Potere Operaio (Workers' Power) was an extra-parliamentary workerist organization in Italy, active from 1967 to 1973, that emphasized autonomous class struggle at the point of production and rejected reformist mediation by trade unions and the Italian Communist Party (PCI).[1][2]Emerging from splits within earlier operaismo (workerist) circles associated with journals like Quaderni Rossi and Classe Operaia, the group formed amid rising factory militancy, with key figures including Antonio Negri advocating a Leninist-style vanguard focused on the "mass worker" as the revolutionary subject.[1][3] Its ideology centered on the "strategy of refusal"—workers' sabotage of production to assert power—while critiquing traditional Marxism's valorization of labor and viewing students as auxiliary "pre-workers" rather than independent forces.[2][1]During the "Hot Autumn" strikes of 1969, Potere Operaio led militant actions, including wage demands and assemblies at factories like FIAT Mirafiori and Montedison, culminating in clashes such as the Corso Traiano demonstration in Turin, which highlighted its emphasis on direct confrontation over negotiated gains.[2] These efforts organized thousands in base committees but boycotted emerging factory councils, prioritizing unmediated revolt, which critics later argued isolated militants from broader working-class layers.[2][1]By the early 1970s, amid declining factory struggles, the group shifted toward the "social factory" concept, encompassing welfare and urban conflicts, before dissolving into the larger Autonomia Operaia network in 1973; this transition marked a defining pivot but also fueled controversies over radicalization, as autonomist offshoots embraced clandestine tactics and contributed to the era's spiral into armed violence, though Potere Operaio itself avoided terrorism in favor of mass mobilization.[1][2] Its legacy endures in autonomist theory, influencing debates on class composition and refusal, yet its rigid anti-institutionalism is often cited as hastening the left's marginalization post-1970s.[1][3]
Origins and Formation
Intellectual Foundations in Operaismo
Operaismo, or workerism, provided the theoretical bedrock for Potere Operaio, emerging in Italy during the early 1960s as a heterodox Marxist current that prioritized empirical analysis of factory struggles over orthodox Leninist or union-mediated strategies. Initiated by Raniero Panzieri through the journal Quaderni Rossi (1961–1965), operaismo critiqued the Italian Communist Party's integration into capitalist planning, advocating instead for "workers' inquiry" methods to map class composition—the technical and social organization of labor under capital—and its disruptive potential.[4] This approach drew from Marx's Grundrisse (first translated into Italian in 1962), emphasizing how worker resistance shapes technological and organizational innovations in response, inverting traditional views where capital drives history unilaterally.[5]A pivotal shift occurred with Mario Tronti's Operai e Capitale (1966), which formalized operaismo's "Copernican revolution": positioning the working class as the active subject that compels capital's development, rather than a passive object awaiting proletarianization. Tronti argued that capital's expansions—such as Fordist mass production—stem from workers' prior antagonisms, necessitating autonomy from reformist institutions to weaponize refusals of work and sabotage.[6] This text, alongside contributions from Romano Alquati's sociological probes into FIAT factories, rejected vanguardism in favor of the "mass worker"—unskilled migrants and assembly-line operatives whose mass insubordination could rupture production cycles.[3]Potere Operaio, coalescing in 1967 from militants of the Classe Operaia group (1964–1967, led by Tronti and others), operationalized these foundations by extending operaismo's focus on class recomposition to broader "social factory" terrains, including student unrest and service sectors, while maintaining a militant emphasis on direct factory interventions.[1] Unlike earlier operaismo's more analytical tone, Potere Operaio's intellectuals, including Antonio Negri, radicalized refusal-of-work tactics into calls for generalized proletarian power, critiquing unions as capitalist mediators and prioritizing spontaneous assemblies over hierarchical organization.[7] This framework underpinned their vision of revolution as irreversible breakdown of work discipline, grounded in observable cycles of struggle from the late 1960s onward.[8]
Establishment as a Group (1967)
Potere Operaio formed in 1967 as an extraparliamentary radical left-wing group, operating independently of established trade unions and political parties, with initial nuclei emerging in industrial strongholds like Veneto and Tuscany through autonomous worker agitation and the launch of a dedicated newspaper.[9] These efforts drew from the operaismo tradition, emphasizing direct factory interventions over institutional mediation, amid rising worker unrest that began challenging capitalist structures from late 1967 onward.[10][11]In Pisa and surrounding Tuscan areas, the group coalesced around the first issue of the newspaper Il Potere Operaio, released on February 20, 1967, as a tool to disseminate critiques of capitalist exploitation and organize against factory hierarchies in coastal industries.[12] The publication, produced by dissidents from the PCI and PSIUP alongside unaffiliated workers and university militants from institutions like the Scuola Normale Superiore, targeted demands such as reduced work hours, abolition of piece-rate pay, equal wages, and rejection of collaborative production norms, fostering direct assemblies in workplaces.[12]Concurrently in Porto Marghera, a petrochemical hub near Venice, the local Potere Operaio group established itself via the newspaper Il Potere Operaio – giornale politico degli operai di Porto Marghera, distributed starting in 1967 to contest the 1965–1969 industrial development plan and promote self-organized resistance.[13] Key catalyst was Italo Sbrogiò's February 1967 resignation from the PCI over its perceived democratic deficits and inadequate support for militancy; this spurred actions including opposition to the April 19 CISL-UIL agreement at Edison abolishing hazard pay, and August strikes at San Marco that mobilized assemblies, pickets, and up to 500 workers with student aid by August 25.[13]In Veneto's broader context, including Marghera, the initiative solidified on May 1, 1967, with the newspaper's launch involving former PSI militants like Toni Negri and factory insiders such as Sbrogiò, shifting from intellectual debates to practical mobilizations against reformist unions.[10] These decentralized formations, united by advocacy for worker power as the revolutionary vanguard, represented Potere Operaio's foundational step toward a coordinated political project, predating full national unification in subsequent years.[10]
Ideological Framework
Core Principles of Workerism
Workerism, or operaismo, posited the working class as the autonomous revolutionary subject whose struggles dictate the development of capital, inverting traditional Marxist emphasis on economic base by prioritizing workers' antagonistic behaviors within production. This perspective, articulated by thinkers like Mario Tronti, held that the proletariat's pursuit of immediate, partial interests—such as higher wages or reduced hours—generates crises in capitalist relations, compelling capital to reorganize in response.[14] Potere Operaio, emerging in 1967 as a radical outgrowth of early operaismo, applied this by viewing factory-based disruptions as evidence of inherent revolutionary subjectivity among proletarians, rejecting vanguard parties in favor of direct class power.[1]Central to workerist theory was the analysis of class composition, encompassing both technical aspects (capital's organization of labor in mass production) and political dimensions (workers' recomposition through refusal and sabotage). The "mass worker"—deskilled, often migrant laborers in large-scale industries like FIAT—emerged as the paradigmatic revolutionary figure, superseding skilled "professional workers" due to their capacity for generalized disruption in Fordist factories.[3][1] Potere Operaio emphasized this composition in interventions, linking students as "pre-workers" to the proletarian core and advocating unmediated base committees to channel the mass worker's potential against capital's command.[3]The principle of refusal of work encapsulated workerism's strategic core, extending beyond conventional strikes to encompass absenteeism, production slowdowns, and sabotage aimed at undermining value extraction rather than merely negotiating concessions. Coined by Tronti, this refusal was theorized as the proletariat's affirmative negation of capitalist discipline, manifesting practically in events like the 1969 Hot Autumn strikes and subsequent absenteeism rates exceeding 16% at plants such as Alfa Romeo in 1974.[15] Workerists critiqued trade unions and leftist institutions like the Italian Communist Party (PCI) for subordinating struggles to mediation, insisting on autonomy through self-reduction practices (e.g., unauthorized bill cuts affecting 130,000 households in Turin by 1974) and direct interventions to amplify proletarian self-activity.[14][15] Potere Operaio operationalized this by positioning itself outside union structures, promoting factory occupations and wildcat actions as expressions of unalienated classpower.[1]
Critiques of Traditional Left Institutions
Potere Operaio viewed the Italian Communist Party (PCI) as having abandoned revolutionary principles in favor of reformism, exemplified by its advocacy for the "Italian Road to Socialism," which prioritized gradual parliamentary integration over direct class confrontation.[1] This approach, they argued, aligned the PCI with capitalist state mechanisms, diluting workers' militancy through post-World War II alliances in the National Liberation Committee and subsequent governments until 1947.[1] Group members, drawing from operaismo's intellectual roots, contended that the PCI's separation from shop-floor realities—such as its disavowal of violent tactics during the 1962 TurinFIAT strikes, where L'Unità emphasized "pacific" framing—rendered it incapable of leading proletarian insurgency.[1][2]The group's critique extended to the PCI's rightward drift, attributing it to institutional priorities over organic worker organization, which isolated the party from the emergent "mass worker" in large factories during the late 1960s.[2] Potere Operaio rejected the PCI's productivist ideology, seeing it as complicit in stabilizing capitalism by channeling struggles into mediated reforms rather than autonomous power seizures.[1] In this vein, they dismissed the PCI's post-1969 efforts to reassert control over factory councils during the Hot Autumn as a conservative maneuver to suppress radical demands.[1]Trade unions, particularly the PCI-dominated CGIL, faced similar condemnation for bureaucratic intermediation that subordinated worker assemblies to negotiated compromises, effectively co-opting militancy.[1] Potere Operaio advocated bypassing such structures in favor of self-organized base committees, arguing that unions like the CGIL perpetuated the traditional left's immobilism by prioritizing wage deals over broader refusal of work and political wages.[1] This position reflected their belief that traditional institutions had become extensions of capital, necessitating independent proletarian forms to expose and overcome reformist limitations.[2]
Organizational Development
Leadership and Key Members
Antonio Negri, a philosopher and key theorist of operaismo, co-founded Potere Operaio in 1969 alongside Oreste Scalzone and Franco Piperno, providing intellectual leadership through writings on worker autonomy and class composition.[16][17]Franco Piperno, a physicist and militant, served as the group's national secretary during a critical phase and acted as a primary organizer, collaborating closely with Negri and Scalzone to direct political interventions in factories and universities.[18]Oreste Scalzone, an activist rooted in student movements, contributed to the group's foundational efforts and strategic orientation toward mass worker mobilization.[18]Other prominent members included Valerio Morucci, who led the group's clandestine operations, including armed actions against perceived capitalist structures, and Nanni Balestrini, a writer involved in propaganda through militant graphics and publications that disseminated Potere Operaio's messages.[19] The leadership emphasized horizontal organization but centralized decision-making among this core, reflecting tensions between theoretical autonomy and practical militancy.[20]
Internal Structure and Tactics
Potere Operaio maintained a centralized leadership structure that coordinated decentralized, factory-based militant groups, drawing on a Leninist vanguard model while emphasizing worker autonomy through political committees established in factories from 1971 onward.[20][1] Internal factions emerged, notably between Antonio Negri's focus on industrial proletarian struggles and the broader social orientation favored by Franco Piperno and Oreste Scalzone, reflecting debates over organizational priorities.[20] By 1969, the group had formed a national network linking local cells, primarily in northern industrial areas like Veneto and Rome, with membership estimates ranging from 3,000 to under 5,000 activists at its peak.[20][1] Decision-making shifted from initial assembly-based practices to a more defined executive framework, enabling coordinated interventions while preserving rank-and-file initiative in autonomous assemblies and base committees.[20][21]The group's tactics centered on direct, unmediated interventions in workplace conflicts to amplify worker power against capitalist production and union hierarchies, rejecting negotiated settlements in favor of disruptive actions like wildcat strikes, mass pickets, and production blockades, as seen in the March 1973FIAT Mirafiori blockade.[20][1] They promoted "refusal of work" strategies, including absenteeism, sabotage, and self-limitation of output to undermine efficiency without full stoppages, alongside demands for flat-rate wage increases to erode internal hierarchies.[1][3] Propaganda via newspapers and leaflets agitated for autonomous workers' bodies outside traditional unions like the CGIL, fostering committees of unitá di base (CUB) and assemblies as fronts for escalating struggles.[21] Beyond factories, tactics extended to urban campaigns—"Take Over the City"—targeting social reproduction issues such as rents, transport costs, and wages for housework, incorporating squatting, mass shoplifting, and slogans like "less work, more wages."[20][9] Insurrectional elements included preparation for armed confrontations, such as petrol bombs during the 1971 Milan demonstration, positioning the group toward broader proletarian self-organization amid declining factory militancy post-1970.[20] These methods, while amplifying short-term disruptions, often isolated Potere Operaio from mass institutions, contributing to internal tensions by 1973.[1]
Potere Operaio, a workerist group emphasizing autonomous class struggle independent of unionmediation, actively intervened in the wave of strikes known as the Hot Autumn, which began in spring 1969 and peaked in September–October with over 440 hours of strikes involving millions of workers, primarily in northern Italy's metalworking and chemical sectors.[1] The group, with fewer than 5,000 members nationwide, focused on large factories as sites of proletarian power, promoting tactics such as wildcat actions, mass assemblies, and the rejection of work to disruptproduction cycles and challenge capitalist planning.[1][22] Their interventions targeted union-led moderation, arguing that organizations like the CGIL served to contain worker militancy rather than advance revolutionary demands.[23]In Turin, Potere Operaio coordinated with rank-and-file committees at Fiat's Mirafiori plant, organizing student pickets and leaflets to escalate disputes beyond official one-day actions. On May 29, 1969, they contributed to halting Fiat assembly lines through coordinated shutdowns.[23] By July 3, 1969, militants transformed a union-called rent strike into a major confrontation outside Fiat's Corso Traiano gate, involving around 3,000 workers in a 16-hour clash with police, under the sloganChe cosa vogliamo? Tutto! ("What do we want? Everything!"), which encapsulated their push for uncompromised demands like equal wages and sabotage.[23][2] Similar efforts occurred in Porto Marghera's petrochemical plants, where they backed "checker-board" strikes alternating hours or days to maximize disruption.[22] These actions radicalized segments of the workforce, particularly migrant assembly-line operators, but remained marginal compared to the broader union-orchestrated mobilizations.[1]The group's participation influenced temporary gains, including the December 1969 national contracts securing wage parity and reduced hours for approximately 4 million metalworkers, which Potere Operaio attributed to autonomous pressure rather than union negotiation.[23] However, by late 1969, trade unions reasserted control through delegate councils, institutionalizing assemblies and recuperating radical energy into reformist frameworks, a development Potere Operaio critiqued as capitulation to capitalist restructuring.[22][2] Empirical assessments note that while workerist tactics amplified militancy in hotspots like Fiat, they failed to prevent the overall containment of the cycle, as mass participation waned without sustained revolutionary organization.[1]
Factory Struggles and Interventions (1970-1972)
In the aftermath of the 1969 Hot Autumn strikes, Potere Operaio intensified its factory interventions from 1970 onward, prioritizing autonomous rank-and-file committees to challenge both capitalist management and union bureaucracies, which it viewed as complicit in moderating worker demands. The group coordinated actions to extend gains into new cycles of struggle, including wildcat strikes that defied post-contract truces, particularly in northern Italy's industrial zones. In chemical and metalworking sectors, Potere Operaio distributed leaflets and organized assemblies advocating egalitarian classifications—demanding uniform pay categories for all workers regardless of skill—to undermine hierarchical wage structures and accelerate capital's crisis. These efforts influenced national contract renewals, such as the metalworkers' agreement that phased in a 40-hour workweek by 1972, though Potere Operaio critiqued it as insufficient without broader refusal of work.[23]A focal point was the Porto Marghera petrochemical complex near Venice, where Potere Operaio's local committee, comprising hundreds of operatives exposed to toxic processes, spearheaded campaigns against "noxiousness"—health-endangering conditions from pollutants and hazardous labor. In September 1970, Potere Operaio's national congress in Bologna endorsed alliances for amplified impact, leading to the December 1970 formation of the Political Committee of Porto Marghera Workers, a tactical fusion with the il Manifesto faction involving over 1,000 participants in assemblies. This bodyrejected union-proposed reforms like hazard pay, instead demanding systemic reductions: a universal 36-hour workweek, elimination of overtime, paid commute time, and free public transport to offset exploitation.[24][25]By February 28, 1971, the committee presented its "Against Noxiousness" platform at the Veneto regional workers' congress, framing struggles as a refusal of poisoned labor rather than mere compensation, and extending agitation to adjacent communities like San Giuliano for broader proletarian unity. Interventions included sabotage of unsafe machinery and mass absenteeism, sustaining disruptions amid employer counteroffensives, including layoffs affecting thousands. In 1972, as national contracts expired, Porto Marghera workers under Potere Operaio influence defied union directives to resume production, prolonging strikes and exposing divisions between base militants and confederations like CGIL, which sought compromise amid economic slowdowns. These actions, while amplifying immediate concessions on safety protocols, highlighted Potere Operaio's emphasis on irreversible worker power over reversible reforms, though empirical outcomes showed limited long-term disruption to production cycles.[24][26]
Decline and Dissolution
Internal Crises and Strategic Shifts
By the early 1970s, Potere Operaio encountered deepening internal divisions over its theoretical framework and organizational strategy, particularly regarding the composition of the working class and the primacy of factory struggles. Debates intensified in 1972, with figures like Antonio Negri questioning the traditional "mass worker" model centered on industrial proletarians, advocating instead for a broader conception encompassing the unemployed from Southern Italy, women in social reproduction roles, and emerging proletarian figures beyond the factory gates.[27] This shift challenged the group's foundational operaismo emphasis on factory hegemony, leading to polemics that exposed a theoretical deadlock: one faction clung to "factoryism" amid resurgent plant conflicts, while others pushed for adaptation to social movements like Southern revolts and feminism, resulting in factional paralysis that eroded the organization's cohesion as a political force.[27]These crises were compounded by strategic disagreements on tactics, including the advocacy of a "theory of the offensive" that prioritized militarized actions and armed resistance to accelerate revolutionary processes, which alienated broader worker bases and highlighted elitist tendencies in the group's interventions.[2] Potere Operaio's boycott of factory councils and unions further isolated it, as institutional left forces regained influence amid economic downturns and state repression, diminishing the group's factory-level impact by 1972–1973.[2] A pivotal event was the March 1973 occupation at FIAT's Mirafiori plant in Turin, involving around 10,000 workers in a blockade lasting over 200 hours, which Potere Operaio framed as a vanguard action but which ended in 250 dismissals and underscored the disconnect between its radical interpretations and sustainable mass mobilization.[28]In response to these fractures, Potere Operaio underwent a strategic pivot toward dissolution, formalized at a congress in Rosolina on March 29, 1973, where it rejected the "logic of the political group" in favor of "organized class autonomy"—a decentralized model emphasizing diffuse networks over hierarchical structures.[28][29] This shift reflected an attempt to transcend internal contradictions by dissolving the organization mid-1973, allowing core members, including Negri, to transition into the nascent Autonomia Operaia movement, which broadened focus to the "social worker" and extra-factory terrains while retaining autonomist refusal of institutional mediation.[27][30] However, the move stemmed from disorientation rather than triumph, as unresolved debates over insurrectionary versus mass-oriented paths left the group unable to counter capitalist restructuring effectively.[2]
Official Dissolution (1973)
Potere Operaio formally dissolved at a national conference held in Rosolina, Rovigo, from May 31 to June 3, 1973.[31][32] The decision marked the end of the group's structured existence as a centralized political organization, with participants rejecting what they described as the "logic of the political vanguard" in favor of dissolving into the broader proletarian movement as individual militants.[2] This shift was influenced by ongoing internal debates over organizational form, exacerbated by events like the March 1973 occupations at Fiat's Mirafiori plant, which highlighted tensions between hierarchical leadership and grassrootsautonomy.[33][1]The conference proceedings revealed fractures within the group, as several key working-class bases, including those in Porto Marghera and other industrial areas, opted to withdraw prior to or during the meeting, citing dissatisfaction with central directives.[34] Proponents of dissolution argued that rigid party structures hindered effective intervention in mass struggles, advocating instead for a decentralized "area of autonomy" where former members could operate without formal affiliation.[20] By June 3, Potere Operaio ceased operations, with its cadre dispersing into emerging autonomist networks that emphasized spontaneous worker action over programmatic politics.[32][1]This self-liquidation was not merely tactical but reflected a broader strategic pivot, as articulated by figures like those in the Veneto collectives, who viewed the move as liberating the movement from bureaucratic constraints amid rising state repression and electoral failures of traditional left parties.[35] Post-dissolution, core activists transitioned to Autonomia Operaia, perpetuating workerist tactics in a less formalized framework, though some retained local Potere Operaio structures temporarily before fully integrating.[36] The event underscored the empirical limits of vanguardist models in sustaining militancy beyond peak factory conflicts, with no revival of the original organization thereafter.[37]
Controversies and Criticisms
Associations with Violence and Subversion
Potere Operaio's militant interventions in factories and urban settings frequently involved confrontations that turned violent, including clashes with police during demonstrations and occupations, as part of their strategy to assert proletarian power against state and capitalist forces.[30] These actions, such as skirmishes in Padova between the group's servizio d'ordine (security apparatus) and law enforcement, exemplified their embrace of direct confrontation to disrupt institutional control.[30] While not engaging in indiscriminate terrorism akin to later groups like the Red Brigades, Potere Operaio's rhetoric in its publications glorified violent encounters with authorities as pedagogical moments for class consciousness, framing them as inevitable escalations in the class war.[38]The organization integrated the concept of political violence into its revolutionary framework from around 1970, initially justifying it as defensive self-defense against fascist threats and police repression, but increasingly as an offensive tool for rupture with bourgeois institutions.[38] Activists interviewed in historical analyses recall internal debates legitimizing violence as essential for proletarian self-affirmation, influencing the trajectory toward more armed formations after Potere Operaio's 1973 dissolution.[38] This shift was evident in publications exalting "urban guerrilla" tactics, drawing parallels to international clashes and positioning violence as a multiplier of class antagonism rather than mere reaction.[39]Subversive elements permeated Potere Operaio's operations, as they sought to undermine parliamentary democracy and union mediation by fostering autonomous workers' committees aimed at seizing factory command and refusing capitalist work discipline.[23]Italian courts, particularly in Padova trials post-dissolution, convicted leaders and militants for eversione (subversion) and incitement to violence, citing efforts to construct a clandestine "armed party" parallel to state structures.[40] A notable incident underscoring these associations occurred on April 16, 1973, when militants set fire to a building in Rome—targeting symbols of capitalist property—resulting in the deaths of two young brothers, Stefano and Virgilio Gaglianone, for which perpetrators received manslaughter convictions.[41]These associations drew scrutiny amid Italy's broader anni di piombo (Years of Lead), though Potere Operaio dissolved before the peak of organized leftist terrorism; former members' migrations to groups like Autonomia Operaia perpetuated militant legacies, but empirical outcomes highlighted tactical overreach without systemic overthrow.[42] Judicial records emphasize that while Potere Operaio's violence was often reactive or symbolic, its theoretical endorsement of escalation contributed to a permissive environment for subsequent extremism, as critiqued in post-hoc assessments of extra-parliamentary left failures.[40][38]
Failures in Theory and Practice
Potere Operaio's theoretical framework, rooted in operaismo (workerism), emphasized the autonomous revolutionary potential of the industrial proletariat through analyses of classcomposition and refusal of work, yet it suffered from an overemphasis on worker subjectivity that progressively severed links to objective economic conditions and broader social forces.[2] This approach, drawing from earlier Marxist theorists like Mario Tronti, posited that capital's innovations in production directly shaped class struggle, but failed to account for the deconstruction of traditional labor forms and the integration of non-factory sectors, leading to an analytically narrow focus on shopfloor militancy.[5] Critics, including later autonomist reflections, highlighted internal contradictions, such as the tension between rejecting parliamentary reformism and underestimating the Italian Communist Party's (PCI) role in channeling worker unrest, which empirically limited the group's ability to generalize struggles beyond isolated factory interventions.[3]In practice, these theoretical limits manifested in organizational fragility and strategic missteps, as Potere Operaio's advocacy for direct action and "workers' power" committees could not sustain a cohesive national structure amid Italy's 1970s economic downturn and state repression.[43] By 1973, following failed attempts to coordinate mass occupations like that at Fiat's Mirafiori plant, key worker bases in areas such as Porto Marghera and Florence withdrew, citing the group's inability to evolve beyond propagandistic interventions into a viable revolutionary force.[34] The organization's dissolution on November 1973, announced as a rejection of "party logic" in favor of diffuse autonomy, empirically accelerated fragmentation rather than empowerment, with members dispersing into looser networks that proved equally prone to co-optation and defeat.[2]Empirical outcomes underscored these failures: despite peak influence during the 1969 Hot Autumn strikes, Potere Operaio never exceeded a few thousand active militants and failed to precipitate systemic change, as wage gains were reversed by inflation and capital flight in the mid-1970s, while revolutionary violence escalated without strategic gains.[33] This pattern of adventurist tactics without mass consolidation echoed prior ultra-left experiments, such as the German KAPD in the 1920s, confirming causal links between theoretical voluntarism and practical isolation.[2]
Legacy and Historical Assessment
Influence on Autonomism and Later Movements
Potere Operaio's workerist ideology, which prioritized militant self-organization in factories and the "strategy of refusal" against capitalist exploitation, directly informed the theoretical foundations of autonomism by extending operaismo's focus on class autonomy beyond traditional unions and parties.[2] This approach emphasized counter-power through rank-and-file actions, such as the 1969 strikes at FIAT and Montedison, influencing autonomists' rejection of reformist integration into state-mediated labor relations.[2]The group's self-dissolution in late 1973, following internal debates and events like the FIAT Mirafiori occupation, catalyzed the transition to autonomist formations, particularly Autonomia Operaia Organizzata.[2] Key figures including Antonio Negri, Oreste Scalzone, and Franco Piperno, who had shaped Potere Operaio's centralized tactics, shifted toward decentralized networks that broadened the "mass worker" concept to encompass social reproduction and urban struggles.[44] This evolution replaced Potere Operaio's Leninist-inspired vanguardism with fluid, area-based assemblies, evident in the 1976-1977 autonomist mobilizations against austerity.[2]Potere Operaio's legacy extended to later movements by promoting independent workplace resistance, inspiring autonomist collectives in the late 1970s that critiqued both far-left hierarchies and union cooptation.[43] Its ideas on proletarian sabotage and autonomy from institutional leftism influenced post-1977 feminist and anti-capitalist currents, though often adapted amid autonomism's fragmentation into diffuse "social movements."[43][45]
Broader Impacts and Empirical Shortcomings
Potere Operaio's strategies contributed to the fragmentation of Italy's extra-parliamentary left, fostering a proliferation of autonomist groups that emphasized worker self-organization over hierarchical parties, yet this diffusion—characterized as "many flowers, little fruit"—resulted in organizational instability rather than consolidated revolutionary power.[46] By mid-1973, the group had dissolved amid internal factional disputes between figures like Antonio Negri and Oreste Scalzone over class composition and political direction, undermining its aim to form an armed proletarian party.[20] This legacy influenced later autonomist experiments, such as the 1977 movement, but empirically reinforced reformist tendencies by tacitly aligning with the Italian Communist Party (PCI) in electoral contests, diluting anti-capitalist momentum.[46][47]Key empirical shortcomings stemmed from an overreliance on spontaneous militancy in large factories, which yielded short-term disruptions during the 1969–1972 period but failed to extend control to smaller workplaces dominated by PCI-affiliated unions like the CGIL.[46] Capitalist restructuring post-1974 eroded these gains, with workerist tactics unable to counter state repression or economic adaptation, leading to autonomist defeats by the late 1970s, including mass arrests following the Red Brigades' escalation in 1979.[46] The 1972 attempt to legitimize "militarization of the class struggle" through worker sanctions collapsed without broad support, exposing a disconnect from mass bases and precipitating strategic isolation.[20]Theoretically, Potere Operaio's rejection of Marxist labor-value and crisis theories overstated proletarian autonomy while underestimating capital's resilience and the PCI's integrative role, fostering a vanguardist drift that alienated non-factory militants and contributed to a programmatic vacuum exploited by armed groups.[46][47] This miscalculation of class forces—prioritizing refusal of work over alliance-building—yielded no systemic overthrow, instead amplifying left-wing disarray amid Italy's economic stagnation and rising state countermeasures by 1980.[46] Such outcomes underscore the causal limits of ultra-left interventions, where intensified conflict without political cohesion accelerated autonomism's marginalization.[20]