Communist Labor Party of America

This article is about the political party that existed from 1919 to 1920. For other uses, see Communist Labor Party (disambiguation).
Logo of the Communist Labor Party of America.

The Communist Labor Party of America (CLP) was one of the organizational predecessors of the Communist Party USA. The group was established at the end of August 1919 following a three-way split of the Socialist Party of America.

Although a legal political party at the time of its formation, with a form of organization closely resembling that of the Socialist Party whence it sprung, the group was quickly forced underground by the Palmer Raids of January 1920 and thereafter conducted its activities in secret.

The CLP merged with a dissident faction of the Communist Party of America in May 1920 to form the United Communist Party of America.

Organizational history

Background

Former United Mine Workers functionary Adolph Germer, Executive Secretary of the SPA, was one of the leaders of the Regular faction that forced the Communist Labor Party split.

With the end of World War I and the consolidation of the Bolshevik Revolution in 1918, long running tension in the Socialist Party of America (SPA) between the revolutionary socialist left wing and the electorally-oriented center deepened.[1] Radicals were particularly disheartened by the tepid 1916 campaign of "colorless" Socialist presidential candidate Allen L. Benson — an effort which saw the first reduction in the party's tally in presidential voting in party history.[2]

From roots in the Boston-based Socialist Propaganda League of America and the Boston newspaper The Revolutionary Age, an organized faction calling itself the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party emerged at the end of 1918.[3] Radical editor Louis C. Fraina composed a Left Wing Manifesto, around which the Left Wing section organized itself, holding raucous meetings of SPA locals and branches to force endorsement of the program and running a slate of candidates in the SPA's annual election in an attempt to "capture" and remold the party according to the Russian Bolshevik Party's model.

Buoyed by the bloc voting of radical, Bolshevik-influenced branches of the Socialist Party's Foreign Language Federations, the Left Wing Section very apparently won a majority of the 15 seats on the party's governing National Executive Committee[4] as well as balloting for International delegates and International Secretary[5] in the 1919 election. Facing ceding party control to an aggressive Bolshevik NEC, the outgoing NEC, guided by James Oneal and Executive Secretary Adolph Germer, declared that voting irregularities had rendered the result invalid.[6]

Suspensions and expulsions of a major part of the SPA's membership immediately followed, beginning with the May 1919 suspensions of the Russian, Lithuanian, Polish, Latvian, South Slavic, and Ukrainian Federations in addition to the entire state socialist parties of Michigan, Massachusetts, and Ohio.[7] In New York state the State Executive Committee suspended and "reorganized" Left Wing locals and branches representing nearly half the state's membership. By July 1919 the Socialist Party had purged itself through suspensions and expulsions pf more than 60,000 of the nearly 110,000 members that it had touted in January of that year.[7]

With Oneal and Germer's Party Regulars clearly in control of the situation, the suspended Foreign Language Federations and idiosyncratic Socialist Party of Michigan determined to move immediately to the formation of a Communist Party of America and issued a call for a founding convention to be held in Chicago on September 1, 1919. Others determined to fight on against the odds to restore the results of the 1919 party election at the scheduled August 30 convention of the Socialist Party. It was this latter group that would go on to establish the Communist Labor Party of America.

Establishment

CLP Executive Secretary Alfred Wagenknecht as he appeared in 1918.

Most of the English-speaking Left Wingers, headed by NEC members Alfred Wagenknecht and L.E. Katterfeld and including prominent New York journalist John "Jack" Reed determined to fight on in an attempt to win control of the Socialist Party for the Left Wing. However, with many Left Wingers already abandoning this approach and the "Regular" faction firmly in control of a majority of the states electing delegates to the Emergency National Convention in Chicago scheduled for Aug. 30, 1919, the fight was essentially over before it began.

The Credentials Committee of this convention was easily won by adherents of the Oneal-Germer "Regulars," who froze out Left Wing-oriented delegations from California, Oregon, and Minnesota. Roughly two dozen delegates pledging allegiance to the Left Wing Section bolted the convention to meet downstairs in a previously rented room, along with about 50 other Left Wingers from around the country. These latter delegates constituted themselves as the Communist Labor Party of America on August 31, 1919.

Executive Secretary of the CLP was Alfred Wagenknecht of Ohio. The five member National Executive Committee consisted of Max Bedacht, Alexander Bilan, L.E. Katterfeld, Jack Carney, and Edward Lindgren. Initial headquarters were maintained in Cleveland, before being moved to New York City in December 1919.

Underground period

The party moved to the underground in response to mass arrests and deportations conducted by the US Justice Department and its Bureau of Investigation, guided by Special Assistant to the Attorney General J. Edgar Hoover. These raids and the move to the underground virtually destroyed the organization, which only existed in skeletal form in the first half of 1920, although publication of its legal newspaper, The Toiler, was maintained. The CLP also published an "illegal" underground monthly paper called Communist Labor Party News and issued the final issue of Ludwig Lore's theoretical magazine, The Class Struggle under its auspices.

Dissolution through merger

On April 18, 1920, Executive Secretary C. E. Ruthenberg exited the Communist Party of America and along with his factional supporters (such as Jay Lovestone and Isaac Edward Ferguson) constituted themselves as the "real" CPA with a view to merger with the CLP. This organizational marriage took place at a secret "Joint Unity Convention" held at Bridgman, Michigan May 26–31. The resulting organization, also organized along underground lines to avoid arrest, was known as the United Communist Party of America (UCP).

The Communist International to which the UCP and CPA both pledged their allegiance sought to end duplication, competition, and hostility between the two communist parties and insisted on a merger into a single organization. That was eventually effected in May 1921 at a secret gathering held at the Overlook Mountain House hotel, near Woodstock, New York. The resulting unified group was also known as the Communist Party of America, which morphed into the Workers Party of America (December 1921), which changed its name in 1925 to Workers (Communist) Party and to Communist Party USA in 1929.

Party press

During the CLPs brief life five English-language periodicals were affiliated with it, some inherited from organizations that had merged into the party, and some new.

Footnotes

  1. The best treatment of the left vs. right struggle in the early Socialist Party remains Ira Kipnis, The American Socialist Movement, 1897-1912. New York: Columbia University Press, 1952.
  2. Theodore Draper, The Roots of American Communism. New York: Viking Press, 1957; pg. 70. The adjective "colorless" is Draper's.
  3. The Socialist Propaganda League launched in October 1915 in Massachusetts, with strong backing of the strong Boston-area units of the Latvian Socialist Federation. The Revolutionary Age, edited by Louis C. Fraina, first saw print in November 1918. See Draper, The Roots of American Communism, pp. 69-72, 131.
  4. Draper, The Roots of American Communism, pg. 156.
  5. Present Party Officialdom Overwhelmingly Repudiated by National Referendum. (A Tabulation of the 1919 Socialist Party Election)." The Ohio Socialist whole no. 73 (June 18, 1919), pg. 3.
  6. Draper, The Roots of American Communism, pg. 157.
  7. 1 2 Draper, The Roots of American Communism, pg. 158.
  8. Goldwater, Walter Radical periodicals in America 1890-1950 New Haven, Yale University Library 1964; pg. 42.
  9. Goldwater, Walter Radical periodicals in America 1890-1950 New Haven, Yale University Library 1964; pg. 44.
  10. Goldwater, Walter Radical periodicals in America 1890-1950 New Haven, Yale University Library 1964; pg. 9.

CLP publications

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.