The Bolshevik
Central Committee meets in the absence of both Lenin and Kamenev. After his “trick”
(Lenin’s word) at the Petrograd Soviet, Kamenev offered his resignation from
the Central Committee, making himself freer to oppose its decisions. Trotsky
obliged him by putting the item on the agenda.
Trotsky moved the
resignation be accepted. Sverdlov read a letter from Lenin criticizing Kamenev
and Zinoviev as “strikebreakers,” and characterizing the way Kamenev had
twisted Trotsky’s words as “plain petty cheating.” Stalin spoke against
acceptance, but the motion passed five votes to three, with Stalin among those
against. The committee also forbade Kamenev’s and Zinoviev’s agitation against
the party’s policies, again over Stalin’s dissent.
This was but one
of a number of signs of fissures in the party as the pressure of the coming
insurrection mounted. On the day of the committee meeting, the party paper printed
a letter from Zinoviev saying that he had moved closer to Lenin’s views and
accepted what Trotsky said in the Soviet. The editor, Stalin, printed it over comments
that this was also the meaning of Kamenev’s “declaration” in the Petrograd
Soviet (though no-one believed this but Stalin) and that the “sharpness of
tone” of Lenin’s article obscured the agreement of the party “in fundamentals”
(though, as Trotsky says, the fundamental question at that time was the imminence of the insurrection, over
which Kamenev, at any rate, was still fighting).
Stalin offered to
resign from the editorial board, but the offer was not accepted.
The American
journalist Reed got the story on the insurrection from Volodarsky the next day.
But because Volodarsky was not on the Central Committee, and might not have
been at the meeting, the version Reed reports has a touch of the fabulous.
Lenin, Volodarsky said, ruled out the 6th, because the insurrection
needed an all-Russian basis, and the Congress of Soviets would not yet have
assembled. Lenin ruled out the 8th, because though the Congress
would already be in session, it would be unable to reach a sudden decision
democratically. This left the 7th (October 25, old style).
But of course
Lenin was not even there….
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