| 2nd Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party | |
|---|---|
| Host country | Belgium,United Kingdom |
| Date | July 30, 1903 (1903-07-30)-August 23, 1903 (1903-08-23) |
| Cities | Brussels,London |
| Participants | Julius Martov,Vladimir Lenin |
| Follows | 1st Congress (1898) |
| Precedes | 3rd Congress (1905) |


TheSecond Congress of theRussian Social Democratic Labour Party was held from July 30 to August 23 (July 17 – August 10,O.S.) 1903, starting inBrussels, Belgium (until August 6) and ending inLondon, England. Probably as a result of diplomatic pressure from the Russian Embassy, Belgian police had forced the delegates to leave the country on August 6.[1] The congress finalized the creation of theMarxist party inRussia proclaimed at the1st Congress of the RSDLP. This congress brought the first split within the party, between theBolshevik faction led byLenin, and theMenshevik faction led byMartov.
The Organising Committee for convening the Second Congress of the RSDLP was originally elected at theBiałystok Conference held in March (April) 1902, but soon after the conference all the committee members but one were arrested. AtLenin's suggestion, a new Organising Committee was set up at a conference of Social-Democratic committees held in November 1902 inPskov. On this committee theIskra-ists had an overwhelming majority.[citation needed] Under Lenin's guidance,[citation needed] the Organising Committee carried out extensive preparatory work for the Second Congress. Draft Regulations for the convening of the Congress were adopted at a plenary session held inOrel in February 1903. Following this plenary session, members of the Organising Committee twice visited the local Party organisations with a view to assisting them in their work. With their participation, the local committees discussed the draft Regulations, after which the Organising Committee finally endorsed the Regulations and approved a list of the local organisations entitled under them to representation at the Congress. The Organising Committee prepared for the Congress a detailed written report on its activities.[2]
There were 37 sessions and 51 delegates. Of these, 33 supportedIskra, the party newspaper (controlled by Lenin and his close allies), 5 backed theBund and there were 2 "economists" (Marxists who believed workers should concentrate on economic demands rather than political ones). 6 delegates were neutral.[citation needed][3]
According to historian Richard Cavendish, the delegates originally "assembled in a flea-ridden flour warehouse in Brussels", where they electedGeorgi Plekhanov as chair.[4]
During the fifteenth session the delegates voted in favor of supporting adictatorship of the proletariat as it approved into the party programme the paragraph "A necessary condition for this social revolution is the dictatorship of the proletariat, that is, conquest by the proletariat of such political power as will enable it to suppress any resistance by the exploiters.".[5]
The Congress saw the RSDLP split intoBolsheviks andMensheviks as a result of a dispute between Lenin andJulius Martov over the major points of the Party Programme. At the 22nd session, Lenin and Martov disagreed on the wording of the first party rule defining membership. Lenin proposed a party member should be someone "Who recognizes the party's program and supports it by material means and bypersonal participation in one of the party organisations". Martov's wording was slightly different: "regular personal association under the direction of one of the party organisations". The dispute was about whether the party should have a loose membership or whether it should be a party of professional revolutionaries. Plekhanov, founder of Russian Marxism, supported Lenin.Leon Trotsky, future leader of the Petrograd Soviet, backed Martov. The congress voted 28–23 in Martov's favour but his support included the 7 Bundists and Economists who would later walk out from the congress. This left Lenin's faction in the majority, so Lenin called his faction theBolsheviks or majoritarians. Martov accepted this, calling his faction theMensheviks or minoritarians.[citation needed]
At the 27th session, one of the constituent groups of the party, theGeneral Jewish Labour Bund, asked that the Bund would be recognized as the sole representative of the Jewish working class in Russia. ABundist delegate tabled a motion that all Russian citizens should have the right to use their own language. Lenin and theIskra group opposed the motion. It was defeated in a tie, 23 votes against 23 votes. However, a similar motion proposed byNoe Zhordania (leader of theTranscaucasian Social Democrats) was passed.[6] Moreover, the Bund proposed that the RSDLP should have a federal structure, with the Bund as a constituent party. This was defeated 41–5 (5 abstentions). Bolsheviks and Mensheviks were united in their opposition to the Bundist proposal, calling it separatist, nationalist and opportunist. After their proposal was rejected, the Bund withdrew from the RSDLP.[6] The two economists also walked out when the congress decided that the Iskraists should represent the party abroad.[citation needed]
The2nd Central Committee was elected at the congress.Iskra's editorial board became the party's Central Organ and was cut from six to three members (Lenin, Plekhanov and Martov).[7]
According to Cavendish, the day after the congress ended, Lenin, who knew London well, took some of the delegates to theNatural History Museum andLondon Zoo, "followed by a respectful visit toKarl Marx’s grave inHighgate Cemetery.[4]
{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)