Early years , the Premier of the Soviet Union, emerged as one of the major contenders for the Soviet leadership in 1953, but lost to Khrushchev in 1955. According to Stalin's secretary,
Boris Bazhanov, Lenin “in general leaned towards a collegial leadership, with Trotsky in the first position”. Historian
Paul Le Blanc referenced various scholars which included
E.H. Carr,
Isaac Deutscher,
Moshe Lewin,
Ronald Suny and
W. Bruce Lincoln that on balance tilted “toward the view that Lenin’s desired 'heir' was collective responsibility in which Trotsky placed an important role and within which Stalin would be dramatically demoted (if not removed)".
Marxist Leninist ideologists believed that
Lenin, the
first Soviet leader, thought that only collective leadership could protect the Party from serious mistakes.
Joseph Stalin, who consolidated his power after Lenin's death in 1924, promoted these values; however, instead of creating a new collective leadership, he built up a leadership centered around himself. After Stalin's death (5 March 1953), his successors, while vying for control over the
Soviet leadership, promoted the values of collective leadership. The collective leadership included the following eight senior members of the
Presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, listed according to the order of precedence presented formally on 5 March 1953:
Georgy Malenkov,
Lavrentiy Beria,
Vyacheslav Molotov,
Kliment Voroshilov,
Nikita Khrushchev,
Nikolai Bulganin,
Lazar Kaganovich and
Anastas Mikoyan. Amongst them Malenkov, Beria and Molotov formed an unofficial
Triumvirate (also known by its Russian name
Troika) immediately after Stalin's death, but it collapsed when Malenkov and Molotov turned on Beria. After the arrest of Beria (26 June 1953),
Nikita Khrushchev proclaimed collective leadership as the "supreme principle of our Party". He further stated that only decisions approved by the
Central Committee (CC) could ensure good leadership for the party and the country. Khrushchev used these ideas so that he could win enough support to remove his opponents from power, most notably Premier Malenkov, who resigned in February 1955. During the
20th Congress of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union Khrushchev criticised Stalin's rule and his
"cult of personality". He accused Stalin of reducing the Party's activities and putting an end to
Party democracy among others. In the three years following Stalin's death, the Central Committee and the
Presidium (Politburo) worked consistently to uphold the collective leadership lost under Stalin. Khrushchev's rule as First Secretary remained highly controversial throughout his rule in the Party leadership. The first attempt to depose Khrushchev came in 1957, when the so-called
Anti-Party Group accused him of individualistic leadership. The coup failed, but Khrushchev's position weakened drastically. However, Khrushchev continued to portray his regime as a "rule of the collective" even after becoming
Chairman of the Council of Ministers (Premier), replacing
Nikolai Bulganin.
Collectivity of leadership ) among the members of the
Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR Most Western observers believed that Khrushchev had become the supreme leader of the Soviet Union by the early 1960s, even if this was far from the truth. The Presidium, which had grown to resent Khrushchev's leadership style and feared
Mao Zedong's
one-man dominance and the growing cult of personality in the
People's Republic of China, began an aggressive campaign against Khrushchev in 1963. This campaign culminated in 1964 with the replacement of Khrushchev in his offices of First Secretary by
Leonid Brezhnev and of Chairman of the Council of Ministers by
Alexei Kosygin. Brezhnev and Kosygin, along with
Mikhail Suslov,
Andrei Kirilenko and
Anastas Mikoyan (replaced in 1965 by
Nikolai Podgorny), were elected to their respective offices to form and lead a functioning collective leadership. One of the reasons for Khrushchev's ousting, as Suslov told him, was his violation of collective leadership. With Khrushchev's removal, collective leadership was again praised by the
Soviet media as a return to "
Leninist norms of Party life". At the plenum which ousted Khrushchev, the Central Committee forbade any single individual to hold the office of
General Secretary and Premier simultaneously. The leadership was usually referred to as the "Brezhnev–Kosygin" leadership, instead of the collective leadership, by
First World medias. At first, there was no clear leader of the collective leadership, and Kosygin was the chief economic administrator, whereas Brezhnev was primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the party and internal affairs. Kosygin's position was later weakened when he
introduced a reform in 1965 that attempted to decentralise the
Soviet economy. The reform led to a backlash, with Kosygin losing supporters because many top officials took an increasingly anti-reformist stance due to the
Prague Spring of 1968. As a result, after 1968 Brezhnev was ranked first in the Politburo hierarchy, followed by Podgorny, Kosygin, Suslov and Kirilenko as the top five-ranked members of Politburo. As the years passed, Brezhnev was given more and more prominence, and by the 1970s he had even created a "Secretariat of the General Secretary" to strengthen his position within the Party. At the
25th Party Congress, Brezhnev was, according to an anonymous historian, praised in a way that exceeded the praise accorded to Khrushchev before his removal. Brezhnev was able to retain the Politburo's support by not introducing the same sweeping reform measures as seen during Khrushchev's rule. As noted by foreign officials, Brezhnev felt obliged to discuss unanticipated proposals with the Politburo before responding to them.
Later years As Brezhnev's health worsened during the late 1970s, the collective leadership became even more collective.
Brezhnev's death did not alter the
balance of power in any radical fashion, and
Yuri Andropov and
Konstantin Chernenko were obliged by protocol to rule the country in the very same fashion as Brezhnev. When Mikhail Gorbachev was elected to the position of General Secretary in March 1985, some observers wondered if he could be the leader to overcome the restraints of the collective leadership. Gorbachev's reform agenda had succeeded in altering the
Soviet political system for good; however, this change made him some enemies. Many of Gorbachev's closest allies disagreed with him on what reforms were needed, or how radical they should be. ==Analysis==