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Communist Party of Great Britain

The Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) was a political party in the United Kingdom, which existed from 1920 to 1991.

The party was founded in 1920 after the Third International decided that greater attempts should be made to establish communist parties across the world. The CPGB was formed by the merger of two smaller Marxist parties, and rode on the brief wave of pollitical radicalism in Britain, which followed the First World War and the Russian Revolution. Amongst the communist party's most important founders was Harry Pollitt[?].

Initially the CPGB tried to channel its activities through the Labour Party which at this time operated as a federation of left-wing bodies. However, despite the support of notable figures (such as the Independent Labour Party leader, James Maxton) the Labour Party decided against the inclusion of Communists within their ranks.

Throughout the 1920s and most of the 1930s, instead of building a party based on mass membership, the CPGB decided to follow the Leninist doctrine that communist parties should be run by a small revolutionary elite, excluding all but the ultra-commited. The CPGB also decided that it would follow directives issued from Moscow whether or not they applied to British circumstances.

This succeeded in isolating the CPGB from the working classes who they were supposedly there to represent, and drove away potential recruits, most of whom joined the mainstream Labour Party. It was also largely responsible for the fact that communism in Britain, unlike many other European countries, never became a significant political force. The party loosened its ties to Moscow in the late 1930s, after Stalin signed the non-aggression pact with Hitler.

The CPGB however, succeeded in gaining some localised support in a few areas, mostly from parts of industrial Scotland, and also in poor areas of East London

In the 1935 general election[?] William Gallacher[?] was elected as the communist party's first MP for West Fife in Scotland.

The CPGB reached its peak in the 1940s when at the 1945 general election[?], the communist party recieved 103,000 votes, and two Communists were elected as members of parliament (one of whom was the aforementioned Gallacher), although both lost their seats at the 1951 general election[?].

The party's membership peaked during the 1940s reaching around 60,000. However, the British Communist party was still tiny compared to its continental European counterparts. The French Communist Party[?] for instance had 800,000 members, and the Italian Communist Party had 1.7 million members.

The 1950s anti-communist uprisings in Hungary and East Germany caused support for the Communist Party to dwindle. Some members defected to the Independent Labour Party due to this. The last strong electoral performance of the CPGB was in the February 1974 General Election[?] in Clydebank[?] where candidate Jimmy Reid[?] won almost 6,000 votes, but even this was really a personal vote for Reid who was a prominent local trade union leader.

From the late 1960s onwards the party was heavily factionalised between those who wanted to stay loyal to the line of the Third International and those who wanted a policy independent of the Soviet Union, described as eurocommunism. This internal argument resulted in the eventual triumph of the eurocommunists, so much so that the CPGB Central Executive Committee voted to show their disapproval at the Soviet Union's invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968.

This eurocommunist grip on the CPGB prompted a group of Stalinists to establish the New Communist Party of Britain[?] in 1977. There was a further split in 1985 when Third International loyalists on the editorial board of the party newspaper the Morning Star established a breakaway Communist Party of Britain[?].

In 1991 when the Soviet Union broke up, the CPGB decided to disband, and renamed itself Democratic Left a left-leaning political think-tank rather than a political party. A "Communist Party of Great Britain" still exists but it is a small splinter grouping of the former CPGB. In Scotland some members established the Communist Party of Scotland[?].

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