LENIN ON ORGANIZATION a German Comrade Akimov and somewhat greater than a German Comrade Egorov. Comrade Wolfgang Heine took up the campaign in the “Socialist Monthly” with no less pomp than Comrade Axelrod in the new “Iskra.” “Democratic Notes on the Gohre Incident”—how precious is the title alone (Sozialistische Monatsheft,” No. 4). The contents are no less weighty. Comrade W. Heine protests against “the attempt against the autonomy of the electoral constituency,” he insists upon ‘the democratic principle,” he objects to the interference of “an appointed authority” (i. e. the Central Committee of the Party) in the free elec- tion of the delegates of the people. It is not only a question of a chance incident, Comrade W. Heine informs us, but of a “general tendency towards bu- reaucracy and centralism within the Party,” a ten- dency which has long made itself felt, but which has now become especially dangerous. It must be “recognized in principle that the local Party organ- izations are the shapers of their own life (a plagiar- ism on the brochure of Comrade Martov, “Once More in the Minority’). One “must not get used to the idea that all important political decisions are to proceed from one centre’; the Party must be warned against “the doctrinaire policy which has lost all contact with life” (appropriated from the speech of Comrade Martov at the Party congress to the effect that “life demands its own”). ¢. .. If we probe to the root of things,” Comrade W. Heine goes on to broaden his argument, “and forget 177