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Review
March 2001


NOT AUTOMATIC

WOMEN AND THE LEFT IN THE FORGING OF THE AUTO WORKERS UNION

by Sol Dollinger and Genora Johnson Dollinger,
Monthly Review Press, New York, 2000, 214 pp.

Just after Sol and Genora Dollinger's recent book on the early organizing days of the Auto Workers' Union came out, newly released Bureau of Labor Statistics figures showed that the percentage of American workers belonging to unions had fallen in 2000 to 13.5%, the lowest point in six decades. While some organizing successes were achieved recently by low-paid workers like janitors and home health aides, as well as some high-paid professionals like doctors, the steady declines have been in the core industries such as auto and steel, where globalization has resulted in increasing layoffs and plant closings.

Concern with these questions begs a look at a book like Not Automatic. The title was chosen to stress that the gains workers have made for everyone through union organization were not easy or inevitable, but came from the hard, often bloody, battles waged by tens of thousands of rank-and-file workers. Their focus is on the contributions made by "Women and the Left in the forging of the Auto Workers Union."

There is no mistaking as they tell their stories that both authors were proud of their lifelong identity as socialists. When Genora begins to tell her story of the l937 Sitdown Strike in Flint, she begins with what she calls the "preparatory work done before the strike by radical parties," such as the Communist Party, Proletarian Party, Socialist Labor Party, Socialist Party (SP) and the Industrial Workers of the World.

The Socialist Workers Party appears on the scene shortly afterwards. Unfortunately, the importance of the radicals seems at times to be counterposed to what Genora calls the "spontaneous combustion of the workers," which "many so-called revolutionaries talk about" but she disputes.

Yet what she describes as the kind of "preparatory" work in which she was engaged for the SP (holding lectures "in socialism, plus labor history and current events" in a church basement), is not in a different world from the creativity of ordinary workers who actually INVENTED the sit-down.

This book is divided into three parts. In Part I, on "Organizing the Auto Industry, 1934-1948," Sol Dollinger begins with a detailed history of three important strikes-the 1934 Electric Auto-Lite strike in Toledo, Ohio; the 1935 Chevrolet Transmission strike in that same city; and the 1936-37 sit-down strikes in Flint, Michigan.

He recounts the way in which the "united front" of the main political groups came to an end after the historic victory over GM. The story then moves to the 1940-41 drive to organize at Ford, but more was involved in those years than just factional warfare.

The bureaucratization of the union confronted by the rank and file by the mid-l940s was the result of U.S. capitalism's preparation for and entry into World War II. Thus, while the contract signed with Ford in June 1941 was the best one achieved in any of the big three auto companies, workers I knew when I worked at Ford Rouge in the early 1950s angrily described how the union they had helped win was unrecognizable when they returned from the army four years later.

Part I ends with the post-World War II beginnings of the "Cold War" and the red-baiting that accompanied it as we see the consolidation of Walter Reuther's control and his capitulation to one draconian anti-union measure after another.

Part II consists of an oral history interview with Genora conducted by Susan Rosenthal in 1995. What is striking is how emphatically she rejects being called the "Joan of Arc" of the labor movement by those who recall the role she played when no women were considered capable of being leaders, the severe beating she suffered from the corporation's hired thugs in October 1945, and the never-ending battle she waged against the union bureaucrats until the end of her life.

"It's not that I was born a heroine," she insists. "It was a question of growing up in a company town where people were going without food and children were going without health services. That wasn't the concern of GM. They just wanted to get their production out. If you were living in a company town, you would feel that, and you would do the same thing."

These pages testify to the hundreds of women who responded to the idea of an Emergency Brigade. "We didn't know that nothing like that had ever been organized before," Genora recalls. "We didn't know we were making history."

In a Part III called "Putting the Record Straight" we get a look of some of the many different ways history is rewritten, whether by Henry Krause inflating the role of the Communist Party in his THE MANY AND THE FEW, or the union bureaucrats who were prevented by Genora from erasing the story of the Women's Emergency Brigade from the 40th anniversary celebration of the victory over GM.

There is much of importance in the labor history recounted in this little book for a new generation to think about. One of the most important is the quote from Karl Marx that serves as a frontispiece to one of the chapters: "History does nothing....history is rather nothing but the activity of humanity in pursuit of its ends." The masthead of N&L uses another quote that sums it up differently: "Human power is it own end."

-Olga Domanski




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