Three Constitutions or Three Systems of Government (original) (raw)
V. I. Lenin
Three Constitutions or Three Systems of Government
Published: Published in leaflet form in June-July 1905. Published according to the text of the leaflet.
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Foreign Languages Publishing House,1962, Moscow,Volume 8, pages 557-559.
Translated: Bernard Isaacs and The Late Isidor Lasker
Transcription\Markup: R. Cymbala
Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive (2003).You may freely copy, distribute, display and perform this work; as well as make derivative and commercial works. Please credit “Marxists Internet Archive” as your source. • README
RUSSIAN SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC LABOUR PARTY
Workers of all countries, unite!
What do the police and officials want?
The absolute monarchy.
What do the most liberal of the bourgeois (the people of the_Osvobozhdeniye_, or the Constitutional-Democratic Party) want?
The constitutional monarchy.
What do the class-conscious workers (the Social-Democrats) want?
The democratic republic.
OF WHAT DO THESE SYSTEMS OF GOVERNMENT CONSIST?
- ABSOLUTE MONARCHY
- The tsar—an absolute monarch.
- A Council of State (officials appointed by the tsar).
- A State Duma, or consultative body of popular representatives (indirect, unequal, and non-universal elections).
- CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY
- The tsar—a constitutional monarch.
- An Upper House of popular representatives (in direct, not quite equal and not quite universal elections).
- A Lower House (universal, direct, and equal elections by secret ballot).
- DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
- No tsar.
- No Upper House.
- A single republican house (universal, direct, and equal elections by secret ballot).
WHAT IS THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THESE SYSTEMS OF GOVERNMENT?
- ABSOLUTE MONARCHY
- 1 and 2. Complete power of the police and the officials over the people.
- 3. Consultative voice of the big bourgeoisie and the rich landlords.
- No power for the people.
- CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY
- One-third of the power in the hands of the police and the officials, headed by the tsar.
- One-third of the power in the hands of the big bourgeoisie and the rich landlords.
- One-third of the power in the hands of the whole people.
- DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
- No independent power for either the police or the officials; their complete subordination to the people.
- No privileges for either the capitalists or the landlords.
- All power— wholly, completely and indivisibly— in the bands of the whole people.
WHAT PURPOSE SHALL THESE SYSTEMS OF GOVERNMENT SERVE?
- ABSOLUTE MONARCHY
- That the courtiers, the police, and the officials may live on the fat of the land;
- that the rich may rob the workers and peasants at their own free will;
- that the people may remain for ever without rights and live in darkness and ignorance.
- CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY
- That the police and the officials may be dependent on the capitalists and landlords;
- that the capital ists, landlords, and rich peasants may freely and easily rob the workers of town and country, by right and not by arbitrary rule.
- DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
- That the free and enlightened people may learn to run things themselves, and, principally, that the working class may be free to struggle for socialism, for a system under which there will be neither rich nor poor and all the land, all the factories and works, will belong to all the working people.