Women’s
Marches
A new movement rising
Millions of women led
protests across the world against the bigoted new US president – the
biggest ever inauguration demos. They form part of a much wider struggle
to defend and extend women’s rights. SARAH SACHS-ELDRIDGE reports on the
significance of this movement, and how it is linked to the need for
systemic change.
On 21 January 2017, the day
after Donald Trump’s inauguration, a surge of resistance exploded onto
the streets of 673 cities and towns across the world. Around five
million women, children and men participated in the Women’s Marches.
Three to four million demonstrated in the US where upwards of 550
marches formed the biggest ever presidential inauguration protests. Such
numbers on the streets indicate the underlying support of the mass of
the population behind them.
There is historical precedent
for women taking the first steps in powerful movements. The outbreak of
the French revolution in 1789 saw women march on Versailles. On 8 March
1917 women textile workers went on strike in several factories in
Petrograd which led to mass demonstrations. These opened the floodgates
to the Russian revolution which not only removed the brutal warmongering
tsar but put society in the hands of the working class to run it
democratically in the interests of all. If today’s marches are to be
seen in a similar way by future generations will be determined by
whether a correct programme to reach the wider masses can be developed,
what organisations grow from it, and its leadership.
Energetic militancy has not
been lacking. Within 48 hours of Trump’s election victory in November
2016, 40,000 had marched, many inspired by the call from Socialist
Alternative, the Socialist Party’s co-thinkers in the US. This and their
call for inauguration protests and student walkouts helped to set the
tone of organised active rejection of the bigoted racist president who
was busy stuffing his administration with fellow billionaire business
people. This was in contradistinction to the hopes of the Democratic
Party leadership that, having failed to defeat Trump, they could lead
that opposition.
Days after the marches,
Trump’s so-called Muslim ban was answered within hours by airport
occupations and protests and by the one-hour strike of Uber drivers, and
by Yemeni shop owners. Quinniapac polls suggest that these protests have
contributed to a twelve point net swing against the general idea of the
travel ban in the month to 7 February, the period during which the
protests took place. A mass movement has the potential to not only
effectively push back against racist and other attacks, but also to
promote a different type of society based on solidarity and democratic
planning to meet the needs of all.
This is an answer to the
pessimism of many on the left who lack confidence in working class
people to act and be convinced to act. It also answers the Blairites who
argue they have no choice but to take their cue from the lies of the
right wing, such as the UK Independence Party (UKIP), rather than
attempting to channel people’s anger at their deteriorating conditions
into a united struggle for socialist change in the interests of the
overwhelming majority of people.
The women’s marches’ size,
composition and energy indicate that, following Trump’s election and the
inability of the Democrats to defeat him, millions of people not only
reject him but believe that they must act themselves because capitalist
establishment leaders and their parties of the rich cannot be trusted to
rule. The slogans and mood signify a yearning and readiness to fight for
an inclusive society that can provide a dignified life for all people
regardless of gender, sexuality, race, etc.
The ongoing fight for women’s rights
Although a common slogan on
the march was, ‘the future is female’, the protests when Betsy DeVos was
confirmed as secretary of education showed that there are no illusions
that a female billionaire will defend women any better. The
understanding that it is whose interests you represent which is
important – not who you are – was made more conscious during the Hillary
Clinton verses Bernie Sanders contest.
Indisputably, Trump’s brazen
misogyny was a major impetus for the marches. The ubiquity of pink
‘pussy hats’, inspired by Trump’s 2005 comments in which he bragged
about grabbing women by their genitals, is testament to this. During the
election campaign Trump threatened to defund Planned Parenthood which is
the biggest abortion provider in the US, among other services it
delivers. Among the placards, the idea of defending women’s rights
indicates an understanding that previous gains could be unwound by an
emboldened billionaire right-wing Republican administration.
Internationally, women’s
marches and protests have been a feature of the recent years of
capitalist crisis. The number of battles for and to defend women’s
rights reveals, on the one side, the radicalisation of big sections of
working class people and a rejection of establishment influence and
rule. On the other side, the desperate attempts by unpopular or unstable
regimes to use social issues to try to maintain power. While majority
support for abortion rights is stable at about 2:1 in the US, Trump, who
lacks any organised force on which to base himself, relied on right-wing
anti-abortion groups to campaign for him. The quid pro quo appears to be
the selection of anti-choice Mike Pence as vice-president and other
appointments. But half of Trump voters support funding Planned
Parenthood.
In Ireland the energetic and
largely youthful campaign for the introduction of abortion rights is
understood as a fight against establishment austerity politicians who
still kowtow to a Catholic church that has lost its influence over the
masses. In the US rights that have been won by previous generations and
that were seen as secure are under threat in this era of capitalist
crisis. This understanding, at different levels throughout the
movements, contributes to the sense that the fight for women’s rights is
‘our task’.
It is also the case that in
every country women have borne the brunt of the years since 2007/08 when
governments across the world have made the working class and poor pay
the price for the world economic crash. Cutting and privatising public
services means women suffer job losses, the reduction or denial of
services they rely on including cruel cuts to refuges for women fleeing
domestic violence, and often have to take up the slack in the family for
the lack of access to care services. Housing and job insecurity can mean
that women also feel less confident to stand up against sexist bosses or
abusive partners.
In Britain 2016, analysis
showed that women have lost an average of between £1,000 and £1,700 a
year through austerity, with low-paid women, especially black and Asian
women and single mothers suffering the most. This is evidence that under
capitalism, even where oppressed groups make gains, they are never
guaranteed to be permanent. Crisis-ridden 21st century capitalism, far
from taking steps forward for all women, is driving in the opposite
direction.
Pervading sense of solidarity
A large proportion of the 21
January marchers were on their first protest. The predominance of
home-made placards showed that the numbers attending were not a sign of
the authority of any particular organisation but of the widespread
feeling of the need to act, to organise. The slogans also showed that
this is a very inclusive and expansive movement.
Over the last few years a
number of more ‘single issue’ movements have erupted: for trans rights,
against police racism, against the cut-backs to services and benefits
for people with disabilities, etc. Particularly where these movements
have been visibly and vocally led by those affected they have inspired
solidarity. Of course, there are also major attempts by the
establishment to sow divisive ideas – look at the amount of airtime,
disproportionate to its size, given by the BBC to UKIP for example. But
that has also served to undermine the legitimacy of the establishment
media.
A new sense of solidarity
pervades, especially invoked by the movement around Bernie Sanders,
above all among young people. It can be seen in the results of a survey
conducted on behalf of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.
This found that 64% of millennials agreed with the words of Karl Marx:
"From each according to his abilities, to each according to his need",
not the result they expected.
Attitudes to LGBT+ people
have been transformed in recent years, especially among young people. A
2015 YouGov poll found that 23% of British people define themselves as
something other than 100% heterosexual and the figure rises to 49% among
18-24 year olds. In the 2015 Irish referendum on equal marriage, the
votes of young people and working class people ensured the victory. In
the US, 40% of white people express support for Black Lives Matter, but
this rises to around 60% for those under 30. The campaign to oppose the
North Dakota pipeline inspired solidarity with Indigenous Americans
including by war veterans. The new generation has already rejected many
of the old divisive ideas and is seeking a new form of inclusive
society.
But this general mood of
solidarity and opposition to attacks needs to be articulated through a
programme which can then aid the movement in reaching out beyond those
involved so far, including to working class Trump supporters. The vast
majority did not vote for Trump because they are sexist and they liked
that he is a misogynist. Of the 26% of eligible voters who backed him,
many did so because they are so angry at their conditions and correctly
saw Clinton as Wall Street’s candidate who sought to maintain the status
quo.
Involving these people means
being firm in fighting oppression, organising against the attacks on
refugees and migrants, for women’s rights, for LGBT+ rights, against
police racism, etc. But it also requires linking that movement to the
bold demands that gained widespread support over the last few years,
most prominently in the campaign of Bernie Sanders to be the Democratic
presidential nominee: for a $15 an hour minimum wage; fighting for free
healthcare and education. In fact the Sanders campaign was emboldened to
expand its programme by the movement – which his stand inspired – so
that it both opposed oppression and demanded better conditions for all,
linking that to the idea of a political revolution and the general idea
of a socialist alternative. This programme needs to be filled out to
show that the movement is serious about taking the wealth off the 1%
with demands for the democratic nationalisation of the banks and big
corporations that dominate the rigged economy.
Establishment tries to ride protest wave
However, various attempts are
being made to rebuild the authority of establishment politicians through
this new movement. Speakers at the Women’s March in Britain included
Blairites like Stella Creasy, who voted to cut benefits, and Yvette
Cooper, who called for the Remain campaign in the EU referendum to go
further than David Cameron’s attacks on EU migrants. They have been part
of the campaign to remove Jeremy Corbyn and keep Labour as a party that
can be relied on to defend capitalist interests, including attempts to
use so-called feminism to attack him. But their one-dimensional
anti-Trump message, bereft of ideas about how to fight Trumpism – whose
rise they facilitated – will not gain widespread influence as this
movement searches for a way to transform society. Likewise, the attempts
in the US by Hillary Clinton and the Democrats to claim the mantle of
opposition leaders will not be widely accepted.
A coalition of Blairites, Lib
Dems and others behind the journalist Owen Jones is seeking to link the
anti-Trump movement to opposition to Brexit. This would mean cutting it
off from half the population - including many conscious anti-racists and
anti-sexists and those who could be won to that position. A campaign to
expose these Remainers’ ultimately pro-capitalist, pro-status quo,
pro-austerity ambitions must also propose a clear internationalist
socialist Brexit in the interests of working class people.
Comparisons are correctly
being made with the 2003 mass anti-war movement. But there is a crucial
difference: that was before the 2007/08 world economic crisis. Since
then hatred and scepticism of establishment politicians have
skyrocketed. Like then, celebrities and politicians will be promoted
but, if the movement is built on the basis of uniting the mass of
working class and young people in struggle, its own leaders will emerge
– of all genders.
The capitalist class is
attempting to intervene in other ways and rebuild reputations damaged by
tales of tax evasion, etc. On 30 January the BBC website reported:
"Google, Apple, Twitter and numerous other multinational companies have
taken action in response to an immigration ban imposed by President
Trump". Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz pledged that his chain would hire
10,000 refugees. Yet in 2014, Schultz (then on $9,637/hour) responded to
the $15/hour uprising by stoking fears about job losses at small
businesses which, he claimed, "would not be able to afford it".

The two superpowers
In 2003, the New York Times,
the USA’s leading capitalist newspaper, wrote that "there may still be
two superpowers on the planet: the United States and world public
opinion". This response indicates that ‘public opinion’ – in other
words, the movement – is once more a factor, even before it has its own
political voice. In the aftermath of the marches and the excitement they
generated there is a huge amount of discussion and debate on social and
‘alternative’ media sites about what to do next.
It is significant and very
welcome that discussion on strike action is prominent. Last October
women in Poland won a crucial victory as proposed legislation to impose
a near-total ban on already restricted access to abortion was
overwhelmingly defeated. An estimated 140,000 women in over 60 cities
took part in a national ‘women’s strike’ opposing the ban. As a direct
result, the Polish parliament was forced back, voting 352-58 against it.
Activists in Ireland, which
has seen a small but significant strike wave, in the movement to repeal
the eighth amendment which bans abortion, have called for similar action
on International Women’s Day. This is part of a trend in the era of
capitalist crisis, of those in struggle reaching for the methods of the
workers’ movement to fight their battles, as was the case with the
dispute by Britain’s junior doctors who are majority female (54% of
training grade doctors).
While strike action remains
at a low level in the UK this is especially the case in the US.
Nonetheless, strikes in sectors dominated by women workers have been to
the fore and have taken a more ferocious character. For decades the
feminisation of health and education has gone hand in hand with
privatisation and the driving down of workers’ conditions. The low level
of action is not an expression of the mood or readiness to fight, as
proven by the way the $15 campaign spread like wildfire. It is the trade
union leaders who have completely abdicated responsibility. A bonfire of
workers’ rights took place under Barack Obama’s administration, such as
the Right to Work legislation which Trump plans to escalate.
It is therefore
understandable that many young people have a hazy understanding of what
a strike is and its potential, especially general strikes which pose the
question of power. A strike is not only a protest – putting ‘sand in the
gearbox’ as some of those proposing it have said – or a folding of arms
but a show of power. It is a promissory note of how the working class
when organised is potentially the most powerful force in society and
capable of democratically running society for the overwhelming majority.
What is being discussed at
this stage would have more the character of a hartal, with aspects of a
mass ‘sickie’, as wide sections of the population walk out. This would
include small business people, students, those who stay at home to care
for children and family members, etc. Socialists welcome this
opportunity to help popularise the need for workers’ strikes and to
patiently explain the need to build them in a serious way to fully
harness the collective power of the working class. This includes
recognising the weakness of the trade unions at this stage and how they
can be transformed. It also means timing – there is a risk that a small
combative layer could be attacked and that, therefore, the watching
masses could be intimidated rather than inspired.
Women fight the system
However, the understanding of
class society will be hammered out through experience. An indication of
this was borne out in an Ipsos Mori poll last March which found that
millennials in the US see themselves as more working class than any
other generation since records began three decades ago. Socialist
Alternative in the US is both explaining this and putting forward ways
to build for effective action that can unite the working class.
It is significant that the
concept of a ‘feminism of the 99%’ has been thrown up. This is a very
good slogan. The task is to give it content and a strategy for action to
win women’s rights and a society in the interests of the vast majority.
It shows how the experience of the years of crisis are impacting on
society, starting to bring together the lessons from Occupy, Black Lives
Matter, solidarity with trans people, etc.
A feminism of the 99% points
to the connection between fighting women’s oppression and fighting the
capitalist system which is run in the interests of the 1%. The roots of
women’s oppression date back thousands of years to the rise of class
society, private property, and the family as an institution of economic
and social control. But it is important to recognise that sexism, the
product of class society, is part of a wider ideological apparatus which
helps to maintain the capitalist system in place. In this respect,
understanding and challenging sexism is not peripheral. It is central to
the struggle for an end to inequality and oppression.
Some groups have called for
the next action to be around the slogan of opposing male violence. Given
that worldwide an estimated 30% of women who have had a partner have
suffered ‘intimate violence’, there is no question but that the movement
must challenge it. Nonetheless, the vigorous fight for women’s rights
cannot be effective if all men are deemed responsible for violence
against women. So this slogan must be part of a programme that can make
it clear to ‘the 99%’ that their interests are best met by joining this
movement. Not only is this correct, it is vital if it is to succeed in
ending women’s oppression. Defending and fighting for women’s rights is
a task of the working class fighting to change society.
Ending violence,
discrimination and oppression against women requires a fundamental
transformation in the way that society is structured and organised.
Through democratic workers’ control and management of industry, moving
away from a system based on inequality and exploitation to one founded
on equality and co-operation, it would be possible to not just end the
economic problems which women face, but to prepare the ground for
eliminating cultural oppression too. Movements towards collective action
by workers, including the vital building of a new mass workers’ party
out of the experience of both the Bernie Sanders and anti-Trump
movements, will be critical steps in the struggle for socialism.