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Socialist Party of America

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Socialist Party of America

FoundersEugene Debs
Morris Hillquit
FoundedJuly 29, 1901
DissolvedDecember 31, 1972
Youth wingYoung People's Socialist League
Membership150,000 (May 1912)
Political orientationDemocratic socialism
Opportunist
Revisionist


The Socialist Party of America (SPA) was a left-wing political party in the United States. It was founded in 1901 and declined after a split in 1912 between opportunists and the left faction of the party.

History[edit | edit source]

Foundation[edit | edit source]

The Socialist Party of America was founded on July 29, 1901 in Indianapolis. 125 delegates were present at the founding convention: 70 from Morris Hillquit's faction of the Socialist Labor Party, 47 from the Social Democratic Party led by Eugene Debs, and eight from other groups.

The second convention of the party, held in May 1904, had 184 delegates from 35 states. By this point, the SPA had over 20,000 members and ran several newspapers in English and other languages.[1]

Peak[edit | edit source]

In 1908, the party created a national women's commission. By 1912, the Socialist Party had 120,000 members, a tenth of them in the state of Pennsylvania. The Socialist Party had socialists as mayors in 56 towns and cities, including Milwaukee, and Victor Berger was elected as the first socialist congressman. In 1913, the Young People's Socialist League was formed as the youth wing of the party.[2]

Split[edit | edit source]

In May 1912, the Socialist Party held a congress in Indianapolis. The right wing of the party, led by Hillquit, proposed an amendment to the party constitution that banned violence or sabotage against the bourgeoisie. The amendment was adopted by a vote of 190 to 91. The rightists tried to prevent Eugene Debs from running for president and kicked Bill Haywood out of the National Committee. In the first four months after the split, party membership dropped from 150,000 to 40,000. The Socialist Party continued to exist for decades after the split, but was highly opportunist. The left-wing members of the party, including C. E. Ruthenberg, went on to found the Communist Party USA.[2]

Suppression[edit | edit source]

During the First Red Scare, members of the KKK and American Legion attacked Socialists. As a result of this repression and defections to the new Communist Party, membership dropped to 12,000 in 1922.[3]

Attempted Trotskyist infiltration[edit | edit source]

After being purged from the CPUSA in 1928 and dissolving their newly formed Workers Party of the United States, James Cannon and Max Shachtman's followers joined the Socialist Party in 1936. Soon after, the SPA purged them, and they created the Socialist Workers Party.[4]

Criticism[edit | edit source]

The Socialist Party of America had a class reductionist policy towards the African diaspora in the United States. The party's leadership was also infiltrated by the petty bourgeoisie.[1] Lenin and the Second International criticized the party for its racism against Chinese immigrants.[2]

References[edit | edit source]