Revolutionary Communist League (France) Politicians
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Revolutionary Communist League (France) Politicians
The Revolutionary Communist League can refer to one of several different parties: * Japan Revolutionary Communist League * Revolutionary Communist League (France) * Revolutionary Communist League (Belgium) * Revolutionary Communist League (Austria) ''Revolutionäre Kommunistische Liga'' * Revolutionary Communist League (Iceland) * Revolutionary Communist League (India) * Revolutionary Communist League (Israel) ''Ha-Liga Ha-Komunistit Ha-Mahapchanit'' (an offshoot of Matzpen) * Revolutionary Communist League (Italy) ''Lega Comunista Rivoluzionaria'' * Revolutionary Communist League (Mexico) ''Liga Communista Revolutionario'' * Revolutionary Communist League (Palestine) * Revolutionary Communist League (Spain) ''Liga Comunista Revolucionaria'' * Socialist Equality Party (Sri Lanka), originally known as the Revolutionary Communist League * Revolutionary Communist League (UK), a.k.a. The Chartists * Revolutionary Communist League of Britain * Revolutionary Communist League (Intern ...
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Japan Revolutionary Communist League
The is a Trotskyist group in Japan. History Several small groups split from the Japanese Communist Party (JCP) following the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. They attended a congress in 1957 and agreed to unite as the JRCL. Although Japan had no history of Trotskyist organisations, they affiliated with the International Secretariat of the Fourth International, while also making contact with the Socialist Workers Party (U.S.), U.S. Socialist Workers Party.Robert Jackson Alexander, "International Trotskyism, 1929-1985: a documented analysis of the movement", pp.599-601 Many of the organisation's founding members were active in the Zengakuren, All-Japan Federation of Student Autonomous Associations, and disagreed with the JCP policy forbidding the student group from developing any political lines distinct from the party. Other members initially attempted to work within the JCP, but leading member Kyoji Nishi was expelled in 1958. The following year, the party split, with dissidents i ...
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Revolutionary Communist League (Spain)
Revolutionary Communist League (in Spanish: ''Liga Comunista Revolucionaria'' (LCR), in Basque: ''Liga Komunista Iraultzailea'', in Catalan: ''Lliga Comunista Revolucionària'', in Galician: ''Liga Comunista Revolucionaria'') was a political party in Spain. It was founded in 1971 by members of the Catalan group ''Comunisme'', a split of the Popular Liberation Front (FLP). The LCR had a trotskyist ideology, adopting more heterodox political positions in the 1980s. History Foundation and clandestinity The LCR was founded in 1971 by members of the Catalan group ''Communisme'', a split of the Popular Liberation Front (PLF or Felipe). It was the Spanish section of the Fourth International (post-reunification), one of the fractions of the Trotskyist Fourth International. The LCR had the purpose of being a revolutionary party that rejected class collaboration and advocated a model of territorial organization based in a confederation of republics, recognizing of the right of self ...
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Communist League (other)
Communist League or League of Communists may refer to: * Communist League, led by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels * Communist League of America * Communist League (Australia) (1972–1976) * Communist League (Austria) * Communist League (Brazil) * Communist League (Canada) * Communist League (Denmark) * League of Communists (Finland) * Communist League (France, 1930) * Communist League (France, 1974) * Communist League (Iceland) * Communist League of India (Marxist–Leninist) * Communist League (India, 1931) * Communist League (India, 1934) * Communist League (India, 1971) * Communist League (Japan) * Communist League of Luxemburg * Communist League (Nepal) * Communist League (New Zealand) * Communist League (Sweden) * Communist League (West Germany) * Communist League of West Germany * Communist League of Xinjiang * League of Communists of Yugoslavia United Kingdom * Communist League (UK, 1919), an anarchist communist group * Communist League (UK, 1932), the fi ...
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Revolutionary Communist Party (other)
Revolutionary Communist Party may refer to: Active *Revolutionary Communist Party (Argentina) * Revolutionary Communist Party (Brazil) *Voltaic Revolutionary Communist Party * Revolutionary Communist Party of China * Revolutionary Communist Party of India * Revolutionary Communist Party of Ivory Coast * Revolutionary Communist Party (Spain) * Revolutionary Communist Party of Turkey * Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (Marxist–Leninist) * Revolutionary Communist Party, USA *Various national sections of the Revolutionary Communist International Defunct * Revolutionary Communist Party (Belgium) * Revolutionary Communist Party (Chile) * Revolutionary Communist Party (India) * Revolutionary Communist Party of India (Das) *Revolutionary Communist Party of India (Tagore) The Revolutionary Communist Party of India, also known as RCPI (Tagore), was a political party in India, led by Saumyendranath Tagore. RCPI (Tagore) emerged from a split in the Revolutionary Communist Party ...
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Revolutionary Communist Group (other)
Revolutionary Communist Group is the name of several political parties: * Revolutionary Communist Group (Algeria) * Revolutionary Communist Group of Colombia * Revolutionary Communist Group (Italy) * Revolutionary Communist Group (Lebanon) * Revolutionary Communist Group (Philippines) * Revolutionary Communist Group (UK) See also * Internationalist Revolutionary Communist Group * Revolutionary Communist League (other) * Revolutionary Communist Party (other) Revolutionary Communist Party may refer to: Active *Revolutionary Communist Party (Argentina) * Revolutionary Communist Party (Brazil) *Voltaic Revolutionary Communist Party * Revolutionary Communist Party of China * Revolutionary Communist Party o ... {{disambig Political party disambiguation pages ...
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Revolutionary Communist League (Marxist-Leninist-Mao Tse-tung Thought)
The Congress of Afrikan people (CAP) was a Black nationalist and Maoist organization in the United States from 1970 to 1980. CAP was founded in 1970. CAP's activities illustrate the fluidity and changing nature of black radicalism in this period. In 1974, CAP became the Revolutionary Communist League (Marxist-Leninist-Mao Tse-tung Thought), led by Amiri Baraka Amiri Baraka (born Everett Leroy Jones; October 7, 1934 – January 9, 2014), previously known as LeRoi Jones and Imamu Amear Baraka, was an American writer of poetry, drama, fiction, essays, and music criticism. He was the author of numerous b .... In 1980, the RCL merged into the League of Revolutionary Struggle (Marxist-Leninist). When this group split, some former CAP members joined the Freedom Road Socialist Organization. References External links {{Authority control 1980 disestablishments in the United States African and Black nationalism in the United States Defunct Maoist parties in the United S ...
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Revolutionary Communist League (Internationalist)
The Revolutionary Communist League (Internationalist) was a small Trotskyist group in the US which existed in various forms between 1968 and the mid 1990s. History Though they considered their ideological origins to be in the "Global Class War Tendency" which was led by Sam Marcy and Vincent Copeland within the Socialist Workers Party from 1948–1959, organizationally it began as a splinter of the Spartacist League in 1968. This first incarnation was simply known as the Revolutionary Communist League, and had a more "activist" orientation than the SL. They collaborated with the Workers World Party, Youth Against War and Fascism and other New Left elements within a united front group called the Coalition for an Anti-imperialist Movement or CO-AIM. The original RCL merged with the WWP later that year. However they quickly found the WWP internal atmosphere "stultifying" and its commitment to world revolution "decayed beyond belief". They began to drift out during 1971 and ...
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Revolutionary Communist League Of Britain
The Revolutionary Communist League of Britain was a Maoist political party in Great Britain, formed in 1977. History The origins of the RCLB lie in the Joint Committee of Communists, founded in 1968 by former Communist Party of Great Britain members and from various youth organisations. In 1969, the group renamed itself the Communist Federation of Britain (Marxist-Leninist), and soon became the main rival of the Communist Party of Britain (Marxist-Leninist). In 1977, the 9-member Communist Unity Association (Marxist-Leninist) merged with the group, which renamed itself the ''Revolutionary Communist League'', and in 1980, the Communist Workers' Movement and Birmingham Communist Association also joined. Like many Maoist organisations, the RCL was regularly convulsed by internal disputes and splits. In 1979 the organisation's secretary and some others (the so-called 'Anti-League Faction') were expelled due after they opposed the majority line that Soviet social-imperialism rath ...
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Revolutionary Communist League (UK)
The Revolutionary Communist League was a small Trotskyist group in Britain. It was founded in 1970 by two small groups, one who split from International Marxist Group, after failing to persuade the group to turn away from work in the student movement and towards the trade unions and entryism in the Labour Party, and one which had split from Militant.Andrew Hosken (2008), ''Ken: The Ups and Downs of Ken Livingstone'', Arcadia Books The League promoted the ''Socialist Charter'' initiative of Tribunite Labour MPs which published the ''Chartist'' paper, and were consequently nicknamed the Chartists. They took over this initiative, and based their work around the Charter on a conception of transitional politics taken from Leon Trotsky. They were also active around The Soldiers' Charter, an attempt to influence the armed forces. By 1973, most of the group were moving to the right, while others (including Al Richardson) had left. A split developed and the Right of the group kept ...
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Socialist Equality Party (Sri Lanka)
The Socialist Equality Party is a Trotskyist political party in Sri Lanka. It was founded in 1968 as the Revolutionary Communist League by former student members of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (Revolutionary) who joined the International Committee of the Fourth International. They remained loyal to Gerry Healy until the majority of the International split from his organisation. Since the death of its founder and leader Keerthi Balasooriya in December 1987, Wije Dias assumed the leadership. In 1996, it changed its name to the Socialist Equality Party, in line with other members of the surviving ICFI. In the 2005 Sri Lankan presidential election, the party's candidate, Wije Dias, came 11th of 13 candidates, with 3,500 votes (0.04%). It publishes analyses on political, economic and other issues, and runs election campaigns via the World Socialist Web Site. On War in Sri Lanka It has consistently opposed the war in Sri Lanka and according to its own words it opposes "racism, cap ...
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Revolutionary Communist League (Palestine)
The Revolutionary Communist League (RCL) or was a Trotskyist party in Mandatory Palestine in the late 1930s and 1940s. It was built out of three components: exiled German Jewish members of Heinrich Brandler’s KPO (Communist Party Opposition – which emerged from the Right Opposition within the Comintern) who became supporters of the International Left Opposition; youth in the '' Hugim Marxistiim'' (Marxist Circles), the youth section of a wing of Left Poale Zion, which at the time was linked to the 'centrist' London Bureau; and elements coming from the left Zionist kibbutz movement, Hashomer Hatzair, which was also linked to the London Bureau. Later, in the 1940s, they were joined by Jabra Nicola, an Arab Communist who broke with the Palestine Communist Party over the Molotov–Ribbentrop pact. The published a newspaper, (Voice of the Class).A long extract from a 1948 edition, republished in ''Fourth International'', can be found i"Arab-Jewish workers' joint struggles pri ...
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Revolutionary Communist League (France)
The Revolutionary Communist League (; LCR) was a Trotskyist political party in France. It was the French section of the Fourth International (post-reunification). It published the weekly newspaper ''Rouge'' and the journal ''Critique communiste''. Established in 1974, it became the leading party of the French far-left in the 2000s. It officially abolished itself on 5 February 2009 to merge with smaller factions of the far-left and form a New Anticapitalist Party. History It was founded in 1974, after its forerunner the Communist League (Ligue Communiste) was banned in 1973. The Communist League was itself founded in 1969 after the Revolutionary Communist Youth (Jeunesses Communistes Révolutionnaires), which was banned in 1968, had merged with Pierre Frank's Internationalist Communist Party. The group included members of other Trotskyist tendencies who were able to organise openly within its ranks to gain support for their views. Its official spokespersons were Alain Kriv ...
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