Why Did Joseph Stalin Rise To Power

Words: 548
Pages: 3

Stalin did not stop by eliminating Trotsky from the power position within the Party. In 1927, he removed the left-wing Communists old Bolsheviks such as Kamenev and Zinoviev who had opposed the New Economic Policy - from the Politburo. Two years later, he claimed that the NEP was un-communist, and got right-wing Communists such as Rykov and Tomsky thrown out of the Politburo.

REASONS FOR STALIN APPROPRIATING THE POWER AFTER LENIN
The main reasons for Stalin’s appropriation of the supreme power in Russia were that the Bolsheviks did not succeed to export socialist revolution to other countries: that Communist Party’s apparatus become extremely bureaucratic and the growing opposition to the power of intellectuals which had, as its base, the working class. In particular, ruling the new regime in one separate country demanded
…show more content…
Most of the Bolsheviks were unable to run administrative services, more used to clandestine operations. The only powerful Bolshevik capable to cope with the bureaucratic system was Stalin. That was the decisive factor of his rise to power. Furthermore, he used his control over the apparatus to nominate his allies to every important Party’s positions. However, Stalin’s personality played also an important role. He was a team player, a pleasant company, never criticized Lenin and kept his real ambitions well hidden from everybody including Lenin. Most probably, Stalin considered himself as Lenin’s disciple and the person who was supposed to endorse and cultivate Lenin’s legacy. Lenin appreciated Stalin as a good organizer and trusted him with multiple high profile nominations within the Party apparatus.