Trotsky and the liquidators expelled from the Party are putting more "mildly" what Nasha Zarya and Dyelo Zhizni [147] said plainly in reviling the illegal Party: in their view, it is outside the narrow illegal Party that the most "active " are, and it is with these that one must "link oneself". We -- the liquidators who have broken away -- are the active element; through us the "Party" must link itself with the masses.
   
The Party has said in no uncertain terms: in leading the economic struggle, the Social-Democratic Party nuclei
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must co-operate with the trade unions, with the Social-Democratic nuclei in them, and with individual leaders of the trade union movement. Or, in the Duma election campaign, it is essential that the unions should march abreast of the Party. This is clear, precise and easy to understand. What the liquidators are advocating instead is a hazy "co-ordination" of the Party's work in general with the "non-political", i.e., non-Party, unions.
   
P. B. Axelrod supplied Trotsky with liquidationist ideas. Trotsky advised Axelrod, after the latter's sad reverses in Nasha Zarya, to cover up those ideas with phrases that would muddle them up.
   
Nobody will be deceived by this company. The liquidationist conference will teach the workers to look more closely into the meaning of evasive phraseology. That conference has nothing to give the workers apart from this lesson, which is bitter and uninteresting but not useless in bourgeois society.
   
We have studied the ideas of liberal labour policy attired in Levitsky's everyday clothes; it is not difficult to recognise them in Trotsky's gaudy apparel as well.
   
The Party 's views on the illegal organisation and its legal work stand out more and more impressively when compared with all that hypocritical masquerading.