The first
Russian Constitution,
which governed the
Russian Socialist
Federative Soviet Republic, described the regime that assumed
power in the
October Revolution
of 1917.
This constitution informally recognized the
working class as the ruling class of Russia
according to
the principle of the dictatorship of the
proletariat. The constitution also stated that the
workers formed a political alliance with the
peasants. This constitution gave broad
guarantees of equal rights to workers and peasants. It denied,
however, the right of the
bourgeoisie or
those who supported the
White armies in
the
Civil War to participate in
elections to the
soviet or to hold
political power.
Supreme power rested with the All-Russian
Congress of Soviets, made up of deputies
from local soviets across Russia. The steering committee of the
Congress of Soviets—known as the
Central
Executive Committee—acted as the "supreme organ of power"
between sessions of the congress and as the collective presidency
of the state.
The congress elected the
Council of People's
Commissars (
Sovnarkom,
Sovet
narodnykh kommissarov) as the administrative arm of the young
government and defined its responsibilities as "general
administration of the affairs of the state". (The Sovnarkom had
exercised governmental authority from November 1917 until the
adoption of the 1918 constitution July 10th by the Congress of
Soviets.)
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