Lenin's illness (1922-1923)
In late 1921 Lenin's health deteriorated, he was absent from Moscow for ever longer periods, and eventually had three strokes between
May 26, 1922 and
March 10, 1923, which caused paralysis, loss of speech and finally death on
January 21, 1924. With Lenin increasingly sidelined throughout 1922, Stalin (elevated to the newly created position of the Central Committee
General Secretary earlier in the year), Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev formed a
troika (triumvirate) to ensure that Trotsky, publicly the number two man in the country and Lenin's
heir presumptive, would not succeed Lenin.
The rest of the recently expanded Politburo (Rykov,
Mikhail Tomsky, Bukharin) was at first uncommitted, but eventually joined the
troika. Stalin's power of patronage
in his capacity as General Secretary clearly played a role, but Trotsky and his supporters later concluded that a more fundamental reason was the process of slow bureaucratization of the Soviet regime once the extreme conditions of the Civil War were over: much of the Bolshevik elite wanted 'normalcy' while Trotsky was personally and politically personified as representing a turbulent revolutionary period that they would much rather leave behind.
Although the exact sequence of events is unclear, evidence suggests that at first the
troika nominated Trotsky to head second rate government departments (e.g., Gokhran, the State Depository for Valuables) and then, when Trotsky predictably refused, they tried to use it as an excuse to oust him.
When, in mid-July 1922, Kamenev wrote a letter to the recovering Lenin to the effect that "(the Central Committee) is throwing or is ready to throw a good cannon overboard", Lenin was shocked and responded:
Throwing Trotsky overboard - surely you are hinting at that, it is impossible to interpret it otherwise - is the height of stupidity. If you do not consider me already hopelessly foolish, how can you think of that????
From then until his final stroke, Lenin spent much of his time trying to devise a way to prevent a split within the Communist Party leadership, which was reflected in
Lenin's Testament. As part of this effort, on
September 11, 1922 Lenin proposed that Trotsky become his deputy at the
Sovnarkom. The Politburo approved the proposal, but Trotsky "categorically refused".
In fall 1922, Lenin's relationship with Stalin deteriorated over Stalin's heavy-handed and
chauvinistic handling of the issue of merging Soviet republics into one federal state, the
USSR. At that point, according to Trotsky's autobiography,
Lenin offered Trotsky an alliance against Soviet bureaucracy in general and Stalin in particular. The alliance proved effective on the issue of foreign trade ,
but it was complicated by Lenin's progressing illness. In January 1923 the relationship between Lenin and Stalin completely broke down when Stalin rudely insulted Lenin's wife,
Nadezhda Krupskaya. At that point Lenin amended his Testament suggesting that Stalin should be replaced as the party's General Secretary, although the thrust of his argument was somewhat weakened by the fact that he also mildly criticized other Bolshevik leaders, including Trotsky. In March 1923, days before his third stroke, Lenin prepared a frontal assault on Stalin's "Great-Russian nationalistic campaign" against the
Georgian Communist Party (the so-called
Georgian Affair) and asked Trotsky to deliver the blow at the XIIth Party Congress. With Lenin no longer active, Trotsky did not raise the issue at the Congress.
At the XIIth Party Congress in April 1923, just after Lenin's final stroke, the key Central Committee reports on organizational and nationalities questions were delivered by Stalin and not by Trotsky, while Zinoviev delivered the political report of the Central Committee, traditionally Lenin's prerogative. Stalin's power of appointment had allowed him to gradually replace local party secretaries with loyal functionaries and thus control most regional delegations at the congress, which enabled him to pack the Central Committee with his supporters, mostly at the expense of Zinoviev and Kamenev's backers.
At the congress, Trotsky made a speech about intra-party democracy, among other things, but avoided a direct confrontation with the
troika. The delegates, most of whom were unaware of the divisions within the Politburo, gave Trotsky a
standing ovation, which couldn't help but upset the
troika. The
troika was further infuriated by
Karl Radek's article
Leon Trotsky — Organizer of Victory published in
Pravda on
March 14, 1923, which seemed to anoint Trotsky as Lenin's successor.
The resolutions adopted by the XIIth Congress called, in general terms, for greater democracy within the Party, but were vague and remained unimplemented. In an important test of strength in mid-1923, the
troika was able to neutralize Trotsky's friend and supporter
Christian Rakovsky by removing him from his post as head of the Ukrainian government (
Sovnarkom) and sending him to London as Soviet ambassador. When regional Party secretaries in Ukraine protested against Rakovsky's reassignment, they too were reassigned to various posts all over the Soviet Union.