Were the collegial forms of government in Switzerland and first world war Ukraine inspired by the Directory of the French revolution?

ChatGPT said:

That’s a fascinating question. The collegial forms of government in Switzerland, Soviet Ukraine during the First World War period, and the French Directory all featured elements of collective executive power — but their inspirations and ideological underpinnings differ, though there are some indirect influences.

Here’s a breakdown:


1. French Directory (1795–1799)

  • Structure: The Directory was a five-man executive government, established after the fall of the Jacobin-led Committee of Public Safety. It aimed to avoid concentration of power and promote moderation after the Terror.
  • Ideological Basis: It was based on liberal constitutionalism, separation of powers, and fear of both royalism and radical populism.
  • Legacy: It was seen as an attempt to prevent dictatorship, but ultimately failed and was overthrown by Napoleon.

2. Switzerland

  • Long-standing Collegial Tradition: Swiss collective governance predates the French Directory by centuries. The Swiss Confederation was historically a loose alliance of cantons, each with considerable autonomy, governed through landsgemeinde (popular assemblies) or small councils.
  • Federal Council (1848–present): The Swiss Federal Council, a seven-member collegial executive, was formally established in the modern Swiss Constitution of 1848, influenced by both:
    • Enlightenment and liberal ideas (like separation of powers),
    • And indigenous Swiss traditions of decentralized, non-personalist rule.
  • Connection to the Directory? Not direct. The Swiss model wasn’t inspired by the French Directory, but they share a mutual distrust of singular executive power, likely shaped by similar Enlightenment ideals. If anything, the Swiss system is more stable and institutionalized.

3. Soviet Ukraine during WWI / Revolution (1917–1921)

  • Background: Soviet Ukraine underwent several regime changes during and after WWI. At different points, the Ukrainian People’s Republic, the Hetmanate, and Soviet regimes vied for power.
  • Soviet Model: The Bolshevik approach to governance was based on collective leadership through soviets (workers’ councils), party committees, and collegial organs at multiple levels.
  • Collegiality in Soviet Ukraine: Yes, governments such as the All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee functioned as collective organs. The Council of People’s Commissars (Sovnarkom) in both Russia and Ukraine were nominally collegial.
  • Connection to the Directory? No direct inspiration. The Soviet form of collegial government was rooted in Marxist-Leninist ideology, emphasizing proletarian rule and collective leadership, not liberal constitutionalism like the French Directory.

Summary Comparison

GovernmentTime PeriodCollegial?Inspired by French Directory?Real Influences
French Directory1795–1799YesEnlightenment, fear of autocracy
SwitzerlandLongstanding (esp. 1848–)YesNot directlySwiss cantonal traditions, liberalism
Soviet Ukraine1917–1921YesNoMarxism-Leninism, Soviet Russia

Conclusion

While all three used collegial executive structures, the French Directory wasn’t a direct inspiration for either Switzerland or Soviet Ukraine. Rather, the similarities arise from broader currents:

  • In Switzerland, from longstanding federal-democratic traditions.
  • In Soviet Ukraine, from Bolshevik revolutionary collectivism.
  • In France, from a post-Terror reaction against centralized tyranny.

So: similar forms, different roots.

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