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Special
article on the occasion of the GREAT OCTOBER SOCIALIST REVOLUTION (7TH
NOVEMBER) we are reproducing the article by Lenin ----what better
than to learn from the saying of the genius about the epoch !
----COMMUNIST PATH
The
Democratic Tasks
of the
Revolutionary Proletariat
Published:
Proletary, No. 4, June 17 (4), 19O6. Published according to the
text in Proletary.
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Foreign
Languages Publishing House, 1962, Moscow, Volume 8, pages 511-518.
The
[Russian] Social Democratic Party, as the conscious exponent of the
working-class movement, aims at the complete liberation of the toiling
masses from every form of oppression and exploitation. The achievement of
this objective—the abolition of private property in the means of
production and the creation of the socialist society—calls for a very
high development of the productive forces of capitalism and a high degree
of organisation of the working class. The full development of the
productive forces in modern bourgeois
society, a broad, free, and open class struggle, and the political
education, training, and rallying of the masses of the proletariat are
inconceivable without political freedom. Therefore it has always been the
aim of the class-conscious proletariat to wage a determined struggle for
complete political freedom and the democratic revolution.
The
proletariat is not alone in setting this task before itself. The
bourgeoisie, too, needs political freedom. The enlightened members of the
propertied classes hung out the banner of liberty long ago; the
revolutionary intelligentsia, which comes mainly from these classes, has
fought heroically for freedom. But the bourgeoisie as a whole is incapable
of waging a determined struggle against the autocracy; it fears to lose in
this struggle its property which binds it to the existing order; it fears
an all-too
revolutionary action of the workers, who will not stop at the democratic
revolution but will aspire to the socialist revolution; it fears a
complete break with officialdom, with the bureaucracy, whose interests are
bound up by a thousand ties with the interests of the propertied
classes. For this reason
the bourgeois struggle for liberty is
notoriously timorous, inconsistent, and half-hearted. One of the tasks of
the proletariat is to prod the bourgeoisie on, to raise before the whole
people slogans calling for a complete democratic revolution, to start
working boldly and independently for the realisation of these slogans—in
a word, to be the vanguard, to take the lead in the struggle for the
liberty of the whole people.
In
the pursuit of this aim the Russian Social-Democrats have had to fight
many a battle against the inconsistency of bourgeois liberalism. Let us
recall, for instance, how Mr. Struve began his career, unhampered by the
censor,
as a political champion of the “liberation” of Russia. He made his début
with his preface to the Witte “Memorandum”, in which he advanced the
markedly “Shipovian” (to use the current political nomenclature)
slogan, “Rights, and an Authoritative Zemstvo”. The Social-Democratic
Party exposed the retrogressive, absurd, and reactionary nature of that
slogan; it demanded a definite and uncompromising democratic platform, and
itself put forward such a platform as an integral part of its Party
programme. Social-Democracy had to combat the narrow conception of the
aims of democracy which obtained in its own ranks when the so-called
Economists did their best to play down these aims, when they advocated the
“economic struggle against the employers and the, government”, and
insisted that we must start by winning rights, continue with political
agitation, and only then gradually (the theory of stages) pass on to
political struggle.
Now
the political struggle has become vastly extended, the revolution has
spread throughout the land, the mildest liberals have become
“extremists”; it may therefore seem that historical references to the
recent past such as we have just made are out of place, with no bearing on
the actual turbulent present. But this may seem so only at first glance.
To be sure, such slogans as the demand for a Constituent Assembly and for
universal, direct, and equal suffrage by secret ballot (which the
Social-Democrats long since and in advance of all presented in their Party
programme) have become common property; they have been adopted by the
illegal Osvobozhdeniye, incorporated in the programme of
the Osvobozhdeniye League, turned
into Zemtsvo slogans, and are now being repeated in every shape and form
by the legal press. That Russian bourgeois democracy has made progress in
recent years and months cannot be doubted. Bourgeois democracy is learning
by experience, is discarding primitive slogans (like the Shipovian
“Rights, and an Authoritative Zemstvo") and is hobbling along
behind the revolution. But it is only hobbling along behind; new
contradictions between its words and its deeds, between democracy in
principle
and democracy in “Realpolitik”, are arising in place of the
old; for revolutionary developments are making steadily growing demands on
democracy. But bourgeois democracy always drags at the tail
of events; while adopting more advanced slogans, it always lags behind; it
always formulates the slogans several degrees below the level really
required in the real revolutionary struggle for real liberty.
Indeed,
let us take that now current and generally accepted slogan, “For a
Constituent Assembly on the basis of universal, direct, and equal suffrage
by secret ballot”. Is that slogan adequate from the standpoint of
consistent democracy? Is it adequate in the light of the urgent
revolutionary tasks of the present moment? The answer to both these
questions can be only in the negative. To be convinced that this is so one
has only to examine carefully our Party programme, to which our
organisations, unfortunately, do not often refer and which they quote and
disseminate all too little. (As a happy exception, worthy of the widest
emulation, we note the recent reprint of our Party programme in leaflet
form by the Riga, Voronezh, and Moscow committees.) The keynote of our
programme, too, is the demand for a popular Constituent Assembly (let us
agree, for brevity’s
sake, to use the word “popular” as denoting suffrage that is
universal, etc.). But this slogan does not stand isolated in our programme.
The context and the addenda and notes prevent any miconstruction on the
part of those who are
least consistent in the struggle for liberty or who even struggle against
it. It occurs in our programme in conjunction with the following other
slogans: (1) the overthrow of the tsarist
autocracy; (2) its replacement by the democratic republic; (3)
the sovereignty of the people, safeguarded by a democratic
constitution, i.e., the concentration of supreme
governmental authority entirely in
the hands of a legislative assembly composed of representatives of the
people and forming a single chamber.
Can
there be any doubt that every consistent democrat is obligated
to accept all these slogans? Why, the very word “democrat”, both by
its etymology and by virtue of the political significance it has acquired
throughout the history of Europe, denotes an adherent of the sovereignty
of the people. It is absurd, therefore, to talk of democracy and in the
same breath to reject even a single one of these slogans. But the main
contradiction, the contradiction between the desire of the bourgeoisie to
preserve private property at all costs and its desire for liberty, is so
profound that spokesmen or followers of the liberal bourgeoisie inevitably
find themselves in this ridiculous position. As everyone knows, a very
broad liberal party is forming Itself in
Russia with enormous rapidity, a party which has the adherence of the Osvobozhdeniye
League, of the mass of the Zemstvo people, and of newspapers like Nasha
Zhizn, Nashi Dni, Syn Otechestva, Russkiye Vedomosti,{1}
etc., etc. This liberal-bourgeois party likes to be called the
“Constitutional-Democratic” Party. In actual fact, however, as can be
seen from the declarations and the programme of the illegal Osvobozhdeniye,
it is a monarchist party. It does not want a republic at all. It
does not want a unicameral assembly, and it proposes for the Upper House
indirect and virtually non-universal suffrage (residence qualification).
It is anything but anxious for the supreme governmental authority to pass entirely
into the hands of the people (although for window-dressing purposes it is
very fond of talking about the transfer of power to the people). It does
not want the autocracy to be overthrown. It wants only a division
of power among (1) the monarchy; (2) the Upper House (where landowners and
capitalists will predominate); and (3) the Lower House, which alone
is to be built on democratic principles.
Thus,
we have before us the indisputable fact that our “democratic”
bourgeoisie, even as represented by its most advanced, most educated
elements, those least subject to
the direct influence of capital, is trailing
behind the revolution. This “democratic” party fears the
sovereignty of the people. While repeating our slogan of a popular
Constituent Assembly, it in fact completely distorts its sense
and significance and misleads the people by its use, or, rather, abuse.
What
is a “popular Constituent” Assembly? It is an assembly which, in
the first place, really expresses the will of the people. To this end we
must have universal suffrage in all of its democratic aspects, and a full
guarantee of freedom to conduct the election campaign. It is an assembly
which, in the second place, really has the power and authority to
“inaugurate” a political order which will ensure the sovereignty of
the people. It is clear as daylight that without these two conditions the
assembly can be neither truly popular nor truly constituent.
Yet our liberal bourgeois, our constitutional monarchists (whose claim to
be democrats is a mockery of the people) do not want real safeguards to
ensure either of these conditions! Not only do they fail to
ensure in any way
complete freedom of election propaganda or the actual transfer of power
and authority to the Constituent Assembly,
but, on the contrary, they seek to make both impossible
since they aim at maintaining the monarchy. The real power and authority
is to remain in the hands of Nicholas the Bloody. This means that the dire
enemy of the people is to convene the assembly and “ensure” that the
elections will be free and universal. How very democratic! It means that
the Constituent Assembly will never have and (according to the idea of the
liberal bourgeois) must never have all power and all authority; it is to
be utterly devoid of power, devoid of authority; it is merely to come
to terms, to reach an agreement, to arrive at an understanding, to strike
a bargain with Nicholas II for the assembly to be granted a modicum
of his royal power! The Constituent Assembly elected by universal suffrage
is to differ in no way from a Lower House. That is to say, the Constituent
Assembly, convened for expressing and executing the will of the people, is
designed by the liberal bourgeoisie to “constitute”, over the will
of
the people, the will of an Upper House and on top of that the will of
the monarchy, the will of Nicholas.
Is
it not obvious that in talking, speechifying, and shouting about a
popular Constituent Assembly, the liberal bourgeois, the Osvobozhdeniye
gentry, are actually planning an anti-popular consultative
assembly? Instead of emancipating the people, they want to subject the
people, by constitutional means, first, to the power of the tsar
(monarchism), and, secondly, to the power of the organised big bourgeoisie
(the Upper House).
If
anyone wishes to dispute this conclusion, let him assert: (1) that
there can be a true expression of the popular will in elections without
complete freedom of propaganda and without the actual abolition of all the
propaganda privileges of the tsarist government; or (2) that an assembly
of delegates devoid of real power and authority, in that these are left in
the hands of the tsar, is not, in effect, a mere consultative body. To
make either of these assertions one must be either a brazen charlatan or a
hope less
fool. History proves conclusively that a representative assembly
coexisting with a monarchical form of government is in actual fact, so
long as governmental power remains in the hands of the monarchy, a
consultative
body which does not bend the will of the monarch to the will of the
people, but only conforms the will of the people to the will of
the monarch, i. e.,
divides the power between monarch and people, bargains for a new order,
but does not constitute it. History proves conclusively that there can be
no such thing as really free elections, that the significance and
character of these elections can hardly be brought home to the whole
people unless the government that is combating the revolution is replaced
by a provisional revolutionary government. Granting for a moment the
improbable and the impossible, namely, that the tsarist government, having
decided to convene a “Constituent” (read: consultative) Assembly, will
give formal guarantees of freedom of propaganda, all the vast
advantages and superior facilities for campaigning which accrue from the
organised power of the state will nevertheless remain in its hands. These
advantages and facilities for propaganda during the elections to the first
people’s assembly will be enjoyed by the very ones who have oppressed
the people by all the means in their power, and from whom the people have
begun to wrest
liberty by force.
In
a word, we arrive
at the very conclusion we reached on the previous occasion (Proletary,
No. 3), when we examined this question from another angle. The slogan of a
popular Constituent Assembly, taken by itself, separately, is at the
present time a slogan of the monarchist bourgeoisie, a slogan calling for
a deal between the bourgeoisie and the tsarist government. Only the
overthrow of the tsarist government and its replacement by a provisional
revolutionary government, whose duty it will be to convene the popular
Constituent Assembly, can be the slogan of the revolutionary struggle. Let
the proletariat of Russia have no illusions on this score; in the din of
the general excitation it is being deceived by the use of its own slogans.
If we fail
to match the armed force of the government with the force of an armed
people, if the tsarist government is not utterly defeated and replaced by
a provisional revolutionary government, every representative assembly,
whatever title—"popular”, “constituent”, etc.—may be
conferred upon it, will in fact be an assembly of representatives of the
big bourgeoisie convened for the purpose of bargaining with the tsar for a
division of power.
The
more the people’s struggle against the tsar comes to a head and the
greater likelihood there is of a speedy realisation of the demand for an
assembly of people’s representatives, the more closely must the
revolutionary proletariat watch the “democratic” bourgeoisie. The
sooner we gain freedom, the sooner will this ally of the proletariat
become its enemy. Two circumstances will serve to cloak this change: (1)
the vagueness, incompleteness, and non-committal character of the would-be
democratic slogans of the bourgeoisie; and (2) the endeavour to turn the
slogans of the proletariat into mere phrases, to substitute empty promises
for real safeguards of liberty and revolution. The workers must
now watch the “democrats” with intensified vigilance. The words
“popular Constituent Assembly” will be nothing more than words if,
owing
to the actual conditions under which the election campaign and the
elections themselves are conducted, this assembly fails to express the
will of the people, if it lacks the strength independently to establish
the new order.
The cardinal issue is now shifting from the
question of summoning the popular Constituent Assembly to the question of
the method by which it is to be summoned. We are on the eve of
decisive events. The proletariat must not pin its faith in general
democratic slogans but must contrapose to them its own
proletarian-democratic slogans in their full scope. Only a force guided by
these slogans can really ensure the complete victory of the revolution.
Endnotes
{1} Our Life, Our Days, Son of the Fatherland,
Russian Recorder.—Ed.
{2} See pp. 492-93 of this volume.—Ed.
{3} The article “The Democratic Tasks of the
Revolutionary Proletariat” was reprinted in Borba Proletariata,
No. 2, July 15 (28), 19O5.
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