“Bold, brave, undaunted”: James Connolly’s socialist legacy

On May 12 1916, a fatally wounded James Connolly was brought by military ambulance to Kilmainham Jail and was later that day carried by stretcher to the courtyard of the prison. Unable to stand to face a firing squad after a bullet had shattered his ankle during the fighting of Easter week, he was strapped to a chair and shot.

Connolly was one of the last of the leaders of the Easter rising to be executed (Roger Casement was executed a number of months later). The circumstances surrounding his execution helped fuel the mounting public anger in Ireland against the brutal callousness displayed by the British government in the aftermath of the rising.

“Apostles of Freedom are ever idolised when dead, but crucified when living.”– James Connolly, 1898, Workers Republic

When the southern capitalist state was founded in 1922, its ruling class was forced to conceal its contempt for Connolly. Along with the six other signatories of the 1916 proclamation, he was elevated to the status of a national hero. In the decades following independence, his name would be given to schools, hospitals and one of Dublin’s central train stations. Many political figures and parties would unashamedly seek to claim his mantle.

But they sought to ignore his role as an outstanding workers’ leader who founded the Irish Citizens’ Army (ICA) in order to protect the working class of Dublin from the brutal repression meted out by the police at the behest of the city’s capitalist class during the 1913 lockout. Crucially they sought to disregard his development of a socialist analysis of the national question, where he argued that the struggle for national liberation in Ireland was bound up with the need for socialist change.

Socialism & the national question

This analysis was developed upon his arrival in Ireland in 1896 in various articles in his paper, The Workers’ Republic, and in his excellent pamphlet, Erin’s Hope written in 1897. In 1910, Connolly wrote his key work, Labour in Irish History, in which he elaborated his view about the role that working people had to and would play in the struggle against British rule. He contrasted it with the baleful and treacherous part played by Ireland’s propertied classes and the middle class leaders of various national movements against British imperialism in the 18th and 19th century.

Ultimately, Ireland’s capitalist class was unwilling to play to a revolutionary role in the struggle to free Ireland. Their conservatism flowed from the fact that as a class they were economically and politically subservient to British imperialism and consequently were fearful that such a struggle would threaten their economic interests. This subservience lead them to consistently betray rebellions against colonialism in Ireland. As a leader of the United Irishmen, Henry Joy McCracken, observed in the aftermath of the 1798 rebellion: “The rich always betray the poor”.

In the foreword to Labour in Irish History Connolly elaborated on this point when writing:

“…the result of the long drawn out struggle of Ireland has been, so far, that the old chieftainry has disappeared, or, through its degenerate descendants, has made terms with iniquity, and become part and parcel of the supporters of the established order; the middle class, growing up in the midst of the national struggle, and at one time, as in 1798, through the stress of the economic rivalry of England almost forced into the position of revolutionary leaders against the political despotism of their industrial competitors, have now also bowed the knee to Baal, and have a thousand economic strings in the shape of investments binding them to English capitalism as against every sentimental or historic attachment drawing them toward Irish patriotism; only the Irish working class remain as the incorruptible inheritors of the fight for freedom in Ireland.”

National & social liberation

Connolly argued that because the Irish working class were the key force in the struggle to end colonial domination, that the struggle for national liberation needed to be intertwined with the struggle for social liberation. This was something the middle class leaders of movements in the 19th century, such as the Young Irelanders, had failed to do. Ultimately working people were driven by a desire not only for change in who would govern Ireland politically, but also by an aspiration for ending the horrendous conditions that confronted them in their daily lives – as seen in the grinding poverty that existed in cities like Dublin at the time. He wrote that:

“The workers, though furnishing the greatest proportion of recruits to the ranks of the revolutionists, and consequently of victims to the prison and the scaffold, could not be imbued en masse with the revolutionary fire necessary to seriously imperil a dominion rooted for 700 years in the heart of their country. They were all anxious enough for freedom, but realising the enormous odds against them, and being explicitly told by their leaders that they must not expect any change in their condition of social subjection, even if successful, they as a body shrank from the contest, and left only the purest-minded and most chivalrous of their class to face the odds and glut the vengeance of the tyrant – a warning to those in all countries who neglect the vital truth that successful revolutions are not the product of our brains, but of ripe material conditions.”

Connolly lambasted nationalists who argued that independence, regardless of whether or not capitalism remained in existence, would bring about real change in the lives of the majority of Irish people. Writing scornfully and with characteristic irony he wrote:

“After Ireland is free, says the patriot who won’t touch Socialism, we will protect all classes, and if you won’t pay your rent you will be evicted same as now. But the evicting party, under command of the sheriff, will wear green uniforms and the Harp without the Crown, and the warrant turning you out on the roadside will be stamped with the arms of the Irish Republic.

Now, isn’t that worth fighting for?”

Failure of capitalist independence

It was for this reason that he argued for and championed the concept of a “Socialist Republic” as the only basis on which the needs of the working class could be fulfilled and a decent life could be provided for all. The history of the Magdalene laundries, industrial schools, mass unemployment and emigration, the enormous dominance of the Catholic Church over the state since its foundation, are all illustrative of the failure of capitalist independence and of the deeply backward nature of Irish capitalism.

It was a tragedy that when participating in the Easter rising, Connolly did not put forward a separate socialist programme on behalf of the ICA that outlined his vision of a socialist Ireland – to explain to a broader audience, as he had done on some many occasions, why revolutionary change needed to be both political and economic. Not doing so allowed figures like Eamon De Valera – whose ideas were an anathema to him – to later claim his legacy.

The salient lesson to be drawn from Connolly’s writings today, one that the ruling class in this country would like us to overlook, is that real change means socialist change. The challenge, for those of us inspired by Connolly’s life, is to help to bring this change into existence.

 

 

Connolly and women’s rights

Connolly championed the cause of the Suffragettes in Britain and the Irish Women’s Franchise League in the struggle for votes for women, a key battle at the time. He was described by one suffragette Louie Bennett, who later became secretary of the Irish Womens Workers Union as being:

“…one of the best suffrage speakers I have ever heard and a thorough feminist in every respect; he taught the Transport Union of Dublin to support women workers’ struggle for political rights.”

Opposing capitalist war

Connolly’s writings on the First World War were searing in their denouncement of a war between Europe’s capitalist states over who would gain control of the world market and the colonies of Africa and Asia.

“We have held, and do hold, that war is a relic of barbarism only possible because we are governed by a ruling class with barbaric ideas; we have held, and do hold, that the working class of all countries cannot hope to escape the horrors of war until in all countries that barbaric ruling class is thrown from power…”

 

 

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