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The Party Unit is the lowest level of organization and consists of at least three members, including a Unit Leader, Unit Secretary, and Unit Leader of Membership and Recruitment. Larger units may also have a Unit Leader of Agitprop, Unit Leader of Finance and Economic Development, and a Unit ''Burning Spear'' Agent.<ref name=":0" />
The Party Unit is the lowest level of organization and consists of at least three members, including a Unit Leader, Unit Secretary, and Unit Leader of Membership and Recruitment. Larger units may also have a Unit Leader of Agitprop, Unit Leader of Finance and Economic Development, and a Unit ''Burning Spear'' Agent.<ref name=":0" />
== Demands ==
The APSP has 14 demands in its platform:<ref>{{News citation|newspaper=African People's Socialist Party|title=What We Want – What We Believe|date=1979-09-23|url=https://apspuhuru.org/about/platform/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220101232639/https://apspuhuru.org/about/platform/|archive-date=2022-01-01|retrieved=2022-07-29}}</ref>
# Peace, dignity, and the right for Africans to build a prosperous life through their own labor and in their own interests
# Economic development and creative and productive employment for African people
# An end to taxation of Black people by the U.S. government
# Free speech and free political association
# The right to political and economic association with Africans and other peoples
# Immediate release of all Black people from U.S. prisons
# Amnesty for all African political prisoners and prisoners of war
# Immediate withdrawal of U.S. police from Black communities
# An end to the political and social oppression and economic exploitation of African women
# Building an African People's Liberation Army
# Reparations from the United States and [[Europe|European]] countries
# An end to U.S. and European interference against Africa and African people
# An end to colonial domination of African people in the United States
# Liberation and unification of Africa under a socialist government


== Repression ==
== Repression ==

Revision as of 23:03, 29 July 2022

African People's Socialist Party

ChairmanOmali Yeshitela
FoundedMay 1972
NewspaperThe Burning Spear


The African People's Socialist Party (APSP) is a socialist and pan-Africanist political party in the United States. It seeks to create a united socialist state for all of Africa.[1]

History

The African People's Socialist Party was founded in May 1972 by Omali Yeshitela. It formed from a merger of three organizations: the Junta of Militant Organizations, the Black Rights Fighters from Fort Myers, and the Black Study Group from Gainsville. In 1976, the APSP formed the African People's Solidarity Committee and allowed white proletarians to join the party. By 1979, the APSP had spread to 15 states and 26 cities.

In 1981, the APSP moved its headquarters to Oakland, California, which was also the headquarters of the Black Panthers. In 1982, the party held its first congress and a tribunal for reparations to New Afrikans.[2]

Structure

National level

The APSP holds a National Party Congress every five years and the congress elects the National Central Committee (NCC). The National Central Committee meets four times a year and can call additional meetings with a one-third vote.The NCC includes a chairperson, and 13 other officers. All officers are elected except the National Director of Security, who is appointed by the Chairperson. The National Party Congress can amend the party constitution with a two-thirds vote.

The Political Bureau consists of six members who are also part of the NCC: the Chairperson, Deputy Chairperson, Secretary General, and National Directors of Agitation and Propaganda, Organization, and Recruitment and Membership. The Political Bureau meets at least eight times a year.[1]

Regional level

The APSP holds regional congresses once every three years. The six regions are Northeast, Northwest, Southeast, Southwest, Midwest, and West. The regional congress elects a regional committee of ten officers who meet four times per year.[1]

Local level

Each local party organization has six voting members and a security organizer. Local officers serve one-year terms.

The Party Unit is the lowest level of organization and consists of at least three members, including a Unit Leader, Unit Secretary, and Unit Leader of Membership and Recruitment. Larger units may also have a Unit Leader of Agitprop, Unit Leader of Finance and Economic Development, and a Unit Burning Spear Agent.[1]

Demands

The APSP has 14 demands in its platform:[3]

  1. Peace, dignity, and the right for Africans to build a prosperous life through their own labor and in their own interests
  2. Economic development and creative and productive employment for African people
  3. An end to taxation of Black people by the U.S. government
  4. Free speech and free political association
  5. The right to political and economic association with Africans and other peoples
  6. Immediate release of all Black people from U.S. prisons
  7. Amnesty for all African political prisoners and prisoners of war
  8. Immediate withdrawal of U.S. police from Black communities
  9. An end to the political and social oppression and economic exploitation of African women
  10. Building an African People's Liberation Army
  11. Reparations from the United States and European countries
  12. An end to U.S. and European interference against Africa and African people
  13. An end to colonial domination of African people in the United States
  14. Liberation and unification of Africa under a socialist government

Repression

In January 1973, a Central Committee member was assassinated by a car crash. Chairman Yeshitela was arrested in May 1973 and imprisoned for two months.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "APSP Constitution" (2013-12-09). African People's Socialist Party. Archived from the original on 2022-01-01. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "History". African People's Socialist Party. Archived from the original on 2022-01-01. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  3. "What We Want – What We Believe" (1979-09-23). African People's Socialist Party. Archived from the original on 2022-01-01. Retrieved 2022-07-29.