Lenin Government | |
---|---|
12th Cabinet of Russia (as Russian SFSR) | |
Date formed | 8 November 1917 |
Date dissolved | 21 January 1924 |
People and organisations | |
Head of government | Vladimir Lenin |
Member parties | Bolsheviks Left Socialist-Revolutionaries (1917–1918) |
Status in legislature | Majority (1917-1921) Sole legal party (from 1921) |
Opposition cabinet | Komuch (1918) Ufa Directory (1918) Omsk Government (1918–1920) Priamurye Government (1920-1923) |
Opposition parties | Socialist-Revolutionaries (1917–1921) Mensheviks (1917–1921) Left Socialist-Revolutionaries (1918–1921) |
History | |
Incoming formation | Alexander Kerensky's Second Cabinet |
Outgoing formation | Alexei Rykov's Cabinet |
Predecessor | Alexander Kerensky |
Successor | Alexei Rykov |
Under the leadership of Russian communist Vladimir Lenin, the Bolshevik Party seized power in the Russian Republic during a coup known as the October Revolution. Overthrowing the pre-existing Provisional Government, the Bolsheviks established a new administration, the first Council of People's Commissars (see article "Lenin's First and Second Government"), with Lenin appointed as its governing chairman. Ruling by decree, Lenin’s Sovnarkom introduced widespread reforms, such as confiscating land for redistribution among the peasantry, permitting non-Russian nations to declare themselves independent, improving labour rights, and increasing access to education.
The Lenin party continued with the previously scheduled November 1917 election, but when it produced a Constituent Assembly dominated by the rival Socialist Revolutionary Party the Bolsheviks lambasted it as counter-revolutionary and shut it down. The Bolshevik government banned a number of centrist and right-wing parties, and restricted the activities of rival socialist groups, but entered into a governmental coalition with the Left Socialist Revolutionary Party. Lenin had inherited a country in the midst of the First World War, with war-weary Russian troops battling the Central Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary on the Eastern Front. Deeming the ongoing conflict a threat to his own government, Lenin sought to withdraw Russia from the war, using his Decree on Peace to establish an armistice, after which negotiations took place resulting in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. This punitive treaty – highly unpopular within Russia – established a cessation of hostilities but granted considerable territorial concessions to Germany, who took control of large areas of the former Empire.