In
this issue, we continue the article begun in International Review
n°122, where we highlighted the change in period which formed the
backdrop to the events of 1905 in Russia, as capitalism entered the
watershed between its ascendant and decadent periods. We also
described the conditions that had favoured the radicalisation of the
struggle in Russia: the existence of a modern, concentrated and
highly conscious working class confronted by the attacks of a
capitalism whose situation had been worsened by the disastrous
effects of the war with Japan. The working class was thus led into a
direct confrontation with the state in order to defend its living
conditions, and organised in soviets to undertake this new historic
phase in its struggle. The first part of this article recounted how
the first workers’ councils were formed, and what needs they
answered. This second part analyses in more detail how the soviets
were formed, how they were linked to the movement of the whole
working class, and their relationship with the trades unions. In
fact, the unions – which already in 1905 no longer corresponded to
the organisational needs of the working class in the new period, only
played a positive role inasmuch as they were pulled along by the
movement’s dynamic, in the wake of the soviets and under their
authority.