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= United Opposition = From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search For the United Opposition in the Philippines, see United Opposition (Philippines).

The United Opposition (sometimes also called the Joint Opposition), formed in July 1926, was a faction formed within the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) in early 1926. It criticized the policies and leadership of the party, which was increasingly dominated by Joseph Stalin and Nikolai Bukharin. The United Opposition formed when the Left Opposition, led by Leon Trotsky, merged with the New Opposition led by Grigory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev in order to strengthen opposition against the Stalin-Bukharin majority. The United Opposition demanded, among other things, greater freedom of expression within the Communist Party, the dismantling of the New Economic Policy (NEP), more development of heavy industry, and less bureaucracy. The group was effectively destroyed by Stalin’s majority by the end of 1927, having had only limited success.

Background and Formation
To promote party unity, factions within the Bolshevik party were banned at the 10th Party Congress in 1921. Despite the ban, unofficial factions remained, and differing opinions continued to be voiced. The future goals of the United Opposition were expressed by multiple groups throughout the 1920s. In 1923, echoing letters that Trotsky wrote to the Central Committee during the same period, dissident party members released the “Platform of the Forty-Six,” criticizing growing bureaucratization and censorship within the party. The Platform criticized the leadership structure of the party, where decisions were increasingly dictated from the top, and the influence of workers and average voters was steadily decreased. Despite the efforts of the oppositionists, Trotsky prominent among them, the 13th Party Congress condemned the opposition in May 1924. Both Zinoviev and Kamenev opposed Trotsky at this time.

The positions of Trotsky, Zinoviev and Kamenev began to come together in 1925. All three men were against Stalin and Bukharin's theory of “socialism in one country,” and were increasingly opposed to the New Economic Policy, with its privileging of the peasantry at the expense of the workers. All of them advocated for more state planning and higher industrial investment. As a natural extension of their oppositional views, Zinoviev and Kamenev both began to support increased dissent within the party and less bureaucratization, much as Trotsky had done since 1923. Lenin's widow, Nadezhda Krupskaia, also briefly lent her support to the opposition. However, there was no major organized oppositional bloc. Despite similarities in their policy, Trotsky was not actively working with Zinoviev and Kamenev in 1925, and their opposition was not coordinated. Oppositional voices boldly raised against Stalin at the Fourteenth Party Congress were easily voted down.

The United Opposition was proposed by the Group of 15, a small faction around Vladimir Smirnov which claimed that the Soviet Union was no longer a workers' state. This brought together Trotsky's Left Opposition and Zinoviev's New Opposition (also known as the Opposition of 1925), despite them both having many differences with the Group of 15, particularly over the question of whether the Soviet Union was still a workers' state. Many former supporters of the Workers Opposition also joined the United Opposition.

The United Opposition
Smirnov's Group of 15 left the United Opposition soon after its formation over increasing differences between themselves and Kamenev and Zinoviev's supporters. The United Opposition quickly started agitating for a more worker-focused party, as opposed to the more peasant-focused policies surrounding the NEP, as well as for greater party democratization. They wanted a greater ability to express dissent within the party and more autonomy for workers' unions. In May 1926, Trotsky, Zinoviev and 82 others signed a declaration denouncing Stalin’s leadership. The Central Committee responded two months later with a demand that the United Opposition rescind their calls for new party leadership, which the Opposition duly refused. Their 1926 platform explicitly criticized the lack of democracy and debate permitted in the party, noting that “no resolutions anywhere are ever adopted otherwise than 'unanimously."' In response to their agitation, Kamenev, Trotsky, and Zinoviev, the three most high-profile members of the Opposition, were soon voted out of their highest political positions. By October 1926 all three had been removed from the Politburo, and Zinoviev lost his position as head of the Comintern. Attempts by the opposition to gain broader support among Soviet citizens failed. Stalin negotiated with leaders of the United Opposition, encouraging them to accept party decisions and renounce factions in exchange for a greater ability to express their views within the party. Bukharin, similarly, invited members of the United Opposition to swear off factions and ask the party for forgiveness. Many members of the United Opposition, accepting the compromise or fearing the consequences of continuing the fight, duly apologized and recommitted themselves against factionalism.

Despite these threats and promises, the United Opposition continued on. In September 1927, their new official platform was released. The platform argued that capitalist influences were seeping into the country through the NEP, criticized Stalin and the Bolshevik’s leadership, and bemoaned the lack of free discourse that was allowed within the party, ultimately concluding that the party was straying from true Leninism. The criticism of Stalin had grown from a more general criticism of the party leadership in 1926 to direct attacks on Stalin’s abilities and dictatorial tendencies by the end of 1927.

The United Opposition also actively worked to undermine Stalin and influence the general public. Demonstrations were organized, which attracted some minor public support. Members also illegally distributed Lenin's testament, a suppressed document in which Lenin expressed his distrust of Stalin and his support for Trotsky. Once again, this failed to attract significant support, and the Opposition remained the clear minority within the party. The police began to crack down on the United Opposition, arresting many members. Trotsky and Zinoviev lost much of their remaining influence when they were expelled from the Central Committee. What was left of the United Opposition was effectively destroyed at the Fifteenth Party Congress in December 1927, when all members of the opposition were expelled from the party.

Aftermath
Trotsky fled the USSR, and spent the remainder of his life in exile, though continuing to agitate against Stalin, primarily through his writings. Zinoviev and Kamenev would generally remain loyal to Stalin, although Bukharin attempted to ally with them against Stalin in 1929. While Bukharin received no help, Stalin would nevertheless use this meeting as proof of Kamenev and Zinoviev's continued plotting. Zinoviev and Kamenev were both sentenced to death and executed on Stalin’s orders in 1936, kicking off the Great Purge. In 1940, Trotsky was murdered in Mexico by a Soviet agent.