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Worker's Socialist Party (Argentina)

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Far-left political party in Argentina Not to be confused with Socialist Workers' Party (Argentina).
Worker's Socialist Party Partido Socialista de los Trabajadores
AbbreviationPST
LeaderNahuel Moreno
Founded1972
Dissolved1982
Split fromWorker's Revolutionary Party
Succeeded byMovement for Socialism
HeadquartersBuenos Aires, Argentina
IdeologyTrotskyism
Morenism
Political positionFar-left
ColoursRed

The Worker's Socialist Party was a Trotskyist political party in Argentina.

History

In 1965, Nahuel Moreno merged Worker's Word with Mario Santucho's FRIP, resulting in the Worker's Revolutionary Party. After the Cordobazo, Morenists clashed against Santuchists because of the place industrial workers had in the proletarian revolution. Santucho, leader of the party, declared that the real proletariat were the peasants and not the industrial workers. Moreno and his followers left the party and established the Worker's Socialist Party in 1972.

In 1973, Moreno offered Agustín Tosco to be the presidential candidate for March elections, but he refused. Instead, Juan Carlos Coral ran for President both in March and September, getting 0,62% and 1,54% of the votes respectively.

After the 1976 Coup, the party went underground and renamed as Movement for Socialism.

References

  1. Editorial CEHuS: Historia del PST - Tomo I
  2. Los ataques al PST se suman a la lista de crímenes de la Triple A
Former political parties and alliances in Argentina Argentina
19th century
–early 20th century
1930s–1970s
1970s–2010s
since 2020s
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