Principles of Party Organisation - Comintern - 1921

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 36
At a glance
Powered by AI
The document outlines the principles of communist party organization adopted by the Third Congress of the Communist International in 1921, including the need for the party to be adaptable to changing conditions while maintaining common revolutionary principles internationally.

The document states that the party must be the vanguard of the proletariat through all phases of struggle, that no form of organization is infallible and must change with conditions, and that the international movement provides a common basis while allowing for national differences.

The document states that democratic centralization means the party is to be guided in its activity by revolutionary requirements and prepare for future revolutionary situations.

Principles of Party Organisation

[Comintern]
PRINCIPLES OF
PARTY ORGANISATION
*
Thesis on the Organisation and
Structure of the
Communist Parties, adopted at
the 3rd Congress of the
Communist International in 1921

Mass Publications Calcutta


NOVEMBER 1975

Scanned / Transcribed by
The Socialist Truth In Cyprus
Web: http//www.KibristaSosyalistGercek.net
http://www.kibristasosyalistgercek.net/intro.htm
E-mail: [email protected]

Elektronik Tarama ve Dzenleme;


Kbrsta Sosyalist Gerek
Web: http//www.KibristaSosyalistGercek.net
E-posta: [email protected]

Kvlcm Yaynclk
Kvlcm Ltd
ht. Arif Diktepe Sok.
No: 10/A Ortaky, Lefkoa, Kbrs
Tel: 0392 22 70 680
Faks: 0392 22 70 681

PUBLISHERS NOTE
The document which is being reprinted here is the Thesis on the
Organisation of the Communist Parties adopted by the Third
Congress of the Communist International in 1921. This basic
document lays down the revolutionary principles of Communist
organisation. It was drafted under Lenins guidance and passed
at the Congress led by him. Latter in 1924 Stalin wrote a pellucid
exposition of these general principles in the pamphlet Foundations of
Leninism.
[Transcribers Note: The following Table of Contents has been
prepared to provide the reader with an overview of the document.
DJR]
ORGANISATION AND STRUCTURE OF THE COMMUNIST
PARTY
I. GENERAL PRINCIPLES
II. ON DEMOCRATIC CENTRALIZATION
III. ON THE DUTIES OF COMMUNIST ACTIVITY
IV. ON PROPAGANDA AND AGITATION
V. THE ORGANISATION OF POLITICAL STRUGGLE
VI. THE NEW LEADERSHIP
VII. ON THE PARTY PRESS
VIII. ON THE STRUCTURE OF THE PARTY ORGANISM
IX. LEGAL AND ILLEGAL ACTIVITY

Organisation And Structure Of The


Communist Party
I. GENERAL PRINCIPLES
1. The organisation of the Party must be adapted to the
conditions and to the goal of its activity. The Communist Party must
be the vanguard, the advanced post of the Proletariat, through all the
phases of revolutionary class struggle and during the subsequent
transition period towards the realization of Socialism, i. e., the first
stage of the Communist society.
2. There can be no absolutely infallible and unalterable form of
organisation for the Communist Parties. The conditions of the
proletarian class struggle are subject to changes in a continuous
process of evolution, and in accordance with these changes, the
organisation of the proletarian vanguard must be constantly seeking
for the corresponding forms. The peculiar conditions of every
individual country likewise determine the special adaptation of the
forms of organisation of the respective Parties.
But this differentiation has definite limits. Regardless of all
peculiarities, the quality of the conditions of the proletarian class
struggle in the various countries, and through the various phases of
the proletarian
revolution, is of fundamental importance to the
international Communist movement, creating a common basis for
the organisation of the Communist Parties in all countries.
Upon this basis, it is necessary to develop the organisation of the
Communist Parties, but not to seek to establish any new model
parties instead of the existing ones and to aim at any absolutely
correct form of organisation and ideal constitutions.
3. Most Communist Parties, and consequently the Communist
International as the united party of the revolutionary proletariat of the
world, have this common feature in their conditions of struggle, that
they still have to fight against the dominant bourgeoisie. To conquer
the bourgeoisie, and to wrest the power from its hands is, for all of
them, until further developments, the determining and guiding main
goal. Accordingly, the determining factor in the organizing activity of
the Communist Parties in the capitalist countries must be the
upbuilding of such organisations, as will make the victory of the

4
proletarian revolution over the possessing classes, both possible and
secure.
4. Leadership is a necessary condition for any common action,
but most of all, it is indispensable in the greatest fight in the worlds
history. The organisation of the Communist Party is the organisation
of Communist leadership in the proletarian revolution.
To be a good leader, the Party itself must have good leadership.
Accordingly, the principal task of our organisational work must be -education, organisation and training of efficient Communist Parties
under capable directing organs to the leading place in the proletarian
revolutionary movement.
5.
The leadership in the revolutionary class struggle
presupposes the organic combination of the greatest possible
striking force and of the greatest adaptability on the part of the
Communist Party and its leading
organs to the everchanging
conditions of the struggle. Furthermore, successful leadership
requires, absolutely, the closest association with the proletarian
masses. With out such association, the leadership will not lead the
masses, but at best, will follow behind the masses.
The organic unity in the Communist Party organisation must be
attained through democratic centralization.

II. ON DEMOCRATIC CENTRALISATION


6.
Democratic centralization in the Communist Party
organisation must be a real synthesis, a fusion of centralism and
proletarian democracy. This fusion can be achieved only on the
basis of constant common activity, constant common struggle of the
entire Party organisation. Centralization in the Communist Party
organisation does not mean formal and mechanical centralization,
but a centralization of Communist activities, that is to say, the
formation of a strong leadership, ready for war and at the same time
capable of adaptability. A formal or mechanical centralization is the
centralization of the power in the hands of an industrial
bureaucracy, dominating over the rest of the membership, or over
the masses of the revolutionary proletariat standing outside the
organisation. Only the enemies of the Communists can assert that
the Communist Party, conducting the proletarian class struggle and
centralizing the Communist leadership, is trying rule over the
revolutionary proletariat. Such an assertion is a lie.

5
Neither is any rivalry for power, nor any contest for supremacy
within the Party at all compatible with the fundamental principles of
democratic centralism adopted by the Communist International.
In the organisation of the old, non-revolutionary labour
movement, there has developed an all-pervading dualism of the
same nature as that of the bourgeois state, namely, the dualism
between the bureaucracy and the people. Under this baneful
influence of bourgeois environment, there has developed a
separation of functions, a substitution of barren, formal democracy
for the living association of common endeavour and the splitting up
of the organisation into active functionaries and passive masses.
Even the revolutionary labour movement inevitably inherits this
tendency to dualism and formalism to a certain extent from the
bourgeois environment.
The Communist Party must, fundamentally, overcome these
contrasts by systematic and persevering political and organizing
work and by constant improvement and revision.
7. In transforming a. Socialist mass party into a Communist
Party, the Party must not confine itself to merely concentrating the
authority in the hands of its central leadership while leaving the old
order unchanged.
Centralization should not merely exist on paper, but be actually
carried out, and this is possible of achievement only when the
members at large will feel this authority as a fundamentally efficient
instrument in their common activity and struggle. Otherwise, it will
appear to the masses as a bureaucracy within the Party and,
therefore, likely to stimulate opposition to all centralization, to all
leadership, to all stringent discipline. Anarchism is the opposite pole
of bureaucracy.
Merely formal democracy in the organisation cannot remove
either bureaucratic or anarchical tendencies, which have found fertile
soil on the basis of just that democracy. Therefore, the centralization
of the organisation, i. e., the aim to create a strong leadership,
cannot be successful if its achievement is sought on the basis of
formal democracy. The necessary preliminary conditions are the
development and maintenance of living associations and mutual
relations within the Party between the directing organs and
members, as well as between the Party and the masses of the
proletariat outside the Party.

III. ON THE DUTIES OF COMMUNIST


ACTIVITY
8.
The Communist Party must be a training school for
revolutionary Marxism. The organic ties between the different parts
of the organisation and the membership become joined through the
daily common work in the Party activities.
Regular participation, on the part of most of the members in the
daily work of the parties, is lacking even today in lawful Communist
Parties. That is the chief fault of these parties, forming the basis of
constant insecurity in their development.
9. In the first stages of its Communist transformation, every
workmens party is in danger of being content with having accepted a
Communist program, with having substituted the old doctrine in its
propaganda by Communist teaching, and having replaced the official
belonging to the hostile camp by Communist officials. The
acceptance of the Communist program is only the expression of the
will to become a Communist. If the Communist activity is lacking, and
the passivity of the mass members still remains, then the Party
does not fulfil even the least part of the pledge it had taken upon
itself in accepting the Communist program. For the first condition of
an earnest carrying out of the program is the participation of all the
members in the constant daily work of the Party.
The art of Communist organisation lies in the ability of making a
use of each and every one for the proletarian class struggle; of
distributing the Party work amongst all the Party members and of
constantly attracting, through its members, ever wider masses of the
proletariat to the revolutionary movement. Further, it must hold the
direction of the whole movement in its hands not by virtue of its
might, but by its authority, energy, greater experience, greater allround knowledge and capabilities.
10. A Communist Party must strive to have only really active
members, and to demand from every rank and file Party worker, that
he should place his whole strength and time, in so far as he can
himself dispose of it under existing conditions, at the disposal of his
Party and devote his best forces to these services.
Membership in the Communist Party entails naturally, besides
Communist convictions, formal registration, first as a candidate, then
as a member; likewise, the regular payment of the established fees,
the subscription to the Party paper, etc. But the most important is the
participation of each member in the daily work of the Party.

7
11. For the purpose of carrying out the Party work, every
member, must as a rule, be also a member of a working smaller
group, a committee, a commission, a broad group, fraction or
nucleus. Only in this way can the Party work be properly distributed,
directed and carried on.
Attendance at the general meeting of the members of the local
organisation, of course, goes without saying; it is not wise to try,
under conditions of legal existence, to replace these periodical
meetings under lawful conditions by meetings of local
representatives. All the members must be bound to attend these
meetings regularly. But that is in no way sufficient.
The very preparation of these meetings presupposes work in
smaller groups or
through comrades detailed for the purpose,
effectively utilizing as well as the preparations of the general
workers meetings, demonstrations and mass action of the working
class. The numerous tasks connected with these activities, can be
carefully studied only in smaller groups, and carried out intensively.
Without such a constant daily work of the entire membership, divided
among the great mass of smaller groups of workers, even the most
laborious endeavours to take part in the class struggle of the
proletariat will lead only to weak and futile attempts to influence
these struggles, but not to the necessary consolidation of all the vital
revolutionary forces of the proletariat into a single united capable
Communist Party.
12. Communist nuclei must be formed for the daily work in the
different branches of the Party activities; for timely agitation, for Party
study, for newspaper work, for the distribution of literary matter, for
information service, for constant service, etc.
The Communist nuclei are the kernel groups for the daily
Communist work in the factories and workshops, in the trade unions,
in the proletarian associations, in military units, etc.; wherever there
are at least several members or candidates for membership in the
Communist Party. If there are a greater number of Party members in
the same factory or in the same union, etc., then the nucleus is
enlarged into a fraction and its work is directed to the kernel group.
Should it be necessary to form a wider opposition fraction or to
take part in existing one, then the Communists should try to take the
leadership in it through special nucleus. Whether a Communist
nucleus is to come out in the open, as far as its own surroundings
are concerned, or even before the general public, will depend on the

8
special conditions of the case after a serious study of the dangers
and the advantages thereof.
13. The introduction of general obligatory work in the Party and
the organisation of these small working groups is an especially
difficult task for Communist mass parties. It cannot be carried out all
at once; it demands unwearing perseverance, mature consideration
and much energy.
It is especially important that this new form of organisation should
be carried out from the very beginning with care and mature
consideration. It would be an easy matter to divide all the members
in each organisation, according to a formal scheme, into small nuclei
and groups and to call these latter at once to the general daily Party
work. Such a beginning would be worse than no beginning at all; it
would only call forth discontent and aversion among the Party
members towards these important innovations.
It is recommended that the Party should take counsel with
several capable organisers who are also convinced and inspired
communists, and thoroughly acquainted with the state of the
movement in the various centres of the country, and work out a
detailed foundation for the introduction of these innovations.
After that trained organisers or organizing committees must take
up the work on the spot, elect the first leaders of the groups and
conduct the first steps of the work. All the organisations, working
groups, nuclei and individual members must then receive concrete,
precisely defined tasks presented in such a way as to at once appear
to them to be useful, desirable and capable of execution. Wherever it
may be necessary they must be shown by practical demonstrations
in what way these tasks are to be carried out. They must be
warned, at the same time, of the false steps especially to be avoided.
14. This work of re-organisation must be carried out in practice
step by step. In the beginning too many nuclei or groups of workers
should not be formed in the local organisation. It must first be proved
in small cases that the nuclei, formed in separated important
factories and trade unions, are functioning properly and that the
necessary groups of workers have been formed also in the other
chief branches of the Party activities and have, in some degree,
become consolidated (for instance, in the information,
communication, womens movement, or agitation department,
newspaper work, unemployment movement, etc.). Before the new
organisation apparatus will have acquired a certain practice, the old
frames of the organisation should not be heedlessly broken up. At

9
the same time this fundamental task of the Communist organisation
work must be carried out everywhere with the greatest energy.
This places great demands not only on a legalized Party, but also
on every unlegalised Party.
Until widespread network of Communist nuclei, fractions and
groups of workers will be at work at all central points of the
proletarian class struggle, until every member of the Party will be
doing his share of the daily revolutionary work and this will have
become natural and habitual for the members, the Party can allow
itself no rest in its strenuous labours for the carrying out of this task.
15. This fundamental organisational task imposes upon the
leading Party organs the obligation of constantly directing and
exercising a systematic influence over the Party work. This requires
manifold exertion on the part of those comrades who are active in
the leadership of their organisation of the Party. Those in charge of
Communist activity must not only see to it that comrades men and
women should be engaged in Party work in general, they must
help and direct such work systematically and with practical
knowledge of the business with a precise orientation in regard to
special conditions. They must also endeavour to find out any mistake
committed in their own activities on the basis of experience,
constantly improving the methods of work and not
forgetting for a moment the object of the struggle.
16. Our whole Party work, consists either of direct struggles on
theoretical or practical grounds or of preparation for the struggle. The
specialization of this work has been very defective up to now. There
are quite important branches in which the activity of the Party has
been only occasional. For the lawful parties have done little in the
matter of combating against secret service men. The instructing of
our Party comrades has been carried on as a rule, only casually, as
a secondary matter and so superficially that the greater part of the
most important resolutions of the Party, even the Party program and
the resolutions of the Communist International have remained
unknown to the large strata of the membership. The instruction work
must be carried on methodically and unceasingly through the whole
system of the Party organisation in all the working committees of the
Parties in order to obtain an ever-higher degree of specialization.
17. To the duties of the Communist activity belongs also that of
submitting reports. This is the duty of all the organisations and
organs of the Party as well as every individual member. There must
be general reports made covering short periods of time. Special

10
reports must be made on the work of special committees of the
party. It is essential to make the work of reporting so systematic that
its should become an established procedure as the best tradition of
the Communist movement.
18. The Party must hand in its quarterly report to the leading
body of the Communist International. Each organisation in the Party
has to hand in its report to the next leading committee (for instance,
monthly report of the local branches to the corresponding Party
committee).
Each nucleus, fraction and group of workers must send its report
to the Party organ under whose leader ship it is placed. The
individual members must hand in their reports to the nucleus or
group of workers, (respectively to the leader) to which he belongs,
and on the carrying out of some special charge to the Party organ
from which the order was received.
The report must always be made on the first opportunity. It is to
be made by word of mouth, unless the Party or the person who had
given the order, demands written report. The reports must be
concise and to the point. The receiver of the report is responsible for
having such communication as cannot be published without harm
kept in safe custody and that important reports be sent in without
delay to the corresponding Party organ.
19. All these reports must naturally be limited to the account of
what the reporter has done himself. They must contain also
information on such circumstances which may have come to light
during the course of the work and which have a certain significance
for our struggle, particularly such considerations as may give rise to
a modification or improvement of our future work; also proposals for
improvement necessity for which may have made itself felt during the
work, must be included in the report.
In all Communist nuclei, fractions and groups of workers, all
reports, both those which have been handed into them and those
that they have to send, must be thoroughly discussed. Such
discussions must become a regular habit.
Care must be taken in the nuclei and groups of workers that
individual Party members or groups of members be regularly
charged with observing and reporting on hostile organisations,
especially with regard to the petty-bourgeois workers organisations
and chiefly the organisation of the socialist parties.

11

IV. ON PROPAGANDA AND AGITATION


20. Our chief general duty to the open revolutionary struggle is
to carry on revolutionary propaganda and agitation. This work and its
organisation is still, in the main, being conducted in the old formal
manner, by means of casual speeches at the mass meetings and
without special care for the concrete revolutionary substance of the
speeches and writings.
Communist propaganda and agitation must be made to take root
in the very midst of the workers, out of their common interests and
aspirations, and especially out of their common struggle.
The most important point to remember is that Communist
propaganda must be of a revolutionary character. Therefore, the
Communist watchword (slogans) and the whole Communist attitude
towards concrete questions must receive our special attention and
consideration.
In order to achieve that correct attitude, not only the professional
propagandists and agitators, but also all other Party members must
be carefully instructed.
21. The principal forms of Communist propaganda are:
(i) Individual verbal propaganda.
(ii) Participation in the industrial and political labour movement.
(iii) Propaganda through the Party Press and distribution of
literature.
Every member of a legal and illegal Party is to participate
regularly in one or the other of these forms of propaganda.
Individual propaganda must take the form of systematic house to
house canvassing by special groups of workers. Not a single house
within the area of Party influence must be omitted from this
canvassing. In larger towns a special organised outdoor campaign
with posters and distribution of leaflets usually produce satisfactory
results. In addition, the fraction should carry on a regular personal
agitation in the workshops accompanied by a distribution of
literature.
In countries whose population contains national minorities, it is
the duty of the Party to devote the necessary attention to
propaganda and agitation among the proletarian strata of these
minorities. The propaganda and agitation must, of course, be

12
conducted in the languages of the respective national minorities, for
which purpose the Party must create the necessary special organs.
22. In those capitalist countries where a large majority of the
proletariat has not yet reached revolutionary consciousness, the
Communist agitation must be constantly. on the lookout for new
forms of propaganda in order to meet these backward workers halfway and thus facilitate their entry into the revolutionary ranks. The
Communist propaganda with its watchwords (slogans) must bring out
the budding, unconscious, incomplete, vacillating and semibourgeois revolutionary tendencies which are struggling for
supremacy with the bourgeois traditions and conceptions in the
minds of the workers.
At the same time, Communist propaganda must not rest content
with the limited and confused demands or aspirations of the
proletarian masses. These demands and expectations contain
revolutionary germs and are a means of bringing the proletariat
under the influence of Communist propaganda.
23. Communist agitation among the proletarian masses must be
conducted in such a way that our Communist organisation appears
as the courageous, intelligent; energetic and ever faithful leader of
their own labour movement.
In order to achieve this, the Communists must take part in all the
elementary struggles and movements of the workers, and must
defend the workers cause in all conflicts between them and the
capitalists over hours and conditions of labour, wages, etc. The
Communists must also pay great attention to the concrete questions
of working class life. They must help the workers to come to a right
understanding of these questions. They must draw their attention to
the most flagrant abuses and must help them to formulate their
demands in a practical and concise form. In this way they will
awaken in the workers the spirit of solidarity, the consciousness of
community of interests among all the workers of the country as a
united working class, which in its turn is a section of the world army
of proletarians.
It is only through an every day performance of such elementary
duties and participation in all the struggles of the proletariat that the
Communist Party can develop into a real Communist Party. It is only
by adopting such methods that it will be distinguished from the
propagandists of the hackneyed, so-called pure socialist
propaganda, consisting of recruiting new members and talking about
reforms and the use of parliamentary possibilities or rather

13
impossibilities. The self-sacrificing and conscious participation of all
the Party members in the daily struggles and controversies of the
exploited with the exploiters is essentially necessary not only for the
conquest, but in a still higher degree for the carrying out of the
dictatorship of the proletariat. It is only through leading the working
masses in the petty warfare against the onslaughts of capitalism that
the Communist Party will be able to become the vanguard of the
working class, acquiring the capacity for systematic leadership of the
proletariat in its struggle for supremacy over the bourgeoisie.
24. Communists must be mobilized in full force, especially in
times of strikes, lockouts, and other mass dismissals of workers in
order to take part in the workers movement.
It would be a great mistake for Communist to treat with contempt
the present struggles of workers for slight improvements in their
working conditions, even to maintain a passive attitude to them on
the plea of the Communist program, and the need of armed
revolutionary struggle for final aims. No matter how small and
modest the demands of the workers may be, for which they are
ready and willing to fight today with the capitalist, the Communists
must never make the smallness of the demands an excuse, at the
same time, for non-participation in the struggle. Our agitational
activity should not lay itself bare to the accusation of stirring up and
inciting the workers to nonsensical strikes and other inconsiderate
actions. The Communists must try to acquire the reputation among
the struggling masses of being courageous and effective participator
in their struggles.
25. The Communist cells (or fractions) within the trade union
movement have proved themselves in practice rather helpless before
some of the most ordinary questions of everyday life. It is easy, but
not fruitful, to keep on preaching the general principles of
Communism and then fall into the negative attitude of commonplace
syndicalism when faced with concrete questions. Such practices only
play into the hands of the Yellow Amsterdam International.
Communists should, on the contrary, be guided in their actions
by a careful study of every aspect of the question.
For instance, instead of contenting themselves with resisting
theoretically and on principle all working agreements (over wages
and working conditions), they should rather take the lead in the
struggle over the specific nature of the tariffs (wage agreements)
recommended by the Amsterdam leaders. It is, of course, necessary
to condemn and resist any kind of impediment to the revolutionary

14
preparedness of the proletariat and it is a well-known fact that it is
the aim of the capitalists and their Amsterdam myrmidons to tie the
hand of the workers by all manners of working agreements.
Therefore, it behoves the Communist to open the eyes of the
workers to the nature of the aims. This the Communists can best
attain by advocating agreements which would not hamper the
workers.
The same should be done in connection with the unemployment,
sickness and other benefits of the; trade union organisations. The
creation of fighting funds and the granting of strike pay are measures
which in themselves are to be commended.
Therefore the opposition on principle against such activities
would be ill-advised. But Communist should point out to the workers
that the manner of collection of these funds and their use, as
advocated bg the Amsterdam leaders, is against all the interests of
the working class. In connection with the sickness benefit etc.,
Communists should insist on the abolition of the contributory system,
and of all binding conditions in connection with all volunteer funds. If
some of the trade union members are still anxious to secure
sickness benefit by paying contributions, it would not do for us to
simply prohibit such payments for fear of not being understood by
them. It will be necessary to win over such workers from their small
bourgeois conceptions by an intensive personal propaganda.
26.
In the struggle against Social-Democratic and pettybourgeois trade union leaders, as well as against the leaders of
various labour parties, one cannot hope to achieve much by
persuasion. The struggle against them should be conducted in the
most energetic fashion and, the best way to do this is, by depriving
them of their following, showing up to the workers the true character
of these treacherous socialist leaders who are only playing into the
hands of capitalism. The Communists should endeavour to unmask
these so-called leaders, and subsequently, attack them in the most
energetic fashion.
It is by no means sufficient to call Amsterdam leaders (i. e.,
leaders of the reformist trade unions) yellow. Their yellowness must
be proved by continual, and practical illustrations. Their activities in
the trade unions, in the International Labour Bureau of the League of
Nations, in the bourgeois ministries and administration, their
treacherous speeches at conferences and parliaments, the
exhortations contained in many of their written messages and in the
Press, and above all, their vacillations and hesitating attitude in all

15
struggles even for the most modest rise in wages, offer constant
opportunities for exposing the treacherous behaviour of the
Amsterdam leaders in simple worded speeches and resolutions.
The fraction must conduct their practical vanguard movement in
a systematic fashion. The Communists must not at all allow the
excuses of the minor trade union officials who, notwithstanding good
intentions, often take refuge, through sheer weakness, behind
statutes, union decisions and instructions from their superiors to
hamper their march forward. On the contrary, they must insist on
getting satisfaction from the minor officials in the matter of removal of
all real or imaginary obstacles, but in the way of the workers by the
bureaucratic machine.
27. The fractions must carefully prepare the participation of the
Communists in conferences and meetings of the trade union
organisations. For instance, they must elaborate proposals, select
lecturers and counsels and put up candidates for elections, capable,
experienced and energetic comrades. The Communist organisations
must, through their fractions, also make careful preparations in
connection with all workers meetings, election meetings,
demonstration, political festivals and such like arranged by the
hostile organisations. Wherever Communists convene their own
workers meetings, they must arrange to have considerable groups
of Communists distributed among the audience and they must make
all the preparations for the assurance of satisfactory propaganda
result.
28. Communists must also learn how to draw unorganised and
backward workers permanently into the ranks of Party. With the help
of our fractions, we must induce the workers to join the trade unions
and to read our Party organs. Other organisations, as for instance
educational boards, study circles, sporting clubs, dramatic societies,
co-operative societies, consumers associations, war victims
organisations, etc., may be used as intermediaries between us and
the workers. Where the Communist Party is working illegally, such
workers association may be formed outside the Party through the
initiative of Party members and with the consent, and under the
control, of the leading Party organs (unions of sympathizers).
Communist youth and womens organisations may also be
helpful in rousing the interests of many politically indifferent
proletarians, and in drawing them eventually inside the Communist
Party through the intermediary of their educational courses, reading
circles, excursions, festivals, sunday rambles, etc., distributing of

16
leaflets, increasing the circulation of the Party organ, etc. Through
participation in the general movement, the workers will free
themselves from their small bourgeois inclinations.
29. In order to win the semi-proletarian sections of the workers,
as sympathizers of the revolutionary proletariat, the Communists
must make use of their special antagonism to the landowners, the
capitalists and the capitalist state in order to win those intermediary
groups from their mistrust of the proletariat. This may require
prolonged negotiations with them, or intelligent sympathy with their
needs, free help and advice in any difficulties, also opportunities to
improve their education, etc., all of which will give them confidence
in the Communist movement. The Communists must also endeavour
to counteract the pernicious influence of hostile organisations which
occupy authoritative positions in the respective districts, or may have
influence over the petty-bourgeois working peasants, over those who
work in the home industries and other semi-proletarian classes.
These are known by the exploited, from their own bitter experience,
to be the representatives and embodiment of the entire criminal
capitalist system, and must be unmasked. All every day occurrences,
which bring the state bureaucracy into conflict with the ideals of
petty-bourgeois democracy and jurisdiction, must be made use of in
a judicious and energetic manner in the course of Communist
agitation. Each local country organisation must carefully apportion,
among its members, the duties of house to house canvassing in
order to spread Communist propaganda in all the villages,
farmsteads and isolated dwellings in their district.
30. The methods of propaganda in the armies and navies of
capitalist states must be adaptable to the peculiar conditions in each
country.
Anti-militarist agitation of a pacifist nature is extremely detrimental
and only assist the bourgeoisie in its efforts to disarm the proletariat.
The proletariat rejects on principle, and combats with the utmost
energy, every kind of military institution of the bourgeois state, and of
the bourgeois class in general. Nevertheless, it utilises these
institutions (army, rifle-clubs, citizens guard organisation, etc.) for
the purpose of giving the workers military training for the
revolutionary battles to come. Intensive agitation must therefore be
directed, not against the military training of the youth and workers.
Every possibility of providing the workers with weapons, should most
eagerly be taken advantage of.

17
The class antagonisms revealing themselves as they do in the
materially favoured positions of the officers, as against the bad
treatment and social insecurity of life of the common soldiers, must
be made very clear to the soldiers. Besides, the agitation must bring
home the fact to the rank and file that its future is inextricably bound
up with the fate of the exploited classes. In a more advanced period
of incipient revolutionary fermentation, agitation for the democratic
election of all commanders by the privates and sailors and for the
formation of soldiers councils may prove very advantageous in
undermining the foundations of capitalist rule.
The closest attention and the greatest care are always required
when agitating the picked troops used by the bourgeoisie in the class
war, and especially against its volunteer bands.
Moreover the social composition and corrupt conduct of these
troops and bands make it possible; every favourable moment for
agitation should be made use of for creating disruption. Wherever it
possesses a distinct bourgeois class character, as for example in the
officer corps, it must be unmasked before the entire population and
made so despicable and repulsive, that they will be disrupted from
within by virtue of their very isolation.

V. THE ORGANISATION OF POLITICAL


STRUGGLE
31. For the Communist Party, there can be no period in which
its Party organisation cannot exercise political activity. For the
purpose of utilizing every political and economic situation, as well as
the changes in these situations, organisational strategy and tactics
must be developed. No matter how weak the Party may be, it can
nevertheless take advantage of exciting political events or of
extensive strikes affecting the entire economic system by radical
propaganda systematically and efficiently organised. Once a Party
has decided to thus make use of a particular situation, it must
concentrate the energy of all its members and Party in this
campaign.
Furthermore, all the connections which the Party possesses
through the work of its nuclei and its workers groups, must be used
for organizing mass
meetings in the centres of political importance and following up a
strike. The speakers for the Party must do their utmost to convince
the audience that only Communism can bring the struggle to a

18
successful conclusion. Special commissions must prepare these
meetings very thoroughly. If the Party cannot, for some reasons, hold
meetings of its own, suitable comrades should address the strikers at
the general meetings organised by the strikers or any other sections
of the struggling proletariat.
Wherever there is a possibility of inducing the majority, or a large
part of any meeting, to support our demand, these must be wellformulated and properly argued in motions and resolutions being
passed, attempts must be made to have similar resolution or motions
adopted in ever-increasing numbers, at any rate supported by strong
minorities at all the meetings held on the same question at the same
place or in other localities. In this way we shall be able to consolidate
the working masses in the movement, put them under our moral
influence, and have them recognised our leadership.
After all such meetings the committees, which participated in the
organisational preparations and utilised its opportunities, must hold
a conference to make a report to be submitted to the leading
committees of the Party and draw the proper conclusion from the
experience or possible mistakes, made for the future. In accordance
with each particular situation, the practical demands of the workers
involved, must be made public by means of posters and handbills or
leaflets distributed among the workers proving to them by means of
their own demands how the Communist policies are in agreement
with and applicable to the situation. Specially organised groups are
required for the proper distribution of posters, the choice of suitable
spots, as well as the proper time for such pasting. The distributing of
handbills should be carried out in and before the factories and in the
halls where the workers concerned want to gather, also at important
points in the town, employment offices and stations. Such distribution
of leaflets should be accompanied by a attractive discussions and
slogans, readily permeating all the ranks of the working masses.
Detailed leaflets should, if possible, be distributed only in halls,
factories, dwellings or other places where proper attention to the
printed matter may be expected.
Such propaganda must be supported by parallel activity at all the
trade unions and factory meetings held during the conflict and at
such meetings, whether organised by our comrades or only favoured
by us, suitable speakers and debaters must seize the opportunity of
convincing the masses of our point of view. Our Party newspapers
must place, at the disposal of such a special movement, greater part
of their space as well as their best arguments. In fact, the active

19
Party organisations must, for the time being, be made to serve the
general purpose of such a movement whereby our comrades may
work with unabated energy.
32. Demonstrations require very mobile and self-sacrificing
leadership closely intent upon the aim of a particular action, and able
to discern, at any given moment, whether a demonstration has
reached its highest possible effectiveness, or whether during that
particular situation, a further intensification is possible by inducing an
extension of the movement into an action of the masses by means of
demonstration, strikes and eventually general strikes. The
demonstrations, in favour of peace during the war, have taught us
that even after dispersal of such demonstrations, a really proletarian
fighting Party must neither deviate, nor stand still, no matter how
small or illegal it may be, if the question at issue is of real
importance, and is bound to become of ever greater interest for the
large masses. Street demonstrations attain greatest effectiveness
when their organisation is based on the large factories. When
efficient preparations by our nuclei and groups, by means of verbal
and handbill propaganda, has succeeded in bringing about a certain
unity of thought and action in a particular situation, the managing
committee must call the confidential Party members in the factories
and the leaders of the nuclei and groups to a conference, to discuss
and fix the time and business of the meeting on the day planned, as
well as the determination of slogans, the prospects of intensification
and the moment of cessation and dispersal of the demonstration.
The backbone of the demonstration must be formed by a wellinstructed and experienced group of diligent officials, mingling
among the masses from the moment of departure from the factories
up to the time of the dispersal of demonstration. Responsible Party
workers must be systematically distributed among the masses, for
the purpose of enabling the officials to maintain active contact with
each other and keeping them provided with the requisite political
instructions. Such a mobile, politically organised leadership of a
demonstration permits most effectively of constant renewal and
eventual intensification into greater mass actions.
33. Communist Parties already possessing internal firmness, a
tried corps of officials and a considerable number of adherents
among the masses, must exert every effort to completely overcome
the influence of the treacherous socialist leaders of the working class
by means of extensive campaign, and to rally the majority of the
working masses to the Communist banner. Campaigns must be

20
organised in various ways depending upon whether the situation
favour actual fighting, in which case they become active and put
themselves at the head of the proletarian movement, or whether it is
a period of temporary stagnation.
The make-up of the Party is also one of the determining factors
for selection of the organisational methods for such actions.
For example, the methods of publishing a so-called open letter
was used in order to win over the socially decisive sections of the
proletariat in Germany to a greater extent than had been possible in
other countries. In order to unmask the treacherous socialist leaders,
the Communist Party of Germany addressed itself to the other mass
organisations of the proletariat at a moment of increasing desolation
and intensification of class conflicts, for the purpose of demanding
from them, before the eyes of the proletariat, whether they, with their
alleged powerful organisations, were prepared to take up the
struggle in co-operation with the Communist Party, against the
obvious destitution of the proletariat and for the slightest demands
even for a pitiful-piece of bread.
Wherever the Communist Party initiates a similar campaign, it
must make complete organisational preparations for the purpose of
making such an action reach among the broad masses of the
working class.
All the factory groups and trade union officials of the Party must
bring the demand made by the Party, representing the embodiment
of the most vital demands of the proletariat to a discussion at their
next factory and trade union meetings, as well as at all public
meetings, after having thoroughly prepared for such meetings. For
the purpose of taking advantage of the temper of the masses,
leaflets, handbills and posters must be distributed everywhere and
effectively at all places where our nuclei or groups intend to make an
attempt to influence the masses to support our demands. Our Party
Press must engage in constant elucidation of the problems of the
movement during the entire period of such a campaign, by means of
short, or detailed daily articles, treating the various phases of the
question from every possible point of view. The organisation must
continually supply the Press with the material for such articles and
pay close attention so that the editors do not let up in their exertions
for the furtherance of the Party Campaign. The parliamentary groups
and municipal representatives of the Party must also work
systematically for the promotion of such struggles. They must bring
the movement into discussion according to the direction of the Party

21
leadership of the various parliamentary bodies by means of
resolutions or motions. These representatives must consider
themselves, as conscious members of the struggling masses, their
exponents in the camp of the class enemy, and as the responsible
officials and Party workers.
In case the united, organisationally consolidated activities of all
the forces of the Party succeed, within a few weeks, in including the
adoption of large and ever increasing numbers of resolutions
supporting our demands, it will be the serious organisational task of
our Party to consolidate the masses thus shown to be in favour of
our demands. In the event of the movement having assumed a
particular trade union character, it must be attempted, above all, to
increase our organisational influence in the trade unions.
To this end, our groups in the trade unions must proceed to wellprepared direct action against the local trade union leaders in order
either to overcome their influence, or else to compel them to wage
an organised struggle on the basis of the demand of our Party.
Wherever factory councils, industrial committees or similar institution
exist, our groups must exert influence through plenary meetings of
these industrial committees or factory councils also to decide in
favour of supporting the struggle. If a number of local organisations
have thus been influenced to support the movement for the bare
living interests of the proletariat under Communist leadership, they
must be called together to general conferences, which should also
be attended by the special delegates of the factory meetings at
which favourable resolutions were adopted.

VI. THE NEW LEADERSHIP


The new leadership consolidated under Communist influence in
this manner, gains new power by means of such concentration of the
active groups of the organised workers, and this power must be
utilised to give an impetus to the leadership of the socialist parties
and trade unions or else to fully unmask it.
In those industrial regions where our Party possesses its best
organisations and has obtained the greatest support for its demands,
they must succeed by means of organised pressure on the local
trade unions and industrial councils, in uniting all the evident
economic isolated struggles in these regions as well as the
developing movement of other groups, into one co-ordinated
struggle.

22
This movement must then draw up elementary demands entirely
apart from the particular craft interests, and then attempt to obtain
the fulfilment of these demands by utilizing the united forces of all
organisations in the district.
In such movement the Communist Party will then prove to be the
leader of the proletarians prepared for struggle, whereas the trade
union bureaucracy and the socialist party who would oppose such a
united, organised struggle, would then be exposed in their true
colours, not only politically, but also from a practical organisational
point of view.
34. During acute political and economic crisis causing, as they
do, new movements, the Communist Party should attempt to gain
control of the masses.
It may be better to forego any specific demands and rather appeal
directly to the members of the socialist parties and the trade unions
pointing out how distress and oppression have driven them into the
unavoidable fights with their employers in spite of the attempts of
their bureaucratic leaders to avoid a decisive struggle. The organs of
the Party particularly the daily newspapers, must emphasize day by
day, that the Communists are ready to take the lead in the impending
and actual struggle of the distressed workers, that their fighting
organisation is ready to lend a helping hand, wherever possible, to
all the oppressed in the given acute situation. It must be pointed out
daily that without these struggles there is no possibility of increasing
tolerable living conditions for the workers in spite of the efforts of
the old organisations to avoid and to obstruct these struggles. The
Communist fractions, within the trade unions and industrial
organisations, must lay stress continually upon the self-sacrificing
readiness of the Communist and make it clear to their fellow workers
that the fight is not to be avoided. The main task, however, is to unify
and consolidate all the struggles and movements arising out of the
situation. The various nuclei and fractions of the industries and crafts
which have been drawn into the struggles must not only maintain the
closest ties among themselves, but also assume the leadership of all
the movements that may break out, through the district committees
as well as through the central committees, furnishing promptly such
officials and responsible workers as will be able to lead a movement,
hand in hand, with those engaged in the struggle, to broaden and
deepen that struggle and make it widespread. It is the main duty of
the organisation, everywhere, to point out and emphasize the
common character of all the various struggles, in order to foster the

23
idea of the general solution of the question by political means, if
necessary. As the struggles become more intensified and general in
character, it becomes necessary to create uniform organs for the
leadership of the struggles.
Wherever the bureaucratic strike leaders have failed, the
Communists must come in at once and ensure a determined
organisation of action the common preliminary organisation
which can be achieved under capable militant leadership, by
persistent advocacy at the meeting of the fractions and industrial
councils as well as mass meetings of the industries concerned.
When the movement becomes widespread, and owing to the
onslaughts of the employers organisations and government
interference, it assumes a political character, preliminary propaganda
and organisation work must be started for the elections of workers
councils which may become possible and even necessary.
It is here that all Party organs should emphasize the idea that
only by forging their own weapons of the struggle can the working
class achieve its own emancipation. In this propaganda not the
slightest consideration should be shown to the trade union
bureaucracy or to the old socialist parties.
35. The Communist Parties which have already grown strong
and particularly the big mass parties, must be equipped for mass
action. All political demonstrations and economic mass movements,
as well as local actions must always tend to organise the
experiences of those movements in order to bring about a close
union with the wide masses. The experience gained by all great
movements must be discussed at broad conferences of the leading
officials and responsible Party workers, with the trusted (trade union)
representatives of large and middle industries and in this manner the
network of communication will be constantly increased and
strengthened and the trusted representatives of industries will
become increasingly permeated with the fighting spirit. The ties of
mutual confidence between the leading officials and responsible
Party workers, with the shop delegates, are the best guarantee that
there will be no premature political mass action, in keeping with the
circumstances and the actual strength of the Party.
Without building closest ties between the Party organisations and
the proletarian masses employed in the big mass actions, a really
revolutionary movement cannot be developed. The untimely collapse
of the undoubtedly revolutionary upheaval in Italy last year, which
found its strong expression in the seizing of factories, was certainly

24
due, to a great extent, to the treachery of the trade unionist
bureaucracy, unreliability of the political party leaders, but partly also
to the total lack of intimacies of organisation between the Party and
the industries through politically informed shop delegates interested
in the welfare of the Party. Also the English coal-miners strike of the
present year (1921) has undoubtedly suffered through this lack to an
extraordinary degree.

VII. ON THE PARTY PRESS


36. The Communist Press must be developed by the Party with
indefatigable energy. No paper may be recognised as a Communist
organ if it does not submit to the directions of the Party.
The Party must pay more attention to having good papers than to
having many of them. Every Communist Party must have a good,
and if possible, daily central organ.
37.
A Communist newspaper must never be a capitalist
undertaking as are the bourgeois, frequently also the socialist
papers. Our paper must be independent of all the capitalist credit
institutions. A skilful organisation of the advertisement, which render
possible the existence of our paper for lawful mass parties, must
never lead to its being dependent on the large advertisers. On the
contrary its attitude on all proletarian social questions will create the
greater respect for it in all our mass Parties.
Our papers must not serve for the satisfaction of the desire for
sensation or as a pastime for the general public. They must not yield
to the criticism of the petty-bourgeois writers or journalist experts in
the striving to become respectable.
38. The Communist paper must in the first place take care of the
interest of the oppressed and fighting workers. It must be our best
agitator and the leading propagator of the proletarian revolution.
It will be the object of our paper to collect all the valuable
experience from the activity of the party members and to
demonstrate the same to our comrades as a guide for the continual
revision and improvement of Communist working methods; in this
way it will be the best organiser of our revolutionary work.
It is only by this all-embracing organisational work of the
Communist paper and particularly our principal paper, that with this
definite object in view, we will be able to establish democratic

25
centralism and lead to the efficient distribution of work in the
Communist Party, thus enable it to perform its historic mission.
39. The Communist paper must strive to become a Communist
undertaking, i.e., it must be a proletarian fighting organisation, a
working community of the revolutionary workers, of all writers who
regularly contribute to the paper, editors, type-setters, printers, and
distributors, those who collect local material and discuss the same in
the paper, those who are daily active in propagating it, etc. A
number of practical measures are required to turn the paper into a
real fighting organ and a strong working community of the
Communists.
A Communist should be in closest connection with his paper
when he has to work and make sacrifices for it. It is his daily weapon
which must be newly hardened and sharpened every day in order to
be fit for use. Heavy material and financial sacrifice will continually
be required for the existence of the Communist paper. The means
for its development and inner improvement will constantly have to be
supplied from the ranks of Party members, until it will have reached a
position of such firm organisation and such a wide circulation among
a legal mass Party, that it will itself become a strong support of the
Communist movement.
It is not sufficient to be an active canvasser and propagator for
the paper; it is necessary to be contributor to it as well.
Every occurrence of any social or economic interest happening in
the workshop from an accident to a general workers meeting, from
the ill-treatment of an apprentice to the financial report of the
concern must be immediately reported to the paper. The trade
union fraction must communicate all important decisions and
resolutions of its meetings and secretariats, as well as any
characteristic actions of our enemies. Public life in the street, and at
the meetings, will often give an opportunity to the attentive Party
member to exercise social criticism on details which, published in our
paper, will demonstrate, even to indifferent readers, how already we
follow the daily needs of life.
Such communications from the life of workers and working-class
organisations must be handled by the board of editors with particular
care and affection; they must be used as short notices that will help
to convey the feeling of an intimate connection existing between our
paper and workers lives; or they may be used as practical examples
from the daily life of workers that help to explain the doctrine of
Communism. Wherever possible, the board of editors should have

26
fixed hours at a convenient time of the day, when they would be
ready to see any worker coming to them and listen to his wishes, or
complain on the troubles of life, which they sought to note and use
for the enlightenment of the Party.
Under the capitalist system, it will, of course, be impossible for
our papers to become a perfect Communist workers community.
However, even under most difficult conditions it might be possible to
obtain a certain success in the organisation of such a revolutionary
paper. This has been proved by the Pravda of our Russian
comrades during the period of 1912-13. It actually represented a
permanent and active organisation of the conscious revolutionary
workers of the most important Russian centres. The comrades used
their collective forces for editing, publishing, distributing the paper.
and many of them doing that alongside with their work and sparing
the money required from their earnings. The newspaper in its turn
furnished them with the best things they desired, with what they
needed for the moment and what they can still use today in their
work and struggle. Such a newspaper should really and truly be
called by the Party members and by other revolutionary workers,
our newspaper.
40. The proper element for the militant Communist Press is
direct participation in the campaigns conducted by the Party. If the
activity of the Party at a given time happens to be concentrated upon
definite campaign, it is the duty of the organ to place all its
departments, not the editorial pages alone, at the service of this
particular campaign). The editorial board must draw material and
sources to feed this campaign, which must be incorporated
throughout the paper both in substance and in form.
41. The matter of canvassing subscriptions for Our newspaper
must be
made into a system. The first thing is to make use of every
occasion stirring up workers and of every situation in which the
political and social consciousness of the worker has been aroused
by some special occurrence. Thus, following each big strike
movement or lockout, during which the paper openly and
energetically defended the interests of the workers, a canvassing
activity should be organised and carried on among the participants.
Subscription lists and subscription orders for the paper should be
distributed, not only in the industries where the Communists are
engaged and among the trade union fractions of those industries that
had taken part in the strikes, but also whenever possible,

27
subscription orders should be distributed from house to house by
special groups or workers doing propaganda for the paper.
Likewise following each election campaign that aroused the
workers, special groups, appointed for the purpose, should visit the
houses of workers carrying on systematic propaganda for the
workers newspaper.
At times of latent political and economic crises, manifesting
themselves in the rise of prices, unemployment and other hardship
affecting great numbers of workers, all possible efforts should be
exerted to win over the professionally organised workers of the
various industries and organise them into working groups for carrying
on systematic house to house propaganda for newspaper.
Experience has shown that the most appropriate time for canvassing
work is the last week of each month. Any local group, that would
allow even one of these last week of the month to pass by without
making use of it for propaganda work for the newspaper, will be
committing a grave omission with regard to the spread of the
Communist movement. The working group conducting propaganda
for the newspaper must not leave out any public meeting or any
demonstration without being there at the opening, during the
intervals, and at the close with the subscription list for the paper. The
same duties are imposed upon every trade union fraction at each
separate meeting of the union, as well as upon the group and
fraction at shop meetings.
42. Every Party member must constantly defend our paper
against all its opponents and carry on energetic campaign against
the capitalist Press. He must expose and brand-mark the venality,
the falsehoods, the suppression of information and all the doubledealings of the Press.
The social-democratic and independent Press must be overcome
by constant and aggressive criticism, with out falling into petty
factional polemising, but by persistent unmasking of their
treacherous attitude in veiling the most flagrant class conflicts day by
day. The trade union and other fractions must seek by organised
means to wean away the members of trade unions and other
workers organisations from the misleading and crippling influence of
these social-democratic papers. Also the canvassing by means of
house to house campaign for our Press, notably among industrial
workers, must be judiciously directed against the social-democratic
Press.

28

VIII. ON THE STRUCTURE OF THE PARTY


ORGANISM
43. The Party organisation, spreading out and fortifying itself,
must not be organised upon a scheme of mere geographical
divisions, but in accordance with the real economic, political and
transport conditions of the given district. The centre of gravity is to be
placed in the main cities, and the centres of large industries.
In the building up of a new Party, there usually manifests itself a
tendency to have the Party organisation spread out at once all over
the country. Thus, disregarding the fact that the number of workers
at the disposal of the Party is very limited, these few workers are
scattered in all directions. This weakens the recruiting ability and the
growth of the Party. In such cases we saw an extensive system of
Party offices springing up, but the Party itself did not succeed in
gaining foothold even in the most important industrial cities.
44. In order to get the Party activity centralized to the highest
possible degree, it is not advisable to have the Party leadership
divided into an hierarchy with a number of groups, subordinate to
one another. The thing to be aimed at is that every large city, forming
an economic, political or transportation centre, should spread out
and form a net of organisations within a wide area of the
surroundings of the given locality and the economic political districts
adjoining it. The Party committee of the large centre should form the
head of the general body of the Party and conduct the
organisational activity of the district, directing its policy in close
connection with the membership of the locality.
The organisers of such a district, elected by the district
conference and confirmed by the Central Committee of the Party, are
obliged to take active part in the Party life of the local organisation.
The Party committee of the district must be constantly reinforced by
members from among the Party workers of the place, so that there
should be close relationship between that committee and the large
masses of the district. As the organisation keeps developing, efforts
should be made to the effect that leading committee of the district
should, at the same time, be the leading political body of the place.
Thus the Party committee of the district, together with the Central
Committee, should play the part of the real leading organ in the
general Party organisation.

29
The boundary lines of the Party districts are not naturally limited
by the area of the place, The determining factor should be that the
district committee be in a position to direct the activities of all the
local organisations, within the district, in a uniform manner. As soon
as this becomes impossible the district must be divided and new
Party districts formed.
It is also necessary, in the large countries to have certain
intermediate organisations serving as connecting links between the
Central Committee and the local. Under certain conditions it may be
advisable to give to some of these intermediary organisations, as for
example, an organisation in a large city with a strong membership, a
leading part, but as a general rule this should be avoided, as leading
to decentralisation.
45. The large intermediary organisations are formed out of local
Party organisations: country groups or of small cities and of districts,
of the various parts of the large city.
Any local Party organisation that has grown to such an extent
that it is existing as legal organisation, it can no longer conduct
general meetings of all its membership, must be divided.
In any Party organisation the members must be grouped for daily
Party activities. In large organisations it may be advisable to combine
various groups into collective bodies. As a rule such members
should be included in one group at their place of work or elsewhere
and have occasion to meet one another in their daily activity. The
object of such a collective group is to distribute Party activity among
the various small or working groups, to receive reports from various
officials and to train candidates for membership.
46. The Party as a whole is to be under the guidance of the
Communist International. The instructions and resolutions of the
Executive of the International, on methods affecting the affiliated
parties, are to be directed firstly, either (1) to their Central Committee
of the Party, (2) through this Committee to some special committee
or (3) to the members of the Party at large.
The instructions and resolutions of the International are binding
upon the Party, and naturally also upon every Party member.
47. The Central Committee of the Party is elected at a Party
Congress and is responsible to it. The Central Committee selects out
of its own midst a smaller body consisting of two sub-committees for
political activity. Both these sub-committees are responsible for the
political and current work of the Party. These sub-committees or
bureau arrange for the regular joint sessions of the Central

30
Committee of the Party where decisions of immediate importance
are to be passed. In order to study the general and political situation
and gain a clear idea of the state of affairs in the Party, it is
necessary to have various localities represented on the Central
Committee whenever decisions are to be passed affecting the life of
the entire Party. For the same reason differences of opinion
regarding tactics should not be suppressed by the Central
Committee if they are of a serious nature. On the contrary, these
opinions should get representation upon the Central Committee. But
the smaller bureau (Polit-Bureau) should be conducted along uniform
lines, and in order to carry on a firm and sure policy, it must be able
to rely upon its own authority as well as upon a considerable majority
of the Central Committee.
Carried on such a basis, the Central Committee of the Party,
especially in cases of legal parties, will be able in the shortest time,
to form a firm foundation for discipline requiring the unconditional
confidence of the Party membership and at the same time
manifesting vacillations and deviations that make their appearance
done away with. Such abnormalities in the Party may be removed
before reaching the stage where they should have to be brought up
before a Party Congress for a decision.
48. Every leading Party committee must have its work divided
among its members in order to achieve efficiency in the various
branches of work. This may necessitate the formation of various
special committees, as for example, committees for propaganda, for
editorial work, for the trade union campaign, for communications, etc.
Every special committee is subordinated either to the Central
Committee, or to the District Committee.
The control over the activity, as well as the composition of all
committees, should be in the hands of the given district committees,
and, in the last instance, in the hands of the Party Central
Committee. It may become advisable from time to time to change the
occupation and office of those people attached for various Party
work such as, editors, organisers, propagandists, etc., provided that
this does not interfere too much with the Party work. The editors and
propagandists must participate in the regular Party work in one of the
Party groups.
49. The Central Committee of the Party, as also the Communist
International, is empowered at any time to demand complete reports
from all Communist organisations, from their organs and individual
members. The representatives of the Central Committee and

31
comrades authorized by it, are to be admitted to all meetings and
sessions with a deciding voice. The Central Committee of the Party
must always have, at its disposal, plenipotentiaries (i.e., Commissars
to instruct and inform the leading organs of the various districts and
regions not only by means of their circulars and letters, but also by
direct and verbal and responsible agencies on the questions of
politics and organisations).
Every organisation and every branch of the Party, as well as
every individual member, has the right of communicating his
respective wishes, suggestions, remarks or complaints directly to the
Central Committee of the Party or to the International at any time.
50. The instructions and decisions of the leading party organs
are obligatory for the subordinate organisations and for the individual
members. The responsibilities of the leading organs and duty to
prevent either delinquency or abuse of their leading position, can
only partly be determined in a formal manner. The less their formal
responsibility (as for instance, in illegalised Parties), the greater the
obligation upon them to study the opinion of the Party members, to
obtain regular and solid information, and to form their own decisions
only after mature and thorough deliberation.
51. The Party members are obliged to act always as disciplined
members of a militant organisation in all their activities. Should
differences of opinion occur as to the proper mode of action, this
should be determined, as far as possible; by previous discussions
inside the Party organisation, and the action should be according to
the decision thus arrived at. Even if the decision of the organisation
or of the Party committee should appear faulty in the opinion of the
rest of the members, these comrades in all their public activity should
never lose sight of the fact that it is the worst form of undisciplined
conduct and greatest military error to hinder or to break entirely the
unity of the common front.
It is the supreme duty of every Party member to defend the
Communist Party, and above all, the Communist International,
against all the enemies of Communism. He who forgets, on the
contrary, and publicly assails the Party or the Communist
International, is a bad Communist.
52. The statutes of the Party must be drawn in such a manner
as not to become a hindrance but rather a helping force, to the
leading Party organs in the Communist development of the general
Party organisations and in the continuous improvement of the Party
activity. The decisions of the Communist International must be

32
promptly carried out by the affiliated Parties even in the case when
corresponding alterations in the existing statutes and Party decisions
can be adopted only at a later date.

IX. LEGAL AND ILLEGAL ACTIVITY


53. The party must be so organised that it shall always be in a
position to adapt itself quickly to all the changes that may occur in
the conditions of the struggles. The Communist Party must develop
into a militant organisation capable of avoiding fight in the open
against overwhelming forces of the enemy, concentrated upon a
given point, but on the other hand, the very concentration of the
enemy must be so utilised as to attack him on the spot where he
least suspects it. It would be the greatest mistake for the Party
organisation to stake everything upon rebellion and street-fighting or
only upon condition of severe repression. Communists perfect their
preliminary revolutionary work in every situation on a basis of
preparedness, for it is frequently next to impossible to foresee the
changeable wave of stormy and calm periods and even in cases it
might be possible, this foresight cannot be made use of in many
cases for reorganisation, because the change, as a rule, comes
quickly and frequently quite suddenly.
54. The legal Communist Parties of the capitalist countries
usually fail to grasp all the importance of the task before the Party to
be properly prepared for the armed struggle, or the illegal fight in
general. Communist organisations often commit the error of
depending on a permanent legal basis for their existence and of
conducting their work according to the needs of the legal task.
On the other hand, illegal parties often fail to make use of all the
possibilities of legal activities towards the building up of a Party
organisation which would have constant intercourse with the
revolutionary masses. Underground organisations which ignore
these vital truths run the risks of becoming merely groups of
conspirators wasting their labours in futile tasks.
Both these tendencies are erroneous. Every legal Communist
organisation must know how to insure for itself complete
preparedness for an underground existence, and above all for
revolutionary outbreaks. Every illegal Communist organisation must,
on the other hand, make the fullest use of the possibilities offered by
the legal labour movement, in order to become, by means of

33
intensive Party activity, the organised and real leader of the great
revolutionary masses.
55. Both among legalized and underground Party circles, there
is a tendency for the unlegalised Communist organisational activity
to evolve into the compartment of establishment and maintenance of
a illegal from legal purely military organisation isolated from the rest
of the party organisation and activity. This is absolutely erroneous.
On the contrary, during the pre-revolutionary period, the formation of
our militant organisations must be mainly accomplished through the
general work of the Communist Party. The entire Party must be
developed into a militant organisation for the revolution.
Isolated revolutionary military organisations, prematurely created
in a pre-revolutionary period, are apt to show tendencies towards
dissolution because of the lack of direct and useful Party work.
56. It is of course imperative for an illegal party to protect its
members and Party organs from being found out by the authorities,
and to avoid every possibility of facilitating such discovery by
registration, careless collection, by contribution and injudicious
distribution of revolutionary material. For these reasons, it cannot
use frank organisational methods to the same extent as the legal
Party. It can nevertheless, through practice, acquire more and more
proficiency in this matter.
On the other hand, a legal mass Party must be fully prepared for
illegal work and periods of struggle. It must never relax its
preparations for any eventualities (viz. it must have safe hiding
places for duplicates of members files and must, in most cases,
destroy correspondence, put important documents into safe keeping
and must provide conspirative training for its messengers).
It is assumed, the circles of the legal as well as the illegal
Parties, that the illegal organisations must be in the nature of a rather
exclusive, entirely military institution, occupying within the Party a
position of splendid isolation. This assumption is quite erroneous.
The formation of our fighting organisation in the pre-revolutionary
period must depend principally on the general Communist Party
work. The entire Party must be made into a fighting organisation for
the revolution.
57. Therefore, our general Party work must be apportioned in a
manner which would ensure, already in pre-revolutionary period, the
foundation and consolidation of a fighting organisation,
commensurate with the needs of the revolution. It is of the greatest
importance that the directing body of the Communist Party should be

34
guided, in its entire activity, by the revolutionary requirement and that
it should endeavour, as far as possible, to gain a clear idea of what
these are likely to be. This is naturally not an easy matter, but that
should not be a reason for leaving out of consideration this very
important point of Communist organisational leadership.
Even the best organised Party would be faced with very difficult
and complicated tasks if it had to undergo great functionary changes
in a period of open revolutionary risings. It is quite possible that our
political Party will be called upon to mobilize, in a few days, its forces
for the revolutionary struggle. Probably it will have to mobilize, in
addition to the Party forces, their reserves, the sympathizing
organisations, viz., the unorganised revolutionary masses. The
formation of a regular Red Army is as yet out of the question. We
must conquer without a previously organised army through the
masses under the leadership of the Party. For this reason even the
most determined effort would not succeed should our Party not be
well-prepared and organised for such an eventuality.
58. One has probably seen that the revolutionary central
directive bodies have proved unable to cope with revolutionary
situations. The proletariat has generally been able to achieve great
revolutionary organisation as far as minor tasks are concerned, but
there has nearly always been disorder, confusion and chaos at
headquarters. Sometimes there has been a lack of even the most
elementary apportioning of work. The intelligence department is
often so badly organised that it does more harm than good. There is
no reliance on postal and other communications. All secret postal
and transport arrangements, secret quarter and printing works are
generally at the mercy of lucky or unlucky circumstances and afford
fine opportunities for the agent provocateurs of the enemy forces.
These defects cannot be remedied unless the Party organises a
special branch in its administration for this particular work. The
military intelligence service requires practice and special training and
knowledge. The same may be said of the secret work directed
against the political police. It is only through long practice that the
satisfactory secret department can be created. For all these
specialized revolutionary work, every legal Communist Party must
make preparations, no matter how small. In most cases a such
secret apparatus may be created by means of perfectly legal activity.
For instance it is quite possible to establish secret postal and
transport communications by a code system through the judiciously

35
arranged distribution of legal leaflets and through correspondence in
the press.
59. The Communist organiser must look upon every member of
the Party and every revolutionary worker as a prospective soldier in
the future revolutionary army. For this reason he must allot him a
place which will fit him for his future role. His present activity must
take the form of useful service, necessary for present Party work,
and not mere drilling, which the practical worker of today rejects.
One must also not forget that this kind of activity is, for every
Communist, the best preparation for the exigencies of the final
struggle.

You might also like