Thanks
to Steve Cohen for sending me the following, which is is one the
oldest surviving leaflets against immigration controls. It was
written in the 1890s by various Jewish trades unions against an agitation by
the Trades Union Congress for legislation to prevent Jewish migration to Britain. The leaflet was launched at
meetings in London and Leeds where the main speaker was Eleanor
Marx – the daughter of Karl Marx. The leaflet will be published
next year by No one Is Illegal. Their Manifesto and other literature can be
found at www.noii.org.uk.
They are happy to provide speakers to discuss their opposition to
immigration controls. Their email is info@noii.org.uk.
VOICE
FROM THE ALIENS
About
the Anti-Alien Resolution of the Cardiff Trade Union Congress.
We,
the organised Jewish workers of England, taking into consideration
the Anti-Alien Resolution, and the uncomplimentary remarks of
certain delegates about the
Jewish workers specially, issue this leaflet, wherewith we hope to
convince our English fellow workers of the untruthfulness,
unreasonableness, and want of logic contained in the cry against
the foreign worker in general, and against the Jewish worker in
particular.
It
is, and always has boon, the policy of the ruling classes to
attribute the sufferings and miseries of the masses (which are
natural consequences of class rule and class
exploitation) to all sorts of causes except the real ones. The cry
against the foreigner is not merely peculiar to England ; it is
international. Everywhere
he is the scapegoat for other's sins. Every class finds in him an
enemy. So long
as the Anti-Alien sentiment in this
country was confined to politicians, wire-pullers, and to
individual working men, we, the organised aliens, took no heed;
but when this ill-founded sentiment has been officially expressed
by the organised working men of
England, thon we believe that it is time to lift our voices
and argue the matter out.
It
has been proved by great political economists that a working man in a country where machinery is greatly developed
produces in a day twice as many commodities as
his daily wage enables him to consume
For
one half, he himself is the market; for the rest (the surplus), a
market must be found elsewhere. Until the market is found, and the
surplus sold off, the worker must
remain idle—unemployed.
The
greater the producing power, the larger the surplus. The larger
the surplus is, the longer is the period of unemployment. The
larger the number of the unemployed,
the keener and fiercer is the competition for work. Consequently.
the harder are the times and the greater the sufferings of the
worker. Who, then, is to be blamed ? Surely we cannot blame the
foreign working man, who is as much a victim of the industrial
system as is the English working man. Neither can we blame the
machine which displaces human labour. The only party at fault is
the English working class itself, which has the power, but
neither the sense nor courage, to make the machines serve and
benefit the whole nation, instead of leaving them an a source of
profit for one class. To punish the alien worker
for the sin of the native capitalist is like the man who struck
the boy because ho was not strong enough to strike his father.
We
will assume for the sake of argument, that the foreign worker is
injurious to the English worker, and that the Government will
prohibit him from coming hero.
What then England
as a Free Trade country would thereby suffer severely; because the
same commodities which the foreign worker used to produce here
(being at
the same time a source of income to the country), he will then
produce abroad—much cheaper, too, because the cost of living is
lower there. Those commodities will then
be imported hero. Will this benefit the English worker? Lot Mr.
Freak and Mr. Inskip answer.
The
Froakians and Inskipians claim that the immigration of workers
from other countries over-gluts the labour market, displaces
English labour, and reduces the wages of
the native workmen. From this it would logically follow that the
emigration of workers from the country would have the contrary
effect, i.e., would relieve the market, and
thus bring on good times. In short, the more the immigration, the
worse for a country ; the more the emigration, The bettor for a
country. If this is so, then how will
they account for the following facts and figures 1
The
average annual immigration of Aliens in .England according to the
report of the Board of Trade for 1891-92-93 has been 24,688, (1) whilst the average annual emigration is put down by the
Dictionary of Statistics at 164,000. (2) In face of those figures, we repeat our argument. If
immigration over-gluts the market then emigration must logically
relieve it. And, seeing that the emigration is more than
six times the immigration, we cannot see why England should
cry out so loudly about the foreigner. We will carry the question
further, and we will prove to our English fellow workers that
immigration or emigration
in no way affects the condition of the working men or the state of
the labour market.
In
Germany the immigration is one-tenth of the emigration .In the United
States it is vice versa. Still, the wages of a tailor in Germany
is 15s., whilst in the United States it is
58s. What will our opponents say to this?
Again, in 1831-40 the immigration in the United States was
699,000.In 1881-89 it was 4,792,000; still, in the former period
the
daily wage of a tailor was 4s. 6d., whilst in the latter period it
was 8s. 4d.(3) With
these statistics in view we can safely say, that if the English
worker has reason to be dissatisfied
with his lot, let him not blame his foreign fellow working man;
let him rather study the social and labour question—he will then
find out where the shoe pinches.
Leaving
the foreign worker in general, we will now deal with the Jewish
worker in particular.
We,
the Jewish workers, have been spoken of as a blighting blister
upon the English trades and workers, as men to whose hearts it is
impossible to appeal, and were it
not for us, the condition of the native worker would be much
improved, lie would have plenty of work, good wages, and what not.
Well, let us look into facts; let us
examine the condition of such workers with whom the Jew never
comes in contact, such as the agricultural labourer, the docker,
the miner, the weaver, the chain maker, ship
builder, bricklayer and many others. Examine their condition, dear
reader, and answer: Is there any truth in the remark that we are a
“ blighting blister " upon the English worker?
It
is alleged that we are cutting down the wages of the English
worker, and no proof is given in support of such an allegation. We
on the other hand claim that English
workers are reducing our wages and we will prove our claim
That
the ready-made clothing trade, the second class-made to
order—tailoring trade, the mantle, waterproof clothing, cap,
slipper, and cheap shoe trades have been created by the Jewish
workers in this country—no one who knows anything about it will
deny. Mr. Booth in his book " Life and Labour of the
People," (4) declares
"That the ready-made clothing trade is not an invasion on the
employment of the English tailor, but an industrial
discovery."
In
the report of the Board of Trade on the effects immigration,
speaking of the boot and shoe trade we find the following
(5) "The foreign Jews are, to a large extent, engaged
on a common class of boots and shoes, some of which probably could
not profitably be made by English labour under the existing
statement, and might hence
cease to be produced, or at least leave London (either for the
provinces or abroad) were it not for the presence of Jewish
labour." The
reader should not fall into the mistake that the Jewish worker can
produce the cheap class of boots because he will work for lower
wages—far from it. In fact, the Jewish workers earn better wages
in this cheap class than the English do in the better class. This
is due to their great abilities in turning out large
quantities. In a circular issued by the Mantle Makers' Union to
the mantle manufacturers we read the following ;—" Germany
and France, though behind England in the evolution of other
trades, were ahead of her in the mantle trade. They have created a
new branch
of
the trade in question. They
have combined the quality, style, and workmanship of the
bespoke
tailor made, with nearly the cheapness of the cheap ready made.
How did they do
it ? By applying the present mode of capitalistic manufacture —
that is, production
on a large scale, use of machinery and the division of labour, to
the bespoke tailor- made
garment.
Thus England has been a market for Germany and France. Some years
ago, certain English manufacturers realised that the same class of
garments could be made in
this country. Circumstances brought to England the class of
workers, experts in that work,
and the trade is now rapidly growing."' This is again
corroborated by an article
on
the mantle trade, which appeared in a German periodical, the Neue
Zeit, No. 39,
of
the year 1893, where the writer points out to his countrymen the
cause of the diminution
of
the mantle trade in Germany. " The cause is," he says,
" the transference of the trade to
England
by the Russian and Polish Jews." We could fill a book with
quotations, statements,
and figures, in favour of our claim. From what has been said, the
truth-seeking reader will
see
how groundless is the accusation that we displace English labour.
Not
only are we engaged in trades which we have introduced, but we
have to a very
great
extent provided work fur the English workers. According to the
report mentioned
above,
the Jewish workers that are employed in the boot and shoe trade
are less than
1
and a half per cent,
of the total number of workers employed in that trade. The export
of
boots and shoes from
the United Kingdom from the year 1873 till 1893 increased about 25
per cent. Taking into
consideration that the Jewish products are mostly exported, and
that their influx into the boot and shoe trade took place during
that period, is it not reasonable
to assume that the great increase in trade is to some extent due
to them?
But
that is nothing to what h as been accomplished in the clothing
trades. The trousers and
vests
are made entirely by English women ; the weaving, cutting,
book-keeping, and all
work
connected with the counting house is performed only by English men
and women.
We
will also remind our English friends of the fact that when the
Jewish tailors of Leeds struck
in 1888, the English workers in the cloth mills were put on half
time.
When
you, our English fellow workers, cry out so loud against our
competition, while you fail to
prove that it exists at all, when you call us a blighting blister,
then what ought we to
say to our
English sister-slaves who are actually taking the broad out of our
mouths by working for
half
the price, and are driving us out of the workshops which we have
built up ? Can they deny
that
they are making a mantle for a shilling, for which we have
received two shillings?
We
feel their throat-cutting competition in every trade which we have
created, and which
they
have stepped into. Those who investigate the subject readily admit
it. Thus we read in the
report of the Board of Trade the following statements:—"At
present the Jews need only fear
the competition with the English female labour." Again
:—" In the machining department, where
foreign men compote with English women, the latter are gaining
ground on the former." (6)
In
view of the foregoing facts, we ask the impartial
reader : Who is competing with whom, who is
displacing whom—the Jew the English, or the English the Jew!
We
have been branded by the Freakians and Inskippians as a class of
people who are behind
in the labour movement, who will not be organised, and to whose
hearts it is impossible!
to appeal. We bog leave to ask these gentlemen whether their
appeals to our
hearts during the boot makers struggle with their masters did or
did not find a response
? If their memories fail them, we will recommend them to the
-Strike Committee.
Did
it require much appealing to our hearts in the time of the great
miners' struggle to induce
us to organise a committee which raised .£38 16s. 4d., besides
what our Unions donated
from their funds ? We could enumerate many instances which would
illustrate
the deep sympathy with which the hearts of the Jewish working men
are filled in response to
every appeal made to them by their English fellow workers. But we
must retrain,
lest it be said that we are " boasting."
The
gentlemen named above would have the world. believe that we are
blacklegs, and that we will not be organised. True, some of us are
hard to be convinced of the benefits of organisation, hut when we
can point to an army of 3,000 union men in London alone, out
of a total of about 10,000 Jewish working men, then we believe
that we can hold up our heads against either English, Scots,
Irish, or Welsh.
That
there are some blacklegs amongst us is nothing more than natural,
you will find them among all nations. But one thing must be
admitted. It is this ; That we have
not amongst us an official organised army of blacklegs, such as
the English can boast of, viz.," A free labour party "
We
are behind the English working men in the labour movement, but
were we not in front of them in the last 1st of May demonstration
?
Just
as we were about to write our concluding remarks in this leaflet,
we have been informed by the Press that a deputation of the
organised English working men met the
Government and laid before them many resolutions that were passed
at the Cardiff Congress. Of all that was asked, only one thing was
granted. It is this : That all alien
exploiters, swindlers, blacklegs, drunkards, idlers of all sorts
who have money are welcomed here; but that skilful, industrious,
honest working men, who have either been out of work for a long
time, or have been locked out by their masters for taking part in
strikes and boycotts, and therefore have no money, shall be
prohibited from coming here.
We
cannot congratulate the English working-class on this achievement.
We believe that with all its influence with its great
organisations and enormous funds, with its millions of votes, and,
above all, with its great intelligence it ought to have achieved
something better and nobler. In conclusion, we appeal to all
right-thinking working men of England not to be misled by some
leaders who have made it their cause to engender a bitter feeling
amongst the British workers against the workers of other
countries. Rather hearken to the voices of such leaders as will
foster a feeling of international solidarity among
the working people.
In
conclusion, we appeal to our fellow-workers to consider whether
there is any justification whatever for regarding as the enemies
of the English workers the foreign workers, who, so far from
injuring them, actually bring trade here and develop new industries;
whether, so far from being the enemies of the English workers, it
is not rather the capitalist class (which is constantly engaged in
taking trade abroad, in opening factories in China, Japan, and
other countries) who is the enemy, and whether it is not rather
their duty to combine against the common enemy than fight against
us whose interests are identical with theirs.
Independent
Tailors, Machinists, and Pressers’ Union.
United
Ladies' Tailors and Mantle-Makers' Union.
United
Cap Makers* Union.
The
International Bakers'
Union.
Independent
Cabinet Makers' Association.
East
London Branch of the National Union of Boot and
Shoe
Operatives.
Amalgamated
Society of Tailors, Jewish Branch.
Slipper Makers’ Union.
The
International Sew-Round and Operative
Union.
Upper Machiners’ Union.
Cabinet Makers' Alliance, Hebrew Branch.
References
(as in original leaflet)
(1)
see page 9
(2)
Dictionary of Statistics page 247
(3)
Ibid pp 579, 583, 251
(4)
Booth’s Life
and Labour of the People, page 213
(5)
Report of the Board of Trade, 1891-2-3, pp93,94
(6)
Report of the
Board of Trade 1891-2-3, pp 93, 94