The Russian Revolution did not end with the ‘‘October
Revolution.’’ Indeed, many in October 1917 saw it as merely another political
crisis, punctuated with the usual street disorders, producing yet another
‘‘provisional’’ government (a term the new government in fact used at first).
Instead, the dispersal of the Constituent Assembly on 6 January 1918 is a
better point to take as the end of the revolution in the precise usage of the
term and the transition to civil war. During the period from 25 October to 6
January, Lenin successfully turned a revolution for Soviet power into Bolshevik
power, while pushing the country into civil war and the new regime toward
dictatorship.
The immense popularity of the idea of Soviet power allowed
the new Bolshevik government to consolidate its power during the following
weeks. It was able to defeat an attempt by Kerensky to use troops from the
front to regain power, it overcame a serious effort during the first week after
the October Revolution to force it to share political power through formation
of a broad multiparty socialist government, and it witnessed the successful
spread of ‘‘Soviet power’’ across much of Russia as local soviets opted for
support of the new Soviet regime. At the same time, Lenin and Trotsky worked to
polarize political opinion and to strengthen the Bolshevik hold on power. They
did this in part through swift movement to meet popular aspirations by a decree
distributing land to the peasants, by an armistice with Germany, by extension
of workers’ authority in management of factories, and by other measures. They
brought some Left SRs into the government as junior partners, thus broadening
slightly their political base while retaining Bolshevik domination of the
government. They also tightened control through press censorship, the formation
of the Cheka (political police), repressive measures against the Kadet Party,
and other actions to suppress opposition.
The final act in marking the end of the revolution and the
onset of civil war was the dispersal of the Constituent Assembly. The elections
to the Constituent Assembly and its forthcoming convocation kept alive not only
the notion of a future broad multiparty socialist government, but also a sense
that Lenin’s government was only another temporary—provisional—government. This
muted early opposition to the new government, but also presented Lenin and the
radical left with a great dilemma. As predicted, the elections in November gave
the SRs a majority that, however unstable, would control the Constituent Assembly
when it opened on 5 January 1918. Any government coming out of the assembly
would be a coalition, probably the broad socialist coalition that the slogan
‘‘All Power to the Soviets’’ originally was thought to mean. Accepting the
authority of the elections and the Constituent Assembly meant yielding power,
and this Lenin was unwilling to do. His unwillingness led the Bolsheviks and
Left SRs to prepare action against the assembly. This came on 6 January when
Lenin shut down the Constituent Assembly by force after only one meeting. Its
dispersal was not essential for maintenance of a socialist government, or even
‘‘Soviet power,’’ but it was necessary if Lenin and the Bolsheviks were to hold
power and for such a radical government as they envisioned.
By closing the Constituent Assembly, Lenin ended the
possibility of the Russian Revolution playing itself out in the political
arena. With that closed, his opponents had no recourse but to arms, and civil
war now replaced the political and social revolution of 1917. The decision also
drove the Bolsheviks further down the road toward establishing a new
dictatorship and destroyed the democratic hopes of the ‘‘radiant days of
freedom,’’ as one poet had described the optimistic early days of the
revolution.
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