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Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
politically loaded events, as well as at less ideologized concerts and festi-
vals. In 1950, the same year that it held the evening for young voters, the
Moscow food industry club organized another youth evening entitled
“Peace will defeat war”.22 In 1951, the same collectives of clubs that per-
formed in the election campaign of the Krasnopresnenskii district also put
on concerts dedicated to various official Soviet celebrations, and evenings
of leisure of district enterprises and clubs: for example, the amateur arts
collective of the Sugar plant.23 For the 1957 Moscow International Youth
Festival, the amateur arts collectives prepared a series of events and con-
certs.24 According to a 1960 report, the club of the factory “Dukat” held
amateur arts concerts for the workers and service personnel of the factory,
as well as the neighborhood population, with all collectives apparently
preparing a major concert program dedicated to the 43rd anniversary of the
October revolution.25
These parallels between the festive aspects of youth participation in
elections to the Soviet government, and other more or less ideologically
and politically loaded events, open a window onto the role of elections as
——————
18 TsAGM, f. 44, op. 1, d. 19, ll. 3–4.
19 TsAOPIM, f. 667, op. 2, d. 33, l. 11.
20 I use only the first name and interview date in order to protect anonymity: Irina, interviewed November 8, 2008.
21 TsAOPIM, f. 667, op. 2, d. 41, ll. 127–28.
22 TsAGM, f. 44, op. 1, d. 19, l. 4.
23 TsAGM, f. 1988, op. 1, d. 9, ll. 8–10.
24 TsAGM, f. 1988, op. 1, d. 45, ll. 8–9.
25 TsAGM, f. 1988, op. 1, d. 85, ll. 23–24.
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celebrations of legitimacy. Certainly, we need to realize the role of political
socialization inherent in these festive occasions: the youth who performed
in amateur arts concerts at election sites engaged in political rituals, in par-
allel to the young Komsomol agitators who lectured to crowds, as high-
lighted by the comment of the GITIS Komsomol representative. A link
can also be made between the celebratory components of elections in the
postwar years, and extant research on festivals in the NEP and Stalin-era
Soviet Union. In both cases, celebrations served the purpose of promoting
communist ideology and Soviet political discourse (Petrone 2000; Rolfe
2009, 7–10; Rolfe 2000, 447–73). Considering the celebratory elements of
elections provides further insights into the Soviet system’s rituals of politi-
cal legitimization. The voluntary and often enthusiastic participation of
young people in amateur arts concerts, including at elections sites as well as
other ideologically-loaded celebrations, and their popularity among the
population, sheds light on how the Soviet government used consumption
to garner political legitimacy. By supplying merry-making at election sites,
the Soviet government, with extensive youth engagement, expanded elec-
tions from political practices that determined political power to include
festive aspects that, like mass attendance at parades or rallies, affirmed
government legitimacy. These “elections without choice” to the organs of
the Soviet government did, then, involve a choice. Individuals could
choose to come and enjoy, and gain pleasure from, the festive atmosphere,
as Irina did—or not. As Arjun Appadurai rightly notes, “where there is
consumption, there is pleasure, and where there is pleasure, there is
agency” (Appadurai 1996, 7). Therefore, by enjoying themselves, by experi-
encing pleasure, individuals expressed their affirmation, however passive,
of the political legitimacy of the Soviet government.
Intriguing comparisons can be made to elections in the GDR, in Nazi
Germany, and in Italy under Mussolini, where, according to the contribu-
tions of Hedwig Richter, Markus Urban, Paul Corner and others in this
volume, festive elements played an important role. This indicates the wide-
spread role of consumption management for political legitimization within
authoritarian states, and suggests the need for further examination of the
softer, less coercive side of the dictatorial dominance of the election proc-
ess as social practice. In relation to Patzelt’s model of elections in authori-
tarian states, youth engagement in elections to Soviet governing bodies can
be said to fit the category of “preference falsification”, through creating a
widespread impression of ubiquitous support for the government.
I N T E G R A T I O N , C E L E B R A T I O N , A N D C H A L L E N G E
89
Youth and Internal Komsomol Elections: Challenge and Loyal
Opposition
While youth participation as agitators and amateur arts performers in elec-
tions to the Supreme Soviet and local soviets remained relatively un-
changed from Stalin to Khrushchev, a marked shift took place in elections
within the Komsomol. The period after Stalin’s death witnessed the new
General Secretary Khrushchev re-energizing the drive to progress from
socialism to communism. An integral component in the project of ideo-
logical renewal involved the attempt to shift governing functions to the
citizenry in a populist move intended both to mobilize the population and
to achieve the eventual goal of communism, an ideal future where the
government withers away (Breslauer 1980, 50–70; Park 1993; Ilic 2010, 1–
8).26 The Khrushchev leadership believed that the engagement of the
young was particularly essential in this project, as they would not only
build, but also presumably live in, the communist utopia that represented
the primary goal of the Soviet experiment.27 This reasoning underpinned
the novel Khrushchev-era shift in emphasis on inspiring voluntary youth
grassroots activism. In the postwar Stalin years, the Komsomol leader-
ship’s rhetoric focused on the need for youth discipline and organization,
as opposed to youth initiative and autonomous grassroots activism.28 How-
ever, the resolution of the Twelfth Komsomol Congress in March 1954,
the first after Stalin’s death, underlined the importance of “guaranteeing
the appropriate realization of Komsomol democracy, development of
criticism and self-criticism, especially from below, the strengthening of
Komsomol member control over the activities of Komsomol organs, the
escalation of activeness by Komsomol members”.29 Here, the stress lies on
democratic, voluntary activism from below, by engaged Komsomol mem-
bers who criticize and impose control over the elected Komsomol organs.
In his speech to the Thirteenth Komsomol Congress in 1958, Khrushchev
went even further, proclaiming that “Bureaucratic organization of [Kom-
——————
26 See, for example,
Voprosy ideologicheskoi raboty
(Moscow: Gospolitizdat, 1961), 144–158.
For a classic study of these ideologically-motivated goals of the Khrushchev leadership, see George Breslauer’s work, and for a more recent take, see Soo-Hoon Park’s contribution. For how this drive fitted into broader Thaw era governance, see Melanie Ilic’s study.
27 See
Spravochnik partiionogo rabotnika. Vypusk IV
(Moscow: 1963), 681–84.
28 See
Rezoliutsii i dokumenty XI s’ezda VLKSM
(Moscow: “Molodaia gvardiia”, 1950), 20.
29 RGANI, f. 5, op. 30, d. 38, l. 127.
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somol] work may harm the upbringing of youth, and push it away from the
Komsomol [...] Life in Komsomol organizations needs to boil, overflow
with initiative”. More than that, he criticized “some of our comrades, who
are so used to bureaucratic forms that even now, when we need to reject
these forms, they are fearful”.30 Illustrating the stress on grassroots activ-
ism and criticism of bureaucratic methods, such tropes grew ubiquitous
within the discourse aimed at youth under Khrushchev (Tsipursky 2010,
629–49).
Designed to devolve governing functions to the population and to mo-
bilize young people to build the communist tomorrow, as well as to differ-
entiate itself from the Stalinist past, such language inspired some Komso-
mol members to act as a “loyal opposition” in Komsomol elections. These
young people, while expressing full support for the Khrushchev leadership
and the goal of building communism, demanded that elections within the
Komsomol conform to democratic norms as promoted by official Soviet
Thaw era discourse, particularly in its emphasis on youth initiative. Their
actions advanced a pluralistic vision of a communist future that often con-
flicted with the ideas and methods of hard-line cadres who opposed many
of the post-Stalin reforms, yet in many cases drew the support of pluralisti-
cally-oriented officials. This finding offers support for those scholars who
argue for the important role of such struggles within the Soviet govern-
ment of the Khrushchev years (Ilic 2010, 1–8; Taubman 2003; Jones 2006,
1–18; Cohen 1980, 11–31), and goes against some recent historiography
that takes a more critical view of the significance of such tensions (Bittner
2008; Dobson 2009).
Elections in Komsomol cells occurred at election conferences, usually
held annually in each local Komsomol organization. These events included
a report on the Komsomol cell’s activities over the past year, a formulation
of a plan for the upcoming year, and election of the Komsomol committee
who would manage that cell’s activities for the year. In the postwar years
before Stalin’s death, the election conference closely followed the direc-
tions of officials from the Komsomol hierarchy and the local Party cell,
with any criticism highly formulaic and in no way challenging either the
——————
30 N. S. Khrushchev,
Vospityvat’ aktivnykh i soznatel’nykh stroitelei kommunisticheskogo obshchestva
(rech’ na XIII s’ezde VLKSM 18 aprelia 1958 goda)
(Moscow: “Molodaia gvardiia”, 1961), 33–37.