic outlook of the working classes. The sheer destruction wrought by the war had rendered profitable production almost impossible, whilst workers would end up paying the price of wage increases in the form of inflation.Footnote 74 In the same vein, socialist workers in Łódż were told that pay rises offered no solution to their problems, as “inflation is the real enemy of the working classes”.Footnote 75 In these circumstances, all socialist leaders could ask for was for workers to show some patience. Faced with a question regarding working-class living standards, one Łódż factory circle leader compared postwar Poland to “a young marriage – first some money has to be made, after that prosperity will follow”.Footnote 76 Not all his colleagues were as polite in their responses to the bread-and-butter demands of workers. After being confronted with a series of complaints about deficiencies in the food and coal supply, a factory circle chairman ordered workers not to “exaggerate about small matters”. Hardships, he argued, were “a victory for the country”, and in the current ruins only patience would see the situation improving.Footnote 77 This linkage between the devastations left by war and the absence of material improvements in workers’ lives was also made by Italian trade unionists. It was absurd, they claimed, for those who had for years cheered on fascism's criminal war politics to think now that trade-union bodies could perform “the miracle of multiplying bread”.Footnote 78
Discipline and sacrifice were, then, the key concepts socialist leaders threw at workers. Visiting a factory circle in one of Łódż's larger textile plants, PPS Central Committee member Stanisław Rybicka discussed the socialist role in the economic reconstruction effort. The government, he insisted, was on its way to “a better tomorrow”, but for that the party needed “honest and disciplined members, who would answer its calls and are prepared to make sacrifices”.Footnote 79 Likewise, the lead socialist trade unionist in the Milan area, Franco Mariani, claimed that CGIL was doing all in its power to instil “a spirit of sacrifice for the salvation of Italy” amongst its working-class constituents.Footnote 80 Strikes stood in the way of this national salvation and were almost universally denounced by socialist leaders.Footnote 81 Socialist workers in Łódż were told that their role had changed now that they were no longer working for the capitalist but for the state.Footnote 82 That meant strikes made no sense, as they were directed against the very government that was struggling to create socialism. Time and again, socialist leaders reminded workers that they were not allowed to participate in strikes, that strikes affected national well-being, and that strikes always had a political character.Footnote 83 Whereas the PSIUP never employed arguments like these towards its discontented workers, the party made it quite clear that the mandate to proclaim industrial action rested with the higher echelons of the labour movement. Writing in the local socialist press, one Sestese socialist called upon workers not to engage in uncoordinated agitations as these did no good to the standing of CGIL and could only tempt the bourgeoisie to “counter-manoeuvres”.Footnote 84
This fear of political opponents capitalizing upon disunity in the labour movement was symptomatic of the PPS and PSIUP leaders’ obsession with a perceived reactionary threat. According to various socialist leaders, those reactionaries who had for decades supported right-wing dictatorships were now trying to destabilize the young democratic regimes by playing upon worker grievances. The aim of these “political speculators”, according to Mariani, was to profit from the misery and joblessness amongst the working classes to “create tumults and insurrections”, which would be crushed by those same Allies on which reactionaries had pinned their hopes to “destroy the nascent democratic structure of our country”.Footnote 85 Even though there was obviously no prospect of the Allies siding with reactionaries in postwar Poland, its socialists too harboured intense fears of a reaction exploiting the socio-economic woes of ordinary workers to achieve its political goals. In every manifestation of worker discontent, they tended to identify the disingenuous machinations of the “exceptionally strong” reactionary movement in Poland.Footnote 86 In order to prevent the working classes from falling prey to the hollow promises of this group yet again, it was imperative that socialists acted quickly in both countries. That involved improving the material situation of the working classes, as their current plight hardly “encouraged them to a struggle with the reaction”.Footnote 87 But, above all, it meant that socialists in government should stop offering only “technical expedients” and finally let workers know “for what and for whom” they were suffering.Footnote 88
The key for socialist leaders was, thus, to raise working-class awareness not only of the difficult situation in which their governments found themselves, but also of what would be ahead if they persevered. To achieve this, both parties placed considerable emphasis on direct worker participation in local and industrial decision-making. These notions had deep roots within both parties, which can be traced back to the defeat of the workers’ movement in the 1920s. The failure to capitalize upon the factory occupations of the biennio rosso (1919–1920) by entering into fruitless negotiations with employers in Italy,Footnote 89 as well as the progressive removal of socialists from the economic apparatus by the Sanacja in PolandFootnote 90 caused profound disillusionment with the reformist politics the PPS and the PSI had pursued thus far. Socialism was to be arrived at by means of a revolution, but not the bureaucratic revolution from above as witnessed in the Soviet Union. A young Morandi defined the dictatorship of the proletariat as class self-management and severely criticized both reformism and the use of the state as a revolutionary instrument under Stalinism.Footnote 91 Similarly, the prewar Polish socialists associated Bolshevik-type nationalizations with bureaucratization, capitalist methods, and the by-passing of society, and championed forms of worker self-management, like cooperatives, as the bedrock of a future socialist civilization.Footnote 92
These theoretical disagreements with the communists often turned into real political conflicts after liberation. When the Italian communists endeavoured to merge the comitati d'agitazione [clandestine factory bodies that had sought to mobilize workers during the German occupation] with the more party-controlled comitati di liberazione nazionale, this was opposed by the PSIUP on the grounds that the comitati d'agitazione, as the organizations closest to factory life, were best placed to arouse spontaneous participation amongst workers and diffuse ideas of socio-economic renewal in factories.Footnote 93 In Poland, too, the socialists came to the defence of the cooperatives during the communist-led nationalization drive of 1947–1948, arguing that cooperatives, by virtue of their direct links with producers and consumers, were in the best position to respond to the needs of both groups and that the bureaucratization entailed in further nationalizations could only come at the expense of workers.Footnote 94
According to PPS and PSIUP leaders, drawing workers into such grassroots participatory structures as factory committees and cooperatives strengthened socialism's position vis-à-vis the reaction in at least two ways. In the first place, by giving workers a clear stake in day-to-day administration, it served to dispel any illusions they might hold about what their governments were able to provide. Speaking at the first congress of Milanese (both factory and non-factory) liberation committees, Morandi argued that the masses would never learn to appreciate “the tragic situation of the moment” through “speeches and sermons” alone – only “direct experience with authority” would help them understand.Footnote 95 When confronted with difficult questions, (local) socialist leaders would often point out that workers could take responsibility to improve their own lives. Faced with complaints about the food supply of the local cooperative, two Łódż district circle leaders claimed that “workers were to blame themselves, as they should improve distribution by their own behaviour”.Footnote 96
Secondly, and more importantly, the PPS and the PSIUP saw grassroots organizations as indispensable vehicles in their relentless efforts to teach the working classes about democracy. Socialist leaders in both Italy and Poland were acutely aware that their countries were lacking a longer democratic tradition and that the reintroduction of democratic freedoms at liberation had not suddenly changed that fact. If the interwar period had taught them anything, it was that, by itself, universal suffrage was insufficient to guarantee a democratic outcome. According to PPS Minister of Labour and Social Security Jan Stanczyk, formal democracy still presented many risks – after all, Hitler had also “come to power by democratic means”.Footnote 97 Or, in the words of PSIUP Secretary General Lelio Basso, it would be “a dangerous delusion” to think that electoral rallies alone “could give a democratic conscience to a people that never had one”.Footnote 98
In order to promote such a democratic conscience amongst the working classes, the two parties attributed a crucial role to grassroots participatory bodies. Emphasizing their “educational significance”, chief PPS economist Stanisław Szwalbe appealed on his government to rely more on factory committees and cooperatives.Footnote 99 Basso was more elaborate on what this would look like in practice. To counter the “political analphabetism” that had beset large parts of the working classes, he argued, it “is from concrete problems that we have to start the work of re-education”. If socialists could manage to get workers, clerks, and peasants to discuss their everyday concerns over pay, food, housing, and heating, the popular masses would gradually learn to “link up their immediate demands with more complex situations and transcend the particular to arrive at a more general understanding of class relations”.Footnote 100
Thus precipitating in the emancipation of the worker not only as “homo economicus” but also as “homo politicus”, socialist leaders vowed to ingrain the value of self-management amongst the working classes even where “they did not yet understand that themselves”.Footnote 101 That meant the largely technical competencies that had so far been awarded to shopfloor participatory bodies needed to be broadened. Speaking at a joint socialist-communist plenum, PPS Secretary General Edward Osóbka-Morawski bemoaned tendencies to curtail the capacities of factory councils. The government, he insisted, should implement “thorough reforms” as their role could not be reduced to mere “canteen control”.Footnote 102 A similar extension of the powers of factory councils was advocated by PSIUP economic theorist Angelo Saraceno. In his view, giving workers the power of co-decision only in technical matters did not alter the basic fact that the provider of capital still carried responsibility for the production process. Instead, he argued, the “technical maturation” and the “political maturation” of the working classes should go hand in hand, as factory councils were empowered to counter the bureaucratization that would inevitably accompany the introduction of a regulated economy.Footnote 103
In this process of political maturation, socialist leaders expected their rank-and-file activists in factories to take a pioneering role. According to Basso, socialist factory cells were the “militant avant-garde” of the working classes, which, having their “finger on the pulse of the masses”, could unite “various categories of workers on the political level”.Footnote 104 This was reflected in the significance both parties attached to the quality of their cadres.Footnote 105 Whereas PSIUP leader Pietro Nenni repeatedly emphasized that party membership was of “moral value” and should not be seen as a necessity to find a job,Footnote 106 PPS activists were told to recruit “new, but democratic members”.Footnote 107 Arguing that there was no place for those who had served Hitlerism in the ranks of the PPS, one speaker of the Łódż provincial committee concluded that the party could be proud to “have stood at the foundation of the healthy bulwark of the labour movement”.Footnote 108
Despite these high demands on new party members, however, the attitudes socialist leaders took towards both their own rank and file and the working classes more generally always hovered between paternalism and condescension. On the one hand, there was an intense desire to take the workers by the hand and teach them the fundamentals of democracy and socialism. After the popular apathy created by fascism, Nenni postulated, it was necessary to unleash “a wave of civicism” on ordinary people to combat “the quietism and pietism” that were the classical nemeses of “the moral resurrection of the nation”.Footnote 109 From a similar logic, one leader of the Łódż provincial PPS criticized a Central Committee member's declaration that “garbage” should be removed from the party. Rather, he contended, socialist awareness should be raised amongst the rank and file – “just as we do not throw semi-finished products in the garbage […], we should educate and inform new members”.Footnote 110 On the other hand, socialist leaders often displayed a barely disguised disdain for the superstitions they perceived as still marring the working classes. Certainly, Basso wrote, the experience of wartime resistance had ushered in the political coming of age of many workers. But, as far as he was concerned, there was no denying that there were “vast sectors of the working classes, specifically women and youngsters, that had not taken part in the political struggle [and] do not show an interest in political problems”.Footnote 111 Łódż PPS leaders too complained bitterly about the indifference and poor knowledge of their rank and file. Calling for a far more widespread subscription to the local socialist daily, one factory circle chairman deplored that “if so many had confidence in the party, they should also read its newspaper and not some tabloid”.Footnote 112
CONCLUSION
In its near-exclusive focus on communist parties, scholarship on the socio-political history of the first postwar years has noted an insurmountable gulf between a radicalized rank and file and a leadership completely swallowed up by the day-to-day business of reconstruction. Within the two socialist parties under review in this article, there seems to have been a grassroots-leadership chasm as well, but rather the other way around: the revolutionary transformation of industrial relations championed by socialist leaders finding little resonance amongst ordinary workers just concerned with getting by. To what extent are these two cases representative for postwar Europe as a whole? The PPS and the PSIUP were definitely peculiarities within the international socialist movement and the preliminary results of similar research on the French and Czechoslovakian socialist parties show their leaders to be distinctively less enthusiastic about worker self-management. As in other countries where democracy had survived during the interwar period, the democratic re-education enshrined in factory councils and cooperatives did not carry similar urgency for them.
Yet, the same results suggest that the priorities of their working classes were remarkably similar to those described by Rusinek in May 1946. Commenting on the countless strikes that had inflamed Poland's industrial strongholds during the spring, he concluded that the cause had been the inadequate supply of basic necessities “almost everywhere”, in some cases the “vagueness” of pay models, and only finally the “inadequate demarcation between management and factory council competencies”.Footnote 113 Despite its subordinate position on the agenda of the postwar working classes, however, the theme of worker self-management still exerts a powerful attraction for the social history of postwar Europe – with even those historians sceptical about the overall revolutionary potential of the moment of liberation featuring it prominently in their accounts.Footnote 114
From the perspective of the PPS and the PSIUP, a more fruitful way of looking at issues surrounding grassroots participatory structures would address how these affected socialist self-understanding vis-à-vis the communists. After all, for all the philo-communism usually attributed to the Italian and Polish socialists, there was within their leading circles a remarkable deal of criticism of communist conceptions of economic democracy. Compared to the full, if gradual, worker empowerment envisioned by socialist parties, communist attitudes towards the working classes were often derided as being one-dimensional and heavy-handed. Whereas the communists tended to see CGIL principally as “a defensive organ” preoccupied with “the direction of salary agitations and the maintenance of a sufficient standard of living”, as one socialist trade unionist remarked, its functions “went far beyond that” for the socialists: “[i]t is a formidable instrument of social politics and should lead workers towards equal pay, but also towards the factory council, agrarian reform, and industrial reform”.Footnote 115 However, socialist calls for “full powers” for factory councils were largely in vain as communists were not about to give the working class a real say in postwar reconstruction.Footnote 116 According to Morandi, this came down to a fundamental difference between socialist and communist conceptions of the purpose of a working-class party. Whereas “the masses expressed their interests within and governed through the party” according to the socialist conception, the communist view saw the party as an “instrument to manoeuvre the masses in accordance with the directives assigned to cadres”.Footnote 117
These debates, however, remained largely academic to the average worker family simply struggling to stay afloat. Probably earlier than their national leaders in government,Footnote 118 the working classes understood how much recent history had seen the political pendulum swing to their disadvantage. After a war fought predominantly in cities and an occupational regime targeting worker organizations specifically, the working classes were bound to lose out relative to other social groups.Footnote 119 Amongst Łódż and Sestese (socialist) workers, there were at least as many resentments against peasants “withholding food”Footnote 120 or “leading an easy life”Footnote 121 as against the bourgeois and capitalist exploiters pointed the finger at by their national leaders. With such animosity persisting amongst the two historically oppressed groups in both Italy and Poland, a revolution, let alone a successful one, was never a likely prospect. This was reflected in the remarks a Sestese socialist made only months after liberation. The country, he argued, found itself in “a critical situation” – just as workers were reclaiming their rights, there was no hope of an improvement in their living conditions until the imbalance between expenditure and revenue in industry had been addressed. In these circumstances, he urged upon workers to stay calm, as “every recrimination is pointless”.Footnote 122