Committee of Ministers The Ministries and the
Committee of Ministers (Комитет Министров) were created in the early 19th century as part of the
Government reform of Alexander I. The committee was an advisory board for the Emperor but could only consider matters referred to it by the monarch or when details for implementation of policy were brought to it by ministers. However, the committee had little collective power and did not make decisions, just recommendations. When the monarch presided personally over Committee meetings it was referred to as a council as the monarch had decision/policy making authority that the committee did not possess.
Chairmen of the committee of Ministers (de facto), 1802 – 1810 •
Alexander Romanovich Vorontsov (1802–1804) as Imperial Chancellor and Foreign Minister •
Adam Jerzy Czartoryski (1804–1806) as Foreign Minister •
Andreas Eberhard von Budberg (1806–1807) as Foreign Minister •
Nikolay Petrovich Rumyantsev (1807–1810) as Foreign Minister
Chairmen of the committee of Ministers, 1810 – 1905 •
Nikolay Petrovich Rumyantsev (1810–1812) •
Nikolay Ivanovich Saltykov (1812–1816) •
Pyotr Vasilyevich Lopukhin (1816–1827) •
Viktor Pavlovich Kochubey (1827–1834) •
Nikolay Nikolayevich Novosiltsev (1834–1838) •
Illarion Illarionovich Vasilchikov (1838–1847) •
Vasily Vasilyevich Levashov (1847–1848) •
Aleksandr Ivanovich Chernyshov (1848–1856) •
Aleksey Fyodorovich Orlov (1856–1861) •
Dmitry Nikolayevich Bludov (1861–1864) •
Pavel Pavlovich Gagarin (1865–1872) •
Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev (1872–1879) •
Pyotr Aleksandrovich Valuyev (1879–1881) •
Michael von Reutern (1881–1887) •
Nikolai Karl Paul von Bunge (1887–1895) •
Ivan Nikolayevich Durnovo (1895–1903) •
Sergei Yulyevich Witte (1903–1905)
Council of Ministers After
Nicholas II issued the
October Manifesto of 1905 granting civil liberties and a national legislature (
Duma and a reformed
State Council), the committee was replaced with a
Council of Ministers. Unlike the Committee of Ministers, this council was presided over by a Chairman (Совет министров) besides the Emperor, and functioned as a policy making
cabinet with its
Chairman acting as
Prime Minister (head) of the government. As a result, from 1905 to 1917 the Council of Ministers collectively decided the government's policy, tactical direction, and served as a buffer between the Emperor and the national legislature. The meetings of the council were in two parts, "official and secret". The first followed a printed agenda; the second was devoted to the discussion of confidential questions, basic issues of policy and so forth. •
Sergei Yulyevich Witte (1905–1906) •
Ivan Logginovich Goremykin (1906) •
Pyotr Arkadyevich Stolypin (1906–1911) •
Vladimir Nikolayevich Kokovtsov (1911–1914) •
Ivan Logginovich Goremykin (1914–1916) •
Boris Vladimirovich Shtyurmer (1916) •
Alexander Fyodorovich Trepov (1916) •
Nikolai Dmitriyevich Golitsyn (1916–1917) Nicholas's hostility to
parliamentarism emerged at the very beginning of his reign in 1894; to him, it would cause Russia to disintegrate. According to S. Kulikov: "Nicholas was pursuing the entirely specific idea of gradually replacing
absolutism with
dualism, rather than with parliamentarism". were the main obstacles. (According to Oleg Platonov on 17 April 1915 Rasputin advised not to convene the Duma.) The Duma was tolerated but frequently ignored. --> On 24 August 1915 the
Progressive Bloc, including the entire membership of the Duma, except the extreme right and the extreme left, was formed. It had the support of the press, the public opinion and, to a considerable extent, most of the Council of Ministers as well. The deputies tried to bring the Council "uninterested in reform" under control of the Duma, but their demands for a "ministry of confidence" were not received by the Tsar. In late 1915, there was a shortage of food and of
coal in the big cities;
Alexander Trepov was appointed as crisis manager in the Minister of Railways. Five key ministries would gather on a more regular basis to solve the transport question. In November 1915 Rasputin told Goremykin (or the obstinate Tsar) it was not right not to convene the Duma as all were trying to cooperate; one must show them a little confidence. In January 1916, Rasputin was opposed to the plan to send the old Goremykin away, who had persuaded the Tsar to reject the proposals of the Progressive Bloc for a government of confidence. On 20 January 1916
Boris Stürmer was appointed as Prime Minister "to the surprise of everyone, and most of all Goremykin, who, as was usual with the Emperor, had never been given the idea that he was even in danger". According to B. Pares, Stürmer was prepared to pose as a semi-liberal and would try in this way to keep the Duma quiet. The new chairman of the council was not opposed to the convening of the Duma, as Goremykin had been, and he would launch a more liberal and conciliatory politic. The Duma gathered on 9 February, on the condition not to mention Rasputin. The deputies were disappointed when Stürmer made his indistinct speech. For the first time in his life, the Tsar made a visit to the
Taurida Palace, suggesting he was willing to work with the legislature. According to Milyukov Stürmer would keep his further dealings with the Duma to a minimum. In the same month, Minister of War
Alexei Polivanov, who in his few months of office had brought about a recovery of the efficiency of the Russian army, was removed and replaced by
Dmitry Shuvayev. According to
Victor Chernov, the campaign of the party of the Empress and Rasputin was waged steadily against the eight ministers who "had resisted the removal of the commander in chief (
Grand Duke Nikolai), and one after the other they were discharged". Early July,
Aleksandr Khvostov, Alexei's uncle, not in good health, was appointed as Minister of the Interior and
Makarov as Minister of Justice. Foreign Minister
Sazonov, decisive when the war started, pleaded for an independent and autonomous
Russian Poland. He was demoted on 10 July and the office given to Stürmer. On 21 July, the minister of agriculture
Naumov refused to participate any longer in the government. According to
Vladimir Gurko, the Council of Ministers as a whole declined continually in importance. Around 6 September,
Alexander Protopopov had been invited as Minister of the Interior. Placing the vice-president of the Duma in a key post might improve the relations between the Duma and the throne. Protopopov made himself ludicrious when he expressed his loyalty to the Imperial couple, and his contacts on peace and credit in Stockholm (without being authorized) became a scandal. When Protopopov raised the question of transferring the food supply from the Ministry of Agriculture to the Ministry of the Interior, a majority of the
zemstvo leaders announced that they would not work with his ministry. His food plan was universally condemned by the Council of Ministers.--> ==Soviet Russia==