Prior to the foundation of the CPSU many revolutionary
socialists belonged to the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party. It was the
RSDLP that had originally split into Bolshevik (majority) and Menshevik
(minority) factions in 1903.
An early version of Pravda appeared that year,
although at the time it was a journal without political affiliation. Its
editorial board gradually began to include active members of the RSDLP and, by
1909 when its headquarters moved to Vienna ,
the board was dominated by Bolsheviks under the editorship of Leon Trotsky.
The
Central Committee of the RSDLP had first suggested making Pravda its official
mouthpiece in 1910, but it wasn’t until the Mensheviks were expelled from the
party in January 1912 that this happened. The Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin
moved the paper to St Petersburg and the first edition was published on 5 May,
the anniversary of Karl Marx’s birth.
The first edition of the newspaper
consisted of just four pages, and focused on workers’ issues. As its circulation
increased to as many as 60,000 copies by July 1914, Pravda was shut down by the
tsarist government censors.
Despite this suppression, Pravda continued to be
printed under a serious of pseudonyms. The newspaper formally reopened
following the February Revolution of 1917 and by 15 March it was being
co-edited by Joseph Stalin following his return from exile.
Pravda remained the
official newspaper of the Soviet Communist Party until it was abolished in
1991. The newspaper continues to exist, albeit not as a daily publication.
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