The Duma Committee and the Monarchy
chapter 23 The Duma Committee and the Monarchy Rodzianko and the Monarchy The Duma Committee was confronted with three crucial issues on the problem of power.The first was what to do with the monarchy, second, what government should be formed, and third, what relations the new government was to have with the Petrograd Soviet. And all these questions were closely connected with the power struggle within the Duma Committee. Two ambitious men, Rodzianko and Miliukov, struggled for the position of power, while Kerenskii, using his popularity among the insurgents, quietly extended his influence.1 Guchkov, though himself not officially a member of the Duma Committee, kept constant and close contact with the Duma Committee members, and sought to achieve his goal of a palace coup, taking advantage of the pressure of the revolution. Eventually at the crucial meeting on the night of 1–2 March, the Duma Committee made three critical decisions: first, it decided to seek Nicholas ii’s abdication, second, it decided to form a provisional government separate from the Duma Committee and the State Duma, and third, it decided to gain the support of the insurgents by gaining the approval of the Soviet Executive Committee for the Provisional Government. In the previous chapter, we saw the result of negotiations between the Duma Committee and the Soviet Executive Committee on the conditions of ‘transfer of power’. In this chapter, we will examine the question of the monarchy, and we will turn to the formation of the Provisional Government in Chapter 27. At the beginning Rodzianko, as chairman of the Duma as well as the head of the Duma Committee, enjoyed unquestioned leadership.
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