Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Mensheviks
View on Wikipedia
The Mensheviks[a] (lit. 'the Minority') were a faction of the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) which split with Vladimir Lenin's Bolshevik faction at the Second Party Congress in 1903. Mensheviks held more moderate and reformist views as compared to the Bolsheviks, and were led by figures including Julius Martov and Pavel Axelrod.
Key Information
The initial point of disagreement was the Mensheviks' support for a broad party membership, as opposed to Lenin's support for a smaller party of professional revolutionaries. The Bolsheviks gained a majority on the Central Committee in 1903, although the power of the two factions fluctuated in the following years. Mensheviks were associated with Georgi Plekhanov's position that a bourgeois-democratic revolution and period of capitalism would need to occur before the conditions for a socialist revolution emerged. Some Mensheviks, notably Alexander Potresov, called for the party to suspend illegal revolutionary work to focus more on trade union work (legal since 1906) and elections to the Duma; this was condemned by Lenin.
In 1912, the RSDLP formally split into Bolshevik and Menshevik parties. The Mensheviks themselves split over World War I into a defencist faction led by Nikolay Chkheidze and an internationalist faction led by Martov. After the 1917 February Revolution, some Mensheviks led by Irakli Tsereteli joined the Provisional Government's coalition, whereas Martov unsuccessfully called for an all-socialist coalition. Following the October Revolution, the Mensheviks denounced it as a Bolshevik coup d'état, but supported the struggle against the Whites in the Russian Civil War. In the 1917 Constituent Assembly election, the Mensheviks received only 3 percent of the vote compared to the Bolsheviks' 23 percent, though were dominant in the Democratic Republic of Georgia from 1918 to 1921. The Menshevik party was banned after the Kronstadt rebellion in 1921; some of its emigres, such as Fyodor Dan and Raphael Abramovitch, became influential.
History of the split
[edit]| Part of a series on |
| Marxism |
|---|
| Outline |
| Part of a series on |
| Communism |
|---|
|
|
| Part of a series on |
| Socialism |
|---|
1903–1906
[edit]At the 2nd Congress of the RSDLP in August 1903, Julius Martov and Vladimir Lenin disagreed, firstly, with regard to which persons should be in the editorial committee of Iskra, the Party newspaper; secondly, in regards to the definition of a "party member" in the future Party statute:[1]
- Lenin's formulation required the party member to be a member of one of the Party's organizations
- Martov's only stated that he should work under the guidance of a Party organization.
Although the difference in definitions was small, with Lenin's being more exclusive, it was indicative of what became an essential difference between the philosophies of the two emerging factions: Lenin argued for a small party of professional revolutionaries with a large fringe of non-party sympathizers and supporters, whereas Martov believed it was better to have a large party of activists with broad representation.
Martov's proposal was accepted by the majority of the delegates (28 votes to 23).[1] However, after seven delegates stormed out of the Congress—five of whom were representatives of the Jewish Bund who left in protest about their own federalist proposal being defeated[1]—Lenin's supporters won a slight majority, which was reflected in the composition of the Central Committee and the other central party organs elected at the Congress. This was also the reason behind the naming of the factions. It was later hypothesized that Lenin had purposely offended some of the delegates in order to have them leave the meeting in protest, giving him a majority. However, Bolsheviks and Mensheviks were united in voting against the Bundist proposal, which lost 41 to 5.[2] Despite the outcome of the Congress, the following years saw the Mensheviks gathering considerable support among regular social democrats and effectively building up a parallel party organization.
1906–1916
[edit]At the 4th Congress of the RSDLP in 1906, a reunification was formally achieved.[3] In contrast to the 2nd Congress, the Mensheviks were in the majority from start to finish, yet Martov's definition of a party member, which had prevailed at the 1st Congress, was replaced by Lenin's. On the other hand, numerous disagreements about alliances and strategy emerged. The two factions kept their separate structures and continued to operate separately.
As before, both factions believed that Russia was not developed enough to make socialism possible and that therefore the revolution which they planned, aiming to overthrow the Tsarist regime, would be a bourgeois-democratic revolution. Both believed that the working class had to contribute to this revolution. However, after 1905 the Mensheviks were more inclined to work with the liberal bourgeois democratic parties such as the Constitutional Democrats because these would be the "natural" leaders of a bourgeois revolution. In contrast, the Bolsheviks believed that the Constitutional Democrats were not capable of sufficiently radical struggle and tended to advocate alliances with peasant representatives and other radical socialist parties such as the Socialist Revolutionaries. In the event of a revolution, this was meant to lead to a dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry, which would carry the bourgeois revolution to the end. The Mensheviks came to argue for predominantly legal methods and trade union work, while the Bolsheviks favoured armed violence.
Some Mensheviks left the party after the defeat of 1905 and joined legal opposition organisations. After a while, Lenin's patience wore out with their compromising and, in 1908, he called these Mensheviks "liquidationists".
1912–1914
[edit]In 1912, the RSDLP had its final split, with the Bolsheviks constituting the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (Bolsheviks), and the Mensheviks the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (Mensheviks). The Menshevik faction split further in 1917 at the middle of World War I. Most Mensheviks opposed the war, but a vocal minority supported it in terms of "national defense".
1917 revolutions
[edit]After the overthrow of the Romanov dynasty by the February Revolution in 1917, the Menshevik leadership led by Irakli Tsereteli demanded that the government pursue a "fair peace without annexations", but in the meantime supported the war effort under the slogan of "defense of the revolution". Along with the other major Russian socialist party, the Socialist Revolutionaries (also known as эсеры, esery), the Mensheviks led the network of soviets, notably the Petrograd Soviet in the capital, throughout most of 1917.
With the monarchy gone, many social democrats viewed previous tactical differences between the Mensheviks and the Bolsheviks as a thing of the past and a number of local party organizations were merged. When leading party members Lev Kamenev, Leon Trotsky, Joseph Stalin, and Matvei Muranov returned to Petrograd from exile in early March 1917 and assumed the leadership of the Bolshevik Party (with Trotsky crossing the aisle from Menshevik to Bolshevik), they began exploring the idea of a complete re-unification of Bolsheviks and Mensheviks at the national level, which Menshevik leaders were willing to consider. However, Lenin and his deputy Grigory Zinoviev returned to Russia from exile in Switzerland on 3 April and re-asserted control of the Bolshevik Party by late April 1917, taking it in a more radical direction. They called for an immediate revolution and transfer of all power to the soviets, which made any re-unification impossible.
In March–April 1917, the Menshevik leadership conditionally supported the newly formed liberal Russian Provisional Government. After the collapse of the first Provisional Government on 2 May over the issue of annexations, Tsereteli convinced the Mensheviks to strengthen the government for the sake of "saving the revolution" and enter a socialist-liberal coalition with Socialist Revolutionaries and liberal Constitutional Democrats, which they did on 17 May. With Martov's return from European exile in early May, the left-wing of the party challenged the party's majority led by Tsereteli at the first post-revolutionary party conference on 9 May, but the right wing prevailed 44–11. From then on, the Mensheviks had at least one representative in the Provisional Government until it was overthrown by the Bolsheviks during the October Revolution.
With Mensheviks and Bolsheviks diverging, Mensheviks and non-factional social democrats returning from exile in Europe and United States in spring-summer of 1917 were forced to take sides. Some re-joined the Mensheviks. Others, like Alexandra Kollontai, joined the Bolsheviks. A significant number, including Leon Trotsky and Adolf Joffe, joined the non-factional Petrograd-based anti-war group called Mezhraiontsy, which merged with the Bolsheviks in August 1917. A small yet influential group of social democrats associated with Maxim Gorky's newspaper Novaya Zhizn (New Life) refused to join either party.
After the 1917 Revolution
[edit]
The 1917 split in the party crippled the Mensheviks' popularity and they received 3.2% of the vote during the Russian Constituent Assembly election in November 1917 compared to the Bolsheviks' 23% and the Socialist Revolutionaries' 37%. The Mensheviks got just 3.3% of the national vote, but in the Transcaucasus they got 30.2%. 41.7% of their support came from the Transcaucasus and in Georgia, about 75% voted for them.[4] The right-wing of the Menshevik Party supported actions against the Bolsheviks while the left-wing, the majority of the Mensheviks at that point, supported the left in the ensuing Russian Civil War. However, Martov's leftist Menshevik faction refused to break with the right-wing of the party, resulting in their press being sometimes banned and only intermittently available.
The Mensheviks opposed war communism and in 1919 suggested an alternative programme.[5] During World War I, some anti-war Mensheviks had formed a group called Menshevik-Internationalists. They were active around the newspaper Novaya Zhizn and took part in the Mezhraiontsy formation. After July 1917 events in Russia, they broke with the Menshevik majority that supported continued war with Germany. The Mensheviks-Internationalists became the hub of the Russian Social Democratic Workers' Party (of Internationalists). Starting in 1920, right-wing Mensheviks-Internationalists emigrated, some of them pursuing anti-Bolshevik activities.[6]
The Democratic Republic of Georgia was a stronghold of the Mensheviks. In parliamentary elections held on 14 February 1919, they won 81.5% of the votes and the Menshevik leader Noe Zhordania became Prime Minister. Prominent members of the Georgian Menshevik Party included Noe Ramishvili, Evgeni Gegechkori, Akaki Chkhenkeli, Nikolay Chkheidze and Alexandre Lomtatidze. After the occupation of Georgia by the Bolsheviks in 1921, many Georgian Mensheviks, led by Zhordania, fled to France, where they set up the Government of the Democratic Republic of Georgia in Exile in Leuville-sur-Orge. In 1930, Ramishvili was assassinated by a Soviet spy in Paris.
Menshevism was finally made illegal after the Kronstadt uprising of 1921. A number of prominent Mensheviks emigrated thereafter. Martov went to Germany, where he established the paper Socialist Messenger. He died in 1923. In 1931, the Menshevik Trial was conducted by Stalin, an early part of the Great Purge. The Messenger moved with the Menshevik center from Berlin to Paris in 1933 and then in 1939 to New York City, where it was published until 1965.[7]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Russian: меньшевики, romanized: men'sheviki; from меньшинство, men'shinstvo, 'minority'
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Lenin, V.I (1903). Second Congress of the League of Russian Revolutionary Social-Democracy Abroad. Moscow. pp. 26–31, 92–103.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Johnpoll, Bernard K. 1967. The Politics of Futility; The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland, 1917–1943. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. pp. 30–31.
- ^ "Lenin: 1906/ucong: Statement in Support of Muratov's (Morozov's) Amendment Concerning a Parliamentary Social-Democratic Group". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
- ^ Radkey, Oliver Henry. 1950. The Election to the Russian Constituent Assembly of 1917. Harvard University Press.
- ^ O'Brien, James. 11 August 2012. "What is to be done: The Menshevik Programme July 1919." Spirit of Contradiction. Retrieved on 26 July 2013.
- ^ Liebich, Andre (1 January 1995). "Mensheviks Wage the Cold War". Journal of Contemporary History. 30 (2): 247–264. doi:10.1177/002200949503000203. JSTOR 261050. S2CID 159481346.
- ^ Kowalski, Werner. 1985. Geschichte der sozialistischen arbeiter-internationale: 1923–1940. Berlin: Dtv Verlagsgesellschaft. pp. 336–37.
Further reading
[edit]- Ascher, Abraham, ed. 1976. The Mensheviks in the Russian Revolution. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
- Basil, John D. 1983. The Mensheviks in the Revolution of 1917. Columbus, OH: Slavica Publishers.
- Bourguina, A. M. 1968. Russian Social Democracy: The Menshevik Movement: A Bibliography. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace.
- Broido, Vera. 1987. Lenin and the Mensheviks: The Persecution of Socialists Under Bolshevism. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
- Brovkin, Vladimir. 1983. "The Mensheviks' Political Comeback: The Elections to the Provincial City Soviets in Spring 1918." Russian Review 42(1):1–50. JSTOR 129453.
- —— 1987. The Mensheviks After October: Socialist Opposition and the Rise of the Bolshevik Dictatorship. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
- —— 1991. Dear Comrades: Menshevik Reports on the Bolshevik Revolution and the Civil War. Hoover Press.
- Galili, Ziva. 1989. The Menshevik Leaders in the Russian Revolution: Social Realities and Political Strategies. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
- Haimson, Leopold H., ed. 1974. The Mensheviks : From the Revolution of 1917 to the Second World War. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- —— 1988. The Making of Three Russian Revolutionaries: Voices from the Menshevik Past. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Liebich, André. 1997. From the Other Shore: Russian Social Democracy after 1921. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
External links
[edit]- marxists.org:glossary:/m/e "Menshevik Party", "Menshevik Internationalists". Glossary of Organisations: Me.
- "The Bolshevik-Menshevik Split." History Today.
- Members of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers' Party (Mensheviks) at the unification Socialist congress, 1923
Mensheviks
View on GrokipediaIdeology and Principles
Core Doctrinal Positions
The Mensheviks espoused an orthodox Marxist framework, rooted in the historical materialism of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, which posited that societal transformation occurs through predetermined economic stages driven by class contradictions. They contended that Russia, characterized by agrarian feudalism and nascent capitalism as of the early 1900s, lacked the mature proletariat and industrialized base necessary for direct socialist revolution, necessitating instead a preliminary bourgeois-democratic phase to dismantle absolutism, redistribute land, and foster capitalist development under democratic institutions.[2][10] Central to their doctrine was adherence to the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party's (RSDLP) dual program: a minimum agenda of democratic reforms—universal suffrage, freedom of assembly, and abolition of censorship—to be pursued via alliances between workers, peasants, and progressive bourgeoisie, followed by a maximum socialist program realizable only post-capitalist maturation.[11] This sequentialism, influenced by Georgi Plekhanov, rejected skipping stages, viewing premature proletarian dictatorship as adventurism likely to provoke counterrevolution without sustainable proletarian hegemony.[12] Tactically, Mensheviks prioritized mass mobilization through trade unions, cooperatives, and legal parliamentary struggle over clandestine vanguardism, believing broad worker education and organization within a democratic framework would organically build revolutionary capacity.[6] They upheld internationalist solidarity via the Second International, critiquing nationalist deviations while endorsing defensive wars against tsarism if aligned with proletarian interests, as debated in pre-1914 congresses.[13] This emphasis on gradualism and inclusivity extended to party composition, favoring open membership for conscious workers and sympathizers to cultivate a mass base, in opposition to restrictive professional revolutionary models.[1]Organizational Views on Party Structure
The Menshevik faction's organizational principles emerged prominently during the Second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) in July–August 1903, where debates over party membership crystallized their preference for a broad, inclusive structure. Julius Martov, the leading Menshevik figure, proposed defining a party member as "one who accepts its programme, supports the Party financially and renders it regular personal assistance under the direction of one of its organisations."[14] This formulation allowed for wider participation by sympathizers and workers providing support without mandatory direct involvement in formal party bodies, aiming to foster a mass organization rooted in the working class rather than a narrow elite. In contrast to Vladimir Lenin's stricter criterion—requiring personal participation in a party organization—Martov's approach sought to avoid excessive centralization that could alienate potential adherents in Russia's repressive tsarist environment.[14] [2] Mensheviks envisioned the party as a decentralized, democratic entity modeled on Western European social democratic parties like the German SPD, emphasizing open membership for all workers who endorsed the Marxist program and contributed regularly, whether through agitation, financial aid, or auxiliary roles.[2] [15] They advocated internal procedures such as elected congresses for policy-making, broad committees accountable to the base, and integration with legal institutions like trade unions and cooperatives to expand influence organically among the proletariat.[2] This structure prioritized building proletarian consciousness through mass education and struggle over conspiratorial tactics, reflecting a belief that socialism required widespread class maturity rather than directives from a professional revolutionary cadre.[16] Critiquing Bolshevik centralism as fostering bureaucratic substitution—where leaders supplanted the class's independent action—Mensheviks like Martov and Pavel Axelrod argued for organizational flexibility to accommodate Russia's semi-feudal conditions, including tolerance for factional debate within a united party framework until the 1912 formal split.[16] [1] They maintained that rigid vanguardism risked isolating the party from the masses, potentially undermining long-term revolutionary potential by prioritizing discipline over democratic vitality.[2] This stance persisted into the 1905 Revolution, where Mensheviks pushed for party unification under democratic rules to channel worker unrest effectively.[1]Strategic Approach to Revolution
The Mensheviks adhered to a two-stage theory of revolution derived from classical Marxist analysis of Russia's socioeconomic conditions, arguing that the country's agrarian dominance, limited industrial proletariat, and incomplete capitalist development necessitated a prior bourgeois-democratic phase to overthrow tsarist autocracy, establish parliamentary democracy, and foster economic modernization before attempting socialist transformation.[17][2] This approach, championed by leaders like Georgy Plekhanov and Julius Martov, rejected skipping stages as utopian, insisting that premature proletarian dictatorship would collapse without bourgeois support and mature class forces.[17][18] Strategically, Mensheviks envisioned the working class leading the democratic revolution through alliances with liberal bourgeois parties and peasants, prioritizing the abolition of absolutism via mass mobilization rather than isolated vanguard action, while avoiding confiscation of land or industry that might alienate potential allies.[2][11] They critiqued Bolshevik tactics of immediate soviet power and armed seizure as adventurist, favoring instead the convocation of a constituent assembly to institutionalize reforms and prevent counterrevolutionary backlash.[6][19] Tactically, the faction emphasized gradualist methods grounded in legal agitation, including strikes, union organization, and participation in the State Duma elections from 1906 onward, to cultivate proletarian hegemony within a broader democratic front and build long-term socialist consciousness without risking isolation.[2][17] This orientation, evident in their 1905 Revolution involvement where they supported general strikes but opposed escalating to full insurrection without bourgeois commitment, reflected a commitment to empirical assessment of Russia's objective conditions over voluntarist leaps.[11][17]Formation and Early Development
The 1903 RSDLP Split
The Second Congress of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) opened on July 30, 1903, in Brussels, with proceedings shifting to London after Belgian authorities threatened intervention against the émigré gathering. Representing 26 organizations, the congress featured 43 delegates holding 51 voting mandates, reflecting the party's modest underground networks amid tsarist repression. Convened to formalize statutes and a minimum program following preparatory work by Iskra editors, the sessions spanned 37 meetings and exposed latent tensions over party organization, overriding initial unity on ideological fundamentals like proletarian revolution and democratic republic demands.[20][1] The core division crystallized during debate on Article 1 of the party rules, defining membership. Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, drafting the statutes, insisted on criteria ensuring commitment: acceptance of the program, financial contributions, and active participation in one of the party's organizations to forge a cadre of professional revolutionaries insulated from opportunist infiltration. Julius Martov countered with looser terms, permitting membership for those accepting the program, financing it, and providing "regular personal assistance under the direction (supervision) of one of its organizations," thereby accommodating sympathizers without mandatory organizational involvement. Lenin's version secured a narrow majority (28-23, including some abstentions shifting alignments), dubbing his supporters bol'sheviki (majority) and opponents men'sheviki (minority), though subsequent votes on Bund autonomy and central committee composition reversed numerical edges, with Georgy Plekhanov initially backing Lenin before gravitating toward Menshevik positions.[14][21][22] Disputes escalated over electing the Iskra editorial board and party council, where Lenin proposed co-opting allies to maintain revolutionary rigor against "economism"—the tendency to limit socialism to trade unionism—prompting Menshevik walkouts and accusations of dictatorial centralism. Bolsheviks envisioned a tightly knit vanguard to direct proletarian struggle, prioritizing discipline to seize state power, while Mensheviks championed broader democracy to cultivate mass support and alliances with liberal bourgeoisie for staged bourgeois-democratic reforms preceding socialism. The congress adjourned August 23 without dissolving the party, but Bolsheviks claimed interim control of central organs, formalizing factional lines by late 1903.[1][21] By November 16, 1903, the rupture hardened as Lenin resigned from the Iskra board and party council amid refusals to reinstate ousted Menshevik editors, solidifying the split in émigré circles like the League of Russian Revolutionary Social Democrats Abroad. This organizational fracture, rooted in Lenin's pre-congress pamphlet What Is to Be Done? (1902) advocating clandestine professionalism, versus Menshevik preferences for inclusivity, persisted despite reconciliation attempts, foreshadowing irreconcilable paths in revolutionary strategy.[1][23]Involvement in the 1905 Revolution
The Mensheviks actively mobilized workers in response to the Bloody Sunday massacre on January 22, 1905 (January 9 Old Style), which sparked initial strikes at the Putilov Works and spread nationwide, interpreting the unrest as the onset of a bourgeois-democratic revolution requiring proletarian support for liberal reforms rather than direct seizure of power.[24] They organized agitation committees and participated in early strike actions, emphasizing education and organization to raise class consciousness without advocating expropriation of land or factories, which they viewed as incompatible with Russia's developmental stage.[25] During the October general strike, which paralyzed St. Petersburg and led to the formation of the St. Petersburg Soviet of Workers' Deputies on October 13, 1905 (October 1 Old Style), Mensheviks took a leading initiative in its establishment, attracting delegates from factories and districts through their networks in the labor movement.[6] The soviet's first chairman was the Menshevik S. Zborovsky, replaced shortly by G. S. Khrustalev-Nosar, an independent radical lawyer who later joined the Mensheviks; under their influence, the body coordinated strike demands for an eight-hour day, freedom of assembly, and amnesty for political prisoners while rejecting Bolshevik proposals for arming workers en masse or declaring a socialist republic.[26] [27] Menshevik tactics prioritized tactical alliances with bourgeois liberals to dismantle tsarism, as articulated in their platforms criticizing "adventurism" and insisting the proletariat act as an "opposition bloc" within a democratic framework rather than lead a premature proletarian dictatorship, a position Lenin condemned as capitulation to liberalism.[11] [25] This approach fostered cooperation with Socialist Revolutionaries in the soviet's daily operations, including publication of the Izvestiya newspaper, but sowed divisions with Bolsheviks over responses to government repression, such as the execution of strike leaders.[28] In the Moscow uprising of December 1905, Mensheviks provided limited support, focusing on defensive barricades and worker self-defense rather than offensive seizure of key points, reflecting their broader aversion to isolated insurrections without broader bourgeois backing; the failure of the uprising, suppressed by January 1906 with over 1,000 deaths, underscored their strategic emphasis on sustained agitation over sporadic violence.[29] Post-revolution, with the October Manifesto conceding a consultative Duma on October 30, 1905, Mensheviks shifted toward electoral participation, boycotting the initial polls but later engaging to expose regime insincerity, thereby building legal trade unions and party infrastructure amid renewed arrests.[15]Interwar Period (1906-1914)
Following the defeat of the 1905 Revolution, the Mensheviks shifted emphasis toward legal forms of political activity amid intensified tsarist repression under Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin, who implemented agrarian reforms and field courts-martial that executed over 1,100 individuals between 1906 and 1909.[30] This period, known as the Stolypin reaction (1907–1912), saw Menshevik leaders like Julius Martov advocate maintaining an underground party structure alongside legal work in trade unions, cooperatives, and elected bodies, contrasting with Bolshevik insistence on conspiratorial methods.[31] Mensheviks prioritized building worker organizations legally, gaining influence in insurance funds and sickness committees, where they viewed these as platforms for proletarian education and mobilization without immediate revolutionary confrontation.[32] In the Second State Duma (February–June 1907), Mensheviks dominated the Social Democratic (SD) faction with 47 deputies compared to 18 Bolsheviks among the 65 total SD seats, using the assembly to critique tsarist policies and push for labor rights, though they rejected blocs with liberals like the Cadets to avoid diluting socialist demands.[33] The Duma's dissolution on June 3, 1907, after accusations of SD involvement in a supposed military plot, led to mass arrests, including most Menshevik deputies, prompting a tactical pivot to electoral participation despite repression.[30] In the Third Duma (1907–1912), the SD faction shrank to 19 members (initially more Menshevik-leaning), where they focused on exposing Stolypin's land reforms as favoring kulaks over peasants, while internal factional splits saw Bolsheviks walk out in 1912, isolating Menshevik voices.[34] A key internal Menshevik debate emerged around "liquidationism" from 1908, with figures like Alexander Potresov arguing for dissolving illegal party structures in favor of purely legal operations via newspapers and unions, reflecting adaptation to the repressive environment but criticized by Martov as abandoning revolutionary discipline. Martov, editing émigré publications, rallied anti-liquidationists at conferences like the 1910 Copenhagen gathering, emphasizing hybrid legal-illegal tactics to preserve Marxist orthodoxy amid declining membership, estimated at under 10,000 by 1910 due to arrests and emigration.[31] Legal Menshevik organs like Luch (The Ray), launched in 1912, reached 40,000 subscribers by 1913, amplifying calls for workers' rights during rising strikes, yet faced censorship and Stolypin's hangings.[35] By the Fourth Duma (1912–1917), Mensheviks held 7 of 14 SD seats, collaborating with Bolsheviks on workers' legislation like the 1912 insurance act but clashing over strategy, as Mensheviks sought broader alliances against autocracy.[2] Prewar labor unrest, including the 1912 Lena Goldfields massacre sparking 700,000 strikers, bolstered Menshevik influence in urban centers like St. Petersburg, though tsarist surveillance fragmented the party, with total SD arrests exceeding 10,000 annually by 1913.[36] This era solidified Menshevik commitment to gradualist socialism through parliamentary and union channels, prioritizing mass organization over Bolshevik adventurism, amid ongoing factional erosion that culminated in the RSDLP's formal Bolshevik-Menshevik schism at the 1912 Prague Conference.[35]Positions During World War I
Initial Patriotic Stance
At the outbreak of World War I on August 1, 1914, when Germany declared war on Russia following Russian mobilization in support of Serbia, a significant faction of Mensheviks adopted a patriotic defensist position, advocating defense of the Russian fatherland against foreign invasion while distancing themselves from tsarist imperialism. This stance contrasted with the Bolsheviks' outright opposition to the war as imperialist on both sides, as Menshevik defensists viewed German aggression—framed as an attempt to subjugate Russia—as a direct threat to socialist progress, prioritizing national defense over immediate revolutionary defeatism.[37] [38] Prominent Menshevik theoretician Georgi Plekhanov exemplified this initial patriotic orientation, publicly endorsing the Entente powers and arguing that a German victory would impose militarism incompatible with Marxism; he authored pamphlets such as those decrying Germany's aim to "turn Russia into its vassal" and actively recruited approximately 9,000 Russian émigrés in Europe to volunteer for the Russian army. [37] Similarly, Menshevik Duma deputies, led by Nikolai Chkheidze, issued statements emphasizing the duty to defend the country—such as their July 26, 1914, declaration opposing unity with the tsarist government but affirming resistance to invasion—while voting against war credits on August 8 to signal anti-autocratic intent without sabotaging military efforts. [39] Figures like Alexander Potresov reinforced this by promoting "active civil patriotism" against tsarism, refusing credits but not the war itself, reflecting the faction's emphasis on conditional national solidarity amid widespread Russian patriotic fervor. This defensist posture, shared by liquidators and early Menshevik-Defensists, initially dominated Menshevik responses, fostering organizational efforts like the formation of patriotic groups among émigrés, though it soon precipitated internal divisions as internationalist voices, led by Yuliy Martov, gained traction by late 1914, criticizing the war's prolongation without annexations or indemnities. Unlike the Bolsheviks' centralized rejection under Lenin—which sought to transform the war into civil conflict—the Mensheviks' decentralized structure allowed this patriotic phase to prioritize peace negotiations over immediate defeat, aligning with broader Second International trends of conditional support for "defensive" wars. [12]Shift Toward Internationalism
As the First World War inflicted mounting casualties—exceeding 2 million Russian dead and wounded by the end of 1915—and exposed the conflict's imperialist underpinnings, a faction within the Menshevik Party pivoted from defensism to internationalism. Julius Martov, operating from exile, had rejected the war from its outbreak in August 1914, denouncing it as a clash between capitalist empires that demanded proletarian fraternization rather than national defense.[19] This position contrasted with defensists like Fyodor Dan and Irakli Tsereteli, who conditionally supported Russia's effort against German autocracy while hoping for post-war democratization.[40] The internationalist wing, coalescing around Martov and figures like Pavel Axelrod, emphasized Marxist principles of class solidarity over patriotic fervor, arguing that the war accelerated capitalism's contradictions but required socialist intervention to transform it into civil strife against ruling classes. They propagated these views through clandestine publications and international coordination, critiquing the pro-war majority within Russian social democracy for betraying internationalism. By 1915, this faction had formalized as the Menshevik-Internationalists, actively opposing war credits in the Duma and seeking to reclaim the party's anti-militarist heritage amid rising domestic unrest from food shortages and military defeats.[41][19] A pivotal manifestation of this shift occurred at the Zimmerwald Conference (September 5–8, 1915), where Menshevik internationalists aligned with anti-war delegates from multiple nations to endorse a manifesto decrying the war as a "crime against humanity" and urging workers to pressure governments for peace without conquests or indemnities. This collaboration, though limited by repression in Russia, amplified calls for a renewed Second International grounded in anti-war action, influencing Menshevik debates and foreshadowing their advocacy for negotiated peace during the 1917 crises.[42]Participation in the 1917 Revolutions
Response to February Revolution
The Mensheviks responded to the February Revolution, which culminated in Tsar Nicholas II's abdication on March 15, 1917 (Gregorian calendar), with broad support for the overthrow of autocracy, interpreting it as the realization of Russia's bourgeois-democratic phase rather than an immediate socialist transformation.[41] Party members in Petrograd, including those from the local Menshevik organization, actively participated in the revolution's final days, contributing to the formation of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies on March 12, 1917.[43] Mensheviks, alongside Socialist Revolutionaries, secured dominance in the Soviet's Executive Committee, issuing Order No. 1 on March 14 to democratize the military by subordinating it to the Soviet while endorsing the Provisional Government as a temporary authority to stabilize the country and prepare for a Constituent Assembly.[43] Key figures like Irakli Tsereteli, amnestied from Siberian exile, arrived in Petrograd on March 20, 1917, and assumed leadership roles in the Soviet, advocating reconciliation between the Provisional Government and the Soviets to consolidate democratic gains.[44] [45] Tsereteli and allies such as Fyodor Dan promoted a policy of conditional government support, urging workers and soldiers to exercise restraint and back liberal reforms, including civil liberties and land redistribution deferred to elected bodies, in line with Marxist staging theory that prioritized capitalism's development before proletarian rule.[41] On the war, the party upheld a defencist position, insisting on continuing Russia's involvement in World War I under parliamentary control to prevent counter-revolutionary invasion, contrasting with pacifist calls from some radicals.[41] This pragmatic alignment initially bolstered Menshevik influence, with party representation in the Soviet exceeding 200 delegates by late March, but it sowed seeds of division as rank-and-file activists grew frustrated with perceived concessions to bourgeoisie.[41] Julius Martov, the party's chief theorist, returned from Swiss exile on May 9, 1917, decrying the leadership's integrationist course as a betrayal of proletarian independence and pushing for Soviet supremacy without ministerial participation.[46] His internationalist critique highlighted emerging rifts between the right-wing "social-patriots" favoring coalition governance and the left-wing minority opposing wartime compromises, though the former retained control through summer.[41]Role in the Provisional Government and Soviets
Following the February Revolution of March 1917, Mensheviks rapidly assumed prominent positions within the newly formed Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, where they, alongside Socialist Revolutionaries, secured a majority on the Executive Committee established on March 15.[4] [47] This body issued Order No. 1 on March 1 (Old Style), mandating that military units elect committees and obey Provisional Government orders only if they did not contradict Soviet directives, thereby establishing dual power and prioritizing Soviet oversight of the armed forces.[48] Menshevik leaders, emphasizing a staged transition to socialism, viewed the Provisional Government as necessary for completing the bourgeois-democratic revolution, including land reform and convening a Constituent Assembly, while rejecting immediate proletarian seizure of power as premature under Russia's economic conditions.[4] Prominent Menshevik Irakli Tsereteli, returning from Siberian exile in March 1917, played a pivotal role in bridging the Soviet and government. At the First All-Russian Congress of Soviets in June 1917, he advocated conditional support for the Provisional Government, promoting "revolutionary defencism"—continuing participation in World War I defensively without annexations or indemnities, to defend the revolution against external threats.[49] [44] This stance contrasted sharply with Bolshevik demands for "all power to the Soviets" and immediate peace, which Mensheviks criticized as adventurist and likely to provoke counter-revolutionary forces or German invasion. By early May 1917, amid a governmental crisis over war aims, Mensheviks abandoned prior reservations against coalition with "bourgeois" elements, entering the cabinet; Tsereteli became Minister of Posts and Telegraphs, while other Mensheviks like Mikhail Tskhakaya and Aleksei Kolokolov took portfolios in food supply and labor.[4] [44] In regional soviets, Mensheviks initially held sway, urging workers and soldiers to exercise restraint and support government stability to avoid chaos, as evidenced by their dominance in the Petrograd Soviet's early executive.[48] [4] However, their defense of the war effort and incremental reforms eroded support amid mounting war weariness and economic dislocation; by July 1917, Bolshevik agitation had shifted soviet majorities toward radicalism, culminating in the failed July Days uprising where Mensheviks opposed the push for soviet power transfer.[4] This gradual loss reflected causal factors including peasant land hunger unaddressed by the government and urban inflation, which Mensheviks attributed to Bolshevik demagoguery rather than inherent governmental flaws, though their own commitment to legalism limited aggressive countermeasures.[50]Opposition to the October Coup
The Mensheviks vehemently opposed the Bolshevik-led coup of October 25–26, 1917 (Julian calendar), viewing it as an antidemocratic seizure that bypassed the Provisional Government and risked civil war without sufficient proletarian support. At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets in Petrograd, which convened amid the Bolshevik insurrection, Menshevik leader Julius Martov presented a resolution calling for an immediate delegation to negotiate an end to the armed clashes and the formation of a unified socialist government incorporating all Soviet parties, including Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs).[51][19] This proposal initially passed unanimously among the approximately 650–670 delegates, reflecting broad initial sentiment for coalition over unilateral Bolshevik action.[52] As Bolshevik forces, including Red Guards, completed the storming of the Winter Palace and announced the transfer of power to the Soviets under their control, most Menshevik and Right SR delegates staged a walkout from the Congress in protest, refusing to legitimize what they deemed a coup d'état.[52] Martov, representing the Menshevik-Internationalist faction, condemned the Bolshevik strategy as reliant on transient "peasants-in-uniform" rather than organized workers, arguing it would alienate the petit bourgeoisie and propel them toward counter-revolutionary forces while enabling minority rule through anti-parliamentary means.[19] The walkout, comprising around 100–150 delegates from moderate socialist groups, left the Bolsheviks and their Left SR allies with a de facto majority, allowing passage of decrees on peace, land, and power transfer.[52] In the immediate aftermath, remaining Menshevik voices in the Petrograd Soviet and Congress attempted to rally opposition by decrying the coup as premature and likely to invite bourgeois restoration or dictatorship, but their influence waned as Bolshevik forces consolidated control over key institutions.[19] Mensheviks like Nikolai Sukhanov later reflected that the exodus handed the Bolsheviks a "monopoly of the Soviet, of the masses, and of the Revolution," underscoring a tactical error that prioritized principled rejection over contesting power within the assembly.[52] This stance aligned with their broader commitment to evolutionary socialism via democratic assemblies, such as the impending Constituent Assembly, rather than violent insurrection amid ongoing World War I pressures.[19]Suppression Under Bolshevik Rule
Immediate Post-October Repression
Following the Bolshevik seizure of power on October 25, 1917 (Julian calendar), Menshevik leaders, including Julius Martov, immediately condemned the events as an antidemocratic coup that undermined the democratic gains of the February Revolution and the Provisional Government.[53] At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, convened that same night, a majority of Menshevik delegates, alongside Right Socialist Revolutionaries, staged a walkout in protest against the Bolshevik resolution to transfer power to the Soviet, viewing it as a violation of socialist unity and procedural norms.[52] This act of defiance marked the Mensheviks' initial exclusion from the new power structures, as Bolsheviks and their allies secured control of the Congress and subsequently the Central Executive Committee, sidelining Menshevik influence in key soviets. The Bolshevik response prioritized consolidating media and institutional control to neutralize opposition narratives. On October 27, 1917, the Council of People's Commissars issued the Decree on the Press, empowering authorities to shutter publications that "called for the overthrow of Soviet power" or disseminated "counter-revolutionary" content, directly targeting Menshevik outlets like Rabochaya Gazeta.[54] Between the October Revolution and March 1918, Bolshevik authorities closed 216 newspapers affiliated with political opponents, including Menshevik and Socialist Revolutionary presses, effectively silencing organized dissent and preventing Mensheviks from mobilizing public opinion against the regime.[55] On November 15, 1917, the Bolshevik Central Committee explicitly rejected any coalition or agreement with parties deemed counter-revolutionary, categorizing Mensheviks alongside Kadets and others, which laid the groundwork for their marginalization in soviet governance.[56] While mass arrests of Menshevik rank-and-file did not occur en masse in November or December 1917—unlike the initial detentions of Provisional Government officials—Moscow Bolshevik forces during the late October fighting arrested several Menshevik activists suspected of aiding anti-Bolshevik defenses.[57] Local soviets, now Bolshevik-dominated, began purging Menshevik representatives from committees, and party meetings faced harassment or dispersal, foreshadowing broader suppression. Menshevik attempts to convene alternative congresses or appeal to workers' organizations were met with Bolshevik-orchestrated counter-mobilization, reducing their operational capacity in urban centers like Petrograd and Moscow by year's end. This pattern of institutional exclusion and informational control, rather than overt violence, characterized the immediate phase, reflecting the Bolsheviks' strategy to portray Mensheviks as traitorous socialists obstructing proletarian dictatorship.[58]Mensheviks in the Civil War Era
During the Russian Civil War (1917–1922), Mensheviks in central Russia pursued opposition to Bolshevik rule primarily through attempts to regain influence in soviets via elections and alliances with Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs), but these efforts met with systematic repression. Until June 1918, the party focused on peaceful reconquest of local soviets, achieving temporary majorities in several industrial centers where workers rejected Bolshevik centralization; however, Bolshevik authorities dissolved these bodies and arrested Menshevik delegates, viewing them as threats to one-party control.[59] By mid-1918, escalating Bolshevik-Cheka arrests targeted Menshevik leaders such as Fyodor Dan and Julius Martov, who went into hiding or exile, while the party's press was shuttered and gatherings banned, effectively driving it underground.[17] Mensheviks ideologically rejected alignment with White forces, condemning generals like Kolchak and Denikin as monarchist restorers who endangered revolutionary gains, yet they conditionally supported soviet defenses against White advances while decrying Bolshevik dictatorship as a deviation from proletarian democracy.[16] Internal divisions emerged, with some factions tolerating Red Army mobilization against Whites in hopes of post-war liberalization, but the Bolsheviks exploited the war to consolidate power, expelling Mensheviks from remaining soviet forums and framing them as "agents of counter-revolution" despite their anti-White stance. By 1920, Martov had emigrated to Berlin, issuing critiques of Bolshevik authoritarianism from abroad, while domestic remnants faced famine, conscription evasion accusations, and further purges.[60] The party's most sustained activity occurred in the Transcaucasus, particularly Georgia, where Mensheviks established the Democratic Republic of Georgia on May 26, 1918, following the collapse of Russian imperial control. Under leaders like Noe Zhordania, the government implemented social-democratic reforms, including land redistribution favoring peasants, labor protections, and a multi-party parliamentary system with free elections and press—contrasting sharply with Bolshevik centralism.[61] In February 1919 parliamentary elections, Mensheviks secured over 80% of votes, reflecting broad support among workers and peasants for their gradualist socialism.[62] The republic maintained neutrality in the Civil War, fostering economic recovery through agrarian incentives and avoiding Red-White fronts, though it faced Bolshevik subversion and border skirmishes; European social democrats, including Karl Kautsky, praised it as a model peasant-based socialism.[62] This experiment ended with the Soviet invasion on February 12, 1921, orchestrated by Joseph Stalin and the Red Army under pretext of supporting a fabricated local uprising, leading to the republic's fall by March 18 and mass arrests of Menshevik officials.[61] Over 5,000 Georgian Mensheviks were imprisoned or executed in subsequent purges, dispersing survivors into European exile and effectively dismantling the party's regional base.[61] By war's end in 1922, Menshevik influence in Russia had evaporated under Bolshevik consolidation, with the party's remnants shifting to diaspora advocacy against Soviet totalitarianism.[17]Forced Emigration and Diaspora Activities
Following intensified Bolshevik repression, including arrests and the banning of the party after the Kronstadt rebellion in March 1921, prominent Menshevik leaders were compelled to emigrate to evade imprisonment and execution.[46] Julius Martov, the party's central figure, departed for Berlin in early 1920, with Soviet authorities facilitating his exit amid deteriorating conditions for opposition socialists.[53] Other key leaders, such as Fyodor Dan and Raphael Abramovich, followed suit by 1921, joining a scattering of Menshevik cadres who fled to Western Europe rather than aligning with White forces during the Civil War.[53] In exile, Mensheviks established intellectual and organizational hubs primarily in Berlin, where they founded Sotsialisticheskii vestnik (Socialist Herald) in 1921 as their flagship publication, continuing uninterrupted until 1964 despite relocations.[53] [63] Edited successively by Martov (until his death in 1923), Dan, and Abramovich, the journal provided detailed critiques of Bolshevik policies, drawing on smuggled reports from Soviet contacts to expose the regime's authoritarian turn and economic failures.[53] [64] Diaspora activities extended to advising European social-democratic parties on Soviet affairs, positioning Menshevik émigrés as early analysts of communism's totalitarian trajectory, though internal divisions emerged—Dan viewing Bolshevism as a distorted but historically progressive force, while Abramovich condemned it outright as counter-revolutionary.[53] By the mid-1920s, Menshevik clubs proliferated in Berlin and Vienna, fostering debates and publications that sustained the faction's reformist Marxist identity amid broader Russian émigré fragmentation.[53] The rise of Nazism prompted a shift to Paris and, post-1940, New York, where figures like Abramovich contributed to outlets such as the Jewish Daily Forward, amplifying anti-Stalinist advocacy within socialist and labor circles. These efforts influenced Western perceptions of the USSR during the interwar period and Cold War, emphasizing democratic socialism over vanguard dictatorship, though the émigrés' influence waned as surviving members aged and Soviet archives later validated many of their warnings on repression.[53]Key Figures and Internal Dynamics
Leadership Under Julius Martov
Julius Martov, born Yuly Osipovich Tsederbaum in 1873, emerged as the principal leader of the Menshevik faction following the 1903 split at the Second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) in London. There, Martov opposed Vladimir Lenin's proposal for a tightly centralized party of professional revolutionaries, instead advocating a broader organization open to wider activist participation, which initially prevailed by a vote of 28 to 23.[46] This stance defined Menshevik organizational principles under his guidance, emphasizing democratic inclusivity over Bolshevik vanguardism, though it contributed to ongoing factional tensions within Russian social democracy. As editor of the Menshevik Iskra from November 1903 to October 1905, Martov directed ideological attacks against Bolshevik centralism, collaborating with figures like Georgy Plekhanov and Leon Trotsky to articulate a vision of gradual socialist development through bourgeois democratic stages, trade unions, cooperatives, and soviets.[46] During the 1905 Revolution, Mensheviks under his influence pursued militant yet legal opposition to the tsarist regime, prioritizing mass mobilization over insurrection. World War I further solidified his internationalist position; exiled abroad, Martov rejected defensive war policies, co-editing anti-war publications like Our World with Trotsky and opposing both Menshevik defensists and Bolshevik defeatism. Martov's leadership intensified after his return to Russia in May 1917 following the February Revolution, where he criticized fellow Mensheviks for joining the Provisional Government, viewing it as premature and inconsistent with Marxist stagism.[46] Heading the Menshevik-Internationalists, a left-leaning faction, he prioritized anti-war agitation and worker organization. On October 25, 1917 (Julian calendar), at the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, Martov proposed a united democratic socialist government excluding right-wing socialists but inclusive of Bolsheviks; though initially passed, Menshevik and Socialist Revolutionary delegates walked out in protest against the Bolshevik seizure of power, only to return briefly before facing marginalization.[19] Post-October, Martov positioned the Mensheviks as a "loyal opposition," supporting the Soviet state against White forces in the Civil War while denouncing Bolshevik suppression of political pluralism, including arrests of liberals and socialists.[46] In a 1917 letter to Pavel Axelrod, he argued that "conscience forbids us Marxists to… stand by the proletariat even when it is wrong," critiquing Bolshevik reliance on semi-proletarian "peasant-in-uniform" elements over mature working-class democracy.[19] His 1919 pamphlet World Bolshevism analyzed the revolution's social dynamics, warning of authoritarian drift. Expelled from the Central Executive Committee in June 1918 and forced into exile by 1920, Martov continued diaspora advocacy until his death in Germany in 1923, maintaining Menshevik commitment to parliamentary socialism amid Bolshevik consolidation.[19]Prominent Thinkers and Factions
Julius Martov served as the central leader and chief ideologue of the Mensheviks after the 1903 schism in the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, promoting a broader, more inclusive party structure open to workers and intellectuals in contrast to Bolshevik vanguardism.[65] Alongside Pavel Axelrod, a veteran organizer who co-edited early party publications and stressed gradualist tactics through legal channels, Martov coordinated émigré activities and opposed revolutionary adventurism.[66] Fyodor Dan, another key editor of Menshevik organs like Sotsialisticheskii Vestnik, contributed to theoretical debates on workers' control and party discipline, maintaining influence into the post-1917 diaspora.[67] Georgy Plekhanov, dubbed the father of Russian Marxism for his pioneering translations and expositions of Marx and Engels, initially aligned with Menshevik gradualism but shifted rightward by 1914, endorsing defensive participation in World War I against German imperialism, which isolated him from the party's anti-war majority.[68] Menshevik internal factions crystallized around tactical disputes, beginning with the liquidators—a post-1905 grouping led by figures like Potresov—who advocated dissolving underground structures in favor of open trade unions and Duma participation amid tsarist liberalization, viewing clandestine operations as obsolete.[69] This clashed with anti-liquidationist Mensheviks, who, like some Bolsheviks, prioritized revolutionary organization despite repression.[70] World War I deepened divisions: the Internationalists, under Martov, rejected the conflict as capitalist-driven, aligning with Zimmerwald Conference calls for proletarian solidarity and immediate peace without annexations or indemnities.[71] Opposing them were the Revolutionary Defensists, who supported continuing the war to defend the revolution until a general democratic settlement, influencing Menshevik entry into the Provisional Government coalitions in 1917.[72] These rifts persisted into the October Revolution, with Defensists decrying Bolshevik "usurpation" while Internationalists critiqued both sides' militarism, contributing to the faction's electoral decline from 3 million votes in July 1917 to marginal status by year's end.[73]Internal Debates and Splits
The Mensheviks faced profound internal divisions after the failed 1905 Revolution, centering on organizational tactics and the role of legal versus illegal activities. A prominent faction, the Liquidators—led by figures such as Nikolai Potresov and Pavel Axelrod—argued for abandoning the clandestine party structure in favor of building a legal workers' party through participation in the State Duma, trade unions, and legal socialist organizations, viewing the underground apparatus as obsolete amid partial liberalization under Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin.[74] Opposing them were the "party Mensheviks" or Menshevik Center, including Julius Martov, who insisted on preserving the illegal Social Democratic Party as the core of revolutionary organization to avoid dilution and co-optation by tsarist institutions; this conflict intensified from 1908 onward, leading to parallel Menshevik publications and conferences that effectively bifurcated the faction by 1912.[75] These debates exacerbated existing rifts, with some Mensheviks aligning temporarily with Bolsheviks against Liquidators at the 1912 Prague Conference, where Lenin expelled the liquidationist wing from the broader Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP), though Menshevik unity remained fractured.[76] The Liquidators, controlling much of the legal socialist press and Duma representation, represented a more opportunistic, reformist tendency, while Martov's group emphasized unwavering commitment to Marxist orthodoxy and proletarian hegemony, foreshadowing tactical divergences in revolutionary strategy.[77] World War I triggered the most consequential split within Menshevism, dividing the faction along attitudes toward the conflict. The majority, known as Menshevik Defensists and led by Irakli Tsereteli and Nikolai Chkheidze, endorsed "defensive war" against German aggression, supporting the Provisional Government's war effort conditional on no annexations and democratic reforms, a position that aligned with Plekhanov's patriotic socialism and gained traction among émigré and Duma-based Mensheviks.[72] In opposition, Martov and the Menshevik-Internationalists condemned the war as imperialist on both sides, advocating proletarian internationalism, anti-war agitation, and alignment with anti-war socialists at conferences like Zimmerwald in 1915; this minority wing, emphasizing class struggle over national defense, critiqued Defensists for betraying internationalism and enabling bourgeois militarism.[78] The war schism persisted into 1917, undermining Menshevik electoral performance—they garnered only 3.2% in the Constituent Assembly vote amid voter confusion over factional labels—and highlighting irreconcilable views on revolution's pace, with Internationalists pushing for soviet power against the Provisional Government while Defensists prioritized bourgeois-democratic stabilization.[16] These debates, rooted in differing assessments of Russia's bourgeois development and proletarian readiness, eroded organizational cohesion, as evidenced by competing party committees and the failure to reunify at the 1917 All-Russian Social Democratic Conference.[6]Legacy and Historiographical Debates
Short-Term Political Impact
The Mensheviks' immediate response to the Bolshevik-led October Revolution on October 25, 1917 (Julian calendar), was to denounce it as an antidemocratic coup that betrayed the broader socialist movement and invited counterrevolutionary forces. At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, convened the same day, Menshevik delegates protested the transfer of power to the Bolshevik-Menshevik minority and walked out, thereby relinquishing influence over the soviets to the Bolsheviks and their Left SR allies. This principled stand, while consistent with their advocacy for broad coalitions and parliamentary processes, accelerated their marginalization by alienating radical workers and soldiers who viewed the Bolsheviks as the authentic vanguard. In the November 1917 elections to the All-Russian Constituent Assembly—the first nationwide vote under universal suffrage—the Mensheviks garnered minimal support, reflecting their inability to compete with Bolshevik promises of "peace, land, and bread" amid wartime desperation. With the Assembly convening on January 5, 1918, Menshevik representatives aligned with the Socialist Revolutionary majority to affirm the Provisional Government's continuity and reject Bolshevik decrees, prompting the Soviet leadership to dissolve the body by force the next day. Menshevik leaders, including Julius Martov, publicly condemned the shutdown as the "Thermidor" of the revolution, framing it as evidence of Bolshevik authoritarianism and galvanizing transient alliances among non-Bolshevik socialists against the suppression of elected institutions.[79][80] By spring 1918, Menshevik efforts to sustain legal opposition through trade union activism and protests against policies like the Brest-Litovsk Treaty eroded under escalating Bolshevik countermeasures, including expulsions from local soviets and targeted arrests of party figures. These actions underscored the Mensheviks' short-term role as a vocal restraint on Bolshevik consolidation, highlighting the regime's rejection of multiparty socialism in favor of centralized control, yet their fragmented organization and waning proletarian base limited tangible disruptions to Soviet power structures.[81][82]Long-Term Critiques of Bolshevism
Menshevik theorists, foremost among them Julius Martov, contended that Bolshevism's insistence on a vanguard party dictatorship would inevitably devolve into minority rule over the proletariat, supplanting genuine soviet democracy with centralized coercion and bureaucratic control. In his 1919 analysis The Ideology of "Sovietism", Martov described the Bolshevik regime as a "minority dictatorship" that sidelined proletarian self-administration through party cells and committees, reflecting not the interests of the working class but those of declassed intellectuals and petty-bourgeois elements in Russia's backward conditions.[83] This critique extended to the suppression of political pluralism, including bans on opposition parties, free press, and trade union independence, which Martov argued contradicted Marxist principles of mass initiative and universal suffrage, fostering instead a Jacobin-style terror apparatus.[83][84] Long-term, Mensheviks predicted that this structure would breed political apathy, careerism, and a "thick layer of... new bureaucrats, and plain scoundrels," eroding any revolutionary gains and evolving into a self-perpetuating absolutism detached from workers' control. Martov's World Bolshevism (written circa 1920, published 2022 edition) foresaw the soviet system transforming into a tool for party dominance, independent of actual councils, with increased reliance on violence and economic vandalism—such as requisitions that destroyed productive forces—leading to cultural regression and inefficiency under "consumer communism" that prioritized immediate maximalist demands over sustainable production.[85] Right-wing Mensheviks like Mirov reinforced this in 1918, observing that the proclaimed "dictatorship of the proletariat" had become a "dictatorship over the proletariat," rendering workers more helpless than under capitalism through enforced helplessness and one-party monopoly.[16] Economically, Mensheviks warned against Bolshevik centralization, advocating instead partnerships between state, labor, and industrialists with partial denationalization to avert famine and stagnation; they critiqued War Communism's rejection of market incentives, such as higher food prices, as dooming agriculture and industry to collapse, a pattern repeated in later collectivization failures.[16] In exile publications like Sotsialisticheskii Vestnik, surviving Mensheviks such as Raphael Abramovich extended these analyses into the 1930s and beyond, decrying the regime's forced labor system and purges as logical outgrowths of Leninist intolerance for dissent, theorizing the USSR as a novel totalitarian formation that perverted socialism into state capitalism or bureaucratic despotism.[84] These prognostications, rooted in adherence to historical materialism over voluntarist leaps, highlighted Bolshevism's neglect of objective conditions—like Russia's peasant majority and industrial underdevelopment—as causal factors in its authoritarian trajectory, ultimately vindicated by the Soviet system's chronic inefficiencies, mass repressions, and dissolution in 1991.[85][16]Modern Reassessments and Controversies
In the post-Cold War era, Western historians have increasingly reassessed the Mensheviks as prescient critics of Bolshevik authoritarianism, crediting their advocacy for parliamentary socialism and gradual economic development as a viable alternative to the centralized command economy that led to Soviet famines and purges. This view gained traction following the 1991 dissolution of the USSR, which some scholars interpreted as empirical vindication of Menshevik warnings against "seizing power prematurely" in an agrarian society lacking proletarian maturity, as articulated by Julius Martov in 1917 debates. [86] [80] Access to Soviet archives after 1991 has enabled detailed examinations of Menshevik underground activities during the 1920s, revealing their organized resistance to Bolshevik consolidation, including secret cells that distributed critiques of War Communism's coercive grain requisitions, which exacerbated the 1921-1922 famine killing over 5 million. Historians like Andrea Graziosi argue this archival evidence underscores Menshevik foresight on the risks of one-party rule, contrasting with earlier émigré accounts that romanticized their exile passivity. [87] [88] Controversies persist among Marxist scholars, who contend Menshevik gradualism reflected bourgeois compromise rather than revolutionary rigor, likening their support for the Provisional Government in 1917 to Girondin moderation during the French Revolution, thereby enabling Bolshevik radicalism through inaction. Critics such as those in contemporary Trotskyist analyses fault Mensheviks for underestimating mass radicalization, citing their rejection of soviet power as a tactical error that alienated workers amid wartime inflation peaking at 300% annually by mid-1917. [6] [89] In Russian historiography since 1991, Mensheviks receive mixed treatment: liberal academics highlight their democratic ethos as a counter to Putin-era centralism, but state-influenced narratives marginalize them as Western-aligned "defeatists," echoing Stalinist trials of 1931 where fabricated confessions portrayed them as saboteurs. This bias stems from institutional incentives to glorify Bolshevik "victory," despite archival disproof of charges like alleged British funding, which documents show were absent. [90] [91]References
- https://en.prolewiki.org/wiki/Liquidationism
