The General Strike™ is over. Except for the coal miners, who have been abandoned by the Trades Union Congress, and will continue striking for another 7 months. A. J. Cook, secretary of the Miners’ Federation of Great Britain points out that the decision of the TUC (which was never enthusiastic about the strike) was made without consulting the miners who, to be fair, have rejected every possible offer of compromise (as have the mineowners). The TUC gets nothing for its surrender, the government gives nothing, so that was a fun nine days for, to repeat, nothing. When a delegation arrives at Downing Street, Prime Minister Baldwin dickishly doesn’t let them in until he sends out the minister of labour to receive assurances that the strike has been called off.
King George recommends amnesia: “Let us forget whatever elements of bitterness the events of the past few days have created and only remember how steady and how orderly the country remained though severely tested.”
Baldwin says this was “a victory of the common sense of the best part of the whole of the United Kingdom” and likewise recommends looking forwards instead of backwards, which will be difficult for those workers on whom many industries will inflict revenge such as firings, loss of seniority and pension rights, reduced wages, being forced to sign statements admitting “guilt,” etc. On the BBC, Baldwin says, “our whole duty at the moment is to forget all recrimination.”
German Chancellor Hans Luther and his cabinet resign after the Democrats & Socialists withdraw from the coalition because of Luther’s attempt to compromise with the Nationalists over... flags. Specifically whether imperial flags – I believe it’s the navy flag, which has the old kaisery colors – will fly over Germany’s embassies alongside the real flag. They accuse Luther of coming under the influence of the reactionary right. I mean, they’re not wrong about the flag thing undermining the legitimacy of the Weimar Republic, but there was a literal fascist coup plot uncovered, you know, yesterday.
The plans for that coup, in which involve Pres. Hindenburg would dissolve the Reichstag before being forced out himself, the end of freedom of the press, the right to meeting, strikes, etc., with executions ordered by court-martials, and, oh yeah, “The Jews were to be segregated in a concentration camp and their property seized.”
Marshal Józef Klemens Piłsudski, forced out as Poland’s chief of state in 1923, leads a coup. Soldiers occupy Warsaw.
The Massachusetts Supreme Court rules that Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were lawfully convicted. Their lawyer argued (in January) that they were tried “not as murderers but as radicals.”
Federal Judge Julian Mack orders the Fish Trust dissolved.
