Freedom and democracy come from the spaces we create inside the struggle – Tim Gee

Any activist who stays an activist long enough must confront the question of effectiveness

No 578 Posted by fw September 26, 2012

“But a revolution isn’t just an event, it’s an ongoing process. The definition of democracy is when people have power, and they can only have power through counterpower, so I suppose the struggle always needs to continue. It’s not in the regime that we find democracy, but in the movement, those beautiful moments of power vacuums when people are able to think for themselves… Freedom and democracy come from the spaces we create inside the struggle, and that has to go on forever. There’s not a perfect end that we’re working toward, just possibilities of extending those moments of freedom and people power.”Tim Gee

The above passage is from an interview with British activist Tim Gee, author of Counterpower: Making Change Happen, a book prominently featured in a series of posts on this blog.

The interview appeared on Waging Nonviolence, “a source for news, analysis and original reporting about nonviolent activism, as well as for discussion of the theory behind it.” If you haven’t already heard of this site of people-powered news and analysis, do take a look – you won’t be disappointed.

Here’s the interview with Gee with added hyperlinks and text highlighting. Although some of Gee’s responses were short and ambiguous in places, there are some gems of wisdom and sound advice to treasure here. To read the original piece, click on the linked title.

New language for nonviolence — a conversation with Tim Gee by Bryan Farrell, Waging Nonviolence, September 26, 2012

Any activist who stays an activist long enough must confront the question of effectiveness. As Henry David Thoreau wrote in Walden, “There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root.” Of course, such a maxim is only useful to those willing to recognize when they are just hacking away among the thousand. Most activists would rather think of themselves as the ones striking at the root.

In recent years, however, a growing body of literature has emerged to challenge stubborn perceptions about how change is made — each with its own unique insight. With Why Civil Resistance Works, Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephen demonstrate that mass participation is everything. In Join The Club, Tina Rosenberg makes a case for peer pressure. John Jackson and Steve Crawshaw show the importance of humor and creativity in Small Acts of Resistance. And smartMeme co-founders Patrick Reinsborough and Doyle Canning explain why story-telling is an integral component to organizing in Re:Imagining Change.

The latest of these is a book by British activist Tim Gee called Counterpower: Making Change Happen. In the introduction, Gee says, “This book began as an inquiry into how campaigning might be more effective.” But as he dove into the archives — specifically the Working Class Movement Library near Manchester with memorabilia dating back to the 1790s — Gee noticed that “all the successful campaigns appeared to have followed a fairly similar path.” The one thing missing from a lot of the writings on these campaigns, however, was an understanding of power as coming from the “have-nots.”

For students of Gene Sharp and other thinkers on strategic nonviolence, this may not seem like a particularly new revelation. But Gee is from a newer generation of activists baptized in the global justice movement. He cut his teeth opposing the Iraq and Afghanistan wars with student groups before moving on to fighting climate change with Britain’s anarchist-guided Camp for Climate Action.

It is this background that not only informs his unique perspective but also makes the history of resistance and the strategy behind it accessible to a whole new audience. And not a minute too soon; the Occupy movement began the same week Counterpower was released.

I recently spoke with Gee about his use of an old and largely forgotten term, whether the climate movement can win, and how true democracy exists within movements and the spaces they create.

Did you anticipate the Occupy movement in any way when you were completing Counterpower? And what was the effect of the release coinciding with Occupy London’s launch?

The book finishes with the Indignados. The last lines of the book were, “I hope you will be part of the next chapter.” And then before it was published this wonderful, though flawed, mass movement did just that. The story of the tour became interlinked with Occupy. I was visiting different cities and their Occupy camps. It was quite useful. It was a great excuse to meet people who were doing great stuff and discuss, debate and run workshops. I didn’t see all of the ingredients of a successful campaign in Occupy, but it was still such an exciting outburst of energy and anger that it was a thrill to be a part of.

That kind of mass sustained action had been absent from American activism for quite some time. But in other parts of the world, such as Europe and the U.K., it doesn’t seem quite so uncommon. Would you agree?

The grass is always greener. The sense that I got in the U.S. was that the radical movement was very wise and got it — perhaps proportionately small to the population at large — but people engaged in it seem to be doing something that we haven’t managed to do properly here in Britain, which is to turn the movement from media stunts and city center occupations to actual frontline solidarity with affected communities. All of the Occupy activists I met in the States were telling me about it, while at the same time saying how exhausting it was and how things looked better in Britain.

Someone I know once said, “The trouble with British NGOs is that they engage in great moments instead of great movements, which start small and take a long time.” And I think he was spot on. That was someone who was becoming disillusioned with mainstream British NGOs at the time and then became one of the key organizers within Occupy London. So that was an interesting trajectory to follow.

Tell us about your background and what led you to become so interested in people power.

I come from a political family. I come from a Quaker family. So being around peace demonstrations and nonviolence is always something that’s been there. But I was never particularly interested in it until I was about 15 or 16 and I was at a Quaker summer school for teenagers. Peter Tatchell — better known in U.K. than U.S. as a high profile gay rights activist — spoke about the civil disobedience that he had been involved with, which was to get rid of Section 28, a horrible piece of homophobic legislation that said you couldn’t talk about homosexuality as if it was normal within schools. So I got involved in the very tail end of that campaign and I’d had some homophobic bullying at school. It was personal.

The campaign eventually won. It had absolutely nothing to do with my involvement, but it was an early reminder that change can happen through people power. If you look at that change in legislation and values in the ongoing struggle for homosexual equality, that’s a nice thing to remind ourselves of, especially as I went from then into the antiwar movement and School Students Against the War. I was also very involved in Climate Camp, including some relatively confrontational stuff. I got my arm broken by some cops in Copenhagen and got arrested whilst I was writing the book at Climate Camp, which didn’t help with the writing.

Especially with the war and climate change we faced a lot of setbacks. I wanted to look backwards at some of the campaigns that had been successful. I wrote in the introduction about the Working Class Movement Library, of which my stepdad was the librarian for the last 20 years. So I knew where to get these stories. In the socialist movement that my parents are more associated with, particularly the trade union movement, people are told stories in a structured way, of the movement and what’s gone before. In the non-hierarchical movement that I’m more a part of, that’s not there unless someone decides that they’re going to play that role. So that’s the role I decided to play.

Why do you use the term “counterpower” as opposed to nonviolence, nonviolent action, civil resistance or any of the many other terms that have been used to describe the type of power average people possess?

In lots of languages there is a word for struggle from below, and in English there isn’t really. I mentioned a few attempts at it in the introduction, such as black power, worker power and sisterhood is powerful, and all of these ideas. But that word counterpower is there. It’s there in the anarchist discourse. If we want reformist ends then we have to engage in revolutionary tactics. That’s why I used a word from the revolutionary discourse, even though, when I started out, my only intention was to ask how we can win campaigns. There’s a lot more I could have said about dual power and power vacuums and, the more I read, the more convinced I get that it’s when countries get to a stage of power vacuums with no one in control that the big transitions happen. I’m more and more interested in how we can extend those periods of power vacuums. I wish I had written more about that.

Given your background as a Quaker, it’s surprising you don’t use the word “nonviolence” much in the book. Is there a reason for that?

There were a few intentional reasons for that. The first is that I knew what I had been brought up to believe, and I only wanted to argue things that I could back up rather than stuff I just had a hunch about. Secondly, nonviolence in itself is not a form of power or counterpower. It’s just a thing. By itself, it’s not nonviolent resistance or nonviolent coercion from below or nonviolent counterpower. So that’s why I spent two chapters talking about counterpower before talking about nonviolence. And then I tried to explain why nonviolence is superior to violence, and I speak about that especially in the conclusion.

I also didn’t want to gloss over the fact that violence can be successful. But I wanted to show that violence leads to a different kind of social change than nonviolence, one in which power is a lot more dispersed. For all of those reasons I wanted to show pragmatic and practical reasons for nonviolence, rather than just my own morality that I’d been brought up with about nonviolence, which wouldn’t necessarily convince anyone.

What types of counterpower do you see most in effective campaigns?

Every book I read about theories of power seemed to argue pretty much the same thing. They seemed to argue that there were three kinds of power and they mostly had fairly long names for them. So I decided to simplify that and use the shortest or most obvious words I could find. One form of power is idea power, which is the ability to persuade someone of something through the media or discussions or songs. Another kind is economic power, which is the ability to pay someone to do something they wouldn’t otherwise do. And the third one is physical power or coercion, the ability to force someone to do something. What I’m interested in is power from below, counterpower. I think all of these can be turned on their heads. Idea counterpower, economic counterpower and physical counterpower.

You identify four stages of a successful campaign: consciousness, coordination, confrontation and consolidation. But you also discuss stages that other theorists and organizers have identified. What did you learn from them in developing your own four stages?

Almost everything in the book is a synthesis of stuff that’s already out there, because one of my objectives was to write in as simple a way as possible, to get it out to activists who wouldn’t necessarily find the really specialist stuff. As I see it, I don’t contradict those other theories. The book lays out a series of stages which seems to be there in all past campaigns. The most quoted stage theory of all, which isn’t really a stage theory, is Gandhi’s “First they ignore you. Then they ridicule you. Then they fight you. Then you win.”

On that note, you observe, “The power to ignore movements is possibly the most important and least understood aspect of idea power.” As an example of where this is the case you cite the U.S. climate movement. 

In 2009, at least, it did feel like the global climate movement was getting to a stage where it couldn’t be ignored. It was getting beyond that. It was on the front pages of all of the newspapers. We would have tens of thousands on the streets, the biggest climate demonstrations the world had ever seen, which haven’t been repeated since. We had an ability to move from that first stage of consciousness-raising into that second stage of coordinating a mass movement beyond the NGOs, into the grassroots. And then there were these wonderful climate actions that took place. But the movement as a whole isn’t getting to the third stage, the confrontation stage. And by that I mean a mass withdrawal of consent large enough to nonviolently coerce the powers that be into giving enough concessions to solve the problem. We focused too much attention on Copenhagen. Even people who knew that the Copenhagen negotiations were incapable of coming up with an answer able to deal with the problem still focused their attention on it, myself included. We were still in that asking-nicely stage, rather than the withdrawal of consent.

The other problem we face in the climate movement is that we’ve been quite good at idea counterpower — at convincing lots of people of the problem — although that’s now being fought back against. We’ve been relatively good at physical counterpower; we’ve had some brilliant, although relatively diffuse actions and blockades. But we’ve not even touched economic counterpower. The people that can close down a coal-fired power station are the workers inside it. I don’t know if it’s the same in the United States, but people would offer the same criticism of the Climate Camp movement in the U.K. Our engagement of the workers in the places we were targeting would be last minute and slapdash if it was anything.

There were some examples of building solidarity with workers. There was an occupation at a wind turbine factory when it got closed down. It’s an interesting case, because prior to it being closed down, it wasn’t a strongly unionized workplace. That was one action at one factory that the U.K. climate movement actually managed. If we reengage with that next time, and we get to a point of being able to move from movement building to confrontation, then we’ll be in a better position.

How do you think that can be done? The environment has long been pitted against the economy as a means of keeping the working class uninterested.

We’re actually doing relatively well, because we started again and we started with a different tack. Now the movement is more about transformation and challenging the economic system. The climate stuff has been folded into this bigger narrative. Through Occupy and other things we’ve been building a first stage and we’re moving into a second stage with the house occupations and the broad grassroots movement that’s being built at the moment. Wider systemic struggle has the ability to solve climate problems if it manages to see it through in a way that a climate movement based entirely around climate as the main thing proved unable to do.

A similarity that I sometimes like to draw with the anti-slavery movement in the U.K. — which is obviously only part of the global anti-slavery movement — is that activists didn’t get the first legislation against slavery through the British Parliament until I think it was 1834. They’d been plugging away at it, but before they could do it, they had to win changes to the Parliament itself. They had to win the reform act of 1832. At least for a few years, many people in the anti-slavery movement, not all of them, put their attention toward redistributing power through another route, which was the vote. Only then could they begin chipping away at slavery. That’s what we’re trying to do with the climate movement. We’re trying to redistribute power, and we’re going through a different route at the moment. Now it’s jobs and public services. If we manage to chip away at the power of the 1 percent, who are also the same people screwing with the planet, then we can reengage with climate issues on the frontline as part of this bigger campaign. But we’re doing okay. I’m more optimistic than most.

One of the major challenges facing practitioners of this kind of work is corporate power. Gene Sharp has very humbly said that he leaves that work to the next generation to figure out. Can we adapt the principles of fighting authoritarian regimes to fighting corporations?

A lot can be pulled across from anti-dictatorship struggles to anti-corporate struggles. A great number of the things we think of as dictatorships have the illusion of democracy and claimed to be democratic. The Burmese regime has claimed it’s moving toward multi-party democracy for the last 20 years, and the Soviet Union called itself a democracy, although not a multiparty one. From the study I’ve managed to do so far, I find that all forms of hierarchical organization, from a country to maybe even patriarchy, have these three pillars of economic power, physical power and idea power. If we chip away at them, that can contribute to weakening any form of regime.

And what about movements against dictators that become capitalist so-called democracies and don’t improve things too much?

That certainly does happen. But a revolution isn’t just an event, it’s an ongoing process. The definition of democracy is when people have power, and they can only have power through counterpower, so I suppose the struggle always needs to continue. It’s not in the regime that we find democracy, but in the movement, those beautiful moments of power vacuums when people are able to think for themselves. I was reading Peter Popham’s autobiography of Aung Sang Suu Kyi today, and it was talking about the power vacuum that happened in 1988 and how it coincided with people thinking freely and debating freely for the first time in many years, just as has happened in Egypt. Freedom and democracy come from the spaces we create inside the struggle, and that has to go on forever. There’s not a perfect end that we’re working toward, just possibilities of extending those moments of freedom and people power.

Fair Use Notice: This blog, Citizen Action Monitor, may contain copyrighted material that may not have been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material, published without profit, is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues. It is published in accordance with the provisions of the 2004 Supreme Court of Canada ruling and its six principle criteria for evaluating fair dealing

Taking a Globe columnist to task over his article: What happened to Harper’s opposition?

No 402 Posted by fw, February 4, 2012

Columnist, Gerald Caplan, asks What happened to Harper’s opposition? (Globe and Mail, February 3, 2012). (Click on the linked title to read his original piece).

Caplan’s main ideas unfold more or less like this –

  • Recent polls show only 32% of Canadians support Harper’s government. So he has lost almost a fourth of the support he had around the time of the May election
  • Even without majority Canadian support, Harper governs without constraint and, so far, with impunity
  • Caplan catalogs Harper policies and actions around which a populist counter-movement could re-align:

. . . the undermining of many traditional parliamentary and democratic niceties; the indifference to evidence; the embrace of the monarchy, militarism and harsh justice; the denial of global warming, the unconditional commitment to the tar sands; the attack on trade unions; the contempt for the United Nations (though only after it rejected Mr. Harper’s bid to win a seat on the Security Council); the tragic transformation of foreign aid; the intimidation of independent NGOs. All of this began under a minority government. But we ain’t seen nothing yet. Where does an unstoppable majority stop?

  • The Globe columnist ridicules the fractured and feeble public opposition to Harper:

So where are all the angry Canadians hiding? There are those dangerous radical environmentalists – aka Canadian citizens – waiting patiently to have their three-minute turn at the Northern Gateway pipeline hearings. There are some trade unionists who have protested the openly class warfare ultimatums presented to unionized workers by the Caterpillar company, Rio Tinto and other greedy corporations. And then there are those really tough, angry op-eds and tweets denouncing the government for its various sins. Fighting words, by god! Mr. Harper and his merry band of right-wing radical fundamentalists are laughing all the way to Dickens’ London.

  • Caplan asks whatever happened to the Voices-Voix coalition of more than 200 organizations that united in solidarity a couple of years ago. This coalition included heavy hitters such as the Council of Canadians, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, the Canadian Labour Congress, and numerous human rights and civil liberties groups, environmental groups.
  • He concludes his piece with this non-answer to his own question, “What happened to Harper’s opposition?” –

Canadians need a multitude of creative and effective opportunities to make their voices heard loud and clear. We need an extra-parliamentary opposition that Mr. Harper will ignore at his peril. I don’t claim to know where the leadership will come from. But it needs to happen, and soon.

So much for investigative journalism

There was so much that Gerald Caplan could have explained but didn’t. He simply restated the obvious about the Harper regime, ridiculed “all the angry Canadians hiding”, lamented the apparent lapse of Voices-Voix, and ends with this cop-out – Yes, Canada needs a people’s movement but don’t expect me to suggest where the leadership will come from to make it happen.

If Caplan seriously wants “an extra-parliamentary opposition” here is how he could help bring it about –

Hard-hitting, Caplan’s analysis isn’t. Where’s Canada’s equivalent to a Matt Taibbi, Chris Hedges, or Glenn Greenwald? Where’s our two-fisted, go-getter who, with a little investigative zeal, might have at least found out why, for example, Voices-Voix is in a dormant state. And why do Canadians not have much of a track record when it comes to building nationwide people’s movements?

Where’s Canada’s equivalent to British activist and author Tim Gee, who, in his recent book, Counterpower: Making Change Happen, explains what contemporary Canadian activists can learn from past people’s movements? They might learn, for example, what it takes to mobilize a people’s campaign capable of effectively countering government and corporate power elites. Best practices include a multi-faceted mix of tactics: persuasive counter arguments, tightly coordinated non-violent direct action, a show of economic power (i.e., boycotts), and even legal action.  Not to mention the power of sheer numbers who show up for events. (For more on Gee’s book, start here “Counterpower” by Tim Gee – Pt 10: One-stop link to previous posts in this series, and more).

The best recent exemplar of an effective grassroots campaign is the orchestrated action that helped to stall, if not yet defeat, government and corporate backers of the Keystone XL pipeline. This people’s movement was successful because of its focus on a strategic combination of grassroots mobilization, including the use of non-violent civil disobedience, genuine and straightforward communication with the public, a distinctly coalition approach, and a sharp political strategy that consistently turned up the pressure on President Barack Obama.

Make no mistake. Organizing and launching a successful people’s campaign is not easy. The requisite knowledge and skill base are formidable.

I suspect the real reason that the Voices-Voix coalition failed to live up to expectations as an effective leader to a nationwide counterpower movement is the dearth of related experience, knowledge and skills to be able to fulfill the role expected of it.

Absent the emergence (or re-emergence) of a coalition-led, nationwide people’s counterpower movement, Harper’s oligarchy will continue to rule supreme. In this event, perhaps the best Canadians can hope for is that Harper will self-destruct — as did that other arrogant, neo-liberal Conservative PM, Margaret Thatcher.

Fair Use Notice: This blog, Citizen Action Monitor, may contain copyrighted material that may not have been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material, published without profit, is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues. It is published in accordance with the provisions of the 2004 Supreme Court of Canada ruling and its six principle criteria for evaluating fair dealing.

“Counterpower” by Tim Gee – Pt 10: One-stop link to previous posts in this series, and more

No 388 Posted by fw, January 19, 2012

In this series of posts, the goal has been to introduce readers to some of the key ideas in Tim Gee’s book, Counterpower: Making Change Happen. Selected excerpts in these posts have provided just a small sample of the wellspring of invaluable knowledge, information and practical tips for anyone involved in social action campaigning.

This post sets out to –

1)      List the 9 chapters in the book as a further teaser, if any be needed, to tempt activists to consider purchasing Gee’s invaluable handbook. In particular, it would be an important addition to the libraries of Occupy Movements, wherever they set up camp;

2)      List the seven pertinent questions Gee poses in his Conclusion;

3)      Provide a one-stop link to the previous ten posts in this series; and finally

4)      Mention that although this is the last post in this series, it is certainly not the last time I will draw on Gee’s book as a resource for Counterpower ideas.

Table of Contents of Tim Gee’s Counterpower: Making Change Happen

Introduction

    1. How Counterpower helps movements win
    2. How India won its Independence
    3. How governments respond to Counterpower
    4. How the Vietnam War was stopped
    5. How apartheid was ended in South Africa
    6. How the vote was won in Britain
    7. How movements resist corporate power
    8. How the Egyptians overthrew their president
    9. Conclusion: making change happen

List of the 7 questions Gee poses in his Concluding chapter

For a week after the March 26, 2011 half-million people march in London to protest proposed government spending cuts, the blogosphere, in Gee’s words, “exploded with debate.” Gee captured the essence of the debate in these 7 key questions about social movement campaigning –

  1. Are ‘insider’ (advocates for reform) or ‘outsider’ (advocates for revolution) methods more effective?
  2. Do demonstrations work?
  3. How do we decide which tactics to use?
  4. Must our actions be acceptable to the mainstream media?
  5. When is it right to escalate?
  6. Do the ends justify the means?
  7. Does campaigning make a difference?

List of Counterpower posts on my blog, in chronological order

That’s it for now. Watch for future posts deriving from Gee’s excellent handbook for activists: Counterpower: Making Change Happen.

Fair Use Notice: This blog, Citizen Action Monitor, may contain copyrighted material that may not have been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material, published without profit, is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues. It is published in accordance with the provisions of the 2004 Supreme Court of Canada ruling and its six principle criteria for evaluating fair dealing.