(Redirected from Congress of People\'s Deputies)The 'Congress of Soviets' was the supreme governing body of the
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and the
Soviet Union in two periods, from
1917 to
1936 and from
1989 to
1991.
Congress of Soviets, 1917–1936
The initial full name was ''Congress of Soviets of Workers', Soldiers' and Peasants' Deputies''. It is also known as 'Congress of People's Deputies'.
The Congress of Soviets was an assembly of representatives of local councils. All members were chosen by the local communist leaders, and then "approved" in single-party, single-candidate elections. In theory, it was the supreme power of the Soviet State, an organ of the
dictatorship of the proletariat. No bourgeois, no noble, no aristocrat, no priest could vote – only working people. Officially, the Congress of Soviets created laws and elected the
Council of People's Commissars, which was the government.
In the interim its functions were performed by designated executive bodies, see
Supreme Soviet.
Under
Joseph Stalin's leadership, the Congress of Soviets effectively only
rubber-stamped the decisions of the
CPSU and served as a
propaganda tribune. The
1936 Soviet Constitution eliminated the Congress of Soviets, making the
Supreme Soviet the USSR's governing During this time, the Central Committee of the Communist Party had complete control.
Congress of Soviets, 1989–1991
The Congress of Soviets was recreated as part of
Gorbachev's reforms, via a 1988 amendment to the
1977 Soviet Constitution. The official name of the re-created Congress was the 'Congress of People's Deputies'. The Congress consisted of 2,250 deputies elected in three different ways:
★ 750 deputies were elected according to the system used in
Soviet of the Union elections in the 1936–1989 period.
★ 750 deputies were elected according to the system used in
Soviet of Nationalities elections in the 1936–1989 period.
★ 750 deputies representing "public organizations", such as the
Communist Party,
Komsomol and the
labor unions. The election law would allocate a fixed number of seats to organizations – for example, 100 to the
Communist Party and 100 to
Komsomol – and the organizations would appoint deputies to those seats.
The congress would gather twice a year and would then elect the
Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union consisting of a smaller number of deputies. The Supreme Soviet would then serve as a permanent legislature, deciding all but the most important issues, such as amendments to the Soviet constitution, which were left to the full Congress only.
Only one Congress was elected, in March 1989. The fundamental difference from previous elections in Soviet Union was that elections were actually competitive. Instead of one Communist Party-approved candidate for each seat, multiple candidates were allowed. A variety of different political positions, from Communist to pro-Western, were represented in the Congress, and lively debates took place with different viewpoints expressed. The Congress existed until the end of Soviet Union in 1991.
Congress of Soviets of the Russian SFSR
During the same period, a similar two-level structure, with a Congress of Soviets meeting twice a year and Supreme Soviet meeting all year, was established in the
Russian SFSR. It met at the
Russian White House. One Congress was elected, in March 1990. It existed until it was dissolved by President
Boris Yeltsin during the
Russian constitutional crisis of 1993. No Congress structure was established in the other republics of the Soviet Union during this period.
See also
★
Ukrainian Bolsheviks convened an All-Ukrainian Congress of Soviets of Workers', Soldiers' and Peasants' Deputies in Kiev, on
December 17,
1917, and in Kharkiv on
December 25,
1917. See
Ukraine after the Russian Revolution.
★
1918 Soviet Constitution
★
1924 Soviet Constitution
★
1936 Soviet Constitution
★
1977 Soviet Constitution