The role of Lenin in the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 Since March 1917, the Russian revolution was not completed. The emperor was overthrown and the power and responsibility of the Russian government was "transmitted" to the state government and workers Soviet, Petrograd's most powerful Soviets. In November 1917, the Second Revolution, the Bolshevik Revolution was planned. The evidence surrounding the Bolshevik revolution is not completely reliable, but it is widely believed that the events of November 1917 were explained by Bolshevik and not boasted.
In Russia, the Bolshevik Party (Lenin was called "Pioneer of Proletariat") promoted the power of the Soviets in October 's revolution in 1917. Through 1917, Lenin believed that the provisional government of Russia did not represent the interests of proletariat, because in his estimation they represented the "bourgeois dictatorship". He believes that they denied the prominent position of the democratic organization Soviets, as they continue to post democratic elections.
Lenin's role in the evolution of the Bolshevik thought eventually drove Russia into a revolution in October 1917. Karl Bolshevik's success was due to Lenin's leader, a strict organization, a clear ideology, and Lenin's willingness to act. But Fitzpatrick argues that the repetition of the strict tradition of Lenin 's party organization and discipline is not the reason why Bolshevik was successful in the 1917 revolution. On the contrary, Bolshevik showed a fundamental approach of refusing to establish an alliance with other parties with enthusiasm for the provisional government and the proletarian revolution. Menshevik and the Socialist Revolutionary Party did not agree with Lenin's position of aggressively instigating the socialist revolution. They also oppose having a highly organized party structure like Bolshevik.
Since the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, the Lenin political party and the Bolshevik party wanted to develop socialism and ultimately establish a communist economic regime. Marxism - The foundation of industrialization in the framework of Leninism is the development of capitalism as the driving force of progress and the establishment of the economic foundation of socialism. Only on this basis, industrial socialism and communism can be established. By contrast, from the standpoint of classical theory and neoclassical economic theory, the prerequisite for industrialization is the emergence of modern agriculture that can support capital accumulation, industry development, demographic change, and changes in Russia's economic structure . It is on the path of sustained economic growth