The government was indeed aware of the classes being developed in the urban centers and grew weary but still the thought of destroying this foreign investment that fed them was indeed feared.
Politicized Workforce.
The urban workforce that fed the government was growing politically and so the political aspect was growing to be an issue that was led to the Russian revolution. The peasants and the urban workforce were always linked and the growth of politics within this workforce led them to be quickly turned against the government especially the restrictions that the government had set against their protests and retaliations. The government's actions towards these politicized lot was to form legal and neutered trade unions that would replace these banned equivalent. The Russian revolution fell heavily on the government considering the fact that the workforce from the urban centers participated fully in the revolution among the major participants. Political instability that had resulted from the politicizing of the workforce was among the major drives that fostered the Russian revolution into being.
Lack of Government Representation .
The Romanov family, also referred to as the royal family, had ruled over the empire for a minimum of three centuries and in the nineteenth century, the ruler was known as Tsar (Fiehn, Corin & School's History Project, 2011). The royal family has ruled and did not have any form of representation among the people considering that Tsar easily ignored the Duma, a body that was elected in the year 1905. The emperor thwarted any form of opposition by employing the secret police forces and so the freedom of expression was really limited and this included the spread of information through the newspaper, and even books. The rebellion against the royal family was totally banned by the government and so the ones seeking reform of the government were pushed to the limits.