fuser wrote:But we are not trying to get support for communism but "socialism" the transitory period and we do have blueprint for that, for example Soviet Democracy
historically, soviet democracy was far from perfect. Once assuming power in October 1917, the Petrograd Soviet formed the PCheka (or Petrograd Cheka) which was designed to be a temporary means to combat counterrevolution in Petrograd.
The PCheka was less harsh than the national VCheka based in Moscow, but with Uritsky's assassination the Cheka, which had hitherto remained more moderate under Uritsky's leadership, became an integral part of the Red Terror in Petrograd.
The Cheka did on the other hand foil several serious counterrevolutionary plots, having raided the British Embassy which had become the base of for foreign British agents, chiefly Cromie who sought out help from domestic counterrevolutionaries in a bid to either install a right-wing military dictatorship or a possible restoration of the monarchy.
It is worth noting that in contrast to the future KGB, the Cheka was highly decentralized and was based inside the soviets on a district-by-district basis. But that in no way mitigated the authoritarian aspect of the Cheka, which evolved into a more centralized NKVD under Stalin.
Besides the Cheka, the district soviets themselves gradually became centralized around the overarching Petrograd Soviet in 1918 when soviet power was most threatened.
However, for a time the district soviets managed to guard their independence jealously but only for a time.
In taking up municipal services in Petrograd, a bureaucracy developed. With the ouster of all other parties from the soviets, the soviets themselves lost their multiparty status and in effect had become fully Bolshevised by 1918.
Not to mention the fact that as the crisis in 1918's Petrograd developed further, the Bolsheviks and Left SR Parties developed a bureaucracy outside and inside the soviets.
By the time of the first anniversary of the October Revolution held in Petrograd, the nascent bureaucracy was clearly in place and separated from the masses.
The Chinese Revolution on the other hand had also developed a bureaucracy, which at first was rather small and consisted of poor peasants at the village level in the form of communist party branches.
It is worth noting that the Communist Party of China (CPC) took steps to cleanse its ranks of impurities (in the form of self-criticism of cadres), as there was by 1948 serious issues of cadres either becoming corrupt or becoming authoritarian in their day-to-day relations with the villagers.
A central problem of modern, 21st-century Marxists is how to mitigate bureaucracy (and the corruption, authoritarianism, isolation from the masses that follows the inevitable creation of a bureaucracy, even a small one), something which handicapped the Russian and Chinese attempts at building socialism in the 20th century.
IMHO democratic procedure and/or habits should be encouraged in a future socialist society, be it multiparty or single-party.
The Chinese Revolution of 1949 put a lot of emphasis on popular power, and there were serious attempts before and during the Cultural Revolution to mitigate the bureaucracy which had become prevalent in Chinese society then.
Although I'm not necessarily against the theory of the vanguard party, I believe that multiparty democracy should exist alongside popular power (i.e. administrative power exercised through councils at the local urban and/or rural level)
democracy is indispensable to socialism, IMHO.