British Labor Bids for Power

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British Labor Bids for Power (1926)
by Scott Nearing
4271218British Labor Bids for Power1926Scott Nearing

BRITISH
LABOR
Bids for
POWER

The Historic Scarboro Conference
of the Trades Union Congress

by
SCOTT NEARING

SOCIAL SCIENCE PUBLISHERS
7 West 106th Street
New York City

page

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BOOKS BY SCOTT NEARING

Educational Frontiers.

Dollar Diplomacy.
(Collaboration with Joseph Freeman)

The American Empire.

The Next Step.

Wages in the United States.

Financing the Wage Earner's Family.

Reducing the Cost of Living.

Anthracite.

Poverty and Riches.

Social Adjustment.

Social Religion.

Woman and Social Progress.
(Collaboration with Nellie Nearing)

The Super Race.

Elements of Economics.

The New Education.

Economics.

Community Civics.
(Collaboration with Jessie Field)

Solution of the Child Labor Problem.

Social Sanity.

FOUR IMPORTANT PAMPHLETS
BY SCOTT NEARING

Russia Turns East.

Stopping a War.

World Labor Unity.

Glimpses of the Soviet Republic.

page

BRITISH
LABOR
Bids for
POWER

The Historic Scarboro Conference
of the Trades Union Congress

by
SCOTT NEARING

SOCIAL SCIENCE PUBLISHERS
7 West 106th Sreet
New York City

page

The Job of Trade Unions

"The functions of the trade unions are two-fold. First of all, they have to defend the workers' standard of life everywhere against the attacks of the capitalist forces, which have closed their ranks internationally, and are thus in a position to deliver smashing blows. This embedies an attempt to improve the condition of the working class 'within the framework of capitalist society.' But the trade unions' ultimate function is a greater one, and is therefore in a sense primary, namely to achieve the overthrow ‘of the capitalist system, the deliverance of labour, the inauguration of socialism." (Edo Fimmen, Labour's Alternative, p, 97.)

Mission of the Trades Union Congress

"That its mission was revolutionary, in effect if not in early intention, is historically certain. Notwithstanding the innate conservatism, caution and moderation of its policy, Congress has moved steadily, decade by decade, toward a complete transformation of the industrial organization based on craft unionism of an exclusive kind. … It has evolved in the general direction of a militant organization of all workers, skilled and unskilled, capable not only of collective bargaining on something like equal terms with the employers, but of more vigorous constructive action, under unified leadership, for the ultimate transformation of the whole system of productive industry. Almost unconsciously, at least until within very recent years, the Trades Union Congress has pursued a path which leads inevitably to the assumption of full responsibility by its central executive for the mass action of the Trades Unions. In recent years this unconscious tendency has become deliberate, a guiding principle of Congress policy and administration."—(Story of the Trades Union Congress, The General Council, London.)

Copyright, 1926
SOCIAL SCIENCE PUBLISHERS

page

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in 1926, before the cutoff of January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1983, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 40 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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