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Ritterband, Charles E. (1978).
Sowjetunion. Bürgerrechte—Völkerrecht: Kann die UdSSR,
die den UNO-Pakt über bürgerliche und politische Rechte ratifiziert hat, ihren Bürgern ein
demokratisches Wahlrecht gemäß Art. 25 gewährleisten?
Diessenhofen: Rüegger.
Roggemann, Herwig (1973).
Die Staatsordnung der Sowjetunion
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Vollweiler, H. (1938). Die Wahlen in der Sowjetunion.
Zeitschrift für Politik
, 28, 126–
29.
Wolters, Margarete, and Annalise Wolters (1977).
Elemente des russischen Rätesystems,
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Yekelchyk, Serhy (2010). A Communal Model of Citizenship in Stalinist Politics:
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Ab
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“The People’s Voice”: The Elections to the
Supreme Soviet of the USSR in 1958 in the
Belarusian Capital Minsk1
Thomas M. Bohn
In the mid-1970s, a short story about “elections” in the Soviet provinces
appeared in the Russian-language literary magazine
Grani
(“Facets”), published in Frankfurt am Main, as part of the so-called
tamizdat
(“There-
Literature”).2 It was written in the style of a
skaz
(“something told”), a narrative mode in which a hero from the people tells an adventure in everyday colloquial language, establishing in the process a special type of
communication with the reader. Assuming the role of chauffeur, the nar-
rator reveals a bitter insight in the very first sentence of his “election”
story: “If you don’t have a drink when you can, you’re a fool.” This view is
bitter, not wise, because the narrator pretends that, right up until the
fateful events of that election Sunday, he had meant to free himself of his
drink problem. Briefly, his story is this: in contrast to the other members
of his collective, the tragic hero spurns the obligatory buffet meal after
casting his vote, and walking upright, starts on his way home. At the same
time, and this is the decisive turning point of the story, the relevant Party
committee is informed that the people of a village somewhere in the steppe
are refusing to vote as a protest against the misappropriation of their
church. As his colleagues are of no use after their morning drinks, the
narrator is ordered to take an inspector to the rebellious village. After a
number of adventures on the way, they finally get to the village only to find
that the local election committee has already solved the problem by
dumping all the papers unceremoniously into the ballot box. At the end of
his report, the narrator joins again the millions of people who see elections
——————
1 An earlier version of this article was published as: Thomas M. Bohn: “Im allgemeinen Meer der Stimmen soll auch meine Stimme erklingen …” Die Wahlen zum Obersten
Sowjet der UdSSR von 1958—Loyalität und Dissens im Kommunismus. In: Geschichte
und Gesellschaft 34 (2008), 524–549.
2 Unofficial term for banned writings that were published outside the borders of the USSR.
310
T H O M A S M . B O H N
for what they really are: a public festival. “Since then I’ve been drinking
again,” is the narrator’s disillusioned conclusion (Zinov’ev 1976).3
The reference to this story is meant to provide a counterweight to re-
search during the Cold War period, which regarded the familiar “elections
without choice”, i.e. non-competitive elections with only one candidate per
constituency and an approval rate of nearly 100 per cent, as unworthy of its
attention. Working on this premise, scholars would mention, at best, the
system-stabilizing function of mobilizing the masses and the Party mem-
bership, and the demonstration of power (Friedgut 1979, 137; Hahn 1988,
93). The present essay, however, takes a different approach in that its in-
terest is directed towards areas of public life in societies of the Soviet type
that permitted the articulation of dissent and in which manifestations of
immunity (“Resistenz”) could go unpunished. These forms of behavior are
the obverse of what elections in state socialism were actually meant to
provide—a means for the regime to reassure itself of the people’s loyalty.
What may serve as a heuristic for the explanation of the room for maneu-
vering between the relevant options is the category of self-will (“Eigen-
sinn”). To explore the potential of these terminological tools, some
definitions will be given first (section I). These are followed by the history
of the Soviet elections, presented, in contrast to the example quoted above
from the underground literature, in the language used by scholars. The
point is however that by using a fascinating new source—comments on
ballot papers—this article will try to do justice to the heterogeneous and
often unappreciated voices of the people. The article will proceed in three
steps: the first will describe the development of the Soviet electoral system
(II.), while the second discusses the perspective of Western research during
the Cold War (III.). The third, finally, will use an exemplary case to recon-
struct the elections to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of 1958 on the
basis of archival materials, and will distinguish between the political and
social background (IV.), the election campaign (V.) and the actual voting
(VI.). It is the thesis advanced in the present essay that both comments on
ballot papers, though apparently of little relevance in quantitative terms,
and petitions, submitted in great numbers to the various agencies of state
and Party, are highly informative sources for the exploration of communi-
cations between the people and the authorities and as such reflect the
whole range of public opinion, from identification with the social welfare
——————
3 The pseudonymous author is Isaak Schapiro, an engineer who had emigrated from the eastern Ukraine to Israel in the early 1970s.
“ T H E P E O P L E ’ S V O I C E ” : E L E C T I O N S T O T H E S U P R E M E S O V I E T
311
dictatorship to the questioning of the political regime.4 A final section
(VII.) will make a few suggestions on open research questions.
Categories of Resistant Behavior in Communism
For a long time, research on the Soviet Union took its inspiration from
Hannah Arendt’s thesis that the Stalinist as well as the National Socialist
dictatorships had led to the “atomization of society” (Plaggenborg 2006,
221–222). This view held that communitization received a renewed
impetus only after the emergence of the dissident intelligentsia, which was
able to develop in the conditions of a cultural “thaw” under Nikita S.
Khrushchev (Alexeyeva 1985; Beyrau 1993; Kulavig 2002; Stephan 2005).
Employing the perspective of the history of everyday life, Moshe Lewin
has propounded the thesis that Soviet society, due to the flight from the
countryside and worker migration during the drives for industrialization of
the 1930s and 1960s, constituted itself as a “quicksand society”, which was
not easy to bring under the control of the authorities.5 It should be noted,
in this context, that the social protests of the post-Stalinist era, and the
hunger revolt of Novocherkassk in 1962 in particular, have repeatedly
attracted the attention of researchers (Schlögel 1984; Baron 2001; Kozlov
2002, 2006). Accordingly, after the opening of the archives the mood of
the Soviet people and the development of public opinion during the de-
Stalinization period became a significant topic of historical research
(Zubkova 1998, 2000; Grushin 2001, 2003–2006; Aksiutin 2004). Reacting
to dissonances, so runs Victor Zaslavsky’s stimulating thesis, the regime
under Leonid I. Brezhnev made the attempt to involve the people via “an
organized mass consensus” and thus score at least an indirect success. As
long as the Socialist welfare state, announced in the Party program of 1961,
guaranteed jobs and stable prices, “withdrawal into the private sphere” was
an increasingly attractive proposition for people in the Soviet Union
(Zaslavsky 1994). Indeed, the dichotomy between the private and the pub-
lic spheres, which led in Socialist political systems to schizophrenic be-
——————
4 On submissions to the authorities see the volumes of sources by Livshin and Orlov (1998) and Livshin et al. (2001) as well as the comprehensive survey by Mommsen
(1987) and the quintessence of the research on Stalinism by Alexopoulos (2003).
5 See Lewin (1985, 1991a, 1991b).
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T H O M A S M . B O H N
havioral patterns, has been described by a number of scholars (Shlapentokh
1989; Rittersporn, 2003).
Against this backdrop, the time has come to employ new categories in
the analysis of non-conformism or dissent in the Soviet Union. As it is the
actions of ordinary people that are the subject of what follows, the phe-
nomenon of intellectual dissidence, well-researched though it is, will be left
out of consideration in this contribution.6 Before I discuss “immunity” and
“self-will”, two terms that have been tested in research on National Social-
ism and the GDR, as alternative analytical tools, I want to explore, by way
of a foil, the concept of “loyalty”, which has been tested in recent years in