The Relevance of the
Russian Revolution
John Molyneux
First written for Irish Marxist Review 17.
It is self-evident that the Russian Revolution was an
enormously important historical event- probably the most important of the 20th
century. But the French Revolution was also an important historical event, so
was the fall of Constantinople in 1453. From the standpoint of this journal,
however, the Russian Revolution was important in a different way: not just
because it is more recent but because it embodied goals and aspirations that
are our goals and aspirations – a socialist society of equality and freedom
based on workers’ democratic control from below - and because it fought for
those goals and aspirations with methods that have a bearing on the methods we
use today.
This why establishing the relevance of the Russian
Revolution for today must start from the needs and tasks of today rather than
simply from what happened in 1917.
We need a revolution
The Russian Revolution is relevant today because the world
we live in is crying out for fundamental change. The need for a revolution is shown
first by the obscene levels of inequality in the world: eight
multi-billionaires own wealth equivalent to that owned by the bottom 3.6
billion of the world’s population – a global figure which is only the appalling
apex of vast and growing inequality in almost every country in the world
including, of course, here in Ireland. Second, the need for revolution is given
by the chronic economic crisis of a system which keeps threatening the mass of
the people, again in almost every country, with more cutbacks and more
impoverishment. Third, there is the growing inter-imperialist rivalry between
the US, Russia and China, which has already produced numerous horrible regional
and local invasions, wars and proxy wars (e.g. Afghanistan, Iraq. Ukraine and
Syria), and which increasing threatens to plunge the world into devastating
conflicts of unprecedented destructiveness. Fourth, the looming threat of
catastrophic climate change, which is the product of capitalism’s relentless
drive to accumulate and which it is proving powerless—and even unwilling—to
avert, and which, in addition to being disastrous in itself, will interact with
the inequality, economic crisis and imperial military rivalry with utterly
barbaric consequences. Fifth, we need a revolution because the intersection of
these multiple crises and contradictions is producing a global polarisation in
which the rising far right—from Donald Trump to Marine le Pen—are trading on
the vilest racism and other prejudices, in such a way that the shadow of the
1930s is again threatening the world. Together all of these mean that the
historic alternative formulated by Rosa Luxemburg a century ago – either
socialism or barbarism – assumes an ever more pressing reality.
We also need a revolution because both theory and experience
show that a solution to these profound problems by means of gradual
parliamentary reform is not a possibility. For example the British ruling
class, which reacted with such concerted rage to the election of Jeremy Corbyn
merely as leader of the Labour Party, would not be prepared to peacefully hand
over their power and privileges, accumulated over centuries, to a radical
Labour government. Rather they would deploy all their vast economic leverage
given by their ownership and control of the major industries, financial
institutions and corporate media, combined with the power of the state (civil
servants, judges, police, military) which they also control, in order to
undermine such a government and defend the capitalist system to the hilt. It is
also clear that the same would be true in other countries. In Greece the forces
of capital represented by ‘the troika’ of the European Commission, the European
Central Bank and the IMF resorted to economic terrorism rather than permit the
leftist Syriza government to implement even a mild Keynesian anti-austerity
programme, never mind any sort of radical transformation of the system. And
this merely confirmed the historical experience reaching back to the Popular
Unity Government in Chile and the Pinochet Coup of 1973, Franco’s fascist
uprising against the Popular Front in Spain in 1936 and Mussolini in Italy in
1922.
The working class
The second reason the Russian Revolution is relevant today
is that it was a workers’ revolution, made and led by the Russian working class.
It was the workers of Petrograd who began the Revolution in February and
overthrew the Tsar. It was the continuing radicalisation of the workers,
particularly in opposition to the ongoing First World War, that drove the
Revolution forward and it was the overwhelming support of the urban
proletariat, together with the soldiers and sailors, that made possible the
smooth and almost bloodless October insurrection which transferred all power to
the Soviets (workers’ councils).
This
alliance between the workers’ revolution and the peasantry enabled the
revolution to hold out the against the White Guard counterrevolution, backed by
fourteen imperialist powers in the desperate Civil War that followed. If we
take the need for international revolution seriously then it can only be a
workers’ revolution.
We have to talk
about a social force that can defeat the immense economic and political power
of global capital—that is, a force capable of taking on and defeating the great
corporations, the IMF, the World Bank, the US state and military, the European
Union and its economic and state forces, the immense Chinese state apparatus,
the Russian state, the Saudi state—and that’s just listing a few of the major
players. There is only one social force remotely capable of doing this: the 1.5
billion strong international working class - in Marx’s words ‘the independent movement of the immense
majority, in the interest of the immense majority’.
Ever since the
economic boom of the Fifties and Sixties, bourgeois sociologists of one stripe
or another, and some self-styled Marxists, have been regularly announcing the
demise of the working class. It had been bought off and bourgeoisified by
consumer goods; it was irrevocably privatised and no longer a force for social
change; it disappeared with de-industrialisation; it had shrunk and been
replaced by a white-collar middle class, and so on. These arguments were wrong
on two fundamental grounds. First, they greatly exaggerated the decline of manufacturing
and the industrial proletariat in the advanced capitalist countries and mistook
the class character of white-collar workers who are, in their large majority,
part of the working class. The working class is not defined by industrial or
manual labour but by the sale of its labour power and its exploitation by
capital. Nurses, teachers, clerical and call centre workers are part of the
working class along with factory workers, miners and dockers. So the working
class remains the majority of the population in all the main western capitalist
countries. Second, while the debate about the western working class has been
rumbling on there has been an immense growth in the size of the working class
in what used to be called the Third World.
In 1993 the figure for waged or salaried employees was 985
million out of a world population of approximately 5.526 billion, or about 18%. By 2013 the number of
waged/salaried employees had grown to 1.575 billion out of a total of 7.086 billion or just over 22%. And significantly
this figure constituted just over 50% of the world’s total labour force of
about three billion. Of course not all these waged employees were workers (a
minority would be managers) but most of them were, and this meant that for the
first time in history Marx’s proletariat really did constitute something like a
majority of society globally.
Even more important than the
absolute figures is the trend. In the twenty years between 1993 and 2013 the
number of waged/salaried grew by 589,814,000 (a staggering 60% of the
1993 figure). An average of 29 million people joined the waged labour force
each year. Moreover the growth of waged labour was concentrated in the
developing countries. In the developed countries, the salaried/waged
employee figure rose slowly from 345 million (1993) to 410 million (2013). In
non-developed countries the growth was explosive, from 640 million (1993) to
1,165 million (2013). On its own the non-developed world waged labour force is
bigger than the entire global waged labour force of twenty years ago.
An estimated 445 million waged or salaried employees were in East Asia in 2013,
i.e. more than in the whole of the developed countries! The largest contingent
of this global proletariat is, of course, in China, where there is a working
class of somewhere around 400-500 million—by far the largest national
proletariat that has ever existed, and fifty to a hundred times larger than the
entire international proletariat in Marx’s day.
In addition to the size of the global proletariat another important factor, indicative
of its immense potential social and power, is its increasing concentration in
great cities. The World Bank’s list of countries by degree of urbanisation
shows over 30 countries that are more than 80% urban including Argentina (92%),
Australia (89%), Belgium (98%), Brazil(85%), Chile (89%), Netherlands (90%),
Qatar (96%), Saudi Arabia (83%), UK (82%), US (81%) and Uruguay (95%).
The World Atlas lists 69 cities with a
population over 5 million and 26 over 10 million.
And again China, because of its huge population and massive economic growth,
is the most important example. The last twenty-five years have seen a vast and
intense migration from the countryside to the towns – especially of young
women.
In
2010 China became a predominantly urban society and it now has more than sixty
cities of over a million including such giants as Shanghai with about 24
million and Beijing with over 21 million. Perhaps the whole development is best
expressed in the example of Guangdong (formerly Canton), which has become a
vast urban sprawl and the most populous province in China with a population at
the 2010 census of 104 million. It is estimated that Guangdong now contains
60,000 factories ‘
which every day
produce some $300 million worth of goods and account for about 30 percent of
China’s exports and one-third of the world’s production of shoes, textiles and
toys’.
It is in these great cities – Guangdong, Shanghai, Seoul, Sao Paolo, Buenos
Aires, Cairo and the rest – that is concentrated the great global social force,
that along with the working people of Los Angeles and Chicago, Birmingham and
Berlin, Paris and Barcelona , alone has the power to defeat international
capital.
It is these fundamental facts about the world we live in today that determine
the relevance of the Russian Revolution. For those who reject revolution, such
as the majority of former Stalinists and Eurocommunists, the Russian Revolution
is a closed episode of history, consigned to the archives, to be recalled only
for reasons of sentimental attachment and nostalgia for ‘the good old days’.
For revolutionaries, however, it remains an inspiration and guide to action
which it is vital to pass on to the new generation of activists now joining the
fight against capitalism.
This absolutely does not involve any notion of mechanical imitation, which
is not possible even if it were desirable. What it means is drawing on this
incredibly rich period of working class struggle so as to derive lessons that
can be applied to the concrete realities of today.
Broadly speaking I suggest there are six main ‘lessons’ from the Revolution,
which for all the very real differences between then and now, remain useful and
applicable today. These are 1) the power and creativity of the workers; 2) the
organisational form of workers’ power; 3) the working class as leader of all
the oppressed; 4) the dynamics of revolution; 5) the role of the revolutionary
party; 6) the international nature of the revolution. I shall discuss them in
turn.
The power and creativity of the
working class.
The Russian working class was small
in absolute numbers and relative to the Russian population as a whole: between
three and ten million (depending on how it is defined), which was much less
than ten percent of the population. It was also largely of recent origin,
retaining strong ties with the peasantry and the countryside from whence it
came and it was widely considered to be uneducated, with low levels of literacy
compared to the working class in Western Europe. Yet in 1917 it displayed
miracles of revolutionary initiative and organisation.
In February, in a week of striking, demonstrating and street fighting
spearheaded by women textile workers and women in bread queues, the working
class of Petrograd won over the soldiers and the Cossacks and brought down a
dynasty that had ruled Russia for three hundred years, and an institution—the
Tsarist autocracy—which had lasted four hundred years. Trotsky in his great
History of the Russian Revolution offers
a wonderful description of how this was done. Space permits me only to quote a
couple of extracts:
On the
25th, the strike spread wider. According to the government’s figures, 240,000
workers participated that day. The most backward layers are following up the
vanguard. Already a good number of small establishments are on strike. The
streetcars are at a stand. Business concerns are closed. In the course of the
day students of the higher schools join the strike. By noon tens of thousands
of people pour to the Kazan cathedral and the surrounding streets. Attempts are
made to organise street meetings; a series of armed encounters with the police
occurs. Orators address the crowds around the Alexander III monument. The
mounted police open fire. A speaker falls wounded. Shots from the crowd kill a
police inspector, wound the chief of police and several other policemen.
Bottles, petards and hand grenades are thrown at the gendarmes. The war has
taught this art. The soldiers show indifference, at times hostility, to the
police. It spreads excitedly through the crowd that when the police opened fire
by the Alexander 111 monument, the Cossacks let go a volley at the horse
“Pharaohs” (such was the nickname of the police) and the latter had to gallop
off….
The
police are fierce, implacable, hated and hating foes. To win them over is out
of the question. Beat them up and kill them. It is different with the soldiers:
the crowd makes every effort to avoid hostile encounters with them; on the
contrary, seeks ways to dispose them in its favour, convince, attract,
fraternise, merge them in itself… The masses try to get near them, look into
their eyes, surround them with their hot breath. A great ro1e is played by
women workers in the relationship between workers and soldiers. They go up to
the cordons more boldly than men, take hold of the rifles, beseech, almost
command: “Put down your bayonets – join us.” The soldiers are excited, ashamed,
exchange anxious glances, waver; someone makes up his mind first, and the
bayonets rise guiltily above the shoulders of the advancing crowd. The barrier
is opened; a joyous and grateful “Hurrah!” shakes the air. The soldiers are
surrounded. Everywhere arguments, reproaches, appeals; the revolution makes
another forward step..
The Tsar fell because after five
days of this sort of thing he had no one left to defend him, and the ruling
class thought it better to sacrifice their figurehead than lose their system.
But in the course of these days the workers of Petrograd also managed to revive
and organise their own democratic assembly, the Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’
Deputies, which convened on the 27 February, and was destined to be of world
historic significance. More on that later.
In the months that followed the
workers who had made the February Revolution but then handed power to the
bourgeoisie became ever more radical, especially under the lash of the
continuing war. What this meant in terms of everyday life in those heady days
has been vividly described by the revolutionary American journalist, John Reed.
All around them great
Russia was in travail, bearing a new world. The servants one used to treat like
animals and pay next to nothing were getting independent. A pair of shoes cost
more than a hundred rubles, and as wages averaged about thirty-five rubles a
month the servants refused to stand in queue and wear out their shoes. But more
than that. In the new Russia every man and woman could vote; there were
working-class newspapers, saying new and startling things; there were the
Soviets; and there were the Unions. The izvoshtchiki(cab-drivers)
had a Union; they were also represented in the
Petrograd Soviet. The waiters and hotel servants were organised, and refused
tips. On the walls of restaurants they put up signs which read, “No tips taken
here–” or, “Just because a man has to make his living waiting on table is no
reason to insult him by offering him a tip!”
At the Front the soldiers
fought out their fight with the officers, and learned self-government through
their committees. In the factories those unique Russian organisations, the
Factory-Shop Committees gained experience and strength and a realisation of
their historical mission by combat with the old order. All Russia was
learning to read, and reading–politics,
economics, history–because the people wanted to know–. In every city, in most towns, along
the Front, each political faction had its newspaper–sometimes several. Hundreds
of thousands of pamphlets were distributed by thousands of organisations, and
poured into the armies, the villages, the factories, the streets. The thirst
for education, so long thwarted, burst with the Revolution into a frenzy of
expression. From Smolny Institute alone, the first six months, went out every
day tons, car-loads, train-loads of literature, saturating the land. Russia
absorbed reading matter like hot sand drinks water, insatiable. And it was not
fables, falsified history, diluted religion, and the cheap fiction that
corrupts–but social and economic theories, philosophy, the works of Tolstoy,
Gogol, and Gorky…
Then the Talk, beside which
Carlyle’s “flood of French speech” was a mere trickle. Lectures, debates,
speeches–in theatres, circuses, school-houses, clubs, Soviet meeting-rooms,
Union headquarters, barracks. Meetings in the trenches at the Front, in village
squares, factories. What a marvellous sight to see Putilovsky Zavod (the
Putilov factory) pour out its forty thousand to listen to Social Democrats,
Socialist Revolutionaries, Anarchists, anybody, whatever they had to say, as
long as they would talk! For months in Petrograd, and all over Russia, every
street-corner was a public tribune. In railway trains, street-cars, always the
spurting up of impromptu debate, everywhere.
It was this great revolutionary democratic
process that enabled the Bolsheviks to win a majority in the soviets and,
finally, in the October insurrection, take power with almost no resistance.
What is important is that this process and this
atmosphere, this creativity of the masses, was not unique to 1917. Something like it, to some extent, appears in every great
uprising of the working class. The comment about the rejection of tipping by
the waiters is repeated, almost word for word in George Orwell’s account of
workers’ power in Barcelona in 1936 in Homage
to Catalonia. The torrent of ‘Talk’ and debate is something I myself
witnessed in Paris in May ’68. A similar mood gripped the masses in Egypt as
the Revolution brought down the dictator, Mubarak, in 2011. What this signifies
is not just ‘excitement’ at dramatic events but a deeper response to the
partial overcoming of alienation that arises from starting to take control of
one’s life, one’s city and one’s world.
Thus, overall what the Russian Revolution proved
was what Marx had first identified in 1844: the capacity of the working class
to overthrow capitalism and begin the construction of a new socialist order of
society. This remains its single most enduring legacy.
Soviet
power
In the
Communist
Manifesto of 1848 Marx proclaimed the revolutionary mission of the proletariat
to overthrow bourgeois society but he did not – and could not at that time –
specify the form that workers’ power would take. He spoke vaguely about the
working class ‘winning the battle of democracy’. In an 1852 letter to his
friend Weydemeyer, Marx stated that ‘the class struggle necessarily leads to
the
dictatorship of the proletariat’.
But it was in the Commune of 1871 that the workers of Paris gave Marx a more
concrete idea of what that meant in organisational terms. On the basis of the experience
of the Commune, which lasted only 74 days, Marx identified three key principles
of the dictatorship of the proletariat: the election and
recallability of public officials, the payment of representatives
at ordinary
workers’ wages and the
Commune being ‘a working, not a parliamentary body—executive and legislative at
the same time’.
The Russian Revolution built on this foundation
but also moved beyond it. First in St. Petersburg in 1905 and then, again, in Petrograd
in February 1917, the Russian workers established a new form of representative
body, the Soviet (Council) of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies. In the weeks
that followed Soviets sprang up across Russia, and by the 29 March an All-Russian
Conference of Soviets was convened. The Soviet was an important advance on the
Commune because the Commune was based purely on geographical constituencies
(like contemporary bourgeois parliaments) whereas the Soviets had delegates
from factories and soldiers’ barracks. This made the Soviets much more
organically organisations of working class power; it gave them deep roots in
the working class, made the workers and soldiers identify with them and regard
them as their own. It made it easier to translate the decrees and decisions of
the Soviets into action in the workplaces and the army.
Thus, for example, the famous Soviet Order No.1
which was issued on 1 March called for every unit of the army to elect its own
council of representatives, for army units only to obey such orders from the
State as did not conflict with the decisions of the Soviet, to retain control
of all armaments, to abolish saluting, or honorary titles (officers to be
addressed as Mister Colonel, etc.) and prohibiting all rudeness by officers
towards the ranks. It also declared that ‘The present order is to be read to
all companies, battalions, regiments, ships’ crews, batteries and other
combatant and non combatant commands’
.
And this was done. ‘It was printed in large numbers and distributed along the
entire front within days’.
It also made the Soviets more genuinely
democratic than any parliamentary set-up because it made the crucial principle
of recall a more practical proposition – one that could be exercised rapidly
and easily by organising a workplace or barracks meeting. In one of the best
accounts of how the soviets actually worked, John Reed wrote:
No political body more
sensitive and responsive to the popular will was ever invented. And this was
necessary, for in time of revolution the popular will changes with great
rapidity. For example, during the first week of December 1917, there were
parades and demonstrations in favour of a Constituent Assembly -that is to say,
against the Soviet power. One of these parades was fired on by some
irresponsible Red Guards, and several people killed. The reaction to this
stupid violence was immediate.
Within
twelve hours the complexion of the Petrograd Soviet changed. More than a dozen Bolshevik deputies
were withdrawn, and replaced by Mensheviki. And it was three weeks before
public sentiment subsided – before the Mensheviki were retired one by one and
the Bolsheviki sent back.
And
on 19 November 1917 Lenin drafted a ‘Decree on the Right of Recall’ which
began:
No elective
institution or representative assembly can be regarded as being truly
democratic and really representative of the people’s will unless the electors’
right to recall those elected is accepted and exercised. This fundamental
principle of true democracy applies to all representative assemblies without exception,
including the Constituent Assembly.
‘All Power to the Soviets!’ was the central slogan of the
Revolution. It was this slogan which prepared the ground for the October
Revolution and under which the October insurrection itself was conducted. Its timing,
as determined by Trotsky, was to coincide with the Second National Congress of
Soviets so that when the Provisional Government was deposed power could be
handed to the Congress. It was precisely as the establishment of ‘soviet power’ that news of the revolution
flashed round the world and seized the imagination of the international working
class, with the result that workers’ councils or soviets appeared in Germany,
in Italy and even in Limerick!
Of course today there can be no question of mechanically
copying the exact form of the Russian soviets. The soviets of 1917 were created
by the working class of that time to meet the concrete needs of the struggle at
that time and it will be the same for any future workers’ councils or similar
bodies. But it is clear that time and again when the working class has made a
revolutionary challenge for power it has started to form, and needed to form,
‘councils’ of some sort; in Chile in 1972 they were called cordones—or
industrial belts; in the Portuguese Revolution of 1974 there were soldiers
councils; and in the Iranian Revolution there were ‘shoras’.
Even in the lower level struggles of the Indignados and Occupy movements there
were the assemblies’ in the squares, and in the water charges movement, at its height,
it was possible to start talking about ‘people’s assemblies’.
In the future the idea is certain to reappear.
The working class
as leader of the oppressed
That the working class should lead all the oppressed in the
revolution was an idea expressed repeatedly by Lenin from the 1890s onwards. This
was not an authoritarian or elitist idea – quite the opposite. He did not mean
the working class should command the oppressed; he meant the economic position
of the working class in big factories and cities enabled it to be in forefront
of fighting all forms of oppression and championing the rights of all the
oppressed and that it was the job of socialists to see that it did so. Lenin
was emphatic on this point:
Working-class consciousness cannot be genuine political
consciousness unless the workers are trained to respond to all cases of tyranny, oppression,
violence, and abuse, no matter what
class is affected.
And again
The Social-Democrat’s
(revolutionary socialist’s) ideal should not be the trade union
secretary, but the tribune of
the people, who is able to react to every manifestation of tyranny and
oppression, no matter where it appears, no matter what stratum or class of the
people it affects.
And this was precisely what happened in 1917. The urban
proletariat through the soviets, and guided by the Bolsheviks, made common
cause with what was by far the largest oppressed group in Russian society,
namely the peasants. They did this by championing the peasants’ elemental struggle
for land and the great peasant revolts that broke out across the country. On 26
October, the day after the Insurrection, the new revolutionary government
issued a decree written by Lenin which read:
(1) Landed proprietorship is abolished forthwith without
any compensation.
(2) The landed estates, as also all crown, monastery, and
church lands, with all their livestock, implements, buildings and everything
pertaining thereto, shall be placed at the disposal of the volost land
committees and the uyezd Soviets of Peasants' Deputies [i.e. handed over to the peasants – JM]
pending the convocation of the Constituent Assembly.
The other way the workers
and the Bolsheviks championed the peasants was by opposing the War. The
majority of the army and, therefore, of the casualties were conscripted
peasants. On the same day as the Soviet passed the above decree on land it also
issued a Decree on Peace.
Decree on
Peace
The workers' and peasants' government, created by the
Revolution of October 24-25 and basing itself on the Soviet of Workers',
Soldiers' and Peasants' Deputies, calls upon all the belligerent peoples and
their government to start immediate negotiations for a just, democratic peace.
By a just or democratic peace, for which the overwhelming
majority of the working class and other working people of all the belligerent
countries, exhausted, tormented and racked by the war, are craving - a peace
that has been most definitely and insistently demanded by the Russian workers
and peasants ever since the overthrow of the tsarist monarchy — by such a peace
the government means an immediate peace without annexations (i.e., without the
seizure of foreign lands, without the forcible incorporation of foreign
nations) and without indemnities
.
Another huge group suffering particular
oppression were the non-Great Russian national minorities – Latvians, Poles,
Finns, Estonians, Georgians, Ukrainians, Uzbeks, Kazaks, Kyrgiz, etc. – who
together made up 57% of the population of the Russian Empire. That empire was
rightly known as the ‘prison house of the peoples’, and these national
minorities had long been subject to all sorts of prejudice and discrimination.
From its foundation the Bolshevik Party had stood for the right of nations’ to
self-determination, i.e. the right of these nations to secede from Russia if
they wanted to. Lenin had fiercely defended this position against all-comers,
and in 1917 it paid great dividends. Lenin believed in and wanted unity between
the Russian people and all these oppressed nations but he insisted it had to be
freely agreed unity, and that required guaranteeing the right of every national
minority to secede if they chose to do so. The adoption of this policy against
the Provisional Government which rejected it assisted the victory of the
October Revolution. At the same time implementation of the policy by the new
Soviet government was a major factor in holding the different nationalities
together against the Whites in the Civil War.
Another major oppressed group in Russia was,
as everywhere, women. I will say little about this here because this issue is
discussed elsewhere in this journal but simply note that the workers’
revolution in Russia did more to realise womens’ equality than any bourgeois
liberal democracy had ever done. Similarly the Revolution rapidly moved to
decriminalise homosexuality.
In the century since the Russian Revolution
the socialist movement’s understanding of a variety of issues of oppression,
for example racism, LGBTQ oppression (including especially the trans issue),
disability and so on, has widened and in different countries there are bound to
be different specifically oppressed groups such as Travellers in Ireland,
Aborigines in Australia, Native Americans in the US, and Palestinians and Kurds
in the Middle East. But the general principle established by the Russian
Revolution that the workers’ movement must stand at the forefront of all
resistance to oppression remains of great importance.
The
dynamics of revolution.
The Russian Revolution is a brilliant
example of the fact that every revolution passes through an internal dynamic
development. Revolution is a process, not a single event, but it is a process
with certain decisive turning points. The first such turning point in 1917 was
the fall of the Tsarist regime in February. This was greeted by (almost) the entire
country with an outburst of joy and ‘national unity’. The political expression
of this euphoric national celebration was the working class (who had made the
February Revolution) voluntarily handing over power to the Provisional
Government through the medium of their political representatives. This produced
the extraordinary spectacle of ‘Dual Power’ – with the workers’ soviets and the
bourgeois government, united and cooperating; self-styled socialist revolutionaries
and Cadet capitalist ministers, all together.
But this could not and did not last. What
drove the revolution from below, in the factories and barracks, was not the aim
of achieving ministerial posts for liberals or even political democracy as an
end in itself, but the need for bread and—above all—an end to the ruinous war.
But an end to the war, and through it relief from hunger, was something which the
bourgeois government—tied by a thousand strings to French and British capital—would
not deliver. Instead they pressed on with patriotic rhetoric and new military
offensives. The result was a rapid process of political differentiation in
which the workers and soldiers, especially in Petrograd, moved rapidly to the
left.
By the 20 April there were armed
demonstrations on the streets of Petrograd against the pro-war Foreign
Minister, Miliukov. By the end of April, the Bolshevik Party, under the
inspiration of Lenin, had declared in favour of a second revolution to
establish workers’ power on the basis of ‘All Power to the Soviets.’ On 17 May
the Kronstadt Soviet proclaimed itself the sole governing power in Kronstadt.
On 18 June mass assemblies in Petrograd called by the Soviet turned into
pro-Bolshevik demonstrations. Overwhelmingly the Petrograd proletariat now
supported the Bolsheviks and demanded an end to the Provisional Government. Dual
power turned from cooperation to antagonism, and the choice became clarified as
one offering either revolution or counterrevolution.
On 3-4 July the Petrograd workers, soldiers
and sailors attempted, more or less spontaneously, to take power by means of
armed demonstrations. But the attempt was premature because the rest of the
country was not yet ready. Lenin, Trotsky and other Bolshevik leaders persuaded
the workers to step back. This was the second key turning point. The impatient
revolution had overreached itself and the counter-revolution now went on the
offensive. On 5 July the government issued a call for the arrest of Bolshevik
leaders and Lenin was forced to go into hiding. On 12 July the government
restored the death penalty in the army, and four days later the arch-Tsarist
General Kornilov was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the army. On 23 July
Trotsky was arrested.
Now it was the turn of the counterrevolution
to overreach itself. On 27-30 August Kornilov attempted to stage a coup by
marching his army on the capital with the intention of crushing the soviets and
burying the revolution. Kerensky, the head of the Government, realized at the
last moment (previously he had schemed with Kornilov) that a Kornilov coup would
take him down too; he was therefore compelled to turn to the Bolsheviks and the
workers for help. The Bolsheviks defended Kerensky without giving him political
support, and the coup was rapidly routed. Railway workers blcoked the trains
transporting Kornilov’s troops, and agitators dissolved his army at the base.
This was another critical turning point.
Within days the mass of the Russian working
class went over to the Bolsheviks, who now won a majority in the Soviet, with
Trotsky elected its President. With the peasant revolt in the countryside
intensifying, the terrified bourgeoisie began to discuss the idea of
surrendering Petrograd to the German army to let them suppress the revolution.
Lenin now decided that the hour of insurrection had struck; either the Bolsheviks
would take power or the Revolution would be drowned in blood. But he still had
to persuade the Party leadership of this, and there was a strong faction in the
central committee (led by Zinoviev and Kamenev) who were opposed to insurrection. It took Lenin a month or so of intense
pressure and debate to win the argument. Then on 25 October, at Lenin’s urging—but
on a plan drawn up by Trotsky—the Winter Palace is stormed and the Provisional
Government arrested.
‘History doesn’t repeat itself, but
sometimes it rhymes,’ said Mark Twain. There has not been and there will not be
a repetition of the sequence of events of 1917, but anyone who studies the
workers’ revolutions of the 20
th and 21
st centuries
cannot fail to be struck by various ‘rhymes’. In the German Revolution the crisis
was more protracted than in Russia—rolling out over five years (1918-23) rather
than eight months—but the parallels are clear: between Petrograd’s half-rising
of July and the premature Spartacist Rising of 1919, which claimed the lives of
Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht; the Kornilov Coup and the Kapp Putsch; the
decisive moment of September/October and the failure to seize that moment in
Germany.
In Russia the nominally socialist head of the Provisional Government, Kerensky,
‘flirted’ with General Kornilov before the latter turned on him in his bid to
destroy the revolution; in Chile in 1973 the Socialist President Salvador
Allende tried to keep General Pinochet on board by inviting him into the
government, only for Pinochet to murder Allende and 30,000 Chileans. In the
Egyptian Revolution of 2011 the youthful ultra-leftism that was seen in Russia
and Germany was much in evidence after the fall of Mubarak, while President
Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood adopted the same collaborationist attitude
towards General Al-Sisi and the military as did Allende, and met the same fate.
Overall, however, the central lesson of the
dynamic of 1917 is that a revolutionary crisis in society is of limited
duration and its outcome is not mechanically pre-determined; either the
revolution will go forward to victory or it will be thrown back by counterrevolution.
The price of failure, will very likely be paid in blood. The moment has to be
seized, and above all that requires decisive revolutionary leadership.
The
role of the revolutionary party
Again and again in history the working class
has risen against capitalism and mounted a serious challenge for power: Paris
in 1848 and 1871; Germany 1918-23, Italy 1919-20, Finland 1918, Hungary
1919-20, China 1925-7, Spain 1936-7, Greece and Italy 1944-45, Hungary 1956,
France 1968, Chile 1972, Portugal 1974-5, Poland 1980, etc. On only one
occasion has the working class been victorious – in October 1917. What made the
difference was the existence in Russia of a well-prepared revolutionary party
that was able to unite the working class, rally around it all the oppressed and
give a decisive lead at the crucial moment.
How the Bolshevik Party did this and thus
enabled the revolution to win is the focus of James O’Toole’s article elsewhere
in this issue, so I will deal briefly with the question here.
The Bolsheviks had contributed to the
socialist consciousness of the Russian working class through many years of
agitation and propaganda, especially in the period 1912-14, when they built a
mass readership for Pravda. They continued this work consistently after
February 1917, engaging in what Lenin called ‘patient explanation,’
particularly over the question of ‘All Power to the Soviets’ from April
onwards. But there were three moments when the role played by the party was of
decisive significance.
The first was during the premature uprising
of the July Days. If the Bolsheviks had simply gone along with this it is
likely that power would have been seized in Petrograd but it is also
overwhelmingly likely that this revolutionary power in one city would have met
the tragic fate of the Paris Commune and been put to the sword by the forces of
reaction in the country as a whole. The Bolsheviks were therefore correct to
demobilise the uprising and prevent it from developing into a full scale armed
confrontation or Civil War. By doing so they saved the revolution.
The second was in response to the Kornilov
Coup. If the Bolsheviks had reacted in an ultra left way and refused to defend
Kerensky and the Government on the grounds that Kerensky was a supporter of the
War, a persecutor of the Bolsheviks and a traitor to the working class - all
true, of course – the probability is that Kornilov would have destroyed the
revolution there and then. If they had simply supported Kerensky and
subordinated themselves to him, there would have been no revolution two months
later.
The third was in October itself. The
decision to launch the insurrection was taken by the leadership of the
Bolshevik Party – and had to be. To have debated it publicly in the Soviet
would have a) alerted the Government and all the forces of counterrevolution
who would not have sat around waiting to be deposed and b) created a huge
element of doubt and vacillation even among the revolutionary forces
.
If the Bolshevik leadership had not acted it is overwhelming probable that the
window of opportunity for workers’ revolution would have closed and the
counter-revolution once again been able to go onto the offensive.
To this it must be added that the Bolshevik
Party was only able to play this crucial role at these turning points because
it had acquired the necessary critical mass and implantation among the masses
and the necessary political maturity through many years of work and struggle in advance of the revolution. For
example, if in the July Days, Lenin, Trotsky and the Bolshevik cadres had not
had the respect and trust of the militant workers (such as the Kronstadt
sailors) they would simply have been brushed aside and been unable to prevent
catastrophe.
None of these points are in any way
academic. All the possible mistakes referred to were made by revolutionaries in
subsequent revolutions with disastrous results. Thus the Bulgarian Communist
Party foolishly sat on its hands during a coup from the right directed at the
Stambuilski government in 1923. Much more recently, in the Egyptian Revolution
many genuine revolutionaries failed to understand the need to defend the Muslim
Brotherhood government against the military coup in 2013, and the same mistake
was committed by many Turkish ‘lefts’ in the 2016 attempted military coup
against Erdogan. On the other hand, in Germany between 1930 and 1933 and in Spain
in 1936 there were groups of Trotskyists with formally correct positions but
completely lacking the size and relationship with the working class to have any
serious influence on events. In short the Russian Revolution is a compelling
demonstration of the need to build a revolutionary party and that is a lesson
that retains all its relevance today.
The
international nature of the revolution
Before 1917 all Russian Marxists agreed that
Russia was too economically underdeveloped to sustained socialist relations of
production. From this the Mensheviks drew the conclusion that the coming
revolution would be a bourgeois democratic revolution led by the bourgeoisie.
Lenin and the Bolsheviks accepted that the revolution would be bourgeois
democratic but believed this revolution would be led by the proletariat.
Trotsky believed that if the proletariat led the revolution the bourgeois
democratic revolution would ‘grow over’ into a socialist revolution, i.e. the
working class would take power, but he too accepted that a socialist revolution
in Russia would not be able to maintain itself unless the revolution spread to
other countries. This became known as Trotsky’s theory of ‘permanent
revolution’—one of his signal contributions to revolutionary Marxism. By early
1917 Lenin had, in effect, adopted Trotsky’s position and this became the basis
for the slogan ‘All power to the Soviets’ and, later, for the October
insurrection.
At this time—namely before and after October--Lenin,
Trotsky and all the Bolshevik leaders argued that a successful establishment of
workers’ power in Russia would act as a spark inspiring an international wave
of revolution. But they also accepted that without this the Russian Revolution
would be doomed. In 1918 Lenin told the Third Congress of Soviets:
The final victory of socialism in a single country is of
course impossible. Our contingent of workers and peasants which is upholding
Soviet power is one of the contingents of the great world army…
It is the absolute truth that without a German Revolution
we are doomed.
In the event both these
predictions – that the Russian Revolution would inspire a revolutionary wave
across Europe and that without its victory they would be defeated – came true. In
March 1919, Lloyd George wrote to French Prime Minister, Georges Clemenceau:
The
whole of Europe is filled with the spirit of revolution. There is a deep sense
not only of discontent but of anger and revolt amongst the workmen against
pre-war conditions. The whole existing order in its political, social and
economic aspects is questioned by the mass of the population from one end of
Europe to the other.
In 1919 there were revolutionary or near
revolutionary struggles taking place in Hungary, Italy, Ireland, and Germany,
with large scale revolts in Britain and France. But everywhere the revolution
was beaten back. The decisive defeat was in Germany in the autumn of 1923, when
the opportunity of revolution was missed. When Lenin and the Bolsheviks said
that without international revolution they were doomed, they thought of that
doom in terms either of military defeat by imperialism or open counterrevolution
(probably based on the richer peasants or kulaks ) within Russia.
But neither of these scenarios materialised.
By 1921 the Bolsheviks were victorious in the Civil War. Tragically the price
they paid for this victory was the virtual destruction of the small Russian
working class. The class that made the revolution in 1917 more or less ceased
to exist and in that situation the upper ranks of the Bolshevik Party and the
Soviet state became rapidly transformed into an unaccountable bureaucracy.
Then, under pressure to defend the Soviet state against western capitalism, this
bureaucracy began to compete with western capital on capitalism’s own terms.
This meant becoming, in the years 1928-9, a state capitalist ruling class
committed to the rapid industrialisation of Russia at the expense of the
working class, i.e. carrying through an internal counterrevolution. But this
was a counter-revolution in the name of socialism and Marxism.
The relevance of this experience for today
is again compelling. In today’s globalized world economy the possibility of
building socialism in one country is even less plausible than it was in 1917 or
1923. It is not just a question of military intervention against any successful
revolution or would-be socialist government – though that would remain a
possibility; rather it would be the effectiveness over time of the economic terrorism
and boycott that would inevitably be imposed by international capital. The
example of what was done by the Troika to the mildly reformist Syriza
government is a clear warning in this respect.
But this very same globalisation which would
be such a powerful weapon against an isolated revolution would also make it
much easier to spread the revolution than it was in 1917-23. This can be seen
in what happened with the Arab Spring in 2011. We are dealing here with
democratic revolutions that did not reach the stage of workers’ power.
Nevertheless the international dynamic was extraordinary. The Tunisian
Revolution began on 18 December 2010 and culminated in the flight of the
dictator, Zinedine Ben-Ali on 14 January. The Egyptian Revolution began on 25
January and saw the fall of Mubarak on 11 February. A week later revolts had broken
out in Bahrain and Libya, followed by Yemen and then Syria in March. By May the movement, albeit in the form of mass
protests rather than revolutionary challenges for power, had leapt across the
Mediterranean to Spain in the shape of the Indignados mass occupation of the
squares, and that in turn spread to the US as the Occupy Movement in the
autumn.
Manifestly the immense improvement in
international communications facilitates this process. As I have written elsewhere:
When
the revolutionary journalist John Reed, author of Ten Days that Shook the World,
traveled from America to Russia in 1917 the journey took him over one
month and then another two months to return to America in early 1918. Antonio Gramsci was not
able to read the writings of Lenin until 1919 or later. By contrast the great
street battles of the Egyptian Revolution were live streamed round the world on
Al Jazeera and the revolutionary, Hossam el-Hamalawy, had tens of thousands of
Twitter followers, world wide.
It requires only a little political
imagination to see the use that could be made of modern communications by a
real workers’ revolution. Let us suppose that workers’ power is established
first in Guangdong. The ability to broadcast appeals to the international
working class of every country to follow suit would be backed by vast global
reach of the Chinese economy and the Chinese people. If the revolution first
succeeded in a European country its international impact would be equally
great.
The international nature of socialist
revolution, borne out by the experience of the Russian Revolution, is thus a
lesson whose relevance has not diminished but greatly intensified with the
passing of time
Again
on revolution today
The other articles in this special edition
of the Irish Marxist Review will
explore further the themes and issues discussed here: the role of the Bolshevik
Party, the struggle for women’s liberation, the revolution and sexual liberation,
the revolution’s impact and reception in Ireland and how the revolution was
lost.
But, as I said at the start of this article,
all of this makes sense only from a political perspective focused on the
necessity of making revolution in our own time. Without this the Russian
Revolution is either a lot of trouble in a faraway country of which we know and
care little or else some kind of dreadful warning about a what terrible thing
it might be to risk any experiment with socialism. The latter view, which is
sure to get a substantial hearing in the media, actually relies on bad history
and ignorance. In contrast those willing to fight for a better world will find
in the Russian Revolution an historical event not only to be celebrated but
also to be seriously studied.
‘
The
working class character of the Russian Revolution is much disputed and the
dominant academic narrative is that it was simply a coup imposed by Lenin and
the Bolshevik leadership. For detailed refutations of this view see my
forthcoming book on
Lenin for Today
and Ernest Mandel, ‘October 1917: Coup
d’Ă©tat or social revolution’ in Paul Le Blanc et al,
October 1917: workers in power, London 2016. Here I will simply
quote Lenin’s old antagonist, the Menshevik leader and opponent of the October
Revolution, Julius Martov, Martov, wrote
‘Understand, please, what we have before
us after all is a victorious uprising of the proletariat – almost the entire
proletariat supports Lenin and expects its social liberation from the
uprising.’ [Martov to Axelrod, 19 November 1917, cited in I. Getzler, Martov,
Cambridge 1967,
p. 172.]