The altercations in Zurich forced the OAK to act. Its members discussed their options in a long and tumultuous meeting. The Committee issued a proclamation entitled "To the Working People of Switzerland". The proclamation called for a general strike beginning on 12 November and made nine demands: • new
national council elections with proportional representation, •
women's suffrage and women's right to hold office, • a general obligation to work, • the
48-hour week, • reorganizing the military into a people's army, • improving the food supply, • old age and disability insurance, • establishing a state monopoly on foreign trade, and • forcing the rich to pay off the country's sovereign debt. The Federal Council immediately rejected the Committee's demands. It left the door open to social reforms, but insisted they could only be accomplished through legal procedures. It called on the Swiss people to side with the government. The government also placed all federal employees under military law, subject to punishment if they participated in the strike. It mobilized the Army, some 110,000 soldiers. Furthermore, the Swiss government decided to close down the Russian diplomatic mission in
Berne. Its staff, including the mission chief
Jan Berzin, were escorted to the German border on November 12. The general strike started as planned on Tuesday, November 12. Participation was greatest in the industrial areas of German-speaking northern and eastern Switzerland. In Zurich and Basel workers were particularly enthusiastic. Even workers who might not otherwise have taken part in the strike, particularly those in rural areas, were prevented from commuting to work because trains did not run. In the French-speaking Romandy, strike participation was far lower, because the OAK had less influence there. French speakers exhibited more support for the Allies in World War I and some suspected Grimm of harboring sympathy for the Germans. There were no major incidents on the first day of the strike. On November 12, both chambers of the Swiss legislature assembled for a special session, with some delegates requiring military assistance to reach Berne. By a vote of 136 to 15, the
Federal Assembly passed several measures designed to break the strike after two days of debates. Only socialist delegates voted against the measures. The OAK was given an ultimatum to call off the strike by 5 pm on November 13. At 2 am on November 14 the Committee and the socialist leadership complied, calling on workers to resume their work on Friday, November 15. The Committee's decision was unanimous, but for the dissent of Grimm and Schneider, a labor leader from Basel. in Berne, which houses the national legislature and executive The strike had already been called off when it claimed its first lives. In
Grenchen, a town in the
Canton of Solothurn, protesting workers were tearing up railroad tracks and soldiers shot at them. Three died and more were injured. In Basel and Zurich, workers initially refused to believe news of the strike's end. Schneider traveled to Basel to convince them to return to work. In Zurich, the labor movement, led by
Ernst Nobs, was incensed by the decision to end the strike and considered ignoring it. Eventually, moderates prevailed, but in some factories work did not resume until the next Monday. ==Aftermath and legacy==