The first orthodox theory of a people's democracy was formulated by Soviet scholar
E. S. Lazutkin, who concluded that a people's democratic state was essentially similar to the Soviet
socialist state, with both representing forms of the proletarian dictatorship. This interpretation was reinforced at the
5th Congress of the Bulgarian Communist Party in December 1948, when
Georgi Dimitrov—after personal discussions with
Stalin and other Soviet leaders—stated that, according to Marxism–Leninism, a Soviet state and a people's democratic state represented two distinct
state forms, but that they nonetheless shared the same class makeup. In a people's democratic state, the proletariat acted as the ruling class, leading a broad alliance of the workers from both rural and urban areas. This meant that a people's democracy was not identical to the Soviet proletarian dictatorship, but it still constituted a form of proletarian rule. Dimitrov further stressed that the class makeup of a state was primary to its organisational form, arguing that even states without a communist form of government could reasonably be designated as people's democracies if their content was essentially proletarian in nature, since "The content of the people's democracy is the dictatorship of the proletariat." Like the proletarian dictatorship in the socialist state, the new proletarian form of class rule in a people's democratic state was tasked with transitioning society from capitalism to socialism. Dimitrov told the congress that the universal principles of history, when viewed through a
historical materialist lens, remained consistent from country to country. Thus, the only path to socialism was the establishment of a proletarian dictatorship directed against capitalism, as had been achieved in the Soviet Union. Following Dimitrov's address, leaders of other Eastern European communist parties delivered similar statements. Several theoretical works elaborated on these ideas, most notably
Naum Farberov's 1949 ''
The State of People's Democracy'', which was approved by the
Soviet Ministry of Higher Education as a university textbook. Farberov, along with
Aleksander Sobolev, criticised earlier theorists such as
Ilya Trainin and
Eugen Varga, who had argued that a people's democratic state represented a third type of state, neither socialist
nor capitalist. Farberov countered that a people's democratic state was of a socialist type. The existence of a
mixed economy did not alter this essential feature, since the decisive factor was its proletarian class makeup and the fact that the socialist sector owned and controlled the
commanding heights of the economy. From this point onward, the dominant conception was that people's democracies were socialist states born from people's democratic revolutions, which themselves constituted a form of
socialist revolution. Soviet theorists conceded that differences existed among states, but these were attributed not to unique national paths, but to variations in their
base and superstructure. Farberov concluded that all were traveling along the same road, guided by the same universal laws. He defined people's democratic states as "states of the toiling classes headed by the proletariat, states which represent the transitional stage from capitalism to socialism, states of a new, socialist type".
Boris Mankovsky reached the same conclusion, characterising people's democracies as "states of the transition from capitalism to socialism, states in which socialism is being built". Like Farberov, he maintained that a people's democratic state was a socialist-type state, since, like its Soviet counterpart, it was a transitory state under the rule of the working class. He also defined a people's democratic revolution as a socialist revolution that aimed to fulfill the same historical tasks. The key distinction was that people's democracies also had to carry out certain bourgeois–democratic responsibilities, such as abolishing remnants of
feudalism and implementing land reform. The adoption of some capitalist policies did not, in Mankovsky's view, undermine their socialist character, since the working class retained political leadership. To call a people's democratic revolution a bourgeois democratic revolution, he insisted, was anti-Marxist.
Dmitry Chesnokov, a philosopher who later joined the
Presidium of the Central Committee, argued in 1948 that a Soviet state, as established by Lenin and Stalin, represented a superior type of socialist state compared to people's democracies. While acknowledging that dictatorships of the proletariat had been established in people's democracies, Chesnokov considered them a unique state form shaped by the relationship and balance of class forces within those countries, the political maturity of the working masses, the global struggle between socialism and
imperialism, and the diverse methods by which nations pursued socialism. Chesnokov further emphasised the decisive influence of the Soviet Union in shaping the development of people's democracies. He maintained that the Soviet example ensured their ability to fulfill the responsibilities of proletarian dictatorships, and that without the support and existence of the Soviet socialist state, these states would have faced severe obstacles in the transition from capitalism to socialism.
Pavel Yudin, later a candidate of the
Presidium of the 19th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, similarly argued that the class form of a people's democracy represented a new form of proletarian dictatorship. In essence, it was identical to Soviet power, differing only in its historical circumstances. He reasoned that "The content of a People's Democracy, as also of Soviet power, is determined by the Marxist–Leninist leadership of the Communist Party."
József Révai, a leading member of the
Hungarian Working People's Party, agreed, asserting: "We must liquidate the concept that the
working class shares its power with other classes. In this concept, we find the remnants of a viewpoint according to which a People's Democracy is some quite specific kind of state which differs from the Soviet not only in its form, but also in its essence and functions." Communist
Albania and
Yugoslavia, however, rejected the notion that people's democracies constituted a new state form. According to Zbigniew Brzezinski, the Albanian constitution "unabashedly copied the Soviet constitution of 1936". Yugoslav leaders, meanwhile, objected to the very premise. As
Josip Broz Tito argued, the
Communist Party of Yugoslavia (CPY) had destroyed the state structure of the
Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Edvard Kardelj, a CPY
politburo member, contended in his 1949 article "On People's Democracy in Yugoslavia" that the Yugoslav experience had been a socialist revolution, not a people's democracy: "In view of the fact that our Revolution began to develop in the conditions of the
National Liberation War, in its first phase it possessed the form of a People's Democracy, but, in view of its class forces and the internal relationship of these forces, it could in fact only be a Socialist revolution."
The proletariat and the peasantry Despite affirming that a people's democratic state was a socialist-like state, theorists argued that it possessed two distinct class makeups. In its first phase, the bourgeois democratic revolution, the state was defined as a
revolutionary–democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and peasantry. Once this phase was completed and the revolution transitioned into a proletarian socialist revolution, the state's class makeup shifted to a proletarian dictatorship. The first phase was brief, lasting from 1944 to 1946/47, and was characterised by relatively less repressive policies toward non-communist elements. According to
Boris Mankovsky, the first phase had four essential tasks to carry out in order to lay the groundwork for the second phase. First, it had to serve as a unifying force against fascism and get rid of the remnants of feudalism. Second, it was required to introduce measures that undermined the material basis of capitalism. Third, it needed to promote democracy in both the social and economic spheres. Fourth, it had to rebuild the national economy in the aftermath of the devastation caused by the
Second World War.
Naum Farberov later added a fifth task: transform the material foundation of society so that the class dynamics themselves were fundamentally altered. By 1948, in most
Eastern European people's democracies, this first phase—combining the proletariat and the peasantry—had evolved into a purely proletarian dictatorship.
Aleksander Sobolev outlined five conditions that he considered necessary for the establishment of a genuine proletarian dictatorship. First, the communist party had to secure a monopoly on political power and assert greater authority than any non-communist party. Second, the bourgeoisie had to be eliminated as a relevant power, with all of its representatives removed from positions of influence. Third, all significant state offices had to be occupied by communists. Fourth, the state was required to assume control over the important parts of the economy. Finally, the communist party had to absorb or merge with other non-communist workers' parties to form a single, unified Marxist–Leninist party. ==Using the state for the construction of socialism==