A
State Conference took place at
Ufa between 8 and 23 September 1918, which resulted in the establishment of this alternative to the
Russian Republic and then when that was overthrown by the
Bolshevik government. It encompassed 170 delegates, including some from other regions. According to
William Henry Chamberlin, "Partly under pressure from the
Czechs, who were becoming impatient at the inability of the anti-Bolshevik Russians, whom they had been aiding, to help themselves, a state conference, attended by representatives of the
Omsk and
Samara Governments and other numerous political organizations and regional authorities, opened in Ufa on September 8 for the purpose of working out some scheme of political and military unity. The radicals at Ufa wished to make the new government, which was to be created, responsible before the original
Constituent Assembly; the conservatives wanted to make it as authoritarian and as free from external control as possible..." A compromise resulted with the formation of a five man Directory, but the Constituent Assembly would resume activity if 250 member gathered by 1 January 1919, or 170 by 1 February. The five person Directory had their deputies, personal backup members of the Directory, some of whom were located at a considerable distance from Ufa. The Council of Ministers carried out the day-to-day administration of the government. A majority of the Council of Ministers (10 out of 14) had served formerly as members of the Provisional Siberian Government. == Views==