Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Communist Party of Sweden (1995)

From ProleWiki, the proletarian encyclopedia
More languages
(Redirected from The Communist Labor Party)
Communist Party of Sweden

Sveriges Kommunistiska Parti
AbbreviationSKP
ChairmanAndreas Sörensen
SecretaryHåkan Jönsson
International SecretaryKarl Gunnarsson
TreasurerIlya Zorkhin-Nilsson
Founded1995
NewspaperRiktpunkt
Youth wingYoung Communist League of Sweden
Political orientationMarxism-Leninism
International affiliationIMCWP
Book PublisherFRAM
Website
skp.se

The Communist Party of Sweden (SKP) is a communist party in Sweden founded in 1995. It opposes imperialism and Sweden's potential membership in NATO.[1]

Timeline[2][edit | edit source]

1848 – in the spring: The first communist societies are formed.

Dec: The Communist Manifesto is published in Swedish.

1881 – 6 Nov: August Palm gives the first socialist lecture in Sweden.

1882 – March 4: The first socialist newspaper, Folkviljan, begins to be published.

1886 – 27 – 29 August: First Scandinavian Labor Congress in Gothenburg declares adherence to socialism.

1888 – January 6 – 8: The South Swedish Labor Congress in Malmö adopts a Marxist program.

1889 – April 19 – 22: Sweden's Social Democratic Workers' Party is formed.

1890 – 1 May: the first May demonstrations in Sweden.

1898 – 5 – 7 August: The National Organization (LO) is formed.

1902 – May 15. General strike for democratic suffrage.

1903 – March 24: Sweden's Social Democratic Youth League is formed.

1906 – October 2: The newspaper Norrskensflamman begins to be published regularly.

1907 – The Social Democratic Youth League participates in the formation of the Socialist Youth International.

1908 – The first issue of the Stormklockan newspaper is published.

1909 – August 4: The general strike against wage cuts begins.

1914 – The Congress of the Social Democratic Youth League rejects the party leadership's demand for unprincipled submission and support for the First World War.

1916 – March 18 – 19: The Peace Congress convenes at the initiative of the Social Democratic Youth League.

1917 – 13 – 16 May: The Social Democratic Left Party is formed at the constituent congress in Viktoriasalen, Stockholm.

1918 – December 17: Universal suffrage is introduced.

1919 – March 2: Red Sunday, general day of solidarity and propaganda in support of the October Revolution in Russia and the proletarian uprisings in other countries.

- September 29: Law on eight-hour working day is adopted by the Riksdag.

1921 – March 25 – 26: The Congress of the Social Democratic Left Party adopts the 21 conditions for joining the Communist International and changes the party's name to Sweden's Communist Party (SKP).

– May 14 – 15: The Congress of the Social Democratic Youth Association decides to adopt the name Sweden's Communist Youth Association (SKU).

1922 – March 12: In nationwide mass deputations, the unemployed present their demands to the government; large unemployment demonstrations.

1927 – Sweden's and the Soviet Union's miners' union forms a friendship and cooperation committee.

1928 – August 1: Demonstrations in connection with International Day of Struggle for Peace.

1929 – January 26 – 27: The Workers' Union National Conference adopts guidelines for the fight against class collaboration and the new anti-union laws.

– 7 November: The Arbetartidningen in Gothenburg begins to be published.

1930 – January 2: The newspaper Ny Dag is published as the main organ of Sweden's Communist Party.

– March: Fierce battles against police-protected strikebreakers in Halmstad.

1931 – May 14: Union workers' demonstration in Ådalen is shelled by the military. 5 workers are killed.

1932 – July: Strike, demonstrations and battles against strikebreakers in Klemensnäs and Sandarne.

1933 – March 24: The Central Committee of the Communist Party proposes to the Social Democratic Workers' Party an anti-fascist united front in the fight against Hitler's fascism and for current social demands.

1936 – In the election, the Labor parties get an overall majority in the second chamber of the Riksdag.

1937 – May: The 10th Congress of the Communist Party addresses the issue of the fight against war and fascism and support for the Spanish Republic.

1939 – April 6 – 9: The 11th Congress of the Communist Party calls for unity in the struggle for peace and the defense of the nation.

1940 – February 28: Transport Union is introduced against the communist newspapers.

– March 3: Fascist murder and arson attack against the Northern Lights, killing 5 people.

1941 – May 28: The Communist Party makes a significant declaration in the Riksdag about the protection of Sweden's freedom and national independence.

1944 – April: The Labor Movement's post-war program is adopted.

– May 6 – 9: The 12th Congress of the Communist Party declares its adherence to the implementation of the post-war program of the Labor Movement.

1945 – February 5: Strike throughout the metal industry, lasting 5 months.

1946 – May 18 – 21: The 13th Congress of the Communist Party adopts the Action Program of Democracy.

1948 – May 15 18: The 14th Congress of Communist Party adopts the Democratic Cultural Program.

1950 – March 16 – 19: The Bureau of the World Peace Council holds its third session in Stockholm issuing the Stockholm Appeal for the Prohibition of Atomic Weapons.

1953 – 3 – 6 April: The 16th Congress of the Communist Party adopts the program 'Sweden's road to socialism'.

1955 – The party campaigns and motions in the Riksdag against the anti-democratic trade union laws.

– 28 – 31 Dec.: 17th Congress: Main tasks are the fight for peace and national self-determination.

1957 – Advisory referendum on ATP.

– 28 – 31 Dec.: 18th Congress: in the sign of the fight for ATP and women's interests.

1958 – New elections to the Riksdag. The party withdraws the lists in 11 constituencies to secure the majority for ATP.

- The youth association SKU merges with Demokratiskt ungdom (Democratic Youth).

1961 – 5 – 8 Jan.: 19th Congress: program of action against big finance. Connection to the declaration from the 81-party conference in Moscow. Comprehensive campaign against nuclear weapons.

1962 – 19 February: party board statement against the cult of personality, for the party's right to self-determination.

1964 – 3 – 6 Jan.: 20th Congress: party leader Hilding Hagberg establishes the party's character as an independent Swedish party. With C H Hermansson as newly elected chairman. begins the opportunistic adjustment to the right.

1967 – May 13 – 16: 21st Congress: The character of the party is the main issue. The party name is changed after compromise to the Left Party Communists. The youth association's name to Vänsterns Ungdomsförbund (VUF).

1969 – After electoral successes in 1964 and 1966, the VPK loses half the electorate (from 6.4% in 1966 to 3%).

1969 – Sept. 19 – 21: 22nd Congress adopts hand lens program 'People Power'. The youth association splits and ceases.

1972 – Oct. 26 – 29: 23rd Congress: Sharpened contradictions.

1975 – March 12 – 16: 24th Congress: Still sharpened contradictions. Prominent representatives of a clear communist line are maneuvered out of the party board. Lars Werner will be the new party chairman. with 162 of 236 votes.

1976 – The VPK leadership drives the party towards division through exclusions and measures contrary to the constitution.

1977 – February 29: Declaration of Communist Party Districts on the Need for a Communist Party

26 – 27 March National Conference: The Communist Party is re-established under the name The Communist Labor Party in english, Arbetarpartiet Kommunistern (APK) in Swedish.

1990 - through a coup as a result of APK distancing itself from the perestroika policy in the Soviet Union and the breakdown of socialism, a group leaves the party and takes the Norrskensflamman newspaper with them in defiance of the party's charter.

The newspaper Riktpunkt is published instead.

1995 – Nov 4-5: 31st Congress decides to reclaim the name Sweden's Communist Party (SKP)

References[edit | edit source]

  1. "Communists save Sweden's dignity — “NO to NATO membership!”" (2022-05-20). In Defense of Communism. Archived from the original on 2022-05-19. Retrieved 2022-05-29.
  2. "The history of our movement". Communist Party of Sweden. Archived from the original on 2023-04-02. Retrieved 2023-04-02.