Posted by Leonie, May 26th, 2009 - under Tiananmen Square, Workers, Working class.

Tags: China, Chinese Communist Party, Class struggle

Twenty years ago, late in the evening of 3 June and into the morning of 4 June, Chinese tanks and troops stormed Tiananmen Square, killing thousands of occupiers. The demonstrators only crime had been to campaign for democracy.

The death of Hu Yaobang sparked the revolt. Hu was a reforming leader who lost power in 1987 for being “too soft” on student demonstrators.

150,000 students went to his funeral demanding his posthumous rehabilitation. The calls widened to include demands for democracy and an end to corruption.

The movement grew rapidly and after a period of unrest throughout the country students and workers occupied Tiananmen Square. The Square became a focus for the democratic and working class movements in China.

The movement was not just a student one. John Gittings is a China expert and wrote for the Guardian newspaper in the UK. He described the ferment in the month before the massacre this way:

Beijing in May 1989 was a city transformed. In the streets there was a sense of comradeship mixed with excitement that so many people – workers and ordinary citizens – had found their voices. The [government] seemed paralysed and the streets belonged to the masses.

After a month of unrest, the Government on 19 May tried to reassert order. Prime Minister Li Peng declared martial law and ordered troops into Beijing to clear the protesters.

He failed.

70,000 workers in the city’s Capital Iron and Steel works went on strike. The Underground workers cut the power off and halted the progress of troops into Beijing.

Workers and students built barricades around the city. The barricades were designed not to stop the soldiers but to slow their progress. This meant ordinary Chinese people could argue with the soldiers and get them to join the revolt.

Many soldiers did join the workers and students. Beijing was on the brink of revolution. One eyewitness at the time described how “for 48 hours now the city of Beijing has been entirely in the hands of the people.”

5 million people were on the streets of the capital. They were in charge.

Everywhere people sang the Internationale as a symbol of their commitment to a better world and to mock the false socialism of their rulers.

Workers began to organise a general strike. Student leaders argued against it, saying it was not in “the national interest.”

The students won the argument, and there was no general strike. The moment of insurrection was lost.

The hard-liners in the Government seized their chance.

Deng Xiaoping and Li Peng sacked Zhao Ziyang, who sided with the demonstrators. They then ordered the brutal attack on the demonstrators in Tienanmen Square.

The hard-liners knew that the democracy movement was a challenge to the rule of the Chinese Communist Party and like all dictators they responded with guns.

John Gittings described the scene:

The tactics were brutally simple. Armoured personnel carriers formed the spearhead while soldiers on foot shot to kill from both sides.

Repression defeated the revolt. But force cannot keep the Chinese people in servitude forever.

The 1989 democracy movement arose out of the very success of the Communist Party’s economic reforms.

It is the continuing massive growth of the Chinese economy which ensures that in the future there will be new and stronger democratic challenges to the rule of the Communist Party.

To paraphrase Marx, the Chinese Communist Party is creating its own gravedigger – the Chinese working class.

The changes to Chinese society have been monumental.

When Mao won power in 1949, China was a peasant country. The working class was small, and played no part as a class in the Chinese Communist Party’s victory. The revolution was nationalist, not socialist.

The essence of Mao’s economic policies was to replicate Stalin and use the state in an attempt to industrialise the country.

Under this state capitalism the state is the collective embodiment of capital, extracting surplus from the working class, and dragging the country up by its bootlaces in the crude accumulation of capital.

Historically it appears state capitalism can be quite successful – for a while. Stalin’s version turned peasant Russia into a military superpower.

But state capitalism outgrows itself, and the ruling “communist” elite, recognising the economic stagnation their model eventually produces, begin to look for new ways of growing.

Thus under Deng Xiaoping the Chinese Government moved away from Mao’s Stalinist state capitalism to a guided market economy.

The consequence has been a massive restructuring of Chinese society.

The workforce in China today is over 900 million. There are hundreds of millions of workers, many of whom are concentrated in the major cities. In addition, the country now has a thriving middle class and millions of students.

In the first quarter this year economic growth fell, on Government figures, to 6.1 percent. Some economists believe the figure is really closer to 4 per cent.

The dictatorship itself admits it needs at least 8 per cent growth to prevent major social unrest. Certainly many millions of workers in the cities have returned to their villages because there is no work in the cities.

China is linked to the world economy. Almost a quarter of its GDP comes from trade with other countries. That trade is drying up.

Twenty years after the massacre, with unemployment in urban areas growing markedly, with corruption endemic, with little faith in the dictatorship and with the Chinese working class the mainspring of China’s growth, the situation is more favourable objectively for the democracy movement now than in 1989.

Tiananmen Square was a dress rehearsal for the future. The Chinese working class has a material interest in democracy. It has the strength to overthrow the corrupt and bankrupt butchers in Beijing.