General Strike - Notable General Strikes

Notable General Strikes

The largest general strike that ever stopped the economy of an advanced industrial country – and the first general wildcat strike in history – was May 1968 in France. The prolonged strike involved eleven million workers for two weeks in a row, and its impact was such that it almost caused the collapse of the de Gaulle government. Other notable general strikes include:

  • 494 BC: The Aventine Secession, Ancient Rome, creating the Tribune of the Plebs
  • 449 BC: A secessio plebis leading to the adoption of the Twelve Tables
  • 287 BC: A secessio plebis leading to the adoption of the Lex Hortensia

(Note: "plebeian secession" was a tactic used by the Roman plebs of vacating a city entirely and leaving its ruling elite to fend for itself, thus an even more radical action than a "general strike", yet unlike the latter term, it does not pertain to withholding labor within a wage-system. General strikes in the current sense of the term only begin to take place in a context where in which labor is treated as a commodity, and wage workers collectively organize to halt production.)

  • 1842: 1842 General Strike, Great Britain
  • 1877: St. Louis general strike, St. Louis, Missouri, an outgrowth of the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 in the United States
  • 1886: Walloon jacquerie of 1886 Wallonia
  • 1892: New Orleans General Strike, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
  • 1893: Belgian general strike of 1893, Belgium, Wallonia
  • 1902: Geneva General Strike of 1902, Switzerland
  • 1905: The Great October Strike, Russia; see 1905 Russian Revolution
  • 1907: Geneva General Strike of 1907, Switzerland
  • 1907: New Orleans Levee General Strike, United States
  • 1909: A general strike coupled with a major uprising in Barcelona
  • 1909: Swedish General Strike
  • 1909: Uprising of the 20,000, New York, NY, U.S.
  • 1912: Brisbane General Strike, Australia
  • 1912: Zurich General Strike of 1912, Switzerland
  • 1917: Australian General Strike
  • 1917: Brazilian General Strike
  • 1917: Spanish General Strike
  • 1918: Swiss General Strike
  • 1919: Barcelona General Strike, Spain
  • 1919: Winnipeg General Strike, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
  • 1919: Seattle General Strike, Seattle, Washington, U.S.
  • 1919: General Strike in Basel and Zurich 1919, Switzerland
  • 1920: German Kapp Putsch Strike
  • 1922: Italian General Strike
  • 1920: German passive resistance strikes at the Ruhr
  • 1926: UK General Strike of 1926
  • 1933: French general strike of 1933
  • 1932: Geneva General Strike of 1932, Switzerland
  • 1934: West Coast Longshoremen's Strike, US
  • 1934: Minneapolis Teamsters Strike, US
  • 1934: Toledo Auto-Lite Strike, US
  • 1936: Palestinian general strike
  • 1936: French general strike of 1936
  • 1936: Syrian General Strike
  • 1941: February Strike, Netherlands
  • 1942: Luxembourgian General Strike
  • 1946: Indian General Strike
  • 1946: Oakland, California General Strike
  • 1950: Austrian General Strikes
  • 1950: General strike against Leopold III of Belgium
  • 1953: Hartal 1953, Ceylon
  • 1954: General strike of 1954, Honduras
  • 1956: Finnish General Strike
  • 1958: Bahamas General Strike
  • 1960: 1960-1961 Winter General Strike in Wallonia
  • 1968: French General Strike
  • 1973: Uruguayan General Strike
  • 1974: Ulster Workers Council Strike, Northern Ireland.
  • 1984: Uruguayan General Strike
  • 1988: Spanish General Strike
  • 1989: Two-hour general strike of all citizens of Czechoslovakia during the Velvet Revolution
  • 1992: Nepalese General Strike
  • 1995: French Public Sector Strikes
  • 1995: Days of Action, Canada
  • 2000: Cochabamba General Strike, Bolivia
  • 2002: Italian General Strike
  • 2002–2003: Venezuelan General Strike
  • 2005: Bolivian Gas Conflict
  • 2006: April 2006 Nepalese General Strike
  • 2007: Guinea General Strike
  • 2009: French Caribbean General Strikes
  • 2010: Spanish General Strike
  • 2011: Oakland, California general strike

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