N.Z. FEDERATION OF LABOUR
CIRCULAR ON W.F.T.U. AFFILIATION
DECISION TO BE MADE (P.A.) WELLINGTON, March 28. Describing the rupture in the World Federation of Trade Unions from which New Zealand unionists must now decide whether they will withdraw, the secretary of the New Zealand Federation of Labour (Hr K. McL. Baxter) has issued a statement to unions in which he says:—
“British and American trade unions stand for immediate relief, reconstruction, and rehabilitation in Europe, apart from political implications. Eastern European trade unions stand for the reconstruction of Europe without outside assistance and its political implications. It appears to be a question of U.S.A, surpluses or U.S.S.R. shortages, with different interpretations of the political and economic consequences. “For the workers who produce goods and render services, and who will go on doing so for a long time whether under ‘democracy’ or ‘dictatorship, the struggle is on. In the language of workers on the job it would appear that the British trade union leaders say, ‘We are up to our knees in dirt. Let us struggle to make conditions more tolerable,’ while the Eastern leaders say, ‘We cannot finalise the struggle to get out of the dirt till it is up to our necks; let us make conditions more intolerable.’ ”
Mr Baxter outlines the history of the World Federation of Trade Unions since its inception in 1945. He says that before the rupture more than 70 trade union national centres were affiliated, covering 75,000,000 trade unionists. From the outset different conceptions existed as to the functions of trade unions. Unions in Eastern Europe In Russia and countries under the influence of Russia economic and political systems are being moulded under different conditions and upon different lines, and trade unions have entirely different functions from those in the United States of America. Britain, Australia, and New Zealand. In Eastern Europe, under forms of dictatorship, trade unions are becoming more and more instruments of the state. When the World Federation was confronted with the problem of reconstruction, the unions of Western Europe urged participation with and co-operation in the administration of the Marshall Plan, but Eastern European countries repudiated the Marshall Plan as policy whereby European countries would be subjected to economic domination by the United States of America with loss of national independence. The political parties of Eastern Europe instructed their trade unions representatives to transform the World Federation into a fighting organ, purged of “all reformists and influences inherited from the past,” to attack capitalism in the rear by nationalist movements in colonial countries.
This fundamental difference led to the withdrawal of the American, British, and Dutch representatives from the W.F.T.U. on January 18 last. The remaining members of the executive committee decided to continue its activities.
Mr Baxter says that since February. 1945, it has cost the New Zealand Federation of Labour £2870 in affiliation fees to the W.F.T.U.. and it could cost from £5OO to £6OO to send a delegate to any W.F.T.U. Congress in Europe.
Communists in United Provinces.— The United Provinces Minister of Police (Lalbahadur Shastai) claimed to-day that the Communist Party in the province was plotting an armed coup. He told the Provincial Assembly that the Government had documentary evidence on the party’s plans.—New Delhi, March 27.
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Press, Volume LXXXV, Issue 25765, 29 March 1949, Page 5
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541N.Z. FEDERATION OF LABOUR Press, Volume LXXXV, Issue 25765, 29 March 1949, Page 5
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