How did the bolsheviks take state power?

Submitted by Ugg on January 2, 2019

I've been trying to read about the Russian Revolution but I'm still a bit confused and so I just want to see if I'm understanding what happened properly.

Were the bolsheviks able to take state power because the soviets were somewhat undemocratic institutions that elected an even more undemocratic party into power, who then used the somewhat undemocratic nature of the soviets to turn them into much more authoritarian structures?

Did the soviets ever function at all like most libertarian-communists imagine councils should work with mandated, recallable delegates? From what I've read it doesn't seem like they did. But if they did function something like that how were the bolsheviks able to get control of them without either being taken out of power by the masses or having their decisions rejected by the masses?

Mike Harman

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mike Harman on January 3, 2019

Have you read this? https://libcom.org/library/the-bolsheviks-and-workers-control-solidarity-group

Ugg

Were the bolsheviks able to take state power because the soviets were somewhat undemocratic institutions that elected an even more undemocratic party into power, who then used the somewhat undemocratic nature of the soviets to turn them into much more authoritarian structures?

So partly this but there's a few different things going on:

There were multiple 'council' structures in 1917 - the soviets, but also the factory committees, peasant committees, various other committees. There were also the trade unions. Brinton shows how the factory committees were sidelined in favour of both the soviets and the unions.

The Red Army was formed in January 1918. By March, Trotsky had already come out against elected officers and putting ex-Tsarist officers in charge instead https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1918/03/work.htm. You can compare this to Lenin specifically opposing a standing army and talking about 'displaceability' of public officials in April 1917 https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/apr/20b.htm

So I think it's easier to answer the question by looking at why was there a state at all counterposed to the organised working class, and from there why it ended up the Bolsheviks that ended up with sole control of it.

Dyjbas

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dyjbas on January 3, 2019

It's too convenient to think that since anarchists did not gain a majority on the soviets there must have been something wrong with the soviets. Of course the soviets were not perfect, but they were the best organ for self-organisation that the working class had created by that point.

Now it is true that as early as mid-1918 Bolsheviks were resorting to gerrymandering to ensure their majority against the Left SRs. This helps to explain how they managed to stay in power but not why they managed to take power in the first place.

Whatever you think of them, the Bolsheviks were the best organised and most politically clear and resolute tendency within the working class movement in Russia. They had a base within all the major working class centers. By autumn 1917 they had majorities on the soviets, factory committees, trade unions etc. At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, which confirmed the October Revolution and elected the VTsIK and the Sovnarkom, it was the Bolsheviks who constituted 60% of the delegates (Left SRs came second, with only 15%) and as such it was the Bolsheviks (plus some Left SRs) that were put into power. In other words, at least at that point, the masses were with the Bolsheviks - the revolutionary programme behind which the working class rallied in 1917 was undeniably that of the Bolsheviks. With the isolation of the revolution, Civil War and famine, that programme was gradually abandoned by the party (the minorities of the Bolshevik Left which tried to keep it alive - Left Communists, Decists, the Workers' Group, etc. - were unsuccessful and repressed).

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 3, 2019

Of course the soviets were not perfect, but they were the best organ for self-organisation that the working class had created by that point.

This, of course, is where Martov disagrees.

The alternative narrative would have been "Of course, the Constituent Assembly was not perfect, but they were the best representative organ the working class had"

https://archive.org/stream/TheStateAndTheSocialistRevolution/Martov_djvu.txt

And we should not conflate the organically created 1905 soviets with the organs built in 1917

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrograd_Soviet

The rest of what Dyjbas wrote is accurate. The Bolsheviks were the better organized and far able to achieve their objectives than all the others. Credit where credit is due. But why praise a very effective pathogen?

Dyjbas

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dyjbas on January 4, 2019

Crucially though, I was talking about working class self-organisation, and not representation. And as we all know, "the representation of the working class radically opposes itself to the working class." ;) So even if the Constituent Assembly was the best organ for representation, it was not fit for self-organisation.

In 1917-1918 there were hundreds if not thousands of organically created (or organically functioning) soviets, if we look at Petrograd itself, a "significant aspect of the First City District Soviet's development in the first months of Bolshevik rule is the degree to which early changes in its role and position appear to have been gradual, unplanned, and unsystematic, with surprisingly little in the way of direction or attempts at control by higher governmental or party authorities. Indeed, the evidence shows that many of the new responsibilities that the district soviet assumed during the first half of 1918 were undertaken on the soviet's own initiative, in response to this or that new problem or crisis. Similarly, the breakdown in the relatively democratic internal operation of the First City District Soviet and the disruption of links with workers that occurred in this period appear to have been less the result of a preconceived plan for the imposition of centralized, arbitrary rule locally than the outcome of drastic personnel shortages and continuing emergencies that served to foster a civil war mentality well before the deepening of the civil war in the summer of 1918." (A. Rabinowich, 1987)

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 4, 2019

Another question to ask is whether the Bolsheviks genuinely supported this movement as supposed by many rather than the Soviets were corrupted and perverted by Lenin because of outside factors.

The soviets proved to be the dispensable means to an end for the Bolsheviks. They were a tactic not a principle.

Trotsky said “Could the Communist Party succeed, during the preparatory epoch, in pushing all other parties out of the ranks of the workers by uniting under its banner the overwhelming majority of workers, then there would be no need whatever for soviets..."
Trotsky also said in History of the Russian Revolution that "The party set the soviets in motion, the soviets set in motion the workers, soldiers, and to some extent the peasantry ."

In other words, the soviets existed to allow the party to influence the workers.

Many do not like Wiki but the link explains I think that the Petrograd Soviet's self-organization was undermined by committees imposed upon it under false pretences. The legitimacy for instigating the November Revolution was from the MRC. Again, Trotsky describes how this Committee took its orders directly from the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party. The MRC was set up by the Soviet on the basis of defending Petrograd because it was rumoured of another potential Kornilov plot or an imminent invading German army . It was not set up on the basis that it would overthrow the provisional government. But then, under the pretext of organising the military defence of Petrograd from this phantom invading German army, Trotsky at the head of the Petrograd Soviet's Military Revolutionary Committee, took over the garrison unit by unit, through a system of commissars,So, although the soviets had played a part in overthrowing Tsarism and opposing the Kerensky government, the events of 7 November were a Bolshevik take-over.

Once more Trotsky, "Even when the compromisers were in power, in the Petrograd Soviet, that the Soviet examined or amended decisions of the government. This was, as it were, part of the constitution under the regime named after Kerensky. When we Bolshevists got the upper hand in the Petrograd Soviet we only went on with the system of double power and widened its application. We took it on ourselves to revise the order sending the troops to the front, and so we disguised the actual fact of the insurrection of the Petrograd garrison under the tradition and precedents and technique of the constitutional duplication of authority” - Lessons of October.

I am not saying that Petrograd workers and soldiers didn't support the idea of a soviet government. They did. But that doesn't mean that they were consciously involved in the decision to go through with the October events in order to arrive at such a government. The lack of opposition to the Bolsheviks and the absence of support for the Provisional Government reflected the sympathies of the workers and the Bolshevik's reactionary aspect had not yet been revealed.This is the point, the most important political act was not by the self-organization of the soviet. The soviets were a cover to secure Bolshevik power.

Libcom's " The Soviet State myths and realities 1917-21' explains, "On his arrival in Petrograd, Lenin astonished everyone with his slogan: 'All power to the soviets'. But, from the outset, he had identified the revolution with the seizing of power by his Party. The slogan he was now propagating with such vehemence was of a purely tactical nature. As if additional proof were needed, see the Bolsheviks' sudden volte-face after the events of 3-5 July 1917, organized under their auspices and designed to force the Petrograd Soviet's hand into seizing power. When the latter refused, the Bolsheviks resumed their old hostility to the institution of the soviets, calling them 'puppets, devoid of real power'...When the capital's council regained popularity after repulsing Kornilov's attacks, the Bolsheviks returned to their old slogan of 'All power to the soviets', at the end of September...This time, it was for good, especially now that Lenin's partisans had won a majority inside the councils. Power was seized in the name of the latter: the Party gave power to the soviets and thus established its superiority over them. They now served merely to confer legal form on the Party's power..."

At the Soviet Congress, Martov called forward a resolution demanding that the Bolsheviks form a coalition government with other left-wing parties. The resolution was about to receive almost complete endorsement from the soviet representatives thus showing that the representatives in the soviet did NOT believe in all power to the Bolsheviks but then the majority of SR and Menshevik delegates inadvisedly left the congress in protest over the Bolshevik coup giving the Bolsheviks a majority of those who remained.

Your point on representation is taken but i'd direct you to this quote by Trotsky, "Who is to seize the power? That is now of no importance. Let the Military Revolutionary Committee take it, or 'some other institution', which will declare that it will surrender the power only to the genuine representatives of the interests of the people.''

Not "the people", not the "representatives of the people", but "the genuine representatives of the interests of the people" and that would be, of course, the Bolshevik Party.

Martov observed, ""The 'soviet regime' becomes the means of bringing into power and maintaining in power a revolutionary minority which claims to defend the interests of a majority, though the latter has not recognised these interests as its own, though this majority has not attached itself sufficiently to these interests to defend them with all its energy and determination."

Soviets or something akin to them, as workplace organisations of the workers, are bound to arise in the course of the socialist revolution. But to claim that they are the only possible form of working class self-organization is to fetish them. Brinton's excellent book which Mike H directed us to showed how the parallel factory committees arose and of course there were the trade unions. Both more of a handful for the Bolsheviks to cope with and their first acts of supremacy was to ensure their ineffectiveness as centres of workers' resistance and opposition to Bolshvik rule.

To sum up I think we can say that the Bolshevik attitude under Lenin towards soviets had not changed since his lesson of 1905 when he wrote in 1907
"...if Social-Democratic activities among the proletarian masses are properly, effectively and widely organised, such institutions may actually become superfluous...that a most determined struggle must be waged against all disruptive and demagogic attempts to weaken the R.S.D.L.p. from within or to utilise it for the purpose of substituting non-party political, proletarian organisations for the Social-Democratic Party...that Social-Democratic Party organisations may, in case of necessity, participate in inter-party Soviets of Workers’ Delegates, Soviets of Workers’ Deputies, and in congresses of representatives of these organisations, and may organise such institutions, provided this is done on strict Party lines for the purpose of developing and strengthening the Social-Democratic Labour Party "

Soviets were always to be mere appendages to the Party in Lenin's view and I don't believe, Dyjbas, that it was the material conditions of the time that caused the Bolsheviks to sabotage the soviets self-organization. I called the Bolsheviks a pathogen because the Revolution was "diseased and infected at infancy" as one Trotskyist reflecting on the failure of The Russian Revolution described it.

AnythingForProximity

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by AnythingForProximity on January 5, 2019

I'm not as well-read on the history of the Russian revolution as I'd like to be, but I've always found Peter Sedgwick's introduction to Victor Serge's Year One of the Russian Revolution (available here) to be insightful when it comes to many of the questions raised here.

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 5, 2019

AFP, I think my favourite quote from Victor Serge is, still sticking to the theme of my earlier pathogen analogy

It is often said that ‘the germ of all Stalinism was in Bolshevism at its beginning’. Well, I have no objection. Only, Bolshevism also contained many other germs, a mass of other germs, and those who lived through the enthusiasm of the first years of the first victorious socialist revolution ought not to forget it. To judge the living man by the death germs which the autopsy reveals in the corpse – and which he may have carried in him since his birth – is that very sensible?

There were multitude of choices to be made during the Russian Revolution and no doubt when cross-roads were reached, some wrong turnings were taken but we should not forget the fundamental Marxist position:
"Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past."

Auld-bod

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Auld-bod on January 5, 2019

ajjohnstone #8

‘There were multitude of choices to be made during the Russian Revolution and no doubt when cross-roads were reached, some wrong turnings were taken but we should not forget the fundamental Marxist position:
"Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past."’

The problem with this is that apologists for Lenin turning ‘Marxism’ on its head, smacks of economic determinism. Looking back everything looks inevitable, forgetting that ideas play a role in the real world and too often we select those ideas which suit our ‘needs’. More, Niccolo Machiavelli than Charlie Marx.

A pal once said to me, “The Bolsheviks were just a bunch of revolutionary chancers”. True then - true now.

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 5, 2019

Auld-Bod, i was trying to express the SPGB view of Lenin that he was the product of the conditions and circumstances of the time. Far from changing the course of history it was the course of history which changed him, hence his constant changes of policies (not to mention his changing of actual language) to match the realities that faced him.

One of my favourite observations that I have used before and will again now is from a Left S R who said "The Bible tells us that God created the heavens and the earth from nothing. The Bolsheviks are capable of no lesser miracles, out of nothing, they create legitimate credentials."

Auld-bod

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Auld-bod on January 5, 2019

ajjohnstone #10

I don’t feel we are too far apart regarding Lenin, the Bolsheviks, and the course of history.
Lenin may have thought he was a materialist though his actions showed he was in practice a messiah blinded by faith in his brand of ‘scientific socialism’, and prepared to pull the working class up by the hair on their heads.

Mike Harman

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mike Harman on January 5, 2019

ajjohnstone

Far from changing the course of history it was the course of history which changed him, hence his constant changes of policies (not to mention his changing of actual language) to match the realities that faced him.

Isn't this just called 'opportunism' though? Lenin adapted extremely flexible positions:

Elected officers in the army in 1917, 'one man management' and tsarist officers in 1918,

Workers legitimately protesting against the bureaucracy in 1921, the party is the proletariat and factory workers aren't proletarians in 1922.

Renegade Kautsky the liberal in 1918, 'Left Wing Communism an Infantile Disorder' in 1920.

Even when he's talking about reforms to the Bolshevik state and how it hadn't changed much from the Tsarist one in the later writings of 1921-1923 it's from the point of view of a capitalist reformer acceding to demands and realities, not an actual communist critique of the state. Left Wing Communism is primarily about securing the Russian state's relative safety among global geopolitics.

Maybe that's saying the same thing, but one of the more frustrating things about CLR James is when he identifies this trait of Lenin's positively.

Ugg

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Ugg on January 6, 2019

Thanks for everyone's responses :)

Mike Harman

Have you read this? https://libcom.org/library/the-bolsheviks-and-workers-control-solidarity-group

There were multiple 'council' structures in 1917 - the soviets, but also the factory committees, peasant committees, various other committees. There were also the trade unions. Brinton shows how the factory committees were sidelined in favour of both the soviets and the unions.

Yeah I remember reading that book a while ago but maybe it'll help to read it again. I've read about the other types of councils and soviets that you mention and how they were more democratic but ultimately were taken over or shut down by the bolsheviks.

Dyjbas

It's too convenient to think that since anarchists did not gain a majority on the soviets there must have been something wrong with the soviets. Of course the soviets were not perfect, but they were the best organ for self-organisation that the working class had created by that point.

I didn't mean to say that the bolsheviks weren't popular, it's just that I think it's kind of a problem if the soviets had things like recallable delegates but still got taken over somehow.

ajjohnstone

Many do not like Wiki but the link explains I think that the Petrograd Soviet's self-organization was undermined by committees imposed upon it under false pretences. The legitimacy for instigating the November Revolution was from the MRC. Again, Trotsky describes how this Committee took its orders directly from the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party. The MRC was set up by the Soviet on the basis of defending Petrograd because it was rumoured of another potential Kornilov plot or an imminent invading German army . It was not set up on the basis that it would overthrow the provisional government. But then, under the pretext of organising the military defence of Petrograd from this phantom invading German army, Trotsky at the head of the Petrograd Soviet's Military Revolutionary Committee, took over the garrison unit by unit, through a system of commissars,So, although the soviets had played a part in overthrowing Tsarism and opposing the Kerensky government, the events of 7 November were a Bolshevik take-over.

This is helpful, thanks

Mike Harman

Maybe that's saying the same thing, but one of the more frustrating things about CLR James is when he identifies this trait of Lenin's positively.

Have you read this essay Mike?
http://readingfanon.blogspot.com/2012/10/silences-on-suppression-of-workers-self.html#more

Dave B

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dave B on January 6, 2019

There is some additional material here;

One of the additional justifications [impending] coup was that the bourgeoisie in cahoots with current PRG etc was planning to ‘postpone’ the constituent assembly elections

eg Trotsky’s "lomg live the constituent assembly".

Whilst the audience understood that the Bolsheviks had been bought by the Germans; which they were, receiving funding.

https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1925/lenin/05.htm

That allowed the Bolshevik to fund there own private army of thugs and chekka etc or Lettish regiments.
[ that ultimately openend fire on mass demonstrations in support of the constituent assembly in January 1918.]

Which was planned much earlier eg;

…….Old Natanson comforted us very much. He came to us “to talk it over,” and after the first words said, “Well, as far as I am concerned, if it comes to that point, break up the Constituent Assembly with force.”….

………Lenin occupied himself intensively with the question of the constituents.
“It is an open mistake,” he said. “We have already gained the power and now we have put ourselves in a situation that forces military measures upon us to gain the power anew.”

He carried on the preparatory work with the greatest care, weighed all the details, and subjected Urizky, who to his great sorrow had been appointed commissar of the Constituent Assembly, to a painful examination. Among other things Lenin ordered the transfer to Petrograd of one of the Lettish regiments consisting ………..

https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1925/lenin/05.htm

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 6, 2019

Ugg, thanks for the link. I for one had not read the essay.

Certainly, author knows the emperor is naked

Dyjbas

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dyjbas on January 6, 2019

The question for Lenin, as for other revolutionaries, was how does the working class take power. Rather than fetishise one way of getting there, the Bolsheviks were at different points considering different routes - at one point it may have been the party winning over a Constituent Assembly, at another the soviets taking power, and at yet another, the factory committees taking power. In the course of 1917, the party settled on the soviets being the answer - "it became clear that these soviets, which had originated as instruments for use in the struggle for power, must inevitably be transformed into the instruments for the wielding of power."

After 1918 Lenin was not one to shy away from opportunism, but the process in which the Bolsheviks settled the question of workers' power was rather that of learning from the self-activity of the class conscious masses, who became increasingly disillusioned with parliamentary politics.

And since we're playing the game of who said what, here's some quotes that challenge the "Lenin was just a power hungry putschist who did not want the working class in power" narrative.

Lenin suggests the SRs and Mensheviks create a government based purely on the soviets, so that the revolution can advance peacefully:

"The compromise would amount to the following: the Bolsheviks, without making any claim to participate in the government (which is impossible for the internationalists unless a dictatorship of the proletariat and the poor peasants has been realised), would refrain from demanding the immediate transfer of power to the proletariat and the poor peasants and from employing revolutionary methods of fighting for this demand. A condition that is self-evident and not new to the S.R.s and Mensheviks would be complete freedom of propaganda and the convocation of the Constituent Assembly without further delays or even at an earlier date. The Mensheviks and S.R.s, being the government bloc, would then agree (assuming that the compromise had been reached) to form a government wholly and exclusively responsible to the Soviets, the latter taking over all power locally as well. This would constitute the “new” condition. I think the Bolsheviks would advance no other conditions, trusting that the revolution would proceed peacefully and party strife in the Soviets would be peacefully overcome thanks to really complete freedom of propaganda and to the immediate establishment of a new democracy in the composition of the Soviets (new elections) and in their functioning." (Lenin, September 1917)

Lenin argues for the right of recall:

"The people were told that the Soviet is a plenipotentiary organ: they believed it and acted upon that belief. The process of democratisation must be carried forward and the right of recall introduced. The right of recall should be given to the Soviets, as the best embodiment of the idea of state power, of coercion. The transfer of power from one party to another may then take place peacefully, by mere re-election." (Lenin, November 1917)

Ugg

I didn't mean to say that the bolsheviks weren't popular, it's just that I think it's kind of a problem if the soviets had things like recallable delegates but still got taken over somehow.

Would it be a problem if it was the anarchists who had a majority on the soviets instead of the Bolsheviks? Would anarchists gaining a majority on the soviets also mean the soviets had been "taken over"?

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 6, 2019

Dyjbas, wasn't the question always for Lenin, " How does the Bolsheviks take power." and not so much how the working class take power.

Lenin may have equated his Party interests with those of the Russian working class but that would be disputed by many.

Later this would become a global problem with the imposition of Moscow rules of the Comintern's 21 Conditions which became an issue for the KAPD, for instance

radicalgraffiti

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by radicalgraffiti on January 6, 2019

Dyjbas

Ugg

I didn't mean to say that the bolsheviks weren't popular, it's just that I think it's kind of a problem if the soviets had things like recallable delegates but still got taken over somehow.

Would it be a problem if it was the anarchists who had a majority on the soviets instead of the Bolsheviks? Would anarchists gaining a majority on the soviets also mean the soviets had been "taken over"?

the soviets where not directly democratic, they elected representatives, so would it be a problem if those representatives where anarchists? what do you think? what is the general opinion of anarchists about elected representatives?

Uncreative

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Uncreative on January 6, 2019

Dyjbas

Would it be a problem if it was the anarchists who had a majority on the soviets instead of the Bolsheviks? Would anarchists gaining a majority on the soviets also mean the soviets had been "taken over"?

If the soviets were organised in a dodgy way, by accident or design (or any other reason), such that they werent an effective way for the working class to express itself politically, then it would be a problem if the anarchists had a majority in them, yes. Same goes for any other tendency. Its a problem not because of whose controlling these organisations but because of what these organisation would be, a body of power outside the control of the working class with the potential to be used against it.

A tendency getting a majority in something, eg the soviets, isn't intrinsically a problem in itself, however if that tendency aims to subordinate eg the soviets to its own political organisation, or alter or dissolve them without creating a more effective way for the working class to run society, thats a problem.

Dyjbas

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dyjbas on January 6, 2019

I thought it was widely known that the soviets were based on delegation rather than simply representation. Even if we take the Petrograd Soviet, which according to ajjohnstone was not "organic", we'll see that in fact

"In the early weeks of its existence the Petrograd soviet resembled a huge permanent assembly of workers and soldiers. The number of delegates grew from day to day; in the first week of March it reached 1,200; by the second half of March it rose to almost 3,000."

"In the weeks following the February Revolution the Petrograd soviet was revolutionary Russia and had significance for the whole country, far beyond the capital. Workers and soldiers councils in other cities sent delegates to Petrograd or maintained permanent observers. Neighboring soviets also began very early to establish closer ties with each other. In March the first provincial and regional conferences took place, and later these were changed into periodic congresses of workers and soldiers soviets, with the necessary executive committees and bureaus."

"402 workers and soldiers soviets and other soldiers committees were represented [at the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets]. Among the roughly 650 delegates, the Bolsheviks controlled a bare majority when the congress ended. The next strongest group was the Left Social Revolutionaries. [...] Of the 366 soviet organizations on which records are available, 255 (69.6 percent) favored the slogan "AIl power to the soviets" ; 81 (22.1 percent) were for "AIl power to democracy" or "Coalition without Kadets"; 30 (8.3 percent) were undecided."

"The Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets had in general terms transferred authority to the soviets throughout the country. On November 18 Lenin appealed to the workers to take over all government affairs. [...] The soviet principle was extended to other areas of public life in the months after the October insurrection. A decree of December 14, 1917, established a Supreme Economic Council to manage the entire Russian economy; it was to lead and unify the economic departments of aIl local soviets, and later formed territorial councils. Other decrees of December 1917 and February 1918 abolished the old courts, replacing them with people's courts; at first judges were elected, but later they, too, were appointed by the local soviets. Thus emerged a widely differentiated system of soviets, whose backbone was the political workers, soldiers, and peasants soviets, to which were added the various economic and military soviets."

(All quotes from O. Anweiler, 1974 - who nevertheless has a fairly low opinion of the Bolsheviks!)

So my question then, for those who think the soviets were "dodgy" or not "directly democratic", is how exactly were they "dodgy" and "not democratic"? And, if the soviets were not the best organ for self-organisation that the working class had created by that point, then - what was? Where should the anarchists have been active?

Ajjohnstone, I might come back to the question about Lenin later.

radicalgraffiti

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by radicalgraffiti on January 7, 2019

just because they are referred to as delegates doesn't mean they performed the function of delegates within a directly democratic institution, and often the word delegates is used for representatives

you also quote selectively

from that same book

The first issue of lzvestija Petrogradskogo soveta raboCich i soldatskich deputatov on the morning of February 28 carried the soviet's programmatic appeal to the population of Petrograd and aIl Russia: "In order to successfully conclude the struggle for democ­racy, the people must organize their power. Yesterday, on February 27, the Soviet of Workers Deputies was founded in the capital, consisting of elected representatives from factories, rebelling troop units, and democratic and socialist parties and groups.

On February 28 most enterprises held elections for deputies. The plenary session at 1 :00 P.M. was already attended by about 120 industrial delegates,35 but there was still no check on credentials, and the meeting came to order without any agenda.36 As before, decisions were made within the confines of the Executive Committee.

. The initiative for its establishment came, in contrast ta 1905, chiefly from a few political leaders (among the workers groups and the duma delegates) who attempted ta form a sort of "reserve and subgovernment" wh en the old regime collapsed.41 Thus from the beginning the socialist intelligents ia decisively in­fluenced the workers and soldiers deputies; of 42 members on the Ex­ecutive Committee at the end of March only 7 were workers.42

here the word delegates is used to refer to members of the duma, does that make parliament directly democratic?

The number of delegates grew fro;n day ta day; in the first week of March it reached The Soviets and the Russian Revolution of 1917 107 1,200; by the second half of March it rose to almost 3,000. 46 Of this number, about 2,000 were soldiers and only 800 were workers, al­though at this time the total number of workers in Petrograd was two or thrce times that of the soldiers stationed in the garrison.47

Under such circumstances, even though aIl delegates were never present at any one time, the soviet's plenary sessions were poorly organized; they resembled demonstrations and rallies more than they did a working parliamentary institution.

In the course of about two months the Petrograd soviet thus changed from a provision al revolutionary organ into a well-organized administrative machine. The execution of its business required several hundred employees, most of them clerks in the various departments. The soviet's administrative expenditures from March to June ran to 800,000 rubles; during the same period it commanded an in come of 3,512,000 rubles.56 However, as the soviet worked more efficiently, it lost proportionately its direct contact with the masses. The plenary sessions, almost daily du ring the early weeks, were less frequent and only sparsely attended by the deputies.57 The soviet Executive be­came increasingly independent, even though it remained subject to certain con troIs by the deputies, who had the right to discharge it. The thrust of this development and certain party traditions may have '/ led to the concentration of power in small committees during the later Bolshevik soviet system. By that time, however-and here lies the definitive difference from the original soviet constitution-they were independent of genuine democratic control from below.

The official ratio of representation for the workers section in the The Soviets and the Russian Revolution of 1917 109 soviet was one deputy for 1,000 workers; however, concerns employ­ing fewer than 1,000 workers were also aIlowed to send one delcgatc. Thus large plants (with over 400 employees), accounting for 87 per­cent of all Petrograd workers, furnished 424 delegates, while con­cerns with fewer than 400 employees, accounting for 13 percent of aIl workers, had 422 delegates.58 One could not, therefore, speak of equal suffrage; this failing was occasionaIly discussed in the sovict."n

so these quotes give us a few examples of some of the flaws in the soviets

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 7, 2019

"I thought it was widely known that the soviets were based on delegation rather than simply representation. Even if we take the Petrograd Soviet, which according to ajjohnstone was not "organic", we'll see that in fact"

In addition to what RG has posted, we have this article reviewing the research of Rabinowich

http://anarchism.pageabode.com/anarcho/review-the-bolsheviks-in-power

Rabinowitch shows, this pattern of supporting institutions until such time as they could not be utilised to secure Bolshevik power repeated itself in 1918. This can be seen from the postponing of elections to the Petrograd soviet until such time as it was gerrymandered to ensure their majority. Before the election, the Bolshevik Soviet confirmed new regulations “to help offset possible weaknesses” in their “electoral strength in factories.” The “most significant change in the makeup of the new soviet was that numerically decisive representation was given to agencies in which the Bolsheviks had overwhelming strength, among them the Petrograd Trade Union Council, individual trade unions, factory committees in closed enterprises, district soviets, and district nonparty workers’ conferences.” This ensured that “only 260 of roughly 700 deputies in the new soviet were to be elected in factories, which guaranteed a large Bolshevik majority in advance.” The Bolsheviks “contrived a majority” in the new Soviet long before gaining 127 of the 260 factory delegates and even here, the result “was highly suspect, even on the shop floor.” (pp. 248-2)

at the fifth All-Russian Soviet Congress in July 1918 when the Bolshevik gerrymandered it to maintain their majority. They ensured their majority in the congress and, so a Bolshevik government, by gerrymandering it has they had the Petrograd soviet. Thus “electoral fraud gave the Bolsheviks a huge majority of congress delegates.” In reality, “the number of legitimately elected Left SR delegates was roughly equal to that of the Bolsheviks.” The Left-SRs expected a majority but did not include “roughly 399 Bolsheviks delegates whose right to be seated was challenged by the Left SR minority in the congress's credentials commission.” Without these dubious delegates, the Left SRs and SR Maximalists would have outnumbered the Bolsheviks by around 30 delegates. This ensured “the Bolshevik's successful fabrication of a large majority in the Fifth All-Russian Congress of Soviets.” (p. 396, p. 288, p. 442 and p. 308)

He discusses the Menshevik inspired, but independent, Extraordinary Assembly of Delegates (EAD). [something I am ignorant about and will now do some further research -ajj]“The emergence of the EAD”, he notes, “was also stimulated by the widespread view that trade unions, factory committees, and soviets . . . were no longer representative, democratically run working-class institutions; instead they had been transformed into arbitrary, bureaucratic government agencies. There was ample reason for this concern.” (p. 224) To counter the EAD, the Bolsheviks and Left-SRs organised non-party conferences which, in itself, provides evidence that the soviets had become as distant from the masses as the opposition argued. District soviets “were deeply concerned about their increasing isolation . . . At the end of March . . . they resolved to convene successive nonparty workers' conferences . . . in part to undercut the EAD by strengthening ties between district soviets and workers . . . Amid unmistakable signs of the widening rift between Bolshevik-dominated political institutions and ordinary factory workers.” (p. 232)

I suppose we can argue that those were developments of the future degeneration of the soviets and get into a discussion of time-lines but I think we can also assume that it reflected the Bolsheviks very elastic and flexible support for the slogan "all power to the soviets"...more a pragmatic principle than a principled practice.

Dyjbas

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dyjbas on January 7, 2019

Radicalgraffiti, I agree that there were flaws in the soviets. It could not be otherwise. For millions of workers and peasants this was their first experience of self-organisation. So, it's only natural that ratios were not quite right or that sessions "resembled demonstrations and rallies more than they did a working parliamentary institution" - by en large, these were not professional politicians! The fact that executive organs were becoming increasingly independent, and the plenary sessions less common were however real issues - seriously exacerbated during the Civil War and famine. But despite these flaws, I stand by my point, the soviets were the best organ for self-organisation that the working class had created by that point. And soviet delegates were delegates - they were not elected through voting for representatives once every four or so years in an election cycle.

Ajjohnstone, I've already mentioned above that as early as mid-1918 Bolsheviks were resorting to gerrymandering to ensure their majority against the Left SRs. This does not change the fact that prior to the October Revolution the slogan All Power to the Soviets became synonymous with the Bolsheviks in the eyes of the masses, and that, in the first few months after the establishment of the Soviet Republic, the Bolsheviks did their best to extend the soviet principle and to promote participation in soviet organs. When Lenin and the Bolsheviks went around calling for workers to take over all government affairs - they meant it. Even in 1918 Lenin was still arguing that "socialism cannot be implemented by a minority, by the Party. It can be implemented only by tens of millions when they have learned to do it themselves" - but between 1918 and the early 1920s something had changed. And here I agree that equating "Party interests with those of the Russian working class" certainly contributed to the undermining of soviet democracy, but this was not the primary or only cause as some anarchists would like to see it.

Mike Harman

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mike Harman on January 7, 2019

Ugg

Have you read this essay Mike?
http://readingfanon.blogspot.com/2012/10/silences-on-suppression-of-workers-self.html#more

Yes I really like that one (and the book Matthew Quest did on strikes and plantation occupations in early 1970s Guyana).

Mike Harman

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mike Harman on January 7, 2019

Dyjbas

But despite these flaws, I stand by my point, the soviets were the best organ for self-organisation that the working class had created by that point. And soviet delegates were delegates - they were not elected through voting for representatives once every four or so years in an election cycle.

Have you actually done a comparison between them and the factory committees and various other forms the revolution threw up though?

I think the representatives stuff is getting a bit semantic:

1. Both representative and delegate can be used interchangeably.
2. Both representatives and delegates can (at least in theory) be recalled sometimes, you're supposed to be able to do that with British MPs ffs.
3. Fixed terms and mechanisms for recall within terms are good, but this is not the same as 'mandated and recallable delegates' which is the thing that prevents decisions being made in private etc.

Dyjbas

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dyjbas on January 7, 2019

Mike Harman

Have you actually done a comparison between them and the factory committees and various other forms the revolution threw up though?

For every flaw in the soviets, you can find a flaw in the factory committees. E.g. from S.A. Smith (1983):

"Although the trade unions led the drive to increase labour-discipline and productivity, the factory committees also played a part in the battle to increase output. This had always been a concern of the committees, but it now took precedence over their other concerns. During 1918 the desire to transform relations of authority within the
enterprise gave way to the drive for greater productivity. Workers' control was no longer seen in terms of the transformation of the relations of workers to production, but in terms of the passive supervision of production and, above all, in terms of upholding labour-discipline. Yet one cannot see in this a triumph of the Bolshevik party over the factory committees. From the first, the committees had been committed both to maintaining production and
to democratising factory life, but the condition of industry was such that these two objectives now conflicted with one another. The factory committees, in general, consented to the prioritisation of productivity: they acquiesced in, and even initiated, impulses towards stricter labour-discipline. Nevertheless, they and the organised rank-and-file resisted impulses towards authoritarianism which they disliked. In spite of the great respect and affection in which Lenin was held, for example, his views on one-man management were quietly ignored. Similarly, while most organised workers agreed to the priority of restoring productivity, they were not prepared to countenance the unconditional reintroduction of piece-rates. Party leaders and trade-union officials were thus not able to 'impose' their policies on the factory committees. In any case, there was no need to do so, for they could count on the support of the factory committees, who could see no alternative to the unpleasant policies being advocated."

But again, this was not primarily the fault of Bolsheviks in the abstract. There were all kinds of tendencies within the Bolsheviks and they differed on how workers' power can be best exercised: some thought it was through the soviets, some through factory committees, some through the trade unions and some through the party. The last option won in the end, but not until the mid-1920s.

Mike Harman

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mike Harman on January 7, 2019

Dyjbas

Mike Harman

Have you actually done a comparison between them and the factory committees and various other forms the revolution threw up though?

For every flaw in the soviets, you can find a flaw in the factory committees. E.g. from S.A. Smith (1983):

That's a good example, but at least in that case looks like a flaw in content rather than form. A mass meeting during a strike could vote to go back to work via a productivity deal in order to keep the factory open, this is not an indictment of the mass meeting as such but the decision it made. And if the workforce continues to organise by mass meetings they could collectively decide to go out on strike again or picket other workplaces later on.

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 7, 2019

"...the Bolsheviks did their best to extend the soviet principle and to promote participation in soviet organs. When Lenin and the Bolsheviks went around calling for workers to take over all government affairs - they meant it..."

Dyjbas, I won't dispute that Lenin and the Bolsheviks talked the talk. This offers supportive texts to your proposition.

http://links.org.au/node/2283

It would be a challenge to try and question his and his comrades intentions.

But the sincerity of Lenin has never been the real issue for Marxists. It's back to what some here call deterministic theory - the materialist conception of history. What conditions and circumstances permit to rather than just trusting in will to achieve it. You probably know the emphasis the SPGB places on workers possessing understanding and education. And that was what lacked and what Lenin came to realise, causing him to change his policies and impose Party power.

We can credit the Bolshevik takeover with a large degree of passive support but subsequent support was increasingly coerced from the masses. When Lenin issued his proclamation taking power in the name of the Soviets. But he was also far-sighted enough to remove from the draft of the text any mention of the constitution of power based on the Soviets. Indeed, the government’ (Soviet of Commissars of the People) was appointed prior to the Congress of Soviets. It emerged in the absence of any consultation with the Soviets themselves and resulted from a list drawn up by a small group within the Central Committee of the Communist Party; henceforth the source of all power in Russia.

Lenin should have remained a stagiest as he once was

“….. If Social-Democracy [ ie the Bolsheviks] sought to make the socialist revolution its immediate aim, it would assuredly discredit itself. It is precisely such vague and hazy ideas of our “Socialists—Revolutionaries” that Social-Democracy has always combated.
For this reason Social-Democracy [Bolshevism] has constantly stressed the bourgeois nature of the impending revolution in Russia and insisted on a clear line of demarcation between the democratic minimum programme and the socialist maximum programme.
Some Social-Democrats, [ egTrotsky] who are inclined to yield to spontaneity, might forget all this in time of revolution, but not the Party as a whole. The adherents of this erroneous view make an idol of spontaneity in their belief that the march of events will compel the Social-Democratic Party in such a position to set about achieving the socialist revolution, despite itself. …….”
http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1905/apr/12b.htm

Often I come back to this Engels quote

[quote]The worst thing that can befall a leader of an extreme party is to be compelled to take over a government in an epoch when the movement is not yet ripe for the domination of the class which he represents and for the realisation of the measures which that domination would imply. What he can do depends not upon his will but upon the sharpness of the clash of interests between the various classes, and upon the degree of development of the material means of existence, the relations of production and means of communication upon which the clash of interests of the classes is based every time. What he ought to do, what his party demands of him, again depends not upon him, or upon the degree of development of the class struggle and its conditions. He is bound to his doctrines and the demands hitherto propounded which do not emanate from the interrelations of the social classes at a given moment, or from the more or less accidental level of relations of production and means of communication, but from his more or less penetrating insight into the general result of the social and political movement. Thus he necessarily finds himself in a dilemma. What he can do is in contrast to all his actions as hitherto practised, to all his principles and to the present interests of his party; what he ought to do cannot be achieved. In a word, he is compelled to represent not his party or his class, but the class for whom conditions are ripe for domination. In the interests of the movement itself, he is compelled to defend the interests of an alien class, and to feed his own class with phrases and promises, with the assertion that the interests of that alien class are their own interests. Whoever puts himself in this awkward position is irrevocably lost.
[/quote

Wasn't this Lenin's predicament?

Dyjbas

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Dyjbas on January 7, 2019

Mike Harman

That's a good example, but at least in that case looks like a flaw in content rather than form. A mass meeting during a strike could vote to go back to work via a productivity deal in order to keep the factory open, this is not an indictment of the mass meeting as such but the decision it made. And if the workforce continues to organise by mass meetings they could collectively decide to go out on strike again or picket other workplaces later on.

Both organs, soviets and factory committees, were flawed. But most importantly they were both forms of self-organisation. It was up to conscious workers, communists and anarchists, to make them better, rather than abandon them (as some in this thread seem to be suggesting) because they were flawed or made some wrong decision. What the soviets had going for them that the factory committees did not however, is that they were territorial rather than purely factory based - which made them more suitable to express workers' power (not all workers are in factories after all!).

ajjohnstone

But the sincerity of Lenin has never been the real issue for Marxists. It's back to what some here call deterministic theory - the materialist conception of history. What conditions and circumstances permit to rather than just trusting in will to achieve it.

Lenin was of course at times overly deterministic, but 1917-18 was not that. I agree with Luxemburg here:

"It is not a matter of this or that secondary question of tactics, but of the capacity for action of the proletariat, the strength to act, the will to power of socialism as such. In this, Lenin and Trotsky and their friends were the first, those who went ahead as an example to the proletariat of the world; they are still the only ones up to now who can cry with Hutten: “I have dared!” This is the essential and enduring in Bolshevik policy."

If I got you right, it seems what you're saying is that they were wrong to dare!

ajjohnstone

We can credit the Bolshevik takeover with a large degree of passive support but subsequent support was increasingly coerced from the masses. When Lenin issued his proclamation taking power in the name of the Soviets. But he was also far-sighted enough to remove from the draft of the text any mention of the constitution of power based on the Soviets. Indeed, the government’ (Soviet of Commissars of the People) was appointed prior to the Congress of Soviets. It emerged in the absence of any consultation with the Soviets themselves and resulted from a list drawn up by a small group within the Central Committee of the Communist Party; henceforth the source of all power in Russia.

I believe the appointment of the Sovnarkom was agreed upon by the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets. It was at first provisional (composed only of Bolsheviks) but was soon after reorganised to include Left SRs as well. These two parties made up around 75% of delegates at the Second Congress, and the Left SRs were part of the government until they walked out over the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.

The 1918 Constitution of the RSFSR outright states that "Russia is declared to be a republic of the Soviets of Workers', Soldiers', and Peasants' Deputies. All the central and local power belongs to these soviets."

Anarcho

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Anarcho on January 7, 2019

Dyjbas

Whatever you think of them, the Bolsheviks were the best organised and most politically clear and resolute tendency within the working class movement in Russia. They had a base within all the major working class centers.

The same was said about all social-democratic parties and their counter-revolutionary role, whether in Russia (the Bolsheviks) or in Germany, Italy, etc. All had such "a base" and all pretended to be "politically clear and resolute"...

Dyjbas

By autumn 1917 they had majorities on the soviets, factory committees, trade unions etc. At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, which confirmed the October Revolution and elected the VTsIK and the Sovnarkom, it was the Bolsheviks who constituted 60% of the delegates (Left SRs came second, with only 15%) and as such it was the Bolsheviks (plus some Left SRs) that were put into power.

So the soviets -- the Bolsheviks -- instantly gave their power to... the Bolshevik party leadership. But then the Bolsheviks were always clear that they aimed for party power. When it came to soviet power or party power, the Bolsheviks went for the latter....

Dyjbas

In other words, at least at that point, the masses were with the Bolsheviks - the revolutionary programme behind which the working class rallied in 1917 was undeniably that of the Bolsheviks.

It is doubtful that "the masses" were that aware of many Bolshevik positions -- such as central planning -- and what certain slogans ("all power to the Bolsheviks" or "workers control") meant in practice. Once the reality of the regime came to be seen, the support (often passive) went to other parties (Mensheviks and Left-SRs) and then the Bolsheviks simply imposed their dictatorship.

Dyjbas

With the isolation of the revolution, Civil War and famine, that programme was gradually abandoned by the party (the minorities of the Bolshevik Left which tried to keep it alive - Left Communists, Decists, the Workers' Group, etc. - were unsuccessful and repressed).

This is wrong, for the regime became authoritarian quite soon after the seizure of power, and many months before the civil war broke out. Also, much of the state-capitalism imposed was actually part and parcel of the Bolshevik programme -- so in that sense, there was not much abandoned. As I discussed here:

The State and Revolution: Theory and Practice

As for the Left Communists, etc. -- they were not a real alternative. They did not question the Bolshevik ideology at all, not least the dominant role of the party and the centralised vision of "socialism"

Mike Harman

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mike Harman on January 7, 2019

Dyjbas

What the soviets had going for them that the factory committees did not however, is that they were territorial rather than purely factory based - which made them more suitable to express workers' power (not all workers are in factories after all!).

While that's true you also see lots of criticism of geographically-based organs of direct democracy because they have no way to exclude petit-bourgeois or capitalists.

There were peasant soviets as well - Lenin writes about them in April 1917. https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/apr/16.htm

By mid-1918 the Bolsheviks had established 'commitees of poor peasants' primarily for grain requisitioning as a counter-institution to the soviets, but it failed and they were eventually merged back into the soviets - however it's clear they saw the geographical nature of the peasant soviets as an obstacle. The preponderance of soldiers in leadership positions in the soviets points to similar problems in the urban ones too.

Anarcho

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Anarcho on January 7, 2019

Dyjbas

The question for Lenin, as for other revolutionaries, was how does the working class take power.

Actually, the question for Lenin was always how did the Bolsheviks take power. Which is precisely what did happen and the source of many of the problems facing the revolution, not to mention a cause of much of its degeneration.

Dyjbas

Rather than fetishise one way of getting there, the Bolsheviks were at different points considering different routes - at one point it may have been the party winning over a Constituent Assembly, at another the soviets taking power, and at yet another, the factory committees taking power. In the course of 1917, the party settled on the soviets being the answer - "it became clear that these soviets, which had originated as instruments for use in the struggle for power, must inevitably be transformed into the instruments for the wielding of power."

The soviets were always seen as simply a means to party power, not a means for working class people to run society. And, really, quoting Bukharin who was at this time -- like all leading Bolsheviks -- an advocate of party dictatorship?

Dyjbas

After 1918 Lenin was not one to shy away from opportunism, but the process in which the Bolsheviks settled the question of workers' power was rather that of learning from the self-activity of the class conscious masses, who became increasingly disillusioned with parliamentary politics.

Or he realised that in a country with around 80% of the population peasants, the Bolsheviks would never gain a majority in the Constituent Assembly?

Dyjbas

And since we're playing the game of who said what, here's some quotes that challenge the "Lenin was just a power hungry putschist who did not want the working class in power" narrative.

Lenin equated party power and class power, fooling himself -- and others -- that Bolshevik power meant the working class was in power. When the two came into conflict (a few months after October), the Bolsheviks imposed their dictatorship over the masses. By early 1919 -- at the latest -- the need for party dictatorship was party orthodoxy, This did not stop him or other Bolsheviks prattling about the working class being "in power,"

Dyjbas

Lenin argues for the right of recall:

But only when he thought his party would benefit -- as soon as recall was being used to replace Bolsheviks, well, then it was a case of party dictatorship...

Dyjbas

Would it be a problem if it was the anarchists who had a majority on the soviets instead of the Bolsheviks? Would anarchists gaining a majority on the soviets also mean the soviets had been "taken over"?

No, as the soviets would not have been marginalised by a party government (an executive) above the soviets -- the same executive Lenin had argued would not be created during the summer of 1917 but then immediately created in October...

I'm surprised to be readng these comments, given how much better informed we are now to the realities of Bolshevik rule.

ajjohnstone

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on January 7, 2019

As I said, Dyjbas, the Bolsheviks talked the talk. But I think we are aware of the separation of formal constitutions from on-the-ground practice.

The Congress (which met twice-yearly) was supposed to control both the Council of People's Commissars (Sovnarkom) and the All-Russian Central Executive Committee. Many would say it was the reverse.

Recall Marx’s admonition.

"Just as one does not judge an individual by what he thinks about himself, so one cannot judge such a period of transformation by its consciousness, but, on the contrary, this consciousness must be explained from the contradictions of material life, from the conflict existing between the social forces of production and the relations of production."

In other words, the proof of the pudding is in the eating.

(As an aside, I appreciate the lack of rancour and the maintenance of civility on this thread, something that was very much missing from another website on much the same topic)

Spikymike

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Spikymike on January 8, 2019

I'd just observe that in 1917 the equation of working class power with party power was a common understanding within Social Democracy in all its tendencies and accepted by much of the politicised working class in Europe. It's rejection was to be a slow process as a result of experience both positive and negative at high points in the class struggle ( such as in Russia 1917, Germany 1918 Spain 1936 and elsewhere across the globe) and appears to be a lesson that has to be re-learnt within the ebb and flow of the struggle today. There are many small political tendencies today from across the anarchist marxist divide that have learnt that lesson but they often end up arguing at cross purposes when seeking to justify current differences on the basis of their claimed historical antecedents.

Ugg

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Ugg on January 10, 2019

But if the soviets had mandated, recallable delegates how were the Bolsheviks able to turn them into authoritarian institutions without being recalled or their decisions rejected?

Take for example the IWW. The IWW's highest body is the General Executive Board. It's voted into power by the membership once yearly and all its decisions must be voted on by referendum.

Let's say the General Executive Board (GEB) decide tomorrow that they want to turn the IWW into a dictatorship so that they no longer have to submit proposals to referendum.

In my view there's only 2 ways for this to work:

1. The membership of the IWW votes in favour of this proposal, either by accident or because they supported the idea of a dictatorship at that time.

2. The GEB has some way of coercing people to vote in favour turning the IWW into a dictatorship or alternatively just forcing the members to ratify all their decisions. Maybe the GEB could blackmail, threaten or create their own secret police or military to repress members. In this case the GEB would already be secretly functioning as some sort of miniature state that they could use to take over the IWW.

If neither of these things happen I don't see how the GEB could make themselves dictators. The membership could just vote against their proposals and ignore the proposals that the GEB tried to enact by decree. Maybe the membership would also elect another GEB if the previous one was refusing to do what they were elected to do.

so if the soviets functioned according to principles that are at all similar to those of an organization like the IWW how were they able to be taken over almost overnight, like in the article Anarcho linked?

"Lenin had stressed the need for "working bodies" and the fusion of legislative and executive bodies yet the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets elected a new Central Executive Committee (VTsIK, with 101 members) and created the Council of People's Commissars (Sovnarkom, with 16 members). As the latter acted as the executive of the soviet executive, Lenin's promises in The State and Revolution did not last the night. Worse, a mere four days later the Sovnarkom unilaterally give itself legislative power simply by issuing a decree to this effect. This was not only the opposite of the example given by the Paris Commune but also made clear the party's pre-eminence over the
soviets." - https://anarchism.pageabode.com/anarcho/state-revolution-theory-practice

I don't really know who Ron Tabor is but I think what he says about the soviets makes a lot of sense to me in his article "Historical and Political Background, the February Revolution and the Soviets":

"In the second place, from an anarchist and libertarian socialist point of view, the soviets were by no means ideal. Specifically, they were hierarchical organizations. It is certainly true that they were nowhere nearly as hierarchical as were the organs of the Tsarist state or even the organizational structures of the socialist parties, but they were not models of libertarian organization either. They generally consisted of three layers. At the bottom were the delegates elected by the rank and file workers, soldiers, sailors, and peasants, along with huge numbers of observers who came and went, observing and participating in the proceedings for varying periods of time. Above them were members of the soviets’ executive committees, who were usually not elected at all but were chosen by the various socialist parties and groups to represent them (according to an agreed-upon quota) on the committees. Moreover, these EC’s often comprised large numbers of people, at times, as many as 100. As a result, the EC’s selected still smaller committees ("permanent bureaus"), often comprising a mere handful of individuals, which carried on the day-to-day work of the soviets. For their part, the sessions of the soviets have been described by various observers as virtually permanent and extremely chaotic mass meetings, essentially rallies attended by large numbers (as many as several thousand) of workers, soldiers, sailors, and peasants who flowed in and out over time, during which they were harangued by, and applauded or jeered at, orators representing the various socialist organizations, and voted on, by voice vote or by a show of hands, various motions and resolutions put to them. The meetings of the soviet were not, in other words, sessions of calm, carefully deliberating bodies operating according to democratic rules of procedure. "- https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/ron-tabor-historical-and-political-background-the-february-revolution-and-the-soviets#toc7

Does anyone know how differently the soviets functioned before the 1918 Constitution was written? I might be misreading it but after looking through it a few times it doesn't seem much more democratic than a regular bourgeois parliament, and in some ways is perhaps even worse. Here's a link https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/1918_Constitution_(Fundamental_Law)_of_the_RSFSR

1.The only officials that are voted into power that regular people are able to recall are the deputies. These deputies must elect a Central Executive Committee and are subservient to all higher level officials.

These deputies don't seem to have any power over higher officials such as a meeting of deputies being able to recall a representative from a soviet or whatever.

I can't tell if I'm confused though and that maybe people elected deputies to local soviets, who then elected "representatives" to higher soviets, and therefore at meetings would be able to recall representatives or something.

2. Voting for Representatives to the All Russian Congress of Soviets seems to be fairly close to voting for a representative in a election in western countries today.

You are a part of a very large electoral district often with tens of thousands of people and periodically you will vote in an election for your representative. I don't see anything stating that people can recall them.

Even if there is a way to recall them that I missed I think me trying to get a by-election going in my electoral district is a lot harder than say a delegate reporting back to my council and then everyone at the end of the meeting voting for the same or a new delegate to go back to meet with other councils' delegates.

3. These Representatives only have to meet twice a year and the rest of the time the system is ran by the Central Executive Committee and the Committee of People's Commisars that they appoint into power.

The representatives can call another meeting in the interim if more than 1/3 of the population vote in favour of it, which seems like a difficult thing to coordinate even if the majority of people would support an interim meeting.

The Central Executive Committee is elected by the All Russian Congress is vaguely "responsible" to the All Russian Congress. I can't really tell if the All Russian Congress has the ability to remove members from the Central Executive Committee whenever they meet.

It seems like these Executive Bodies had a lot of power and everyone was expected to do whatever they said in the interim between meetings of the All Russian Congress.

Auld-bod

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Auld-bod on January 10, 2019

Ugg #35

‘But if the soviets had mandated, recallable delegates how were the Bolsheviks able to turn them into authoritarian institutions without being recalled or their decisions rejected?’

This question confuses the form a grouping takes with the political content of the group. One does not necessarily determine the other.

‘So if the soviets functioned according to principles that are at all similar to those of an organization like the IWW how were they able to be taken over almost overnight, like in the article Anarcho linked?’

The soviets were thrown up by a series of events and were a political mixed bag.

There was not a single unifying principle under which the soviets operated - unless it is generalised ‘all power to the soviets’, etc. The confusion/uncertainty of many Russian workers on how the achieve their goals, allowed the disciplined Bolsheviks to offer leadership. (Would make the workers confusion in the UK over BREXIT look like perfect clarity.)

The form, ideas and actions of a group, are evolved by the nature of the problems confronted by the organisation. (How else can we explain the recent split in the Anarchist Federation?)

Mike Harman

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mike Harman on January 10, 2019

Take for example the IWW. The IWW's highest body is the General Executive Board. It's voted into power by the membership once yearly and all its decisions must be voted on by referendum.

Let's say the General Executive Board (GEB) decide tomorrow that they want to turn the IWW into a dictatorship so that they no longer have to submit proposals to referendum.

1. The membership of the IWW votes in favour of this proposal, either by accident or because they supported the idea of a dictatorship at that time.

2. The GEB has some way of coercing people to vote in favour turning the IWW into a dictatorship or alternatively just forcing the members to ratify all their decisions. Maybe the GEB could blackmail, threaten or create their own secret police or military to repress members. In this case the GEB would already be secretly functioning as some sort of miniature state that they could use to take over the IWW.

In the case of the IWW, who has control of the official website, e-mail address, social media, mailing lists etc., any print media? If the GEB or people aligned with them did, then they could take control of those, issue statements, use them to dox people who opposed etc.

They might not be able to force opposing IWW members to do anything directly, but they would have control of 'the IWW' in terms of its public facing infrastructure and maybe some private infrastructure. They might also be able to continue to attract new members not familiar with what's going on and who don't have a firm grasp of organisational structures. And the only way to reverse this would be to wrest back control of them or split. It's not only the formal organisational structure of a group that determines where power lies but also informal roles taken on, and distribution of responsibility and knowledge.

Craftwork

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Craftwork on January 10, 2019

Ugg

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Ugg on January 14, 2019

Mike Harman

In the case of the IWW, who has control of the official website, e-mail address, social media, mailing lists etc., any print media? If the GEB or people aligned with them did, then they could take control of those, issue statements, use them to dox people who opposed etc.
>
They might not be able to force opposing IWW members to do anything directly, but they would have control of 'the IWW' in terms of its public facing infrastructure and maybe some private infrastructure. They might also be able to continue to attract new members not familiar with what's going on and who don't have a firm grasp of organisational structures. And the only way to reverse this would be to wrest back control of them or split. It's not only the formal organisational structure of a group that determines where power lies but also informal roles taken on, and distribution of responsibility and knowledge.

Yeah, you're right; I hadn't thought of that. However I still feel there's an important difference between the GEB being able to misuse funds or take over the website domain vs. having the ability to transform the IWW from an organization where all proposals must be voted on by referendum into one where the membership aren't allowed to vote on those proposals.

Maybe the IWW isn't the best example because it isn't a federated system of councils made up of mandated, recallable delegates.

Since reading your post I've been thinking about the fact that even if you did have a council system of mandated, recallable delegates a delegate could still mislead their own council by lying about the way they personally voted or the result of a vote (ie. a delegate saying a proposal that was rejected by all the other councils actually received unanimous support or something).

But in order to do this delegates would need to:

1. Doctor public voting records, meeting minutes and keep their members away from any reports about the decision in the free press.

2. Prevent other delegates and people from within their council (for example if councils send delegates to represent the positions of those in the minority and assistants to take minutes) who attended the delegate meetings from contradicting their story.

3. Deal with delegates and people from other councils finding out about them misinforming their council and then contacting them.

Finally even if corrupt delegates can bypass all these safeguards, or convince people that everyone else is lying, their councils STILL retain their ability to recall their delegate in my view so long as they are committed to it (and aren't coerced into abandoning this principle). This means that at some point in the future if they do find out their delegate was corrupt they should still have the ability to change their delegate.

As I said before I'm pretty sure that the soviets and the parties for the most part didn't operate under the principle of "mandated, recallable delegates"? I don't think that people were able to just change their delegate at the next meeting or were able to reject decisions But if I'm mistaken about this I'm not sure what else you could have done. Not only then were the soviets democratic you also had:

1. A huge amount of participation of the masses in the revolution. Maurice Brinton in the book "The Bolsheviks and workers' control" that you recommended me points out that the amount of participation by the working class was probably unique in its history.

2. Tremendous support for at least somewhat libertarian ideas like "All power to the soviets" and "Factories to the workers, Land to the Peasants". I've read that a key reason why the Bolsheviks were so popular was because they were perceived as being more committed to those principles than the other parties.

3. Once the Bolsheviks started doing things people didn't like there were tons of people who took action to try to get them out of power both through the soviets and outside of them.

It just seems hopeless that if none of this was enough to prevent the Bolsheviks from just turning the soviets overnight into more and more authoritarian institutions and keeping them that way for 74 years.

auld-bod

This question confuses the form a grouping takes with the political content of the group. One does not necessarily determine the other.

Aren't both important though?

Auld-bod

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Auld-bod on January 16, 2019

Ugg #39

The form an organisation takes and the politics contained is important.

As Mike Harman #37 suggests, the actual operation/practice may not always mesh with the theoretical basis. This is not necessarily a bad thing. Some years ago there was an anarchist organisation where some important office holders bunked off, and the organisation regenerated itself, when other comrades simply stepped into the vacancies until a conference could be organised which could endorse their action.

Beware of modelling the revolution - all the models of utopias I know of - Plato’s Republic, etc., are based on the idea that people can be moulded into some kind of perfection - any time this has been attempted it ends in living hells.

Looking back over the history of failed revolutions can be depressing. Thing is, no one is in control of history and our present state shows that many people are very dissatisfied with the status quo. We really have no choice than to believe that the working class will overcome its fear and take matters into their own hands (eventually).

meerov21

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by meerov21 on January 16, 2019

Ugg But if the soviets had mandated, recallable delegates how were the Bolsheviks able to turn them into authoritarian institutions without being recalled or their decisions rejected?

Oh man! I love your questions. How? Oh Yeah, just the Bolsheviks forbade workers to recall the delegates- the-Bolsheviks, ahahaha)))... like in Petrograd: the left s-r note that was done in January 1918, 2 months after the so-called "October revolution".

The fact is that a couple of months after October, the mood of the workers began to turn against the Bolsheviks. And it was happening fast because the economic catastrophe was becoming more and more pronounced.

In the spring and summer of 1918 the workers of the biggest factories began to withdraw deputies-the-Bolsheviks across all the country. In response, the Bolsheviks:

a) prohibited the re-election of some Soviets
b) falsified the elections to the Soviets (like in Petrograd in the spring or summer)
c) dispersed non-Bolshevik Soviets, if the workers still elect them (Samara, Tambov, Izhevsk)
d) dispersed election meetings, strikes and demonstrations of workers (Yaroslavl),
e) has closed the opposition press,
f) made an armed attacks against the opposition groups (anarchists, social revolutionaries-maximalists in Moscow and Samara and Izhevsk)
g) ...or have completely banned the activities of opposition parties (June 14, 1918 Mensheviks and SR were banned).

There are some details here:

https://libcom.org/forums/history/paradoxes-working-class-russia-ussr-16012019

P.S.
If you read in my (Russian) language, you can read the documents, where it is said about it, in the book: Pavlov,D.B. “The workers' opposition movement in Bolshevik Russia. 1918 " http://communism21.org/books/%D0%A0%D0%B0%D0%B1%D0%BE%D1%87%D0%B5%D0%B5%20%D0%BE%D0%BF%D0%BF%D0%BE%D0%B7%D0%B8%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%B5%20%D0%B4%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B6%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8%D0%B5%20%D0%B2%20%D0%B1%D0%BE%D0%BB%D1%8C%D1%88%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B9%20%D0%A0%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%81%D0%B8%D0%B8%201918%20%D0%B3.pdf

meerov21

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by meerov21 on January 16, 2019

Auld-bod There was not a single unifying principle under which the soviets operated - unless it is generalised ‘all power to the soviets’, etc. The confusion/uncertainty of many Russian workers on how the achieve their goals, allowed the disciplined Bolsheviks to offer leadership.

" to offer leadership" ----------ahahah man!!! O, I love it. They "offered their leadership to the Soviets" in 1918 in much the same way as all dictatorships did ;) They simply killed or dispersed, or arrested opponents. All these documents are published today. I wrote the details above. Moreover, the Bolsheviks also destroyed in 1918 new, alternative Councils - so called "Assemblies of commissioner factories and plants", which quickly spread to all industrial centers. https://libcom.org/forums/history/paradoxes-working-class-russia-ussr-16012019

P.S. Sorry, I forgot to say one more thing. In 1918, the Soviets acted on the principle that 1 worker's vote weighed as much as 5 votes of peasants. Those 5 peasants in the elections to the Soviets, equated to 1 worker. Even this fact alone forces one to say that there has never been any "Power of the soviets" at list as a single structure. Keep in mind that among the peasants the Bolsheviks were less popular than among the workers. The so-called "Congresses of the Soviets", held in 1918, were based on this ultra-discriminatory principle. Now add to this all those countless violent acts, falsifications, dispersals of the Soviets, prohibitions of critics, prohibitions of the opposition, attacks on anarchists etc, in order to understand what kind of "Soviet power" after Lenin's victory we are talking about. Already in April 1918, a prominent anarchist Andrei Andreev declared that the power of the Bolsheviks was reactionary shit.

Ugg

5 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Ugg on January 23, 2019

I'm sorry if I'm not making sense.It just seems like a circle to me where the Bolshevik party attained state power because they already had the state power to shut down soviets, ban other parties, oppress the masses and so on.

My understanding is that both the soviets and Bolsheviks at the very least had some undemocratic aspects to their organizations which allowed them to become more authoritarian. But I also feel like some people say the soviets were ultra-democratic but got taken over anyway.

But if I'm wrong and the soviets were basically an anarchist federation did the Bolshevik power come from:

A. The fact that it was a hierarchical organization that was willing to use force and its members were loyal to the Bolshevik party, NOT soviet democracy?

B. There was a "dictatorship of the majority" situation where people who voted in the Bolsheviks were in some way okay with what their leaders were doing?

C. The fact that they gained a majority within the soviets and therefore they were viewed as paradoxically having the democratic right to centralize and destroy soviet democracy?

If it's "A" or "B" it makes perfect sense to me why the Bolsheviks were able to take over. This would mean that basically a violent oppressive group bullied everyone into doing what they wanted.

However if its "C" I'm having trouble understanding how exactly that happened if:

1. The soviet system was set up so that people were able to easily go to the next council meeting or call an emergency one to instantly change their delegates and reverse any decision.

2. People believed that councils were the ultimate authority and so no delegate should be able to decree that they are shutting them down, getting rid of instant recall, imprisoning people they disagree with even if they did win a majority.

Maybe it was confusion or something where people thought that for example decrees the Committee of People's Comissars made were actually democratically approved by the masses in their soviets or something?