Squadism

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Squadism (or sometimes "Squaddism") was the practice of physical, anti-fascist direct action. The term, often used pejoratively by liberal anti-fascists eschewing violence, originated in the Anti-Nazi League, an anti-fascist campaigning organisation dominated by the heterodox Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party (SWP). The SWP formed "squads", fighting units, in 1977, initially to defend and steward meetings against violent attacks from the fascist National Front. However, other anti-fascist squads emerged separately from the SWP, such as the Sari Squad.

The name associated eventually with all of the fighting groups of that era, i.e., "Squads" originated with the already established Manchester-based anti fascist fighting group, drawn from many groups on the left and non-aligned anti fascists which first adopted the name "The Squad" for its, previously very ad hoc, fighting unit in 1977.[1] The adoption of the name, "Squad", had only an accidental connection with the very similar "Peoples Squads" in Italy in the early 1920s.

Squads were active in the North West of England and then Glasgow, the Midlands, Hatfield, and London in this period.[2][1][3] The core of the fighting units were SWP members, but also included many members of other left groups and non-aligned anti fascists. The squads were formed to directly combat the rising tide of fascist "street" violence being experienced by the Left, and black communities, during this period, from the National Front in particular. The regionally-based direct action squads operated within, but also considerably beyond, the ANL.[4] Squad members also used violence and intimidation to break up meetings, marches and other gatherings of far right groups such as the National Front and the British Movement[1] The idea behind the tactic was to ensure the safety of ANL and general left meetings through efficient stewarding, and also to generally intimidate groups seen as fascist, without generating media publicity for the far right.

Squadism became increasingly frowned upon by the ANL/SWP leadership when the National Front's expansion fell away in the late 1970s. By 1979/80, the ANL leadership had decided that the National Front was a broken force, and so militant campaigning anti-fascism was no longer a priority.[5] Militant anti-fascists both within and without the SWP strongly disagreed with what they saw as a mistaken and opportunistic abandonment of militant activity. The SWP leadership had also for some time been concerned that in areas of London and Manchester the semi-clandestine combat groups had become a law unto themselves.[6] A campaign led by the Central Committee within the SWP against "squadists" was organised in late 1981, on the back of an "operation" by the Manchester Squad which resulted in five of its members (and four non-Squad SWP students) receiving prison sentences.[7] Many of the individual SWP members who had defended the Left from fascist attack across the UK for many years were expelled during late 1981 to early 1982.[3]

When the ANL was disbanded in the late 1970s, many ex-squad members went on to form Anti-Fascist Action and Red Action (AFA), whose "Stewarding Group" was active (along the same lines as the earlier "Squads") from the mid-1980s until the early 1990s.[8][3][9][10] As a term of abuse, "squadism" is taken to mean vanguardist, secretive, adventurist, direct action against fascist organisations; isolated from mass anti fascist activities. This negative, pejorative labelling of any combat group based physical force action against fascism has since the 1980s been the political orthodoxy on most of the British Left.[11] Anarchist groups and other anti fascists in particular however have continued the direct physical action, "squadist" approach to fascist street mobilisations to the present day, via a variety of nationally networked groupings over the years, such as "No Platform" and "Antifa"[12]

Similar currents have existed elsewhere, with analogous terminology. In Italy, for example, the Arditi del Popolo (people's squads) pursued a similar policy in the 1920s and were suppressed by the Communist Party of Italy.[13][14]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Steve Tilzey and Dave Hann. No retreat Milo Books. 2003
  2. ^ Dave Hann Physical Resistance Zero Books, 2012, p.265-317
  3. ^ a b c Sean Birchall Beating the Fascists, Freedom Press, 2010
  4. ^ A short history of the Anti-Nazi League Archived 2009-06-03 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Dave Renton When We Touched the Sky
  6. ^ Dave Hann Physical Resistance Zero Books, 2012, p.277
  7. ^ Steve Tilzey and Dave Hann. No Retreat. Milo Books. 2003. p.75-82.
  8. ^ Rebecca Binns "It's Up to You: Class, Status, and Punk Politics in Rock against Racism" The Bloomsbury handbook of popular music and social class New York : Bloomsbury Academic, 2020 ISBN 9781501345364
  9. ^ Hayes, Mark (2014-12-01). "Red Action – left-wing political pariah". Against the grain. Manchester University Press. doi:10.7765/9781847799234.00020. ISBN 978-1-84779-923-4.
  10. ^ Anthony Ince (2009-06-04). "Contesting the 'authentic' community: Far-right spatial strategy and everyday responses in an era of crisis". Ephemera: Theory & Politics in Organization 11 (1), pp. 6-26. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
  11. ^ Mark Hayes and Paul Aylward "Anti-Fascist Action: Radical resistance or rent-a-mob?" soundings issue 14 Spring 2000
  12. ^ Dave Hann Physical Resistance Zero Books.2013
  13. ^ Working Class Defence Organization, Anti-Fascist Resistance and the Arditi Del Popolo in Turin, 1919-22 - Sonnessa 33 (2): 183 - European History Quarterly
  14. ^ "The Arditi del Popolo in Italy the first anti-fascist organization (1921-22)". Archived from the original on 2009-09-06. Retrieved 2006-07-24.

Further reading[edit]