Anarchist Federation (Britain)
Template:Short description Template:Infobox political party Template:Anarchism UK
The Anarchist Federation (AF, AFed) is a federation of anarcho-communists in Great Britain. It is not a political party, but a direct action, agitational and propaganda organisation.
History
The British anarchist movement had been revitalized during the time of the miners' strike of 1984–1985, which had drawn many new people to anarchism and caused a number of anarchist organizations to spring up in the wake of Class War.Template:Sfn In 1984, a number of former members of the Libertarian Communist Group established the Libertarian Communist Discussion Group (LCDG), drawing inspiration from texts such as the Platform by Nestor Makhno and the Manifesto of Libertarian Communism by Georges Fontenis. The LCDG then began to collaborate with the editor of Virus magazine and started publishing their own texts about anarcho-communism, changing their name again to the Anarchist Communist Discussion Group (ACDG). After the split of Syndicalist Fight (SyF) from the Direct Action Movement (DAM) in 1986, the ACDG merged together with SyF and established the Anarchist Communist Federation (ACF).Template:Sfn
Throughout the late-1980s, the ACF drew together many people that were new to anarchism, which effectively made it into an entirely new organization, almost completely disconnected from its roots.Template:Sfn At the beginning of the 1990s, they participated in the poll tax riots, calling for "the abolition of all hierarchy" and "the creation of a worldwide classless society".Template:Sfn According to a 1991 report by the Economic League an anti-socialist blacklisting group, the ACF had quickly become "second only to Class War" in terms of its "militancy and commitment to violence".Template:Sfn Although a small organization, much of the ACF's influence came from its "cordial relationships" with other libertarian socialist groups, cooperating particularly closely with the autonomous Marxists of Subversion.Template:Sfn In 1999, the ACF changed its name one final time, becoming the Anarchist Federation (AF).Template:Sfn According to an interview with founding members of the AF, this was in order to shorten the name and to clarify that it was not an alliance of anarchists with other forms of communists.<ref name="nefac" />
By the turn of the 21st century, the AF were involved in the anti-globalization movement and participated in protests against rising third world debt. The Special Branch of the Metropolitan Police began investigating the AF, following 2000's May Day demonstration at Parliament Square, during which some activists had dug up the grass to plant vegetables.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2014, following a series of acts of vandalism and arson by green anarchists, a large police investigation was launched into Bristol's anarchist community, to which the Bristol Anarchist Federation responded with a statement denouncing the police's "concerted effort to intimidate and divide" local anarchists.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2018, a "class struggle" anarchist faction within the AF split to form the Anarchist Communist Group (ACG) due to alleged support of "identity politics" within the AF.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In February 2020, eco-socialist activists connected to the Anarchist Federation took part in the occupation of Paddington Green Police Station,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> but they were swiftly evicted.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Publications
The Anarchist Federation and its predecessors were responsible for publishing Virus magazine between 1984 and 1989, which ran for 13 issues before being replaced with a new magazine, Organise!, which has been published ever since.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="nefac">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Ideology
Template:Platformism sidebar The Anarchist Federation propagates a theory of anarchist communism, distancing itself from individualist anarchism, anarcho-pacifism and anarcho-syndicalism.Template:Sfn It had come to outright reject trade unionism during the suppression of the miners' strike of 1984–1985, which had caused it to question the role of the trade unions in a class conflict.Template:Sfn It extends its skepticism of trade unions to any permanent workplace organizations, arguing they can become integrated into the functioning of capitalism.Template:Sfn
The AF advocates for prefigurative politics, out of a belief in a "strong correlation between means and ends", which rejects all politicians and political parties.Template:Sfn It considers participation in representative democracy to be "ceding political power to someone or some party", and thus favors direct action over electoralism.Template:Sfn It further claims that Members of Parliament inevitably become corrupted by power and distant from their own communities.Template:Sfn
References
Bibliography
Template:UK far left Template:Anarchism Template:Platformism Template:Authority control
- 1986 establishments in the United Kingdom
- Anarchism in Scotland
- Anarchism in the United Kingdom
- Anarchist Federations
- Anarchist organisations in the United Kingdom
- Anarcho-communism
- Anti-nationalism in Europe
- Far-left politics in Scotland
- Far-left politics in the United Kingdom
- International of Anarchist Federations
- Political organizations established in 1986
- Platformist organizations