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Irish Workers' Party

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(Redirected from Irish Workers' League) This article is about the party founded in 1948. For the party founded in 1923, see Irish Worker League. For the party founded in 1926, see Irish Workers' Party (1926). For the current Workers' Party, see Workers' Party (Ireland).

Political party in Ireland
Irish Workers' Party
General SecretaryMichael O'Riordan
FoundedNovember 8, 1948 (1948-11-08)
Dissolved1970
Merged intoCommunist Party of Ireland
Newspaper
IdeologyCommunism

The Irish Workers' League (1948–1962), later the Irish Workers' Party (1962–1970) was a communist party in the Republic of Ireland.

Background

The Southern section of the Communist Party of Ireland had suspended its activities from 1941 onwards, because of police interference in its activities and the difficulties imposed by the emigration of many members to find work in England. Members were encouraged instead to join the Labour Party (although many were subsequently expelled).

The influx of communists to the Labour Party and the union movement, from both James Larkin's party and the Communist Party of Ireland, caused a split in Labour, with the formation in 1944 of the National Labour Party. During this time, the communists still ran a revolutionary book-shop called New Books and produced a publication, Irish Review.

Irish Workers' League

After the Second World War, former internees from the Curragh Camp, including members of the "Connolly Group," along with individuals expelled from the Labour Party, established a party in Republic of Ireland on 8 November 1948 under the name Irish Workers' League. Michael O'Riordan became its secretary, and others involved in early meetings of the party included Dominic Behan, Sam Nolan, Joe O'Connor and Sean Mulready. The IWL resumed publication of The Irish Workers' Voice which had been a publication of the Communist Party. The IWL ran candidates unsuccessfully in the 1951, 1954, and 1961 general elections.

Change of name to Irish Workers' Party

The group's name was changed to the Irish Workers' Party in 1962, but this organisation did not register itself as a political party. Thus, it did not select candidates until the 1965 general election, when it fielded some candidates unsuccessfully, and again in the general election of 1969. In December 1965 the IWP began publishing a monthly newspaper, The Irish Socialist, from its New Books bookshop.

In 1970, the Irish Workers' Party merged with the Communist Party of Northern Ireland to reconstitute the all-Ireland Communist Party of Ireland.

General Secretary

External links

References

  1. A history of the communist movement in Ireland - Communist Party Website
  2. Matthews, Ann (2003). "The archive of the Communist Party of Ireland". Saothar. 28. Retrieved 30 October 2024.
  3. 'The Communist Party of Ireland 1921 - 2011' By Matt Treacy, Dublin 2012.
Defunct political parties in Ireland
to 1918
Home Rule/Nationalist
Unionist
Pan-UK parties
post 1918
Communist and far-left
Socialist and left-wing
Republican and nationalist
Liberal
Agrarian
Conservative and right-wing
Christian right
Unionist
Far-right
Other

Coakley, John. “http://Ljournal.ru/Wp-Content/Uploads/2017/03/a-2017-023.Pdf.” Minor Parties in Irish Political Life, 1922–1989, vol. 21, no. 3, 2017. The Economic and Social Review, doi:10.18411/a-2017-023.


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