1.
RESOLUTION OF THE FACTORY-SHOP
COMMITTEES
Workers
Control
1. (See Ppage 43) 2. The organisation
of Workers Control is a manifestation of the same
healthy activity in the sphere of industrial production,
as are party organisations in the sphere of politics,
trade unions in employment, Cooperatives in the domain
of consumption, and literary clubs in the sphere of
culture.
3. The working-class has much
more interest in the proper and uninterrupted operation
of factories
than the capitalist class. Workers
Control is a better security in this respect for the
interests of modern society, of the whole people, than
the arbitrary will of the owners, who are guided only
by their selfish desire for material profits or political
privileges. Therefore Workers Control is demanded
by the proletariat not only in their own interest,
but in the interest of the whole country, and should
be supported by the revolutionary peasantry as well
as the revolutionary Army.
4. Considering the hostile attitude
of the majority of the capitalist class toward the
Revolution, experience shows that proper distribution
of raw materials and fuel, as well as the most efficient
management of factories, is impossible without Workers
Control.
5. Only Workers Control over
capitalist enterprises, cultivating the workers conscious
attitude toward work, and making clear its social
meaning, can create conditions favourable to the development
of a firm self-discipline in labour, and the development
of all labours possible productivity.
6. The impending transformation
of industry from a war to a peace basis, and the redistribution
of labour all over the country, as well as among the
different factories, can be accomplished without great
disturbances only by means of the democratic self-government
of the workers themselves
. Therefore the realisation
of Workers Control is an indispensable preliminary
to the demobilisation of industry.
7. In accordance with the slogan
proclaimed by the Russian Social Democratic Labour
Party (Bolsheviki), Workers Control on a national
scale, in order to bring results, must extend to all
capitalist concerns, and not be organised accidentally,
without system; it must be well-planned, and not separated
from the industrial life of the country as a whole.
8. The economic life of the countryagriculture,
industry, commerce and transportmust be subjected
to one unified plan, constructed so as to satisfy
the individual and social requirements of the wide
masses of the people; it must be approved by their
elected representatives, and carried out under the
direction of these representatives by means of national
and local organisations.
9. That part of the plan which
deals with land-labour must be carried out under supervision
of the peasants and land-workers organisations;
that relating to industry, trade and transport operated
by wage-earners, by means of Workers Control; the
natural organs of Workers Control inside the industrial
plant will be the Factory-Shop and similar Committees;
and in the labour market, the Trade Unions.
10. The collective wage agreements
arranged by the Trade Unions for the majority of workers
in any branch of labour, must be binding on all the
owners of plants employing this kind of labour in the
given district.
11. Employment bureaus must be
placed under the control and management of the Trade
Unions, as class organisations acting within the limits
of the whole industrial plan, and in accordance with
it.
12. Trade Unions must have the
right, upon their own initiative, to begin legal action
against all employers who violate labour contracts
or labour legislation, and also in behalf of any individual
worker in any branch of labour.
13. On all questions relating
to Workers Control over production, distribution
and employment, the Trade Unions must confer with the
workers of individual establishments through their
Factory-Shop Committees.
14. Matters of employment and
discharge, vacations, wage scales, refusal of work,
degree of productivity and skill, reasons for abrogating
agreements, disputes with the administration, and similar
problems of the internal life of the factory, must
be settled exclusively according to the findings of
the Factory-Shop Committee, which has the right to
exclude from participation in the discussion any members
of the factory administration.
15. The Factory-Shop Committee
forms a commission to control the supplying of the
factory with raw materials, fuel, orders, labour power
and technical staff (including equipment), and all
other supplies and arrangements, and also to assure
the factorys adherence to the general industrial
plan. The factory administration is obliged to
surrender to the organs of Workers Control, for their
aid and information, all data concerning the business;
to make it possible to verify this data, and to produce
the books of the company upon demand of the Factory-Shop
Committee.
16. Any illegal acts on the part
of the administration discovered by the Factory-Shop
Committees, or any suspicion of such illegal acts,
which cannot be investigated or remedied by the workers
alone, shall be referred to the district central organisation
of Factory-Shop Committees charged with the particular
branch of labour involved, which shall discuss the
matter with the institutions charged with the execution
of the general industrial plan, and find means to deal
with the matter, even to the extent of confiscating
the factory.
17. The union of the Factory-Shop
Committees of different concerns must be accomplished
on the basis of the different trades, in order to
facilitate control over the whole branch of industry,
so as to come within the general industrial plan;
and so as to create an effective plan of distribution
among the different factories of orders, raw materials,
fuel, technical and labour power; and also to facilitate
cooperation with the Trade Unions, which are organised
by trades.
18. The central city councils
of Trade Unions and Factory-Shop Committees represent
the proletariat in the corresponding provincial and
local institutions formed to elaborate and carry out
the general industrial plan, and to organise economic
relations between the towns and the villages (workers
and peasants). They also possess final authority
for the management of Factory-Shop Committees and Trade
Unions, so far as Workers Control in their district
is concerned, and they shall issue obligatory regulations
concerning workers discipline in the routine of productionwhich
regulations, however, must be approved by vote of
the workers themselves.
2.
THE BOURGEOIS PRESS
ON THE BOLSHEVIKI
Russkaya Volia, October 28.
The decisive moment approaches
. It is decisive
for the Bolsheviki. Either they will give us
a second edition of the events of July 16-18, or they
will have to admit that with their plans and intentions,
with their impertinent policy of wishing to separate
themselves from everything consciously national, they
have been definitely defeated
.
What are the chances of Bolshevik success?
It is difficult to answer that question,
for their principal support is the
ignorance of the
popular masses. They speculate on it, they work
upon it by a demagogy which nothing can stop
.
The Government must play its part
in this affair. Supporting itself morally by
the Council of the Republic, the Government must take
a clearly-defined attitude toward the Bolsheviki
.
And if the Bolsheviki provoke an
insurrection against the legal power, and thus facilitate
the German invasion, they must be treated as mutineers
and traitors
.
Birzhevya Viedomosti, October
28. Now that the Bolsheviki have separated themselves
from the rest of the democracy, the struggle against
them is very much simplerand it is not reasonable,
in order to fight against Bolshevism, to wait until
they make a manifestation. The Government should
not even allow the manifestation
.
The appeals of the Bolsheviki to
insurrection and anarchy are acts punishable by the
criminal courts, and in the freest countries, their
authors would receive severe sentences. For what
the Bolsheviki are carrying on is not a political
struggle against the Government, or even for the power;
it is propaganda for anarchy, massacres, and civil
war. This propaganda must be extirpated at its
roots; it would be strange to wait, in order to begin
action against an agitation for pogroms, until
the pogroms actually occurred
.
Novoye Vremya, November 1.
hellip; Why is the Government excited only about
November 2d (date of calling of the Congress of Soviets),
and not about September 12th, or October 3d?
This is not the first time that Russia
burns and falls in ruins, and that the smoke of the
terrible conflagration makes the eyes of our Allies
smart
.
Since it came to power, has there
been a single order issued by the Government for the
purpose of halting anarchy, or has any one attempted
to put out the Russian conflagration?
There were other things to do
.
The Government turned its attention
to a more immediate problem. It crushed an insurrection
(the Kornilov attempt) concerning which every one
is now asking, Did it ever exist?
3.
MODERATE SOCIALIST
PRESS ON THE BOLSHEVIKI
Dielo Naroda, October 28 (Socialist
Revolutionary). The most frightful crime of the Bolsheviki
against the Revolution is that they impute exclusively
to the bad intentions of the revolutionary Government
all the calamities which the masses are so cruelly
suffering; when as a matter of fact these calamities
spring from objective causes.
They make golden promises to the
masses, knowing in advance that they can fulfil none
of them; they lead the masses on a false trail, deceiving
them as to the source of all their troubles
.
The Bolsheviki are the most dangerous
enemies of the Revolution
.
Dien, October 30 (Menshevik).
Is this really the freedom of the press? Every
day Novaya Rus and Rabotchi Put openly
incite to insurrection. Every day these two papers
commit in their columns actual crimes. Every
day they urge pogroms
. Is that the freedom
of the press?
The Government ought to defend itself
and defend us. We have the right to insist that
the Government machinery does not remain passive while
the threat of bloody riots endangers the lives of its
citizens
.
4.
YEDINSTVO
Plekhanovs paper, Yedinstvo,
suspended publication a few weeks after the Bolsheviki
seized the power. Contrary to popular report,
Yedinstvo was not suppressed by the Soviet Government;
an announcement in the last number admitted that it
was unable to continue because there were too few
subscribers
.
5.
WERE THE BOLSHEVIKI
CONSPIRATORS?
The French newspaper Entente
of Petrograd, on November 15th, published an article
of which the following is a part:
The Government of Kerensky discusses
and hesitates. The Government of Lenin and Trotzky
attacks and acts.
This last is called a Government
of Conspirators, but that is wrong. Government
of usurpers, yes, like all revolutionary Governments
which triumph over their adversaries. Conspiratorsno!
No! They did not conspire.
On the contrary, openly, audaciously, without mincing
words, without dissimulating their intentions, they
multiplied their agitation, intensified their propaganda
in the factories, the barracks, at the Front, in the
country, everywhere, even fixing in advance the date
of their taking up arms, the date of their seizure
of the power
.
Theyconspirators? Never
.
6.
APPEAL AGAINST
INSURRECTION
From the Central Army Committee
Above everything we insist upon
the inflexible execution of the organised will of
the majority of the people, expressed by the Provisional
Government in accord with the Council of the Republic
and the Tsay-ee-kah, as organ of the popular
power
.
Any demonstration to depose this
power by violence, at a moment when a Government crisis
will infallibly create disorganisation, the ruin of
the country, and civil war, will be considered by the
Army as a counter-revolutionary act, and repressed
by force of arms
.
The interests of private groups and
classes should be submitted to a single interestthat
of augmenting industrial production, and distributing
the necessities of life with fairness
.
All who are capable of sabotage,
disorganisation, or disorder, all deserters, all slackers,
all looters, should be forced to do auxiliary service
in the rear of the Army
.
We invite the Provisional Government
to form, out of these violators of the peoples will,
these enemies of the Revolution, labour detachments
to work in the rear, on the Front, in the trenches
under enemy fire
.
7.
EVENTS OF THE NIGHT,
NOVEMBER 6TH
Toward evening bands of Red Guards
began to occupy the printing shops of the bourgeois
press, where they printed Rabotchi Put, Soldat,
and various proclamations by the hundred thousand.
The City Militia was ordered to clear these places,
but found the offices barricaded, and armed men defending
them. Soldiers who were ordered to attack the
print-shops refused.
About midnight a Colonel with a company
of yunkers arrived at the club Free Mind,
with a warrant to arrest the editor of Rabotchi
Put. Immediately an enormous mob gathered in the
street outside and threatened to lynch the yunkers.
The Colonel thereupon begged that he and the yunkers
be arrested and taken to Peter-Paul prison for safety.
This request was granted.
At 1 A. M. a detachment of soldiers
and sailors from Smolny occupied the Telegraph Agency.
At 1.35 the Post Office was occupied. Toward
morning the Military Hotel was taken, and at 5 oclock
the Telephone Exchange. At dawn the State Bank
was surrounded. And at 10 A. M. a cordon of troops
was drawn about the Winter Palace.