Published:
Source:
Lenin
Collected Works,
Progress Publishers,
1977,
Moscow,
Volume 41,
pages 142-166.1.
Translated: Yuri Sdobnikov
Transcription\Markup:
R. Cymbala
Copyleft:
V. I. Lenin Internet Archive (www.marxists.org)
© 2004
Permission is granted to copy and/or distribute this document under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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Text
{1} The Third Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. was held in London from April 12 to 27 (April 25 to May 10), 1905. It had been prepared by the Bolsheviks and was directed by Lenin. The Mensheviks refused to attend it and met for a conference at Geneva.
The Congress was attended by 38 delegates: 24 with vote, and 14 with voice only. Delegates from twenty-one R.S.D.L.P. committees had Votes. Lenin was a delegate from the Odessa Committee. Among the delegates were V. V. Vorovsky, B. S. Zemlyachka, N. K. Krupskaya, A. A. Bogdanov, A. V. Lunacharsky, M. M. Litvinov and M. G. Tskhakaya. Lenin was elected chairman of the Congress.
The Congress examined the basic questions of the unfolding revolution in Russia and determined the tasks of the proletariat and its party. Lenin wrote the draft resolutions on all the main questions debated by the Congress. He gave reports on Social-Democratic participation in a provisional revolutionary government and on the resolution concerning support for the peasant movement; ho spoke on the armed uprising, the attitude to the government’s tactics on the eve of the revolution, the relations between the workers and intellectuals in Social-Democratic organisations, the Party Rules, the report on the Central Committee’s activity and other questions (see present edition, Vol. 8, pp. 359–424). The Congress laid out the Party’s strategic plan for the bourgeois-democratic revolution and defined the Party’s tactical line. The Congress set out the organisation of an armed uprising as the Party’s most important and pressing task. The Congress said that the victory of the armed popular uprising should lead to the establishment of a provisional revolutionary government, whose task would be to suppress the resistance of the counter revolution, carry out the R.S.D.L.P. minimum programme, and prepare the conditions for the transition to a socialist revolution.
The Congress reviewed the Party Rules: it adopted Lenin’s formulation of Paragraph One, which deals with Party member ship; eliminated the duocentric system (the C.C. and the C.O.) in the Party, and set up a single, governing Party centre—the Central Committee; it gave a precise definition to the C.C.’s powers and its relations with the local committees.
The Congress condemned the acts of the Mensheviks and their opportunism in organisational and tactical questions. In view of the fact that Iskra had fallen into Menshevik hands and was conducting an opportunist line, the Congress authorised the Central Committee to set up a new Central Organ, Proletary. A Plenary Meeting of the Central Committee on April 27 (May 10), 1905, appointed Lenin editor of the newspaper.
The Third Congress was of tremendous historical importance. It was the first Bolshevik congress, which gave the Party and the working class a militant programme of struggle for the victory of the democratic revolution. For the work and importance of the Congress see Lenin’s article “The Third Congress” (present edition, Vol. 8, pp. 442–49). The Congress decisions were substantiated in Lenin’s book Two Tactics of Social-Democracy in the Democratic Revolution (see present edition, Vol. 9, pp. 15–140). p. 142
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