Read Jessen & Richter (Eds.) Online
Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
76
M A R K B . S M I T H
like the campaign of 1950, did not generally succeed in its aim of making
citizens talk and write as if they were exercising rights.
The rhetorical coherence of Soviet rights was further undermined by
another theme of the campaign: trust. Elections in democracies and dicta-
torships present trust in different ways. In modern democracies, trust is
ideally earned by politicians who observe constitutional norms and allow
people to exercise their rights without hindrance: popular politics is medi-
ated through accountability rather than paternalism or deference (though
of course few such democracies existed in 1946). By contrast, in dictator-
ships, trust requires a leap of faith. In the 1946 Supreme Soviet campaign,
“trust” was constructed as a substitute for the exercise of rights, not as a
means of reinforcing them, and was often conflated with “faith”. For the
prestigious
Literary Gazette
, “the trust of the people” lay at the heart of the election (
Literaturnaia gazeta
, January 12, 1946). But this anodyne formula really served to subordinate the status of the population to that of power.
Typically, Moscow’s popular evening paper declared shortly before polling
that “The people have unlimited trust in the Bolshevik Party” (
Vecherniaia
Moskva
, February 5, 1946). Writing of political elites, the teachers’ newspaper
Uchitel’skaia gazeta
claimed: “the people [rightly] trusted them”
(
Uchitel’skaia gazeta
, February 14, 1946). The notion of faith was connected to that of trust. A speaker declared at the vast nomination meeting at Moscow’s Elektrozavod plant at the start of the campaign: “Comrade Stalin,
with his love for the Motherland, for his people, his indefatigable energy
and care for the needs of the workers, has justified our faith—the faith of
the voters—in his role as a deputy of the people” (
Pravda
, January 3, 1946).
Rhetorical inconsistencies and the observable absence of rights in
everyday life were unpromising enough, but the campaign also suffered
from practical failures. Was an election campaign an unpromising arena for
the inculcation of a particular rhetoric? To be fair, the task was immense
and the post-war circumstances of extreme deprivation imposed practical
hindrances and elevated popular skepticism or confusion.18 Regime rheto-
ric was unlikely to obtain even a superficial purchase among the population
when electoral campaigning was extremely ineffective in some areas of the
country. This left some people badly educated in the language and con-
cepts that the Party-government wanted the election campaign to impart.
A confidential report on Voronezh
oblast’
(province) showed that some
——————
18 For post-war misery and “state-society” relations, see Zubkova 1998.
P O P U L A R S O V E R E I G N T Y A N D C O N S T I T U T I O N A L R I G H T S
77
villages were entirely neglected by agitators, while, in others, the propa-
ganda effort comprised nothing more than an activist “reading out the
electoral rules, two articles of the constitution, and all of a speech by Com-
rade Molotov”, which officials understood as being unlikely to engage the
audience of tired peasants (Zubkova 2003, 396). Welfare rights, protected
by the constitution, made little sense when the level of well-being was so
low, and when agitators could not explain the situation. A confidential
report that summarized voters’ responses and questions at small election
meetings throughout the country showed widespread dissatisfaction with
the provision of welfare and local facilities. One voter asked, “Why is there
no care for people’s everyday needs in Troitsk? The whole municipal
economy is in ruins.” Another wondered: “When are residents of Nov-
gorod going to be moved out of holes in the ground and basements?”
(Zubkova 2003, 403–4). In the end, rights did not exist in the Stalinist
dictatorship and the election campaign of 1946 could not invent them.
Conclusion
Election talk is often cheap. In conventional democracies, as parties and
candidates compete with each other, they exaggerate the generosity of their
policies, or scaremonger about their opponents, or deliberately ignore the
issues that actually concern them most. The language of election cam-
paigns in twentieth century dictatorships also seems pitiful, re-circulating
slogans and clichés, reheating a leader cult, offering gigantically ambitious
formulae for insoluble problems. Yet this rhetoric gave citizens the chance
to understand the Party on its own terms. Controlling the media and the
campaign agenda completely, not needing to deal with an opposition or to
concern itself with unpredictable political weather, the leading Party could
communicate its ideas of choice in a clear and uncluttered way, offering
ready-made rhetorical strategies that the population could learn and repeat.
The 1946 campaign for elections to the Supreme Soviet displayed these
characteristics. Central to its aims was the reassertion of the legitimacy of
Party and government—and indeed of the whole Soviet project—follow-
ing the test of the war. It sought to achieve this by exploiting the dynamics
of popular sovereignty and constitutional normality in order to present its
principal campaign messages in a relentless and even total performance.
78
M A R K B . S M I T H
These messages were very particular to the time: they focused on victory in
the war, the personality of Stalin, and—the theme analyzed in this chap-
ter—the rights that were part of the 1936 constitution. But the campaign
failed on the last of these. The gap between rhetoric and reality was too
stark, while the rhetorical message that sought to bridge it was too con-
fused for people to internalize and make use of on a widespread scale.
They would only do so after Stalin’s death, and then only thanks to con-
crete social and political reforms rather than electoral rhetoric. In the end,
Soviet democracy’s essence of popular sovereignty and would-be modern
constitutional rights undermined the coherence of the campaign, as it
would do again later in the Soviet period. The 1946 election makes clear
why a pseudo-democratic process was essential for Soviet rule, just as it
demonstrates that it was a weak technology for the exercise of dictatorial
power.
Bibliography
Anweiler, Oskar (1974).
The Soviets: The Russian Workers, Peasants, and Soldiers Councils, 1905–1921
. New York: Pantheon.
Brooks, Jeffrey (1999).
Thank You Comrade Stalin! Soviet Public Culture from Revolution
to Cold War
. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Carson, George (1956).
Electoral Practices in the USSR
. London: Atlantic.
David-Fox, Michael (2003), The Fellow Travelers Revisited: the “Cultured West”
through Soviet Eyes.
Journal of Modern History,
75, 2, 300–335.
Emmons, Terence (1983).
Formation of the Political Parties and the First National Elections in Russia
. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Friedgut, Theodore H. (1979).
Political Participation in the USSR
. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Geltzer, Israel (1992). Soviets as agents of democratization. In Edith Rogovin
Frankel, Jonathan Frankel and Baruch Knei-Paz (eds.).
Revolution in Russia: Reassessments of 1917
, 17–33. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Fulbrook, Mary (2005).
The People’s State: East German Society from Hitler to Honecker
.
New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Getty, J. Arch (1991). State and Society under Stalin: Constitutions and Elections in the 1930s.
Slavic Review,
50, 1, 18–35.
Gilison, Jerome M. (1968). Soviet Elections as a Measure of Dissent: The Missing One Per Cent.
American Political Science Review,
62, 3, 814–26.
Goldman, Wendy Z. (2007).
Terror and Democracy in the Age of Stalin: The Social
Dynamics of Repression
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
P O P U L A R S O V E R E I G N T Y A N D C O N S T I T U T I O N A L R I G H T S
79
Gorlizki, Yoram and Oleg Khlevniuk (2004).
Cold Peace: Stalin and the Soviet Ruling
Circle, 1945–1953
, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gorshenev, A. and I. Cheliapov (1959).
Sovetskaia izbiratel’naia sistema
. Moscow: Gospolitizdat.
Gusev, N. (1957).
Kak my vypolnim nakazy izbiratelei
, Moscow: Gospolitizdat.
Hahn, Jeffrey W. (1988).
Soviet Grassroots: Citizen Participation in Local Soviet Government
. London: I.B. Tauris.
Hazard, John N. (1953).
Law and Social Change in the USSR
. Westport, CT: Hyperion.
Hill, Ronald J. (1973). Patterns of Deputy Selection to Local Soviets.
Soviet Studies
, 25, 2, 196–212.
— (1976). The CPSU in a Soviet Election Campaign.
Soviet Studies
, 28, 4, 590–8.
Hosking, Geoffrey (1973).
The Russian Constitutional Experiment: Government and
Duma, 1907–1914
, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jacobs, Everett M. (1970). Soviet Local Elections: what they are and what they are not.
Soviet Studies
, 22, 1, 61–76.
Jones, Jeffrey W (2008).
Everyday Life and the “Reconstruction” of Soviet Russia during and
after the Great Patriotic War
, 1943–48. Bloomigton, IN: Slavica.
Kiselev, A. S. et al. (eds.). (2000).
Moskva poslevoennaia 1945–1947gg: Arkhivnye dokumenty i materialy
. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo Mosgorarkhiv.
Kotkin, Stephen (1995).
Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as a Civilization
, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Krasnaia zvezda, Moscow.
Kravtsov, B. P. (1954).
Verkhovnyi Sovet SSSR
. Moscow: Gosiurizdat.
Krutogolov, M. A. (1958).
Vybory v SSSR i v stranakh kapitala
. Moscow: IMO.
Literaturnaia gazeta, Moscow.
Medvedev, Roi (1975).
On Socialist Democracy
. London: Macmillan.
Moskovskii bol’shevik, Moscow.
Mote, Max E. (1965).
Soviet Local and Republic Elections
. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution.
Pionerskaia pravda, Moscow.
Pravda, Moscow.
Priestland, David (2002). Soviet Democracy, 1917–91.
European History Quarterly
, 32, 1, 111–30.
— (2007).
Stalinism and the Politics of Mobilization: Ideas, Power and Terror in Interwar
Russia
. Oxford: Oxford University Press.