Revolutions - 10.48- The Death of Reform
Episode Date: March 22, 2021Stolypin's reforms died. Then Stolypin died....
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And welcome to revolutions.
Episode 10.48, The Death of Reform.
Last week, we talked about the heyday of the Stalepin reform era, which lasted from about 1907 to about 1909.
This was no small project.
Stilipan was aiming for a complete reorganization of property relations, a restructuring of the imperial administration, and a general social transformation from a society of lords and subcommittee.
subjects to a society of equal citizens. It was a total reimagining of the Russian Empire carried
out through a program of enlightened despotism, imposing and forcing changes from the top down
in order to rejuvenate and modernize the Tsarist system before it collapsed under the weight of
its plainly evident backward contradictions. But though Steliepin was trying to reform the system
in order to save it, he was surrounded by people who believed he was trying to reform the system
in order to destroy it.
Or at least destroy the parts of the system they liked best,
the parts of the system they benefited from.
So I think it's fair to say that the biggest threats to Stalepin's project
were not radicals or socialist or revolutionaries,
but the entrenched interests and powers that formed a conservative bulwark
who tried to undermine Stalepin at every turn.
We're talking about nobles, both at court and out in the countryside,
the leadership of the conservative Orthodox Church,
Russian nationalists who form that proto-fascist union of the Russian people
and their paramilitary black hundreds groups,
police officers, gendarmes, and chronic agents who were afraid they might be subjected to oversight,
patriarchal village elders who didn't want anything to change
because they would lose their own little dominion of power and influence.
These various groups oppose some or all of Stalepin's reforms,
each for their own reasons, and they became linked in both formal and informal alliances to hamper
the Prime Minister, whether at the local level or in the halls of the Winter Palace.
Things might have gone differently if Tsar Nicholas had truly supported what Stalepin was trying to do,
but he really did not.
Nicholas went along with all of this because he felt he had to.
After the Revolution of 1905, the situation was too dire for him to do what he was.
really wanted to do, which was nothing. He still believed with every fiber of his being that he
was the divinely ordained autocrat of all the Russias. He was the father. Everyone else were his children.
No one should stand between a father and his children, certainly not constitutions or Dumas or
prime ministers. It was also clear that Stalipin's reforms aimed to supplant the sovereignty of the Tsar
with the sovereignty of the state.
And in this new system,
the czar would be reduced to being merely an executive functionary,
still exalted and rich and powerful,
but under the overarching constitutional state just like everyone else.
Nicholas not only found this idea personally degrading,
but also a sin against God.
Because when you get up to that level,
it's not just that he felt his rights were being taken away.
It's that he believed that this was literally,
blasphemy against the will of God.
So Stilipin had always carried his brief to implement reform because of the upheavals of 1905,
and because people around Nicholas convinced the Tsar, if he didn't go along with it,
that the revolution would come back.
But Stilipin was never operating in a world where the Tsar was like, yes, I see what you're doing
and I like it, because he didn't like it, he hated it.
And only fear of revolution trumped his hateful.
of reform. But as I said last week, things seemed to be getting a little better with each passing
year. Economic conditions improved, and the political danger receded further into the rearview mirror.
Agricultural yields increased. Foreign investment continued to flow. Business and industry enjoyed a
little reflourishing. It led Nicholas to listen to those who fed his own instinctive desire to go back to
the way things were.
To listen to the people who said the danger is passed.
We don't need Stalipan or his reforms anymore.
With hindsight, we can see that the firm conservative pushback was already well underway
by 1909, and we can see it working over an otherwise obscure fight over the naval budget.
The Russians were still just a few years removed from losing basically their entire navy
to the Japanese.
The reputation of the Russian military had obviously taken a big hit, and one thing many leaders on all sides of all aisles agreed on, was the need to rearm, rebuild, and return Russia to its former state as a great military power.
And that included liberals and octoberists in the Duma, who represented a tradition going back to the end of the Crimean War, that one of the major reasons to have reform and modernization was to ensure Russia remained a great power that could win.
big wars. Now, as I've said before, there is nothing that liberal nationalists hate more than a
poorly run war. So while the Octobrist supported the idea of rebuilding the military in theory,
they believe that significant strings had to go along with increased appropriations.
The final autopsy report on the Russo-Japanese War laid a lot of justified blame at the Tsar's
feat because of his exclusive control of the military and the general staff.
Strategy, tactics, and logistics had been handled not by professional experts, but by friends
of the Tsar.
So when a bill came forward to build four new dreadnots for the Baltic fleet, the
octobrist dominated Dumas indicated that they would approve the money only if the naval
general staff was put under government oversight.
The Tsar could not just do whatever he wanted, the admirals and their staffs would answer
to the government.
Now, this was a clear expression of the core promise at the heart of the October manifesto,
that confidence in the Tsarist system would only prevail if it was understood that people
other than the Tsar actually ran the day-to-day operations of the empire.
That was the whole reason there was now a prime minister and a government, rather than
everything running through the Romanov family, dividing sovereignty from government
was key, and they now wanted to extend this to the military. But this ran right into Nicholas's
most deeply held beliefs. He believed he had a divine right, if nothing else, to be the Supreme
Commander-in-Chief of the Russian military. If anything ought to be the personal purview of the
Tsar, it was this. They had already taken away so much from him, and now they wanted to take
away his army and his navy, too. So he resisted.
Even though Stalipan, the government and the Duma all supported the measure, Nicholas dug in his heels and refused to go along with it.
And the Tsar won this fight.
The bill died.
Stalepin was upset enough about the Tsar's opposition that he tendered his resignation, but Nicholas refused to accept it.
He was feeling more self-confident, but not so self-confident that he thought he could get along without Stalepin, at least not.
yet. But Nicholas was thrilled to discover he could hold the line, and maybe, bit by bit,
he could start to reclaim what he believed had been unjustly taken away from him. Shortly after the
naval budget fight, we get to the next big legislative showdown, the Western Zemstva bill.
When the Zemstva were first created back in the 1860s, they were not created in the most
westernly provinces of the Russian Empire, those territories that had been.
been annexed from Poland. And this was for a pretty good reason. The Polish population had recently
risen in revolt, and it did not seem wise to the Russian administrators to give the landowning Polish nobility
an elected forum in which to make more trouble. But now, as part of his broader administrative reforms,
Stilipin wanted to introduce the Zemstva to six western provinces. But to be very clear,
this was not about Polish rights or national equality or local autonomy or any such nonsense.
These new Zemstvas were in fact designed with quite the opposite goal in mind.
Suffrage, voting procedures, and other qualifications were meant to heavily favor the Russian landowners in these provinces.
It was meant to elevate Russian voices and interests and strengthen the Russian character of the administration of the Polish provinces.
support for the bill in the Duma came not from the liberals necessarily or polls,
but conservative Russian nationalists who wanted to ensure the Russian Empire remained the
Russian Empire.
Thanks to the support of these nationalist groups, when the bill was introduced in the Duma
in May 1910, it was passed, and then it got kicked up to the upper house, the state council
for consideration and debate and final approval.
The slow-moving wheels of the legislative process meant that the state council was not ready to take up the bill until early 1911.
And it turned out that there were objections to creating new Zemstva.
Some didn't like that it seemed to undermine the traditional status of the local Polish nobility,
because even though they were Polish, they were still nobles, and nobles in the state council didn't want to see their brethren have their rights taken away.
Others just didn't like the idea of extending the Zemstva at all.
They wanted such a democratic institution to shrink and disappear, not expand and grow.
But opposition truly coalesced around a much more particular and petty idea.
Stilipan wanted it.
And if his enemies could torpedo the Western Zemstva bill,
they might just be able to torpedo Stilipin along with it.
As the vote in the state council approached in March 1911, several of Stalepin's enemies at court went behind the prime minister's back straight to Tsar Nicholas and encouraged Nicholas to suspect the worst both about the bill and his prime minister.
They leaned on Nicholas to withdraw his support for the bill and, crucially, not tell Stalepin what he was doing lest the wily prime minister evade the trap.
Nicholas went along with all of this, and on the eve of the vote, surreptitiously inform the state
counselors looking to him for instructions and guidance that they ought to vote their conscience,
which was taken as a clear sign he did not support the bill, or he would have said,
vote for the bill.
Stelipin was not aware of any of this, nor did he have reason to suspect the bill might be in trouble.
Final approval seemed to be a foregone conclusion, and Stalepin did not even bother to
attend the final debates on the assumption that it was all in the bag. But when he came down to
the state council on March the 4th to witness the final vote on one of the key provisions, he was
shocked when it was voted down. He was stunned. He stormed out in an angry huff, under the entirely
correct assumption that this was a direct attack on his authority. It was a vote of no confidence
engineered by his enemies at court. So the very next day, Stalepin went to the czar and again
submitted his resignation. This apparently spooked the Tsar into realizing maybe he had been
pushed into doing something he ought not have done. Yes, he wanted independence from Stalipan,
and yes, he wanted to reassert his old privileges, but he still feared cutting out on
Stelipan entirely and accidentally inviting back revolution. So Nicholas said, look, if you
reintroduce the bill, I will tell the members of the state council to support it. But sensing he could
regain the upper hand and wanting to prove to everyone he could not be pushed around,
Stalepin made a big mistake. He said, no, there will not be a next bill or another bill.
I want you to put through this bill, despite the state council's rejection.
He demanded the czar temporarily recessed the Duma and the state council, and then, when they
were officially out of session, promulgate the Western Zemstva bill using Article 87. That was the
emergency law that allowed for such decrees when the Duma and state council were not technically
in session. Steliepon also demanded that the court favorites who had been identified as the ones behind
the plot be exiled from St. Petersburg. If the Tsar did not agree, Steliepian said he would resign
and walk away for good. It took the terminally indecisive Tsar a few days to figure out what to do
because he was trying to balance all these various forces pulling him in different directions,
as well as his own hopes and fears and resentments,
and he was trying to put it all on top of a spine made completely of jelly,
and it just didn't seem to ever want to hold.
So he collapsed back into the place he had been for the last few years.
He let his fear of revolution trump his hatred of reform.
On March the 12th, he sent the two chambers into recess,
and then exiled the offending court favorites.
Then on March 14th, the Tsar promulgated the Western Zemstva Bill by arbitrary decree.
To call this a Pyrrhic victory for Stilipan would be an understatement.
He stood victorious all right, but he stood completely alone.
The conservatives now hated his guts more than ever, not just for dodging their attempt to bury him, but for exiling their friends from court.
Liberals hated the abrupt usage of Article 87 to get his way, once again blatantly showing that Stalepin would,
never let a little thing like the Constitution get in his way. It drove the Octoberists,
once willing partners in the Duma, permanently into opposition to Stalepin and his government.
Stilipan was also attacked in society and in the presses for his high-handed arrogance.
The Tsar, meanwhile, was left feeling personally humiliated and he was furious about it.
Everyone knew he had buckled under an ultimatum that made Stalepen seem much stronger than Nicholas.
Whatever lingering flame of personal attachment remained between the two men was snuffed out.
Their relationship died of hypothermia.
Stilipan could not even enjoy his own success,
and colleagues noted that after the spring of 1911,
he went from being grandly self-confident to moody and bitter.
Stilipin went into the summer of 1911 unhappy with everyone and with everyone unhappy with him.
It is extremely plausible,
bordering on a certainty, that if what is about to happen had not happened,
Stilippin would have been ejected from power and ejected from our story anyway,
that he would have followed in the footsteps of Sergei Vita
and wound up writing pointed critiques of his successors that nobody paid any attention to,
well, maybe sort of hoping the Tsar would come to his senses and recall him.
But instead, what's about to happen did happen.
And so Stalepin's departure from our story,
is far more abrupt and far more permanent.
Stilipin lived for years knowing that he was the prime target for assassination.
All Russian officials were targets for assassination.
The SR terrorists had made it very clear, long before even the revolution of 1905,
that anybody who worked for the Tsar was a viable target.
This was not a theoretical or a hypothetical threat.
This was very real.
Stilipin had already escaped one bombing already in the summer of 1906.
He went around wearing bulletproof vests and always surrounded by bodyguards.
Because of all this, Stilippin seems to have had a fatalistic assumption about his own demise.
In his will that he rewrote in 1906, he stated that he wished to be buried close to wherever he was murdered.
It's hard to tell exactly what his state of mind was in the summer of 1911 and how much he had literally developed a death wish.
but he certainly did everything in his power to not avoid getting assassinated.
In late August 1911, the Imperial Court journeyed to Kiev to celebrate the unveiling of a statue to the Tsar Liberator Alexander II.
Proceeding this trip, the police informs to leap in that they had picked up chatter about an active plot to assassinate him.
They advised the Prime Minister to keep his head down and stay away from public places during the trip.
Instead, Stilipan left his bulletproof vest and his personal bodyguards behind and entrusted a lockbox full of papers to a close friend telling that friend to burn them if he didn't come back.
Then off to Kiev he went, and he did not come back.
The last few days of August 1911 make it pretty clear how damaged the relationship between the Tsar and the Prime Minister now was.
Though Stalepin was in Kiev, he was thoroughly snubbed.
by the court. The imperial family did not invite him to their various soirees and ceremonies,
and he was always a pointed and obvious absence. Stalepin also ignored the advice of the police
and regularly walked around in public. He visited horse races at the hippodrome and took walks in the
park. This brazen disregard for his own safety at the very least indicates Stalepin was not
desperate to stay alive at all costs. Whether or not he was actually
suicidally depressed, is beyond any historian's ability to diagnose.
The great confusing irony of all this is that though Stilippin was walking around Kiev,
brazenly disregarding the threat of assassination, and though there really was a threat
of assassination that he was brazenly disregarding, it was not the assassination threat that the police
had warned Stilippin not to brazenly disregard. That threat, the threat that Steliep,
leap and thought he was brazenly disregarding was completely made up.
It was imaginary.
But it was made up to throw the police off the scent of the real threat of assassination.
In fact, the real assassin was the very same person who had warned the police about the fake
assassination plot that didn't actually exist.
This is all very confusing, so let us start at the beginning.
24-year-old Dimitri Grigorovich Bogroff was the son of a wealthy Ukrainian Jewish family.
He had gone off to university and emerged as a lawyer, but also emerged as an SR revolutionary,
because during his days at university, he fell in with student radicals.
But young McGrath was as interested in gambling and partying as being a revolutionary,
and he was frequently blowing through all his cash and turning back to his family for more money.
It would appear, however, that sometime around 1907 he secured his own stable financial situation
by becoming a paid police informant.
For the next three years, Begroff reliably passed information along to the police,
thwarting various plots and leading to the arrest of his supposed comrades.
He was considered by the Kiev police to be one of their most trusted and reliable sources of information.
Now, over time, his comrades grew suspicious of where Begrov was getting his income,
and at first they thought he was embezzling from the party.
But over the course of a secret investigation, they turned over a few rocks and discovered the far
worst truth that he was a paid police spy.
Rather than just whack McGrath, they decided to use him.
In mid-August 1911, his erstwhile comrades confronted him with undeniable evidence, and they
gave him a stark ultimatum.
They said, we know what you've done.
We could kill you right now and be done with it if we wanted to, but we're going to give you
one chance to live. You must kill somebody important by September the 5th or we're going to execute you.
And then they cut him loose to either figure out how to kill somebody important or get whacked himself.
At first, Bogroff was going to kill the head of the Kiev police, the guy he had been informing for all these years.
But Bogroff chickened out when he went to meet the police chief and was treated so warmly that he just
couldn't go through with it. He also apparently considered assassinating the Tsar himself,
but decided that if a Ukrainian Jew assassinated Tsar Nicholas, that would lead directly to a violent
anti-Semitic backlash, and so he abandoned that idea as well. Stilippen was thus selected as a target
for no other reason than Begruff had to kill somebody important, and other potential targets had
too many complications. To give himself some breathing room, Begros,
went to the police and told them there's a plot against DeLeepin's life. He then invented two fictitious
SR assassins and said they are going to use my apartment as a home base. So I'm going to clear
out of there, but you should keep that apartment under surveillance. Since he had been such a reliable
source all these years, the police took this seriously. They devoted resources and attention and manpower
to monitoring the apartment, but not Begroff, who they trusted,
and who proceeded to spend the next few days stalking Prime Minister Stilippin.
On September 1st, Begroff found out the Tsar and much of the court would attend a theatrical performance, and Stelipan would be there.
Continuing to feed his police handler's misinformation, Begraf told them that the assassins would surely be catchable at his apartment that very night,
and he begged for a ticket to the theatrical performance to provide McGrath with a clean alibi.
Just one hour before the performance was set to begin, he received the ticket from his police handlers,
and that is how he gained access to the theater that night.
The Tsar was seated in the front row near the orchestra with his four daughters.
Stilipan was nearby, though the two men did not interact.
Around 10 p.m. during the second intermission,
Stalepin stood chatting with a few of his neighbors.
Begroff, dressed in formal coattails, approached with a pistol.
approached with a pistol hidden under his program.
As soon as he got close, he pulled out the pistol and fired two shots into the prime minister.
One hit Stilippen's hand and ricochade and wounded a musician.
The other hit him in the chest, deflected off a metal,
Sleepen was wearing for the occasion, and lodged in his liver.
Begroff was jumped, apprehended, and beaten into submission.
Now, according to witnesses, Sleepen at first staggered in shock confusion
and did not exactly understand what had just happened to him.
But then he opened up his coat and saw blood pouring out everywhere and realized he had been shot.
He collapsed into a chair and in the commotion shouted loud enough for everyone to hear,
I am happy to die for the czar.
Stelipan was rushed out of the theater to a nearby hospital,
and it's entirely possible that with today's medicine he would have lived,
because at first the wound did not seem fatal.
But his recovery in the hospital over the next few days took a sharp and fatal turn when the wound became infected.
And it was the infection rather than the bullet that killed him.
On September 5th, 1911, Peter Stolipin died.
Stilipin loomed like a giant over a very particular moment of Russian history.
And for a long time, there was a general story, at least among Western historians,
and especially during the Cold War, that his life and reforms,
represented the great path not taken. That he was carrying out the great reforms that had been
exposed as necessary by the Revolution of 1905, and those reforms were cut short by his untimely
death. Had he lived, he could have kept going and reinvented and reimagine the empire
and thus avoided the whole second revolution of 1917. But every book you read nowadays
pretty much agrees that this was not the case,
that his death here in 1911
actually came after his reforms started to stall and fail.
He was already cut off and estranged from the Tsar,
and politically he was dead man walking.
Every instinct in the Tsar's body
was to turn away and reject land reform
and administrative reform and social reforms,
and the conservative defenders of the old order
were winning the argument by Sepul.
September 1911.
As we talked about last week, the land reforms, the vaunted land reforms, were already limited
and mostly resisted at every level.
The proposed administrative and political reforms were never carried out.
They would have taken years to accomplish anyway.
But by the time Stalipan was dead, they were already being slow walked until the Tsar could
just get rid of them.
Stilipin was despised enough by conservatives that, given Bogroff's connection to
to the police, there was immediate suspicion that the hit was ordered not by the SR revolutionaries,
but high-place conservative reactionaries. In truth, Stalipin was trying to impose his vision onto Russia,
which, for all we know, might have worked had he been able to impose it. But he did not have
any support from the Tsar, and he was acting on behalf of no real organic community out there
in the provinces or the villages or the cities or really anywhere.
And he was trying to do it with a bureaucracy that was too weak, too disorganized, and too
incoherent to carry it out.
So as I said, had he not been assassinated here in 1911, the story probably would have gone
that he winds up drafting bitter memoirs about how everybody should have listened to him,
rather than him carrying all this to a successful conclusion and avoiding any future Russian
revolutions. That's my read on it anyway. But his death does helpfully coincide with the death
of reform, bringing to an end a brief period opened by the emergency of 1905, but which was
dead, dead, dead, whether metaphorically or bodily, by 1911. After Stilippin's death,
no one anywhere near the levers of power would ever again try anything so bold or so challenging
to the existing order.
Because Nicholas, his court, his family, and his friends promptly retreated to their old habits,
believing the worst was behind them.
But obviously, the worst is yet to come.
Next week, we will follow our story back to the inner sanctum of the imperial court,
as Nicholas and Alexandra reasserted their own personal power over the empire that they believed
God had given them to run.
This means that it's finally time to introduce one of the most infamous characters in all of Russian history,
and you all know who I'm talking about, so I don't even have to dramatically end this episode by saying his name.
