Alex Bail

Alex Bail (1900 June 8, 1973) was an American radical and union leader.

Biography

Early years

Alex Bail was born in Russia in 1900.

Communist years

Bail entered the US labor movement in 1922. He was also an early member of the Communist Party of America, arrested in August that year attending the parties underground second convention in Bridgman, Michigan.[1]

Bail attended the third national convention of the Workers Party of America (Dec 30, 1923-Jan 2, 1924) representing the third district, centered in Philadelphia. At the party's 5th convention in 1927 he was made a candidate member of the Central Executive Committee, and by the end of the year was district organizer in the party's first district, centered in Boston.[2] He remained in that position for the rest of his tenure as a member of the American Communist Party.[3]

He was again elected CEC candidate at the party's 6th Convention in March 1929, but soon left the party after the expulsion of party leader Jay Lovestone and a group of about 200 loyalists around him.[4]

When Lovestone and his co-thinkers established a formal organization called the Communist Party (Majority Group), Bail enlisted in that organization as a member of the group's original National Council.[5] He stayed with the organization for the duration of its existence.[6]

While in the Lovestone organization he adopted a "party name" "George F. Miles." In the late 1930s he was put in charge of the Lovestonites operation in the United Auto Workers assisting Homer Martin in his fight with the communists within that union. The factional fight would eventually lead to Martin's group being ousted from leadership of the UAW and leading a rump organization back into the AFL. During this period he was assisted by his wife, Eve Smith, who became head of the UAW's Women's Auxiliary.[7]

Later career

By 1948 Bail had emerged as the secretary-treasurer of the Playthings, Jewelry and Novelty Workers Union, CIO. In 1950 he was member of an ad hoc committee of New York area CIO officials that was formed to "financially and morally" support the Transport Workers Union of America in their conflict with the New York Board of Transportation over wages and hours of work for transit workers. The committee pressured Mayor William O'Dwyer into naming a fact finding commission to see if this financially tenable.[8][9] In 1952 Bail became president of the Playthings, Jewelry and Novelty Workers Union after the executive board expelled A. H. Esposito and his Local 223 for signing a contract with a jewelry box factory in Queens in the midst of a strike.[10]

In 1954 the Plaything, Jewelry and Novelty Workers International Union voted to merge with the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. The PJNWIU had about 20,000 members at the time of the merger.[11] Bail became an executive vice president of the RWDSU. He retired in 1970, becoming vice-president emeritus.[12]

Death and legacy

Alex Bail died June 8, 1973.

Footnotes

  1. "Communists' Trial Begins Tomorrow," New York Times, Nov 26, 1922, pg. 33.
  2. Theodore Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia. New York: Viking Press, 1960; pg. 531.
  3. "Party District Organizers Endorse Comintern Address," The Daily Worker, vol. 6, no. 64 (May 22, 1929), pg. 1.
  4. Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia, pp. 361-365.
  5. Tim Davenport, "The Lovestone Organization: Organizational Officials," Early American Marxism website, www.marxisthistory.org/
  6. Robert J. Alexander The Right Opposition: The Lovestoneites and the International Communist Opposition of the 1930s. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1981; pp. 28-29.
  7. Ted Morgan, A Covert Life, pp. 128-130
  8. "Mayor to Decide on Transit Study," New York Times, January 5, 1950; pg. 3.
  9. "Leaders of CIO Back Transit Men," New York Times, December 24, 1949; pg. 2.
  10. "Ousted Union Seeks Readmission to CIO," New York Times, May 9, 1952, pg. 15.
  11. "Three Unions Pressing Plans for Merger," New York Times, May 21, 1954, pg. 23.
  12. "Alex Bail, Long an Official Of Department Store Union," New York Times, June 8, 1973, pg. 42.
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