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Ninety years since the Russian Revolution: The prospects for
socialism in the twenty-first century
Part 3
By Nick Beams
27 November 2007
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The following is the Part 3 of a lecture delivered by Nick
Beams, Socialist Equality Party national secretary and Senate
candidate for NSW, to SEP election meetings in Sydney on November
18, Perth on November 20 and Melbourne on November 21. Part
1 was published on November 24 and Part
2 on November 26.
The revolution of February 1917 in Russia was initially sparked
by a protest by women over the lack of bread. Their struggle rapidly
drew in other sections of the working class. The tsar called in
the troops, upon which his regime had relied to defend the capital
during the tumultuous events of 1905. But when they refused to
fire upon the demonstrations, and joined them instead, the fate
of the tsarist autocracy was sealed.
The February Revolution saw the birth of a new order. But in
this case, twins arrived. Not one, but two centres of power emerged:
the Provisional Government, comprising the bourgeois and peasant
parties, and the Soviets or workers councils, which had
been created in the 1905 revolution and were rapidly re-established
in the February days. The initial response of all the socialist
parties, including the Bolsheviks, was to extend conditional support
to the Provisional Government.
Upon his return to Russia at the beginning of April, however,
Lenin delivered a political bombshell: he insisted that the Bolshevik
Party turn to leading the working class to the conquest of political
power. But there was significant resistance to Lenins perspective
within the party leadership. While not explicitly stated by Lenin
himself, it was recognised that he was, in fact, adopting Trotskys
perspective.
What had brought about this change? The February Revolution
had demonstrated that the peasantry could not play an independent
role. The democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and
the peasantry had been realised in the form of the Provisional
Government, where the bourgeois parties ruled with the support
of the peasant parties.
The government initially enjoyed support among the masses,
and from the Soviets, where, as yet, the Bolsheviks comprised
only a small minority.
But the Provisional Government could not meet the masses
demands. It could not end the war, because the Russian bourgeoisie
was tied by a thousand strings to the imperialist powers of the
Westand, moreover, harboured its own agenda for conquest.
It could not sanction the peasant rebellions against the landlords,
tied as the bourgeoisie was to this class, fearing that the overthrow
of landed property would call into question all forms of property.
And it could not end the national oppression that had characterised
tsarist Russia.
In short, the Provisional Government had been placed in power
by a movement that it did not prepare, that it did not want, and
whose demands it could not meet. Herein lay the objective foundations
for the second revolution, the October Revolution.
The months of February to October were marked by a movement
to the left. This accelerated after an attempted coup by General
Kornilov in August-September revealed the complicity of the Provisional
Government with the counter-revolution. Support in the Soviets
for the Bolsheviks steadily grew, as the parties backing the bourgeois
Provisional Government became increasingly discredited in the
eyes of the working class.
But the Russian situation was not the only motivating factor
that led to the October 25 insurrection. In pressing his demands
for the seizure of power, Lenin was above all guided by the international
situation. The Russian Revolution was not a Russian question,
but the opening shot of the world revolution. It was necessary
to take power in Russia to show the international working class
a way out of the barbarism of the war, and the impasse into which
it had been driven by the betrayals of its own leaderships.
The insurrection placed power in the hands of the Soviets.
From the outset it was opposed by the bourgeois parties and their
chief props, the Mensheviks, by the so-called moderate socialists,
and by the right-wing of the peasant based Social Revolutionary
Party. According to them, the Bolsheviks were anarchists, putschists,
and the seizure of power had no legitimacy.
Once the Provisional Government was overthrown, the attention
of all these forces turned to the constituent assembly, which
was convened in January 1918. The convening of this body had long
been a demand of the socialist and democratic movement. But events
had by-passed it. None of the parties insisting that the Constituent
Assembly must form the government would recognise the legitimacy
of the revolution, and that political power rested in the hands
of the Soviets.
Thus the Constituent Assembly could only act as a focus for
the organisation of counter-revolution. It was dispersed and disappeared
from the scene. As one leading Social Revolutionary later observed,
it passed away as a consequence of the indifference with
which the people responded to our dissolution.
We cannot here review the history of the degeneration of the
first workers state and the rise of the Stalinist bureaucracy,
except to make the most essential point.
The degeneration was not some inevitable product of Marxism
or of Bolshevism, much less a result of the dispersal of the Constituent
Assembly. The degeneration was a product of the isolation of the
revolution. The perspective of Lenin and Trotsky was that if the
revolution did not extend to Western Europe, then there would
be no possibility of holding on to power. In the event, the revolution
was not extended, due to the betrayals of the social democratic
leaderships of the working class. But neither was the revolution
overturned.
The isolation, however, had a terrible impact. It was the chief
factor in the degeneration of the workers state and the
usurpation of political power by a cancerous bureaucracy under
the leadership of Stalin. This apparatus carried out the murder
of all the Bolsheviks who had led the revolution, culminating
in the assassination of Leon Trotsky in 1940. The Stalinists were
to play the central role in propping up the capitalist order until
they handed over to the bourgeoisie in 1991 and restored capitalism.
The prospects for socialism
What of the prospects for socialism in the twenty-first century?
Has the Russian Revolution simply passed into history, to be regarded
as an interesting experience, but containing no essential lessons
for today? To answer, we have to review the historical process
itself.
World War I and the Russian Revolution were the outcome of
what we can now see, looking back, was the first phase of capitalist
globalisation. The vast economic developments that transformed
the world in the period of 1871 to 1914 brought to a head all
the contradictions of the capitalist mode of production.
The perspective guiding the Bolsheviks ninety years ago was
world socialist revolution. But the first attempt to initiate
that revolution did not succeed, and humanity paid a terrible
price. The next three decades witnessed depression, mass unemployment,
fascism, the unspeakable horrors of the Holocaust and tens of
millions more killed in a war that culminated in the use of atomic
weapons.
What followed was a period of relative stability, even an upswing
in the fortunes of capitalism, as a new economic expansion seemed
to relegate the problems of the first half of the twentieth century
to the past. But by the end of the 1960s, the post-war boom was
coming to an end, with the eruption of a series of potentially
revolutionary struggles of the working class around the worldfrom
the May-June 1968 general strike in France, to the hot autumn
in Italy, the bringing down of the Heath Tory government in Britain
in 1973-4, to the collapse of the Salazar regime in Portugal in
1975. But in none of these struggles was the working class able
to challenge for political power due to the betrayals of its leaderships.
After utilising these betrayals to stabilise its position,
the bourgeoisie embarked on an offensive against the working class.
This began in the second half of the 1970s and has continued to
this day. Over the past 30 years the working class has suffered
a series of defeats and setbacks. The prospect of socialism seems
to have receded well into the background, if not altogether beyond
the bounds of possibility.
Thirty years is a considerable period of time in the life an
individual. To members of the older generation, it appears that
the hopes of their youth have been dashed, while for younger people
it seems that there is nothing, at least in the immediate past,
on which they can base their desire for change.
Three decades can seem a long time. But weighed on the scales
of history, considering the vast changes in economic processes,
and social and cultural relationships, it is but a short interlude.
And what changes there have been! The past period has seen
a transformation in the very structure of world capitalism. We
have been living through the second phase of capitalist globalisation,
in which the whole world has become one indivisible economic unit,
with each part inseparably connected with every other.
What are the implications for the prospects for socialism?
Let us turn to some ABCs of Marxist politics.
Our perspective is grounded on the conception that the objective
prerequisites for socialism are to be found in the contradictions
of the capitalist system itself. At a certain point these contradictions
lead to a breakdown in the capitalist order and an historical
crisis of capitalist rule.
Where do we stand today? The answer is clear. The processes
of economic globalisation have raised to a new peak of intensity
the contradiction between world economy and the nation-state system.
In other words, to refer back to the passage we cited from Marx,
the material productive forces of society have come into conflict
with the existing relations of production. Just as in the period
leading to World War I, that conflict is expressed in the intensification
of inter-imperialist rivalries. That is why, suddenly, we find
the American president talking about World War III.
Furthermore, the sweeping economic changes of the past thirty
years have completely undermined the relative economic strength
of the United States, which was such a decisive factor in stabilising
world capitalism in the period following World War II. Rather
than a force for stability, the US is now the most destabilising
factor in world economics and politics. Its increasing resort
to militarism is disrupting all the relations among the capitalist
powers, while its deepening financial crisis threatens to set
off a global economic collapse of catastrophic proportions. In
his book Imperialism Lenin referred to the growth of parasitism
in the period prior to World War I. But the processes to which
Lenin pointed pale into insignificance compared to the situation
today.
What of the position of the working classthe only social
force capable of overthrowing capitalism? The processes of globalisation
have resulted in a vast increase in both the size and geographical
spread of this social class.
Over the past two decades or so, even less in some cases, millions
of peasants and petty producers, in China, in India, in Latin
America, in Africaall over the worldhave become wage
workers involved in a global process of production. Fifty years
ago, many learnedand not so learnedacademics claimed
that Marxs predictions about the proletarianisation of the
majority of the worlds people had not been fulfilled, because
of the preponderance of the peasantry. History has now caught
up to Marx.
There is another, very decisive, effect of globalisation. A
study of the complex problems that confronted the Bolsheviks after
the October Revolution, reveals the level and intensity of opposition
from middle class layers in the state and civil service, and the
difficulties this caused. Today, so-called white collar workers,
employed either by the state or by large corporations, no longer
occupy a privileged social position. They are as likely as any
other section of the working class to be downsized, or to have
their wages and conditions slashed.
What of the subjective factors, and the all-important question
of leadership? A study of the history of the twentieth century
shows there has been no lack of opportunities when the working
class, armed with a revolutionary leadership, could certainly
have repeated the experience of October 1917. It is precisely
the absence of such leadership, and the counter-revolutionary
role of social democracy and Stalinism, that has allowed the bourgeoisie
to remain in the saddle.
But in this case too, history has been doing its work. All
over the world the Stalinist and social democratic parties, which
once commanded a mass following in the working class, are nothing
but empty shells. Writing on the eve of World War II, Trotsky
predicted that coming events would leave not one stone upon another
of these outlived organisations. That has taken longer than he
expected, but taken place it has.
The disgust and hostility felt by millions towards the Labor
Party, which has been so apparent in this election campaign, is
part of a global political shift against all the old parties and
leaderships. Moreover, attempts by the various middle class radical
organisations to pump life back into them through so-called regroupments
have failed dismally.
What are the implications? They become more apparent if we
pose the question: why have there been no socialist revolutions
since the Bolsheviks took power ninety years ago? Two main factors
have been at work: the treacherous role of the leaderships of
the working class, and the ability of United States capitalism
to provide a certain stability to the global capitalist order.
Today, the old parties and organisations no longer command the
mass following they once did, and the US is the most destabilising
factor in world economics and politics.
These profound changes will have far-reaching political consequences.
Throughout the world there is a mounting sense of dissatisfaction
among ordinary working people and a growing desire for change.
But there is still no understanding of how the problems of society
can be overcome. In other words, there is a deep-going crisis
of perspective.
This is not the result of some organic incapacity of the working
class, but of complex historical events. And
conditions are rapidly maturing for this crisis of perspective
to be overcome.
Herein lies the decisive role of our party, the International
Committee of the Fourth International, the world Trotskyist movement,
which has consciously based itself on the traditions of Bolshevism,
and on the defence of the principles that animated it, in the
ninety years since the Russian Revolution.
The task at hand is the development of socialist consciousness
in the working class. This does not mean convincing workers of
the need to struggle against capitalism. Such struggles are inevitable.
The key question is the transformation of this unconscious movement
into a conscious political struggle for the overthrow of capitalism,
by advancing, at every stage, a program and perspective based
on the political independence of the working class.
It was by this method that the Bolsheviks came to the leadership
of the Russian Revolution and led the first assault carried out
by the international working class on the citadel of global capital.
Now it falls to us to complete the task that they began. We urge
you to take up this challenge by joining our party and building
it as the new leadership of the international working class.
Concluded
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
Bolsheviks in Power - Professor
Alexander Rabinowitch's important study of the first year of soviet
power
[9 November 2007]
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