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Special pages :
The Ukraine and the Defeat of the Ruling Parties of Russia
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1977, Moscow, Volume 25, pages 99-102
The ruling parties of Russia, i. e., the Cadets, who have a majority in the government and the omnipotence of capital in the economy, and the Socialist-Revolutionaries and Mensheviks, who now have an obvious majority in the country (but who are powerless in the government and in the countryâs capitalist economy), have all suffered an obvious defeat over the Ukrainian issue, and what is more, a nation-wide defeat over an issue of vast importance.
The Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks put up with the fact that the Provisional Government of the Cadets, i. e., of the counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie, had not done its elementary democratic duty, had not declared itself in favour of the Ukraineâs autonomy and of her right to freely secede. According to Minister Chernovâs report in todayâs Dyelo Naroda, the Ukrainians demanded far less than that. They only wanted the Provisional Government âto declare by a special act that it is not opposed to the Ukrainian peopleâs right to autonomyâ. This is a most modest and legitimate demand. The other two demands are just as modest: (1) The Ukraine should through her own people elect one representative to the central Russian Government. The modesty of this demand can be seen from the fact that in 1897 the Great Russians in Russia were estimated at 43 per cent, and the Ukrainians at 17 percent of the population. In other words, the Ukrainians could have insisted on having not one but six Ministers out of the sixteen!! (2) In the Ukraine there should be âone representative of the central Russian Government elected by the local populationâ. What could be more legitimate than this? By what right does a democrat make free to depart from the principle, proved in theory and confirmed by the experience of democratic revolutions, that âno officials for the local population should be appointed from aboveâ??
The Provisional Governmentâs rejection of these very modest and legitimate demands was an instance of utter shamelessness, of savage impertinence, on the part of the counter-revolutionaries, and a true manifestation of the policy of Derzhimorda.[1] The Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks made a mockery of their own party programmes by tolerating that in the government, and are now defending it in their papers! I To what a disgraceful level the Socialist-Revolutionaries and Mensheviks have fallen! How pitiful the subterfuges of their organs, Dyelo Naroda and Rabochaya Gazeta, are today!
Chaos, confusion, âLeninism over the national questionâ, anarchyâthese are a wild landownerâs outcries[2] that the two newspapers are hurling at the Ukrainians.
Let us ignore their outcries. What is the substance of their argument?
Their only argument is that until a Constituent Assembly is convened it will be impossible to settle in a âregularâ manner the issue of the Ukraineâs boundaries, her freedom, her right to collect taxes, and so on and so forth. They insist on a âguarantee of regularityââthis expression used in Rabochaya Gazetaâs editorial gives the whole gist of their argument.
But that is an obvious lie, gentlemen, it is a manifestly shameless thing on the part of the counter-revolutionaries. For to advance such an argument means actually helping real traitors to the revolution!!
âGuarantees of regularityâ ... stop and think for a second. Nowhere in Russia, neither in the central government nor in any local department (except in a very small institution, the Petrograd district councils), is there any guarantee of regularity. In fact, there is admittedly no regularity. There is admittedly no âregularityâ in the existence of the Duma or of the Council of State.[3]
There is admittedly no âregularityâ in the composition of the Provisional Government, for its composition is a mockery of the will and intelligence of the majority of Russiaâs workers, soldiers and peasants. There is admittedly no âregularityâ in the composition of the Soviets (of Workersâ, Peasantsâ and Soldiersâ Deputies), for these institutions have not yet worked out any guarantees of really complete and strictly democratic elections. Still, this does not prevent either our Party or the mass of the workers and peas ants from regarding the Soviets as the best exponent of the will of the majority of the population so far. Nowhere in Russia are there, can there be, or have there ever been at a revolutionary time like the present any âguarantees of regularityâ. Everyone realises that, no one asks anything different, everyone is aware that it is inevitable.
It is only for the Ukraine that âweâ demand âguarantees of regularityâ!
You are paralysed with fear, Socialist-Revolutionary and Menshevik gentlemen, having yielded to the counter revolutionary howls of the Great-Russian landowners and capitalists led by Rodzyanko, Milyukov, Lvov, Tereshchenko, Nekrasov, Shingaryov and Co. You are already the perfect picture of people overawed by the rising Cavaignacs (and those âlying low?â).
There is absolutely nothing terrible, not the shadow of anarchy or chaos, either in the resolutions or in the demands of the Ukrainians. Accede to their most legitimate and most modest demands and authority will be just as effective in the Ukraine as it is everywhere in Russia, where the Soviets (which have no âguarantees of regularityâ!!) are the sole authority. You and all the peoples of Russia will be given a âguarantee of regularityâ by the future Diets, by the future Constituent Assembly, not only in regard to the Ukrainian issue, but in regard to all issues. For at this moment there is admittedly no âregularityâ in Russia about any issue. Accede to the Ukrainiansâcommon sense demands it. For, unless you do, things will be worse. Force will not check the Ukrainians. It will only embitter them. Accede to the Ukrainians, and you will open the way to mutual confidence and brotherly union between the two nations on the basis of equality!
The Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks, who constitute ruling parties, have been defeated over the Ukrainian issue by yielding to the counter-revolutionary Cadet Cavaignacs.
- â Derzhimordaâa policeman in Gogolâs Inspector-General, a boorish, insolent oppressor, a petty tyrant.
- â Wild Landownerâa character in M. Saltykov-Shchedrinâs fairy-tale of the same name.
- â The Council of Stateâone of the supreme organs of state power in tsarist Russia; was established in 1810, according to M. M. Speranskyâs plan, as a legislative-advisory body whose members were appointed and confirmed by the tsar. A reactionary institution, it voted down even moderate Bills approved by the Duma.