Report by CC CPRF Chairman Gennady Zyuganov to the March 2015 Plenary Session of the CC
Dear comrades,
It will shortly be 100 years since the greatest event of the 20th
century and the whole history of humankind. Its significance was
succinctly expressed by the words of Joseph Stalin: “The October
Revolution inflicted on world capitalism a deadly wound from which it
will never recover… This is precisely why capitalism will never regain
the ‘balance’ and ‘stability’ that it had before the October
Revolution.”
The anniversary of the Great
October Socialist Revolution is an excellent opportunity to remember its
significance, to highlight the achievements of the socialist system and
of course to mobilize forces in the fight for the triumph of the
brightest ideals of the working people.
We should start a massive
campaign to prepare for the centenary of that epoch-making event. It is
equally important to verify our historical experience against the tasks
of the party which is the heir to the October Revolution. The
characteristic features of the first victorious proletarian revolution
are of enormous significance. Therefore this is just the right time to
remind people of these features without leaving out of sight those
facets of the Revolution that we are coming to see in a different light.
Their knowledge and understanding will prepare the Party better for the
class battles for peace, genuine democracy, human rights and dignity.
Prerequisites of the Great Revolution
The socialist revolution in
Russia did not occur spontaneously, on the off-chance or all of a
sudden. Vladimir Lenin proved that it was inevitable relying on the
wealth of theory whose foundation was laid by Karl Marx and Friedrich
Engels. In practice the victory of the Revolution was prepared by the
Leninist Party whose stainless weapon was Bolshevism.
The greatest discovery made by Lenin was that capitalism had morphed into a new and higher stage, imperialism. Free
competition was replaced by monopolies. The merger of banking and
industrial capital produced financial capital. Export of capital came to
exceed the export of goods. The colonial division of the world was
completed.
Capitalist competition remained and
inevitably resulted in uneven development of various countries. Under
imperialism this created a situation when the world became a single
chain of capitalism and the division of markets signified a re-division
of a world that had already been divided. Lenin then went on to draw the
second important conclusion: under imperialism there inevitably is a weak link in the capitalist chain. The imperialist predators seek to strengthen their positions at its expense.
The chain of capitalism can be broken in its weakest link. In
that link capital may or may not be able to withstand the onslaught of
the proletarian forces. This led the founder of Bolshevism to the third
outstanding discovery: under imperialism the socialist revolution may initially triumph just in several countries or even in one country.
Profound analysis convinced Lenin that the weakest link in the chain of imperialism was the Russian Empire and that Russia could become the birthplace of the socialist revolution. First, the country was pregnant with revolution even before it passed on to the imperialist stage. Back in 1875 Friedrich Engels wrote: “Russia
is undoubtedly on the eve of a revolution… It will destroy at one blow
the last and still untouched reserve of reaction in the whole of
Europe.”
Secondly, the First Russian Revolution
had ended in defeat. The contradictions that it had failed to resolve
remained and needed to be resolved.
And thirdly, in the early 20th
century the centre of the world revolutionary process moved from
Germany to Russia. This was noted for example, by Karl Kautsky who at
the time was still a staunch Marxist.
Russia represented a tangle of acute contradictions. The
contradiction between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, between the
Tsarist feudal superstructure and the alliance of the bourgeoisie and
the liberal land owners, between land owners and the peasantry. Between
the kulaks (rich peasants), middle-level and poor peasants in the midst
of the peasantry, the most numerous class in Russia. Superimposed on
these contradictions were: those between the rural bourgeoisie and the
rural community. The land and nationalities problems had come to a head.
There were contradictions between regions and religions. There was
growing antagonism between town and countryside.
The World War aggravated all these
social contradictions and added some new antagonisms. The sense that the
revolution was imminent became all-pervading. “The year 1916 is approaching in a crown of thorns,” wrote Vladimir Mayakovsky. We find similar motives in the work of Alexander Blok and other poets and writers.
But Lenin could not rely on the predictions of poets. His credo was rigorous scientific analysis. “There can be no revolution without a revolutionary situation,” he
insisted and gave his classical definition of a revolutionary
situation. First: for a revolution it is necessary that “the lower
orders do not” want to live in the old way and “the rulers are unable”
to rule in the old way, i.e. to be unable to preserve their dominance
unchanged. Second: “the privation and hardship of the oppressed classes
are aggravated more than usual. Third: there is a surge in the activity
of the masses which allow “themselves to be robbed” in a “peaceful” era
but mature for “independent historical action” in turbulent times.
The Russian people rightly called the
World War the “imperialist” war. It had brought the poverty and hardship
of the oppressed classes to a limit. Suffice it to recall that in 1916
the Tsarist government formed food requisitioning units for the first
time in Russian history. Their task was to take away “surplus” grain
from the peasants in the face of the threatening famine in the Empire’s
major cities.
The country was swept by strikes. In
January 1917 400,000 people took part in them. The war had made it
necessary to give weapons to millions of workers and peasants, the
masses of soldiers were becoming increasingly responsive to the
socialist ideas. Thus, on October 25, 1916 a massive demonstration took
place in Petrograd against the trial of the Baltic Fleet seamen whom the
authorities persecuted for creating a Bolshevik organization. Such
episodes were becoming increasingly frequent.
The inability of the “rulers” to rule in
the old way manifested itself dramatically. The sway of Rasputin was
vivid proof that the Tsarist regime was rotten down to the last cell.
Mysticism – an evident sign of confusion and ignorance - was widespread
in the higher circles of the Empire.
Russia was engulfed by a systemic crisis of capitalism. The
country had already become part of the capitalist chain. But its feudal
elite was unable to master the bourgeois management of governance. Even
the liberal sections of the bourgeoisie were closely linked with
Tsarism and only sought to give it a more appealing look.
A revolutionary situation took shape in the Russian Federation. But
for a revolution to happen objective conditions are not enough. What is
needed is mass actions by the revolutionary class that are strong
enough to overturn the old government “which will never ‘fall’ even in the crisis era unless it is ‘dropped’”. Lenin remembered well the words of Marx and Engels: “The
working class can oppose the united power of the propertied classes as a
class only having organized itself into a political party that opposes
all the old parties: organization of the working class into a political
party is necessary to ensure the victory of the socialist revolution…”
For Lenin the proletariat and its party formed a unity in the revolution. The Party was playing the role of vanguard. The existence of a vanguard party is the key subjective factor of the Revolution.
Lenin and his followers managed
to bring together the creative revolutionary forces to achieve the
victory of the Great October Revolution. Bolshevism claims the main
credit for the solution of that task. Having started with Lenin’s Iskra (Spark) it formed an organization as early as the summer of 1903 at the historic 2nd
Congress of the RSDLP. Already in the course of the First Russian
Revolution it proved its ideological, political and tactical validity.
The word “Bolshevism” has entered dozens of languages across the world
not in translation but the way it sounds in the original. That fact
alone speaks about the historic scale of the phenomenon. Bolshevism is a
consistently Marxist revolutionary current in the international
workers’ movement. It emerged in the specific conditions that prevailed
in Russia. But the October Revolution cannot be seen as a revolution “within the national framework.” These are the opening words of I.V.Stalin’s article written for the 10th anniversary of the October Revolution. And he continues:
“It is above all a
revolution on an international world scale because it marks a radical
turning point in the world history of humankind from the old capitalist
world to a new socialist world… One cannot deny that the mere fact of
the existence of the ‘Bolshevik state’ reins in the dark forces of
reaction facilitating the struggle of the oppressed classes for their
liberation. This, in fact, accounts for the gut hatred that the
exploiters of all countries feel for the Bolsheviks.”
The Leninist
Party did not “construct” Bolshevism by putting national garb on
Marxism. It offered it as a convincing answer to the fact that
capitalism was entering its imperialist stage. It helped the Russian
revolutionary movement to become an advance unit in the struggle against
monopoly capitalism and its leading force, the financial oligarchy.
Bolshevism is a combination of the proletarian movement with scientific socialism. It
consistently implements the doctrine of the class struggle of the
proletariat, of the socialist revolution, the dictatorship of the
working class, the building of socialism in the conditions of capitalist
encirclement.
Proletarian internationalism is a characteristic feature of Bolshevism. It
invariably follows the principles of international solidarity of
working people and skillfully links the general laws of the struggle for
socialism with national, regional and historical features.
As an alternative to Menshevism, Bolshevism rejects social appeasement, opportunism and revisionism. It
upholds the purity of Marxist-Leninist theory, combats its
falsifications, and opposes the convergence of communist and
social-democratic ideologies. By the same token, Bolshevism rejects sectarianism and seeks to unite left-wing forces in their confrontation with the dictatorship of capital.
Bolshevism is a truly
outstanding phenomenon. It combines the romanticism of lofty dreams and
pragmatic actions, adherence to principle and flexible tactics, brimming
energy and hard calculation.
The Bolshevik party is the
party of the socialist revolution, of socialist creative activity and
the Communist perspective. The greatest achievement of V.I.
Lenin and his followers is the creation of a new type of political
party. Its task is to direct the proletarian movement towards the
struggle for socialism.
The concepts of
“Bolshevik party” and “the party of a new type” are virtually
synonymous. The Bolshevik Party brought into a single stream the
irreconcilable struggle of the working class against the bourgeoisie and
the peasants’ struggle for land. Merging with the revolutionary
liberation movement of the colonial and oppressed peoples it opened up
broad vistas for uniting the social-class and national-liberation
struggles.
Leninist Bolsheviks consistently upheld the proletarian character of the Party. “The main driving force of the movement is the organized workers at large factories,” Lenin maintained insisting that “every factory must become our stronghold” . This task is fully relevant for the CPRF today.
The party of a new type is distinguished by an organic unity of firm and conscious discipline and broad internal democracy. It enabled Leninists to cover the difficult road from organizing the Party to organizing power after the victory of the socialist Revolution.
The new power
established itself so rapidly, firmly and in a such a businesslike
manner that as early as 1919 the Moscow correspondent of the Chicago Daily News wrote that never
in the history of contemporary Russia had the government enjoyed such
genuine and great authority as the Soviet power today. When you entered
Soviet Russia you immediately noticed that whatever Bolshevism might be
it was certainly not identical with anarchy. Having spent some time in
the Communist republic one was amazed because the situation there was
the opposite of what the American people had. There was no disorder. You
were safer in the streets of Petrograd and Moscow than in the streets
of New York and Chicago.
Soviet power represented a qualitatively new type of statehood. Relying on the root traditions of Russian peoples it combined the creativity of the working masses and their culture. The
vertical structure “people-Soviets-party of the new type” proved to be
an effective system thanks to the unity of interests and goals.
On October 26
(November 8) 1917 the II All-Russia Congress of the Soviets of Workers
and Soldiers’ Deputies formed the supreme body of the Soviet state. The
All-Russia Central Executive Committee included 62 Bolsheviks, 29
Left-Wing Social Revolutionaries, 6 Internationalist Social Democrats, 3
Ukrainian Socialists and 1 Maximalist Socialist Revolutionary. Very
soon the allies and fellow travelers of the Bolsheviks left the
political scene one after another.
Soviet power became a distinct social milieu. In this environment all the other parties except the Bolshevik Party were in a position of “non-systemic parties”. This
was not by any means done by “Commissars in leather jackets”. These
parties were “non-systemic” with regard to Soviet power from the very
start. Why? Because all of them, including the Mensheviks and the Social
Revolutionaries, were elements of the bourgeois system. Only
the Bolsheviks proved to be a party of the new type not only in terms of
organization but socially and politically. That is why they had massive
and vigorous support of all the working people of Russia.
The truth of history is on our side
It is becoming ever more evident that capitalism is reactionary and has no historical perspective. In
defending itself it ascribes to socialism violence, lies, hypocrisy and
all the other vices that it has. It is waging a crusade against
historical memory on which the great achievements of the Soviet era are
etched. It generates vicious myths and falsifications. It calls black
white and white black. The apologists for capitalism use anti-Sovietism
as a means of justifying and saving capitalism. Their aggression
against historical memory is logical. It is necessary in order to
transform socialist national consciousness into bourgeois consciousness.
As early as 1918 Lenin exposed the double standards of the defenders of capitalism in a letter to the American workers: “We
are accused of destruction wreaked by our revolution. But who are the
accusers? The underlings of the bourgeoisie. The very bourgeoisie which
during the four years of the imperialist war, having destroyed almost
the whole of European culture, brought Europe to a state of barbarism,
savagery and famine. This bourgeoisie now demands that we pursue the
revolution not on the basis of all this destruction, not amid the
fragments of culture, the debris and ruins created by the war, not with
the people who have been turned into savages by this war. Oh, how humane
and just is the bourgeoisie.
“Its servants are accusing
us of terror… The English bourgeoisie has forgotten its own 1649 and the
French its 1793. Terror was fair and legitimate when it was used by the
bourgeoisie for its own benefit against the feudal lords. Terror became
monstrous and criminal where workers and the poorest peasants dared to
use it… to overthrow all exploitative minorities.”
If one follows the logic of
anti-Sovietism, there should be no violence, no blood, no destruction
and no mistakes in a revolution. But who frenziedly resisted Soviet
power? Who was the first to launch terror against it? Who sacrificed
national interests in order to regain power? Who put their class
interests above Russia’s independence?
On the eve of the first anniversary of the creation of the Red Army of Workers and Peasants Stalin wrote: “The world has decisively and irrevocably split into two camps: the camp of imperialism and the camp of socialism.” Yes,
it split as soon as power in Russia was taken over by the Soviets of
Workers’, Soldiers’ and Peasant Deputies. Because of this our opponents
scream about a civil war unleashed by the Bolsheviks. But there are hard
facts. On March 12, 1918 Izvestia VTSIK published Lenin’s article ‘The Main Task of the Present Day’. The
task was set as follows: ‘To make sure at any cost that Rus ceases to
be humble and impotent, that it becomes in the full sense of the word
mighty and abundant.’ Is there a single word about the civil war?
The Bolshevik leader sets an exclusive creative task. He could not have set it in any other way because “having
overthrown the bourgeoisie within several weeks we overcame its open
resistance during the course of the Civil War. Bolshevism marched
triumphantly from one end of the vast country to the other”.
Make no mistake: the Civil War
allegedly unleashed by the Bolsheviks was completed within several
weeks. It was a very different war that saw so much bloodshed. It
was the war for the sake of which General Alexeyev had left for
Novocherkassk on the fifth day after the victory of Soviet power. It was
the war in which 14 bourgeois states that dreamed of strangling the
young republic of the Soviets had a hand. As early as November 1917 the
Entente countries called a meeting at Lasi to work out a plan of war in
southern Russia. In December of that same year an Entente conference in
Paris decided to support and issue credits to the counterrevolutionary
governments of Ukraine, the Cossack areas, Siberia and the Caucasus.
During the Intervention and the Civil
War the bourgeoisie and the land owners betrayed national interests
right and left. Today’s anti-Sovieteers prefer not to mention this. Both
the liberals and White Guard patriots would rather not mention this
truth of history. Lenin’s relentless objectivity hurts their eyes even
today. The exploitative minority did possess have and will never possess
such truth. Its leaders are unable to speak of the people the way Lenin
could speak. This is what he said in the grim year 1918:
“Let the venal bourgeois
press trumpet to the whole world every mistake that our revolution is
making. We are not afraid of our mistakes. People have not become saints
because the revolution began. The working classes which have been
oppressed for centuries… were squeezed in the vice of poverty, ignorance
and savagery cannot carry out a revolution without mistakes… The
capitalism that has been killed is rotting and decomposing in our midst
contaminating the air with miasma, poisoning our life, grabbing all that
is new, fresh, young and living with thousands of threads and links to
what is old, rotten and dead.”
Lenin’s truth dispels the anti-Soviet myth about the Bolsheviks concealing the dramas and tragedies of the Revolution.
Studying the history of the Great October Revolution based on Leninist
sources, studying Soviet history based on Stalin’s works, educating
young people who seek this truth are the tasks we must address actively
and persistently. Bourgeois ideologists are at pains to ascribe to Lenin
what is characteristic of bourgeois politicians. Allegedly, he did not
think about victims for the sake of achieving his goal. Lenin’s works
written shortly before the October armed uprising in Petrograd, give the
lie to these allegations. Yes, the history of great revolutions pointed
to the danger of a civil war. But Lenin did everything to avoid it. His
famous “April Theses” argued that a peaceful transition of power from
the Provisional bourgeois government to the Soviets of Workers’,
Peasants’ and Soldiers’ Deputies was possible. He was convinced this was
possible until the middle of 1917. Everything changed on July 4. After
the shooting down of a peaceful demonstration of workers, soldiers and
seamen Lenin wrote: “The slogan ‘All Power
to the Soviets’ was the immediate step slogan: it was a slogan of
peaceful development of the Revolution which was possible between
February 27 and July 4 and which was of course highly desirable, but
which is now definitely impossible”.
Yet even in the new conditions Lenin
looked for ways of peaceful transition of power to the Soviets. In early
September 1917, in an article “On Compromises” he wrote that if there
was “one chance in a hundred” to avoid a civil war one should avail
oneself of this chance. In mid- September in an article “The Russian
Revolution and the Civil War” Lenin argued: “Only an
alliance of the Bolsheviks with the social revolutionaries and the
Mensheviks, only an immediate transition of all power to the Soviets
would have made the Civil War in Russia impossible.” But
the Mensheviks and the Social Revolutionaries did not renounce their
alliance with the bourgeoisie. The possibility to avoid a civil war was
thus lost.
With the victory of the October Revolution proletarian dictatorship was established in our country in the form of the Soviets. It solved the formidable historic task of protecting the people. This is yet another fact that is hushed up by the anti-Sovieteers of every stripe.
In 1919 – the most difficult year of the Civil War – Lenin said the words that still ring true today: “If
we save the working man, save the main productive force of humanity –
the worker – we will regain everything, but we will perish if we fail to
save him”. Soviet power saved the worker, restored what had been lost and created a mighty industrial power. This fact carries a great creative message which we must bring to mass consciousness.
The dramatic transformation of Russia
was keenly sensed by contemporaries. In 1919 the English philosopher
Bertrand Russel wrote that even in the conditions that
prevailed in Russia at the time one could feel the enthusiasm generated
by the main ideas of Communism, the ideas of creative hope that seek to
put an end to injustice, tyranny and violence and that impede man’s
spiritual growth… This hope helped the best among the Communists to
survive through the difficult years Russia lived through inspiring the
whole world… Whether Russian communism would fail or would develop,
Communism in general would not die.
The heritage of the Great
October Revolution will be relevant not only after we overcome the
restoration of capitalism. It is already necessary today, at the current
stage of class struggle. For the CPRF the “task of the moment”
is to save the working man, be it a worker or engineer, a peasant or a
teacher. We are mindful of this when we oppose privatization and the
bankruptcy of enterprises, when we seek a revision of the Labour, Land
and Housing Codes, when we oppose the destruction of the education
system and the decimation of the Academy of Sciences, when we worked to
secure the adoption of the law on industrial policy. All these are
peaceful forms of political struggle and they must be multiplied.
The CPRF undoubtedly wants to see revolutionary transformation and resurgence of our country carried out by peaceful means. Among
these instruments are nationalization of the property of oligarchs and
restoration of the Soviet system of state power on the basis of a
nationwide referendum. The aim of these measures is to bring about a
radical change of the social and political system in Russia.
The struggle against capital acquires a
non-peaceful character in response to its aggressiveness, as it adopts
the policy of mass repressions and cruelly suppresses social protest.
Then a non-peaceful revolution asserts itself and, according to Lenin,
the readiness of the working class “to translate the passive state of oppression into an active state of indignation and uprising” becomes
key. The proletarian vanguard – the Communist Party – must be ready for
such a development of events. As the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights passed by the UN General Assembly notes, power must concern
itself with the needs of the people so that they would not have to
resort to “an uprising against tyranny and oppression”.
The ability to see the
correlation of the situation and the forms of the struggle against
capitalism is a key lesson that the Bolshevik Party taught us in the
1917 revolution.
The Soviet Science of Creating
Towards the end of his life I.V.Stalin wrote: “The
special role of Soviet power stems from two circumstances: first, the
fact that Soviet power was not meant to replace one form of exploitation
with another form, as happened during the course of earlier
revolutions, but to liquidate all exploitation; second, because, owing
to the absence in the country of any elements of the socialist economy
it had to create “from scratch,” so to speak, new socialist forms of
economic management”.
Soviet government came to grips with
these tasks immediately after winning the Civil War and driving foreign
invaders out of the country. However, the country was still encircled by
enemies. This prompted the need to preserve the command-and-administer
principles of interaction between the socialist basis and its state
superstructure, both socio-economic and political.
In the era of socialism the decisive role is played by economic policy. As V.I.Lenin wrote: “The
essence of the transition from capitalist society to socialist society
is that political tasks are subordinate to economic tasks.” I.V.Stalin devoted his book “Economic Problems of Socialism in the USSR” to
the objective laws of socialist society. In it he proceeds from the
Marxist-Leninist doctrine to study the outstanding experience of the
first decades of socialist construction.
One of the most important steps for the
young Soviet Republic was the decision of the X Congress of the RCP (B)
in March 1921 on the transition to the New Economic Policy. Among the
Party members there were many who considered the NEP to be a retreat
that would have tragic consequences for the revolution. This was a
position not only of Trotsky, but even of such dedicated supporters of
Lenin as the People’s Commissar for Food, Tsyuryupa. However, the fact
that as a result of heated debates at the X Congress Lenin prevailed
showed that the majority of communists accepted Lenin’s pivotal idea
that political tasks took second place compared with economic ones. We Communists, in preparing to run the country, must make a thorough study of this historical experience. Today
there are those who like to draw an analogy between Lenin’s NEP and the
Gorbachev perestroika. They invoke the New Economic Policy of the 1920s
to discredit the key role of the state in managing the economy in order
to continue to impose on our society the idea of “self-regulated
market” which has proved to be untenable.
However, “the free market ideology turned out to be just a pretext for using new forms of exploitation”. This was not a statement of some Communist ideologist, but of the American Joseph Stiglits , winner of the Nobel Prize for economics.
No comparisons of Gorbachev’s
perestroika and the practice of the early Soviet years hold water. By
the beginning of 1921 the young Soviet Republic was in a desperate
situation. The country had been ravaged by two wars, the First World War
and the Civil War. Between 1913 and 1921 industrial output shrank
almost fivefold. Agricultural production dropped by half. Hostilities,
hunger and epidemics carried away at least 25 million lives.
When the decision to introduce the New
Economic Policy was taken the Japanese invaders and their White
underlings were still on the rampage in the Far East. The country had
been hit by crop failure and famine. Kulak riots were raging in
the Kuban and Don areas, in Ukraine, the Volga Area and in Siberia. An
anti-Bolshevik mutiny erupted in Kronstadt right when the X RCP(B)
Congress was being held. It was a life-or-death situation for Soviet
power. Either the Bolsheviks would triumph and continue to build
socialism or the world bourgeoisie would destroy the young Republic of
the Soviets.
The state of our country six decades later was fundamentally different. By
the mid-1980s the powerful economic, scientific-technical and cultural
potential had turned the USSR into a leading world country. Thus the
NEP was used by the Soviet government to save the country and create a
strong state. Perestroika destroyed the country and eliminated the
Soviet system.
Lenin set forth the basic principles of the Bolshevik economic policy long before the 10th RCP(B) Congress. In his article “The Immediate Tasks of Soviet Power” he
proved that there had to be a transition period between the capitalist
and socialist economy and described the main conditions for such a
historic transition. This also formed the subject of other articles he
wrote at that time: “On Food Tax”, “On Cooperation”, “On the Importance of Gold Today and after the Victory of Socialism”.
In all the articles and speeches Lenin
revealed a profound insight into the situation and a sense of
responsibility for the country’s future. Addressing the X Congress of
the RCP(B) he said: “Comrades, the question of replacing
food requisitioning with tax is first and foremost a political question
because the essence of the question is the attitude of the working class
to the peasantry”. And he stresses: “You cannot deceive social classes.” These
words of Lenin are informed with precision and truthfulness. They
cannot be compared to Gorbachev’s demagoguery about “socialism with a
human face”.
The perestroika reforms launched
processes that proved to be catastrophic for the country. The architects
of this policy never presented their goals to the citizens. By
contrast, the Bolshevik Party set these goals with crystal clarity.
Lenin said: “We tell the peasants frankly, honestly and
without any cheating: in order to stay the course towards socialism we
will make a number of concessions to you, comrade peasants, but only
within certain limits and only to a degree and of course we will
ourselves decide to what degree and what limits these would be.”
In the late 1980s, was there as much as a
hint of such truthfulness and sense of responsibility in Yeltsin’s
speeches delivered from podiums with the posters that read “All Power to
the Soviets”? Four years would pass and in October 1993 he would issue
the beastly order to shoot down Soviet power and those who rose to
defend it. Clinging to his presidential autocracy this “renewer of
socialism” would start issuing decrees on the privatization of the
national wealth hastening to create a new Russian bourgeoisie.
In his works on transitional economies
Lenin looked at the national economy as a whole. Therefore in announcing
the NEP he again turned to the GOELRO plan which would enable the
country to move forward rapidly.
As the head of the Soviet of People’s
Commissars he realized that it was not enough to allow the peasants to
produce and keep surplus farm produce to themselves. It was important to
create conditions for its marketing, for earning and developing the
peasant farms. Hence the close attention to trade and consumer
cooperation. Consumer cooperation made it possible to provide the
peasants with industrial goods and to buy their produce. The
role of the state during the NEP period was, if anything, growing
stronger. It was this state policy that turned poor peasants into
well-to-do peasants.
The current Russian government,
hamstrung by liberal dogma about the state removing itself from economic
management, is unable to solve the problems in industry, science,
agriculture, construction or trade. There is no coherent policy in these
spheres today. In such conditions an economic upsurge is simply
inconceivable.
Stalin took on board Lenin’s ideas about the role of economic policy. At the XIV Congress of the AUCP (B) in 1925 he said: “We
must make our country economically self-sufficient, independent, based
on the internal market… we must build our economy so that our country
does not become an appendage of the world capitalist system, so that it
is not included in the general scheme of capitalist development as an
auxiliary enterprise, so that our economy develops… as an independent
economic entity based on the link between our industry and the peasant
economies of our country.” The people understood these ideas. They united Soviet society in the struggle for the independence of the USSR.
The goal of creating an industrial basis
set by Stalin was achieved. In 1922-1929, by the beginning of the First
Five-Year Plan Period, more than 2000 large industrial enterprises had
been built. The country’s successes were recognized even by its
opponents. In January 1932 the French newspaper Temps wrote that the USSR had won the first round by industrializing without the assistance of foreign capital. The French newspaper were echoed by the British Financial Times which noted that the
successes achieved in engineering were undeniable… The USSR was
producing all the equipment it needed for its metallurgical and
electrical industries. It had managed to create its own automobile
industry. It created the production of tools and instruments running the
gamut from the smallest high-precision instruments to the heaviest of
presses.
Modern Russian anti-Communists have
every reason to hate Soviet power. The heroic breakthroughs under Lenin
and Stalin dwarf those who consigned Russia to a debt pit, borrowed
dollar credits from foreign banks, took their money to offshore banks,
bled the Russian economy white, humiliated and robbed our citizens. The
Bolsheviks were leading our country to the frontiers of progress. The
policy of the liberal authorities guarantees its plunder. In his book The Men Who Stole the World the American Nicholas Shaxson wrote that the
citizens of Russia and many other countries were watching powerlessly
the national elites plundering the wealth of their countries and
colluding with the Western financiers and businessmen to hide the booty
in offshores and to evade taxes.
During the two first Five-Year Plan
Periods under Stalin a powerful potential was built. In 1937 80% of
industrial output of the USSR was produced at enterprises built between
1929 and 1937. Labour productivity doubled during the same period.
Particular attention was paid to science and education. Cultural
amenities were being built actively: theatres, cinemas, libraries,
children’s clubs. They were springing up both in rural and industrial
areas.
The American writer Theodore Dreiser wrote in 1937 that he
was particularly grateful to the Soviet Revolution for being the first
to raise so sharply on a world scale the issue of the haves and
have-nots. In 1917 the Soviet Union embarked on the great march in
defense of the have-nots. This showed the world significance and triumph
of Marxism. To use labor, agriculture, industry, the natural wealth,
technology, human knowledge, man’s power over nature, to use all this
for the benefit of all the working people in order to ensure a
comfortable and cultured life for all of them: this was a lesson the
Soviet Revolution was teaching the rest of mankind.
Having prevailed in the life-and-death
struggle against fascism the Soviet Union was able to quickly restore
the devastated economy, the cities and villages. By 1952 the rate of new
housing construction was 8 times that of 1925. Science and education
had reached new heights. All this proved irrefutably the advantages of socialism as a social and economic system. This
advantage still causes the adepts of capitalism to challenge Soviet
history. They persistently distort the truth about the war and the
victory of the people who have upheld the socialist gains and saved the
world from fascism.
Stalin’s death was an irreparable loss
for the country. With his departure the USSR lost a loyal follower of
Lenin who had mastered Marxism and was consistently strengthening the
socialist character of the country’s economy. A retreat began from the key Leninist principle: to solve economic tasks using the objective laws of social development. Political command decisions in the economic sphere were becoming the norm.
In 1957 sectoral ministries were
replaced with Economic Councils. This violated the law of planned
proportional development that Stalin considered to be of decisive
importance. Three years later the sectoral ministries had to be
restored, but the quality of planning and efficient links between the
sectors had been substantially weakened.
In 1958, under Nikita Khrushchev it was
decided to transfer machine and tractor stations to the collective
farms. That dramatically undermined the efficiency of the use of farm
machinery. While between 1954 and 1958 agricultural output in the
country increased by 46%, there was no growth in 1958-1963 and crop
yields were falling.
For all the shortcomings the CC CPSU and
the USSR Council of Ministers paid great attention to improving the
methods of economic management. One instance of this was the thorough
discussion within the Party circles of the economic management reform in
1965-1970. It went down in history as the Kosygin reform. During the
course of that reform, profit – the basic category of the market economy
– came to be regarded as the main indicator of the performance of
enterprises. This contradicted the objective laws of the socialist
system, something Stalin had warned against. Making an absolute of the profit factor contradicted the principle of planned economic development.
Yes, the years 1965-1970 were marked by a
high rate of growth of the gross domestic product, by an average 7.4% a
year. The average growth of the national revenue was 7.7%. This was
partly the result of the introduction of systems of economic stimulation
and material incentives. The enterprises and industries were allowed to
make deductions to the material incentive funds and to production
development funds. This is fully in line with the Leninist principles of
cost accounting. However, these funds were not used for the purpose for
which they were created. The desire to gain profit did not stimulate
the enterprises to spend money on development and on the introduction of
new technologies. Scientific and technological progress began to slow
down. The qualitative gap between science and production was widening.
The problem was never solved.
The oil and gas export revenues were not
used in the best possible way. Until the mid-1980s they stimulated the
import of goods. This had a negative impact on the pace of scientific
and technological progress. More and more goods in the Soviet consumer
market were manufactured in the Western countries. It helped the
“stewards of perestroika” to convince people of the advantages of the
capitalist economy and get across the message that “the free market” is a
noble goal for the sake of which the abuses of shock therapy and
landslide privatization had to be endured.
It was very difficult to build a
powerful socialist economy. This was accomplished by people of immense
intellect and lofty spiritual principles – Lenin, Stalin and their
fellow workers. The whole people took part in this great
creative process. The people who were destroying the Soviet economy were
ignorant people who had no grasp of the Marxist-Leninist theory and had
rejected the massive experience of the Soviet era. They were unable to
learn to manage the complicated system of governance, to use scientific
methods in the process and to elevate the country to a new level of
socialist development. Eventually production relations came to
contradict the powerful productive forces.
The former head of the US Federal Reserve System Alan Greenspan was openly jubilant writing that the
economic significance of the collapse of the Soviet Union was immense…
that more than a billion low-paid often well- educated workers streamed
to the world competitive market… Such labour migration in the market
brought down the world level of wages, inflation, inflationary
expectations and interest rates and thus contributed to global economic
growth.
The “benefits” from the collapse of the
great socialist power are enjoyed by those who concentrated the levers
of managing the global capitalist economy in their hands. Meanwhile the
citizens of the USSR suffered colossal losses. The preservation
of oligarchic, comprador capitalism suggests that Russia has yet to
experience the worst consequences of the destruction of the socialist
economy.
All the generations of
Communists should learn this well: the building of socialism is a
scientifically validated and scientifically managed process. Socialism
has a unique feature: given the knowledge of the laws of social
development its creators are able to greatly accelerate social and
economic progress.
The Causes of Temporary Setbacks
Dear comrades, today we face a
special set of circumstances. The combined forces of the imperialist
West and internal counterrevolution have done their job. With direct
complicity of the Gorbachev group the victory of bourgeois
counterrevolution and restoration of capitalism were ensured in the vast
spaces of the Soviet Motherland and in the fellow socialist countries. We
must honestly explain to people why we failed to safeguard the gains of
the Soviet people. Why we have failed to protect the dreams of all the
generations that were building a great power and more than once rose to
overthrow the power of exploiters. Why in the 1980s we failed to
safeguard the honor and integrity of the Communist Party of the Soviet
Union.
Gorbachev began his activities as
General Secretary of the CPSU not with the notorious perestroika but
with a reasonable slogan of accelerating the country’s development. The
call for combining the achievements of scientific and technological
progress with the advantages of socialism relied on the ideas of the
Brezhnev time. However, acceleration under Gorbachev acquired a criminal
character.
In late 1986 a decision was made to
create new, essentially bourgeois cooperatives. Indeed, to enable them
to make private profit, they were allowed to use public means of
production. That marked the first step towards social stratification. It
provided the basis for the emergence of an alliance of “shadow business”, the dissident intellectuals and the “stewards” of the new cooperatives. Before
long they were joined by the heads of the early commercial banks and
business structures created under the masthead of the Komsomol.
The legal renunciation of the property
of the whole people which was declared the property of the state was a
disgraceful move which had a far-reaching goal. To privatize the
property of the whole people would have required the consent of its
owner – the people. However, a referendum on the issue was never
contemplated by the leaders of perestroika. After the “transformation” of property all that was needed to sell it into private hands was government resolutions.
The team of turncoats step by step legitimized the transition towards the capitalist way of life. The
law On Property in the USSR was passed on March 6, 1990, the law On the
General Principles of Entrepreneurship of the Citizens of the USSR was
passed on April 2, 1991 and the law On the Basic Principles of
Denationalization and Privatization of Enterprises was passed on July 1,
1991. It became possible to transfer state-owned enterprises into
private hands.
Gorbachev and the people around him did
virtually nothing to maintain people’s living standards. On the
contrary, in order to foment popular discontent they contributed to
creating a shortage of the basic necessities.
The turning point for political
dismantling of socialism was the plenary session of the CC CPSU of 1987.
The Party General Secretary led the attack on the Party cadre. Before
long the Trotskyite slogans of “targeting the headquarters” were heard.
In violation of the Party Charter more than 100 full and alternate
members of the CC were dropped. They included recent members of the
Politbureau and prominent Soviet leaders. Next 97% of the secretaries
and department chiefs of the Central Committees of the Communist Parties
in the Union Republics, regional committees and area committees of the
CPSU, almost all the heads of central and republican newspapers and
magazines were replaced.
The Party leadership openly demonstrated
its renunciation of its traditional social base. While at the XXVII
Congress of the CPSU 34% of the delegates were workers, 17.4% were
collective farmers, there were only 11.6% of workers and 5.4% of
collective farmers among the delegates to the XVIII Party Congress.
Renunciation of the working class as the
social base was understandable. For it was the workers who rejected not
only the so-called “market” which was a cunning way of a return to
capitalism. Almost 90% of the workers who spoke at the Congress from the
podium or from the floor, criticized Gorbachev and demanded that the
performance of the Central Committee be declared to be unsatisfactory.
Gennady Pershin , an electrician from Irkutsk, thus explained this position: “The
decisions of the XXVII Congress of the CPSU have by and large not been
fulfilled. Because of this I think that giving an unsatisfactory mark
would adequately describe the activities of the CC and the Politbureau
during the report period.”
To facilitate the restoration of
capitalism conditions were created for the Party to abandon the working
class. The opportunistic Gorbachev supporters even smuggled into public
consciousness the idea of banning the activities of Party organizations
at enterprises and institutions. In 1990 the possibility of the CPSU
switching to the territorial principle was widely discussed.
The principles of party building were violated more and more frequently and openly. In
fact Gorbachev was no longer accountable to the Central Committee. To
forestall his possible dismissal from the post of General Secretary he
got himself elected to this post by the Congress, for the first time in
the Party’s history.
The position of the CPRF is well known: restoration of capitalism in the Soviet Union was not inevitable. But
because the laws of social development were neglected objective
circumstances conspired to facilitate the implementation of the
counterrevolutionary plans of world capital and home-bred traitors.
First, the
Soviet leadership overestimated the level of the development of the
USSR. In reality society had not yet reached the stage of “mature
socialism”. Meanwhile, in the period of transition from capitalism to
socialism economic contradictions may result in crises. In 1986 the then
Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR Nikolai Ryzhkov
warned the XXVII CPSU Congress of some alarming trends of 1981-1985.
Economic performance indicators had worsened. Industrial output growth
had slowed down. The rise of the real incomes practically stopped. There
were shortfalls in meeting the targets of the 11th
Five-Year Plan. Many sectors failed to meet the targets. The targets for
raising the real incomes and increasing retail trade had not been met.
The financial and monitoring situation had become more complicated. At
the second stage of perestroika, in 1987-1990s, isolated crisis
phenomena began to develop into a full-scale crisis because of the
counterrevolutionary actions of the Gorbachev group. The year 1990 was
the most difficult year for the Soviet economy.
Second, a
revolution only develops successfully when it sets the tasks it is
capable of solving. In other words, the tasks for which objective
conditions had matured. Running ahead of oneself is fraught with dire
consequences. Thus the task of “full-scale building of communism” set by
the XXII Congress of the CPSU was unrealistic. Moreover, it was set in a
patently incompetent way: the creation of the material and technical
basis of Communism was interpreted as matching the economic performance
indicators of the USA. This suggested that there was already the basis
for … Communism within the framework of American capitalism. One example
of “running ahead of oneself” in the 1970s was the concept of
eliminating unpromising villages, which inflicted great damage on
agriculture, especially in the Non-Black Soil Zone of Russia.
Third, throughout
the existence of the USSR there was a persistent threat of aggression
on the part of imperialist forces. The debilitating Cold War lasted for
more than four decades. Zbigniew Brzezinski stresses that the arms race
was ruining the Soviet state. Nevertheless the Soviet Union had
achieved military parity with the USA and was able to use the
achievements of the scientific-technical revolution to increase the
production of quality consumer goods. However that opportunity had been
missed. Perestroika broke out…
These are just some of the objective
phenomena that created conditions for the restoration of capitalism. Of
course the subjective factor also had to be involved. And in this
connection one regrets to have to note the extremely negative role of
such individuals as Gorbachev and Yeltsin, Yakovlev and Shevardnadze.
One has only to think of their extraordinary vanity and personal lack of
integrity from which, as it turned out, there was but a step to
betrayal.
Is there a need today to discuss the traitors who had infiltrated the Party then when discussing the 100th
anniversary of the Great October Revolution? Yes, there is. First, in
order to prevent a repeat of a similar disaster. Second, in order to
bring it home to everyone: what our compatriots saw in the perestroika
years was not genuine but deformed socialism. In the eyes of many Russians today there is a distorted image of Soviet socialism and the Communist Party. They are in the shadow of what some people call “catastroika,” others “gorbostroika” and others again “the Yeltsin dementia”.
Yes, we resolutely dissociate our Party
history from some actions and some individuals. We are very well aware
that the Communists need protection from new turncoats and traitors, and
that this calls for vigilance and loyalty to the Leninist call: “More
light.” Criticism and self-criticism is the lot of the strong and every
generation of Party members must understand and remember this. However,
we Communists should not entirely dissociate ourselves even from the
perestroika era. After all, it was the people of that time who had
remained loyal to the ideal and loyal to the working people who formed
the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. It was created by those
who understood that the retreat of socialism was temporary. Those who
were ready to act to assert truth and justice. Having survived the
tragedy of the defeat of socialism in the expanse of their country, Russian Communists prevented a demise of their party and are bravely and worthily fighting for the resurgence of their country.
Unshakeable conviction is the most valuable part of the legacy which we are not renouncing. It goes back to the fighters on Krasnaya Presnya in 1905, to the dedicated Bolsheviks Ivan Babushkin and Nikolai Bauman, to Ivan Voinov, a pointsman on the Nikolayevskaya Railway who was killed in the summer of 1917 for distributing copies of the Pravda, to Nikolai Lazo who was burned alive in a steam engine furnace by Japanese occupiers in 1920… Our
convictions have strong reinforcement bars. They hold together the
framework of our cause. This helps the Communists to move forward again
and again.
The legacy that we cherish
Esteemed participants and guests of the Plenary Session,
We are talking about the 100th anniversary of the Great October Revolution on the eve of another red-letter date, the 70th anniversary of the Victory of the Soviet people over Nazi Germany and its satellites. Shortly afterwards we will mark the 70th anniversary of the defeat of militarist Japan. Addressing an election meeting on February 9, 1946 Stalin said with pride: “after
the object lessons of the war no skeptic any longer dares express
doubts about the viability of the Soviet social system. Today we say
that the Soviet … system … is the best form of organization of society…”
On the eve of the 70th Victory anniversary the CPRF declares: the
advantages of socialism have been proved by the great achievements of
the victorious era. This is the legacy we will never renounce. We will
multiply this legacy.
There are several concepts and models of
socialism in the modern world. Having taken the relay from the Great
October Revolution we position ourselves as the party of the proletarian
revolution and of Soviet socialism whose foundations were laid under
the leadership of Lenin and Stalin. Our party is more than 110 years
old. We look at its history through the prism of contemporary tasks.
Every facet of Soviet socialism that has withstood the test of time will
be cherished by our successors. They will build on these achievements
by their intense creative work.
Speaking about the legacy of the Soviet era let us first of all note the main features of socialism we are struggling for.
Socialism is a society of the working people in which everyone is obliged to work: “He who does not work neither shall he eat.” Such
a society cannot be built on the foundations of private property. The
issue of radical change of property relations is what the transition
from capitalism to socialism is all about. The new society only
becomes real when the working man feels responsible for his job, his
workshop, factory and the country. For this it is necessary to overcome
the alienation of man from labour and property. Man
must participate in managing production and society. Only in this case
does labour become a thing of honor, valor and heroism.
The building of a new society is not
like installing a ready-made programme in a digital machine tool. It
requires constant creative initiative of the masses. Addressing the
All-Union Conference of Socialist Industry Workers in 1931 Stalin did
not only set the task of running in 10 years the distance that
advanced countries covered in 50-100 years. He identified the three key
instruments of solving that task: first, self-criticism and criticism,
second, the movement for rationalization of production and third,
socialist emulation.
In order to continue the cause of the
October Revolution and set the country on course towards socialism it is
not enough to overcome the diktat of capital. One of the
greatest parts of the heritage of our revolution is the experience of
proletarian dictatorship that reflects the interests of the vast
majority of the working people. So, the task of the future
government is not only to act in the interests of the working class, but
to ensure its guiding role in social and political life. Socialism is not only about social guarantees, it is also about the power of the working people.
The October 2014 Plenum of the CC CPRF made a profound review of the issue of the Party’s work in the proletarian milieu. It
set concrete tasks. Persistence and energy are needed to fulfill them.
Nearly half a year has passed since then. However, not all the Party
branches have put the new decisions of the CC at the focus of their
activities. The All-Russia Party Meeting on this topic has yet to become
the key event in the life of the CPRF. Many major party committees have
failed to set an example in this work.
All our comrades must understand that
when private property holds sway the working class remains an oppressed
and exploited class. That is why it is objectively interested in the
socialist transformation of Russia. It is the main guarantor of
successful implementation of the CPRF’s programmatic goal of building a
renewed socialism.
I think we all understand that the Party has a vital stake in the working class. However,
the decisions of the October 2014 Plenum are being put into practice in
a somewhat timid way. The main reason is that the share of workers
within the Party is still low and that our activists are not well
equipped to work with the proletarian masses.
We should enter the collectives of workers more rapidly. It
is only by forming proletarian class consciousness among the majority
of workers that we will formulate that consciousness in the social
strata that are close to the workers. What we vitally need is a
strong alliance between the industrial working class, the proletarian
workers by brain, the working peasantry, the semi-proletarian strata in
the town and countryside and in the sphere of small business. In
the showdown with big capital only this alliance makes it possible to
neutralize the “upper strata” of the petty bourgeoisie and especially
the middle-level bourgeoisie. And yet this is the decisive
condition for a peaceful transition to socialism. The strength of that
alliance will determine the outcome also in the event the struggle
against the dictatorship of capital takes other forms.
The priceless legacy of our great Revolution is the Soviets of People’s Deputies. Lenin in his works explained the essence of the power of the Soviets. In April 1917 he stressed: The parliamentary bourgeois republic impedes and chokes independent political life of the masses,” it leaves intact the machine of oppression: the army, police and bureaucracy. The Soviets “smash and eliminate that machine”.
Soviet power has demonstrated its
genuine democratic character immediately after its victory. It did so in
spite of the blockade, famine and Intervention. Honest observers
recognized the fact. George Lansbury , a prominent British Labour Party member, wrote in 1920 that they
were trumpeting atrocities in Moscow and Petrograd, but when he was
there he felt, if anything, safer than in London. He wrote that true
faith was not persecuted, genuine marriage was as sacred as ever. The
churches were being restored with public money. The place, he wrote, was
as good as other world capitals and in many, very many ways was better.
People had been told that Russia was in the hands of a band of despots.
In reality, he wrote, Lenin and his associates wielded no other
personal power except that conferred on them by the Soviets. They were
at the head of the largest people in Europe but they ate, dressed and
lived like the poorest of workers.”
Unlike the Republic of the Soviets the bourgeoisie keeps the masses away from running the affairs of the state. There
are concrete figures to prove this. In the mid-1980s the Supreme Soviet
of the RSFSR had 975 deputies. Today the State Duma of the RF has 450
deputies and the Federation Council has 170 members. The number of MPs
has dropped substantially. And one has to remember that the interests of
the RSFSR population at the state level were also represented by some
900 deputies of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. However, Zhirinovsky,
that loyal servant of big capital, would like to see the Duma reduced to
a small group of “boyars”.
The total number of deputies of the
Supreme Soviets of the autonomies and local Soviets in Russia in the
1980s exceeded 1 160 000. Today there are a little more than 250 000
deputies at all these levels, which means that 900 000 mandates have
been taken away from the voters. The bourgeois regime has limited the
access of Russian citizens to decision-making at the local level by
almost five times.
Democracy is being truncated not only in
quantitative terms. Quality is more important. The local power and
self-government bodies have been almost totally “cleansed” of the
representatives of the working class and the peasantry. The
justification often rolled out is that professionals should govern. Yet
it is precisely today that the qualification of governing personnel is
deteriorating at an alarming pace.
The programmatic task of the
CPRF is to ensure broad participation of the working people in running
the state through the Soviets, the trade unions, worker self-government
and other bodies of direct people’s rule. To this end we should
involve the masses in active social and political life on a day-to-day
basis. It is necessary to struggle for every bridgehead in the bodies of
power and local government. It is time to launch a massive campaign to
prepare not only for the Single Voting Day in September of next year,
but also for elections for the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the
Russian Federation. The areas of responsibility have been determined.
It is important to go to the grassroots and make our case. The
Communists and our supporters are equipped with all the necessary
arguments for that.
Dear comrades, the Great October Revolution opened in our country the era of unique and soaring achievements. The
construction projects of the prewar Five Year Plans and the cultural
revolution, the victory over fascism, the world’s first atomic power
plant and the sputnik, Communist Yuri Gagarin’s spaceflight,
military-political parity with the USA, the creation of the commonwealth
of socialist countries and the highly valuable experience of
integration within the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance: each of
these events will forever remain part of the history of humankind.
The exploits of the country are the sum of the exploits of concrete individuals. We
should see to it that the heroism of the workers and the captains of
industry, scientists and political strategists should not be forgotten.
Tribute should be paid to their intellect and creative endeavor, their
ingenuity and skill, and thorough strategic planning and scientific
decisions.
Modern Russia inherited a powerful economy from Soviet socialism. But
the current political regime has failed to maintain the standards that
had been achieved. It is not even prepared to properly remember its
heroes. Anti-Sovietism has become its hallmark. We Communists hold sacred the memory of the unique contribution of the Soviet people to world civilization. Our heritage is our ideological weapon in the struggle against the class enemy.
We understand that we will again have to traverse the path of the October Revolution. We will have to do it in a different way, but we will inevitably have to walk that path. Our key legacy is the unique practice of the trail-blazers of socialism. One
can safely put at the top of the list the experience of restoring the
war-devastated national economy. The Bolsheviks accomplished this
formidable task twice.
The Civil War ended in late
1920s. The VIII All-Russia Congress of the Soviets adopted the first
integrated state plan of economic development in history, GOELRO. Industry
began to recover immediately. As early as 1921-1923 output doubled, the
fuel crisis was overcome and the work of transport was improving. The
NEP made it possible to establish normal trade between town and
countryside. In 1926 industry exceeded the prewar level by 8% and power
generation had increased by 80%. A bridgehead had been put in place for
industrialization.
The second period of economic recovery was equally large-scale and challenging. During
the Great Patriotic War the country lost 30% of its industrial
potential. More than 32 000 industrial enterprises were ruined, 60% of
steel-making capacity and 70% of coal-mining capacity were destroyed.
But the organizing role of the AUCP(B) and mobilization of the forces of
the entire Soviet people ensured a revival of industry within a short
space of time. It is incredible, but by the end of 1946 the Soviet
industry reached the prewar level in terms of output. In 1950 the prewar
level was exceeded by 73%. Simultaneously structural changes aimed at
speeding up scientific and technical progress were being implemented. The Communists must have thorough knowledge of this great experience because we are destined to apply it in practice. Capitalism,
which has been restored in Russia, failed during the last quarter
century even to match the economic performance indicators of 1990, which
was an extremely difficult year for the Soviet system. After the
counterrevolution of August 1991 the rate of economic decline became
catastrophic.
The people’s patriotic forces
face the challenge, like our fathers and grandfathers, of lifting the
country from its knees at the Bolshevik pace. The first economic miracle of the 20th
century occurred in the Soviet Union, and not in Japan or China. The
average annual rate of growth of industrial output throughout the 1930s
was 16.5%, a record that has never been beaten. It can be matched only by learning to apply the mobilization methods of economic development.
The era of the Great October Revolution has bequeathed to us the unique practice of developing and implementing scientific and production programmes. Thanks
to them the nuclear missile shield of our country was created within
the shortest space of time. The conquest of outer space was a
multi-sectoral programme of genius. In implementing it the USSR did not
only win the space race but ensured the creation of new civilian
technologies.
Territorial-production complexes proved
to be highly effective. Russia is still enjoying the fruits of these
ambitious projects. The Western Siberia oil and gas complex alone
enables the country’s economy to preserve its world significance. Among
the outstanding phenomena are the Bratsk Territorial-Production Complex,
the Baikal-Amur Railway and of course, the pioneer of giant projects,
the Urals-Kuznetsk Coal and Metallurgical Base.
The years of Soviet government saw radical changes in the country’s spiritual culture. Prior to the Great October Revolution Russia had two cultures: that of the rich and that of the muzhiks.
The Soviet people created a single culture with socialist content. Its
values were the values of the working people. The working man, the
builder and defender of the Motherland became the main hero in
literature and the arts. From Fyodor Gladkov’s novel “Cement” the tradition leads to the works of Yuri Bondarev, Valentin Rasputin and Vasily Belov. The calling cards of Soviet sculpture are the works of Ivan Shadr “The Flagstone: the Weapon of the Proletariat”, “The Worker”, “The Sower” and “The Peasant”. Vera Mukhina’s sculpture “The Worker and the Collective Farm Woman” became a vivid symbol of emancipated labour. Yevgeny Vuchetich has created great images. The artists Alexander Laktionov, Arkady Plastov, Alexander Deineka and Mitrofan Grekov have left a unique legacy.
Humanism became an inalienable feature of Soviet culture. It marks the literary works of Maxim
Gorky and Konstantin Fedin, Alexei Tolstoy and Mikhail Sholokhov,
Konstantin Simonov and Leonid Leonov, Konstantin Paustovsky and Vasily
Shukshin. Profound humanity permeates the poetry of Alexander Tvardovsky and Yegor Isayev, the verses of Mikhail Isakovsky and Alexei Fatyanov, the music of Georgy Sviridov, Isaak Dunayevsky, Vasily Solovyov-Sedoy, Valery Gavrilin, Boris Mokrousov and Alexandra Pakhmutova. Soviet culture is so rich in talent that it is impossible to enumerate all the names.
Socialist culture has been actively helping to form a new civilization of kindness, humanity and of serving one’s people. The
development of Soviet civilization was cut short during take-off.
However, its achievements and its best specimens will yet help us to
solve the tasks of a new transition from capitalism to socialism. That
is why we cherish this legacy so ardently. It is our duty to pass it on
to those who will carry forward the banner of the struggle for
socialism. We are called upon to do everything possible so that the new
generations of Russian youth should assimilate the spectacular
achievements of the high Soviet culture.
Relying on the priceless legacy
of Soviet socialism, the Communists have yet to create new large-scale
projects. We have to recreate the most ambitious project of the Soviet
era, the single national economy complex of the socialist Motherland.
The new generations of the
followers of Lenin must above all assimilate the science of recovery and
creation. They will again tailor their actions to the socialist law of
planned and proportional development of the national economy. To this
end it is necessary first of all to solve the all-important task of
giving the country’s economy back to the people.
In putting Russia back on the
socialist track the CPRF will have not only to overcome the current
economic dislocation. It will have to catch up with the countries that
have outstripped it. Therefore, even before the restoration
period begins, we have to gain people’s trust, convince the working
class, the engineers, scientists, teachers and all the working people
that we are capable of being in the vanguard of major transformations.
To this end we should step up the propaganda of our anti-crisis
programme in every direction. We should aggressively insist on a radical
change of course.
The priority measure that the
CPRF proposes is to form a government of popular trust that will tackle
the crisis competently and vigorously. Among the key measures that would ensure economic growth it is called upon to carry out a ten-point plan:
1.To establish state control of currency
operations and the entire banking system. To nationalize the leading
banks. To make it obligatory for commodity exporters to sell at least
half of their currency earnings to the state.
2.To put the Central Bank in the service
of the interests of Russia. To make it obligatory for the Central Bank
to issue targeted credits to the real sector of the economy. To reduce
the key rate to the inflation level. To establish tight control over the
actual use of the credit resources that are allocated.
3.To bring back not only profits but
also assets to Russia from offshore zones on a massive scale. To ban
cross-border capital movement.
4.To take the country out of the World
Trade Organization. To impose a moratorium on payments towards external
credit obligations until all international sanctions are lifted.
5.To form a powerful state sector in the
economy, to pave its way to high technologies on the basis of the
latest achievements of fundamental and applied sciences.
6. To nationalize the power industry,
railway transport, oil and gas and other extractive sectors. To link
access to natural resources to orders for the domestic industry. To
impose a moratorium on the growth of tariffs for the products of natural
monopolies. To ensure state regulation of prices for fuel and
lubricants.
7.To immediately introduce control of
the prices of prime necessity goods. To create a state trade sector to
ensure competition with private trade companies.
8.To ensure priority state support of
the agro-industrial complex. To bring federal budget expenditure on
agriculture to 10% of all spending. To provide conditions for peasants
to sell their products at specialized city markets.
9.To introduce state monopoly on the production and sale of alcohol-containing goods.
10.To introduce progressive tax on super-profits. To relieve the poor from paying income tax.
Each of these ten points needs to be
thoroughly detailed. In order to delve into this work we must continue
to have active working groups involving qualified experts. An example of
close study of major problems was the recent symposium Breakthrough Technologies of the XXI Century held in St Petersburg to mark the jubilee of the world-famous scientist Zhores Alferov.
We are confident that only an
immediate implementation of the set of measures proposed by the CPRF
will make it possible to wrest the country from the vice of the crisis. This
approach helped the Primakov-Maslyukov-Gerashchenko government to pull
the country back from the edge of an abyss. These measures are asking to
be used today considering the assessment of the situation that Yevgeny
Primakov presented to a meeting of the Chamber of Trade and Industry in
his report on the results of 2014.
Putin’s turn to a nationally oriented
foreign policy has still not been backed up by measures to take the
country out of the social and economic impasse. It is obvious that the Medvedev government is not coping. On the agenda is the formation of a government of popular trust.
Anti-Sovietism: the law of capitalist restoration
It has become a set pattern that as soon
as the situation in Russia worsens a new spiral of anti-Sovietism and
Russophobia begins. Behind every such upsurge are attempts to divert
people’s attention from acute social problems. From the beginning of the
1990s anti-Soviet attacks have never stopped with various forms of
slandering the Soviet way of life complementing one another. We
habitually hear the liberal bourgeois moaning that Soviet power
strangled individual freedom and human rights. It is regularly attacked
from those who embrace White Guard patriotism. Anti-Sovietism is cherished in order to suppress socialist consciousness of the broad popular masses.
Anti-Sovietism is objectively to be expected in Russia under restored capitalism. In his 1929 book “The National Question and Leninism” Stalin proposed a concept of replacing bourgeois nations with socialist ones. He wrote: “Is
it not obvious that with the disappearance of capitalism the bourgeois
nations it engendered must also disappear? On the ruins of old bourgeois
nations there emerge and develop new socialist nations which are more
cohesive than any bourgeois nation because they are free of
irreconcilable class contradictions that erode bourgeois nations, they
are more nations of the whole people than any bourgeois nation.”
This was precisely the situation in the
USSR. The strength of the union of socialist nations was proved by the
Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. A new historical community was being
born in the country. It was the Soviet people. It is not by chance that
the Victory Marshal, Georgi Zhukov, wrote: “Due
to the influence of the Soviet way of life, the immense educational
work of the Party a new mold of man was created in our country, a man
ideologically convinced of his righteous cause and deeply aware of
personal responsibility for the destiny of his country.” Nations
drew as close together as never in world history. It is not by chance
that the collapse of Soviet power fomented national-patriotism and
national-separatism. Anti-Sovietism has from the outset been leavened with bourgeois liberalism and nationalistic frenzy.
The essence of anti-Sovietism is
barbaric destruction of socialist nations and their forcible
transformation into bourgeois nations. To accomplish this the
oligarchic pro-Western capital in Russia has to eliminate the worldview
that forms the foundation of socialism. It has proved to be impossible
to do it peacefully with the voluntary consent of the popular masses.
Even after Soviet society was destroyed its values are alive in our
historical memory, in the national mentality of Russians, Tatars, Yakuts
and other peoples of Russia.
A lot has recently been said about the
Russian world. This is not surprising because Russophobia has for a
quarter of a century been hurting the sense of national dignity of the
people that forms the core of our state. It emanates from liberals who
are calling the shots not only in economics but also in the cultural
sphere, in the media, cinema, theatre and literature. The problem has
become even more sensitive with the breakout of the Civil War in Ukraine
where Russophobia is one of the ideological weapons of Banderovites.
All this is true. But it is
equally important to speak about the Soviet world, the world of
collectivism and internationalism of the working people, of comradely
mutual help and mutual assistance. This world has not disappeared in
Russia, Byelorussia or Ukraine or in other union republics. The
memory of the great victory of the Soviet people over German fascism
prompted the volunteers, the citizens of Lugansk and Donetsk, to join
the life-and-death struggle against Banderovites. The people of Russia
are preserving Soviet features in their national mentality and culture.
This is today the main cause of Russophobia which has donned the garb of
anti-Sovietism.
Soviet collectivism has not disappeared. It manifests itself in various forms of comradely cooperation. There
exist people’s enterprises. Associations in the sphere of
semi-proletarian small business exist. Collectivism manifests itself in
the work of artists to revive Soviet culture: music, drama and
literature. Proletarians are learning to uphold their rights. Trade
unions are appearing that are challenging capital. Political forms of
the struggle for socialism are offered by the CPRF and a large block of
people’s patriotic forces that includes the Leninist
Communist Youth League of the RF, the All-Russian Women’s Union – The
Hope of Russia, the Children of War and Russky Lad movements, RUSO, the
International Union of Soviet Officers, the Movement in Support of the
Army and a whole range of trade unions.
We are a party of Soviet internationalists. The
CPRF has mobilized its best forces in aid of embattled Donbass –
Russians and Tatars, Bashkirs and Chechens, Ossetians and Kalmyks,
Chuvashis and Jews. In this way we are actively uniting our supporters
from across the multinational Russia.
Soviet internationalism is alive. It helps the CPRF to continue the struggle for reviving the union state of working people. We are tackling this historic task together with fraternal Communist parties which are members of the UCP-CPSU.
All of us – Soviet Communists – are responsible for preserving the
values of socialism in the historical memory of our peoples, in their
national consciousness. One of our most important missions is to
prevent the transformation of the socialist nations of the former USSR
into bourgeois nations of the CIS countries.
The people cherish the values of Soviet socialism. This
was highlighted by the television series that had been running for many
months, such as “The Name of Russia”, “The Judgment of Time” and “The
Historical Process”. The Liberals who initiated these broadcasts have
miscalculated. Time and again mass consciousness ruined the hopes of
anti-Sovieteers and administered a mighty rebuff to the dyed-in-the-wool
Russophobes.
The potential for the revival of
socialist values among our people is great. It is our duty as
communists to realize that potential. The challenge is formidable. The
process of the formation of bourgeois nations is achieving some success
for the ruling capital. Anti-Sovietism in Russia is yielding its
poisoned fruit.
For a quarter of a century the Soviet
way of life has been branded as a herd-like, barrack-room system that
enslaves the individual. Private propertied individualism is passed off
for personal freedom. Capital needs precisely this kind of freedom, the
freedom to seek material gain and increase wealth, the freedom of moral
and intellectual license. It is the freedom of a consumer who seeks
pleasure without burdening his mind or conscience with thoughts about
social good. Such freedom strengthens the power of capital and
guarantees its spiritual and not only economic dominance.
During a quarter of a century a powerful
anti-culture industry has been created, the “mass culture” of show
business, casinos, thrillers and pornographic reads, films replete with
violence, horror and perversion. This stream changes the life and
attitudes of many people promoting the mentality of fast living. The
cult of the crude power of money penetrates both the luxurious apartment
of an oligarch and the modest abode of a worker. Not to think, not to
feel pricks of conscience, not to create, but to possess money that “can
do everything” – this is the credo of the vulgar bourgeois consumer.
Militant individualism is backed up by group egoism which affects not
only oligarchs and corrupt officials, but high-paid public sector
workers, members of the artistic elite, “the workers’ aristocracy” and
trade union bureaucrats. Group egoism has forever been used by big
capital in its interests.
The revival of socialism poses a mortal danger to capital. That
is why it dreams of destroying all things Soviet: the economy and the
social system, science and culture, everything that has determined the
values of socialist nations. It is not surprising that all the reforms
in Russia since August 1991 have been destructive in character. The
restoration of capitalism is an anti-historical and reactionary
phenomenon. Anti-Sovietism is an inevitable feature of this
anti-history. It is inevitable when a country’s development towards
socialism is violently stopped.
Isn’t the destruction of the world’s
best education system an absurdity? Is it not evidence of reaction and
obscurantism? Science is deprived of its role of society’s productive
force, even as calls are trumpeted for innovation. This is a travesty of
common sense. The reason for this aggressive savagery is that the
school, the higher education institution and science in the Soviet
country sought to mold a creative personality. A critically thinking
personality poses a danger to capital. It needs people with utilitarian
thinking, robots programmed to work in sweatshops. Capital needs an
obedient personality that is spiritually enslaved and easy to control,
with a narrow set of knowledge and skills, a personality that produces
surplus value. The bourgeois Russian school is based on a class division
of studentss.
To turn the school into a factory that
churns out primitive consumers – this is the essence of the education
reform with its Unified State Examination and new curricula. But capital
is unable to quickly bring the education process to a common
denominator. School teachers and university professors who are loyal to
the traditions of the Soviet education that develops the personality
continue their creative quests. It is our task to popularize their work,
to unite them in the public movement “Education for All”. We should
more vigorously seek to create Komsomol and Young Pioneer Organizations
in which children and young people go through a school of civic and
patriotic education.
Today anti-Sovietism is again on the sharp end of events. Russia has been confronted with a formidable challenge. Seventy
years after the Second World War the USA and its satellites are using
Nazism to achieve their geopolitical goals. The West has kindled a
fratricidal fire in Ukraine. The citizens of a fraternal country are
being exposed to Russophobic-anti-Soviet poison. Monuments to Lenin,
symbols of Russian and Soviet history and culture are being destroyed.
The marriage between anti-Sovietism and Russophobia is more than 90 years old. Since
the socialist revolution in Russia the West has seen a double threat
emanating from our country. It was afraid of socialism as an alternative
to the capitalist world order. The horror was multiplied by the fact
that the country calling for a new world is the largest country on the
planet.
Western imperialists still shudder
recalling how more than half a century ago our country blocked their
path towards world dominance. We will always be on the receiving end of
attempts to take revenge for industrialization and for building a mighty
socialist power, for the victory in May 1945 and for Yuri Gagarin’s
historic spaceflight. For achieving nuclear missile parity and for
helping the peoples of Asia, Africa and Latin America who have thrown
off the colonial yoke. The coveted goal of Western propaganda is to
erase the memory of socialism’s great achievements.
The USSR could not be defeated
by force of arms and it could not be strangled by sanctions. But the
“fifth column” of anti-Soviet traitors helped to undermine it. The
wave of Russophobia and anti-Sovietism contributed to the demise of the
USSR and led to the bloody October of 1993. The charred House of the
Soviets in Moscow was a harbinger of the Odessa massacre and the
punitive actions in Donbass. Supported by the USA, Banderovites are
already waging war against all of us in Novorossia. Unless they get a
fitting rebuff, NATO bases may appear near Kharkov.
Russia is targeted not only by a
diplomatic and economic offensive. An information war has been unleashed
against it. Among its tasks is to deprive us of our heroic past that
can inspire people to work towards a better future. In spite of all
this, anti-Sovieteers of every stripe are enjoying a comfortable life in
Russia. Revealing their ideological kinship with Banderovites they
besmirch the achievements of the Soviet era. Not only in Ukraine but in
this country too the Soviet historical and cultural landmarks are coming
under attack. There are calls for destroying the Lenin Mausoleum and
the necropolis at the Kremlin wall. Government representatives often
come out for dismantling monuments. Television channels lend the
airwaves to aggressive Russophobes and anti-Sovieteers. Nikolai Svadinze
uses taxpayers’ money to churn out his pseudo-documentary serials.
Contrary to historical justice, the
government has developed a grandiose programme of celebrating that
notorious anti-Sovieteer, Solzhenitsyn. And this at a time when jubilees
are approaching of truly great masters of culture. These include 200
years since the birth of Ivan Turgenev, 100 years since the birth of Konstantin Simonov, and 100 years since the birth of Georgy Sviridov.
The bacillus of anti-Sovietism causes
the authorities to cover the Mausoleum with drapes during celebrations
in Red Square. The Lenin Mausoleum has witnessed great events. It saw
the parade on November 7, 1941. The banners of defeated Hitler armies
were thrown at its feet in 1945. Veterans are proud of it. And we, the
heirs of the victorious heroes, are proud of it. We are categorically against coyly hiding the truth of history behind plywood screens on the day of the 70th anniversary of the Great Victory.
Anti-Sovietism is dangerous for Russia. It
helps to destroy the country’s productive forces, the working people
and science. It targets national culture and contributes to turning the
nations of Russia into bourgeois nations of the colonial type. In
forcibly changing national consciousness it replaces Soviet values, the
humanistic traditions of Russian culture with surrogates of the
decadent bourgeois culture of the West. It is inadmissible to
keep silent in the face of this situation. My open letter to the
citizens of Russia calls on everyone to join the struggle against
Russophobia and anti-Sovietism.
The members of the Russian Communist
Party are well aware that socialism is impossible if it is not rooted in
the national soil, in the great cultural heritage created over the
centuries. The best achievements of past eras are the basis for the
emergence of the new socialist culture.
Anti-Sovietism is the banner of traitors and defeatists. It
is pushing our country into an abyss. Those who inspire and commission
anti-Sovietism today are the same foreign political forces as during the
Cold War with the USSR. The enemies of socialism have pushed our
country to the path of degradation and disintegration. But they would
not stop. The masks are off. They do not need an imperial or a socialist
or even a bourgeois Russia.
To protect its right to a future it is necessary to promote the achievements of our culture. It
is necessary to bring back the spectacular decades and festivals of
friendship of the peoples. It is necessary to support the talented
people who are custodians of the best traditions. It is necessary to
publish a 100-volume collection of Russian classics and send it to every
library and school. And finally and most importantly: it is necessary to eradicate the dry rot of anti-Sovietism that is corroding the institutions of power.
We are not naïve people. We understand that the ruling regime needs anti-Sovietism. It helps to cover up and justify the destructive policy of the oligarchic capital. But it is already obvious that Russophobia is a weapon against our country. Both
those who defend Russia and those who try to destroy it know this.
Communists should be aggressive in getting across the message that Russophobia and anti-Sovietism are pursuing the same task.
A true patriot today has no right to relinquish a single accomplishment of our thousand-year-old history. Forming
the same front with us in the struggle for Russia are the armies of
Kievan Rus and the regiments of the Moscow state, the Zemstvo volunteers
and Suvorov’s “wonder warriors,” the soldiers of Borodino and the Red
Guard heroes, the Red Army soldiers who defeated foreign invaders and
their White Guard accomplices and the valiant soldiers of the Great
Patriotic War. Those who are waging war on Soviet history are waging war on Russia regardless of the colour of their banners.
The people cannot be united by fostering White Guard patriotism. Such attempts will merely split society. It
is not by chance that history has destroyed the bourgeois patriotism of
White anti-Soviet forces. It was the patriotism of the country estates
of the gentry, of exploitation by land owners and capitalists. As long
as society is rent apart by class antagonisms White and Red will never
be brothers. Today it is no secret that the organizers of Bolotnaya
rallies carrying white ribbons never once condemned the vandals in
Ukraine who pull down the monuments to Lenin, desecrate the monuments to
those who defeated fascism and other Soviet-era heroes. They scream
about repressions by the government but they do not protest when
Communists are victims of repression. It happened to our comrades more
than once. It is happening today to Vladimir Bessonov.
The CPRF is stating with confidence that the place of anti-Sovietism is in the rubbish heap of stale and harmful ideas. It
should not poison our lives. The reunification of the Crimea with
Russia has confirmed that our people want to breathe clear and fresh
air. The country needs a healthy atmosphere of pride for the deeds of
ancestors, faith in the future, in creative endeavor and progress.
We will persistently argue our
case. We will steadily follow this path. All the others need to make up
their minds. It is clear that in a “special situation” not everyone will
be able to leave and live on money that has been stolen and stashed
away in offshore zones. Some will have to choose between upholding
national independence without anti-Sovietism or a real possibility of
facing the Hague tribunal. It may be that for them patriotism would be
only a tactical move. We should make sure that this is in the interests
of the strategic goals of preserving and reviving our country.
Averting a national catastrophe
Dear comrades,
A party that comes out for
building a renewed socialism must determine whether the features of the
era when Lenin led his party in a victorious socialist revolution are
still relevant today?
The CPRF Programme says in black and
white that we live in a society of restored capitalism. The October 2014
Plenum of the Party’s Central Comittee described it as “regressive and
parasitic, oligarchic and comprador” capitalism that is “not viable and
is historically doomed”.
Opinion surveys show that Russian citizens want to live in a society in which the main value is social justice. Almost
half of respondents give this answer. Nearly 36% of respondents dream
of a return to the national traditions by which they usually mean the
traditions of the Soviet era. One in every three respondents wants to
see a future in which Russia is a great power. Only 13% pin their hopes
on the “free market and private property”. This is not surprising: the future that our compatriots long for cannot be achieved as long as power is in the hands of big business.
Russia is again in a tangle of acute contradictions. The main contradiction is between labour and capital. Restoration
of capitalism is accompanied by impoverishment – both relative and
absolute – of the working people. According to the RAS Sociology
Institute one-third of our compatriots live in poverty. Most of these
people have jobs but their wages are not living wages. The gap between
the groups of Russians that have the highest and the lowest incomes is
40 times. This is a much wider gap than in Tsarist Russia.
The privations and poverty of the oppressed classes are evident. Surveys
have shown that during the past 20 years employment in the public
sector has diminished significantly and the social security of the
employees of private enterprises has diminished. Unemployment is rising.
First Deputy Prime Minister Shuvalov, Minister of Economic Development
Ulyukayev, Labour Minister Topilin and President of the Central Bank
Nabiullina all openly warn that unemployment may rise. Thus the
authorities admit that further impoverishment of the working people is
inevitable.
Among the age-old contradictions the
antagonisms between the peasants and the land owners, between the rural
bourgeoisie and the peasant community have disappeared. However, the
latest rural census in 2006 revealed the existence of acute contradictions within the stratified peasantry. At the time of the census there were more than 550,000 hired workers who were exploited by private land owners.
The land issue is
becoming ever more acute. On the one hand, millions of hectares of
arable land have been abandoned and taken out of cultivation. On the
other hand, as a result of the forcibly introduced purchase and sale of
land there is growing stratification in rural areas in terms of the size
of plots of land. More than 17% of peasant households have no land and
43% have small plots of land. At the same time there have appeared huge
private estates of tens of thousands of hectares.
The nationalities issue was
very acute in pre-Revolutionary Russia. It was again exacerbated by the
counter-revolutionary coup of 1991-1993. We also see inter-religious contradictions. According
to sociologists, only one-fifth of the population are not worried about
religious extremism. 42% feel concern about the issue and nearly 40%
are very worried or afraid.
The antagonism between town and countryside that characterized Tsarist Russia has transformed itself into acute contradictions
between different types of communities. Contradictions between regions
and between different parts of the country are very strong.
Thus the contradictions between
the “lower” and the “upper” strata in modern Russia are becoming more
acute. But the question is, are the “upper strata” able to rule in the
old way? Today they probably still are. But their capabilities are
stretched to the limit.
Surveys have shown that 80% of our
fellow countrymen are ready to give up food that comes from Western
countries and 55% are ready to give up travel to the European Union
countries and the USA. But that means that they are ready to give up
what may be called “luxuries”. A very different answer has been given to
the suggestion that Russian citizens should tighten their belts: 82% are against tax rises and 84% reject the freezing of wages and pensions.
In the context of economic crisis the
situation of the working class in Russia continues to deteriorate.
Impoverishment of the “lower orders” continues. Objective conditions are
ripening for a revolutionary situation. However, as Lenin warned, “a
revolution may be ripe, but the movers of the revolution may not have
enough strength to accomplish it – in this case society decays and the
decay may last for decades”.
What is happening in this country shows that Russia is already in a stage of decay. The
CPRF, acting in and outside parliament, seeks to stop the
disintegration of society brought about by the restoration of
capitalism. This work is needed to protect the country and to save its
working people. But practice shows that the ills of capitalism cannot be cured from within it. Therefore our position remains unchanged: “socialism is the way out of the crisis”. Only the proletariat can play the role of the advanced class “capable of saving Russia from decay”.
The authorities have imposed a tacit
taboo on the theme of the working class. Those who are not engaged in
industrial production may get the impression that the working class has
disappeared. This is exactly what the regime counts on. Those members of
the patriotic groups who have fallen under the influence of new-fangled
theories of post-industrial and information society are playing up to
it. With the nonchalance of a Khlestakov they declare that the
proletariat has disappeared, that the class struggle is fading and is
being replaced with the national liberation struggle.
But if there is no proletarian class,
there is no one to exploit and there is nowhere to derive surplus value
from. How then is capital generated and where do capitalists come from?
But it is perhaps futile to argue with self-styled theoreticians who
pass off absurdity for the truth. All their speculations amount to
ideological defeatism in the face of big capital. Bourgeois
ideologies have always tried to keep the workers away from a class
analysis of facts and social phenomena. Capital remembers well the
lessons of history and is afraid of the working class which may become
its undertaker.
In order to firmly rely on the masses of
working people we Communists must at all times know exactly the level
of protest sentiments in the country and understand what position we are
in and from what position we are launching our offensive. At the end of
last year scientists from the RAS Sociology Institute published a
report on the problems of mass politics. It notes that 70% of
respondents said they had political views. The most numerous group – 75%
- are advocates of various models of socialism. This is the social base
with which we should work closely. This majority represents real
opposition to comprador capitalism and its political regime. Left-wing,
right-wing and “middle-of-the-road” liberals accounted for a mere 8% of
the respondents. Anarchists, conservatives and environmentalists
accounted for 7-8%.
The survey is the best answer to those
who are still bemoaning the absence or passivity of the proletarians.
And yet 29% of workers declare that they feel sympathy for those who
actively take part in rallies. Another 29% of workers say that their
positions are similar to those who do not rule out participation in
political actions. Activism is much less evident among the
intelligentsia and is almost 2.5 times less than among civil servants
and “white collar” workers.
Thus more and more workers are
ready to take part in protest actions. This improves the soil for our
influence on the proletarian masses. We should make the most of
this trend. The previous plenary session of the CC has issued specific
instructions to this end. The city and regional party committees have
been recommended to take on board the methods of “strongholds” of
influence on the working class. Specific enterprises must become such
strongholds. There needs to be active protection of the interests of
hired workers, and a fight against unfair dismissals and for greater
proletarian solidarity. Before this year is out we will conduct a review
of how the decisions are being implemented by each organization.
The task of the CPRF is to develop the working class movement and to combine it with socialist ideology. The
current state of affairs makes it incumbent upon us to increase
step-by-step our day-to-day work among the grassroots, to know the needs
of the working people of various trades and age, to find a common
language with religious believers and atheists, to convince the waverers
and to make those who have lost their way change their minds. If we
neglect the organizing role of mass protests we may find ourselves
sidelined politically, if we are active we will bring closer the time of
socialist transformation of our Motherland.
Four forces have clashed in modern Russia. First,
the rapacious oligarchy and the power that expresses its interests.
Their political bulwark is United Russia. Second, the liberal
pro-Western bourgeoisie which is close to them in terms of their class
orientation. They rely on groups of oligarchs who appeared during the
Yeltsin era of favouritism. Its centres are small parties such as the
Party of Progress (A.Navalny), PARNAS (V.Ryzhkov, M.Kasyanov),
Solidarnost, etc. The third force is petty bourgeoisie whose numbers
tend to increase at times of economic crises. Its leading political
representatives are Just Russia and the LDPR. The fourth force is the
working class and its allies whom the CPRF is called upon to lead.
Such multi-polar structures are
characteristic of “peaceful” political life. But events in Ukraine have
shown that when things come to direct confrontation such polyhedrons
straighten out. There remain only two poles, two centres of attraction.
They have to neutralize other social political forces. If political
activism in Russia rises, the petty bourgeoisie will, as usual, find
itself on the sidlines. Only two forces will have a real claim to power.
The first version: The
two poles will be the united bourgeoisie and the CPRF-led united
proletariat. This is a chance for Russia to be back on the path of
socialist creative endeavor. This was the strategy of the Bolsheviks
during the Great October Socialist Revolution which brought them
victory.
Second version: Two
competing groups of oligarchs will clash in the struggle for power. The
difference between them is only in the methods used to ensure the
dictatorship of capital. The victory of either of these can establish a
regime with “brown spots”: when capital finds bourgeois democratic
methods insufficient it opts for fascist methods. This is what happened
in Ukraine.
For the CPRF this means that it cannot regard any of the big capital groups as its allies or fellow travelers. The
real alternative to the counter-revolutionary forces must be the
working class and the CPRF. As Stalin maintained, renunciation by the
Communist Party of the struggle to lead millions, its line for a
coalition with the bourgeoisie corresponds to a Menshevik strategy.
Bolshevism chooses to give the role of “hegemon of the revolutionary movement” to the proletariat.
The party of the heirs to the October Revolution cannot afford to trail behind the events. We will cope with our historical role only if we act as the vanguard of the struggle for socialism. The
CPRF has long passed its formative stage. It now has to scale new
heights. The party is called upon to win over the broad masses of
workers and peasants. Characterizing such a situation I.V.Stalin noted: “The
party at this period is not as weak as in the previous period; it is
becoming a serious factor as a moving force. Now … it becomes … an
instrument for guiding the struggle of the masses in overthrowing the
power of capital: the Party focuses its attention not on the party
itself, but on the millions of the population.”
Decay of the country was how Lenin
described the state of Russia a hundred years ago, and it is still
relevant today. The working class was the leading force of the Great
October Revolution that prevented a national catastrophe. The
key task of the CPRF is to unite in its ranks the best representatives
of this class. They alone are capable of waging an uncompromising
struggle against capital. Only with them will the Party be able to
protect the country from the threat of a new national disaster.
A banner for all times
Dear comrades, friends, fellow fighters
Almost a hundred years after the victory
of the Great October Revolution it is becoming ever more evident that
our revolution cannot be seen as a phenomenon confined just to Russia. The
Russian revolution made an imprint on the processes on world scale. The
socialist proletarian revolution changed the destinies of mankind.
In his 1920 work “Left-Wing Communism: Infantile Disorder” Lenin wrote: “Some
of the main features of our revolution have not only local, not only
national-specific, not only Russian, but international significance.”
Under the influence of the October
Revolution all the Soviet people understood and identified themselves
with the great slogan of Marx and Engels. “Proletarians of all lands, unite!”. The Russian Bolsheviks have taken it up and put it into practice.
The CPRF is loyal to this slogan today.
Yes, the Bolsheviks believed in victory
when they called the masses to arise in October of 1917. But they have
always regarded the Russian Revolution as part of the world struggle
between Labour and Capital. However, the Leninists resolutely rejected
Trotsky’s idea of turning the Great October Revolution into a bundle of
sticks to ignite a world fire. The Bolsheviks had a much deeper
understanding of the international character of the proletarian
revolution. Addressing the III All-Russia Congress of the Soviets of
Workers’, Soldiers’ and Peasants’ Deputies, Lenin said: “Our
Socialist Republic of the Soviets will stand firm like a torch of
international socialism and an example to all the working masses. Over
there it is fighting, war and bloodshed, over here it is a genuine
policy of peace and the socialist republic of the Soviets”.
Three days before the opening of the Congress of the Soviets Lenin wrote: “The interests of socialism are above the interests of the right of nations to self-determination.” Firmly adhering to this approach Stalin maintained that the elimination of national oppression is unthinkable “without
breaking off with imperialism, without overthrowing ‘one’s own’
national bourgeoisie and without the working masses taking power
themselves”. This principle is still relevant today. For
the CPRF supporting the working people of Crimea and Novorossia is an
act of solidarity with their struggle against imperialism, against
Banderovites, against the right-wing nationalistic Ukrainian
bourgeoisie. Our solidarity can only be complete if the working people
resolutely seek to gain power in our country. These are the behests of
Lenin and Stalin.
Protecting the gains of the October
Revolution was an international affair. The land of the Soviets was
assisted by the revolutionary struggle of the international proletariat.
A great tradition was born in Russia during the Civil War. During that
time thousands of internationalist fighters had joined the Red Army.
They included Serbs, Hungarians, Czechs, Poles and Chinese. Later
history was made by international brigades that defended the Spanish
Republic in 1936-1938. That glorious tradition is still alive today. Its
frontline now runs in the proletarian region of Donbass.
The legacy of the Great October Revolution includes many lessons of international solidarity. Beginning from the middle of the last century many new associations joined that work. They include the
World Peace Council, the International Federation of Resistance
Fighters, the World Federation of Trade Unions, the Women’s
International Democratic Federation, the World Federation of Democratic
Youth and the International Association of Democratic Lawyers. We are preparing to welcome representatives of these organizations in Moscow soon in order to hold a forum to mark the 70th anniversary of the victory of the Soviet people in the Great Patriotic War.
The international significance
of the Great October Socialist Revolution is vast. It laid the
foundations of a new world. Soviet Russia offered the planet an
outstanding experience of socialist creative work. The Red Banner of the
Great October Revolution has become the banner of the working people of
the whole world, the banner of truth and justice.
In the years of the fight
against fascism our Red Banner inspired the heroic defenders of Moscow,
Leningrad and Stalingrad. It saw the first victory fireworks to mark the
liberation of Oryol and Belgorod. In May 1945 this flag soared over the
defeated Berlin to become the main symbol of the Great Victory. This is
a banner for all times.
The legacy of Soviet socialism
is alive. It is alive in the romantic Cuban Revolution, in the
outstanding quests of Che Guevara and Salvador Allende, Daniel Ortega
and Hugo Chavez, in the present-day successes of China and Vietnam, in
the progressive development of the unassuming and industrious
Byelorussia, and in the “reddening” Latin America.
The Russian Communists are proud
of their history. Our struggle today draws on the diverse and
impressive experience of different units of the international left-wing
movement. At the sources of that experience is the dawn of a new life
born in October 1917. This rich experience is our great heritage. The
achievements of the Soviet era are our stainless steel weapon, our
lodestar and the foundation of our new accomplishments.
Our truth gives us confidence that the forces of creation, peace and progress will prevail over the forces of evil.
Ours is the right cause, victory will be ours.Fuente: CPRF/Solidnet/PrensaPopularSolidaria
http://prensapopular-comunistasmiranda.blogspot.com
Correo: pcvmirandasrp@gmail.com
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