Forum Post: what is a GA?
Posted 13 years ago on Oct. 28, 2011, 12:44 p.m. EST by anaoneworld
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Hi. I thought you might be interested in this piece by the CNT/AIT in France, which summarizes their experience with GAs in France during the struggles in 2010. I read the OWS guide to GAs and I feel it didn’t really say that the GA is sovereign, that the Working Groups shouldn’t be autonomous from the GA, but directly accountable to it. There have been several examples where things have happened without agreement from the GA (OWS Journal, list of demands from the Demands Working Group, etc). Maybe the experience from France and the 15M movement in Spain shows that this is a common danger that has to be consciously fought against?
========== What is a general assembly? (Text of the CNT AIT, Gers)
Definition
We call a general assembly the regular meeting, democratic and sovereign, of workers, regrouped as and when, without criteria, which can be varied (those belonging to a union, a confederation of unions, a social movement). At no point should these workers be prevented from being delegates: the principle of the GA is the vote by head count.
Typology
There are several types of GA:
The GA of a single union The combined GA of several unions The GA of workers on strike
Moreover, it can be limited to a single profession or be ‘inter-professional’. [Regrouping those from many professions – trans.]
Functioning of the GA
The GA is democratic, and therefore guarantees each a turn to speak, shared equally in terms of duration and discussion topics. This is guaranteed by a mandate given to the moderator. Speeches must also be consistent with an agenda, agreed at the beginning of the meeting, which does not include various decision points. The GA is sovereign, and decisions are made by a show of hands, without any overturning of decisions, according to the agenda. The GA meets regularly and keeps a record of its debates and decisions. The record is kept by a secretary appointed early in the meeting, who ensures the debates and decisions of the GA are made public. The GA gives the date and place of the next GA.
Threats to the GA
Monopolisation of debate: The GA becomes un-democratic. The classic case is the shop-steward who takes the role of moderator, participates in discussions or responds systematically giving their opinions. A variation on this is a participant in the room who monopolises the floor or speaks too often. The handling of the debate: The agenda is not respected. When the debate is moving precisely towards direct action, or a motion to renew the strike, the agenda is changed in order to blur the clarity of discussion, and to confuse the whole point of a GA, which is to answer the question “What and how?” Lack of democracy within the GA: the vote is not respected. Violating the agenda, votes are taken several times on decisions already made. Often, manipulation occurs at the end of the meeting, to destroy its coherence and audacity. Neutralisation of the GA: there is no alternative to a GA, however rich. Often, a GA of striking workers is treated as a safety-valve for their anger, neutralising their revolt, transforming their militancy into a sterile talking-shop. Be on guard! In a GA, we have all the tools at hand to see if they are being monopolised, manipulated, and neutralised. In all cases, failure to denounce the above threats will undermine our activity, our words, and our decisions: in short, our very reason to go on strike!
“The emancipation of the workers will be the task of the workers themselves”
SIA 32 (Member of the CNT-AIT).
Interesting. Thank you. Too bad interesting posts like this get lost in the shuffle.