A 'soviet' (,
IPA: , "council"
[1]) originally was a
workers' local council in late
Imperial Russia. According to the official historiography of the
Soviet Union, the first Soviet (in this sense) was organized during the
1905 Russian Revolution in
Ivanovo (Ivanovo region) in May 1905. However in his memoirs
Volin claims that he witnessed the creation of the
St Petersburg Soviet in
Saint Petersburg in January 1905. The councils were later adopted by the
Bolsheviks, as the basic organizing unit of society.
Originally the soviets were a grassroots effort to practice
direct democracy. Russian Marxists made them a medium for organizing against the state, and between the
February and
October Revolutions, the
Petrograd Soviet was a powerful force. The slogan Вся власть советам ("All power to the soviets" or "All power to the workers' councils") was popular in opposing the
Provisional Government led by
Kerensky.
Shortly after the
October Revolution, the soviets, as organized into a larger body, formed the new basis for governing the post-revolutionary society through
soviet democracy. All parties were united in anticipation of a
Constituent Assembly. However, a year of debate and discussion within the Bolshevik party resulted in a significant change in party policy. The Bolsheviks adopted the position that the Constituent Assembly was a bourgeois-democratic institution, and counterposed to it the direct mode of workers' democracy represented by the Soviets. Thus, the
post-October Constituent Assembly was dissolved with the mass support of the urban working class, leading to the
Russian Civil War. The Bolsheviks and the Left Socialist Revolutionaries together held a majority of seats in the Congress of Soviets and formed a coalition government, which lasted until the Left Socialist Revolutionaries left the coalition in the summer 1918. Over time, the independence of the soviets was supplanted by the top-down authority of the increasingly bureacratized ruling regime, based on the strict hierarchy of power within the
CPSU. Despite this, the claim was still made after the rise of
Stalinism that Bolshevik power rested on the collective will of these soviets.
The term also came to be used outside the
Soviet Union by some
Marxist-Leninist movements, for example, the
Communist Party of China's efforts in the "
Chinese Soviet Republic" immediately prior to the
Long March.
Based on the view of the state implicit in the Bolshevik use of the term, the word "soviet" naturally extended, or consciously was extended, to mean in effect any body formed by a group of soviets to delegate, up a hierarchy of soviets, the authority to express and effect their will. In this sense, post-Kerensky government bodies at local and
republic levels (but in the
Russian federated republic, local,
republic, and federated republic levels) were called "soviets", and at the top of the hierarchy, the
Congress of Soviets was the nominal core of the Union government of the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, officially formed in December
1922.
Footnotes
1. (''rada''); ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Further reading
★ Edward Acton ''Rethinking the Russian Revolution'' 1990 Oxford University Press ISBN 0713165308
★
Tony Cliff ''
Lenin: All Power to the Soviets'' 1976 Pluto Press
★
Voline ''The Unknown Revolution'' Black Rose Books
★ Rex A. Wade ''The Russian Revolution, 1917'' 2005 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521841550
See also
★
Congress of Soviets
★
Workers' council
★
Soviet democracy
★
Council communism
★
Participatory democracy
★
Workers' control
★
Rada (Ukrainian equivalent)