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Why did Stalin become party leader?

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'Stalin is a Genghis Kahn, an unscrupulous intriguer, who sacrifices everything ... 'We will build the dirigible squadron named for Lenin!' ( 1931) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why did Stalin become party leader?


1
Why did Stalin become party leader?
  • Personality, or something else?

Lauren Kelly Ros Williams
2
Personality
  • Stalin is a Genghis Kahn, an unscrupulous
    intriguer, who sacrifices everything else to the
    preservation of power Bukharin, July 1928
  • Upon his appointment as party secretary, Stalin
    filled an underestimated role he was known as
    Tovarishch Kartotekov Comrade Card-Index and
    had access to the personnel files of the party
    a great deal of sensitive information in the
    hands of a ruthless man.
  • Stalin never imposed his views in the Politburo.
    By always acting with the majority or ensuring
    that he had the majority, he appeared a detached
    Leninist, guardian of the doctrine I.
    Deutscher, Stalin

3
  • Stalin contrasted directly with Trotsky in that,
    although Stalin was not considered an
    intellectual like Trotsky, he had the power to
    lead equals (which Trotsky lacked) through
    manipulation and cunning.
  • Stalin focussed upon the theory of socialism in
    one country as opposed to world revolution. The
    left turn rapid industrialisation and
    collectivism brought most people to support
    Stalins policies.
  • Stalins lack of scruples and the fact that he
    had no fear of behaving immorally or of getting
    this hands dirty, as it were, (clearly shown
    later in his rule) contributed largely to his
    success in taking over the party by 1929.

4
(No Transcript)
5
Other Factors
  • The deaths of Lenin and Felix Dzerzhinsky
  • Had Lenin not died Stalin would probably have
    been sent to
  • the provinces to work for the Party.
  • M. McCauley, Russia 1917-41
  • Dzerzhinsky had never liked Stalin overmuch, but
    after he died, Stalin was able to find his
    supporters positions in the political police so
    he could later use them against his opponents

6
  • Lenins Testament
  • The document was only ever read out in private to
    the Central Committee in closed session and while
    this was embarrassing for Stalin, his reputation
    was not severely damaged because Zinoviev leapt
    to his defence.
  • Weakness/Mistakes of rivals
  • Trotsky
  • Lost his Politburo seat in December and expelled
    from Party because of role in the United
    Opposition in 1927.
  • Overconfident
  • While he could inspire the masses, he could not
    command the respect of his equals
  • He was once a Menshevik

7
  • He had openly disagreed with Lenin on policy at
    times
  • In 1923, he criticised the way in which the Party
    was being managed and then did not turn up to the
    Congress to explain his views so he was accused
    of factionalism
  • He hesitated to publish Lenins testament, and
    when it did come to light, his failure to
    previously acknowledge its existence reflected
    badly on him
  • He did not attend Lenins funeral
  • He should not have relinquished his position as
    Commissar for Military Affairs in 1925
  • He was not as shrewd as Stalin he did not see
    that taking a strong position at a time of
    upheaval, as he did in the United Opposition, put
    his career at risk
  • He refused to recant his views as Kamenev and
    Zinoviev had done so that he would be readmitted
    to the party

8
  • Zinoviev and Kamenev
  • Zinoviev was sacked as Leningrad Soviet Chairman
    in January 1926 and expelled from the Politburo
    in July. Kamenev also lost his Politburo seat at
    this time and in October he was replaced as
    leader of the Comintern. They were banned from
    the Party at the same time as Trotsky for being
    part of the United Opposition, and though they
    were readmitted in June 1928, they had each
    forfeited any opportunity they might have had to
    become Party leader.
  • They took too radical a position
  • Kamenev had sent a letter to Grand Duke Nicholas
    congratulating him on accession to the throne
    after Tsar Nicholas abdicated and he had opposed
    the Bolshevik coup
  • They weakened Trotskys position by forming the
    triumvirate and then later made an alliance with
    him!

9
  • A struggle over power, not for power
  • The contenders were anxious to prevent rivals
    coming to power as much as gaining power for
    themselves so they often pursued policies with
    which they did not agree, whereas Stalin avoided
    making himself unpopular by taking a radical
    stance on anything.
  • Divisions within the Party and the ban on
    factionalism
  • The Party was divided over issues such as the
    NEP, the quest for socialism in one country
    versus a world communist revolution, the pace by
    which industrialisation could be allowed to take
    place and how much of a role the proletariat
    should have in government. Stalin could exploit
    these divisions.

10
  • The ban on factionalism meant that it was
    difficult to change the Partys (i.e. Stalins)
    official line, although because the Party lacked
    clear direction, as discussed above, it might be
    argued that a firm leader, as the Party found in
    Stalin, was needed.
  • Control of the media/Political suppression
  • Stalin was able to win over the media and so the
    opposition had no means of putting their case to
    the people.
  • Propaganda was used
  • The OGPU (Ob'edinennoe Gosudarstvennoe
    Politicheskoe Upravlenie) had been formed from
    the Cheka in 1922 and its role was to neutralise
    any threat to the success of the Revolution. It
    was later responsible for the creation of the
    GULAG system and it found its final incarnation
    in the KGB.

11
  • The new membership of the party
  • After Lenins death, the Party launched a
    campaign to increase membership. The new members,
    the Lenintsy, were mainly young, poorly educated
    and naïve so they were easily persuaded by Party
    propaganda. Stalins nationalist policies
    naturally appealed to them.
  • The general chaos as a result of Lenins death
    and Russias problems
  • All Bolshevik leaders were trying to find their
    feet in an unfamiliar and unanticipated world
    C. Ward, Stalins Russia
  • Government was still lacking in a firm structure
    following the Revolution
  • In 1927, harvests did not meet targets and
    peasants refused to hand over their grain
  • Continuing economic difficulties

12
  • The mood of the Russian people
  • The Russian public had been through two
    revolutions and famines and wars and were now
    looking to find some stability - Stalin was seen
    as a moderate
  • He made an effort to foster an image as a man of
    the people, whereas Trotsky, as an upper middle
    class intellectual, could not hope to achieve
    this.

13
We will build the dirigible squadron named for
Lenin! (1931)
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