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Nature of Government Lecture. This will aim to…. Show continuity in terms of hierarchical approach, use of autocracy (but with gradients) and use of force to sustain rule.
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This will aim to… • Show continuity in terms of hierarchical approach, use of autocracy (but with gradients) and use of force to sustain rule. • Show change in terms of liberal policies towards the people, view of leaders as “Little Fathers” and complete change with Provisional Government.
TSAR • Autocratic. • Controlled policy making + implementation. • All accountable to the Tsar • 13 ministers with specific responsibilities, i.e. finance. • Often conflicting.
Exec = 10% of Congress and filled Politburo, Orgburo and Ogburo Chairmen: Lenin/Stalin/ Khrushchev Members product of chain of elections, but dominated by Bolsheviks Central Executive Committee
Alex II (mutton chops) • Tsar Liberator – still autocrat. • Refused to change after Crimea, despite failures. • Reform aimed to make Russia a world power. • Emancipation of the Serfs. • Zemstva helped both peasants and landowners. • Introduced local duma 1870. • 1864 legal reforms, better pay for judges and jury system. • More repressive post 1866. • BUT – Vera Zasulich case suggested failure.
Alexander III (beast) • Much less liberal. • 1881 Manifesto. • Opposition, People’s Will, ruthlessly suppressed. • Reactionary. • Influenced by Pobedonostev. • Believed people not ready for democracy or constitution. • 1881 centralised police under Minister for interior, special courts for political cases and Land Captains brought in.
Nicholas II (weak as a pigeon) • Similar to father. • 1905 Duma followed by 1906 Fundamental Laws. • Motivations uncertain. • Russo-Japanese War, Bloody Sunday and mutiny of the Potemkin = social unrest. • Duma and Zemstva flourished and pressured central government, but irritated government too. • Oversaw 4 Duma (2 fired, 4th forced him to abdicate with the Progressive Bloc getting it suspended by 1915). • Oversaw collapse of economy and WWI disaster. • Saw increasing unrest in 1917 with strikes, marches and workers’ protests until abdication.
Provisional Government • Abdication not expected. • Self appointed – Old Guard? • Shared authority with Petrograd Soviet. • 8 Principles of free speech, end to death penalty etc. • Allowed protest groups. • Economic disaster. • Struggled with peasant land seizures, didn’t take initiative. • Wanted decisive WWI victory. • Suffered July Days and Kronstadt mutinyand Kornilov affair. • Kicked out 27th Oct, Lenin had returned 7th Oct.
Lenin (Reptilian) • Allowed Constituent Assembly elections, rejected after 1 day. • Issued Decree of Land, sanctioned land grabs. • Signed peace of Brest-Litovsk. • Centralised control during Civil War. • Tolerated moderates and debate was allowed. • Opposition eradicated. • Membership of Bolsheviks = privilege. • 10% apparatchiki (full time organisers), 30% “other administrators” and rest workers/peasants. • Become detached from the grassroots.
Stalin (Paranoid Android) • Continued democratic centralism. • 1936 Constitution promised greater representation for nation states in government. • Argued new superstructure needed, i.e. 5 Year Plans and Collectivisation. • Personalised control, accused opposition of being bourgeois. • Developed cult of personality. • Different versions of ideology.
Khrushchev (shoe-t me!) • De-stalinisation through secret speech. • Saw off opposition (Beria, Malenkov, Vorishilov) and idea of collective leadership. • Also saw off Anti-Party Group who wanted to remove position of First Secretary. • Promoted idea of thaw in repression but used MVD to maintain power. • Still dismissed politicians at will, i.e. Zhukov, Bulganin. • Introduced new members and removed Stalinist supporters. • Virgin Land Scheme offered. • Relaxed censorship and removed cult of personality.
Key Examples for Nature of Government What changes? Examples? What continues? Examples?