The Provisional Government (February–October 1917) With the abdication of Tsar
Nicholas II in the
February Revolution of 1917, power in Russia passed to a
Provisional Government formed by the liberal leadership of the Duma. The Provisional Government was so named because it was made up of parliamentary figures, last elected (as the
Fourth Duma) in 1912, who claimed provisional authority for managing the
revolutionary situation in the midst of the First World War until a more permanent form of government could be established by an elected Constituent Assembly.
Grand Duke Michael had refused to ascend to his older brother Nicholas II's throne without the consent of an elected
Constituent Assembly, and it was broadly assumed that an elected Constituent Assembly was the only body with the authority to change Russia's form of government. The Provisional Government claimed that it would organize elections once the First World War had concluded, but in spite of the initial agreement in July 1917, they declared Russia a republic and began preparations for elections in the "
Preparliament", later named the
Council of the Russian Republic. These actions triggered criticism from both left and right. Monarchists saw the declaration of a republican form of government in Russia as unacceptable, while the left considered the declaration a power grab intended to weaken the influence of the Soviets.
The Bolsheviks and the Constituent Assembly The Bolsheviks' position on the Constituent Assembly evolved during 1917. At first, like all the other socialist parties, the Bolsheviks supported the election of a Constituent Assembly.
Vladimir Lenin himself later argued: 'The demand for the
convocation of a Constituent Assembly was a perfectly legitimate part of the programme of revolutionary Social-Democracy, because in a bourgeois republic the Constituent Assembly represents the highest form of democracy'. But there was a potential contradiction in Bolshevik policy. Since Lenin's return from Switzerland in April 1917, the Bolsheviks had distinguished themselves from other socialists by calling for "All Power to the
Soviets". The Bolsheviks thus opposed "bourgeois" parliamentary bodies, like the Provisional Government and the Constituent Assembly, in favour of the Soviets (directly elected revolutionary councils of workers, soldiers and peasants) which had arisen after the February Revolution. On , the Bolsheviks acted on this policy by leading the
October Revolution against the Provisional Government. The uprising in Petrograd coincided with the convocation of the Second All-Russian Congress of Workers' and Soldiers' Soviets. The Soviet deputies of the more moderate socialist parties, the
Mensheviks and the
Right SRs, walked out of the Congress in protest at what they argued was a premature overthrow of the "bourgeois" government in which they had participated. Over the next few weeks, the Bolsheviks established control in urban areas and in almost all of
Great Russia, but had less success in the countryside and in ethnically non-Russian areas. Although the new Soviet government limited the
freedom of the press (by sporadically banning non-socialist press) and persecuted the liberal
Constitutional Democratic party for its undeclared but widespread support of
General Kornilov's affair, it allowed elections for the Constituent Assembly to go ahead on , as scheduled by the Provisional Government. Officially, the Bolshevik government at first considered itself a provisional government and claimed that it intended to submit to the will of the Constituent Assembly. As Lenin wrote on (emphasis added): ==Election results (12/25 November 1917)==