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Executive Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Executive Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain (EC of the CPGB) was the governing body of the Communist Party of Great Britain between 1920 and 1991.[1] It governed the party between congresses, at which successive ECs were appointed/elected. The EC played an important leadership role, according to the principles of democratic centralism to which the CPGB adhered.[1]

Provisional Committee for the Communist Party

The Provisional Executive Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain was based at 21a Maiden Lane, Strand, London, W.C.2.[2]

In June 1919, the first of a series of meeting to discuss founding a Communist Party for Great Britain took place. Eventually the following proposal was formulated:

“That the membership of the various organisations be consulted as to their willingness to merge the existing organisations in a united party, having for its object the establishment of Communism by means of the dictatorship of the working class working through Soviets; and that the question of the affiliation of the new Party to the Labour Party be settled by a referendum of the members three months after the party is formed.”[3]

Whereas the BSF were firmly behind affiliation to the Labour Party, the WSF rejected such a proposal, along with sections of the SWSS and the SLP. However, sections within the SWSS formed the South Wales Communist Council in favour proposal, just as the Communist Unity Group was formed within the SLP, only to be expelled by the SLP executive committee.

The provisional committee then proceeded to organise a National Convention, at which the proposal was to be turned into a resolution, which if carried would transform the convention into the Founding Congress of the Communist Party. Those groups attending the convention were obliged to pledge to pass the resolution and transform all the branches, groups, and societies sending delegates to the convention would be transformed into branches of the new party, bound by the decisions of the convention. This was in line with Lenin's democratic centralism and was rejected by the WSF.[4]

The Foundation Congress took place at Cannon Street Hotel, London and the International Socialist Club, London, 31 July – 1 August.

Name Role Location Political organisation Ethnicity Social class
Tom Bell London (CUG, SLP) Scottish Working Class
George Deer (BSP) South Wales Communist Council Lincoln (BSP) English Working Class
Will Hewlett Abertillery (SWCC) Welsh Working Class
Fred Hodgson Reading (BSP) English Working Class
Albert Inkpin Secretary London (BSP) English Working Class
Arthur MacManus Chairman London (CUG, SLP) Scottish Working Class
Cecil Malone London (BSP) English Minor aristocracy
Dora Montefiore Crowborough (BSP) English Middle class
William Paul Derby (CUG, SLP) Scottish Working class
Fred Shaw Huddersfield (BSP) English Working class
Bob Stewart Dundee (PRP, CUG) English Working class
Alf Watts Treasurer London (BSP) English Working class
Fred Willis London (BSP) English Working class

First EC of the CPGB

Foundation Congress, 31 July – 1 August 1920

References

  1. ^ a b McIlroy, John; Campbell, Alan (2020-11-01). "The early British Communist leaders, 1920–1923: a prosopographical exploration". Labor History. 61 (5–6): 423–465. doi:10.1080/0023656X.2020.1818711. S2CID 225166906.
  2. ^ "CPGB: Provisional Executive Committee". www.marxists.org. Marxists Internet Archive. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  3. ^ Inkpin, Albert (1920). "Communist Conference". The Communist (5 August, 1920).
  4. ^ Inkpin, Albert (1920). "Secretary's Report". Communist Unity Convention: Official Report.
This page was last edited on 9 December 2023, at 22:25
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