In June 1932, Ryutin wrote a
pamphlet entitled
Appeal to All Members of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) and a nearly 200-page document entitled
Stalin and the Crisis of the Proletarian Dictatorship (more commonly known as "Ryutin's Platform"). In these documents, Ryutin called for an end to forced collectivization ("peace with the
peasants"), a slowing down of the
industrialization programme in the Soviet Union, the reinstatement of all previously expelled Party members on the left and on the right (including
Leon Trotsky), and a "fresh start". Four of the Platform's thirteen chapters examined the character of Stalin, whom Ryutin called "the evil genius of the Party and the revolution". Ryutin's
Appeal was even more inflammatory, arguing Stalin "must be removed by force" and urging its readers "to everywhere organize cells of the 'Union' to be joined under the banner of
Leninism for the liquidation of the Stalin dictatorship." Ryutin gathered around him a group of like-minded friends who called themselves "The Union of
Marxist-Leninists". They began to distribute the
Appeal to workers and to members of the opposition in the summer and early autumn of 1932. Bukharin's former comrades, the
"Red Professors" -
Alexander Slepkov, , and
Jan Sten - helped to distribute the manifestos. Sten gave copies to
Lev Kamenev and to
Grigory Zinoviev, while Slepkov provided the documents to a group of
Trotskyists in
Kharkov. Nearly all of the former leaders of the "Right Opposition" -
Mikhail Tomsky,
Nikolai Uglanov, and Rykov - saw the
Appeal.
Benyamin Kayurov also aligned himself with the group. An informer soon betrayed the Union to the
OGPU (the Soviet
secret police) and to Stalin. On 23 September 1932, Ryutin was arrested along with other suspects. On 27 September, the Presidium of the
Central Control Commission hastily convened to investigate and deal with the Ryutin group. Twenty-four members attended, including
Yan Rudzutak,
Yemelyan Yaroslavsky,
Avel Yenukidze,
Aaron Soltz, and Lenin's sister,
Maria Ilyinichna Ulyanova. They authorized the OGPU "to uncover the still undetected members of Ryutin's
counterrevolutionary group" and to acquaint "these
white guard criminals...with the entire strictness of revolutionary law". The final report of the Presidium, released on 9 October, expelled twenty-four people from the CPSU and banished them from Moscow for varying lengths of time. The members of the Union were characterized as "
degenerate elements who have become the enemies of
communism and of Soviet power, as traitors to the party and the
working class, who have tried to form an underground
bourgeois-
kulak organization under a fake 'Marxist-Leninist' banner for the purpose of restoring
capitalism in general and kulakdom in particular in the USSR". The OGPU referred the matter of Ryutin's fate to the ruling
Politburo. == Historical analysis ==