Read Jessen & Richter (Eds.) Online
Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
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A fifth reason concerns the way that elections might hoodwink the
people. Social scientists working in the West during the Soviet period
pointed to the location of the elections in the regime’s “façade of legiti-
macy and legality”, and to the symbolic significance of the elections for the
population, since they allowed ordinary people a token of participation
(Vanneman 1977, 74). But this last point does not stand up so well to his-
torical analysis, since it overstates the credulity of the population and un-
derestimates the structural role of elections.
Despite their lack of liberal democratic rigor, elections and constitu-
tionalism were not a Soviet façade, but part of its foundation. During the
shaky post-war year of 1946, re-establishing the strength of this foundation
was a major priority for Stalin and his ruling circle. While the themes of the
campaign were presented for celebration rather than for approval or disap-
proval, this was because unanimity was assumed: the unanimity of a mono-
lithic popular sovereignty whose theoretical existence was at the core of
the Soviet system of rule. The campaign was a moment when power
sought to teach the people to express the will of all—the will of people and
power, alike and indivisible—in the language of constitutional rights. The
campaign, though, would fail to do this.
Forcing People to be Free: Popular Sovereignty and Unanimity
A fake electoral democracy was an indispensable component in making the
Soviet system coherent, in theory and practice. The tensions and paradoxes
that underpinned elections were essential to the inner logic of the Soviet
system as a whole. In two books, David Priestland has elaborated on two
impulses inherent to Marxism that directly influenced the construction of
Soviet institutions: Marxism’s rational, modern side, and its Romantic,
mobilizing aspect (Priestland 2007; 2009). The electoral system can be seen
as a product of both. The Bolsheviks might have held “bourgeois parlia-
mentarianism” in contempt, but they believed in the creation of modern
institutions and in the formation of a state that (before its ultimate
withering away) could efficiently serve the needs of the proletariat and then
the people as a whole. They had to make a modern bureaucracy work in a
socialist society (Friedgut 1979, 38). Elected and accountable institutions
were part of the landscape of modernity of which the Soviet project was
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M A R K B . S M I T H
deemed the center. For the Bolsheviks, it was inconceivable that elections
should not be held. Yet they found it equally inconceivable that a near
absolute majority—the 99 per cent—should not vote for them. Straight
after the revolution, national elections to the Constituent Assembly
favored the Socialist Revolutionaries, and the Bolsheviks destroyed the
Assembly; for the Bolsheviks, permitting the elections and then violently
eliminating their outcome were consistent. One of their pamphlets at the
time declared: “The constituent assembly must meet in Petrograd, so that
the revolutionary people, and especially the revolutionary garrison, can
watch it and direct it” (Anweiler 1974, 211). This logic created in turn the
Soviet system of elections. Single-candidate elections were symptomatic of
Soviet mobilizing techniques. In formal terms, elections to the Supreme
Soviet were indeed a grand exercise in popular sovereignty, as Vyshinskii
maintained, but this was sovereignty indistinguishable from unanimity.
This popular sovereignty owed little to the feeble heritage of the
Duma-period parliaments between 1906 and the First World War (Hosk-
ing 1973; Emmons 1983), let alone to the elected assemblies of the medie-
val Russian lands, though its populist form to some extent emerged from
the village commune.6 The enduring weakness of parliamentary structures
during the Soviet period and after can be better explained as a result of the
popular sovereignty embedded in the Soviet system, which derived from
the early Soviets (Carson 195, 93–95; Kravtsov 1954, 9). The Soviets were
products of “direct democracy”, appearing dramatically in 1905 and then
again in 1917, and were elected in factories, villages and military units
(Geltzer 1992). Notwithstanding their free election, and the lively and ex-
citing debates that they hosted during the revolutionary period and espe-
cially during the “freest” year of 1917, Soviets would ultimately provide a
template for unanimity, with their public voting, high pressure atmosphere,
and exhausting, revolutionary intensity (Anweiler 1974, 54).
Both in 1917 and later, a determined attitude to class was the rhetorical
framework within which unanimity developed. Even after Stalin’s triumph
of socialism in the 1930s and consequent universalization of the concept of
citizenship, class remained the crucial discursive category. After 1917, as
other parties were sidelined and then banned, and as the Communist Party
came to speak with a more unified voice, elected Soviets became the repre-
——————
6 The existence of organs of local government (
zemstva
) was only one sign by the late imperial period of a political culture that might have had the potential to evolve democratically.
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67
sentative organs of a dictatorship—the dictatorship of the proletariat. As
so often, the inner logic of Soviet rule rested on discursive and practical
paradoxes. The point that revolution-era Soviets were “democratic institu-
tions” that “would be an obstacle to any force wishing to establish one-
party rule” (Thatcher 1995, 26) does not account for the way that the Bol-
sheviks were quite easily able to integrate democracy and dictatorship
within the Soviets as part of the construction of the Bolshevik brand of
popular sovereignty. This principle underwrote everything that happened
in the 1946 campaign.
Popular sovereignty and populism extended into various areas of life.
Wendy Z. Goldman has shown how in 1937 and 1938 factory and village
meetings, and elections to Party organizations at multiple levels, helped to
drive the cycles of denunciation that made the Great Terror such a dy-
namic and expanded process (Goldman 2007). Elections to the Supreme
Soviet were driven by the same pressures of unanimity, populism, confor-
mity and fear. They followed the prototype of the 1936 “all-union discus-
sion” by which the new constitution was publicized, when a dynamic un-
certainty and sometimes populist discussion lay behind a general face of
unanimity (Getty 1991; Wimberg 1992). The language of unanimity was
certainly ubiquitous in 1946. In a typical campaign article, the newspaper
Moskovskii bol’shevik
described “the indestructible moral-political unity of our people” (
Moskovskii bol’shevik
, January 8, 1946).
Pravda
splashed a banner in standard style: “Across the whole of the Soviet country, with the
greatest unanimity, candidate nominations continue” (
Pravda
, January 4,
1946). An elderly, disabled doctor was reported in the
Literary Gazette
as struggling down from his fifth floor home to vote and thereby to “feel
clearly my connection with the monolithic will of our people” (
Literaturnaia
gazeta
, February 9, 1946). In elections, candidates were elected unopposed by universal suffrage on 99 per cent-plus turnouts. Propagandists claimed
greater credibility for this unanimity by extending it beyond the Party; can-
didates belonged to a bloc of Party and non-party representatives (Hill
1973, 200–2; 1976). In 1946, the proportion of non-party candidates was
19 per cent (Hazard 1953, 75). For all the idea of a populist coalition, Party
and non-party candidates alike shared the same opinions, and the things
over which they agreed were by definition in everyone’s interests. It was an
electoral system in which people were forced to be free.
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M A R K B . S M I T H
Constitutional Rights and Modern Government
Popular sovereignty, populism and the “general will” seem contrary to
regularized principles of modern government, but in the Stalinist Soviet
Union, they were complementary. The 1936 constitution had created what
looked like liberal institutions, including a national parliament, and had
declared new universal rights. While class remained an essential means of
structuring Soviet society, the 1936 constitution removed the class disabili-
ties of “former people” and established rights for all. The 1946 election
was a natural time to emphasize these new rights to the population.
Following victory, and amid mass disruption and major-scale destruction,
the regime sought to make its grip on power as tight as possible. One
method was by emphasizing the durability of Soviet institutions and their
grounding in constitutional propriety. Institutions were renamed or
reconstituted to embody regularity and permanence rather than revolution.
At the centre of government, the Council of People’s Commissars became
the Council of Ministers (Gorlizki and Khlevniuk 2004). The dull
“parliamentarianism” of the Supreme Soviet, with its routine territorial
constituencies and apparently standardized voting procedures, reflected
this normalization. It recrafted the revolutionary inheritance, replacing the
direct workplace democracy and combined executive-legislative functions
of typical Soviets (Medvedev 1975, 131–47). In the quest for permanence
and renewed legitimization, the constitution was put at the heart of the
election campaign of 1946. The constitution’s emphasis on rights was
central to the way that the regime sought after the war to describe its
relationship with the population.
Even in the Supreme Soviet nomination meetings, gatherings that ex-
isted because of the Soviet heritage of popular sovereignty, the turn to
regularized constitutionalism was becoming evident. The mass meetings at
which candidates were nominated for election to the Supreme Soviet were
faint echoes of their institutional predecessors, the Soviets of workers that
had gathered in 1905 and 1917, and their expression of popular sovereignty
was trammeled by top-down and centrally coordinated political directives.