Gojko, the Trotskyist movement to which I once belonged believed, as you 
probably know, that the Bolsheviks under Lenin presided over a "workers' state" 
and that the state "degenerated" under Stalin but did not change its class 
character because the bourgeoisie had been eliminated as a class in the Soviet 
Union in 1917. But, unlike under Lenin, where the state did act in the 
interests of the working class, the Stalin wing represented the interests of a 
bureaucratic "caste" which had developed atop of and was oppressing the working 
class. That view has always been challenged by those who admire Stalin, as well 
as within the Trotskyist movement by those who argued that the Stalin regime 
was "state capitalist" and did not lead a workers' state, degenerated or 
otherwise.

In recent years, a new tendency has emerged which, looking back at Soviet 
history, agrees with Karl Kautsky that the state established by the Bolsheviks 
had little in common with what Marx and Engels and the classical Marxist view 
of a proletarian democracy which even Lenin himself had earlier expressed in 
his State and Revolution. The following article by a British "neo-Kautskyist" 
is a serious contribution to the debate and reflects the view you have 
consistently put forward on the list. It's by the late Ed Rooksby and was 
published in the New Socialist, the publication of a group which I believe 
emerged from the Corbyn movement and is sympathetic to the views of Lars Lih 
and Eric Blanc.

https://newsocialist.org.uk/bolsheviks-did-not-smash-old-state/
The Bolsheviks did not 'smash' the old state

The recent debate that has broken out ( 
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/01/karl-kautsky-german-revolution-democracy-socialism
 ) over the legacy ( 
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/03/karl-kautsky-socialist-strategy-german-revolution
 ) of Karl Kautsky ( 
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2019/03/karl-kautsky-socialist-strategy-german-revolution
 ) signals a very welcome return to fundamental questions of socialist strategy 
today – part of a wider reassessment of classic arguments on matters of reform 
and revolution that have acquired a new currency and sense of relevance in the 
context of the resurgence of left wing politics especially in Britain and the 
US.

As so often, this debate really shakes down into a confrontation between those 
arguing for a (pro-Kautsky) strategic orientation that seeks to combine 
electoral and parliamentary activity on the one hand, with extra-parliamentary 
mobilisation on the other, versus a (pro-Lenin) strategy that hinges on the 
need for the insurrectionary overthrow of the existing parliamentary state and 
to place all power into the hands of soviets (workers’ councils).

What divides them is of course the question of the relevance and applicability 
of this insurrectionary orientation in the context of advanced capitalist 
democratic states today. But what both sides in this debate share in common is 
an assumption that this ‘Leninist’ strategy was actually put into effect 
(however briefly it lasted) in Russia in 1917.

The classic text, in this respect, is of course Lenin’s 1917 pamphlet The State 
and Revolution ( https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/ ). 
It’s here that Lenin first set out the overall strategic approach in relation 
to the state and the question of the socialist exercise of power that would 
come to define what became known as ‘Leninism’.

Whatever the ambiguities ( 
https://www.marxists.org/archive/miliband/1970/xx/staterev.htm ) in Lenin’s 
vision of the (withering) proletarian state to come, the core argument of the 
text – drawing on Marx’s observation in the context of his analysis ( 
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1871/civil-war-france/index.htm ) 
of the lessons of the Paris Commune ( 
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/12/22/fires-paris ) , that ‘the working 
class cannot simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery, and wield it 
for its own purposes’ - is hard to miss. For Lenin, the old state must be 
destroyed and replaced with a new one manifesting the dictatorship of the 
proletariat. ‘A revolution’, he emphasises ‘must not consist in the new class 
ruling, governing with the aid of the old state machinery, but in this class 
smashing this machinery and ruling, governing with the aid of a new machinery’. 
While what specifically Lenin means by the bourgeois ‘state machinery’ (its 
boundaries, the exact range of its institutional components) is left rather 
imprecisely stated, he is certainly clear that what is to be destroyed 
comprises two core elements – the standing army and what he calls ‘the 
bureaucracy’.

Most Marxists today, whether ‘Leninist’ or not, seem to agree that whatever the 
later compromises, retreats and forms of degeneration, this is precisely what 
happened in the early phase of the Russian revolution under the leadership of 
the Bolsheviks and in this sense Marxists today tend to take Lenin at his word 
in State and Revolution , regarding the text as a more or less accurate guide 
to the Bolsheviks’ revolutionary practice. That is, it is often taken as an 
established fact, a truism indeed repeated time and time again, that the old 
Russian state was ‘smashed’ and replaced with a new one based fundamentally on 
soviet power.

Take for example, Ernest Mandel’s comments in his Introduction to Marxism ( 
https://www.plutobooks.com/9780861043897/introduction-to-marxism/ ) :

> 
> 
> 
> The old state apparatus and the Provisional Government collapsed. The
> Second Congress of Soviets voted by a large majority for the coming to
> power of the workers’ and peasants’ soviets. Over the vast territory of a
> great country a state on the model of the Paris Commune had been set up
> for the first time – a workers state.
> 
> 

Or take Joseph Choonara’s and Charlie Kimber’s Arguments for Revolution ( 
https://bookmarksbookshop.co.uk/view/25218/Arguments+For+Revolution ) where, 
after echoing Lenin’s argument that the capitalist state must be smashed and 
replaced ‘with a new kind of state’, it is stated; ‘[t]his is what existed for 
a period after the Russian Revolution of 1917’.

Of course, as the story normally continues the early hopes and intentions of 
the Bolsheviks were dashed with the revolution’s failure to spread 
internationally and under the weight of isolation, blockade, foreign 
intervention, and the brutalising consequences of famine and civil war. The 
general degeneration of the regime, it’s often added, was directly reflected in 
its grim trajectory toward intensifying bureaucratic centralisation and top 
down authoritarian statism – a process that reached its apogee with Stalin’s 
consolidation ( http://www.sussex-academic.com/sa/titles/biography/mckenna.htm 
) of his grip on power in the years after Lenin’s death. But what had been 
achieved for at least a little while before this process of degeneration took 
hold, it’s widely agreed, was a definitely workers’ state modelled closely on 
the Paris Commune, with soviet power as its key characteristic – a ‘new kind of 
state’ built upon the smashed ruins of the old.

But the central claim here – that the old state was ‘smashed’ in 1917 and a new 
one based (however fleetingly) on soviet institutions set up in its place – is 
a myth.

Although Lenin claimed, in his 1918 polemic ( 
https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1918/prrk/index.htm ) against 
Kautsky that in Russia ‘the bureaucratic machine has been completely smashed, 
razed to the ground’, later pronouncements were quite different. While it was 
true that in January 1918 the Constituent Assembly had been dispersed, this was 
of course a fledgling institution and certainly not an established state organ. 
In reality much of the old state apparatus remained almost unchanged. A later 
statement by Lenin from 1923 is quite instructive in this respect (and 
completely at odds with his earlier declaration):

> 
> 
> 
> Our state apparatus, with the exception of the People’s Commissariat for
> Foreign Affairs, represents in the highest degree a hangover of the old
> one, subjected to only the slightest extent to any serious change.
> 
> 

Indeed, as T. H. Rigby demonstrates in his study ( 
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/lenins-government/13F80DCBDD22959AD7EB42B2DA621D0D
 ) of the formation of the ‘Soviet’ system of government in Russia, Lenin’s 
later comments here provide a much more accurate guide to the reality of the 
system put in place after the revolution than his comments in State and 
Revolution. As Rigby comments, there was a ‘high level of continuity in the 
central administrative machine of the Russian state’, before and after the 
revolution – so much so, that ‘the structural changes’ put into effect by the 
Bolsheviks ‘were scarcely greater than those sometimes accompanying changes of 
government in Western parliamentary systems’. While it’s certainly more than 
plausible to say that the old ‘standing army’ was smashed during the revolution 
(though, of course, a new one ( 
https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/writers/wright/1941/08/redarmy.htm ) was 
soon built by Trotsky ( 
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/11/leon-trotsky-october-revolution-paul-le-blanc-stalinism/
 ) very much along the lines of the old) that other core instrument of the old 
state Lenin identifies – ‘the bureaucracy’ – was not.

As Rigby shows, despite Lenin’s stress in State and Revolution on the 
non-bureaucratic character of the new proletarian state, ‘equipping itself with 
an effective bureaucracy was in fact the main preoccupation of the Soviet state 
during its initial phase’ and moreover, ‘predominantly this expressed itself in 
efforts to “take over” and “set in motion” the old ministerial machine’. This, 
of course, was something that could not be achieved immediately and for the 
first few weeks after the insurrection the first steps toward asserting the 
authority of the new regime were coordinated by the body that had organised the 
seizure of power in the capital – the Military Revolutionary Committee. By 
December 1917, however, with the abolition of the MRC, central authority had 
passed to what would now form the political nucleus of the revolutionary state: 
Sovet Narodnykh Komisarov (Council of People’s Commissars) – known as 
Sovnarkom. Set up by decree of the Second Congress of Soviets within hours of 
the insurrection, Sovnarkom was tasked with ‘administration of the country up 
to the convening of the Constituent Assembly’ as a ‘Temporary Worker and 
Peasant Government’. Membership of Sovnarkom would comprise the chairs of 
various commissions, or commissariats, that would constitute governmental 
branches of the revolutionary state, with Lenin as the chair of this central 
council. Sovnarkom was to operate under the sovereign authority of the Congress 
of Soviets and its Central Executive Committee (CEC).

Even at this very early stage, at the time of this decree, the similarities 
between the proposed structure of commissariats and the old ministerial 
structure inherited by the Provisional Government from the Tsarist regime are 
very striking. For one thing the division of responsibilities between the 
various commissariats was virtually identical to that between the old 
ministries, and further, there seemed little to distinguish Sovnarkom from the 
pre-revolutionary government executive. Sovnarkom was essentially a ‘cabinet’ 
of ministers along surprisingly conventional lines. As Rigby comments, only two 
(apparently) important innovations were incorporated into the new structure of 
government. Firstly, the head of each government department (‘People’s 
Commissar’) would share authority with a ‘commission’ of which s/he would be a 
chairman – but in reality commissariats rarely functioned in this way. The 
second major innovation was in terminology. As Rigby puts it:

> 
> 
> 
> In calling their government the ‘Council of People’s Commissars’, the
> Bolshevik leadership were seeking to de-emphasise formal and structural
> similarities to ‘bourgeois’ governments and to proclaim and dramatise the
> revolutionary role and class content they believed it to embody.
> 
> 

But even here – at the level of mere terminology – differences with the old 
regime can be exaggerated. As Rigby comments:

> 
> 
> 
> That the title of the new government contained the word ‘soviet’ (sovet)
> some have seen as designed to identify it with the new revolutionary
> institutions of the masses, as the topmost soviet in a hierarchy of
> soviets. This supposition seems highly dubious, since sovet is simply the
> usual Russian word for ‘council’, and the pre-revolutionary government
> executive had been called Sovet Ministrov (Council of Ministers).
> 
> 

But it’s not just at the level of formal similarity that the revolutionary 
government was structured to conform to the main divisions of the 
pre-revolutionary administrative machine. Within a few months the new 
government had also moved literally to incorporate the extant administrative 
apparatuses (including most of their personnel) left over from the old regime. 
At first the various commissariats of the new government operated almost 
entirely from the Smolny Institute – but this only served as an initial 
headquarters from which the various People’s Commissars ventured out to seek to 
establish control over ‘their’ ministries (i.e. the old government 
departments). The main task of the commissars at this time was to persuade and 
cajole the old government officials – or at least significant sections of them 
– to return to work in the ministries under Bolshevik control (now renamed 
‘commissariats’). With the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly in early 
1918, most of the initial resistance among old officials melted away and the 
People’s Commissars were able to transfer their offices and core support staff 
from Smolny to the old government department buildings – merging this new staff 
with the old one.

This arrangement did not last long, since with the German advance in the period 
before Brest-Litovsk, followed by the territorial concessions made under the 
terms of that treaty, the decision was made to move the seat of the government 
from Petrograd to Moscow. The main point here, however, is that what was 
transferred to Moscow and re-established there were, for all intents and 
purposes, the old ministries – their existing structures and much of their 
personnel more or less in toto.

None of this is to say that there were no significant changes to the state 
structures seized by the Bolsheviks. In the months following the revolution 
there were substantial reorganisations in several commissariats (including the 
People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs mentioned in the 1923 Lenin quotation 
above) and, in addition, two new organs of government were set up which, as 
Rigby puts it, ‘were destined before long to assume great importance’ – the 
Cheka (which first cut its teeth in bloody suppression of ‘anarchists’ in 
Moscow – against the vigorous protest of local soviet authorities – to 
establish ‘order’ in preparation for the transfer of the seat of government) 
and the National Economic Council (NEC). But even here in the case of the NEC, 
there were strong lines of continuity with the old Ministry of Trade and 
Industry in terms of its functions and structures. Several of the old 
institutions of the imperial state were, of course, destroyed – the monarchy ( 
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/03/russia-february-revolution-tsar-great-war-lenin-trotsky
 ) key among these. But, as Rigby puts it, when ‘it came to the apparatus of 
the executive arm of the government, however, destruction was far less 
apparent’.

What of the soviets though? As we have seen, the decree setting up Sovnarkom 
declared that this organ and the commissariats it coordinated should have been 
answerable to the Congress of Soviets (represented between congresses by its 
executive arm, the CEC). Indeed the 1918 Constitution defined the Congress of 
Soviets as the ‘supreme authority’ of the new Republic. But in practice as 
Rigby demonstrates, the Congress was soon sidelined by Sovnarkom and indeed, in 
reality, the former ‘can scarcely be said to have acted as a constraint or even 
as a serious influence’ on the latter. As the new structures of government 
solidified after an early period of flux, the role of the Congress had been 
reduced to that of merely rubber stamping the decisions promulgated by 
Sovnarkom, and as a source of legitimacy for those decrees.

The onset of the civil war further reduced the vitality of the Congress and 
CEC. In part this reflected the atrophy of local soviets under civil war 
conditions (and the ascendancy of the Cheka, Defence Council and Trotsky’s 
Military Revolutionary Council as ’emergency’ organs of power), but it also 
reflected the emergence of single party dictatorship, making it extremely 
difficult for other parties to gain representation in the soviets. An attempt 
was made at the end of the civil war to revitalise the soviets, which involved 
significant empowerment of the CEC vis-a-vis Sovnarkom (since it was realised 
that the latter had lost much of its legitimacy, particularly in the eyes of 
the peasantry, given that it was associated with the widely hated Cheka) – but 
as Rigby points out, the chief beneficiary of the decline in Sovnarkom’s power 
was the Communist Party, which more and more began to act as an institutional 
factor of cohesion binding central government to local organs of power and 
increasingly imposing cohesion too in relation to the bureaucratic dysfunction 
of the central organs of Lenin’s state. By 1921 the party’s Central Committee 
and its two chief inner organs, the Politburo and Orgburo, were ‘well on the 
way to becoming the true government of the Soviet Republic’ – a development 
that reached its culmination after Lenin’s death.

It’s often assumed that the soviets were workplace organisations. In fact, as 
Carmen Sirianni ( 
https://www.versobooks.com/books/2654-workers-control-and-socialist-democracy ) 
points out, though there was some overlap between them, the soviets were 
usually distinct from the organs of power that emerged within workplaces to 
challenge capitalist ownership and control – the factory committees. As 
Sirianni documents, in the first months of the revolution hundreds of firms 
were taken over spontaneously from below by groups of workers forming factory 
committees. But as he also documents, the Bolshevik leadership sought very 
strenuously to hold back and reverse this wave of spontaneous expropriations - 
supporting the retention of private ownership in most cases. This was informed 
by Lenin’s view that the immediate task of the revolution was to organise a 
transitional economy on the basis of ‘state capitalism’ – a situation in which 
a ‘workers’ state’ would superintend an economic base in which basic relations 
of production remained essentially unchanged and in which private ownership was 
still the norm. It was only very reluctantly and through sheer unavoidable 
necessity in conditions of near economic collapse that in June 1918 the new 
regime moved decisively to nationalise all large industrial enterprises under 
the aegis of the NEC (one of the new organs of government power mentioned 
above). Indeed the main function of the NEC was to rein in the factory 
committees, bringing them under the domination of the much more conservative 
and pliable trade unions, in a struggle to stamp out what the Bolshevik 
leadership regarded as deviant ‘syndicalist’ tendencies among the proletariat.

The organs of mass struggle manifesting workers’ control of industry, then, 
fared even worse under Lenin than the soviets. Neither soviets nor (much less) 
factory committees constituted the real heart of power in the early months and 
years of the revolution – the major seat of power in this the ‘heroic period’ 
of the revolution was Sovnarkom and the commissariats.

So what must be understood is that, contrary to the myth of the October 
Revolution and ‘soviet power’, the main structures of the ‘workers’ state’ that 
emerged under Lenin’s leadership looked very little, for even the briefest 
period, like the description in State and Revolution. At its core were 
institutions and structures inherited directly and often more or less wholesale 
from the overthrown old regime.

None of this is simply a matter of historical interest – grasping this myth is 
key to gaining clarity on strategic debates still raging on the socialist left 
today. Indeed the major strategic division that has been drawn by ‘Leninists’ 
ever since 1917 between, on the one hand, ‘reformists’, ‘left reformists’ and 
so on who seek to utilise existing state institutions as a core part of their 
approach, and, on the other hand, ‘revolutionaries’ who seek to ‘smash’ and 
replace that state machinery on the basis of what Lenin’s Bolsheviks are 
purported to have attempted (or briefly achieved), pivots on a 
misunderstanding/ misrepresentation of the historical reality. As we have seen 
the bureaucratic apparatus of the old regime in Russia was not smashed at all – 
in fact Lenin’s party sought, precisely, to ‘lay hold of’ this ‘ready-made 
state machinery’ and to ‘wield it for its own purposes’. Grasping this is a 
first step toward thinking beyond the simplistic and fetishistic terms of the 
reform/revolutionary dichotomy that has sunk deep roots in the collective 
socialist psyche and toward a genuinely open engagement with the crucial 
question of the necessary contours of a feasible strategy of socialist 
transformation ( 
https://jacobinmag.com/2017/11/social-democracy-sweden-meidner-plan-socialism ) 
today.


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