Following the insurgent
victory over the
White movement, the Makhnovshchina experienced a rapid growth. The local populations of the insurgent-occupied territory were invited to elect their own delegates from
trade unions and
Soviets to a regional congress, which would determine how to solve the issues at hand. , chairman of the Fourth Regional Congress of Peasants, Workers and Insurgents. From 27 October to 2 November 1919, a Fourth Regional Congress of Peasants, Workers and Insurgents was held in
Oleksandrivsk. It brought together 300 delegates that each represented roughly 3,000 people, including 180 peasant delegates, 20 worker delegates and 100 delegates from insurgents units and the various "left-wing revolutionary organizations", with
Volin being elected as the Chairman of the Congress. During the election of delegates, the Makhnovists prohibited official representation for political parties and refused to allow any electoral campaign beforehand, an issue that saw an intervention from members of the
Left Socialist-Revolutionaries, who worried that "
counter-revolutionaries" would end up being elected. On the Congressional agenda was the: • Organization of the insurgent army; • Reorganization of supply arrangements; • Organization of a commission to convene a subsequent congress and conferences on the questions of social and economic construction; • Business in hand. First of all, the Congress called for a "voluntary" mobilization of young people into the Insurgent Army, where those aged 18–25 would be dispatched to the front and those aged 25–45 would undertake the self-defense of their local districts. Congress then decided that the Insurgent Army's provisions would be drawn from supplies captured in battle, requisitions from the wealthy and voluntary contributions from the peasantry. Congress also set up a "freelance medical service" in order to tend to wounded and sick insurgents and established an enquiry to investigate abuses of power by the Makhnovist security service, which was being accused of arbitrary arrests, executions and torture. After that, Congress appointed a commission for the preparation of further congresses and conferences, in order to reconstruct the region's economy and wider society. On the final day, the issue of "free soviets" was raised by Volin and
Nestor Makhno, with Congress adopting a resolution that called for the immediate construction of "free soviets". This was opposed by delegates from the
Mensheviks and
Socialist-Revolutionary Party, who supported a
Constituent Assembly, to which Makhno responded by denouncing them a "counter-revolutionaries", which led to 11 trade union delegates walking out of the Congress in outrage. The issue of "free soviets" was also opposed by the Bolshevik delegates in attendance, with one taking the opportunity to denounce
Anarchy in its entirety. However, the Bolsheviks did not press the issue further and one of their party members was even elected to the Military Revolutionary Council. Makhno was later forced to clarify on his comments about the Menshevik and SR delegates, publishing an open letter in
The Road to Freedom, in which he reiterated his opposition to a Constituent Assembly, accusing the delegates in question of working for
Anton Denikin. Other resolutions passed at the Oleksandrivsk Congress included one that prohibited drunkenness amongst the armed insurgents, by penalty of
execution by firing squad, and another that levied an
expropriation against the local
banks and
bourgeoisie, resulting in the seizure and redistribution of millions of rubles. Plans were also made to convene a definitive Fourth Regional Congress of Peasants, Workers and Insurgents at
Katerynoslav in December 1919, but this was unable to proceed, as the city was attacked by White Cossacks, forcing the insurgents to evacuate the city. ==Further Planned Congresses (1920)==