The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky

The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky is a work by Vladimir Lenin written in October and November of 1918 defending the Bolsheviks against criticisms being made against them by Karl Kautsky who was then the intellectual leader of moderate socialists.

In it, Lenin writes that Kautsky in his pamphlet The Dictatorship of the Proletariat distorted Karl Marx's and Friedrich Engels' ideas on democracy and it's relation to socialism and revolution. He also writes that Kautsky uses "twaddle...to befog and confuse the issue", for example when talking about democracy under capitalism, instead of using the term "bourgeois democracy", a term which has clear class content, Kautsky instead uses the term "presocialist democracy."[1]

An important issue taken up Kautsky in his pamphlet was the dispersal of the Russian Constituent Assembly by the Bolsheviks. Lenin writes that it is the "crux" of the pamphlet and that it is an important question because "the relation between bourgeois democracy and proletarian democracy here confronted the revolution in a practical form." Lenin goes on to assert that Kautsky in his pamphlet resorts to lying and falsification of facts in order to try to argue his point. Lenin continues that important, fundamental issues, especially for someone claiming to be a Marxist, received no attention from Kautsky and that he "evaded" them, one issue was whether "the bourgeois-democratic parliamentary republic is inferior to the republic of the Paris Commune or Soviet type". Essentially, whether or not socialism is a higher form of democracy than bourgeois democracy.[2]

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