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The
Russian Revolution recalled

Even
90 years after the Russian revolution there are still some who claim
that the event shines as a beacon for socialism. We were able to say
at the time that whatever was happening in Russia it was not a
socialist revolution.
In
August 1918 the Socialist Standard pointed out that, while
there were industrial towns in Russia, the country was largely
agricultural with about 80 per cent of the population still living on
the land. The answer to the question whether “this huge mass of
people” (about 160 million), which indeed included some industrial
and agricultural wage slaves, was “convinced of the necessity and
equipped with the knowledge requisite for the social ownership of the
means of life?” was “No!”; beyond the fact that the leaders in
the November movement claimed to be Marxian socialists there was no
justification for terming the upheaval in Russia a Socialist
Revolution.
Our
analysis of the situation was based upon Marx’s definition of
capitalism as a relation of wage-labour and capital and on the
conditions necessary for that relation to be ended and replaced by
socialism. Before “the Communistic abolition of buying and selling,
of the bourgeois conditions of production”, as the Communist
Manifesto put it, can happen, there must be a sufficient
development of the productive forces, and the class which has to sell
its labour power in order to live – the working class – must
fully understand what is involved and be ready to take the necessary
political action.
The
conditions envisaged by Marx to be necessary for the ending of
capitalism and establishing socialism did not exist in Russia in
1917, so why have the events been claimed as socialist?
Russia
in 1917
The
country had suffered huge losses during the war against the more
heavily industrialised Germany, the economy was in a mess and there
were food riots. The Tsar had been forced to abdicate in March 1917 –
while both Lenin and Trotsky were out of the country – and the
situation was confused. There was a provisional government which
included capitalist and landowning representatives. In July Kerensky
became leader with support from the Committee of the Duma (the
Russian parliament) but with increasing support from the councils of
Workers and Soldiers – the Soviets. However he continued with the
war despite its unpopularity.
There
was widespread discontent with soldiers, workers and peasants
reacting against the adverse conditions, which the Bolsheviks were
able to take advantage of the discontent. They gained control of the
Soviets using slogans like “All power to the Soviets”, and
crucially “Peace! Bread! Land!” In other words, this was what the
war-weary, hungry workers and peasants wanted – they were not after
socialism. That there was not a majority ready for socialism would
not have concerned Lenin. The situation fitted his vanguard theory
that the working class by its own efforts is only able to develop
trade union consciousness and needs to be led by professional
revolutionaries. There were enormous difficulties including the
backward state of the country and the civil war; also the expected
uprisings in other European countries did not take place. The
development of capitalism was all that could happen and the
Bolsheviks as the new rulers would have no choice but
to do their
best to aid it.
...continued
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