Change and continuity in government
- Created by: Tori
- Created on: 05-05-20 09:04
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- Change and Continuity in Government
- The Fundmental Laws
- In April 1906, the Tsar attempted to reassert his authority.
- He promoted the Fundmental Laws (basically the new constitution).
- They re-established the autocratic nature of Russian government.
- He was in a stronger position in April than he had been in October 1905.
- His opponetns were divided and the workers had been crushed.
- He promoted the Fundmental Laws (basically the new constitution).
- The Tsar's Powers
- The Fundamental Laws gave the Tsar extensive powers:
- -Article 4 stated that the Tsar had absolute, God-given autocratic power.
- -The Tsar retained sole authority over command of the army and dealings with foreign nations.
- -Article 87 layed out the nature of the Tsar's relationship with the new Duma.
- The Tsar kept 'supreme sovereign power'.
- Meant Nicholas could make laws without the consent of the Duma.
- Nonetheless, the Duma had the power to formally ratify the Tsar's laws.
- The Tsar kept 'supreme sovereign power'.
- -The Tsar was given the right to dissolve the Duma and call new elections at any time.
- The Fundamental Laws gave the Tsar extensive powers:
- The Duma
- The 1906 constitution altered the nature of Russian government:
- -Created a 'two-house' Duma.
- The lower house was elected by an electorate made up of most male Russians.
- The upper house (the 'Council of State') was partically appointed by the Tsar.
- Other half was appointed by institutions, eg the Orthodox Church.
- -The upper house had the right to veto laws proposed by the lower house.
- -Guarenteed individuals rights of freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, freedom of conscience, the right to form political parties and unions, as well as freedom of the press.
- -Created a 'two-house' Duma.
- The 1906 constitution altered the nature of Russian government:
- In April 1906, the Tsar attempted to reassert his authority.
- Reactions to the Fundamental Laws
- The new consitution failed to satisfy liberals:
- -The limited powers of the Duma did not fulfil the demands of the liberals as the elected lower house didn't have ultimate law making power.
- -Liberals recognised that the promise of individual rights was largely meaningless.
- Socialists argued that the new constitution failed to address Russia's underlying problems.
- The SR's argued that the new constitution did nothing to satify the peasants' desire for land.
- Lenin argued that it would not limit the oppression of the working class.
- The new consitution failed to satisfy liberals:
- The Radicalism of the first Duma
- 1st Duma was elected in April 1906.
- Was largely made up of conservative Octoberists, the liberal Kadets and the Troudoviks.
- The SRs and the factions of the RSDLP boycotted the election.
- The newly elected Duma made a series of radical demands:
- -The creation of universal suffrage
- Land refom
- Freedom of political prisoners
- The Tsar dissolved this Duma after 73 days because they were making too many radical demands.
- The Vyborg Manifesto
- Led by the Kadets, radicals from the First Duma fled to the Finnish town of Vyborg.
- Kadets assumed that they would be safe from persecution while in Finland as the Tsar promised to respect the traditional rights of the Finns.
- Kadet radicals issued an open letter, the 'Vyborg Manifesto'.
- Called on the Russian people to refuse to pay tax until the Duma was re-established.
- However, Russian workers and peasants didn't support the middle-class Kadets.
- This was because the Kadets had compromised with the Tsar in late 1905.
- Failed to have an impact, and the Kadets who had organised the protest were imprisoned.
- The failure of the 1st Duma ad the Vyborg Manifesto led many Russian people to lose faith in liberal reform.
- Thus, the Kadets lost popular support and public opinion became polarised between revolutionaries on the left and reactionaries on the right.
- Led by the Kadets, radicals from the First Duma fled to the Finnish town of Vyborg.
- The Fundmental Laws
- Change and continuity in government
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