(Redirected from Council of People\'s Commissars)'Council of Ministers of the USSR' (,
tr.: ''Sovet Ministrov SSSR''; sometimes ''Sovmin'' shortcut was used) was the
Soviet government - the highest executive and
administrative body of the
Soviet Union.
[1] Between 1918 and 1946 it was named 'Council of People's Commissars of the USSR' (Совет Народных Комиссаров СССР,
tr.: ''Sovet Narodnykh Komissarov SSSR'', sometimes ''Sovnarkom'' or ''SNK'' shortcuts were used). Council of Ministers of the USSR was formed by the
Supreme Soviet of the USSR on the first session of each
convocation, i.e. every four years.
History
Sovnarkom
According to
1918 Constitution of the RSFSR and subsequent USSR constitutions, until
1946, the functions of ministers in the government of the
Russian SFSR and, since 1922, the
Soviet Union were performed by 'People's Commissars' (, tr.: ''Narodny komissar'', or 'Narkom'). A ministry was called 'People's Commissariat' (, tr.: ''Narodny komissariat'', abbreviated to 'narkomat'), and the country's main governing body was the Council of People's Commissars. Its role was fixed in the
constitution of the USSR. The
Soviet republics retained their own governments which dealt with domestic matters; they were also named Sovnarkom by conventions of their pre-Union legislation.
Communists wanted to create a government of workers and peasants. Traditionally, a government is a council of ministers nominated by a ruler or by a president. The communists saw this as a
bourgeois institution, and wanted to organize things differently in a workers' state. After the
October revolution, political power was held by councils (''
soviets'') of workers, peasants and soldiers. The Second All-Russian
Congress of Soviets (1917) introduced and elected the first Council of People's Commissars to manage Russia in the name of working people. The
Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars, also elected by the
Congress of Soviets, had a function similar to that of a
prime minister. The first Chairman of Sovnarkom was
Vladimir Lenin.
The
1918 Soviet Constitution made the Sovnarkom of the
RSFSR responsible to the
Congress of Soviets for the "general administration of the affairs of the state." The constitution enabled the Sovnarkom to issue decrees carrying the full force of law when the congress was not in session. The congress then routinely approved these decrees at its next session. In fact, the Sovnarkom had already exercised governmental authority of the
RSFSR since November 1917 after the Second All-Russian
Congress of Soviets.
The People's Commissariats
Each Commissar was head of commissariat and had several deputies and a collegium which functioned as a deliberative body to advise the commissar.
The first council elected by the Second All-Russian congress was composed as follows:
Chairman:
Vladimir Lenin
:
People's Commissariat for Agriculture: Commissar
Vladimir Milyutin
:
People's Commissariat for Military Affairs: Commissars
Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko ,
Nikolai Krylenko
:
People's Commissariat for Naval Affairs: Commissar
Pavel Dybenko
:
People's Commissariat for Trade and Industry: Commissar
Viktor Nogin
:
People's Commissariat for Enlightening:Commissar
Anatoly Lunacharsky
:
People's Commissariat for Food: Commissar
Ivan Teodorovich
:
People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs: Commissar
Leon Trotsky
:
People's Commissariat for Interior Affairs: Commissar
Alexei Rykov
:
People's Commissariat for Justice: Commissar
Georgy Oppokov
:
People's Commissariat for Labour: Commissar
Alexander Shlyapnikov
:
People's Commissariat of Nationalities: Commissar:
Josef Stalin
:
People's Commissariat for Post and Telegraph:Commissar
Nikolai Glebov-Avilov
:
People's Commissariat of Railways: (vacant)
:
People's Commissariat of Finance: Commissar
Ivan Skvortsov-Stepanov
Sovmin
In 1946, Sovnarkom was renamed as the Council of Ministers of the USSR (, tr.: ''Sovet Ministrov SSSR''). While the People's Commissars and People's Commissariats became
Ministers and
government departments.
The building of the ''Council of Ministers of the USSR'' was situated inside the
Moscow Kremlin, next to the building of the
Presidium of the Supreme Soviet.
See also
★
Government of the Russian Federation
★
Politics of Russia
★
Premier of the Soviet Union
★
Commissar
★
Political commissar
References
1. Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd edition, entry on "Совет Министров СССР", available online here
External links
★
Building of the Council of Ministers of the USSR - satellite photo