Read Jessen & Richter (Eds.) Online
Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
tion in implementing state politics (tax, arrests etc.), distribution of state
funds (apartments, jobs, pensions etc.), and in organizing public welfare.
Thus, the election of local deputies had much more immediate significance
for the people. The voters often knew precisely how these deputies did
their job. It was only at the grassroots levels that there existed a manifest
risk for the candidates in the countryside of being defeated in secret elec-
tions.6 The real places of political decision-making, however, the Central
——————
4 Also, candidates in these elections in general were designated by higher levels.
5 Cf. Ritterband (1978, 101–3).
6 Roggemann (1973, 256) indicates that the total number of such cases for the 1957
election to the local soviets was 134 candidates defeated for the RSFSR, and 16 for Ukraine. Especially the heads of rural soviets or
kolkhoz
chairmen ran the risk of being defeated, cf. TsDNIY, Fond 272, op. 226–29, diverse dela.; 227, delo 489, l. 209 states that there were more negative votes in the lower soviets; delo 464 (1959), l. 53: states that two chairmen of rural soviets failed.
280
S T E P H A N M E R L
Committees of the Party or the Party Committees, were not elected in
general or direct elections. Their leading personnel was installed from the
top by the ruler and the
nomenclatura system
(Merl 2010a, 264).
From 1937 onwards, elections of the Soviets were prescribed to be
general, direct, free and secret. This constituted a fundamental change in
the principles effective until the mid-1930s. Only the principle of equal
elections had existed since 1917, granting men and women the same voting
rights.7 Especially in the countryside, it had taken a long time for women
to make use of their new rights.8 The principle of general elections was
new. From 1937 onwards, every person “was granted” voting rights, in-
cluding the previously disenfranchised “former people” such as former
kulaks
, landowners, and “cult servants” (priests). While participation in the elections until the mid-1930s was under increasing political pressure, it still
remained voluntary. Now it became obligatory. The second novelty was
the introduction of direct elections to all levels of the soviets. This meant
that in 1937, for the first time, the election of the newly-founded highest
organ of state power, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, was held. Until the
mid-1930s, only the rural and city soviets had been elected directly. Finally,
the principle of secret balloting was introduced. It played the core role in
Stalin’s understanding of “democracy” (Goldman 2005).
Was there a need to change the election system in the mid-1930s in the
first place? In comparing Stalinism to National Socialism, we realize that
the ideological foundation of Stalinism, making use of class struggle and
splitting up the population by class categories, was clearly inferior to the
German
Volksgemeinschaft
, providing a formal cover of
belonging together
.9
——————
7 (Cf. Roggemann 1973, 243–49). In contrast, the constitution of 1918 introduced a differentiated, indirect and unequal vote. Only rural and city soviets were elected directly. It could be classified as class right of voting. Cf. Carson (1955, 49–54). He gives an overview on pre-1935 election practices (ibid. 9–48).
8 For participation in pre-1935 elections see Carson (1955, 39–48) and Merl (1990, 241–
42). In 1922, total participation in rural soviets was only 28.9 per cent (men 47.8, women 10.0 per cent). In 1929, 61.5 per cent of the rural inhabitants took part (75.7 per cent of men and 48.5 of women), and in 1934 participation in the election to rural soviets reached 83.2 per cent (women: 80.3 per cent). This increase in the female voter turnout is partly to be seen as emancipation and partly due to the presence of industrial worker brigades, since 1929, during the rural elections. Roggemann (1973, 249) provides data on the percentage of disenfranchised voters: 1923 8.2 per cent in cities, 1927 in cities 6.6 per cent, in the countryside 3.0 per cent, 1934/35 3.0 and 2.3 per cent respectively.
9 See my forthcoming study (2012) on “Political Communication in Dictatorships”.
E L E C T I O N S I N T H E S O V I E T U N I O N , 1 9 3 7 – 1 9 8 9
281
After forced collectivization and the Cultural Revolution made the af-
firmative-action policy towards the integration of non-Russian population
groups obsolete at the turn to the 1930s, the Soviet state was in urgent
need of an integrative ideology suitable for a multi-ethnic country. The
constitution of 1936 therefore created a new unity, becoming manifest in
the
Soviet
people, and granted each citizen equal voting rights. It is in con-junction with this new emphasis on the unity of the people that we can
understand the full scale of the altered voting principles. Equality now
meant that each Soviet citizen possessed equal voting rights regardless of
ethnicity. Direct voting meant that everybody would take part in the elec-
tion of the supreme organ of state power. From this point of view, it be-
comes evident that the principle of general voting was a threat rather than
a right to many citizens. It put the voter and the official under fear of re-
pression. Not taking part in the election from now on meant self-exclusion
and unmasking oneself as an enemy of the people, the consequences of
which were dire. As nobody could possibly be against the “good Tsar”, not
voting could only be attributed to the lack of the local officials’ persuasive
powers. Voting against the candidate signified dissent with the ruler on the
one hand, but expressed dissatisfaction with incompetent local officials on
the other hand, who did not provide the promised welfare to the voters.
Voting against the candidates thus caused repressions against both, the
officials for their failure to convince and mobilize the voters and the voters
themselves for being political enemies, subject to arrest or annihilation
(Kozlov and Mironenko 2005, 186–212). In 1937 this demonstration of
unity served foreign policy aims as well. In connections with Stalin’s mania
of a
fifth column
, it should demonstrate to enemy countries that in the case of attack any hope of finding collaborators in the Soviet Union was idle.
The fatal consequence of this interpretation was the criminalization of
any form of justified opposition as a result of the political role played by
the ruler. Being the representative of the objective truth, he could do no
wrong. An individual might have held a different view at the beginning, but
upon being informed by the officials, he/she had to recognize the objec-
tive truth. The duty of the officials was to make the people “voluntarily”
take part in the election. Pressure on the officials led to pressure on the
population. Nomination of the deputies by the state would have been a
much easier way, as the voters suggested several times.10
——————
10 GARF, Fond R-7522, opis’ 6, delo 22, ll. 16–20; delo 28, ll. 17–20.
282
S T E P H A N M E R L
The birth of Stalin’s electoral system was strongly connected to the si-
multaneous implementation of his conception of consumption. Both elec-
tions and consumption aimed at the stabilization of the regime on a seem-
ingly “democratic” basis. The system of allotting consumption goods was
replaced by the principle of free or open trade, allowing the people to de-
cide on their own which goods they preferred to consume (Merl 2007).
The electoral system was designed to be secret, allegedly allowing the voter
to make his own choice.
How could Stalin be convinced that general elections in 1937, granting
voting rights also to those class-alien and
anti-Soviet
elements, would not lead to a disaster for his rule by showing dissatisfaction with the Communist regime? The archives do not leave any doubt that this was Stalin’s own
decision, enforced even by personally interfering in the work of the com-
mission writing the constitution. Many people making proposals for the
constitution in the public discussion campaign in 1936 did not agree with
Stalin’s proposal to give voting rights to everyone. About 20 per cent of
those writing demanded the exclusion of priests and alien people, espe-
cially former
kulaks
(Getty 1991, 26). Getty states that the majority of people were concerned with questions of bread and butter and with putting
the local authorities under public control, but “they were not worried
about individual rights or civil protection” (ibid.).
The new election regulations were mostly a threat to the local officials,
who could now be blamed and repressed for any unpleasant result of the
vote. As Goldman argues, the campaign for “democracy” was closely con-
nected to terror. In the self-conception of the Party, there could be no
opposition to the regime. Everything depended solely on correct and com-
petent agitation. From the very beginning, the principles of general and
secret ballot caused a wave of letters from Party and NKVD officials to
leading Party organs. The local officials feared that the “former people”,
especially
kulaks
and priests, might negatively influence the result of the vote. They were especially frightened that somebody might misunderstand
the concept of the secret ballot as the right to vote against the regime.
They were also afraid of Stalin’s “democratic” claim that there should be
several candidates in order to give the voter a chance to unmask incompe-
tent officials. This would have led the voters to turn office-holders into
scapegoats, eliminating the names of officials who had previously executed
Stalin’s orders from the ballots. The dubious outcome of such a choice
would have been to elect unknown and inexperienced new candidates, as