Communist Party of Ireland
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| Communist Party of Ireland | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Collective leadership (National Executive Committee). National chairperson: Lynda Walker. General secretary: Eugene McCartan |
| Founded | 1933 |
| Headquarters | 43 East Essex Street, Dublin 2 |
| Political Ideology | Marxist/Socialism |
| International Affiliation | World Communist Movement |
| European Affiliation | none |
| European Parliament Group | none |
| Colours | |
| Website | www.communistpartyofireland.ie |
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The Communist Party of Ireland (CPI; Irish: Páirtí Cumannach na hÉireann) is a small all-Ireland Marxist party. It was founded as the Socialist Party of Ireland, and was renamed the Communist Party in 1921 upon its affiliation to the Communist International. The party dissolved in 1924, but was refounded in 1933. In 1941 the Southern Area of the party suspended its activities, while the Northern Area continued to operate under the name Communist Party, Northern Ireland. The party was re-established in the South in 1948 under the name Irish Workers’ League, which changed its name in 1962 to Irish Workers’ Party. The two sections reunited as the Communist Party of Ireland in 1970.
In the early half of the 20th century the CPI suffered from the authoritarian and Catholic political culture of Ireland at that time; its premises were burned down on one occasion. (See the report by Eugene Downing, who was present.) The party provided the core of the Irish volunteers in the 1936–39 Spanish Civil War, losing a number of members who were killed in action.
The party, however, grew consistently through the 1960s and 70s and early 1980s. In the late 1980s membership declined significantly, but the party survived the 1990s and recently began rebuilding.
Historically the party belonged to the wing of international communism that looked to the Soviet Union for inspiration.
The party’s aim is to win the support of the majority of the Irish people for ending the capitalist system and for building socialism. It is actively opposed to neo-liberalism and to the European Union.
The general secretary of the party is Eugene McCartan. The Belfast District produces a weekly paper called Unity, while the Dublin District produces a monthly paper called Socialist Voice. There are also branches in Galway and Cork.
While it is a registered party, the CPI has rarely run candidates in elections and has never had electoral success. Despite this it has had a significant influence in the trade union movement and was actively involved in the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association. In addition, a number of prominent Irish Labour Party members were former members of the CPI.
Internationally, it maintains fraternal relations with other communist and workers’ parties and is a strong supporter of Cuba and Venezuela.
The CPI operates a bookshop in Dublin called Connolly Books. It has the support of a youth organisation, the Connolly Youth Movement. Both are named after the Irish socialist James Connolly.
| Political parties in the Republic of Ireland | |
|---|---|
| Represented in Dáil Éireann (166): | Fianna Fáil (78) • Fine Gael (32) • Labour Party (21) • Progressive Democrats (8) • Green Party (6) • Sinn Féin (5) • Socialist Party (1) |
| Represented in Seanad Éireann (60): | Fianna Fáil (29) • Fine Gael (15) • Labour Party (5) • Progressive Democrats (5) |
| Represented in the European Parliament (13 out of 732): | Fine Gael (5) • Fianna Fáil (4) • Labour Party (1) • Sinn Féin (1†) |
| Minor parties: | Workers Party • Socialist Workers Party • Communist Party of Ireland • Christian Solidarity Party • Republican Sinn Féin |
| † Sinn Féin has a second MEP from Northern Ireland. | |
| Political Parties in Northern Ireland | ||
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Democratic Unionist Party | Ulster Unionist Party | Sinn Féin | Social Democratic and Labour Party | Alliance Party of Northern Ireland | Progressive Unionist Party | UK Unionist Party | Northern Ireland Women's Coalition | Northern Ireland Unionist Party | Conservative Party | Green Party in Northern Ireland | Socialist Environmental Alliance | Workers Party | Ulster Third Way | Socialist Party | Communist Party of Ireland |
| Communist Parties in Europe | ||||||||||||||
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Categories: All-Ireland political parties | Irish communists | ComIntern sections | Communist parties in Europe | Political parties established in 1921 | Political parties established in 1933 | Political parties established in 1970 | Political parties in Northern Ireland | Republic of Ireland political parties