Leon Trotsky

The New Course 1923

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Trotsky’s impassioned plea, written as a series of letters from December 1923 to January 1924, for the regeneration of party democracy and the active participation of the working class in Soviet decision-making. He warns that the New Economic Policy (NEP) is giving rise to an entrenched bureaucracy in the Bolshevik Party and the state apparatus which appropriates privileges and makes decisions in its own interests, threatening the party’s connection to the working class and its international revolutionary program. He argues for systematic planning and economic direction with real accounting to strengthen the young Soviet state.

 

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Trotsky’s impassioned plea, written as a series of letters from December 1923 to January 1924, for the regeneration of party democracy and the active participation of the working class in Soviet decision-making. He warns that the New Economic Policy (NEP) is giving rise to an entrenched bureaucracy in the Bolshevik Party and the state apparatus which appropriates privileges and makes decisions in its own interests, threatening the party’s connection to the working class and its international revolutionary program. He argues for systematic planning and economic direction with real accounting to strengthen the young Soviet state.

Table of Contents

I The Question of the Party Generations

II The Social Composition of the Party

III Groups and factional formations

IV Bureaucratism and the revolution

V Tradition and revolutionary policy

VI The “underestimation” of the peasantry [Appendix: The fundamental questions of the food and agrarian policy]

VII Planned Economy (Order 1042)

Appendices

 

Leon Trotsky (1879-1940) was born on November 7, 1879 in the village of Yanovka, which at the time was part of the Russian Empire and is now within the borders of Ukraine. Along with Vladimir Lenin, he was one of the leaders of the October Revolution of 1917, which brought the Bolsheviks to power in Russia. Trotsky, who was head of the Red Army during the years immediately following the revolution, led the Soviet Union to victory in the Civil War from 1918-1921. Trotsky founded the Left Opposition in 1923, which was established to oppose the growth of bureaucratism, nationalism, and inequality in the Soviet Union under Stalin’s leadership. He was an outspoken defender of the perspective of internationalism against the program of “socialism in one country”, which the Stalinist bureaucracy advanced as part of the defense of its own power and privileges. Because of his intransigent opposition to Stalinism, he was expelled from the Communist Party in 1927, sent into exile in Central Asia in 1928, and ultimately banished from the Soviet Union in 1929. In 1933, Trotsky warned that the policies pursued by the Stalinist Communist Party in Germany, if not changed, would pave the way for the coming to power of Hitler by politically disorienting and organizationally disarming the working class in the face of the fascist threat. After his warnings were proven correct, Trotsky concluded that Stalin’s betrayal of the German working class meant that the Third International could not be reformed. In 1938, he founded the Fourth International. Trotsky was murdered in 1940 in Mexico, where he had been given asylum, by a Stalinist agent. In addition to his political work, Trotsky was a major Marxist theoretician. He elaborated the theory of “permanent revolution”, which explained why an economically backward country like Russia was driven onto the path of socialist revolution despite the fact that it had a comparatively low level of capitalist development. Trotsky’s theory ultimately formed the basis for the October 1917 revolution. His letters and articles explaining the class nature of the Soviet state, written in the context of an inner-party debate that took place in 1939-1940 within the Trotskyist movement and collected in the volume In Defense of Marxism, are a brilliant example of the application of the dialectical materialist method to the analysis of contemporary political questions and problems of party program and perspective. Trotsky’s prediction, outlined most explicitly in The Revolution Betrayed, that unless the working class in the USSR regained power through a political revolution, the Stalinist bureaucracy would bring about the restoration of capitalism, was proven correct by the events of 1989-1991. Additional information about Trotsky’s political biography, his role in Soviet and world history, and his treatment at the hands of modern historians can be found here: Leon Trotsky, Soviet Historiography, and the Fate of Classical Marxism Books by Leon Trotsky
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