Collaboration and conflict with Lenin in 1900 The turn of the century marked a new phase in the history of Russian Social Democracy, one centered on the newspaper
Iskra (The Spark). The enterprise was conceived by Lenin, Martov, and
Alexander Potresov as a vehicle for combating Economism and uniting the dispersed Social Democratic organizations into
a centralized party. They sought the collaboration of the Emancipation of Labour Group, and in August 1900, Lenin traveled to Geneva to negotiate with Plekhanov. The initial encounter was stormy. Plekhanov, in a "Jacobin" mood after his battles with the Economists, was suspicious of Lenin's conciliatory draft for the newspaper's editorial policy, which he saw as an "opportunistic" concession to the very tendencies they were meant to fight. Despite the initial friction, an agreement was reached. The editorial board of
Iskra would consist of six members: Plekhanov, Axelrod, Zasulich from the old guard, and Lenin, Martov, and Potresov from the new generation. Plekhanov's views, however, prevailed in the final editorial statement, which committed the paper to a hard, uncompromising line and the drawing of "lines of demarcation" between the orthodox and their opponents. For a time, a more comradely relationship was established, as Lenin demonstrated his efficiency and reliability as an organizer. The collaboration, however, was soon strained by new disagreements, this time over the party program, particularly the agrarian question. Lenin's proposal for the
nationalization of land in the "bourgeois" revolution was seen by Plekhanov and the other editors as a dangerous and ill-conceived departure from Marxist doctrine.
Second Congress The
2nd Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party convened in Brussels in July 1903, its main purpose being to unite the party and adopt a program and rules. The
Iskra faction, which Plekhanov and Lenin jointly led, held a solid majority of the delegates. The congress began with the easy defeat of the
Bundists and the Economists, but the unity of the Iskrists soon shattered. The split occurred over the definition of party membership, as formulated in Paragraph 1 of the party rules. Lenin's draft proposed a narrow, centralized party of professional revolutionaries, while Martov's draft advocated for a broader party, open to any who accepted the party program and worked under the control of one of its organizations. To the surprise of many, Plekhanov sided with Lenin against his old comrade Martov. He argued that Martov's formula would open the party to "all elements of dispersion, wavering, and opportunism," particularly the "bourgeois individualism" of the intelligentsia. In a famous speech that would haunt him for years, he declared that "the success of the revolution is the highest law" and that, if the success of the revolution demanded it, the party might even have to limit democratic principles like
universal suffrage. Despite Plekhanov's support, Lenin's draft was defeated by a majority that included the Bundists and Economists. However, after the Bund and the Economists walked out of the congress, Lenin's faction, now known as the
Bolsheviks (from
bolshinstvo, meaning "majority"), was left with a slim majority. The opposition became known as the
Mensheviks (from
menshinstvo, meaning "minority"). Lenin pressed his advantage, securing the election of a Central Committee and an
Iskra editorial board composed of his supporters. At the conclusion of the congress, Plekhanov stood firmly in the Bolshevik camp. Plekhanov characterized Bundists as "nothing more than Zionists suffering from sea-sickness."
Break with Lenin Congress of the
Second International, 1904 Plekhanov's alliance with Lenin was short-lived. Caught in the crossfire of the post-congress factional struggle, he soon began to waver. The Mensheviks, led by Martov, boycotted
Iskra and the Central Committee, and sought to undermine Lenin's control of the party. Plekhanov, horrified by the prospect of a new split, recoiled from Lenin's intransigence. He now saw the "state of siege" in the party, which Lenin considered indispensable, as a "heinous political crime". In October 1903, he broke with Lenin and used his position on the
Iskra board to recall the old Menshevik editors. In the months that followed, Plekhanov became one of the leading critics of Lenin and
Bolshevism. In November 1903, he denounced Lenin as an unscrupulous man, dubbing him a "
Robespierre", and joined the Menshevik faction. He now saw Lenin's organizational scheme, as outlined in
What Is to Be Done?, as a perversion of Marxism. He charged Lenin with creating a "monolithic organizational conception" that confused the
dictatorship of the proletariat with a "dictatorship over the proletariat". He accused the Bolsheviks of "ultracentralism", "
Bonapartism", "
Jacobinism", and "
Blanquism", and of attempting to realize the "ideal of the Persian
Shah". Plekhanov's critique of Lenin's conception of the party was trenchant and prophetic, but it also revealed the fundamental contradictions in his own position. He had embraced the elitist and centralist logic of the
Iskra period, only to recoil from its ultimate consequences when they were drawn by Lenin. ==1905 Revolution==