Class Consciousness and Working Class Political Organisation (Part VI): Spontaneity and Organisation in the Russian Revolution of February 1917

Class Consciousness and Working Class Political Organisations - Part Six

In this part of our series on class consciousness and political organisation we have arrived at the point where all previous ideas about what was and was not “revolutionary class consciousness” reached their greatest test. Here we should perhaps begin with a warning on methodology. We don’t look at the experience of the Russian Revolution as something to be learned by rote so we can mechanically repeat it in the future. The history of all previous class struggles tells us that no two events ever follow the same trajectory for the very obvious reason that they take place in different historical circumstances. Equally, the contending classes have before them the experience of that previous struggle, and alter their actions accordingly. In this respect we can be certain of only one thing - the next proletarian revolution will be very different in its origins and development from the Russian revolution of 85 years ago. This does not mean there is nothing to understand from that experience in terms of the development of class consciousness and class political organisation. Just as the Russian working class of 1917 had before it the experiences of the Paris Commune of 1871 and the first Russian Revolution of 1905 we have the experience of 1917 as part of our historic legacy. The key issue is to understand what that legacy actually means for us today. The big questions revolve around how the working class moved from accepting the existing order to a full-scale overthrow of the political system as well as three governments in course of ten months. What role did the previously politically aware workers play in the course of that development of a mass class consciousness and how did the working class establish class-wide organisations which were at total odds with the old ruling class state? But first we will deal with the question of the bourgeoisie’s denial that there was any development of a revolutionary class consciousness at all.

A Bourgeois Tragedy

After the collapse of the USSR in 1990 you would expect that the bourgeois ideological offensive against the revolution of 1917 would have eased up. Not a bit of it. In fact the reverse was the case. No sooner was the military threat of the Soviet Union consigned to the dustbin of history than a whole new series of revisionist histories by bourgeois writers of all backgrounds were trying to deny any working class character to the events of 1917. All were intent on denying the real proletarian character of the October Revolution. Doyen of them all was the ex-KGB general Dmitri Volkogonov (now deceased) who published two works which claimed to have racy new revelations about how the Russia of Lenin consciously paved the way for the Russia of Stalin. However a reading of the text shows that all this is publisher’s froth. The archives have revealed little to alter what we know (at least so far). All Volkogonov did was to give an interpretation that would sell books to Western readers (no point writing for a Russian readership since, apart from the new emerging revolutionary minorities, the whole issue is a yawn for them today). Volkogonov and his ilk have had an enormous influence on academic writing on the Russian Revolution in the West. You can see this by comparing the works of Neil Harding and Robert Service both before and after the fall of the Soviet Union. Both have written extensively (two volumes in Harding’s case and three in Service’s case) about Lenin’s role in the Revolution. These are serious works extensively researched and meticulously evidenced. However in the 1990’s both have written smaller books to make sure that we know that they totally disapprove of Lenin. (1)

But not content with denying that the October Revolution was anything other than a coup the have now expanded into denigrating the very appearance of soviets in the February Revolution. This is the aim of Orlando Figes who, in attempting to imitate the gossipy style of Simon Schama in his book on the French Revolution only gives us a good insight into what bourgeois consciousness is. What links the two books is their anti-Marxism. The French Revolution was “good” because it made us all Citizens (the title of Schama’s work) but the Russian Revolution was A People’s Tragedy because it wanted to make us all “comrades”. For these public schoolboy scribblers there can be no higher human progress beyond the current capitalist society. For them “freedom” means continuing to enjoy the comfortable life of the Cambridge college whose exclusiveness needs to be preserved from the untutored masses.

So bourgeois revisionism has only heaped more on its own mountain of distortions since 1990. The fact is that the bourgeois version of the Russian Revolution insists that there was no revolutionary or class consciousness amongst the Russian working class, but that the weaknesses of both the Russian liberal bourgeoisie and the existing power structures in Russia (which had not established a solid Westminster-style Parliament) had allowed any old band of ruthless adventurers like the Bolsheviks to turn up and pick up the power which lay abandoned in the streets. This is a very ruling class conception. If our masters don’t control power then it must be an orphan. Or as Trotsky put it:

Those who lose by a revolution are rarely inclined to call it by its real name. (2)

The fact that the “spontaneous” uprising of the Russian working class in February 1917 had very sound material reasons seems only peripheral to their analysis.

February 1917: Beyond Spontaneity

Here we use the term “spontaneous” carefully. The Tsarina Alexandra wrote to her husband that this was a “hooligan movement” which would die down if only “the Duma would behave itself”! But the movement was anything but hooligan. Even if no organisation planned the revolution it had clear goals which developed from demands for bread into a call for the overthrow of the monarchy and an end to the war. Spontaneous in this sense does not mean disorganised but means that it has no single organisational centre. Lenin was quite happy (in his famous January 1917 lecture to Swiss socialist youth) to state that the 1905 revolution was “spontaneous” but as Trotsky noted in his wide-ranging analysis, The History of the Russian Revolution,

The mystic doctrine of spontaneousness explains nothing. In order correctly to appraise the situation and determine the moment for a blow at the enemy, it was necessary that the masses or their guiding layers should make their examination of historical events and have their criteria for estimating them. In other words it was necessary that there should not be masses in the abstract but masses of Petrograd workers, and Russian workers in general, who had passed through the Revolution of 1905...

op.cit. p169

What Trotsky correctly emphasises is that the “dress rehearsal” of 1905 is absolutely central to the formation of working class consciousness in February 1917. It explains why the actions of the masses in 1917 were so collectively coherent (and, as Lenin noted, went well beyond the hesitant attitudes of the political parties). In a general sense the revolution is only spontaneous in that...

the history of a revolution is first of all a history of the forcible entrance of the masses into the realm of rulership over their own destiny.

This revolution however starts off from relatively limited perspectives. It only moves forward because a new situation has arisen.

... society does not change its institutions as need arises, the way a mechanic changes his instruments. On the contrary, society actually takes the institutions which hang upon it as a given once and for all. For decades the oppositional criticism is nothing more than a safety valve for mass dissatisfaction, a condition of the stability of the social structure. Such, in principle, for example was the significance acquired by the social-democratic criticism. Entirely exceptional conditions, independent of the will of persons or parties are necessary in order to tear of from discontent the fetters of conservatism and bring the masses to insurrection.

op.cit. pp17-18

In other words, changing circumstances create changed human beings. Here Trotsky is demonstrating his grasp of Marxism. It echoes, in a real historical context, what Marx wrote in The German Ideology that:

the alteration of human beings on a mass scale ... can only take place in a practical movement, a revolution... (3)

The “entirely exceptional conditions” he speaks of link the Bolshevik party and the revolutionary working class in 1917.

In the long term the Bolsheviks held the view after 1906 that whatever the nature of the coming revolution the working class would have to fight for “a revolutionary democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and peasantry” from the start. They were not hamstrung by the mechanistic theory of the Mensheviks that the proletariat would have to lend its support to the bourgeois to establish a democracy. This meant that the actions of individual Bolsheviks inside the class were always towards pushing forward the struggle of the working class as an independent class. Mensheviks, on the other hand tended to look to their leaders to see what compromises they were making with the “democratic” parties. This comes over in the “personal record” of Sukhanov. Although an Internationalist Menshevik (i.e. a supporter of Martov on the “left” of the Party”) he records that he found the Bolsheviks in St Petersburg in the February Revolution rather dreary and narrow. He arrives at this verdict because they were not willing to go to Gorky’s house to coordinate with the other intellectual Social Democrats and “progressive” bourgeois politicians. Sukhanov complains that they did not understand “the bigger picture”. All they did was look around for printing presses to get out propaganda to the workers. This is significant because it tells us how the Bolsheviks were already embryonically the party of the class. However they were not yet that but they had also laid down the ground work in the shorter term.

They key issue here was the war. No other party in the world had come out so clearly against the war as the Bolsheviks. It is their greatest claim to revolutionary leadership in their entire history. Trotsky (who was not then a Bolshevik) points out that on the eve of the First World War Bolshevik influence amongst the working class was at its height. Indeed strike figures for 1913-14 show that Tsarism was facing a wave of strikes like that which preceded the 1905 revolution. (4)

The Bolsheviks had been growing in influence. Once war was declared the St Petersburg Committee of the Party issued a leaflet against it. It read

Comrades, the government and bourgeoisie have sown the wind; they will reap the whirlwind! Nicholas the Bloody ... will be the last Russian Tsar... Revolution is coming. Lets do all we can to make it victorious. (5)

This brought to the factories of St Petersburg the message that Lenin was already fighting for on the international stage of turning “the imperialist war into a civil war”. Of course this was not a way to instant popularity but it did lay down a class position, a banner which would later become a rallying point for the working class. Once war was declared a wave of patriotic fervour had engulfed Russia, like all the other belligerent states. The Bolsheviks declined numerically as the more conservative elements in the working class began to dominate (not least because the war gave the excuse for mass arrests of worker activists). (6)

However this was a situation which only lasted until the end of 1915. As the Russian war effort ground to a halt and as the economic impact of the war led to appalling shortages, the discontent of the masses rose and the Bolsheviks, persecuted, their most experienced leaders in exile in Siberia or abroad, and short of resources were still able to exert a political influence beyond their real organisational strength. This was because they had taken a coherent programmatic stand against the war. Thus when Trotsky answers his own question “Who led the February Revolution?” his lapidary statement,

Conscious and tempered workers educated for the most part by the party of Lenin.

doesn’t appear quite so metaphysical. He cites various examples of unsung Bolshevik members like the soldier Muralov or the worker Kaiurov who carry out decisive actions at the level of the street in the early days of the February Revolution. Nor do we need to take only Trotsky’s word. Orlando Figes, no friend of the proletariat, even concedes that “socialist agitation amongst the working class” was significant in the early hours of the February Revolution in getting striking workers out onto the street. This had begun on International Women’s Day (February 23rd according to the old calendar), when the usual demonstration was transformed by women strikers marching from the working class Vyborg quarter to the bourgeois Nevsky Prospekt to join it and protest against the bread shortages. On this day the bread ration had been cut for the third time so the shouts for khleba (bread) were accompanied with the first cries of Doloi tsarskoi monarkhii (Down with Tsarism). Working class agitation continued on February 24th 1917 when hundreds of thousands joined the strikes.

Workers held factory meetings throughout the city and urged on by socialist agitators, resolved to march against the centre. Many armed themselves with knives, spanner, hammers... (7)

This is also significant because for all the streetfighting and fraternisation with troops that was to take place over the next five days what gave it substance was the collective consciousness which had brought at least half (one police report gave 90%) of the St Petersburg working class out on strike. It gave life to what Lenin had written after the Moscow Uprising of December 1905 that

... unless the revolution assumes a mass character and afects the troops, there can be no question of a serious struggle. (8)

Once on strike they met every day at the factory and in these mass assemblies decided to go down to the city centre to demonstrate. No wonder the Tsar’s State Council ordered the factories to be locked to deny the workers this collective meeting place. It was also noted by eyewitnesses of all shades of opinion that whereas the early demonstrations had been “good-humoured” and accompanied by people “dressed respectably” this gradually changed on the afternoon of the 23rd as the mass movement became more proletarian in character. However, even now, when some Bolsheviks tried to unfurl a banner inscribed with the words Doloi voiny (Down with the War) they were set upon and the banner disappeared. Two days later the crowds, faced by armed troops, were chanting the very same slogan in Znamenskaia Square.

It wasn’t just desperation then that had transformed the consciousness of the working class but also a sense that the war had created a new situation different from 1905. In 1905 the Army was still largely the professional Army of the Tsar. The sense of futility of the war had not been so deep in 1905 either. Now (and various eyewitnesses testify to this) as the demonstrators realised that the largely peasant conscript reservists which made up the bulk of the Petrograd garrison were unlikely to shoot they grew more confident. The final key to it was the Cossacks, who had never hesitated in the past to gun down any anti-tsarist demonstrators but the workers were already making attempt to fraternise with them on the very first day of the uprising. Emboldened individuals, often women but also men would go up to soldiers, seize the barrel of their gun and beg them to turn it the other way. There is no record of any of these appeals failing. (9)

Once the Cossacks made it clear that they were only standing in line and not really attacking the demonstrators the regime’s last bastion was the police. Although some soldiers in some regiments had shot down strikers early in the revolution, it was the fighting between the police and the other soldiers that led to most of the casualties. Once the Cossacks (at the request of the Bolshevik worker Katyurov) killed Constable Krylov, a top police officer in the act of ordering his forces to shoot on a crowd in Znamenskaia Square (10) the last hesitation of the mass movement ended. The revolution was in full swing. Although some regiments were still slow to come over to the workers, and there were exchanges of gunfire within and between regiments, the numbers on the streets increased. Red flags began to appear everywhere. What for years had been mere ideas put forward by revolutionary minorities were now taking on a practical dimension.

Nowhere was this clearer than the question of what was to replace Tsarism. The bourgeoisie had watched with horror as the working class and the peasant army reservists had wiped away centuries of autocracy whilst they themselves had done nothing. However the more energetic amongst them (especially those in labour organisations like Kerensky) realised some response was needed if the “underclass” were to be prevented from taking over. This is the key point in any revolution.

Workers can do the fighting and the dying on the streets but unless they know what they want they are likely to be stitched up by one or other capitalist faction. This was clearly illustrated in more recent times in Poland when the shipyard workers of Gdansk started the movement to overthrow the Stalinist apparatus in Poland. Lacking an independent class perspective of their own (since they were workers overthrowing a supposed “workers’ state”) they succumbed to the leadership of reactionary Catholicism in the shape of Lech Walesa’s Solidarity movement, itself maintained by CIA finance. This illustrates the limits of a movement which can, with practical steps, demolish a hated regime but which without its own programmatic perspective cannot create a new society. This programmatic perspective has to be posed in advance within the working class by those workers who understand that a change of leadership is not enough to make a revolution.

In Russia the Social Democratic movement had been doing this and had this made a vital contribution to the February Revolution. But, once the Tsar had gone, the acid test would be in the nature of what followed. It was a testimony to the strength of the class movement in Petrograd that the bourgeoisie did not get things all their own way. When Kerensky and his pals in the Socialist Revolutionary Party were prepared to sit with conservative Duma members like Shingarev and Milyukov to create a Provisional Government, the workers and soldiers who had done the fighting also demanded their own organisations. As Trotsky said this was not just any old proletariat this was the same Russian proletariat who had recently experienced the 1905 Revolution. In some respects they did not need to wait for their political minorities to remind them of 1905 as it was still relatively fresh in their collective consciousness. That is why, when the Bolsheviks put out a leaflet on February 27th calling for elections to the Soviets, they were echoing resolutions already made by cooperative organisations, the Mensheviks and workers on the factory floor calling for the Soviets to take power.

Soviets without Communism The actual decision to revive the 1905 Soviet seems to have arisen when the crowds on the Vyborg side (the working class district around the Finland Station) decided to free the prisoners in the Kresty (Crosses) Prison. Amongst these was the Menshevik first President of the 1905 Soviet, Khrustalev-Nosar. The Mensheviks led the way in forming the new Soviet and linked it with the Tsarist War Industries Committees which were led by Gvozdev, another Menshevik (as they were designed to improve war production the Bolsheviks had led a successful boycott campaign against them). At this point many histories make the point that the Bolsheviks had seemingly played little overt part in the Revolution. Were several reasons for this. Like all other parties they had not expected the revolution and were even cautioning women strikers not to get isolated on February 24th.

The first Bolshevik leaflet calling for a general strike only hit the streets on the 26th (by which time hundreds of thousands were already out!). The Bolshevik leadership in St Petersburg was undoubtedly weak (the St Petersburg Committee was so decimated by arrests that the Vyborg committee was given its role). However the Bolsheviks were not idle. As we have seen individual Bolsheviks were with the workers on the streets and often took the initiative in giving an informal lead when it was required. The Bolsheviks did not go to the Tauride Palace to be present at the setting up of the Provisional Government and the Soviet because they regarded this as all in the realm of the bourgeoisie and were thus caught out by the re-establishment of the Petrograd Soviet).

Figes scoffs at the revival of the Soviet pointing out accurately enough that its original executive was made up of intellectuals who represented the political parties (even the Bolsheviks were allocated two seats on it). What he does not explain (because it undermines his basic argument that this was an illegitimate power) is that this was only the beginning of the process. Very soon every regiment would be electing its own delegates. These delegates were not the articulate intellectuals who formed the provisional executive but people whose voice had rarely ever been heard in history. Sukhanov gives a vivid picture of their “artless” (11) entry onto the stage of history.

We had a meeting... We have been told to say... The oficers hid... To join the Soviet of Workers’ Deputies... They told us to say that we refuse to serve against the people any more, we’re going to join with out brother-workers, all united to defend the people’s cause... We would lay down our lives for that... Our general meeting told us to greet you... Long live the revolution!...
It was there and then proposed, and approved with storms of applause - to fuse together the revolutionary army and the proletariat of the capital and create a united organisation to be called from then on the “Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies”...

Many factories already had elected delegates to the Soviet. At the same time, unlike in 1905 the soviet movement spread rapidly to the provinces. (12)

Within a fortnight there were 77 other soviets in cities and towns around Russia. There is much to comment on here. In the first place the soviet or workers’ council represents the historically discovered form of the proletarian transformation of society. If proletarian revolution can only be carried out “by the immense majority” it has to have a totally different form of organisation to bourgeois society. In bourgeois society parliamentarism represents the class form of their rule. It creates the illusion of mass rule, of democracy but in actual fact depends on the passivity of the citizens. They get to vote once every four or five years for representatives who then have the total freedom to do as they like with their so-called “democratic mandate”. The citizens cannot object and indeed any strike or other form of direct action to object to a policy comes up against the argument that the democratically elected representatives have the only legitimate authority. Note the difference with the soviet. The soldiers’ delegates repeatedly state “we have been told to say” or “our general meeting stated”. These are delegates. They have a direct mandate. They don’t vote how they like but how they were told to vote by their workers’ or regimental assembly. If they don’t they can be instantly recalled and replaced. Bourgeois theorists constantly tell us that this sort of direct democracy is impractical but the whole experience of 1917 demonstrates the opposite. This democracy is not subject to bribery of individuals and controlled only by the electors - but then that’s why the bourgeoisie hate it and why they get their hack writers to denigrate it. Up until now there has been nothing more effective in allowing the mass of the population to directly participate in “government”.

What does this tell us about class consciousness and political organisation? First that in a practical movement like a revolution the working class will re-create (even in slightly amended form) organs that they have already experimented with in the past. Second, that even the best proletarian party can be left behind by events. Lenin had no qualms about telling the world that the working class as a whole were infinitely more revolutionary than any political party (including the Bolsheviks). However this is not the end of the story. The real issue is how does that party respond to the new situation. All the evidence is that the working class members of the Bolshevik party acquitted themselves well in the turmoil of February. Less impressive were the so-called leaders. If Shlyapnikov and company vacillated in late February they at least stuck to the revolutionary defeatist policy which characterised the Bolsheviks throughout the war. But when they were replaced by “Old” Bolsheviks like Stalin, Muranov and Kamenev, newly released from Siberian exile, the picture became blurred. The new threesome took over Pravda and began writing about the need to support the Provisional Government. Kamenev even wrote that the war must go on until the Germans had been pushed out of Russia. Lenin’s irritation and anger about this is well-known. Less well-known is the perplexed reaction of the rank and file who had defended the revolutionary defeatist position throughout the war. Whilst Lenin’s April Theses were a bombshell to some of the Bolshevik leadership they were welcomed as a restatement of Bolshevik clarity in the factories. All the indications are that this confusion was too short to be critical but it also illustrates that the Bolshevik Party was not the rigidly disciplined organisation which Stalinist legend has made it out to be.

What we have tried to show here is that its strengths were that it had a clear revolutionary political orientation and that it was a distinct part of working class life in advance of the revolution. These were to be critical factors in the development of a revolutionary party in1917. And this forms the next focus of our study. It is one thing for the working class to create class wide organs which actually carry out the transformation of society but these organs cannot do this as long as they are dominated by political programmes which call for class collaboration with the dominant class.

Soviets with Communists?

From the beginning of May the distinction between the Bolsheviks and the other political parties became sharper. This was critical to the future development of the revolution. It is one thing for the working class to overthrow a regime, even to establish class wide organisations but it is another to make these organs of revolutionary transformation. As we saw in the last part of this text the soviets in the German revolution were always dominated by the Social Democrats who simply got them to vote for the bourgeois option of a parliamentary regime. In Russia history took a different course largely (as we argued in the previous issue) because there was a preparation of the working class for the next and decisive step. The Bolshevik refusal to accept the compromise of Dual Power, their refusal to accept that the Revolution was now over as a parliamentary regime had been established, meant that they set out an alternative for the working class.

As the material situation shifted, as the hopes for a “democratic peace” faded the Bolsheviks were the only party who constantly called for “All Power to the Soviets”. In 1917 the class struggle did not reach a peak in February - in February it had barely started. Once the Tsar was out of the way the bourgeois Provisional Government was face to face with workers and soldiers Soviets. The only party which was not compromised by being represented in the Provisional Government as well as in the Soviets was the Bolsheviks. The Soviets under Menshevik and SR leadership straddled the two and got the Soviet to agree to support the Provisional Government. In practice the workers and soldiers were supporting decrees of the Soviet which undermined bourgeois rule (such as the orders on military discipline where officers were no longer allowed to address soldiers as ty a disrespectful form of “you”, or more seriously officers had to listen to elected committees). Dual Power then was always an uneasy compromise. Real power always lay with the Soviet but the Soviet did not use it. However once it was clear that the Kadet Foreign Minister (and strong man of the bourgeois regime) Milyukov wanted to follow the Tsar’s policy of annexation of territory the Soviet demanded his resignation. This was followed by the disastrous June Offensive which confirmed that a war to victory was a distant chimera. This was the pivotal point at which the 1917 Revolution turned. The Bolsheviks continued principled opposition to the war was not to make its programme the only alternative for the Russian working class. The relationship between party and class in the later part of 1917 is what we will turn to in the next part of this series.

(1) Harding’s Lenin’s Political Thought was reviewed in Revolutionary Perspectives 23, Second Series. His later work Leninism was reviewed in RP4 (this series). Service wrote Lenin: A Political Life (3 Vols, 1985-95) and then Lenin: A Biography in 2000. The former is hardly sympathetic to Lenin but the latter introduces us to his subject by listing the evils of Stalinism, but does not mention Stalin once, and claims the whole history of the USSR is Lenin’s legacy!

(2) The History of the Russian Revolution, Pluto Press (1977) p.155.

(3) For the full discussion on this see Part 2 of this series How Working Class Consciousness Develops in Revolutionary Perspectives 22 (this series).

(4) See S.A. Smith Red Petro grad (Cambridge 1990).

(5) Quoted in E.N.Burdzhalov Russia’s Second Revolution, Indiana University Press, (1987) p. 15.

(6) The History of the Russian Revolution, Pluto Press (1977) p.165.

(7) A People’s Tragedy (Pimlico 1997) p.308.

(8) Lessons of the Moscow Uprising in V.I.Lenin Selected Works Vol 1 (Moscow 1977) p.530.

(9) E.N.Burdzhalov Russia’s Second Revolution, Indiana University Press, (1987) p. 131.

(10) See Black Night, White Snow Harrison Salisbury, Cassell, (1977) p.343.

(11) N.N. Sukhanov (Himmer) The Russian Revolution 1917: A Personal Record, Princeton, (1984) The description and quotation which follows are from p.61.

(12) Before anyone objects that the first actual soviet in 1905 was in the textile town of Ivanovo-Vossnessensk we mean here that the soviet movement was confined to 4 or 5 places in 1905. In 1917 it began to spread from the very beginning.

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