Revolutions - 10.65- The Dawn of a New Day
Episode Date: August 16, 2021The February Revolution succeeded! Everything is great now! Get tix for Hero of Two Worlds Events! Aug 20 Politics and Prose with Jamelle Bouie Aug 23 Midtown Scholar with Ben Rhodes Aug 24 The Str...and with Alexis Coe Aug 31 Harvard Bookstore with Patrick Wyman.
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Hello and welcome to Revolutions.
Episode 10.65, The Dawn of a New Day.
I want to start this week by saying that this is the penultimate episode of the
Revolutions podcast before Hero of Two Worlds, the Marquis de Lafayette in the Age of Revolution,
publishes on August 24th, 2021.
I kind of can't believe it's already here.
I kind of can't believe I've been doing this for this long and some
thing is finally going to come of it. I am consumed by nervous anticipation. This is three and a half
years in the making. But anyway, this is basically the last time I'll have to ask you to please
pre-order the book before it comes out. And just so you know, all the pre-orders count as transactions
on the date of publication. And therefore, massing all of those sales in a single week and on a single
day helps put the book on the New York Times bestseller list, if that's a possibility. And
maybe we can help prove that I'm not just a one-hit wonder. So if you're planning on getting the book,
please just go ahead and pre-order it right now. Thank you very much. Now, people have asked me,
how are we doing on the 10,000 pre-order campaign? And the honest answer is, I have no idea. That is because
all the local indie bookshops out there don't report their pre-order numbers. They just take the order
and then process the resulting sale on publication date. So my big push to get you all to pre-order
the book from local stores has left me and the publisher basically blind, but I don't really
care because it sounds like we've done exactly what I wanted to do. And I just want to read to you
now some bullet points that were reported from the indie channel rep at the publisher in a recent
roundup of how things are going out there for the whole catalog of offerings. The first one is
Mike Duncan has done an incredible job driving sales of Hero of Two Worlds to the Indies. Accounts are
picking up on average five to 20 copies. And then later she said, speaking of pre-orders,
Mike Duncan is the new hero of independent bookstores everywhere. His pre-order campaign for
Hero of Two Worlds, sending listeners to our stores has made a big impact. And then the final bit
is from a final call-out of things worth focusing on, Hero of Two Worlds. This has been one of the
most successful author-generated pre-order campaigns I've seen in some time. Almost every indie
has commented on how thrilled they are with their advance orders.
So this is exactly what I wanted, exactly what I hoped would happen.
And it's all thanks to you guys out there for doing this the right way.
I mean, I already consider the pre-order campaign to be a massive success.
We have made a huge positive impact.
It has been noticed.
It has been appreciated.
And it's something I think we can all take a great deal of pride in accomplishing.
And we did it together.
I mean, it says like Mike Duncan did this and Mike Duncan did that.
that, but all I did was ask you guys to go do something and you did it. So this is really,
this is all of us doing this together. And truly, thank you from the bottom of my heart. I really
do have the best fan base in the world. And people out there are noticing it. So great job.
Really. Great, great job. Thank you. But enough about us. The last two episodes covered what we
call the February Revolution, which took place in the final week of February 1917, according to
the old style calendar. But what began in February finally finished in March, and what we're
here to talk about today is all of the stuff that is associated with the February Revolution
and is wrapped up in the memory of glorious February, but which actually happened in March.
So today we're going to run through events in March because after March comes April, and if you've read
ahead even a little bit, you know that you know who is coming back in April.
So we're going to pick things up today with a phone call at 6 o'clock in the morning on March 3rd,
1917, so just a few hours after Nicholas signed his abdication in a railcar in Pskopf.
The phone call was placed by the leaders of the rapidly coalescing new provisional government
to Nicholas's younger brother, Grand Duke, Mikhail.
This phone call informed a groggy Michao that Nicholas abdicated the throne,
and, at least according to the paperwork, Mikhail was now Tsar of Russia.
But this was not a happy call, a congratulations on your promotion,
and let us know when you want us to come down and pledge fealty to you.
It was instead, this is where things stand at the moment,
but please do come down at your earliest convenience to discuss this with us,
because there are some very important things to discuss.
So Mikhail got dressed and went to meet the leaders of the Dumas Provisional Executive Committee,
which, as I said, is rapidly transitioning into becoming an official provisional government.
When the Grand Duke entered, he expressed surprise and consternation at his brother's decision.
Like almost everyone else, he expected that if and when Nicholas abdicated,
it would be in favor of Alexei.
And if anything, Mikhail would be a regent, not the Tsar himself.
He admitted he didn't quite know what to do.
The leaders around him, almost to a man, told the Grand Duke,
we think it would be a catastrophic mistake for you to accept the crown.
The news has already been spreading that you're the news are,
and the response, particularly from the soldiers, has been hostile and dissatisfied.
And this gets back to what we talked about last week,
which is one of the key points in the agreement between the leaders of the Duma
and the leaders of the Soviet, is that a constituent assembly would be convened to settle Russia's post-revolutionary constitution.
This is the expectation that was out there in the streets and in the barracks.
These people were not going to accept a backroom deal to simply replace one Romanov for another.
Now, almost alone among his colleagues, however, Pavel Miliakov told Grand Duke Mikhail that he must accept the crown,
that the monarchy itself was still an essential institution, and if Mikhailianov,
refused to be czar, he would guarantee a civil war.
But Meliakov was the only one who believed that.
After this general discussion, the Grand Duke was taken aside by Chairman of the Duma
Rodzienka, who later recorded,
It was absolutely clear to us that the Grand Prince would reign for only a few hours before
enormous bloodshed would occur in the Capitol.
It was clear to us that the Grand Prince would be murdered immediately and all his supporters
with him.
he did not have any loyal troops at his disposal and therefore could not rely on any armed force.
He asked point blank whether I could guarantee his life if he accepted the throne, and I was compelled to tell him, no.
Mikhail emerged from this meeting and announced to the other leaders surrounding him he would not accept the crown,
unless it was offered to him by the anticipated constituent assembly.
He drafted a statement to this effect, wherein he also implored everyone to recognize and obey the provisional government.
This statement was published the following day in the newspaper alongside Nicholas's official letter of abdication.
And this is how legal political authority passed first from Nicholas to Mikhail and then from Mikhail to the provisional government.
And there it would remain until October.
The new provisional government, which officially marks its beginning to March 2, 1917,
was drawn from the senior leadership of the Progressive Block,
most of whom had been sitting on the unofficially convened provisional executive committee of Duma Delegates.
Pavel Miliakov became foreign minister,
Alexander Gutschkoff became Minister of War,
Alexander Kerensky became Minister of Justice.
Heading up the provisional government was Prince Lavov,
the highly effective and well-respected leader of the Zemstva Union,
who became Minister of the Interior and also Prime Minister of the new provisional government.
All of these guys took up their post quickly and without very much infighting.
The Progressive Block had been aggressively trying to force Nicholas to accept a new government composed of them for years now,
and so the question of who would get what job had long since been settled.
For months, newspapers had openly published lists of what leaders would take over which ministries.
So while the revolution, of course, caught them by surprise, they had been expecting to get this call for years now.
It's not like they were totally caught off guard and suddenly rushing to do things they weren't expecting to be doing.
Now, the general public had also been waiting for these guys to become the government for months now, or years now.
And when the news finally started to spread, the provisional government.
government enjoyed broad support from the right and from the left, from workers and aristocrats,
soldiers and civilians, at home and abroad. As I've hopefully established by now, just about
everyone was ready for a new government by the winter of 1917. And even any lingering shred of
loyalty to Nicholas and Alexandra out there among conservatives had long since frayed beyond repair.
As word spread over the next few hours and days and then weeks, news of the Zubes, news of the Zubarakers,
Tsar's abdication, and that Russia was now in the hands of capable leaders, was greeted with
celebratory euphoria. Not the least reason being that these guys were all viewed as patriotic Russians,
unlike Empress Alexandra and the people who surrounded her, who most everybody had long since
concluded were like secretly pro-German and trying to lead the empire to ruin. So there were
celebrations in city streets, and out in the trenches and in tiny rural villages. A new
day was dawning, and the wave of optimistic joy and relief was nearly uniform throughout the
empire. With the Russians themselves clearly ready to embrace and recognize the provisional government,
Russia's foreign allies quickly followed suit. On March 9th, the United States became the
first power to formally recognize the provisional government as the legitimate government of
the Russian Empire, with Britain, France, Italy, and the other allies quickly following. With this
final test of legitimacy passed, the provisional government, was the government. So what were they
going to do with their newfound power, authority, and legitimacy? Well, they very quickly got to work
trying to live up to everyone's expectations, to deliver on what was generally understood to be the
promise of the revolution, and that promise can be distilled down to two essential components,
one destructive, the other, constructive. By that I mean,
they needed to dismantle the most abusive parts of the old absolutist regime, while at the same time
fostering something new, a participatory government that included all of Russian society,
not just a tiny click of incompetent sycophants appointed by Nicholas and Alexandra.
For years now, decades, really. The arbitrary centralized state apparatus had been a major
source of anger and resentment at nearly all levels of Russian society. So to maintain the goodwill
and support of that society, the provisional government knew they were going to have to embark on a
rapid program of destruction and construction. On the destructive side, that meant eliminating the most
hated parts of the old regime, and on the constructive side, it meant replacing the deeply unpopular,
closed-up and arbitrary bureaucratic apparatus was something that was far more open and responsive
to the Russian people. One of the first targets for destruction was the Tsar's police and internal
security apparatus. Within days of taking power, the provisional government straight up abolished the
ministry of police, the gendarme, and the achrana. These forces were the most visible symbol of an
unjust and coercive state. The police in Petrograd had been the most staunchly violent defenders
of the old regime during the street fighting between February 23rd and March 2nd, and thus abolishing
the existing police force had been one of the things the provisional government had promised to do
in order to secure support from the Petrograd Soviet.
Now, of course, it helped that the headquarters of all these police agencies had already been trashed,
their senior leaders arrested or lynched,
and the rank-and-file officers dissolved and scattered in the wake of revolutionary victory in the streets.
So announcing that these forces were abolished was merely announcing something that had kind of already taken place.
And before we go on, I do want to note with a bit of a wry smile that many revolutionaries
destroyed and burned the offices of the Akrona with particularly meticulous zeal,
on account of how many of them had been paid agents of the Akrona for years.
Now, in place of these dissolved police forces,
the provisional government expected to organize militia companies,
drawn from the citizenry and led by elected officers.
So the idea was not to have no police force,
but instead to have a police force by and for the people,
rather than by and for the Tsar.
The provisional government also moved quickly to reorganize provincial administration throughout
the empire.
The provincial governors enjoyed considerable power in their provinces, and all of them were
appointed directly by the Tsar.
They thus stood as an enormous potential roadblock to expanding the revolution out from
Petrograd into the rest of the empire.
Leaving them in place would have been a grave political mistake.
they had been entrusted with broad discretionary power out in the provinces specifically
because they were loyal to Nicholas and Alexandra.
These were hardly people who could be trusted to support the revolution.
So on March 5th, all governors and deputy governors were summarily dismissed from service.
To replace these governors, the provisional government invited local leaders to take control.
Specifically, they called on the provincial Zemstva's, municipal council.
councils and other elements in the local professional classes and intelligentsia to step into the
vacuum and take over administration. And it's not like these groups weren't ready to do the job.
The Zemstva had been begging for years to be allowed to play an official role in local government
and administration, but had been kept at arm's length by the paranoid central authorities who
feared they were trying to take over. Well, now they got a chance to take over. And over the course of the
first few weeks of March 1917, they moved into government offices and administrative headquarters and all
their local capitals and went about the business of governing their provinces.
Meanwhile, back in Petrograd, the provisional government was decreeing all aspects of our well-known
list of liberal and democratic reforms, most of which were also included in that eight-point agreement
with the Soviet we ended on last week. They were announcing freedom of speech and freedom of the press and
freedom of assembly and freedom of religion.
And since the general critique of the Tsar from a liberal perspective was that his arbitrary central
authority was unresponsive to the people, the provisional government leaned heavily into a more
hands-off and decentralized vision of democratic liberalism.
As we just saw, their idea for provincial government was not to replace the centrally appointed
governors with somebody else, but to let local elites take up the job for themselves.
Meanwhile, when it came to national minority groups, everybody was promised some kind of autonomy.
Finland's constitution would be absolutely respected.
Poland was basically promised self-government after the war was over.
All of this fit into the widespread belief that for too long, the great potential of the Russian Empire had been kept bound by the Tsar's shackles.
The February Revolution was supposed to set them free.
And in March 1917, that's exactly what it looked like was happening.
That's what the provisional government is trying to do.
They are trying to set the people of the empire free.
But of course, the Revolution of 1917 is not just about what the provisional government is doing,
because one of the key dynamics of the Revolution of 1917 is this business of dual power.
Because growing right alongside the provisional government is the Petrograd Soviet,
who sometimes supported, sometimes criticized,
and sometimes outright undermined what the provisional government was doing.
and in fact, to make sure the interests and goals of the Soviet were protected, its leaders built out their own parallel apparatus of power.
And while their official policy was supporting the provisional government, it was very clear that their support was entirely contingent on the provisional government not doing anything that the Soviet opposed.
And as the Soviet was an assembly of workers and soldiers, which is to say the mass of people under arms, the leaders of the Soviet believed not.
not incorrectly, that the provisional government only existed because the Soviet let them.
The Soviet could frankly overthrow the provisional government practically any time they wanted,
and both sides were well aware of it.
Now, thanks to holding the Trump card in this uneasy power-sharing dynamic,
the Petrograd Soviet felt free to pursue their own initiatives without bothering to seek the approval of the provisional government.
So they would just do stuff.
For example, on March 5th, they blew off freedom of the press and announced that no paper could be published without Soviet approval.
Now, mostly permission was granted, but they specifically named a bunch of reactionary newspapers with known ties to the Black hundreds and said, yeah, you're shut down, you can't publish.
Now, on the level of principle, this was an opposition to the professed respect for freedom of speech in the press trumpeted by liberals in the provisional government,
and which was supposed to be one of the goals of the revolution,
but the leaders in the Soviet did not care.
Their eye was on a very practical ball.
If you want a revolution to succeed,
don't let conservative thugs publish anti-revolutionary propaganda
in the middle of the revolution.
In the weeks that followed the Soviet then expanded on what was becoming a loose working policy
that whatever happened out there,
whether in the streets or in the army or in the provinces,
required the stamp of approval from the Soviet.
They were now casting themselves
as the closest thing to a true expression of popular sovereignty.
They sent commissioners out to set up shop in key locations and sectors,
telegraph offices, railroad stations, post offices, printing presses,
radio stations, industrial factories.
The Soviet put commissioners everywhere.
The basic idea was that while the provisional government technically wielded power,
the Soviet exercised a kind of supreme oversight authority.
Representatives of the Soviet told anyone they encountered,
you are to obey orders from your superiors
or laws from the provisional government
unless they contradict decrees of the Soviet,
in which case you are duty-bound to disobey them.
One of the examples of the Soviet having more control over things
than the provisional government they were allegedly supporting
was the fate of Nicholas and Alexander.
After Nicholas signed his abdication, he secured permission from Prince Lavov to go to Army
headquarters to say goodbye to his officers. Then, he requested permission to go back home to the
Imperial Palace, link up with his family, and from there, they would all hopefully retire to a
coastal community until the end of the war. Nicholas received permission to do all this,
and the ex-Zar returned to army headquarters to bid tearful farewell to his officers. But after
he departed Paskoff, the provisional government talked it over more and decided they could probably
not let the Tsar and his family just stay inside Russia. So they sounded out the diplomatic corps
in Petrograd and found the British willing to accept Nicholas, Alexandra, and their children.
All of the Allies were concerned that if Nicholas and Alexandra settled anywhere in close proximity
to the Germans, that they would become a focal point not just for domestic counter-revolutionary
activity that would further destabilize Russia, but that the Germans would be able to get in contact
with Alexandra and fund and support such counter-revolutionary activity. In fact, the restoration
of the Russian monarchy might become a German war aim. The whole Eastern Front could collapse,
and Russia might very well become a permanent ally of Germany. So the Imperial family remaining in
Eastern Europe was not in the national interest of any of the Allies, and so the British made logistical
arrangements for the imperial family to be put on a British steamship. King George V even wrote a
personal letter inviting his cousins to come settle in England. But this whole idea was quickly short-circuited
when rumors leaked of the plan. When the leaders of the Soviet found out about it, they were incensed.
They did not believe Nicholas nor Alexandra should be allowed to simply depart Russia without
standing trial for their many crimes. The leaders of the Soviet informed the provisional government that they would
not stand by and let the Ex-ZAR leave the country. The provisional government immediately back down.
They sent four deputies to army headquarters to escort Nicholas back to Zarski-Salo, where he would be
placed under house arrest. The provisional government also ordered officers and soldiers that they
trusted to go take control of the imperial palaces and make sure no one got in or out without
permission. In the midst of all this, the leaders of the Soviet briefly panicked when the ex-Zar
was in transit back to Petrograd because they lost track of him, and they believed he was being hustled
out of the country. They went so far as to issue radio broadcasting, if you see the Tsar,
you must arrest him at once. He is a fugitive. But the provisional government had not double-crossed
the Soviet, and shortly thereafter, Nicholas was deposited back in the Imperial Palace.
To be super sure of things, though, the Soviet
then sent its own company of about 300 infantrymen backed by a company of machine gunners under
an officer who just so happened to be an SR. Their job was to make sure Nicholas was in fact there,
and this officer may have had further orders to either take command of security at the palace
or possibly go so far as to take the imperial family into custody and deposit them in the Peter and
Paul Fortress. Although what this officer wound up doing was negotiating with the soldiers he found on site,
and decided not to push the envelope, and instead reported back to the Soviet that he believed
the imperial family were under proper custody. So it's not 100% just the Soviets' representatives
running roughshod over anybody here. But that said, if the provisional government had had their way,
Nicholas and Alexandra and the children would have been safely sent to England. Instead,
at the behest of the Soviet, they remained very unsafely in Russia. As the Soviets' claim to their
special authority grew. The Soviet itself also grew. After the first week of March, there were about
a thousand elected delegates, and within just a few weeks, that number is going to top out at over
3,000. Then, the newly forming Soviets out in the provinces, and out on the front lines,
started sending delegates to Petrograd. After a brief debate, the Petrograd Soviet voted to allow
these people to come in as full-fledged members, and by the last week of March, they were no longer
calling themselves the Petrograd Soviet of Workers and Soldiers Deputies. They were now the
all-Russia Soviet of workers and soldiers deputies, bolstering their claim to be the true representatives
of the people, not just the people of the capital, but of the whole empire. As the Soviet
grew, the executive committee also grew until it hit more than 70 members. And as this body
became increasingly unwieldy, they created another nested committee called the Bureau, composed of 24
members, mostly Mensheviks, SRs, and Trudeviks. General assemblies of all the delegates became
infrequent. There were only a handful of full sessions over the course of the rest of the month,
and this self-selected group of socialist party leaders in the executive committee and in the
Bureau made most of the decisions on behalf of the people they claim to speak for.
Now, it would be easy, and partly true, to cast these socialist leaders as cynically co-opting
the sovereignty of the people. But it is worth keeping in mind that,
that the workers and soldiers clearly believe the Soviet represented their interests better than any other
institution. And so if you would ask them at this moment, they would have probably said, yes,
the Soviet is the institution of the people, and I support them for that very reason.
But that said, it is worth pointing out for the umpteenth time that the vast majority of Russians
were peasants, and peasants were not represented at all in the Soviet.
No matter how much they might have claimed to speak for the people, the Soviet was only reasonably
speaking for like 10% of the population, 15% tops. And it's not like the peasants were just
passively inert on the one hand or clamoring to join the Soviet on the other. As we're going to
talk about more down the road, the peasants were having their own revolution. For them,
the February revolution meant agrarian revolution. And they were already taking matters into
their own hands on the landfront. But in terms of political representation, a bunch of regional
SR organizations got the idea of getting the old peasant union back together. The peasant union had become a
major locus of peasant power during the revolution of 1905, but it had been broken and dispersed in the
repressive aftermath. So as we're going to see with the peasants, they are, again, the vast
majority of the population, and they are going to remain aloof from the Soviet and seek to create
their own representative institutions where their representatives were representing their interests.
So whatever the assumed pretensions of the Soviet, they were never going to be more than what they officially were, a Soviet of workers and soldiers.
But as to this question of who represented the people and what could be considered an authentic voice of the nation, we'll end today with a big mistake that the provisional government was making.
As we've noted several times over the past couple episodes, the final verdict of the February Revolution was always supposed to be rendered by a constituent assembly.
Assembly. Everyone was under the impression the provisional government was just that. Provisional.
That one of their most important jobs was figuring out when, where, and how to hold Democratic elections to convene a National Assembly that would hammer out a new constitutional order, an assembly that could truly claim popular legitimacy.
But instead of treating this promised constituent assembly as a matter of vital urgency, the provisional government dragged their feet.
They formed a committee to come up with an electoral plan,
but this committee got bogged down either arguing minutia or getting distracted by minor concerns.
So weeks passed, and then months passed,
before they even had a preliminary idea of how to hold elections.
So not only was the provisional government failing to fulfill one of their most important promises on a moral level,
on a strategic level, their failure to convene the constituent assembly left laying around a
very big and very obvious cudgel critics of the provisional government could pick up and beat them
with. It is going to become very easy to argue the provisional government was not interested in
forging a government of the Russian people, but of simply perpetuating their own power indefinitely.
So that's the political situation heading into April 1917. A great deal of promise, a great deal
of promises, but with the initial rush of hope and optimism getting its first tingees of
suspicious disappointment. There were now multiple power structures forming out there, all of them
beginning to truly jostle with one another, and no big national assembly that would sort it all
out any time soon. This was the atmosphere into which a train pulled into Finland Station
on April 3, 1917. When the train stopped, a small group of
of Russian expats got out, returning home for the first time in more than a decade.
So before we go, I have to take this second to last opportunity before Hero of Two Worlds comes
out to ask you to please pre-order Hero of Two Worlds from your favorite independent bookstore.
And if you are so inclined, please join me on August 20th with Jamel Bowie, August 23rd with Ben Rhodes,
August 24th with Alexis Coe or August 31st with Patrick Wyman.
those are going to be the online events that go along with publication week, which is now, my God, just one week away.
