Lenin's First and Second Government


Following the October Revolution, Vladimir Lenin became the head of the new government of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. It was known officially as the Council of People's Commissars, effectively his cabinet. Ten of the council's fourteen members would later be killed during Joseph Stalin's Great Purge.

Council of People's Commissars

The Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR was the governmental cabinet of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic from 1917 through 1946. That year it was renamed the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR. Following the Declaration of the Creation of the USSR in 1922, state powers of this institution of the RSFSR were somewhat superseded by the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR.
By September 1917, the councils of workers, peasants and soldiers acquired considerable political and military power. The leaders of the Petrograd Soviet conspired to overthrow the Russian Provisional Government; the uprising started on 7 November 1917, when Red Guards units captured the Winter Palace. On the next day, 8 November 1917, the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets recognized the success of the uprising, and formally established the new government, reflecting the capture of the soviets by the Bolsheviks.
The government was formally called the Council of People's Commissars, abbreviated as Sovnarkom. Leon Trotsky devised the council and commissar names, thereby avoiding the more "bourgeois" terms of minister and cabinet.
The People's Commissars functioned as government ministers. A ministry was called a People's Commissariat.

Formation

Traditionally, the executive part of a government is directed by a council of ministers nominated by a ruler or by a president. The Bolsheviks considered this to be a bourgeois institution, and wanted to create what they believed was a new government made up of a 'soviet' of workers and peasants.
The role and structure of the Sovnarkom was formalized in the 1918 Constitution of the RSFSR. The Sovnarkom of the RSFSR was 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 would routinely approve these decrees at its next session.
Each People's Commissar was head of commissariat and had several deputies and a collegium, which functioned as a deliberative body to advise the commissar.
The Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars, also elected by the Congress, had a function similar to that of a prime minister. The first Chairman of the Sovnarkom was Vladimir Lenin.

First People's Commissars

The first council elected by the Second All-Russian congress was composed by the following 17 members. Nine of the men were executed during the late 1930s, a time of the Great Purge by Joseph Stalin, then General Secretary of the Communist Party and leader of the USSR. Trotsky was assassinated in Mexico in 1940. Four died prior to it and only one, Vladimir Bonch-Bruyevich, survived Stalin's purges entirely.
People's CommissarOriginal incumbentDeath
ChairmanVladimir LeninNatural causes, 1924
Administrator of AffairsVladimir Bonch-BruyevichNatural causes, 1955
People's Commissariat for Agriculture of the RSFSRVladimir MilyutinExecuted 1937
People's Commissariat for Military Affairs of the RSFSRVladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko
Nikolai Krylenko
Executed 1938
People's Commissariat for Naval Affairs of the RSFSRPavel DybenkoExecuted 1938
People's Commissariat for Trade and Industry of the RSFSRViktor NoginNatural causes, 1924
People's Commissariat for Education of the RSFSRAnatoly LunacharskyNatural causes, 1933
People's Commissariat for FoodIvan TeodorovichExecuted 1937
People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of the RSFSRLeon TrotskyAssassinated 1940
People's Commissariat for Interior Affairs of the RSFSRAlexei RykovExecuted 1938
People's Commissariat for Justice of the RSFSRGeorgy OppokovExecuted 1938
People's Commissariat for Labour of the RSFSRAlexander ShlyapnikovExecuted 1937
People's Commissariat of NationalitiesJoseph StalinNatural causes, 1953
People's Commissariat for Posts and Telegraphs of the RSFSRNikolai Glebov-AvilovExecuted 1937
People's Commissariat for Railways of the RSFSRMark Yelizarov
Typhus, 1919
People's Commissariat for FinanceIvan Skvortsov-StepanovTyphoid fever, 1928