The 'May events' of France 1968 constituted the greatest general strike in history. It erupted like an exploding volcano. The shock waves reached every corner of the world. The aftereffects will never truly subside. At its height, ten million workers were on strike. They occupied their workplaces, hoisted the red flag and set up committees. They sang the Internationale and hotly debated how to take control of their lives. Every layer in society was swept along by the tidal wave which flowed towards a new form of society - a break with the past and a flowering of human talent. Few saw the approach of this great movement; millions felt its effects, and ruling classes everywhere trembled at what the consequences would be.
The titanic clash of class forces apparently came like a bolt from the blue. World capitalism was basking in the sunshine of an unprecedented post-war boom, which many commentators believed was unending. Even some claiming to be 'Marxists' decided that capitalism had found a way of 'amortizing' (solving) its crises!
France's special 'chromium-plated' boom had started late with the coming to power of General Charles de Gaulle in 1959. By 1969 it was providing a healthy 5 per cent rate of growth and gaining ground for French goods on the world market. 'All was for the best in the best of all possible worlds', as Voltaire's character Pangaloss liked to believe!
But none of the basic contradictions and conflicts of capitalist society had been eliminated. On the contrary, they had been aggravated and exacerbated, and would inevitably lead to new crises and new explosions in the class struggle. Just as, nearly twenty years later, it was only the Marxists around Militant who predicted the world stock market crash of 1987 and the convulsions which followed, it was only they who understood the processes taking place in 1968. They were adamant that explosive changes were ahead, and that the socialist revolution would re-emerge in Europe with a vengeance.
The 'Communist' Party in France continued to peddle the line, inherited from the pre-war leader Maurice Thorez, that revolution was impossible in France as long as living standards in Russia remained lower than those of Western Europe! The false perspectives of other so-called Marxists were summed up in an article by the French 'theoretician' André Gorz, in the January 1968 Socialist Register: 'In the foreseeable future, there will be no crisis of European capitalism so dramatic as to drive the mass of workers to revolutionary general strikes.'
The PCI (International Communist Party) whose youth organization, the JCR, was heavily involved in the student struggles in France, echoed these ideas. Claiming to stand on the ideas of Trotsky, in reality they had completely abandoned them. At a meeting in London only weeks before the outbreak of the general strike, they claimed that such a development would not be possible within the next twenty years! Workers in the metropolitan cities were 'defeated' and 'on the retreat', they declared.
They had turned their backs on the working class of Europe and looked elsewhere for their 'revolution'. They concentrated on students everywhere and uncritically sang the praises of the Stalinist-leaning leaders of the colonial revolutions of Cuba, Algeria and Vietnam (which they said were analogous to the Russian revolution of 1917).
The full impact - the scale, the scope, the sweep - of the revolutionary movement which took place in France, still astonished even those who were expecting a movement of the working class in the advanced capitalist countries. It gave a glimpse of the revolutionary past of France and a taste of what is to come - not only in France, but throughout Europe and indeed the world.
It was not just Militant in May and June 1968 that recognized a new French revolution in the making. The French general Beaufre declared: 'The times we live in are undoubtedly those of the birth of a revolution of which it is impossible to predict the course of events.'
As always, the serious strategists of capital came to the same conclusions as the Marxists, although from the opposite standpoint. The Financial Times on 22 May, 1968, reflected the terror of the world's bourgeoisie at the prospects:
When Louis Philippe was driven from his throne in 1848, after a few brisk days of rioting in Paris and took refuge in London, there were revolutions all over Europe. Italy, West Germany, Belgium and Spain are in trouble enough without the 'Mother of Revolutions' once again setting a bad example.
The London Evening Standard declared on 29 May: 'The situation today can be summed up in a few words: it is a revolutionary situation of an almost text-book kind.' The Economist (1 June) was drawing the same conclusion, although only a week earlier it had spoken of France not being a revolutionary country!
Once the revolutionary storm had subsided and the commentators had recovered their balance, their tune changed. The 'May events' were declared 'exceptional', an 'aberration', an 'episode' - unforgettable but nevertheless an 'episode. French society had never really been threatened, they insisted. But such a mighty movement could not be buried with declarations. Twenty years later the questions remain: Could it happen again? Could it happen in any other country? Could it happen in every other country?
That a general strike of such proportions could take place in an industrialized capitalist society is a constant nightmare not only for the French ruling class but for many others besides. As world recession approaches, the 'scare of '68' looms larger than ever.
By 1968 there had been a prolonged post-war boom. It had provided a breathing space for workers. The wounds of past defeats and disappointments were healed over. Their organizations grew in numbers and cohesion. The employers, making vast profits, seemed more favorably disposed to accede to workers' demands. Class relations were apparently softened. In this climate, the ideas of reformism could gain ground. The illusion that capitalism could provide for workers' needs little-by-little led the leaders of the workers' organizations to abandon the idea that socialism was necessary.
The analysis of the so-called Trotskyist theoreticians was the other side of the same coin. They, along with numerous academics, 'discovered' another phenomenon that they claimed would prevent workers from moving towards socialism - the existence of the 'strong state'. In France this was personified in the figure of Charles de Gaulle. He had come to power in 1958, posing as the 'savior of the nation' in a situation of crisis in the economy, with a 'mission' to defeat the liberation war for Algerian independence.