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Geschichte und Gesellschaft
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Popular Sovereignty and Constitutional
Rights in the USSR’s Supreme Soviet
Elections of February 1946
Mark B. Smith
After the end of the Second World War, Western observers usually saw
Soviet elections as empty rituals that were derisory or comic, or as totali-
tarian ceremonies with sinister trappings. These were, after all, elections in
which only a single political party could field candidates, and then only one
in each electoral district. They generated an assembly whose delegates
apparently gathered to do little more than applaud a dictator. At a recep-
tion in the British Houses of Parliament in the spring of 1956, the Conser-
vative Minister of Housing, Edwin Duncan Sandys, made this point to the
Soviet Minister of Culture, Nikolai Aleksandrovich Mikhailov. Mikhailov
was a deputy in the lower house of the Supreme Soviet, the country’s par-
liament, and represented a district of Moscow. According to their inter-
preter, Sandys asked Mikhailov: “Did you have an opponent at the last
election?” To which Mikhailov replied: “Mr. Duncan Sandys knows very
well that we do not have opponents in our elections.” Sandys went on:
“Well, why do you bother to visit your voters?” Mikhailov’s response
seemed evasive: “They have other ways of expressing their dissatisfaction
with me. […] They can withdraw their confidence in me at a [candidate
nomination] meeting of the electorate. […] The voters are not expected to
judge us only by what we do for them, but also by our contribution to
national affairs.” Like Sandys, the interpreter seemed unimpressed, and he
prefaced his archived transcription with some comments about Soviet
“pseudo-parliamentary institutions”.1
During a visit to the USSR more than twenty years earlier, the leading
left-wing commentators, Sidney and Beatrice Webb, had formed a different
view. They deduced that Soviet elections proved the existence of
“universal participation in public administration”; even though the political
system had only one party, the procedure for nominating candidates for
election to local and national Soviets ensured that “there is never such a
——————
1 TNA: FO 371/122838, Interpreters’ Reports, 15: report by Mr. Kolarz.
60
M A R K B . S M I T H
thing as an uncontested election”; the country’s fundamentally democratic
public culture produced a Soviet government that was “less of an autocracy
or a dictatorship than many a parliamentary cabinet” (Webb and Webb
1935, 44, 46, 448). A few years later, they praised the Stalin constitution of
1936 for creating “the most inclusive and equalized democracy in the
world” (Webb and Webb 1942, 16). For them, the universal rights that the
constitution enshrined, from the right to certain welfare services to the
right to vote for the national assembly, were deeply impressive. They saw
nothing “pseudo” in the Supreme Soviet or the elections to it.
Yet Soviet elections were neither meaningless nor sincere: neither hol-
lowly totalitarian nor openly democratic. While their judgments do not
survive historical scrutiny, Sandys and the Webbs still provide a number of
contrasts that throw light on Soviet electoral democracy. This chapter
seeks to interpret that phenomenon by making special reference to the
Supreme Soviet elections of 1946. On the one hand, these elections had
some formalistic and emptily procedural characteristics, but, on the other,
they were also solidly constitutional, and were considered important by the
hierarchy of Party and government. The election campaign and poll were
static occasions in political terms, but they rested on a dynamic and some-
times unpredictable popular sovereignty that was presented as unanimous.
The exercise of this sovereignty was intrinsic to Soviet rule and was the
basic reason why elections were held. True, this popular sovereignty was an
incarnation of Rousseau’s general will and was a fearsome, institutionally
“totalitarian” consequence of the popular Soviet democracy of 1917. Yet
the Supreme Soviet, the product of the 1936 constitution, was an ideal
parliamentary form; in outline it resembled a Western parliament, and was
similarly grounded on constitutional rights. Indeed, a major theme of the
1946 campaign was the propagandizing of these rights.
In the USSR, elections took place at various levels of Party and govern-
ment, and citizens found themselves voting with improbable frequency
(Friedgut 1979, 73). At the top of the hierarchy was the all-union, bicam-
eral Supreme Soviet, set up as the whole country’s parliament by the 1936
constitution. Its first election took place in 1937 (the second was in 1946,
following the interruption of the war). Elections to all institutions ignored
recognizably democratic norms: most outstandingly, they were not con-
tested; by definition, they could not change an incumbent for a challenger;
and some of their practices—such as the need to cross out, often when
standing outside the privacy of a polling booth, an unfavored candidate on
P O P U L A R S O V E R E I G N T Y A N D C O N S T I T U T I O N A L R I G H T S
61
a ballot paper that contained a single name—were aggressively anti-democ-
ratic.2 Nonetheless, the general constitutional framework of elections, set
up in 1936, offered a robustly democratic prescription. Elections took
place according to universal suffrage, with even the “former people”, such
as the children of nobles or priests, who had been denied the right to vote
since the revolution, now being able to cast a vote. Constitutional rules did
not presume at all that elections would not be competitive, or that the