*Vladimir Lenin’s*

*Left-Wing Communism: an Infantile Disorder *

*"Left-Wing" Communism in Germany The Leaders, the Party, the Class, the
Masses *



The German Communists we must now speak of call themselves, not
"Left-wingers" but, if I am not mistaken, an "opposition on principle". [17]
>From what follows below it will, however, be seen that they reveal all the
symptoms of the "infantile disorder of Leftism".



Published by the "local group in Frankfurt am Main", a pamphlet reflecting
the point of view of this opposition, and entitled *The Split in the
Communist Party of Germany (The Spartacus League)* sets forth the substance
of this Opposition’s views most saliently, and with the utmost clarity and
concision. A few quotations will suffice to acquaint the reader with that
substance:



"The Communist Party is the party of the most determined class struggle...."

"... Politically, the transitional period [between capitalism and socialism]
is one of the proletarian dictatorship...."

"... The question arises: who is to exercise this dictatorship: *the
Communist Party or the proletarian class*? ...* Fundamentally*, should we
strive for a dictatorship’ of the Communist Party, or for a dictatorship of
the proletarian class?..."

(All italics as in the orginal)

The author of the pamphlet goes on to accuse the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of Germany of seeking ways of achieving a *coalition with
the Independent Social*-*Democratic Party of Germany*, and of raising *"the
question of recognising*, *in principle*, *all political means"* of
struggle, including parliamentarianism, with the sole purpose of concealing
its actual and main efforts to form a coalition with the Independents. The
pamphlet goes on to say:

"The opposition have chosen another road. They are of the opinion that the
question of the rule of the Communist Party and of the dictatorship of the
Party is merely one of tactics. In any case, rule by the Communist Party is
the ultimate form of any party rule. *Fundamentally*, we must work for the
dictatorship of the proletarian class. And all the measures of the Party,
its organisations, methods of struggle, strategy and tactics should be
directed’ to that end. Accordingly, all compromise with other parties, all
reversion to parliamentary forms of struggle which have become historically
and politically obsolete, and any policy of manoeuvring and compromise must
be emphatically rejected." "Specifically proletarian methods of
revolutionary struggle must be strongly emphasised. New forms of
organisation must be created on the widest basis and with the widest scope
in order to enlist the most extensive proletarian circles and strata to take
part in the revolutionary struggle under the leadership of the Communist
Party. A *Workers’ Union*, based on factory organisations, should be the
rallying point for all revolutionary elements. This should unite all workers
who follow the slogan: ’Get out of the trade unions!’ It is here that the
militant proletariat musters its ranks for battle. Recognition of the class
struggle, of the Soviet system and of the dictatorship should be sufficient
for enrolment. All subsequent political education of the fighting masses and
their political orientation in the struggle are the task of the Communist
Party, which stands outside the Workers’ Union....

"... Consequently, two Communist parties are now arrayed against each other:

*"One is a party of leaders*, which is out to organise the revolutionary
struggle and to direct it from *above*, accepting compromises and
parliamentarianism so as to create a situation enabling it to join a
coalition government exercising a dictatorship.

"*The other is a mass party*, which expects an upsurge of the revolutionary
struggle from *below*, which knows and applies a single method in this
struggle—a method which clearly leads to the goal -- and rejects all
parliamentary and opportunist methods. That single method is the
unconditional *overthrow of the bourgeoisie*, so as then to set up the
proletarian class dictatorship for the accomplishment of socialism...

"... There—the dictatorship of leaders; here—the dictatorship of the masses!
That is our slogan."

Such are the main features characterising the views of the opposition in the
German Communist Party.

Any Bolshevik who has consciously participated in the development of
Bolshevism since 1903 or has closely observed that development will at once
say, after reading these arguments, "What old and familiar rubbish! What
’Left-wing’ childishness!"

But let us examine these arguments a little more closely.

The mere presentation of the question—"dictatorship of the party
*or*dictatorship of the class; dictatorship (party) of the leaders,
*or* dictatorship (party) of the masses?"—testifies to most incredibly and
hopelessly muddled thinking. These people want to *invent* something quite
out of the ordinary, and, in their effort to be clever, make themselves
ridiculous. It is common knowledge that the masses are divided into classes,
that the masses can be contrasted with classes only by contrasting the vast
majority in general, regardless of division according to status in the
social system of production, with categories holding a definite status in
the social system of production; that as a rule and in most cases—at least
in present-day civilised countries—classes are led by political parties;
that political parties, as a general rule, are run by more or less stable
groups composed of the most authoritative, influential and experienced
members, who are elected to the most responsible positions, and are called
leaders. All this is elementary. All this is clear and simple. Why replace
this with some kind of rigmarole, some new Volap?k? On the one hand, these
people seem to have got muddled when they found themselves in a predicament,
when the party’s abrupt transition from legality to illegality upset the
customary, normal and simple relations between leaders, parties and classes.
In Germany, as in other European countries, people had become too accustomed
to legality, to the free and proper election of "leaders" at regular party
congresses, to the convenient method of testing the class composition of
parties through parliamentary elections, mass meetings the press, the
sentiments of the trade unions and other associations, etc. When, instead of
this customary procedure, it became necessary, because of the stormy
development of the revolution and the development of the civil war, to go
over rapidly from legality to illegality, to combine the two, and to adopt
the "inconvenient" and "undemocratic" methods of selecting, or forming, or
preserving "groups of leaders"—people lost their bearings and began to think
up some unmitigated nonsense. Certain members of the Communist Party of
Holland, who were unlucky enough to be born in a small country with
traditions and conditions of highly privileged and highly stable legality,
and who had never seen a transition from legality to illegality, probably
fell into confusion, lost their heads, and helped create these absurd
inventions.

On the other hand, one can see simply a thoughtless and incoherent use of
the now "fashionable" terms: "masses" and "leaders". These people have heard
and memorised a great many attacks on "leaders", in which the latter have
been contrasted with the "masses"; however, they have proved unable to think
matters out and gain a clear understanding of what it was all about.

The divergence between "leaders" and "masses" was brought out with
particular clarity and sharpness in all countries at the end of the
imperialist war and following it. The principal reason for this was
explained many times by Marx and Engels between the years 1852 and 1892,
from the example of Britain. That country’s exclusive position led to the
emergence, from the "masses", of a semi-petty-bourgeois, opportunist "labour
aristocracy". The leaders of this labour aristocracy were constantly going
over to the bourgeoisie, and were directly or indirectly on its pay roll.
Marx earned the honour of incurring the hatred of these disreputable persons
by openly branding them as traitors. Present-day (twentieth-century)
imperialism has given a few advanced countries an exceptionally privileged
position, which, everywhere in the Second International, has produced a
certain type of traitor, opportunist, and social-chauvinist leaders, who
champion the interests of their own craft, their own section of the labour
aristocracy. The opportunist parties have become separated from the
"masses", i.e., from the broadest strata of the working people, their
majority, the lowest-paid workers. The revolutionary proletariat cannot be
victorious unless this evil is combated, unless the opportunist,
social-traitor leaders are exposed, discredited and expelled. That is the
policy the Third International has embarked on.

To go so far, in this connection, as to contrast, *in general*, the
dictatorship of the masses with a dictatorship of the leaders is
ridiculously absurd, and stupid. What is particularly amusing is that, in
fact, instead of the old leaders, who hold generally accepted views on
simple matters, *new leaders* are brought forth (under cover of the slogan
"Down with the leaders!"), who talk rank stuff and nonsense. Such are
Laufenberg, Wolffheim, Horner [18], Karl Schroder, Friedrich Wendel and Karl
Erler, *2 in Germany. Erler’s attempts to give the question more
"profundity" and to proclaim that in general political parties are
unnecessary and "bourgeois" are so supremely absurd that one can only shrug
one’s shoulders. It all goes to drive home the truth that a minor error can
always assume monstrous proportions if it is persisted in, if profound
justifications are sought for it, and if it is carried to its logical
conclusion.

Repudiation of the Party principle and of Party discipline -- that is what
the opposition has *arrived at*. And this is tantamount to completely
disarming the proletariat in *the interests of the bourgeoisie*. It all adds
up to that petty-bourgeois diffuseness and instability, that incapacity for
sustained effort, unity and organised action, which, if encouraged, must
inevitably destroy any proletarian revolutionary movement. From the
standpoint of communism, repudiation of the Party principle means attempting
to leap from the eve of capitalism’s collapse (in Germany), not to the lower
or the intermediate phase of communism, but to the higher. We in Russia (in
the third year since the overthrow of the bourgeoisie) are making the first
steps in the transition from capitalism to socialism or the lower stage of
communism. Classes still remain, and will remain everywhere *for years after
* the proletariat’s conquest of power. Perhaps in Britain, where there is no
peasantry (but where petty proprietors exist), this period may be shorter.
The abolition of classes means, not merely ousting the landowners and the
capitalists—that is something we accomplished with comparative ease; it also
means *abolishing the small commodity producers*, and they *cannot be ousted
*, or crushed; we *must learn to live* with them. They can (and must) be
transformed and re-educated only by means of very prolonged, slow, and
cautious organisational work. They surround the proletariat on every side
with a petty-bourgeois atmosphere, which permeates and corrupts the
proletariat, and constantly causes among the proletariat relapses into
petty-bourgeois spinelessness, disunity, individualism, and alternating
moods of exaltation and dejection. The strictest centralisation and
discipline are required within the political party of the proletariat in
order to counteract this, in order that the *organisational* role of the
proletariat (and that is its *principal* role) may be exercised correctly,
successfully and victoriously. The dictatorship of the proletariat means a
persistent struggle—bloody and bloodless, violent and peaceful, military and
economic, educational and administrative -- against the forces and
traditions of the old society. The force of habit in millions and tens of
millions is a most formidable force. Without a party of iron that has been
tempered in the struggle, a party enjoying the confidence of all honest
people in the class in question, a party capable of watching and influencing
the mood of the masses, such a struggle cannot be waged successfully. It is
a thousand times easier to vanquish the centralised big bourgeoisie than to
"vanquish" the millions upon millions of petty proprietors; however, through
their ordinary, everyday, imperceptible, elusive and demoralising
activities, they produce the *very* results which the bourgeoisie need and
which tend to *restore* the bourgeoisie. Whoever brings about even the
slightest weakening of the iron discipline of the party of the proletariat
(especially during its dictatorship), is actually aiding the bourgeoisie
against the proletariat.

Parallel with the question of the leaders—the party—the class—the masses, we
must pose the question of the "reactionary" trade unions. But first I shall
take the liberty of making a few concluding remarks based on the experience
of our Party. There *have always been* attacks on the "dictatorship of
leaders" in our Party. The first time I heard such attacks, I recall, was in
1895, when, officially, no party yet existed, but a central group was taking
shape in St. Petersburg, which was to assume the leadership of the district
groups. [20] At the Ninth Congress of our Party (April 1920) [21], there was
a small opposition, which also spoke against the "dictatorship of leaders",
against the "oligarchy", and so on. There is therefore nothing surprising,
new, or terrible in the "infantile disorder" of "Left-wing communism" among
the Germans. The ailment involves no danger, and after it the organism even
becomes more robust. In our case, on the other hand, the rapid alternation
of legal and illegal work, which made it necessary to keep the general
staff—the leaders—under cover and cloak them in the greatest secrecy,
sometimes gave rise to extremely dangerous consequences. The worst of these
was that in 1912 the *agent provocateur* Malinovsky got into the Bolshevik
Central Committee. He betrayed scores and scores of the best and most loyal
comrades, caused them to be sentenced to penal servitude, and hastened the
death of many of them. That he did not cause still greater harm was due to
the correct balance between legal and illegal work. As member of the Party’s
Central Committee and Duma deputy, Malinovsky was forced, in order to gain
our confidence, to help us establish legal daily papers, which even under
tsarism were able to wage a struggle against the Menshevik opportunism and
to spread the fundamentals of Bolshevism in a suitably disguised form.
While, with one hand, Malinovsky sent scores and scores of the finest
Bolsheviks to penal servitude and death, he was obliged, with the other, to
assist in the education of scores and scores of thousands of new Bolsheviks
through the medium of the legal press. Those German (and also British,
American, French and Italian) comrades who are faced with the task of
learning how to conduct revolutionary work within the reactionary trade
unions would do well to give serious thought to this fact. *3

In many countries, including the most advanced, the bourgeoisie are
undoubtedly sending *agents provocateurs* into the Communist parties and
will continue to do so. A skilful combining of illegal and legal work is one
of the ways to combat this danger.

*Footnotes*

[17] The "*opposition on principle*" -- a group of German Left-wing
Communists advocating anarcho-syndicalist views. When the Second Congress of
the Communist Party of Germany, which was held in Heidelberg in October
1919, expelled the opposition, the latter formed the so-called Communist
Workers’ Party of Germany, in April 1920. To facilitate the unification of
all German communist forces and win over the finest proletarian. elements in
the C.W.P.G., the opposition was temporarily admitted into the Communist
International in November 1920 with the rights of a sympathising member.

However, the Executive Committee of the Communist International still
considered the United Communist Party of Germany to be the only
authoritative section of the Comintern. C.W.P.G.’s representatives were
admitted into the Comintern on the condition that they merged with the
United Communist Party of Germany and supported all its activities. The
C.W.P.G. leaders, however, failed to observe these conditions. The Third
Congress of the Communist International, which was held in June-July 1921,
and wanted solidarity with workers who still followed the C.W.P.G. Leaders,
resolved to give the C.W.P.G. two months to call a congress and settle the
question of affiliation. The C.W.P.G. Leaders did not obey the Third
Congress’s resolution and thus placed themselves outside the Communist
International. Later the C.W.P.G. degenerated into a small sectarian group
without any support in the working class.

[18] *Homer*, *Karl*—Anton Pannekoek.

[19] *Kommunistische Arbeiterzeitung* (The Communist Workers’
Newspaper)—organ of the anarcho-syndicalist group of the German Leftwing
Communists (see Note 17). The newspaper was published in Hamburg from 1919
till 1927. Karl Erler, who is mentioned by V. I. Lenin, was Heinrich
Laufenberg’s pen-name.

[20] The reference is to the *League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the
Working Class* organised by V. I. Lenin in the autumn of 1895. The League of
Struggle united about twenty Marxist circles in St. Petersburg. It was
headed by the Central Group including V. I. Lenin, A. A. Vaneyev, P. K.
Zaporozhets, G. M. Krzhizhanovsky, N. K. Krupskaya, L. Martov, M. A. Silvin,
V. V. Starkov, and others; five members headed by V. I. Lenin directed the
League’s activities. The organisation was divided into district groups.
Progressive workers such as I. V. Babushkin, V. A. Shelgunov and others
linked these groups with the factories.

The St. Petersburg League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working
Class was, in V. I. Lenin’s words, the embryo of a revolutionary party based
on the working-class movement and giving leadership to the class struggle of
the proletariat.

[21] The Congress was held in Moscow from March 29 to April 5, 1920. The
Ninth Congress was more numerous than any previous Party congresses. It was
attended by 715 delegates—553 of them with full votes, and 162 with
deliberative votes—representing a membership of 611,978. Represented were
the Party organisations of Central Russia, the Ukraine, the Urals, Siberia
and other regions recently liberated by the Red Army. Many of the delegates
came to the Congress straight from the front.

The agenda of the Congress was as follows:



1. The report of the Central Committee.

2. The immediate tasks of economic construction.

3. The trade union movement.

4. Organisational questions.

5. The tasks of the Communist International.

6. The attitude towards the co-operatives.

7. The change-over to the militia system.

8. Elections to the Central Committee.

9. Miscellaneous.

The Congress was held under the guidance of V. I. Lenin, who was the main
speaker on the political work of the Central Committee and replied to the
debate on the report. He also spoke on economic construction and
co-operation, made the speech at the closing of the Congress, and submitted
a proposal on the list of candidates to the Party’s Central Committee.

In the resolution "The Immediate Tasks of Economic Development" the Congress
noted that "the basic condition of economic rehabilitation of the country is
a steady implementation of the single economic plan for the coming
historical epoch" (*KPSS v rezolutsiyakh i resheniyakh syezdov*, *konferentsii
i plenumow TsK* [*The C.P.S.U. in the Resolutions and Decisions of Its
Congresses*, *Conferences and Plenums of the Central Committee*], Part I,
1954, p. 478). The kingpin of the single economic plan was electrification,
which V. I. Lenin considered a great programme for a period of 10 to 20
years. The directives of the Ninth Congress were the basis of the plan
conclusively drawn up by the State Commission for the Electrification of
Russia (the GOELRO plan) and approved by the All-Russia Congress of Soviets
in December 1920.

The Congress paid particular attention to the organisation of industrial
management. The resolution on this question called for the establishment of
competent, firm and energetic one-man management. Taking its guidance from
Lenin, the Congress especially stressed the necessity to extensively enlist
old and experienced experts.

The anti-Party group of Democratic Centralists, consisting of Sapronov,
Osinsky, V. Smirnov and others, came out against the Party line. Behind a
cover of phrases about Democratic Centralism but in fact distorting that
principle, they denied the need for one-man management at factories, came
out against strict Party and state discipline, and alleged that the Central
Committee did not give effect to the principle of collective leadership.

The group of Democratic Centralists was supported at the Congress by Rykov,
Tomsky, Milyutin and Lomov. The Congress rebuffed the Democratic Centralists
and rejected their proposals.

The Congress gave special attention to labour emulation and communist *
Subbotniks.* To stimulate such emulation, the extensive application of the
bonus system of wages was recommended. The Congress resolved that May 1, the
international proletarian holiday, which in 1920 fell on Saturday, should be
a mass *Subbotnik* organised throughout Russia.

An important place in the work of the Congress was held by the question of
trade unions, which was considered from the viewpoint of adapting the entire
work of the trade unions to the accomplishment of the economic tasks. In a
resolution on this question, the Congress distinctly defined the trade
unions’ role their relations with the state and the Party, forms and methods
of guidance of trade unions by the Communist Party, as well as forms of
their participation in communist construction. The Congress decisively
rebuffed the anarcho-syndicalist elements (Shlyapnikov, Lozovsky, Tomsky and
Lutovinov), who advocated the "independence" of the trade unions and
contraposed them to the Communist Party and the Soviet government.

At a closed meeting held on April 4, the Congress elected a new Central
Committee of 19 members and 12 candidate members. The former included V.I.
Lenin, A. A. Andreyev, F. E. Dzerzhinsky, M. I. Kalinin, Y. E. Rudzutak, F.
A. Sergeyev (Artyom), and J. V. Stalin. On April 5 the Congress concluded
its work.

[*2] Karl Erler, "The Dissolution of the Party", Kommunistische
Arbeiterzeitung, [19] Hamburg, February 7, 1920, No. 32:

"The working class cannot destroy the bourgeois state without destroying
bourgeois democracy, and it cannot destroy bourgeois democracy without
destroying parties."

The more muddle-headed of the syndicalists and anarchists in the Latin
countries may derive "satisfaction" from the fact that solid Germans, who
evidently consider themselves Marxists (by their articles in the
above-mentioned paper K. Erler and K. Homer have shown most plainly that
they consider themselves sound Marxists, but talk incredible nonsense in a
most ridiculous manner and reveal their failure to understand the ABC of
Marxism), go to the length of making utterly inept statements. Mere
acceptance of Marxism does not save one from errors. We Russians know this
especially well, because Marxism has been very often the "fashion" in our
country.

[*3] Malinovsky was a prisoner of war in Germany. On his return to Russia
when the Bolsheviks were in power he was instantly put on trial and shot by
our workers. The Mensheviks attacked us most bitterly for our mistake—the
fact that an *agent provocateur* had become a member of the Central
Committee of our Party. But when, under Kerensky, we demanded the arrest and
trial of Rodzyanko, the Chairman of the Duma, because he had known, even
before the war, that Malinovsky was an *agent provocateur* and *had not
informed* the Trudoviks and the workers in the Duma, neither the Mensheviks
nor the Socialist-Revolutionaries in the Kerensky government supported our
demand, and Rodzyanko remained at large and made off unhindered to join
Denikin.

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