Harry Pollitt
Harry Pollitt (22 November 1890 – 27 June 1960) was a British communist activist and politician who led the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) as General Secretary from 1929 to 1939 and again from 1941 to 1956, then as Chairman until his death.[1][2][3] Born in Droylsden, Lancashire, to a blacksmith's striker, Pollitt began as an engineering worker and trade unionist in Manchester before co-founding the CPGB in 1920 amid postwar labor unrest.[1][3] Under his tenure, the party prioritized alignment with Soviet directives from the Comintern, including advocacy for class-against-class tactics in the early 1930s, brief anti-war opposition during the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact that led to his temporary ousting, and postwar efforts to infiltrate trade unions and support de-Stalinization after 1956.[2][4] Pollitt organized strikes and anti-fascist mobilizations, such as the 1926 General Strike and aid for Spanish Republicans, but the CPGB remained electorally marginal with membership peaking below 60,000, reflecting limited appeal amid revelations of Soviet atrocities that many British sources, often shaped by academic sympathies for leftist causes, downplayed in contemporaneous accounts.[2][5] His career exemplified the tension between domestic proletarian organizing and subordination to Moscow's shifting geopolitical imperatives, prioritizing ideological purity over pragmatic British socialism.[6]Early Life and Radicalization
Family Background and Childhood
Harry Pollitt was born on 22 November 1890 in Droylsden, Lancashire, a textile-manufacturing area near Manchester, into a working-class family with deep roots in 19th-century radical politics.[2] His lineage traced back to Lancashire laborers, including a great-grandfather active in the Chartist movement, which sought democratic reforms through mass agitation in the 1830s and 1840s.[7] The second of six children, Pollitt's parents were Samuel Pollitt, a blacksmith, and Mary Pollitt, who had entered a cotton mill as a child laborer at age 12 and later pursued self-education in economics and industrial history while attending Independent Labour Party meetings.[2] Extreme poverty defined the household; three siblings perished in infancy owing to malnutrition, poor sanitation, and limited medical access common in Victorian industrial slums.[2] Mary's commitment to socialist principles provided Pollitt's primary early exposure to left-wing thought, emphasizing dignity amid exploitation.[2] In this milieu, Pollitt attended a local elementary school, where teacher Jessie Rathbone observed his intellectual acuity and natural leadership.[2] A pivotal event occurred in 1903 when his sister Winifred died young, intensifying his nascent perception of systemic class inequities in an era of unchecked industrial capitalism.[2] These formative experiences, drawn from Pollitt's own recollections and biographical accounts, underscored the causal links between economic deprivation and political radicalization in his upbringing.[2]Entry into Engineering and Labor Unions
Pollitt left school at approximately age 12 in 1902 and initially took up half-time employment in a local cotton mill in Droylsden, reflecting the common path for working-class children in Lancashire's textile industry at the time.[8] After three years in the mill, he commenced an apprenticeship as a boilermaker at the Gorton locomotive works of the Great Central Railway in Manchester in 1905, entering the skilled engineering trade of fabricating and assembling heavy steel boilers for steam locomotives.[1][8] Boilermaking required precision metalworking, riveting, and structural engineering knowledge, positioning Pollitt within the burgeoning railway engineering sector amid Britain's industrial expansion.[9] Upon completing his apprenticeship—typically a five- to seven-year term—he attained first-class membership in the Boilermakers' Society, a craft union representing skilled workers in heavy engineering and shipbuilding trades.[1][3] As a journeyman boilermaker, Pollitt engaged in union activities, advocating for better wages, hours, and conditions in an era of frequent industrial disputes over piece rates and machinery introduction.[2] His involvement intensified during the pre-World War I period, when engineering unions faced employer resistance to collective bargaining, culminating in his election to the executive committee of the Boilermakers' Society in 1912 at age 21.[2] This role involved negotiating agreements and mobilizing members, establishing Pollitt as an emerging figure in Manchester's labor movement within the engineering sector.[8]Conversion to Marxism and Initial Activism
Pollitt's exposure to Marxist ideas began through his mother, Mary Pollitt, who had embraced the writings of Karl Marx; on his twenty-first birthday in 1911, she gifted him the first volume of Capital, which profoundly shaped his ideological development.[2] Influenced by this reading and his family's socialist leanings, Pollitt underwent a conversion to Marxism around this period, viewing capitalism's inherent contradictions as necessitating revolutionary change rather than reformist palliatives.[1] In 1909, at age 19, Pollitt joined the Independent Labour Party (ILP) alongside his mother in the Openshaw branch near Manchester, marking his entry into organized socialist activity.[10] By 1911, he had been elected secretary of the local ILP branch, where he engaged in public speaking and agitation against industrial exploitation, drawing on Marxist critiques of wage labor.[1] Disillusioned with the ILP's gradualist tendencies and its alignment with reformist demands that he believed deferred systemic overthrow, Pollitt rejected affiliation with the Labour Party, prioritizing revolutionary socialism.[2] His initial Marxist activism intensified in 1912, when he participated in the formation of the British Socialist Party (BSP) from his local organization, advocating explicitly for proletarian revolution over parliamentary incrementalism.[3] Through BSP involvement, Pollitt organized workers' educationals and anti-war discussions in Manchester's engineering districts, linking class struggle to international socialist currents amid rising pre-World War I tensions.[9] These efforts laid the groundwork for his later role in the 1920 founding of the Communist Party of Great Britain, where he emerged as a proponent of Bolshevik-style discipline.[3]Rise within the Communist Party of Great Britain
Participation in Party Founding and Early Campaigns
![Soviet stamp honoring Harry Pollitt and the Jolly George freighter][float-right] In 1919, Harry Pollitt served as the national organizer of the Hands Off Russia campaign, which sought to oppose British government intervention in the Russian Civil War by mobilizing workers against the shipment of arms to anti-Bolshevik forces.[1] Under his coordination, the campaign achieved a notable success on 21 May 1920 when London dockers, led by Pollitt, refused to load munitions onto the SS Jolly George bound for Poland, preventing the delivery and highlighting working-class solidarity with the Soviet regime.[11] This action, involving figures like shop steward H. C. Stuart and supported by broader labor agitation in the East End, underscored Pollitt's emerging role as a militant organizer bridging trade union action and revolutionary politics.[12] Pollitt's activities in the Hands Off Russia effort contributed to the radical convergence of socialist groups, culminating in his participation in the formation of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) in 1920.[13] Representing the Boilermakers' Union, he joined the provisional committee tasked with unifying factions from the British Socialist Party, Socialist Labour Party dissidents, and other proletarian organizations into a single communist entity.[14] The CPGB's establishment through conferences in Leeds (January 1920) and London (June 1920), followed by formal unity in August 1920, marked Pollitt's transition from trade union militancy to structured party work, though initial membership remained small, numbering around 3,000 by late 1920.[15] Following the party's founding, Pollitt engaged in early CPGB campaigns focused on industrial agitation and international solidarity, including his first visit to the Soviet Union in 1921 as a delegate to the Third Congress of the Communist International, where he met Vladimir Lenin.[13] He authored pamphlets critiquing union bureaucracy, such as The Autocracy of the Boilermakers (1920) and contributions to debates on the 1922 engineering lockout, advocating for rank-and-file control and opposition to "imperialist" policies.[4] In 1922, as a Boilermakers' Union delegate to the Labour Party conference, Pollitt unsuccessfully pushed for discussion of CPGB affiliation, highlighting the party's initial strategy of infiltrating and influencing the broader labor movement amid resistance from Labour's leadership.[1] These efforts positioned Pollitt as a key figure in the CPGB's "united front from below" tactics during the early 1920s, emphasizing workplace struggles over electoral adventurism.[16]Trade Union Organizing and Strike Leadership
Pollitt joined the Amalgamated Society of Boilermakers, Shipwrights, Blacksmiths and Structural Workers in January 1912 and later became a prominent shop steward in the engineering sector, advocating for militant responses to employer demands during disputes.[9] In the 1922 engineering lockout, which affected over 100,000 workers amid employer pushes for wage cuts and restrictions on union practices following the formation of the Amalgamated Engineering Union in 1920, Pollitt criticized the employers' tactics and urged workers to resist through unified action, as detailed in his contemporary writings.[17] From the early 1920s, Pollitt served as national secretary of the British Bureau for the Red International of Labor Unions (Profintern), coordinating communist influence within British trade unions to promote revolutionary trade unionism aligned with Soviet directives.[18] In 1924, he was appointed general secretary of the National Minority Movement (NMM), a Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB)-initiated grouping aimed at organizing left-wing militants inside existing trade unions rather than forming dual unions, with the goal of converting minority revolutionary elements into majorities to challenge moderate leadership.[19] Under Pollitt's leadership, the NMM held conferences, such as the 1925 Unity Conference chaired by A. J. Cook, to advocate for united fronts and rank-and-file control, growing influence in sectors like mining in South Wales and Fife by securing activist positions.[20][21] Pollitt's organizing efforts intersected with major strikes, including preparations for the 1926 General Strike, for which he was arrested on August 4, 1925, alongside 11 other CPGB leaders under charges of sedition for inciting mutiny and anticipating industrial action against the government; he received a 12-month prison sentence, serving time during the strike itself from May 3 to May 12, 1926.[2] Despite his imprisonment, the NMM, shaped by his prior direction, agitated for continued militancy through workers' committees and opposed the Trades Union Congress (TUC) leadership's decision to end the strike, highlighting tensions between revolutionary and reformist union strategies.[21] Upon release in 1926, Pollitt resumed NMM work, defending its growth against critics like TUC figure Walter Citrine in 1927 and emphasizing shop-floor leadership to sustain strike momentum where TUC officials wavered.[22] He remained in the role until 1929, during which the NMM claimed thousands of adherents but faced resistance from union bureaucracies wary of its subordination to CPGB and Comintern policies.[23]Internal Party Maneuvering and Promotion
Pollitt's ascent within the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) began with his participation in the party's founding convention on July 31, 1920, at the Cannon Street Hotel in London, where he was elected as one of the first full-time organizers alongside Arthur McManus and Tom Bell.[2] His practical experience in engineering and trade unionism positioned him as a key figure in bridging the party with industrial workers, enhancing his influence amid early debates over affiliation with the Labour Party and adherence to Comintern directives.[2] By 1922, Pollitt aligned with Albert Inkpin and Rajani Palme Dutt to implement the Comintern's organizational theses, which emphasized centralized control and Bolshevik-style discipline; this effort secured their election to the party executive committee, outflanking more autonomous factions resistant to Moscow's oversight.[2] In 1924, his appointment as general secretary of the National Minority Movement—a CPGB-led initiative to radicalize trade unions—further solidified his credentials as a pragmatic organizer, as he collaborated with figures like Tom Mann to coordinate strikes and recruitment drives.[2] The pivotal internal maneuvering occurred in 1929 amid a factional crisis triggered by the Comintern's "class against class" policy, which rejected alliances with reformist socialists. Pollitt, leading a minority faction with Palme Dutt, opposed the incumbent leadership's perceived opportunism in accommodating Labour Party elements, rallying grassroots support and securing endorsement from the Executive Committee of the Communist International (ECCI), which condemned the majority and demanded a purge.[6] This Comintern-backed revolt resulted in the removal of three "opportunist" members from the Political Bureau and the replacement of general secretary Albert Inkpin with Pollitt in August 1929; a special party congress in November confirmed his election, alongside structural reforms to enforce stricter ideological conformity.[6] The party's membership had dwindled to around 2,500 by this point, underscoring the stakes of the leadership shift.[6]Leadership as General Secretary: Interwar Period
Ascension in 1929 and Policy Implementation
In 1929, amid the onset of the global economic crisis triggered by the Wall Street Crash, the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) elected Harry Pollitt as its General Secretary at its national congress, replacing Albert Inkpin in a shift toward more centralized and dynamic leadership aligned with Comintern directives.[13][2] Pollitt, previously a prominent trade union organizer and advocate for revolutionary tactics within the National Minority Movement, received endorsement from Soviet authorities, reflecting the Comintern's preference for his pragmatic yet staunchly orthodox approach over Inkpin's tenure.[6] This ascension marked a pivotal consolidation of authority in Pollitt's hands, as the party sought to intensify Bolshevik-style organization to combat perceived reformist deviations.[1] Under Pollitt's immediate leadership, the CPGB underwent structural reorganization, including the establishment of a Political Committee to streamline decision-making and the promotion of younger cadres such as William Rust and D. F. Springhall to key roles, aiming to invigorate party apparatus amid declining membership and electoral isolation.[24] A cornerstone policy implementation was the launch of the Daily Worker on January 1, 1930, with Rust as editor, to propagate Comintern-aligned propaganda and counter bourgeois media narratives during the deepening Depression.[24] Pollitt also directed intensified efforts through the National Minority Movement to build rank-and-file revolutionary cells within trade unions, eschewing splits in favor of converting majorities to communist positions without accommodation to moderate leaders.[2] Pollitt rigorously enforced the Comintern's Third Period strategy (1928–1934), which posited an era of capitalist collapse and revolutionary upsurge, mandating a "class against class" line that branded social democrats as "social fascists" and the principal obstacle to proletarian advance, thereby precluding united fronts with the Labour Party.[25] This entailed sharp denunciations of Labour's reformism, independent CPGB candidacies in the 1929 general election—including Pollitt's own unsuccessful run in Seaham Harbour—and mobilization of the unemployed via bodies like the National Unemployed Workers' Movement for direct actions against benefit cuts.[26][24] While fostering militant strikes and anti-fascist agitation, such as early opposition to Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists, the ultra-left orientation contributed to the party's marginalization, with Comintern oversight ensuring fidelity despite domestic setbacks.[24][25]Adherence to Comintern Directives and Popular Front
Pollitt, as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) from 1929, maintained strict adherence to directives from the Communist International (Comintern), reflecting the organization's centralized control over national sections during the interwar period. This loyalty was evident in the CPGB's implementation of the Comintern's "Third Period" policy (1928–1934), which Pollitt enforced through party campaigns denouncing social democrats as "social fascists" and prioritizing revolutionary sectarianism over broader alliances, resulting in the party's electoral isolation and minimal gains, with membership hovering around 2,500–3,000 by 1932.[23] By early 1933, responding to Comintern instructions amid rising fascist threats in Europe, Pollitt directed a tactical pivot toward "united front from below" tactics, seeking collaboration with rank-and-file trade unionists and independent Labour groups while criticizing Labour Party leadership; this shift, articulated in his reports and resolutions at the CPGB's 13th Congress in February 1933, aimed to counter fascism but yielded limited success due to ongoing sectarian rhetoric.[27][28] The Comintern's Seventh World Congress in July–August 1935 marked a further evolution under Georgi Dimitrov's influence, endorsing the Popular Front strategy of broad anti-fascist alliances encompassing communists, socialists, liberals, and even conservatives against fascism and war; Pollitt, attending as a CPGB representative, endorsed this line and integrated it into British policy at the party's 14th Congress in February 1935, reorienting propaganda toward unity with the Labour Party and advocating electoral pacts.[29][30] Implementation of the Popular Front in Britain under Pollitt involved campaigns for a "People's Front" government, including support for Labour candidates in the November 1935 general election—where the CPGB fielded only two candidates and urged votes for anti-fascist opponents—and initiatives like the 1936–1937 Unity Campaign with the Independent Labour Party, which polled modestly at around 50,000 votes in by-elections.[29] Despite these efforts, Labour's National Executive rejected formal alliances, citing the CPGB's subordination to Moscow, limiting the strategy's impact; nonetheless, Pollitt's advocacy facilitated CPGB participation in anti-fascist actions, such as the October 1936 Battle of Cable Street, where party members joined broader coalitions to oppose Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists march, demonstrating tactical flexibility within Comintern bounds.[29][31] Pollitt's correspondence with Comintern officials, including input on adapting the front to British conditions, underscored his role in bidirectional influence, though ultimate policy fidelity remained to Moscow's anti-fascist pivot amid Stalin's diplomatic maneuvers.[29] This adherence bolstered CPGB membership growth to approximately 18,000 by 1939 but reinforced perceptions of the party as a Soviet proxy, constraining independent strategic agency.[32]Response to Stalin's Great Purge
As General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), Harry Pollitt aligned the party with the Soviet Communist Party's official narrative on the Great Purge, portraying the Moscow show trials as legitimate exposures of internal sabotage and Trotskyist conspiracies. In response to the second Moscow Trial of January 1937, which convicted defendants including Grigory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev on charges of plotting against Joseph Stalin, Pollitt co-authored a pamphlet with R. Palme Dutt titled The Truth about Trotskyism, asserting the trial's revelations demonstrated a fascist-Trotskyist bloc undermining Soviet socialism.[33] This position mirrored Comintern directives requiring affiliated parties to endorse the trials without reservation, leading the CPGB to denounce critics within its ranks as capitulators to bourgeois propaganda.[34] Following the third Moscow Trial in March 1938, where Nikolai Bukharin and 20 others were sentenced to death for alleged espionage and treason, Pollitt publicly hailed the proceedings as "a mighty demonstration to the world of the power and strength of the Soviet Union," framing the convicted as "political and moral degenerates" whose guilt validated Stalin's vigilance against wreckers.[35] At the CPGB's 15th Congress in September 1938, Pollitt's report reinforced this stance, instructing members to refute Western media reports of purge excesses as fabrications designed to discredit the USSR, while expelling dissenting voices like philosopher John Macmurray, who questioned the trials' authenticity.[31] These actions reflected Pollitt's role as the party's "Code Holder" in secret radio communications with Moscow, where he received explicit orders to counter leaks about the purges' scale, estimated by Soviet records to have executed over 680,000 individuals between 1937 and 1938. Pollitt's adherence persisted despite personal tragedy: his longtime partner, Rose Cohen, a Soviet citizen and CPGB supporter, was arrested in December 1937 amid the purge's anti-cosmopolitan phase targeting perceived foreign agents, and executed by firing squad on September 28, 1938, after a secret trial.[36] Privately corresponding with Cohen post-arrest, Pollitt expressed concern but publicly maintained unwavering support for the Soviet leadership, prioritizing party discipline over individual cases, as evidenced by his failure to challenge her detention through Comintern channels. This loyalty underscored the causal pressures of Comintern oversight, where deviation risked marginalization, though empirical critiques later highlighted how such endorsements ignored fabricated evidence, with declassified NKVD files confirming many trial confessions were coerced under torture.[34] Pollitt's defense of the purges thus exemplified the CPGB's subordination to Moscow, contributing to internal fractures as membership stagnated amid broader skepticism in Britain.[2]Role in the Spanish Civil War
As General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), Harry Pollitt directed the party's mobilization of support for the Spanish Republican government against Nationalist forces during the Spanish Civil War from July 1936 to April 1939. Adhering to Comintern directives under the Popular Front policy against fascism, Pollitt oversaw campaigns denouncing the British non-intervention agreement and advocating for Republican aid.[37] The CPGB raised funds, organized medical supplies, and issued appeals for weekly contributions of £700 to support wounded International Brigades members and their dependents.[38] Pollitt led recruitment efforts for the British Battalion within the 15th International Brigade, enlisting British and Irish volunteers primarily through party networks. In an October 1936 speech, he announced that 750 men had joined, forming the battalion and committing to further reinforcements.[2] The CPGB handled training at camps and dispatched representatives, including arranging for Tom Wintringham to organize the unit in Spain in August 1936.[39] Recruitment was explicitly entrusted to the party, with Pollitt as its leader playing a coordinating role.[40] Between 1936 and 1939, Pollitt undertook five trips to Spain to inspect conditions, meet fighters, and enhance morale among the International Brigades.[41] During his third visit from 15 to 27 December 1937, traveling with editor Bill Rust, he visited Albacete, Teruel, Madrid, and frontline areas, distributing over 500 letters and cigarettes to the British Battalion. He conferred with commanders including Wally Tapsell and Fred Copeman, inspected hospitals in Tarancon and Huete treating wounded like George Turnhill, and noted high troop morale amid harsh winter conditions and fascist bombings, particularly after the Republican capture of Teruel. A key event was presenting the battalion with a banner—entwined with one from General José Miaja—during a Christmas Day parade at Mas de las Matas. Pollitt detailed these experiences in the 1938 pamphlet Pollitt Visits Spain, urging intensified arms supplies and an end to the blockade to secure Republican victory.[42]World War II: Policy Shifts and Isolation
Opposition to War as Imperialist Aggression
Following the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact on August 23, 1939, and the subsequent Comintern directive on September 9, 1939, the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) under General Secretary Harry Pollitt shifted its stance to denounce World War II as an imperialist war between rival capitalist powers seeking to repartition colonies, markets, and resources.[43] This view portrayed Britain and France not as defenders against fascism but as aggressors alongside Germany, with the conflict arising from unresolved contradictions within global capitalism rather than ideological opposition to Nazism.[44] Pollitt, who had initially supported the war in his September 1939 pamphlet How to Win the War—arguing it pitted democracy against fascist conquest—publicly aligned with the reversal, though archival evidence indicates his personal resistance to the abrupt change, viewing it as a departure from the party's anti-fascist commitments.[2][45] On October 7, 1939, the CPGB Central Committee, chaired by Pollitt, issued a manifesto declaring the war a "robber war kindled from all sides by imperialist groups of powers," urging workers to reject national unity and prioritize class struggle over military mobilization.[46] The party propagated this line through publications and agitation, framing British involvement as serving the City of London financiers and arms manufacturers, who profited from rearmament and colonial exploitation.[47] Pollitt contributed to internal discussions enforcing the policy, emphasizing in party circles that opposing the war exposed the hypocrisy of Allied imperialism, which had appeased Hitler at Munich while denying collective security to the Soviet Union.[48] This echoed Comintern representative Dimitrov's telegrams insisting the conflict lacked progressive content until Soviet interests were directly threatened.[43] The CPGB's anti-war campaign included supporting industrial actions to sabotage production, such as endorsing strikes in munitions factories and transport despite Trade Union Congress condemnations, and opposing conscription under the Military Training Act of 1939 as a tool of bourgeois suppression.[47] Pollitt's leadership endorsed calls for immediate peace negotiations, including unofficial contacts with German socialists to foster worker solidarity across lines, and criticized British expeditions like the intervention in the Winter War against the Soviet invasion of Finland in November 1939 as extensions of anti-communist imperialism.[44] By framing the war as mutually predatory—citing pre-war Anglo-French loans to Germany and colonial rivalries—the party sought to rally the working class against all belligerents, predicting that victory for either side would intensify exploitation and fascism domestically.[44] R. Palme Dutt's November 1939 tract Why This War?, endorsed by the leadership, quantified imperialist motives through statistics on British overseas investments exceeding £4 billion and arms exports, arguing these drove the "carnival of reaction" regardless of outcomes.[44] This policy, rigidly tied to Soviet non-aggression with Germany, led to practical absurdities, such as CPGB members discouraging resistance to Luftwaffe raids and advocating fraternization with captured Wehrmacht personnel as fellow victims of capitalism.[47] Membership stagnated around 17,500 amid public revulsion, with the Daily Worker newspaper's circulation dropping as it labeled Churchill's May 1940 coalition a "war cabinet of national betrayal."[49] Pollitt's adherence, despite his documented qualms about diluting anti-Hitler rhetoric, underscored the CPGB's subordination to Moscow, prioritizing geopolitical alignment over empirical assessment of Nazi expansionism in Poland and Scandinavia.[45] The stance persisted until Operation Barbarossa on June 22, 1941, reframing the war as a people's crusade only after direct Soviet peril.[43]Resignation, Reinstatement, and Alignment with Soviet Line
The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, signed on August 23, 1939, between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, prompted the Communist International (Comintern) to issue a directive on September 9, 1939, instructing its affiliated parties, including the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), to oppose the war between Britain, France, and Germany as an imperialist venture rather than a defense against fascism.[43] Harry Pollitt, who had publicly endorsed Britain's entry into the war as a necessary anti-fascist measure in the CPGB's initial response to the September 3, 1939, declaration of war, clashed with this shift in policy.[50] Pollitt's disagreement with the Comintern-mandated anti-war line led to his resignation as General Secretary in late 1939, amid internal party tensions where he and other veterans like William Gallacher and J.R. Campbell resisted the new stance.[1][43] During his tenure out of formal leadership, from 1939 to 1941, the CPGB under acting secretary Robert Stewart intensified anti-war agitation, distributing leaflets and organizing protests that condemned British involvement and equated it with fascist aggression, aligning strictly with Moscow's position of neutrality toward the Axis-Soviet pact.[47] The German invasion of the Soviet Union, Operation Barbarossa, on June 22, 1941, reversed Soviet foreign policy, framing the conflict as a people's war against fascism and calling for Allied unity.[51] The CPGB promptly adopted this perspective, urging support for the British war effort to aid the USSR, which facilitated Pollitt's reinstatement as General Secretary later in 1941.[52][51] Pollitt's return solidified the party's pivot, as he issued appeals to CPGB members emphasizing defense of the Soviet Union and defeat of Hitler, thereby realigning British communist activities with the prevailing Soviet directive.[53] This sequence of resignation and reinstatement highlighted Pollitt's deference to Comintern authority over independent assessment, as he yielded leadership when his pro-war views diverged from Moscow but resumed it upon synchronization, prioritizing Soviet strategic imperatives amid Britain's existential conflict.[54][43]Communications with Moscow and MI5 Surveillance
Pollitt served as the Communist Party of Great Britain's (CPGB) designated "code holder" from 1933 to November 1939, facilitating encrypted radio communications with the Comintern in Moscow to receive policy directives and report on party activities.[55] These contacts ensured alignment with Soviet foreign policy, including shifts dictated by events such as the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact signed on August 23, 1939.[45] On September 9, 1939, the Comintern Secretariat issued a directive via telegram instructing the CPGB to reframe the war as an imperialist conflict between rival capitalist powers, opposing British involvement rather than supporting it as an anti-fascist struggle.[43] Pollitt, along with senior figures like William Gallacher and John R. Campbell, resisted this abrupt reversal, viewing it as incompatible with the party's prior anti-fascist commitments; he had recently published the pamphlet How to Win the War on September 7, 1939, advocating support for the Allied effort.[56] This defiance prompted his resignation as General Secretary on October 12, 1939, after the CPGB Politburo endorsed the Moscow line, with Pollitt acknowledging in his letter that his stance represented resistance to Comintern instructions.[57] Radio contact with Moscow ceased following his ousting, reflecting the CPGB's subordination to Comintern authority over independent British assessments.[45] Pollitt was reinstated in June 1941 after Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22 shifted Comintern guidance to endorse the war as a people's struggle against fascism, restoring his leadership amid renewed Soviet directives.[43] Throughout the war, MI5 subjected Pollitt to intensive surveillance as a perceived Soviet agent and domestic security risk, maintaining voluminous personal files—spanning at least 14 volumes by 1953—that documented his movements, associates, and communications.[58] Methods included postal interception, telephone tapping, physical shadowing, and infiltration; notably, MI5 agent Olga Gray infiltrated the CPGB by posing as Pollitt's secretary from the mid-1930s, providing intelligence on party operations and Soviet links until the Woolwich Arsenal spy ring's exposure in 1938.[59] Surveillance intensified during policy flip-flops, capturing intercepted discussions such as Pollitt's 1940s overtures to Labour MPs like Emanuel Shinwell for potential affiliation, which MI5 flagged as subversive amid fears of CPGB-Soviet coordination undermining war unity.[60] Declassified files at The National Archives (KV 2 series) reveal MI5's assessment of Pollitt's unwavering loyalty to Moscow as prioritizing foreign directives over British interests, justifying sustained monitoring despite temporary alignment with Allied war aims post-1941.[61]Post-War Leadership and Cold War Challenges
Support for Soviet Union in Early Cold War
Following the end of World War II, Harry Pollitt, as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), maintained staunch public defense of the Soviet Union amid escalating tensions with the West. In his political report to the CPGB's 21st National Congress in November 1949—delivered shortly after the resolution of the Berlin Blockade—he extolled the USSR's economic achievements, noting a 41% increase in industrial output by June 1949 compared to 1940 levels, fulfillment of Five-Year Plan targets ahead of schedule, and a doubling of workers' wage purchasing power within two years.[62] Pollitt positioned the Soviet Union as the vanguard of global peace efforts, crediting it with fidelity to the Potsdam Agreement and proactive UN proposals, such as banning atomic weapons, while advocating for expanded Anglo-Soviet trade to alleviate Britain's economic woes over reliance on the U.S.-led Marshall Plan.[62] Pollitt lambasted Western initiatives as aggressive encirclement of the USSR, denouncing the Atlantic Pact (NATO), formed in April 1949, as an "imperialist war organization" intended to establish anti-Soviet bases in West Germany and Japan.[62] He framed the "cold war" as a deliberate U.S.-British strategy to alienate British workers from their Soviet counterparts, criticizing the Labour government's military spending—exceeding £800 million annually—as preparation for conflict rather than domestic welfare.[62] Under his leadership, the CPGB echoed Soviet narratives on flashpoints like the Berlin Blockade (June 1948–May 1949), attributing the crisis to Western currency reforms and provocations rather than Soviet restrictions on access. This alignment extended to the Korean War (1950–1953), where Pollitt endorsed CPGB campaigns portraying U.S. intervention as imperialist aggression, amplifying Soviet and Chinese claims of American atrocities, including unsubstantiated allegations of bacteriological warfare, through party publications and peace agitation.[63] In January 1951, Pollitt conferred directly with Joseph Stalin in Moscow, conveying British workers' gratitude for Soviet leadership and seeking guidance on the CPGB's draft program, "The British Road to Socialism," which incorporated Stalin's recommendations on parliamentary paths to socialism while preserving Soviet-style vanguardism.[64] [51] This consultation exemplified Pollitt's deference to Soviet authority over independent British communist strategy. Upon Stalin's death on March 5, 1953, Pollitt's eulogy hailed him as an unparalleled builder of socialism, directly countering Labour Party critiques of Stalinist repression and purges, thereby reinforcing CPGB loyalty amid Western exposés of Soviet gulags and show trials.[65] Such positions prioritized Soviet geopolitical interests, contributing to the CPGB's marginalization as Cold War anti-communism intensified in Britain.General Secretary Tenure until 1956
Following the end of World War II, Pollitt led the CPGB amid initial optimism for expanded influence, with party membership exceeding 45,000 in 1945 and the 1945 general election yielding two parliamentary seats—held by Willie Gallacher and newly won by Phil Piratin in Mile End—alongside approximately 100,000 votes nationally.[66] Pollitt himself contested Rhondda East, securing about 9,000 votes or roughly 20% of the share, reflecting temporary wartime prestige from the party's anti-fascist stance but failing to translate into broader electoral viability.[67] Efforts to capitalize included repeated pushes for affiliation with the Labour Party; in 1946, Pollitt proposed such a motion at Labour's conference, which was decisively rejected, underscoring the CPGB's marginalization as Labour consolidated power under Clement Attlee and pursued social democratic reforms incompatible with communist internationalism.[1] As Cold War divisions sharpened, Pollitt aligned the CPGB firmly with Soviet positions, opposing the Marshall Plan in 1947 as imperialist exploitation and criticizing NATO's formation in 1949 as aggressive encirclement, positions that prioritized Moscow's directives over domestic appeal and contributed to union expulsions of communists and public backlash.[62] The 1948-1949 Berlin Blockade reinforced this orientation, with Pollitt framing Western responses as provocations against socialism, while internal party discipline suppressed dissent, maintaining Stalinist orthodoxy despite evidence of Soviet expansionism alienating British workers benefiting from Attlee's welfare state. Membership began declining from postwar peaks, dropping to around 35,000 by 1950, as anti-communist sentiment grew amid events like the 1949 Chinese Revolution and Gouzenko affair revelations of espionage.[68] In 1951, under Pollitt's oversight, the CPGB issued The British Road to Socialism, advocating a parliamentary path to socialism via alliances with Labour and nationalization, after Stalin personally reviewed and endorsed drafts during Pollitt's January 1951 Moscow visit, where discussions emphasized preventing Conservative resurgence while subordinating tactics to Soviet geopolitical needs.[64] [69] This program, while adapting rhetoric to British conditions, retained vanguardist commitments and uncritical Soviet defense, limiting mass recruitment. The Korean War (1950-1953) further isolated the party; Pollitt denounced UN intervention as U.S.-led aggression in works like Britain Arise! (1952), calling for troop withdrawal and framing China and North Korea as anti-imperialist defenders, a stance that echoed Soviet propaganda but clashed with prevailing British support for the allied effort, exacerbating electoral collapse—Piratin lost his seat in 1950, and by 1951 the CPGB contested only ten constituencies, urging votes for Labour elsewhere.[70] [67] Pollitt's tenure thus saw tactical shifts toward united fronts but persistent fidelity to Cominform guidance, yielding industrial agitation successes—like strikes in engineering and mining—but no sustained political breakthrough, as voter preference for Labour's reforms over revolutionary internationalism rendered the CPGB electorally negligible by mid-decade, with national vote shares falling below 0.5% in 1955.[62] This outcome stemmed from causal disconnects between Soviet-aligned policies and British empirical realities, including economic recovery and aversion to totalitarianism, rather than insufficient militancy.[68]Transition to Chairman and Reaction to De-Stalinization
In May 1956, Harry Pollitt resigned as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) due to deteriorating health, a decision announced following the party's executive committee meeting. John Gollan, previously the party's Scottish secretary, succeeded him in the role, while Pollitt transitioned to the position of Chairman, a largely honorary post that allowed him to retain influence amid his illness. This leadership shift occurred shortly after the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in February 1956, where Nikita Khrushchev delivered his "Secret Speech" denouncing Joseph Stalin's cult of personality, mass repressions, and violations of socialist legality.[13][71] Pollitt, a long-standing admirer of Stalin whom he had met personally and viewed as an embodiment of revolutionary leadership, reacted with personal dismay to the speech's revelations, finding them upsetting given his prior defenses of Stalin's policies and achievements. Despite this, in public CPGB responses, including his own contributions to the party press, Pollitt avoided detailing the specific crimes outlined by Khrushchev—such as the execution of Old Bolsheviks and fabricated charges against party cadres—and instead emphasized Stalin's positive contributions to Soviet industrialization and victory in World War II. The CPGB's official statement in April 1956 acknowledged "some truth" in the criticisms but rejected full repudiation, arguing that errors were exaggerated and that Stalin's overall legacy remained positive, a line Pollitt supported to maintain party unity.[71][2] This cautious stance reflected Pollitt's unwavering loyalty to Soviet leadership and Stalinism, even as the speech triggered internal dissent within the CPGB, including resignations and debates over historical assessments. Pollitt's role as Chairman positioned him to guide the party's navigation of de-Stalinization, prioritizing continuity with Moscow's evolving line over radical self-criticism, though it contributed to membership declines amid broader disillusionment following the Soviet intervention in Hungary later that year.[71]Controversies and Empirical Criticisms
Unwavering Defense of Stalinism
Harry Pollitt, as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), vociferously defended Joseph Stalin's policies throughout the 1930s, including the Moscow Show Trials, which resulted in the execution or imprisonment of numerous Old Bolsheviks and military leaders on charges of treason and espionage. In the Daily Worker, the CPGB's newspaper, Pollitt hailed the 1936 trial as "a new triumph in the history of progress," aligning the party line with Moscow's narrative that the proceedings exposed a Trotskyist conspiracy against the Soviet state.[2] This stance persisted despite contemporaneous reports from Western observers and defectors documenting coerced confessions and fabricated evidence, which Pollitt dismissed as imperialist propaganda.[72] Pollitt's loyalty extended to personal interactions with Stalin; during a 1951 meeting in Moscow, he expressed gratitude for Soviet guidance on CPGB strategy, reinforcing his commitment to Stalinist orthodoxy even as domestic British communist influence waned.[73] Following Stalin's death in March 1953, Pollitt maintained ideological adherence, praising Stalin's role in establishing socialist leadership methods that he claimed the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) continued to apply. In writings published in CPGB outlets, Pollitt argued that Stalin had incrementally built a cadre of reliable leaders, attributing any deviations to individual errors rather than systemic flaws in the purges or collectivization campaigns that had caused millions of deaths through famine and repression.[74] The 20th CPSU Congress in February 1956 posed a severe test when Nikita Khrushchev's secret speech denounced Stalin's cult of personality and mass repressions, including the execution of 70% of the 1934 Central Committee. Pollitt's initial response, in an April 21, 1956, article in World News, provided a summary but omitted key empirical details such as the arrest of 1,108 out of 1,966 delegates to the 1934 Soviet Party Congress by 1938, thereby softening the speech's indictment.[72] In a follow-up piece on May 5, he further defended Stalin by framing the excesses as personal failings rather than inherent to the political system, a position that contrasted with emerging evidence from Soviet archives and survivor accounts of widespread terror.[72][75] This reluctance to fully repudiate Stalin manifested personally; upon learning of the speech's contents, Pollitt displayed visible exhaustion and refused to remove a portrait of Stalin from his home, declaring, "He’s staying there as long as I’m alive."[2] His biographer noted that while Pollitt acknowledged the human cost of the terror, his Marxist convictions prevented outright rejection of Stalin, leading to temporary resignation from the General Secretary role amid party debates, though he retained influence as Chairman until his death in 1960. Pollitt's persistence in defense, even as CPGB membership fractured over de-Stalinization, underscored a prioritization of Soviet loyalty over empirical reassessment of Stalinism's causal role in suppressing dissent and economic distortions.[2][75]Subordination to Soviet Influence over British Interests
In May 1920, Pollitt participated in organizing a dockers' strike against the loading of munitions onto the SS Jolly George destined for Polish forces opposing the Soviet Red Army during the Polish-Soviet War, framing the action as solidarity with Soviet Russia against imperialist intervention despite British government support for Poland as an ally.[76] This effort, which successfully halted the shipment, prioritized Bolshevik interests over Britain's wartime alliances and anti-Bolshevik foreign policy.[56] Following the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact on August 23, 1939, Pollitt and the CPGB leadership aligned with the Soviet position by denouncing the emerging Anglo-French war against Nazi Germany as an imperialist conflict, urging negotiations that would preserve Soviet neutrality rather than supporting Britain's defensive effort against the Axis threat.[47] On September 2, 1939, the CPGB Central Committee issued a manifesto opposing the war and calling for a "people's government" to end hostilities, a stance that undermined national unity as Britain faced potential invasion.[56] Pollitt initially resisted this line, authoring a pro-war pamphlet How to Win the War in late August 1939, but resigned as General Secretary on October 3, 1939, after the CPGB Politburo enforced Moscow's directive, demonstrating the party's deference to Comintern instructions over independent assessment of British security needs.[49][47] The CPGB's anti-war agitation continued into 1941, with party publications like the Daily Worker campaigning against conscription and military production, actions that critics argued aided Soviet interests by weakening Britain's resolve during a period when the USSR maintained a non-aggression treaty with Hitler until Operation Barbarossa on June 22, 1941.[43] Only after the German invasion of the Soviet Union did Pollitt regain his position, shifting the CPGB to full support for the Allied war effort in line with Moscow's new imperatives.[51] This abrupt reversal highlighted the mechanical subordination to Soviet foreign policy shifts, often at the expense of consistent advocacy for British anti-fascist defenses prior to Soviet involvement.[77] Postwar, Pollitt sought Soviet endorsement for the CPGB's British Road to Socialism program during visits to Moscow, including consultations with Joseph Stalin in 1951, where the document was revised to emphasize trade and cooperation with the USSR while critiquing British alignment with the United States, subordinating domestic electoral strategy to geopolitical alignment with Soviet priorities.[64][78] In 1956, amid the Soviet suppression of the Hungarian uprising, Pollitt defended the USSR's intervention in CPGB statements, prioritizing bloc unity over criticism that might resonate with British public sympathy for anti-Soviet revolts, contributing to internal party fractures but maintaining fidelity to Moscow.[79][80] Such positions, as noted in declassified Comintern correspondence, reflected Pollitt's consistent prioritization of Soviet directives, even when they conflicted with opportunities to broaden CPGB appeal within Britain's anticommunist consensus.[43]Failures in Building Mass Support and Electoral Irrelevance
Despite achieving a wartime peak in membership of 56,000 in December 1942 under Pollitt's leadership as General Secretary, the CPGB failed to translate this into sustained mass support, with numbers declining to 45,435 by March 1945 and continuing to fall sharply in the post-war period amid growing anti-communist sentiment.[32] This temporary surge, driven by the party's shift to supporting the Allied war effort after June 1941, masked underlying structural weaknesses, including dependence on short-term patriotic appeals rather than broad ideological appeal to British workers.[81] Electorally, the CPGB under Pollitt remained marginal, securing just 102,780 votes (0.4% of the total) in the 1945 general election across 22 candidates, winning only two seats—held by incumbents Willie Gallacher and Phil Piratin—which were lost in the 1950 election as vote shares further eroded to under 0.3%.[82] Pollitt himself contested Rhondda East in 1945 but failed narrowly, hampered by the party's mixed messaging that urged votes for Labour in some seats while fielding candidates elsewhere, alienating potential supporters who viewed the CPGB as a divisive fringe rather than a viable alternative.[67] Subsequent elections in 1950 and 1951 yielded negligible gains, with the party's rigid adherence to Soviet foreign policy—defending actions like the 1953 East German uprising suppression—exacerbating perceptions of disloyalty to British interests amid Cold War tensions.[67] Causal factors for this irrelevance included the CPGB's subordination to Moscow's directives, which prioritized international communist discipline over adapting to domestic realities like Labour's reformist appeal and trade union dominance, limiting organic growth beyond niche industrial enclaves.[83] Pollitt's personal emphasis on unwavering loyalty to Stalinism, evident in his resistance to critiquing Soviet policies even as evidence of purges and repression mounted, deterred moderate left-wing voters who prioritized national welfare over ideological purity.[67] Empirical data from consistent sub-1% vote shares across decades underscores how these strategic missteps, compounded by the Labour Party's absorption of working-class grievances through welfare state expansions, rendered the CPGB electorally insignificant despite Pollitt's energetic campaigning.[82]Organizational Impact and Legacy
CPGB Membership Trends and Internal Dynamics
Under Pollitt's leadership from 1929 to 1939 and again from 1941 to 1956, CPGB membership grew modestly in the 1930s amid anti-fascist mobilization, reaching approximately 18,000 by 1939 from a low of around 2,500 in 1930, driven by the Popular Front policy and recruitment in industrial areas like mining and engineering.[84] This expansion reflected temporary alignment with broader labor movements but remained limited, comprising overwhelmingly manual workers (over 80%), predominantly male and from Scotland, Wales, and northern England, with scant penetration into southern or white-collar sectors.[32] Wartime conditions further boosted numbers to a peak of about 56,000 in 1942, fueled by patriotic anti-Nazi rhetoric and Soviet alliance, yet qualitative issues persisted, including high turnover and reliance on transient recruits rather than stable cadre.[84] Post-1945, membership declined steadily under Pollitt's continued stewardship, falling to roughly 36,000 by 1950 and around 30,000 by 1956, coinciding with Cold War disillusionment, exposure of Soviet crimes, and the party's rigid adherence to Moscow's line over domestic adaptation.[68] This trajectory contrasted with initial post-war optimism, where industrial unrest briefly sustained branches, but causal factors included electoral irrelevance, purges alienating potential allies, and failure to evolve beyond sectarianism, rendering the CPGB a marginal force despite Pollitt's emphasis on trade union infiltration.[29] Internally, Pollitt enforced a centralized, hierarchical structure modeled on Bolshevik norms, suppressing factions through Comintern-mandated "bolshevization" in the 1920s and Stalinist purges in the 1930s, such as the 1929 liquidation of the "right opposition" led by figures like Harry Walton, which consolidated his control but stifled debate.[85] Party congresses under his tenure ritualized loyalty oaths and self-criticism, aligning with Soviet diplomacy—evident in the 1939 temporary ousting of Pollitt for opposing the Nazi-Soviet Pact, followed by his 1941 reinstatement amid wartime exigencies—yet fostering dependency on Moscow over autonomous strategy.[86] Post-war dynamics saw emerging tensions, including critiques of "Browderism" (revisionist deviations echoing U.S. Communist leader Earl Browder's accommodationism), which Pollitt navigated by reaffirming orthodoxy, though this exacerbated isolation from Labour's mass base and contributed to cadre demoralization.[87] Such rigidity, while maintaining short-term cohesion, empirically hindered broader appeal, as evidenced by persistent low retention rates and branch atrophy outside strongholds like South Wales coalfields.[84]Electoral Record and Policy Outcomes
Under Harry Pollitt's leadership as General Secretary, the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) achieved its most notable electoral results in the 1935 and 1945 general elections, though these remained marginal compared to major parties. In 1935, the party secured one parliamentary seat with Willie Gallacher in West Fife, while Pollitt himself polled 38 percent of the vote in Rhondda East but lost to Labour.[88] The 1945 election marked the CPGB's peak, yielding two seats (West Fife and Mile End) amid wartime anti-fascist sentiment and limited candidate fielding to avoid splitting the left vote; Pollitt came closest to victory in Rhondda East, receiving 15,761 votes (45.5 percent) against Labour's 16,733 (48.4 percent), a margin of under 1,000 votes influenced by the party's endorsement of Labour in many contests.[67] Subsequent elections saw rapid decline: the party retained one seat in 1950 before losing all representation in 1951, with vote shares falling below 0.5 percent nationally by the mid-1950s as Cold War associations eroded support.[79]| General Election | CPGB Seats Won | Key Notes Under Pollitt |
|---|---|---|
| 1935 | 1 | Gallacher retained West Fife; Pollitt's strongest pre-war showing in Rhondda East.[88] |
| 1945 | 2 | Brief high amid alliance politics; Pollitt's near-win in Rhondda East.[67] |
| 1950 | 1 | Last seat lost post-war; declining turnout.[79] |
| 1951 | 0 | Total parliamentary exclusion thereafter.[79] |
| 1955 | 0 | Negligible national share amid de-Stalinization fallout.[79] |