There is such a party!

is a catch phrase allegedly uttered by Vladimir Lenin on June 17, 1917[1] at the First All–Russian Congress of Soviets in response to the thesis of the Minister of the Provisional Government Irakli Tsereteli.

[2][3] After the February Revolution, the leaders of the Socialist Mensheviks Fedor Dan, Mikhail Lieber, Irakli Tsereteli and Nikolay Chkheidze were members of the Petrograd Soviet and in this capacity advocated active cooperation between the Soviet and the Provisional Government.

Thus, the Minister of Agriculture, Socialist Revolutionary Viktor Chernov, legalized the right of peasants to uncultivated land, despite the protests of the landowners; Social Democrat Labor Minister Matvey Skobelev introduced compulsory health insurance for industrial workers, the right of trade unions to resolve labor disputes in court, and other measures that significantly alleviated the situation of workers.

[5] Meanwhile, the situation in the country continued to deteriorate steadily: desertions were gaining momentum in the army; in the countryside, chaos and lawlessness reigned, accompanied by self–seizure of land and the destruction of property of landowners.

You can laugh as much as you like, but if a citizen minister puts us in front of this question next to the right–wing party, he will receive a proper answer.According to Robert Service, Lenin's words drew thunderous applause among the Bolsheviks, but the overwhelming majority of the congress participants did not take them seriously, there was a laugh in the hall[7] (in the above transcript there is "laughter, applause" after Lenin's words).

I already had a chance at the All–Russian Congress of Soviets to answer with a categorical statement to this question in one remark that I happened to shout from my seat during one of Tsereteli's ministerial speeches".

A wonderful batch of ... drugs from Thailand!And when the archivist began to regret his untimely interrupted career, Moisey with difficulty suppressed the desire to shout the famous – "There is such a party!

Evgeny Kibrik. "There is Such a Party!", 1947