Third All-Russian Conference of Trade Unions

The Third All Russian Conference of Trade Unions was the first national conference of trade unions held in Russia following the February Revolution. It was held in Petrograd 20–28 June 1917.

The conference was attended by 211 delegates representing 380,000 workers. These delegates were 73 Bolsheviks, 36 Mensheviks, 6 Menshevik Internationalists, 11 Bundists 31 non-fractional Social Democrats, 25 Social Revolutionaries and 7 delegates on no known party affiliation.

V. P. Grinevich, a Menshevik started the discussion on the role of the trade unions, which he characterised as conducting the economic struggle of the working class, depicting the strike as the principal weapon while under capitalism. He argued that they should not involve themselves in the organisation of production, a role he allocated to the state. The Internationalists criticised this view as supporting state control rather than workers' control.

Nikolai Glebov-Avilov presented the Bolshevik positions at this conference:

The All-Russian Metalworkers Union played a prominent role at the conference. It was during this conference they elected their Temporary Central Committee.[2]

References

  1. Bolsheviks and Workers' Control by Maurice Brinton
  2. The struggling union of the working class by M. I. Zin'kovskii, in Metallurgist, Volume 11, Number 8, August, 1967.
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