1949 coal strike: How Chifley lost Labor’s supporters

For decades, only the Left has talked about the 1949 coal miners’ strike, using it as an example of how low a Labor government can stoop—to the point of using soldiers to scab.

So it should have been welcome news that the ABC had put resources into an hour-long dramatisation, Infamous Victory: Ben Chifley’s Battle For Coal.The ABC's Infamous Victory tries to justify Labor Prime Minister Ben Chifley's war on the miners' union.

Unfortunately, the ABC has given us little to cheer about, creating a show that turns the ideological tables to paint Labor as the embattled victim of a Cold War plot.

The years immediately following the Second World War were pregnant with radical possibilities.

Worldwide, millions had died, tens of millions more were wounded or displaced. Europe was in tatters. Workers on the home front had been cajoled or coerced into heroic feats of production.

These were the same workers who had suffered enormous privations in peacetime—in the Depression that preceded the conflict.

Australia was no exception. Unemployment peaked at about 30 per cent in the 1930s. Some 40,000 Australians died in the war and those at home were made to sacrifice, through rationing of essential goods and inflation.

The mood in 1945 was that it was time for workers to get their reward.

The first to gain from this was Labor under Ben Chifley, returned with 51.3 per cent of the first preference vote in the 1946 election—its best ever result. It held 33 of 36 senate seats.

But workers quickly found that improvements would still have to be fought for.

Chifley opposed calls for wage increases to compensate for wartime sacrifice. Unionists responded with strike action—four million days in 1945-46 alone—and won substantial gains.

Labor’s obstruction continued over the move to a 40-hour week. Again it was mass action that tipped the balance. The Arbitration Court, in granting the claim from January 1948, declared:

“This working class claim has been and is the basis of industrial dispute and unrest … No realist for a minute think that a rejection by the Court in these cases would bring about industrial harmony and would abate for an instant the demand for the shorter week.”

The 40-hour week raised the question of a five-day week with penalty rates for weekend working. Railway workers led the charge in February 1948.

Once again they faced resistance from Labor. Queensland premier Hanlon banned picketing. Police baton-charged a demonstration, injuring several people.

Central to this union struggle was the Communist Party, which emerged from the war (in which Russia had been an ally of the West) at the peak of its success.

It had 23,000 members, an MP in the Queensland parliament, control of some local councils and, crucially, the support of between 25 and 40 per cent of unionists.

By 1948, many of its middle-class, wartime recruits had fallen away. But the party still had some 300 top-level trade union officials and control of key blue-collar unions.

In 1949, the CP leadership of the Miners Federation decided to launch a three-pronged claim, for a 35-hour week, long service leave and a 30-shilling ($3) a week pay rise.

Infamous Victory paints Chifley as a friend of the workers. He had taken part in the NSW general strike of 1917 as a train driver. It was he who coined the inspirational Labor slogan, the Light on the Hill, pointing the way to a better society.

The central theme of Infamous Victory is that the decent Chifley was forced to do the unthinkable, even at the risk of alienating Labor voters, by the CP.

According to the program, the dispute was imposed on the miners, concocted by the CP to produce a revolutionary situation.

This was the justification for Labor’s vicious attacks on the miners and their supporters, which included:

  • banning strike pay and solidarity donations;
  • jailing eight union officials;
  • a police raid on the CP’s Sydney headquarters; and
  • sending troops in to mine open-cut coal.

The truth was that the miners were overwhelmingly behind the strike. They had a proud and militant tradition to draw on.

Many of the older miners well remembered the death of Norman Brown—shot by the police on the picket line at Rothbury in NSW in 1929.

They also remembered that 1929 had been a lock-out by the employers and that the state had lined up with the bosses.

As one miner put it in the Newcastle Morning Herald in July 1949:

“I have no doubt that the conditions I enjoy today are the direct result of the struggle and hardships of the past …

“We will continue to use our gifts in the only way we ever have found to get results – by struggle.”

Miners backed the claim and the call for a general strike by 7995 votes to 822.

Their union paper, Common Cause, reported that meetings were “among the best in the Federation’s history … with a higher attendance and better vote that those on the eve of the big 1940 general strike”.

A further blow to the Infamous Victory thesis was that the employers used deliberately provocative tactics in the run-up to the strike.

They not only rejected the pay claim and the 35-hour week, but called on the Federation to make four significant concessions in return for a watered-down long service leave clause.

In June, the Federation was poised to call mass meetings for action. When the head of the Coal Industry Tribunal indicated that the union’s claim would be “generously” considered, the leadership postponed the meetings for a fortnight.

Far from accepting this olive branch, the employers announced that they would oppose long service leave outright.

It was this, much more than any “Communist plot”, that tipped the balance towards striking.

The dispute was a turning point that shaped Australian politics for a generation.

On their side, the miners had the power that comes from stopping coal supplies in a society dependent on the stuff. Industry ground to a halt.

While the miners also enjoyed widespread solidarity, they found they were up against not just the employers, but the state.

Chifley deployed some new tactics, such as major advertisements in the papers putting the government’s case, as well as a dirty old one—convincing the rail union to scab.

Labor put itself on the line, with MPs going into the coalfields and into major workplaces to argue with the miners and their supporters head on.

The tone deteriorated. As Infamous Victory shows, the Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell told tens of thousands in the Sydney Domain that Communists should be put into concentration camps—just four years after the Holocaust. He continued:

“We will use all the resources of the country against them. We will use the army on them, the navy on them and the air force on them …

“Only the stars are neutral in this fight. This is a fight between the Labor movement and the Labor Government on the one hand and the Communist ratbags on the other. It is a fight that the Government must win …

“The army will be used in the open cuts. We will run up the Australian flag and it will cover Australian servicemen mining coal in Australia for the Australian people.”

In Infamous Victory, Chifley refers to “civil war” and a “semi-revolution”. It is this analysis that justifies his use of the state to drive the miners back to work.

By 1949, the Communist Party’s analysis was that a recession, even a Depression, was coming and that workers should grab what they could before the going got tougher.

The CP had also sharpened its anti-Labor rhetoric and was counterposing itself to the ALP in an increasingly shrill, ultraleft way.

But there is no indication that the Communist Party was planning for insurrection.

Far from bringing down capitalism, the outcome of the strike weakened the Left for a generation. The CP went into what turned out to be a long, irreversible decline.

Labor lost the December 1949 election. The strike was not the only reason—Chifley’s pledge to retain rationing in order to help Britain was also deeply unpopular.

The result was not only an even more rabidly anti-Communist government under Menzies, but the deepening of anti-Communism within the ALP, leading to the 1955 split.

The story of the 1949 strike is more than historical curiosity. It shows the depth of Labor’s loyalty to the system. It shows how Labor will fracture its base rather than threaten capitalism.

Sixty years on, it is inconceivable that a Labor minister would stand on a soap box and talk directly to striking workers.

But it is sadly all too believable, if the stability of the system demanded it, that today’s Labor would wield its biggest sticks against us.

The ghost of Chifley hovers over next month’s trial of CFMEU official Noel Washington and the possibility of his jailing.

By David Glanz

* In most respects, Infamous Victory sketches a broadly accurate picture of the course of events. But one element does not ring true.

With the strike under way, Chifley is shown offering to concede the full claim. He does this, according to the scriptwriters, knowing that the miners’ leaders would not be able to accept without undermining the Communist Party’s strategy for destabilisation.

Yet if the rank-and-file knew, it would foment a revolt against the strike.

The only evidence for this that I can find is a line by Phillip Deery in the Journal of Australian Studies, No. 54-55, 1997, republished here

Infamous Victory: Ben Chifley’s Battle For Coal
ABC1, November 6

Watch online at www.abc.net.au/tv/iview

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