[10 POSTINGS]
One need only read all 45 volumes of Lenin’s Collected Works as well as some of his other writings to see that he often criticized and vehemently denounced Trotsky. Those who seem to think Trotsky was the proper carrier of Lenin’s torch definitely need to read the following 10 postings in this regard. But first we should note Lenin’s compliments of Stalin.
A few noteworthy instances are the following.
In a 1913 article
in the Social Democrat entitled The National Programme of the R.S.D.L.P. Lenin
stated,
“Why and how the national question has, at the present time, been bought
to the fore...is shown in detail in the resolution itself. There is
hardly any need to dwell on this in view of the clarity of the situation.
This situation and the fundamentals of a national programme for Social-Democracy
have recently been dealt with in Marxist theoretical literature (the most
prominent place being taken by Stalin’s article.” He is referring to
the writing by Stalin entitled Marxism and the National Question.
At the 11th Congress of
the R.C.P. (B) in 1922 Lenin was more flattering toward Stalin when he said,
“It is terribly difficult to do this; we lack the men! But Preobrazhensky
comes along and airily says that Stalin has jobs in two Commissariats.
Who among us has not sinned in this way? who has not undertaking several
duties at once? And how can we do otherwise? What can we do to
preserve the Nationalities; to handle all the Turkestan, Caucasian, and other
questions? These are all political questions! They have to be
settled. These are questions that have engaged the attention of European
states for hundreds of years, and only an infinitesimal number of them have
been settled in democratic republics. We are settling them; and we
need a man to whom the representatives of any of these nations can go and
discuss their difficulties in all detail. Where can we find such a
man? I don’t think Comrade Preobrazhensky could suggest any better
candidate than Comrade Stalin.
Lenin’s Collected Works,
Vol. 33, page 315
In a February 1913 letter to Gorky Lenin said
in regard to Stalin, “We have a marvellous Georgian who has sat down to write
a big article for Prosveshcheniye, for which he has collected all the Austrian
and other materials.”
Lenin’s Collected Works,
Vol. 35, page 84.
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NOW WE CAN MOVE ON TO THE FIRST POST
LENIN DENOUNCES TROTSKY
POST #1
It is very important to note that the following statements about Trotsky’s ideas, tactics, and personality were made by Lenin, not Stalin.
At the Second Congress of the R.S.D.L.P
in 1903 Lenin said in the Third Speech in the Discussion on the Agrarian Programme,
“Therein lies the fundamental difference between
us and the liberals, whose talk about changes and reforms ‘pollutes’ the minds
of the people. If we were to set forth in detail all the demands for
the abolition of serf-ownership, we should fill whole volumes. That
is why we mention only the more important forms and varieties of serfdom,
and leave it to our committees in the various localities to draw up and advance
their particular demands in development of the general programme. Trotsky’s
remark to the effect that we cannot concern ourselves with local demand is
wrong, for the question...is not only a local one.”
At the same Congress Lenin made
an extremely important and farsighted comment with respect to Trotsky’s theoretical
wisdom. He stated,
“To come to the main subject, I must say that Comrade
Trotsky has completely misunderstood Comrade Plekhanov’s fundamental idea,
and his arguments have therefore evaded the gist of the matter. He
has spoken of intellectuals and workers, of the class point of view and of
the mass movement, but he has failed to notice a basic question: does my
formulation narrow or expand the concept of a Party member? If he had
asked himself that question, he would have easily have seen that my formulation
narrows this concept, while Martov’s expands it, for (to use Martov’s
own correct expression) what distinguishes his concept is its ‘elasticity.’
And in the period of Party life that we are now passing through it is just
this ‘elasticity’ that undoubtedly opens the door to all elements of confusion,
vacillation, and opportunism. To refute this simple and obvious conclusion
it has to be proved that there are no such elements; but it has not even
occurred to Comrade Trotsky to do that. Nor can that be proved, for
everyone knows that such elements exist in plenty, and they are to be found
in the working class too....
Comrade Trotsky completely misinterpreted the main
idea of my book, What Is To Be Done? when he spoke about the Party not being
a conspiratorial organization. He forgot that in my book I propose
a number of various types of organizations, from the most secret and most
exclusive to comparatively broad and ‘loose’ organizations. He forgot
that the Party must be only the vanguard, the leader of the vast masses of
the working class, the whole (or nearly the whole) of which works ‘under
the control and direction’ of the Party organizations, but the whole of which
does not and should not belong to a ‘party.’ Now let us see what conclusions
Comrade Trotsky arrives at in consequence of his fundamental mistake.
He had told us here that if rank after rank of workers were arrested, and
all the workers were to declare that they did not belong to the Party, our
Party would be a strange one indeed! Is it not the other way round?
Is it not Comrade Trotsky’s argument that is strange? He regards as
something sad that which a revolutionary with any experience at all would
only rejoice at. If hundreds and thousands of workers who were arrested
for taking part in strikes and demonstrations did not prove to be members
of Party organizations, it would only show that we have good organizations,
and that we are fulfilling our task of keeping a more or less limited circle
of leaders secret and drawing the broadest possible masses into the movement.”
In an article written in 1905 entitled “Social-Democracy
and the Provisional Revolutionary Government” Lenin spoke of Parvus and said,
“He openly advocated (unfortunately, together
with the windbag Trotsky in a foreward to the latter’s bombastic pamphlet
‘Before the Ninth of January’) the idea of the revolutionary-democratic dictatorship,
the idea that it was the duty of Social-Democrats to take part in the provisional
revolutionary government after the overthrow of the autocracy.”
Later in the same article Lenin stated,
“It would be extremely harmful to entertain
any illusions on this score. If that windbag Trotsky now writes (unfortunately,
side by side with Parvus) that a Father Gapon could appear only once,’ that
‘there is no room for a second Gapon,’ he does so simply because he is a
windbag. If there were no room in Russia for a second Gapon, there
would be no room for a truly ‘great’ consummated democratic revolution.”
In a 1904 letter to Stasova, Lengnik, and others Lenin
stated,
A new pamphlet by Trotsky came out recently, under
the editorship of *Iskra*, as was announced. This makes it the “Credo”
as it were of the new Iskra. The pamphlet is a pack of brazen lies,
a distortion of the facts.... The pamphlet is a slap in the face both
for the present Editorial Board of the C.O. and for all Party workers.
Reading a pamphlet of this kind you can see clearly that the “Minority” has
indulged in so much lying and falsehood that it will be incapable of producing
anything viable....”
In a 1905 article entitled “Wrathful Impotence” Lenin stated,
‘We shall remind the reader
that even Mr. Struve, who has often voiced sympathy in principle with
Trotsky, Starover, Akimov, and Martynov, and with the new-Iskra trends in
general and the new-Iskra Conference in particular--even Mr. Struve was in
his time obliged to acknowledge that their stand is not quite a correct one,
or rather quite an incorrect one.”
At the 1907 Fifth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P Lenin stated,
“A few words about Trotsky. He spoke
on behalf of the ‘Centre,’ and expressed the views of the Bund. He
fulminated against us for introducing our ‘unacceptable’ resolution. He threatened an outright split, the withdrawal of the Duma group, which is
supposedly offended by our resolution. I emphasize these words. I urge you to reread our resolution.... When Trotsky stated: ‘Your unacceptable
resolution prevents your right ideas being put into effect,’ I called out
to him: ‘Give us your resolution!’ Trotsky replied: ‘No first withdraw
yours.’ A fine position indeed for the ‘Centre’ to take, isn’t it?
Because of our (in Trotsky’s opinion) mistake (‘tactlessness’) he punishes
the whole Party.... Why did you not get your resolution passed, we
shall be asked in the localities. Because the Centre (for whom Trotsky
was speaking) took umbrage at it, and in a huff refused to set forth its
own principles! That is a position based not on principle, but on the
Centre’s lack of principle.”
Speaking at the same Congress Lenin objected to
Trotsky’s amendments to the Bolshevik resolution on the attitude towards bourgeois
parties by saying,
“It must be agreed that Trotsky’s amendment is not
Menshevik, that it expresses the ‘very same,’ that is, bolshevik, idea.
But Trotsky has expressed this idea in a way that is scarcely better (than
the Menshevik--Ed.).... Trotsky’s insertion is redundant, for we are
not fishing for unique cases in the resolution, but are laying down the basic
line of Social-Democracy in the bourgeois Russian revolution.”
While later discussing the same issue (the attitude
the party should have toward bourgeois parties) Lenin said,
“The question of the attitude of Social-Democracy
towards bourgeois parties is one of those known as ‘general’ or ‘theoretical’ questions, i.e., such that are not directly connected with any definite practical
task confronting the Party at a given moment. At theLondon Congress
of the R.S.D.L.P, the Mensheviks and the Bundists conducted a fierce struggle
against the inclusion of such questions in the agenda, and they were, unfortunately,
supported in this by Trotsky, who does not belong to either side. The
opportunistic wing of our Party (notice that that is the group with which
Trotsky allied himself--Ed.) like that of other Social-Democratic parties,
defended a ‘business-like’ or ‘practical’ agenda for the Congress.
They shied away from ‘broad and general’ questions. They forgot that
in the final analysis broad, principled politics are the only real, practical
politics. They forgot that anybody who tackles partial problems without
having previously settled general problems, will inevitably and at every
step ‘come up against’ those general problems without himself realizing it.
To come up against them blindly in every individual case means to doom one’s
politics to the worst vacillation and lack of principle.”
And it is quite clear to which philosophy Trotsky
adhered.
***************************************************************
LENIN DENOUNCES TROTSKY
POST #2
Our list of statements about Trotsky by Lenin continues:
In 1909 Lenin wrote an article entitled “The Aim of
the Proletarian Struggle in our Revolution” and said the following,
“As for Trotsky, whom Comrade Martov has involved
in the controversy of third parties which he has organized...we positively
cannot go into a full examination of his views here. A separate article
of considerable length would be needed for this. By just touching upon
Trotsky’s mistaken views, and quoting scraps of them, Comrade Martov only
sows confusion in the mind of the reader.... Trotsky’s major mistake
is that he ignores the bourgeois character of the revolution and has no clear
conception of the transition from this revolution to the socialist revolution.
This major mistake leads to those mistakes on side issues which Comrade Martov
repeats when he quotes a couple of them with sympathy and approval.
Not to leave matters in the confused state to which Comrade Martov has reduced
them by his exposition, we shall at least expose the fallacy of those arguments
of Trotsky which have won approval of Comrade Martov.”
Later in the same article Lenin states,
“Trotsky’s second statement quoted by Comrade Martov
is wrong too. It is not true that ‘the whole question is, who will
determine the government’s policy, who will constitute a homogeneous majority
in it,’ and so forth. And it is particularly untrue when Comrade Martov
uses it as an argument against the dictatorship of the proletariat and the
peasantry. Trotsky himself, in the course of his argument, concedes
that ‘representatives of the democratic population will take part’ in the
‘workers’ government,’ i.e., concedes that there will be a government consisting
of representatives of the proletariat AND the peasantry.
On what terms the proletariat will take part in
the government of the revolution is quite another question, and it is quite
likely that on this question the Bolsheviks will disagree not only with Trotsky,
but also with the Polish Social-Democrats.”
Notice how Lenin does not consider Trotsky to be
a bolshevik.
And finally, Lenin also states in the same article,
“In any case, Comrade Martov’s conclusion that
the conference agreed with Trotsky, of all people, on the question of the
relations between the proletariat and the peasantry in the struggle for power
is an amazing contradiction of the facts, is an attempt to read into a word
a meaning that was never discussed, not mentioned, and not even thought of
at the conference.”
In 1910 Lenin wrote several articles in which
he said the following:
Article= “Faction of Supporter of Otzovism and God-Building”
in which he said,
“The ‘point’ was that the
Mensheviks (through the mouth of Trotsky in 1903-04) had to declare: the
old Iskra and the new ones are poles apart.”
Article= “Notes of a Publicist” in which he said,
“With touching unanimity
the liquidators and the otzovists are abusing the Bolsheviks up hill and down
dale. The Bolsheviks are to blame, the Bolshevik Centre is to blame....
But the strongest abuse from Axelrod and Alexinsky only serves to screen
their complete failure to understand the meaning and importance of Party
unity. Trotsky’s resolution only differs outwardly from the ‘effusions’
of Axelrod and Alexinsky. It is drafted very ‘cautiously’ and lays
claim to ‘above faction’ fairness. But what is its meaning? The
‘Bolshevik leaders’ are to blame for everything--this is the same ‘philosophy
of history’ as that of Axelrod and Alexinsky....
This question needs only
to be put for one to see how hollow are the eloquent phrases in Trotsky’s
resolution, to see how in reality they serve to defend the very position held
by Axelrod and Co., and Alexinsky and Co.... In the very first
words of his resolution Trotsky expressed the full spirit of the worst kind
of conciliation, “conciliation” in inverted commas, or a sectarian and philistine
conciliation....
It is in this that the enormous
difference lies between real partyism, which consists in purging the Party
of liquidationism and otzovism, and the‘conciliation’ of Trotsky and Co.,
which actually renders the most faithful service to the liquidators and otzovists,
and is therefore *an evil* that is all the more dangerous to the Party the
more cunningly, artfully and rhetorically it cloaks itself with professedly
pro-Party, professedly anti-factional declamations.”
Lenin’s
Collected Works, Vol. 16, pages 209-211
Later Lenin stated, “The draft of this resolution
was submitted to the Central Committee by myself, and the clause in question
was altered by the plenum itself after the commission had finished its work;
it was altered on the motion of Trotsky, against whom I fought without success.”
Ibid.
page 215
And this was later followed by,
“Here you have the material--little, but characteristic
material--which makes it clear how empty Trotsky’s and Yonov’s phrases are.”
Referring to Trotsky’s stance while discussing
liquidationism Lenin says,
“Of this we shall speak further on, where
it be our task to demonstrate the utter superficiality of the view taken
by Trotsky....”
In another stinging indictment in the same article
Lenin says,
“Hence the ‘conciliatory’ efforts of Trotsky and
Yonov are not ridiculous and miserable. These efforts can only be explained
by a complete failure to understand what is taking place. They are
harmless efforts now, for there is no one behind them except the sectarian
diplomats abroad, except ignorance and lack of intelligence in some out-of-the-way
places.”
Continuing in the same vein, Lenin states,
“The heinous crime of *spineless ‘conciliators’*
like Yonov and Trotsky, who defend or justify these people, is that they are
causing their ruin by making them more dependent on liquidationism....
That this position of Yonov and Trotsky is wrong
should have been obvious to them for the simple reason that it is refuted
by facts.”
In an article entitled “How certain Social-Democrats
Inform the International About the State of Affairs in the R.S.D.L.P.” Lenin
stated,
“Yes, it is the ‘non-factional’ Comrade Trotsky,
who has no compunction about openly advertising his faction’s propaganda
sheet.”
In an article written in 1910 entitled “An Open
Letter to All Pro-Party Social-Democrats” Lenin said about Trotsky,
“If Trotsky and similar advocates of the liquidators
and otzovists declare this rapprochement ‘devoid of political content,’ such
speeches testify only to Trotsky’s *entire lack of principle*, the real hostility
of his policy to the policy of the actual (and not merely confined to promises)
abolition of factions.”
***************************************************************
Our list of denunciations of Trotsky by Lenin continues:
In a 1911 letter “To the Central Committee” Lenin said,
“We resume our freedom of struggle against
the liberals and *anarchists*, who are being encouraged by the leader of the
‘conciliators,’ Trotsky. The question of the money is for us a secondary
matter, although of course we do not intend to hand over the money of the
faction to the bloc of liquidators+anarchists+Trotsky, while in no way renouncing
our right to expose before the international Social-Democratic movement this
bloc, its financial ‘basis’ (the notorious Vperyodist ‘funds’ safeguarded
from exposure by Trotsky and the Golosists).”
Later Lenin says,
“There has been a full development of what was already
outlined quite clearly at the plenum (for instance, *the defence of the anarchist
school, by Trotsky* + the Golosists). The bloc of liberals and anarchists
with the aid of the conciliators is shamelessly destroying the remnants of
the Party from outside and helping to demoralize it from within. The
formalistic game of ‘inviting’ the Golosists and Trotskyists on to the central
bodies is finally reducing to impotence the already weakened pro-Party elements.”
In a 1911 article entitled “Historical Meaning
of Inner-Party Struggle in Russia” Lenin commented,
“The theory that the struggle between Bolshevism
and Menshevism is a struggle for influence over an immature proletariat is
not a new one. We have been encountering it since 1905 in innumerable
books, pamphlets, and articles in the liberal press. Martov and
Trotsky are putting before the German comrades *liberal views with a Marxist
coating*....”
Trotsky declares: ‘It is an illusion’ to imagine
that Menshevism and Bolshevism ‘have struck deep roots in the depths of the
proletariat.’ This is a specimen of the resonant but empty phrases
of which our Trotsky is a master. The roots of the divergence between
the Mensheviks and the Bolsheviks lie, not in the ‘depths of the proletariat,’
but in the economic content of the Russian revolution. By ignoring
this content, Martov and Trotsky have deprived themselves of the possibility
of understanding the historical meaning of the inner-Party struggle in Russia.”
Later in the same article Lenin states,
“For the same reason
Trotsky’s argument that splits in the International Social-Democratic movement
are caused by the ‘process of adaptation of the social-revolutionary class
to the limited (narrow) conditions of parliamentarism,’ while in the Russian
Social-Democratic movement they are caused by the adaptation of the intelligentsia
to the proletariat, is *absolutely false*.
Trotsky writes.... This truly
‘unrestrained’ phrase-mongering is merely the ‘ideological shadow’ of liberalism.
Both Martov and Trotsky mix up different historical periods and compare Russia,
which is going through her bourgeois revolution, with Europe, where these
revolutions were completed long ago.”
Subsequently Lenin says,
“As regards boycotting the trade unions and the
local self-government bodies, what Trotsky says is *absolutely untrue*. It is equally untrue to say that boycottism runs through the whole history
of Bolshevism.... *Trotsky distorts Bolshevism*, because he has never
been able to form any definite views on the role of the proletariat in the
Russian bourgeois revolution.”
In the same article Lenin said regarding Trotsky,
“It is not true. And this untruth expresses,
firstly, *Trotsky’s utter lack of theoretical understanding*. Trotsky
has absolutely failed to understand why the plenum described both liquidationism
and otzovism as a ‘manifestation of bourgeois influence on the proletariat’.
Secondly, in practice, this untruth expresses the
‘policy’ of advertisement pursued by Trotsky’s faction. That Trotsky’s
venture is an attempt to create a faction is now obvious to all, since Trotsky
has removed the Central Committee’s representative from Pravda. In
advertising his faction Trotsky does not hesitate to tell the Germans that
the Party is falling to pieces, that both factions are falling to pieces
and that he, Trotsky, alone, is saving the situation. Actually, we
all see now--and the latest resolution adopted by the Trotskyists in the
name of the Vienna Club, on November 26, 1910 proves this quite conclusively--that
*Trotsky enjoys the confidence exclusively of the liquidators and the Vperyodists*.
The extent of *Trotsky’s shamelessness* in
belittling the Party and exalting himself before the Germans is shown, for
instance, by the following. Trotsky writes that the ‘working masses’
in Russia consider that the ‘Social-Democratic Party stands outside their
circle’ and he talks of ‘Social-Democrats without Social-Democracy.
How could one expect Mr. Potresov and his friends
to refrain from bestowing kisses on Trotsky for such statements?
But these statements are refuted not only by the
entire history of the revolution, but even by the results of the elections
to the Third Duma from the workers’ curia....
That is what Trotsky writes. But the facts
are as follows....
When Trotsky gives the German comrades a detailed
account of the stupidity of ‘otzovism’ and describes this trend as a ‘crystallization’ of the boycottism characteristic of Bolshevism as a whole...the German reader
certainly gets no idea how much subtle *perfidy* there is in such an exposition.
Trotsky’s Jesuitical ‘reservation’ consists in omitting a small, very small
‘detail.’ He ‘forgot’ to mention that at an official meeting of its
representatives held as far back as the spring of 1909, the Bolshevik faction
repudiated and expelled the otzovists. But it is just this ‘detail’
that is inconvenient for Trotsky, who wants to talk of the ‘falling to pieces’
of the Bolshevik faction (and then of the Party as well) and not of the falling
away of the non-Social-Democratic elements!....
...Trotsky, on the other hand, represents only his
own personal vacillations and nothing more. In 1903 he as a Menshevik;
he abandoned Menshevism in 1904, returned to the Mensheviks in 1905 and merely
flaunted ultra- revolutionary phrases; in 1906 he left them again; at the
end of 1906 he advocated electoral agreements with the Cadets (i.e., he was
in once more with the Mensheviks); and the spring of 1907, at the London
Congress, he said that he differed from Rosa Luxemburg on “individual shades
of ideas rather than on political tendencies”. One day Trotsky *plagiarizes*
from the ideological stock-in-trade of one faction; the next day he plagiarizes
from that of another, and therefore declares himself to be standing above
both factions. In theory Trotsky is on no point in agreement with either
the liquidators or the otzovists, but in actual practice he is in entire
agreement with both the Golosists and the Vperyodists.
Therefore, when Trotsky tells the German comrades
that he represents the ‘general Party tendency,’ I am obliged to declare that
Trotsky represents only his own faction and enjoys a certain amount of confidence
exclusively among the otzovists and the liquidators. The following
facts prove the correctness of my statement.”
After listing his facts and referring to ‘Trotsky’s
anti-Party policy’ Lenin states,
“Let the readers now judge for themselves whether
Trotsky represents a ‘general Party,’ or a ‘general anti-Party’ trend in
Russian Social-Democracy.”
***************************************************************
Our on-going expose of Lenin’s Opinion of Trotsky continues:
In an article entitled “Letter to the Russian
Collegium of the Central Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. Lenin attacked Trotsky
by saying,
“Trotsky’s call for ‘friendly’ collaboration by
the Party with the Golos and Vperyod groups is *disgusting hypocrisy and
phrase-mongering*. Everybody is aware that for the whole year since
the Plenary Meeting the Golos and Vperyod groups have worked in a ‘friendly’
manner against the Party (and were secretly supported by Trotsky). Actually,
it is only the Bolsheviks and Plekhanov’s group who have for a whole year
carried out friendly Party work in the Central Organ. Trotsky’s attacks
on the bloc of Bolsheviks and Plekhanov’s group are not new; what is new
is the outcome of his resolution: the Vienna Club (read “Trotsky”) has organized
a ‘general Party fund for the purpose of preparing and
convening a conference of the RSDLP
This indeed is new. It is a direct step towards
a split. It is *a clear violation of Party legality* and the start
of an adventure in which Trotsky will come to grief. This is obviously
a split.... It is quite possible and probable that ‘certain’ Vperyod
‘funds’ will be made available to Trotsky. You will appreciate that
this will only stress the adventurist character of his undertaking.
It is clear that this undertaking violates Party
legality, since not a word is said about the Central Committee, which alone
can call the conference. In addition, Trotsky, having ousted the C.C.
representative on Pravda in August 1910, himself *lost all trace of legality*,
converting Pravda from an organ supported by the representative of the C.C.
into a purely factional organ....
Taking advantage of this, ‘violation of legality,’ Trotsky seeks an organisational split, creating ‘his own’ fund for ‘his own’
conference.”
After this critique of Trotsky, Lenin really comes
down solid on him by stating,
“You will understand why I call Trotsky’s move an
adventure; it is an adventure in every respect. It is an adventure
in the ideological sense. *Trotsky groups all the enemies of Marxism*,
he unites Potresov and Maximov, who detest the ‘Lenin-Plekhanov’ bloc, as
they like to call it. *Trotsky unites all to whom ideological decay
is dear*, *all who are not
concerned with the defence of Marxism*; *all philistines* who do not understand
the reasons for the struggle and who do not wish to learn, think, and discover
the ideological roots of the divergence of views. At this time of confusion,
disintegration, and wavering it is easy for Trotsky to become the ‘hero of
the hour’ and *gather all the shabby elements around himself*. The
more openly this attempt is made, the more spectacular will be the defeat.
It is an adventure in the party-political sense.
At present everything goes to show that the real unity of the Social-Democratic
Party is possible only on the basis of a sincere and unswerving repudiation
of liquidationism and otzovism. It is clear that Potresov and the Vperyod
group have renounced neither the one nor the other. Trotsky unites them,
basely deceiving himself, *deceiving the Party, and deceiving the proletariat*.
In reality, Trotsky will achieve nothing more than the strengthening of Potresov’s
and Maximov’s anti-Party groups. The collapse of this adventure is
inevitable.”
And Lenin concludes by saying,
“Three slogans bring out the essence of the
present situation within the Party:...
3. Struggle against the splitting tactics and the
*unprincipled adventurism of Trotsky* in banding Potresov and Maximov against
Social-Democracy.”
In a 1910 article entitled “The State of Affairs
in the Party” Lenin again attacks Trotsky’s anti-Party stance by saying,
“...Trotsky’s statement of November 26, 1910...completely
distorts the essence of the matter. Martov’s article and Trotsky’s resolution
conceal definite practical actions--actions directed against the Party....
Trotsky’s resolution, which calls upon organizations
inthe localities to prepare for a “general Party conference” independent of,
and against, the Central Committee, expresses the very aim of the Golos group--to
destroy the central bodies so detested by the liquidators, and with them,
the Party as an organization. It is not enough to lay bare the anti-Party
activities of Golos and Trotsky; they must be fought.
In the same article Lenin states,
“When Trotsky, in referring to the Meeting’s decisions
on Pravda, fails to mention this fact, all one can say about it is that *he
is deceiving the workers*. And this deception on the part of Trotsky
is all the more *malicious*, since in August Trotsky removed the representative
of the Central Committee from Pravda....
Therefore, we declare, in the name of the Party
as a whole, that Trotsky is pursuing an anti-Party policy....
Trotsky is trying again and again to evade the question
by passing it over in silence or by phrase-mongering; *for he is concerned
to keep the readers and the Party ignorant of the truth*, namely that Potresov’s
group, the group of sixteen, are absolutely independent of the Party, represent
expressly distinct factions, are not only doing nothing to revive the illegal
organization, but are obstructing its revival, and are not pursuing any Social-Democratic
tactics. *Trotsky is concerned with keeping the Party ignorant of the
truth*, namely, that the Golos group represent a faction abroad, similarly
separated from the Party, and that they actually render service to the liquidators
in Russia....
Trotsky maintains silence on this undeniable truth,
because *the truth is detrimental to the real aims of his policy*. The
real aims, however, are becoming clearer and more obvious even to the least
far-sighted Party members. They are” an anti-Party block of the Potresovs
with the Vperyod group--a bloc which Trotsky supports and is organizing.”
Lenin later states,
“We must again explain the fundamentals of Marxism
to these masses; the defence of Marxist theory is again on the order of the
day. When Trotsky declares that the rapprochement between the pro-Party
Mensheviks and the Bolsheviks is ‘devoid of political content’ and ‘unstable,’
he is thereby merely revealing *the depths of his own ignorance*, he is thereby
demonstrating *his own complete emptiness*.”
Lenin later follows this up with,
“...Trotsky, who is in the habit of joining any
group that happens to be in the majority at the moment....
Trotsky’s policy is adventurism in the organisational
sense; for, as we have already pointed out, it violates Party legality....”
***************************************************************
Our continuing revelation of Lenin’s Opinion of Trotsky proceeds apace:
In a 1911 article entitled “Judas Trotsky’s Blush
of Shame” Lenin states,
“At the Plenary Meeting *Judas Trotsky* made a big
show of fighting liquidationism and otzovism. He vowed and swore that
he was true to the Party. He was given a subsidy....
Judas expelled the representative of the Central
Committee from Pravda and began to write liquidationist articles....
And it is this Judas who beats his breast and loudly
professes his loyalty to the Party, claiming that he did not grovel before
the Vperyod group and the liquidators.
Such is Judas Trotsky’s blush of shame.”
In a leaflet published in 1911 entitled “Resolution
Adopted by the Second Paris Group of the R.S.D.L.P. on the State of Affairs
in the Party” Lenin addressed this same theme by saying,
“People like Trotsky, with his inflated phrases
about the R.S.D.L.P. and his *toadying* to the liquidators, who have nothing
in common with the R.S.D.L.P., today represent ‘*the prevalent disease*.’
They are trying to build up a career for themselves by cheap sermons about
‘agreement’--agreement with all and sundry, right down to Mr. Potresov and
the otzovists.... Actually they preach surrender to the liquidators
who are building a Stolypin labour party.”
And in the 1911 article entitled “From the Camp
of the Stolypin Labour Party” Lenin revisits this issue by saying,
“Hence it is clear that Trotsky and the ‘Trotskyites
and conciliators’ like him are *more pernicious than any liquidators*; the
convinced liquidators state their views bluntly, and it is easy for the workers
to detect where they are wrong, whereas the *Trotskys deceive the workers*,
*cover up the evil*, and make it impossible to expose the evil and
to remedy it. *Whoever supports Trotsky’s puny group supports a policy
of lying and of deceiving the workers*, a policy of shielding the liquidators.
Full freedom of action for Potresov and Co. in Russia, and the shielding
of their deeds by ‘revolutionary’ phrase-mongering abroad--there you have
the essence of the policy of ‘Trotskyism’.”
In an article entitled “The New Faction of Conciliators,
or the Virtuous” Lenin stated,
Trotsky expressed conciliationism more consistently
than anyone else. He was probably the only one who attempted to give
the trend a theoretical foundation, namely: factions and factionalism express
the struggle of the intelligentsia “for influence over the immature proletariat”.... For a long time now, Trotsky--who at one moment has wavered more to the side
of the Bolsheviks and at another more to that of the Mensheviks--has been
persistently carrying on propaganda for an agreement (or compromise) between
all and sundry factions.
“But after it, every since the spring of 1910 Trotsky
has been *deceiving the workers in a most unprincipled and shameless manner*
by assuring them that the obstacles to unity were principally (if not wholly)
of an organizational nature. This deceit is being continued in 1911
by the Paris conciliators; for to assert now that they organizational questions
occupy the first place is sheer mockery of the truth. In reality, it
is by no means the organizational question that is now in the forefront,
but the question of the entire programme, the entire tactics and the whole
character of the Party.... The conciliators call themselves Bolsheviks,
in order to repeat, a year and a half later, *Trotsky’s errors* which the
Bolsheviks had exposed. Well, is this not an abuse of established Party
titles? Are we not obliged, after this, to let all and sundry know
that the conciliators are not Bolsheviks at all, that they have nothing in
common with Bolshevism, that they are simply inconsistent Trotskyites?
The only difference between Trotsky and the conciliators
in Paris is that the latter regard Trotsky as a factionalist and themselves
as non-factionalist, whereas Trotsky holds the opposite view....
Trotsky provides us with an abundance of instances
of scheming to establish unprincipled “unity....
Trotsky was merely revealing the plan of the liquidators
whom he serves faithfully....”
In a 1911 article on the same theme entitled “Trotsky’s
Diplomacy and a certain Party Platform,” Lenin states,
“Trotsky’s particular task is to conceal liquidationism
by throwing dust in the eyes of the workers.
It is impossible to argue with Trotsky on the merits
of the issue, because *Trotsky holds no views whatever*. We can and
should argue with confirmed liquidators and otzovists;; but it is no use
arguing with a man whose game is to hide errors of both these trends; in
his case the thing to do is to expose him as a *diplomat of the smallest
caliber*.”
In an article entitled “Fundamental Problems of
the Election Campaign” Lenin states,
“There is nothing more repugnant to the spirit of
Marxism than phrase-mongering....”
And later on he states,
“But there is no point in imitating Trotsky’s inflated
phrases.”
In a 1912 pamphlet entitled “The Present Situation
in the R.S.D.L.P. Lenin stated,“
This is incredible, yet it is a fact. It will
be useful for the Russian workers to know how *Trotsky and Co. are misleading
our foreign comrades*.”
In another 1912 pamphlet entitled “Can the
Slogan ‘Freedom of Association’ Serve as a Basis for the Working-Class Movement
Today?” Lenin responds by saying,
“In the legal press, the liquidators headed
by Trotsky argue that it can. They are doing all in their power to
distort the true character of the workers’ movement. But those are
hopeless efforts. The drowning of the liquidators are clutching at
a straw to rescue their unjust cause.”
In a 1912 pamphlet entitled “Platform of the Reformists
and the Platform of the Revolutionary Social-Democrats” Lenin stated,
“Look at the platform of the liquidators. Its
liquidationist essence is artfully concealed by Trotsky’s revolutionary phrases.”
“The revolutionary Social-Democrats have given their
answer to these questions, which are more interesting and important than
the *philistine-Trotskyist* attitude of uncertainty; will there be a revolution
or not, who can tell?....
Those, however, who preach to the masses their *vulgar,
intellectualist, Bundist-Trotskyist scepticism*--’we don’t know whether there
will be a revolution or not, but the current issue is reforms’--are already
*corrupting the masses, preaching liberal utopias to them*.”
In the 1912 pamphlet entitled “The Illegal Party
and Legal Work” Lenin again referred to Trotsky by saying,
“We have studied the ideas of liberal labour policy
attired in Levitsky’s everyday clothes; it is not difficult to recognize them
in *Trotsky’s gaudy apparel* as well.”
In a letter to the Editor of Pravda in 1912 Lenin said,
“I advise you to reply to Trotsky throught the post:
‘To Trotsky. We shall not reply to disruptive and slanderous letters.’
Trotsky’s dirty campaign against Pravda is one mass of lies and slander.
The well-known Marxist and follower of Plekhanov, Rothstein, has written
to us that he received Trotsky’s slanders and replied to him: I cannot complain
of the Petersburg Pravda in any way. But this intriguer and liquidator
goes onlying, right and left.
P.S. It would be still better to reply in this way
to Trotsky through the post: ‘To Trotsky. You are wasting your time
sending us disruptive and slanderous letters....”
In a 1913 article in Pravda Lenin really blistered
Trotsky on the question of Party unity by saying,
“It is amazing that after the question has been
posed so clearly and squarely we come across Trotsky’s old, pompous but perfectly
meaningless phrases in Luch No. 27 (113). Not a word on the substance
of the matter! *Not the slightest attempt to cite precise facts and
analyze them thoroughly!* Not a hint of the real terms of unity!
Empty exclamations, high-flown words, and haughty sallies against opponents
whom the author does not name, and impressively important assurances--that
is *Trotsky’s total stock-in-trade*.
That won’t do gentlemen.... The workers will
not be intimidated or coaxed. They themselves will compare Luch and
Pravda...and simply shrug off Trotsky’s verbiage....
You cannot satisfy the workers with mere phrases,
no matter how ‘conciliatory’ or honeyed.
‘Our historic factions, Bolshevism and Menshevism,
are purely intellectualist formations in origin,’ wrote Trotsky. This
is the *repetition of a liberal tale*....
It is to the advantage of the liberals to pretend
that this fundamental basis of the difference was introduced by ‘intellectuals.’
But *Trotsky merely disgraces himself by echoing a liberal tale*.
In a 1913 article entitled “Notes of a Publicist” Lenin states,
“Trotsky, doing faithful service to liquidators,
assured himself and the naive ‘Europeans’ (lovers of Asiatic scandal-mongering)
that the liquidators are ‘stronger’ in the legal movement. And this
lie, too, is refuted by the facts.”
Lenin again blasted Trotsky in an article published
in 1914 entitled “Break-up of the ‘August’ Bloc” by stating,
“Trotsky, however, has never had any ‘physiognomy’ at all; *the only thing he does have is a habit of changing sides*, of *skipping
from the liberals to the Marxists and back again*, of mouthing scraps of
catchwords and bombastic parrot phrases....
Actually, under cover of high-sounding, empty, and
obscure phrases that confuse the non-class-conscious workers, Trotsky is
defending the liquidators....
But *the liquidators and Trotsky...are the worst
splitters*.”
And in an article entitled “Ideological Struggle
in Working-Class Movement” Lenin states,
“People who (like the liquidators and Trotsky) ignore
or falsify this twenty years’ history of the ideological struggle in the
working-class movement do tremendous harm to the workers.”
***************************************************************
Our ongoing revelation of what Lenin thought of Trotsky proceeds on schedule.
In a 1914 article named “Disruption of Unity” Lenin stated,
“Trotsky’s ‘workers’ journal’ is Trotsky’s journal
for workers, as there is not a trace in it of either workers’ initiative,
or any connection with working-class organizations....
The question arises: what has ‘chaos’ got to do
with it? Everybody knows that *Trotsky is fond of high-sounding and
empty phrases*.... If there is any ‘chaos’ anywhere, it is only in
the heads of cranks who fail to understand this....
And that fact proves that we right in calling Trotsky
a representative of the ‘worst remnants of factionalism’. Although
he claims to be non-factional, Trotsky is known to everybody who is in the
least familiar with the working-class movement in Russia as the representative
of ‘Trotsky’s faction’.
Trotsky, however, possesses no ideological and political
definiteness, for his patent for ‘non-factionalism’, as we shall soon see
in greater detail,is merely a patent to flit freely to and fro, from one
group to another.
To sum up:
(1) Trotsky does not explain, *nor does he understand,
the historical significance of the ideological disagreements among the various
Marxist trends and groups*, although these disagreements run through the
twenty years’ history of Social-Democracy and concern the fundamental questions
of the present day (as we shall show later on);
(2) Trotsky fails to understand that the main specific
features of group-division are nominal recognition of unity and actual disunity;
(3) Under cover of ‘non-factionalism’ Trotsky is
championing the interests of a group abroad which particularly lacks definite
principles and has no basis in the working-class movement in Russia.
All that glitters is
not gold. *There is much glitter and sound in Trotsky’s phrases, but
they are meaningless*....
But joking apart (although joking is the only way
of retorting mildly to Trotsky’s insufferable phrase-mongering). ‘Suicide’
is a mere empty phrase, mere ‘Trotskyism’....
If our attitude towards liquidationism is wrong
in theory, in principle, then Trotsky should say so straightforwardly, and
state definitely, without equivocation, why he thinks it is wrong. But
Trotsky has been evading this extremely important point for years....
Trotsky is very fond of using, with the learned air
of the expert, *pompous and high-sounding phrases* to explain historical phenomena
in a way that is flattering to Trotsky. Since ‘numerous advanced workers’
become ‘active agents’ of a political and Party line which does not conform
to Trotsky’s line, Trotsky settles the question unhesitatingly, out of hand:
these advanced workers are ‘in a state of utter political bewilderment,’
whereas he, Trotsky, is evidently ‘in a state’ of political firmness and
clarity, and keeps to the right line! And this very same Trotsky, beating
his breast, fulminates against factionalism, parochialism, and the efforts
of intellectuals to impose their will on the workers!”
“Reading things like these, one cannot help
asking oneself; *is it from a lunatic asylum that such voices come*?
Trotsky is trying to disrupt the movement and cause a split.
Later in the same article Lenin states,
“Those who accused us of being splitters, of being
unwilling or unable to get on with the liquidators, were themselves unable
to get on with them. The August bloc proved to be a fiction and broke
up.
By concealing this break-up from his readers, *Trotsky
is deceiving them*.”
Still later, Lenin confronted a problem I have
often encountered by stating,
“*The reason why Trotsky avoids facts and concrete
references is because they relentlessly refute all his angry outcries and
pompous phrases*.... Is not this weapon borrowed from the arsenal of
the period when Trotsky posed in all his splendor before audiences of high-school
boys?”
And finally, in the same article Lenin shatters
Trotsky, his theory of Permanent Revolution, and his all consuming equivocating,
with which I am thoroughly familiar, by saying,
“Trotsky was an ardent Iskrist in 1901-03, and Ryazanov
described his role at the Congress of 1903 as ‘Lenin’s cudgel.’ At
the end of 1903, Trotsky was an ardent Menshevik, i.e., he deserted from
the Iskrists to the Economists. He said that ‘between the old Iskra
and the new lies a gulf’. In 1904-05, he deserted the Mensheviks and
occupied a vacillating position, now co-operating with Martynov (the Economist),
now proclaiming his **absurdly Left permanent revolution theory**. In
1906-07, he approached the Bolsheviks, and in the spring of 1907 he declared
that he was in agreement with Rosa Luxemburg.
In the period of disintegration, after long ‘non-factional’
vacillation, he again went to the right, and in August 1912, he entered into
a bloc with the liquidators. He has now deserted them again, although
in substance he reiterates their shoddy ideas.”
In another 1914 article entitled “Objective Data
on the Strength of Various Trends” Lenin commented,
“One of the greatest, if not the greatest, faults
(or crimes against the working class) of the Narodniks and liquidators, as
well as of the various groups of intellectuals such as the Vperyodists, Plekhanovites
and Trotskyists, is their subjectivism. At every step they try to pass
off their desires, their ‘views’, their appraisals of the situation and their
‘plans’, as the will of the workers, the needs of the working-class movement.”
In a article published in 1914 entitled “The Right
of Nations to Self-Determination” Lenin stated,
“**The obliging Trotsky is more dangerous than an
enemy!** Trotsky could produce no proof, except ‘private conversations”
(i.e., simply *gossip, on which Trotsky always subsists*), for classifying
‘Polish Marxists’ in general as supporters of every article by Rosa Luxemburg....
Why did Trotsky withhold these facts from the readers
of his journal? Only because it pays him to speculate on fomenting
differences between the Polish and the Russian opponents of liquidationism
and to *deceive the Russian workers* on the question of the programme.”
And now comes another comment that blows off Trotsky’s
doors.
“**Trotsky has never yet held a firm opinion on
any important question of Marxism**. He always contrives to worm his
way into the cracks of any given difference of opinion, and desert one side
for the other. At the present moment he is in the company of the Bundists
and the liquidators. And these gentlemen do not stand on ceremony where
the Party is concerned.”
In an article first published in 1917 Lenin noted
that Trotsky made a number of errors by saying,
“A number of Trotsky’s tactical and organizational
errors spring from this fear....”
Still later, Lenin confronted a problem I have often
encountered by stating,
“*The reason why Trotsky avoids facts and concrete
references is because they relentlessly refute all his angry outcries and
pompous phrases*.... Is not this weapon borrowed from the arsenal of
the period when Trotsky posed in all his splendor before audiences of high-school
boys?” It seems to him that to desire Russia’s defeat means desiring the
victory of Germany.... To help people that are unable to think for
themselves, the Berne resolution made it clear that in all imperialist countries
the proletariat must now desire the defeat of its own government. Bukvoyed
and Trotsky preferred to avoid this truth....
*Had Bukvoyed and Trotsky done a little thinking,
they would have realized that they have adopted the viewpoint on the war held
by governments and the bourgeoisie, i.e., that they cringe to the ‘political
methodology of social-patriotism’, to use Trotsky’s pretentious language*.
Whoever is in favour of the slogan of ‘neither victory
nor defeat’ [Trotsky] is consciously or unconsciously a chauvinist; at best
he is a conciliatory petty bourgeois but in any case he is an enemy to proletarian
policy, a partisan of the existing governments, of the present-day ruling
classes....
Those who stand for the ‘neither-victory-nor-defeat’ slogan are in fact on the side of the bourgeoisie and the opportunists, for
they do not believe in the possibility of international revolutionary action
by the working class against their own governments, and do not wish to help
develop such action, which, though undoubtedly difficult, is the only task
worthy of a proletarian, the only socialist task.”
And in another 1915 article labeled “The State
of Affairs in Russian Social-Democracy” Lenin comments,
“Trotsky, who as always entirely disagrees with
the social-chauvinists in principle, but agrees with them in everything in
practice....”
In the article entitled “Socialism
and War” Lenin states,
“In Russia, Trotsky, while rejecting this idea,
also defends unity with the opportunist and chauvinist Nasha Zarya group.
***************************************************************
More on Lenin’s Opinion of Trotsky will now be presented.
In 1915 article in the Social Democrat entitled
“On the Two Lines in the Revolution” Lenin comments on Trotsky’s failure to
realize the importance of the peasantry by saying,
“This task is being wrongly tackled in Nashe Slovo
by Trotsky, who is repeating his ‘original’ 1905 theory and refuses to give
some thought to the reason why, in the course of ten years, life has been
bypassing this splendid theory. From the Bolsheviks Trotsky’s original
theory has borrowed their call for a decisive proletarian revolutionary struggle
and for the conquest of political power by the proletariat, while from the
Mensheviks it has borrowed ‘repudiation’ of the peasantry’s role. The
peasantry, he asserts, are divided into strata, have become differentiated;
their potential revolutionary role has dwindled more and more; in Russia a
‘national’ revolution is impossible; ‘we are living in the era of imperialism,’ says Trotsky, and ‘imperialism does not contrapose the bourgeois nation to
the old regime, but the proletariat to the bourgeois nation.
...The length *Trotsky’s muddled thinking* goes
to is evident from his phrase that by their resoluteness the proletariat will
attract the ‘non-proletarian popular masses’ as well! Trotsky has not
realized that if the proletariat induce the non-proletarian masses to confiscate
the landed estates and overthrown the monarchy, then that will be the consummation
of the ‘national bourgeois revolution’ in Russia; it will be a revolutionary-democratic
dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry!.... This is such
an obvious truth that not even the thousands of phrases in scores of Trotsky’s
Paris articles will ‘refute’ it. *Trotsky is in fact helping the liberal-labour
politicians* in Russia, who by ‘repudiation’ of the role of the peasantry
understand a refusal to raise up the peasants for the revolution!”
In a 1921 pamphlet entitled “The Trade Unions,
the Present Situation and Trotsky’s Mistakes” Lenin drops a whole series of
bombs on Trotsky’s theoretical analyses by saying,
“My principal material is Comrade Trotsky’s pamphlet,
The Role and Tasks of the Trade Unions. When I compare it with the
theses he submitted to the Central Committee, and go over it very carefully,
I am amazed at the number of *theoretical mistakes and glaring blunders*
it contains. How could anyone starting a big Party discussion on this
question produce *such a sorry excuse for a carefully thought out statement*?
Let me go over the main points which, I think, contain the original *fundamental
theoretical errors*.
Trade unions are not just historically necessary;
they are historically inevitable as an organization of the industrial proletariat,
and, under the dictatorship of the proletariat, embrace nearly the whole of
it. This is basic, but Comrade Trotsky keeps forgetting it; he neither
appreciates it nor makes it his point of departure.... Within the system
of the dictatorship of the proletariat, the trade unions stand, if I may
say so, between the Party and the government. In the transition to
socialism the dictatorship of the proletariat is inevitable, but it is not
exercised by an organization which takes in all industrial workers. Why not?.... What happens is that the Party, shall we say, absorbs the
vanguard of the proletariat, and this vanguard exercises the dictatorship
of the proletariat.... But the dictatorship of the proletariat cannot
be exercised through an organization embracing the whole of that class, because
in all capitalist countries (and not only over here, in one of the most backward)
the proletariat is still so divided, so degraded, and so corrupted in parts
(by imperialism in some countries) that an organization taking in the whole
proletariat cannot directly exercise proletarian dictatorship. It can
be exercised only by a vanguard that has absorbed the revolutionary energy
of the class.... From this alone it is evident that there is something
fundamentally wrong in principle when Comrade Trotsky points, in his first
thesis, to ‘ideological confusion’, and speaks of a crisis as existing specifically
and particularly in the trade unions.... *It is Trotsky who is in ‘ideological
confusion’*, because in this key question of the trade unions’ role, from
the standpoint of transition from capitalism to communism, he has lost sight
of the fact that we have here a complex arrangement of cogwheels which cannot
be a simple one; for the dictatorship of the proletariat cannot be exercised
by a mass proletarian organization. It cannot work without a number
of ‘transmission belts’ running from the vanguard to the mass of the advanced
class, and from the latter to the mass of the working people.
...When I consider the role of the trade unions in
production, I find that Trotsky’s basic mistake lies in his always dealing
with it ‘in principle,’ as a matter of ‘general principle.’ All his
theses are based on ‘general principle,’ an approach which is in itself fundamentally
wrong.... In general, Comrade Trotsky’s great mistake, his mistake
of principle, lies in the fact that by raising the question of ‘principle’
at this time he is dragging back the Party and the Soviet power. We
have, thank heaven, done with principles and have gone on to practical business.
We chatted about principles--rather more than we should have--at the Smolny.
The actual differences, apart from those I have
listed, really have nothing to do with general principles. I have had
to enumerate my ‘differences’ with Comrade Trotsky because, with such a broad
theme as ‘The Role and Tasks of the Trade Unions,’ **he has, I am quite sure,
made a number of mistakes bearing on the very essence of the dictatorship
of the proletariat**.
...I must say that had we made a detailed, even
if small-scale, study of our own experience and practices, we should have
managed to avoid the hundreds of quite unnecessary ‘differences’ and *errors
of principle in which Comrade Trotsky’s pamphlet abounds*.
...While betraying this lack of thoughtfulness, Comrade
Trotsky falls into error himself. He seems to say that in a workers’
state it is not the business of the trade unions to stand up for the material
and spiritual interests of the working class. That is a mistake.
Comrade Trotsky speaks of a ‘workers’ state.’ May I say that this is
an abstraction. It was natural for us to write about a workers’ state
in 1917; but it is now a patent error to say: ‘Since this is a workers’ state
without any bourgeoisie, against whom then is the working class to be protected,
and for what purpose?’ The point is that it is not quite a workers’ state.
That is where Comrade Trotsky makes one of his main mistakes.... This
will not do. For one thing, ours is not actually a workers’ state but
a workers’ and peasants’ state. And a lot depends on that.
...Well, is it right to say that in a state that
has taken this shape in practice the trade unions have nothing to protect,
or that we can do without them in protecting the material and spiritual interests
of the massively organized proletariat? No, this reasoning is theoretically
quite wrong. It takes us into the sphere of abstraction or an ideal
we shall achieve in 15 or 20 years time, and I am not so sure that we shall
have achieved it even by then.
...At any rate, see that you choose fewer slogans,
like ‘industrial democracy,’ which contain nothing but confusion and are
theoretically wrong. *Both Trotsky and Bukharin failed to think out
this term theoretically and ended up in confusion*. ...I say: cast
your vote against it, because it is confusion. Industry is indispensable,
democracy is not. Industrial democracy breeds some utterly false ideas.
The idea of one-man management was advocated only a little while ago.
We must not make a mess of things and confuse people: how do you expect them
to know when you want democracy, when one-man management, and when dictatorship.
But on no account must we renounce dictatorship either....
***************************************************************
[LENIN’S VIGOROUS DENUNCIATION OF TROTSKY’S POSITION ON THE TRADE UNIONS CONTINUES--PART 2]
But to go on. Since September we have
been talking about switching from the principle of priority to that of equalization....
...Priority implies preference for one industry out
of a group of vital industries because of its greater urgency. What
does such preference entail? How great can it be? This is a difficult
question.... And so if we are to raise this question of priority and
equalization we must first of all give it some careful thought, but that
is just what we fail to find in Comrade Trotsky’s work; *the further he goes
in revising his original theses, the more mistakes he makes*. Here
is what we find in his latest theses:.... This is *a real theoretical
muddle. It is all wrong*....
The fourth point is disciplinary courts. I
hope Comrade Bukharin will not take offence if I say that without disciplinary
courts the role of the trade unions in industry, ‘industrial democracy,’ is
a mere trifle. But the fact it that there is nothing at all about this
in your theses. *“Great grief!’ is therefore the only thing that can
be said about Trotsky’s theses and Bukharin’s attitude, from the standpoint
of principle, theory and practice*.
I am confirmed in this conclusion when I say to
myself: *yours is not a Marxist approach to the question.* This quite
apart from the fact that there are a number of theoretical mistakes in the
theses. It is not a Marxist approach to the evaluation of the ‘role
and tasks of the trade unions,’ because such a broad subject cannot be tackled
without giving thought to the peculiar political aspects of the present situation.
After all, Comrade Bukharin and I did say in the resolution...on trade unions
that politics is the most concentrated expression of economics.
...Comrade Trotsky says in his theses that on the
question of workers’ democracy it remains for the Congress to ‘enter it unanimously
in the record.’ That is not correct. There is more to it than
an entry in the record; an entry in the record fixes what has been fully
weighed and measured, whereas the question of industrial democracy is from
having been fully weighed, tried and tested. Just think how the masses
may interpret this slogan of ‘industrial democracy.’
...*Trotsky’s theses, whatever his intentions, do
not tend to play up the best, but the worst in military experience*. It must be borne in mind that a political leader is responsible not only for
his own policy but also for the acts of those he leads.
...The last thing I want to tell you about--something
I called myself a fool for yesterday--is that I had altogether overlooked
Comrade Rudzutak’s theses. His weak point is that he does not speak
in ringing tones; he is not an impressive or eloquent speaker. He is
liable to be overlooked. Unable to attend the meetings yesterday, I
went through my material and found his leaflet called: ‘The Tasks of the
Trade Unions in Production’. Let me read it to you, it is not long....
(Lenin then read Rudzutak’s pamphlet and says,--Ed.), I hope you see not
why I called myself names. There you have a platform, and *it is much
better than the one Comrade Trotsky wrote after a great deal of thinking*,
and the one Comrade Bukharin wrote without any thinking at all. All
of us members of the Central Committee who have been out of touch with the
trade union movement for many years would profit from Comrade Rudzutak’s
experience, and this also goes for Comrade Trotsky and Comrade Bukharin.
The trade unions have adopted this platform.
(Lenin concludes his article on the trade unions by saying--Ed.)
The net result is that *there are a number of theoretical mistakes in Trotsky’s and Bukharin’s theses*: they contain a number of things that are wrong in principle. Politically, the whole approach to the matter is utterly tactless. *Comrade Trotsky’s ‘theses’ are politically harmful*. The sum and substance of his policy is bureaucratic harassment of the trade unions. Our Party Congress will, I am sure, condemn and reject it.”
At the Second All-Russia Congress of Miners in
1921 Lenin wrote,
“The morbid character of the question of the role
and tasks of the trade unions is due to the fact that it took the form of
a factional struggle much too soon. This vast, boundless question should
not have been taken up in such haste, as it was done here, and *I put the
chief blame on Comrade Trotsky for all this fumbling haste and precipitation*.
To illustrate my point, and to proceed at once to
the heart of the matter, let me read you the chief of Trotsky’s theses.
(Lenin then reads Trotsky’s short statement--Ed.). I could quote many
similar passages from Trotsky’s pamphlet. I ask, by way of factional
statement: Is it becoming for such an influential person, such a prominent
leader, to attack his Party comrades in this way? I am sure that 99%
of the comrades, excepting those involved in the quarrel, will say that this
should not be done.
...What sort of talk is this? Is it the right
kind of language? Is it the right approach? I had earlier said
that I might succeed in acting as a ‘buffer’ and staying out of the discussion,
because it is harmful to fight with Trotsky--it does the Republic, the Party,
and all of us a lot of harm--but when this pamphlet came out, I felt I had
to speak up.
...Even if there is a spirit of hostility for the
new men, one should not say a thing like that. *Trotsky accuses Lozovsky
and Tomsky of bureaucratic practices. I would say the reverse is true*.
...Even the best workers make mistakes.... Comrade Trotsky says that Comrades Tomsky and Lozovsky--trade unionists both--are
guilty of cultivating in their midst a spirit of hostility for the new men.
*But this is monstrous. Only someone in the lunatic fringe can say
a thing like that*.
That is just why *Trotsky’s whole approach is wrong*.
I could have analyzed any one of his theses, but it would take me hours,
and you would all be bored to death. *Every thesis reveals the same
thoroughly wrong approach*....
***************************************************************
LENIN’S EXPOSURE OF TROTSKY’S INADEQUACIES CONTINUES--THE TRADE UNIONS (Part 3)
In another 1921 article
on the same topic entitled “Once Again on the Trade Unions” Lenin states,
“*Comrade Trotsky’s theses have landed him in a
mess*. That part of them which is correct is not new and, what is more,
turns against him. That which is new is all wrong. I have written
out Comrade Trotsky’s correct propositions. They turn against him not
only on the point in thesis 23 but on the others as well.
...Can it be denied that, even if Trotsky’s ‘new
tasks and methods’ were as sound as they are in fact unsound, *his very approach
would be damaging to himself, the Party, the trade union movement, the training
of millions of trade union members and the Republic*?
...I decided there and then that policy lay at the
root of the controversy, and that Comrade Trotsky, with his ‘shake-up’ policy
against Comrade Tomsky, was entirely in the wrong.
...But ‘shake-up’ is a real ‘catchword’, not only
in the sense that after being uttered by Comrade Trotsky at the Fifth All-Russia
Conference of Trade Unions it has, you might say, ‘caught on’ throughout
the Party and the trade unions. Unfortunately, it remains true even
today in the much more profound sense that it alone epitomizes the whole
spirit, the whole trend of the platform pamphlet entitled The Role and Tasks
of the Trade Unions. Comrade Trotsky’s platform pamphlet is shot through
with the spirit of the ‘shake-up-from-above’ policy.
...but after its publication we had to say: *Comrade
Trotsky is essentially wrong on all his new points*.
This is most evident from a comparison of his theses
with Rudzutak’s which were adopted.... They are fuller and more correct
than Trotsky’s, and *wherever the latter differs from Rudzutak, he is wrong*.
...The fourth point is that ‘industrial democracy’ is a term that lends itself to misinterpretation. It may be read as
a repudiation of dictatorship and individual authority. It may be read
as a suspension of ordinary democracy or a pretext for evading it.
Both readings are harmful, and cannot be avoided without long special commentaries.
...Trotsky’s ‘production atmosphere’ is even wider
of the mark, and Zinoviev had good reason to laugh at it.... Comrade
Trotsky’s ‘production atmosphere’ has essentially the same meaning as production
propaganda, but such expressions must be avoided when production propaganda
is addressed to the workers at large. The term is an example of how
not to carry it on among the masses.
...Defence or camouflage of the political mistake
expressed in the shake-up policy, which runs through the whole of Trotsky’s
platform pamphlet, and which, unless it is admitted and corrected, *leads
to the collapse of the dictatorship of the proletariat*.
...That is where Zinoviev and myself, on the one
hand, and Trotsky and Bukharin, on the other, actually stand on this question
of politics and economics.
I could not help smiling, therefore, when I read
Comrade Trotsky’s objection in his speech.... Comrade Trotsky thought
these words were ‘very much to the point.’ Actually, however, *they
reveal a terrible confusion of ideas, a truly hopeless ‘ideological confusion*.’
...Comrade Trotsky’s political mistakes, aggravated
by Comrade Bukharin, distract our Party’s attention from economic tasks and
‘production’ work, and, unfortunately, make us waste time on correcting them
and arguing it out with the syndicalist deviation (which leads to the collapse
of the dictatorship of the proletariat), objecting to the incorrect
approach to the trade union movement (which leads to the collapse of the
Soviet power), and debating general ‘theses’ instead of having a practical
and business-like ‘economic’ discussion....
Once again we find political mistakes distracting
attention from economic tasks. I was against this ‘broad’ discussion,
and I believed, and still do, that it was a mistake--a political mistake--on
Comrade Trotsky’s part to disrupt the work of the trade union commission,
which ought to have held a business-like discussion.
*For Trotsky has made the Party waste time on a
discussion of words and bad theses*....
We who are breaking new ground must put in a long,
persistent and patient effort to retrain men and change the old habits which
have come down to us from capitalism, but this can only be done little by
little. *Trotsky’s approach is quite wrong*. In his December
30th speech he exclaimed: ‘Do or do not our workers, Party and trade union
functionaries have any production training? Yes or no? I say:
No. This is a ridiculous approach. It is like asking whether
a division has enough felt boots: Yes or no?
It is safe to say that even ten years from now we
shall have to admit that all our Party and trade union functionaries do not
have enough production training....
...And it is this rule that Comrade Trotsky has
broken by his theses and approach. *All his theses, his entire platform
pamphlet, are so wrong that they have diverted the Party’s attention and
resources from practical ‘production’ work to a lot of empty talk*.
...Trotsky’s mistake is ‘insufficient support for
the school-of-communism idea’;....
...Whether you take it in the form it assumed at
the Fifth All-Russia Conference of Trade Unions, or as it was presented and
slanted by Trotsky himself in his platform pamphlet of December 25th, you
will find that his whole approach is quite wrong and that he has gone off
at a tangent. He has failed to understand that the trade unions can
and must be viewed as a school both when raising the question of ‘Soviet
trade-unionism,’ and when speaking of production propaganda in general....
On this last point, as it is presented in Trotsky’s platform pamphlet, the
mistake lies in his failure to grasp that the trade unions are a school of
technical and administrative management of production. ...the trade
unions, whichever way you look at them, are a school. They are a school
of unity, solidarity, management and administration, where you learn how
to protect your interests. Instead of making an effort to comprehend
and correct *Comrade Trotsky’s fundamental mistake*, Comrade Bukharin has
produced a funny little amendment.
...let me say that Comrade Trotsky’s fundamental
mistake is that he treats (rather maltreats) the questions he himself had
brought up in his platform pamphlet as administrative ones, whereas they could
be and ought to be viewed only from the administrative angle....
The state is a sphere of coercion. *It would
be madness to renounce coercion, especially in the epoch of the dictatorship
of the proletariat*.... The Party is the leader, the vanguard of the
proletariat, which rules directly. *It is not coercion but expulsion
from the Party that is the specific means of influence and the means of purging
and steeling the vanguard.* The trade unions are a reservoir of the
state power, a school of communism and a school of management. The
specific and cardinal thing in this sphere is not administration but the
‘ties’ ‘between the central state administration,’ ‘the national economy and
the broad masses of the working people.
The whole of Trotsky’s platform pamphlet betrays
an incorrect approach to the problem and a misunderstanding of this relationship.
This is essentially a political question. Because
of the substance of the case--this concrete, particular ‘case’--*it is impossible
to correct Trotsky’s mistake by means of eclectic little amendments and addenda*,
as Bukharin has been trying to do, being moved undoubtedly by the most humane
sentiments and intentions.
*Trotsky and Bukharin have produced a hodgepodge
of political mistakes in approach*, breaks in the middle of the transmission
belts, and unwarranted and futile attacks on ‘administrative steerage.’ It is now clear where the ‘theoretical source of the mistake lies, since Bukharin
has taken up that aspect of it with his example of the tumbler. His
theoretical mistake lies in his substitution of eclecticism for dialectics. His eclectic approach has confused him and has landed him in syndicalism. **Trotsky’s mistake is one-track thinking, compulsiveness, exaggeration and
obstinacy**.
...Incidentally, Comrade Trotsky says in his theses
that ‘over the last period we have not made any headway towards the goal
set forth in the Programme but have in fact retreated from it.’ That
statement is unsupported, and, I think, wrong.
...And Trotsky has no one but himself to blame for
having come out--after the November Plenary Meeting, which gave a clear-cut
and theoretically correct solution--with a factional pamphlet on ‘the two
trends’ and proposed a formulation in his thesis 41 which is wrong in economic
terms.
Today, January 25, it is exactly one month since
Comrade Trotsky’s factional statement. It is now patent that this pronouncement,
inappropriate in form and wrong in essence, has diverted the Party from its
practical economic and production effort into rectifying political and theoretical
mistakes. But it’s an ill wind, as the old saying goes.
In this one month, Petrograd, Moscow and a number
of provincial towns have shown that the Party responded to the discussion
and *has rejected Comrade Trotsky’s wrong line by an overwhelming majority*. While there may have been some vacillation ‘at the top’ and ‘in the provinces’,
in the committees and in the offices, the rank-and-file membership--*the mass
of Party workers--came out solidly against this wrong line*.
...In any case, his January 23 announcement shows
that the Party, without so much as mustering all its forces, and with only
Petrograd, Moscow and a minority of the provincial towns going on record,
has *corrected Comrade Trotsky’s mistake promptly and with determination*.
The Party’s enemies had rejoiced too soon. They have not been able--and will never be able--to take advantage of some
of the inevitable disagreements within the Party to inflict harm on it and
on the dictatorship of the proletariat in Russia.
In a January 1921 article entitled The Party Crisis
Lenin states,
“The Central Committee sets up a trade union commission
and elects Comrade Trotsky to it. He refuses to work on the commission,
magnifying by this step alone his original mistake, which subsequently leads
to factionalism....”
***************************************************************
THIS POST IS OUR FINAL REVELATION OF LENIN’S CRITICISMS OF TROTSKY
During a 1921 “Speech on the Trade Unions” Lenin
stated,
“Comrade Trotsky now laughs at my asking who started
it all, and is surprised that I should reproach him for refusing to serve
on the commission. I did it because this is very important Comrade
Trotsky, very important, indeed; your refusal to serve on the trade union
commission was *a violation of Central Committee discipline*.”
In a 1922 article entitled “Reply to Remarks Concerning
the Functions of the Deputy Chairmen of the Council of People’s Commisars”
Lenin said,
“Some of Trotsky’s remarks are likewise vague (for
example, the ‘apprehensions’ in paragraph 4) and do not require an answer;
other remarks made by him renew old disagreements, that we have repeatedly
observed in the Political Bureau....
As regards the Workers’ and Peasants’ Inspection,
*Comrade Trotsky is fundamentally wrong*....
As regards the State Planning Commission, *Comrade
Trotsky is not only absolutely wrong but is judging something on which he
is amazingly ill-informed*.
...The second paper from Comrade Trotsky...contains,
first, an extremely excited but profoundly erroneous ‘criticism’ of the Political
Bureau decree on setting up a financial triumvirate....
Secondly, this paper flings the same fundamentally
wrong and intrinsically untrue accusations of academic method at the State
Planning Commission, accusations which lead up to *the next incredibly uninformed
statement by Comrade Trotsky*....”
In a letter to Lyubimov written in 1909 Lenin
stated,
“As regards Trotsky, I must say that I shall be
most vigorously opposed to helping him if he rejects (and he has already rejected
it!) equality on the editorial board, proposed to him by a member of the
C.C. Without a settlement of this question by the Executive Committee
on the Bolshevik Centre, no steps to help Trotsky are permissible.”
In a letter to Alexandra Kollontai written in
1917 Lenin really blasted Trotsky by saying,
“Pleasant as it was to learn from you of the victory
of N.Iv. and Pavlov in Novy Mir (I get this newspaper devilishly irregularly;...it
was just as sad to read about the bloc between Trotsky and the Right for
the struggle against N. Iv. *What a swine this Trotsky is*--Left phrases,
and a bloc with the Right against the Zimmerwald Left!! He ought to
be exposed (by you) if only in a brief letter to the Social-Democrat!”
In another Letter to Kollontai written after August
1915 Lenin stated,
“Roland-Holst, like Rakovsky...like Trotsky, in
my opinion, are all the most harmful ‘Kautskians,’ in the sense that all
of them in various forms are for unity with the opportunists, all in various
forms *embellish* opportunism, all of them (in various way) preach eclecticism
instead of revolutionary Marxism.”
In an equally powerful letter to Inessa Armand
written about the same time Lenin states,
“...Trotsky arrived, and *this scoundrel* at once
ganged up with the Right wing of Novy Mir against the Left Zimmerwaldist! That’s it!! *That’s Trotsky for you!! Always true to himself==twists,
swindles, poses as a Left, helps the Right, so long as he can*....”
In a 1911 article entitled “The State of Affairs
of the Party” Lenin stated,
What is the attitude of the other factions abroad?
Trotsky, of course, is solidly behind the liquidators....
There are Party people, and liquidators who have
broken away and set up a separate group. Groups abroad, like those
of Golos, Trotsky, the Bund, and Vperyod, want to cover up the break-away
of the liquidators, help them to hide under the banner of the R.S.D.L.P.,
and help them to thwart the rebuilding of the R.S.D.L.P. It is our task
at all costs to rebuff the liquidators and, despite their opposition, recreate
the R.S.D.L.P....
The ‘conciliators’ put their trust in Trotsky, who
has clearly executed a full turn towards the liquidators....
We Bolsheviks have resolved on no account to repeat
the error of conciliationism today. This would mean slowing down the
rebuilding of the R.S.D.S.P, and entangling it in a new game with the Golos
people (or *their lackeys, like Trotsky*), the Vperyodists and so forth.”
In 1911 Lenin stated in an article,
“We know that there are people who, while recognizing
the need to fight the liquidators, object to a complete break with them and
continue (even now!) to speak of ‘conciliation’ or ‘agreement’. Among
these people are not only *the ‘loyal servitors’ of Trotsky, whom very few
people now take seriously*.”
In a 1912 “Report on the Work of the International
Socialist Bureau” Lenin stated,
“I was no longer about able to talk to the Golos
people and looked at Trotsky with disapproval, especially over the letter.”
In a 1915 letter to Herman Gorter Lenin stated,
“I congratulate you on your splendid attacks on
opportunism and Kautsky. Trotsky’s principal mistake is that he does
not attack this gang.”
In a letter to Kamenev Lenin stated,
“What is the purpose of our policy now, at this
precise moment? To build the Party core not on *the cheap phrases of
Trotsky and Co.* but on genuine ideological rapprochement between the Plekhanovites
and the Bolsheviks.”
In a March 1916 letter to Henriette Roland-Holst
Lenin commented,
“What are our differences with Trotsky? This
must probably interest you. *In brief--he is a Kautskyite*, that is,
he stands for unity with the Kautskyites in the International and with Chkheidze’s
parliamentary group in Russia. We are absolutely against such unity....
Trotsky at present is against the Organizing Committee (Axelrod and Martov)
but for unity with the Chkheidze Duma group!!
We are decidedly against.”
In a 1909 Letter to Zinoview Lenin stated,
“As regards Pravda, have you read Trotsky’s letter
to Inok? If you have, I hope it has convinced you that Trotsky behaves
like a despicable careerist and factionalist of the Ryazanov-and-Co. type.
Either equality on the editorial board, subordination to the CC and no one’s
transfer to Paris except Trotsky’s (the scoundrel, he wants to ‘fix up’ the
who rascally crew of Pravda at our expense!)--or break with this swindler
and and exposure of him in the CO. He pays lip-service to the Party
and behaves worse than any other of the factionalists.
In a 1916 letter to Zinoviev Lenin said,
“We had better deal with Trotsky in Sbornik Sotsial-Demokrata;
he has to be dealt with at greater length.”
In another letter to Zinoviev in the same year
Lenin stated,
“...It’s ghastly. I don’t know what to do.
Yet something has still to be written about opportunism (I have 1/2 of it
ready), about defeatism, and about Trotskyism (including the Duma group +
P. S. D.).
In a March 1916 article entitled The Peace Programme
Lenin stated,
“What about Trotsky? He is body and soul for
self-determination, but in his case, too, it is an empty phrase, for he does
not demand freedom of secession for nations oppressed by the ‘fatherland’
of the socialist of the given nationality; he is silent about the hypocrisy
of Kautsky and his followers.’
In a July 1916 article entitled The Discussion
on Self-determination Summed Up Lenin stated,
“No matter what the subjective ‘good’ intentions
of Trotsky and Martov may be, teir evasiveness objectively supports Russian
social-imperialism.”
In a report to the 7th Congress of the R.C.P.
(B.) Lenin stated,
“What I predicted has come to pass; instead of the
Brest peace we have a much more humiliating peace, and the blame for this
rests upon those [e.g. Trotsky] who refused to accept the former peace.”
COMMENTS BY TROTSKY ABOUT LENIN
And we must certainly not forget the following
opinions of Lenin expressed by Trotsky in a 1913 Letter to Chkeidze in which
he stated,
“The wretched squabbling systematically
provoked by Lenin, that old hand at the game, that professional exploiter
of all that is backward in the Russian labour movement, seems like a senseless
obsession.... The entire edifice of Leninism Is built on lies and falsification
and bears within itself the poisonous elements of its own decay.“
WELL, THERE YOU HAVE IT LADIES AND GENTLEMAN;
SPELLED OUT BY 10 POSTS IN ALL ITS GORY DETAIL.
NOW YOU KNOW WHY TROTSKY WAS THE ONLY MAJOR LEADER
NOT AT LENIN’S FUNERAL.
NOW YOU KNOW WHY TROTSKY WAS NEVER SERIOUSLY CONSIDERED
FOR THE POSITION OF GENERAL SECRETARY
OF THE PARTY.
NOW YOU KNOW WHY TROTSKY’S PROGRAM WAS SOLIDLY AND
ROUNDLY REJECTED AT THE 13TH PARTY CONGRESS IN
1924 AND THE 15TH PARTY CONGRESS IN 1927, THE LATTER BY A VOTE OF 740,000
T0 4,000.
AND ABOVE ALL, NOW YOU KNOW WHY TROTSKYISM IS NOT
MARXISM-LENINISM.