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Communist Party USA

Communist Party USA, officially the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA),[9] also known as the American Communist Party, is a communist party in the United States which was established in 1919 after a split in the Socialist Party of America following the Russian Revolution.[6][10]

Communist Party USA
AbbreviationCPUSA
PresidiumNational Convention[1]
Co-chairsJoe Sims
Rossana Cambron
FounderC. E. Ruthenberg[2]
FoundedSeptember 1, 1919; 104 years ago (1919-09-01)
Split fromSocialist Party of America
Headquarters235 W 23rd St, New York, NY 10011, Manhattan, New York
NewspaperPeople's World[3]
Youth wingYoung Communist League[note 1]
Membership (2023 est.) ~15,000[4]
Ideology
Political positionFar-left[8]
International affiliationIMCWP (since 1998)
Comintern (until 1943)
Colors  Red
Slogan"People and Planet Before Profits"
Party flag
Website
www.cpusa.org

The history of the CPUSA is closely related to the history of the American labor movement and the history of communist parties worldwide. Initially operating underground due to the Palmer Raids which started during the First Red Scare, the party was influential in American politics in the first half of the 20th century, and it also played a prominent role in the history of the labor movement from the 1920s through the 1940s, playing a key role in the founding of the Congress of Industrial Organizations.[10] The party was unique among labor activist groups of the time in being outspokenly anti-racist and opposed to racial segregation after sponsoring the defense for the Scottsboro Boys in 1931. The party reached the apex of its influence in US politics during the Great Depression, playing a prominent role in the political landscape as a militant grassroots network capable of effectively organizing and mobilizing workers and the unemployed in support of cornerstone New Deal programs, principally Social Security, unemployment insurance, and the Works Progress Administration.[11][12][13]

The transformative changes of the New Deal era combined with the US alliance with the Soviet Union during World War II created an atmosphere in which the CPUSA wielded considerable influence with about 70,000 vetted party members.[14] Under the leadership of Earl Browder, the party was critically supportive of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and branded communism as "20th Century Americanism."[15] Envisioning itself as becoming engrained within the established political structure in the post-war era, the party was dissolved in 1944 to become the 'Communist Political Association.'[16] However, as Cold War hostility ensued, the party was restored but struggled to maintain its influence amidst the second Red Scare and McCarthyism. Its opposition to the Marshall Plan and the Truman Doctrine failed to gain traction, and its endorsed candidate Henry A. Wallace of the Progressive Party under-performed in the 1948 presidential election. The party itself imploded following the public condemnation of Stalin by Nikita Khrushchev in 1956, with membership sinking to a few thousand who were increasingly alienated from the rest of the American Left for their support of the Soviet Union.[10]

The CPUSA received significant funding from the Soviet Union and crafted its public positions to match those of Moscow.[17] The CPUSA also used a covert apparatus to assist the Soviets with their intelligence activities in the United States and utilized a network of front organizations to shape public opinion.[18] The CPUSA opposed glasnost and perestroika in the Soviet Union and as a result major funding from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ended in 1991.[19]

History edit

 
Charter for a local unit of the CPUSA dated October 24, 1919

During the first half of the 20th century, the Communist Party was influential in various struggles. Historian Ellen Schrecker concludes that decades of recent scholarship[note 2] offer "a more nuanced portrayal of the party as both a Stalinist sect tied to a vicious regime and the most dynamic organization within the American Left during the 1930s and '40s".[20] It was also the first political party in the United States to be "fully"[clarification needed] racially integrated.[21]

By August 1919, only months after its founding, the Communist Party claimed to have 50,000 to 60,000 members. Its members also included anarchists and other radical leftists. At the time, the older and more moderate Socialist Party of America, suffering from criminal prosecutions for its antiwar stance during World War I, had declined to 40,000 members. The sections of the Communist Party's International Workers Order (IWO) organized for communism around linguistic and ethnic lines, providing mutual aid and tailoring cultural activities to an IWO membership that peaked at 200,000 at its height.[22]

During the Great Depression, some Americans were attracted by the visible activism of Communists on behalf of a wide range of social and economic causes, including the rights of African Americans, workers and the unemployed.[23] The Communist Party played a significant role in the resurgence of organized labor in the 1930s.[24] Still others, alarmed by the rise of the Falangists in Spain and the Nazis in Germany, admired the Soviet Union's early and staunch opposition to fascism. Party membership swelled from 7,500 at the start of the decade to 55,000 by its end.[25]

Party members also rallied to the defense of the Spanish Republic during this period after a nationalist military uprising moved to overthrow it, resulting in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939).[26] The Communist Party of the Soviet Union, along with leftists throughout the world, raised funds for medical relief while many of its members made their way to Spain with the aid of the party to join the Lincoln Brigade, one of the International Brigades.[27][26]

 
The Washington Commonwealth Federation newspaper after the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact (original scan)

The Communist Party was adamantly opposed to fascism during the Popular Front period. Although membership in the party rose to about 66,000 by 1939,[28][26] nearly 20,000 members left the party by 1943.[26] While general secretary Browder at first attacked Germany for its September 1, 1939, invasion of western Poland, on September 11 the Communist Party received a communique from Moscow denouncing the Polish government.[29] Between September 14–16, party leaders bickered about the direction to take.[29]

On September 17, the Soviet Union invaded eastern Poland and occupied the Polish territory assigned to it by the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, followed by co-ordination with German forces in Poland.[30][31] The Communist Party then turned the focus of its public activities from anti-fascism to advocating peace, opposing military preparations. The party criticized British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and French leader Édouard Daladier, but it did not at first attack President Roosevelt, reasoning that this could devastate American Communism, blaming instead Roosevelt's advisors.[32] The party spread the slogans "The Yanks Are Not Coming" and "Hands Off", set up a "perpetual peace vigil" across the street from the White House and announced that Roosevelt was the head of the "war party of the American bourgeoisie".[33] The party was active in the isolationist America First Committee.[34] In October and November, after the Soviets invaded Finland and forced mutual assistance pacts from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, the Communist Party considered Russian security sufficient justification to support the actions.[35] Comintern and its leader Georgi Dimitrov demanded to Browder to change the party's support for Roosevelt.[35] On October 23, the party began attacking Roosevelt.[33] The party changed this policy again after Hitler broke the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact by attacking the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941.

In August 1940, after NKVD agent Ramón Mercader killed Trotsky with an ice axe, Browder perpetuated Moscow's line that the killer, who had been dating one of Trotsky's secretaries, was a disillusioned follower.[36]

The Communist Party's early labor and organizing successes did not last long. As the decades progressed, the combined effects of the second Red Scare, McCarthyism, Nikita Khrushchev's 1956 "Secret Speech" in which he denounced the previous decades of Joseph Stalin's rule and the adversities of the continuing Cold War mentality, steadily weakened the party's internal structure and confidence. Party membership in the Communist International and its close adherence to the political positions of the Soviet Union gave most Americans the impression that the party was not only a threatening, subversive domestic entity, it was also a foreign agent which espoused an ideology which was fundamentally alien and threatening to the American way of life. Internal and external crises swirled together, to the point when members who did not end up in prison for party activities either tended to disappear quietly from its ranks or they tended to adopt more moderate political positions which were at odds with the party line. By 1957, membership had dwindled to less than 10,000, of whom some 1,500 were informants for the FBI.[37] The party was also banned by the Communist Control Act of 1954, although it was never really enforced and Congress later repealed most provisions of the act, also with some declared unconstitutional via the court system.[38]

The party attempted to recover with its opposition to the Vietnam War during the civil rights movement in the 1960s, but its continued uncritical support for an increasingly stultified and militaristic Soviet Union further alienated it from the rest of the left-wing in the United States, which saw this supportive role as outdated and even dangerous. At the same time, the party's aging membership demographics distanced it from the New Left in the United States.[39]

With the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev and his effort to radically alter the Soviet economic and political system from the mid-1980s, the Communist Party finally became estranged from the leadership of the Soviet Union itself. In 1989, the Soviet Communist Party cut off major funding to the American Communist Party due to its opposition to glasnost and perestroika. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the party held its convention and attempted to resolve the issue of whether the party should reject Marxism–Leninism. The majority reasserted the party's now purely Marxist outlook, prompting a minority faction which urged social democrats to exit the now reduced party. The party has since adopted Marxism–Leninism within its program.[6] In 2014, the new draft of the party constitution declared: "We apply the scientific outlook developed by Marx, Engels, Lenin and others in the context of our American history, culture, and traditions".[40]

 
The 30th National Convention was held in Chicago in 2014

The Communist Party is based in New York City. From 1922 to 1988, it published Morgen Freiheit, a daily newspaper written in Yiddish.[41][42] For decades, its West Coast newspaper was the People's World and its East Coast newspaper was The Daily World.[43] The two newspapers merged in 1986 into the People's Weekly World. The People's Weekly World has since become an online only publication called People's World. It has since ceased being an official Communist Party publication as the party does not fund its publication.[44] The party's former theoretical journal Political Affairs is now also published exclusively online, but the party still maintains International Publishers as its publishing house. In June 2014, the party held its 30th National Convention in Chicago.[45]

The party announced on April 7, 2021, that it intended to run candidates in elections again, after a hiatus of over thirty years.[46] Steven Estrada, who ran for city council in Long Beach, was one of the first candidates to run as an open member of the CPUSA again (although Long Beach local elections are officially non-partisan).[47] Estrada received 8.5% of the vote.[48]

Beliefs edit

Constitution program edit

According to the constitution of the party adopted at the 30th National Convention in 2014, the Communist Party operates on the principle of democratic centralism,[49] its highest authority being the quadrennial National Convention. Article VI, Section 3 of the 2001 Constitution laid out certain positions as non-negotiable:[50]

[S]truggle for the unity of the working class, against all forms of national oppression, national chauvinism, discrimination and segregation, against all racist ideologies and practices, ... against all manifestations of male supremacy and discrimination against women, ... against homophobia and all manifestations of discrimination against gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgender people.

Among the points in the party's "Immediate Program" are a $15/hour minimum wage for all workers, national universal health care and opposition to privatization of Social Security. Economic measures such as increased taxes on "the rich and corporations", "strong regulation" of the financial industry, "regulation and public ownership of utilities" and increased federal aid to cities and states are also included in the Immediate Program, as are opposition to the Iraq War and other military interventions; opposition to free trade treaties such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA); nuclear disarmament and a reduced military budget; various civil rights provisions; campaign finance reform including public financing of campaigns; and election law reform, including instant runoff voting.[51]

Bill of Rights socialism edit

The Communist Party emphasizes a vision of socialism as an extension of American democracy. Seeking to "build socialism in the United States based on the revolutionary traditions and struggles" of American history, the party promotes a conception of "Bill of Rights Socialism" that will "guarantee all the freedoms we have won over centuries of struggle and also extend the Bill of Rights to include freedom from unemployment" as well as freedom "from poverty, from illiteracy, and from discrimination and oppression".[52]

Reiterating the idea of property rights in socialist society as it is outlined in Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels's Communist Manifesto (1848),[53] the Communist Party emphasizes:

Many myths have been propagated about socialism. Contrary to right-wing claims, socialism would not take away the personal private property of workers, only the private ownership of major industries, financial institutions, and other large corporations, and the excessive luxuries of the super-rich.[52]

Rather than making all wages entirely equal, the Communist Party holds that building socialism would entail "eliminating private wealth from stock speculation, from private ownership of large corporations, from the export of capital and jobs, and from the exploitation of large numbers of workers".[52]

Living standards edit

Among the primary concerns of the Communist Party are the problems of unemployment, underemployment and job insecurity, which the party considers the natural result of the profit-driven incentives of the capitalist economy:

Millions of workers are unemployed, underemployed, or insecure in their jobs, even during economic upswings and periods of 'recovery' from recessions. Most workers experience long years of stagnant and declining real wages, while health and education costs soar. Many workers are forced to work second and third jobs to make ends meet. Most workers now average four different occupations during their lifetime, many involuntarily moved from job to job and career to career. Often, retirement-age workers are forced to continue working just to provide health care for themselves and their families. Millions of people continuously live below the poverty level; many suffer homelessness and hunger. Public and private programs to alleviate poverty and hunger do not reach everyone, and are inadequate even for those they do reach. With capitalist globalization, jobs move from place to place as capitalists export factories and even entire industries to other countries in a relentless search for the lowest wages.[52]

The Communist Party believes that "class struggle starts with the fight for wages, hours, benefits, working conditions, job security, and jobs. But it also includes an endless variety of other forms for fighting specific battles: resisting speed-up, picketing, contract negotiations, strikes, demonstrations, lobbying for pro-labor legislation, elections, and even general strikes".[52] The Communist Party's national programs considers workers who struggle "against the capitalist class or any part of it on any issue with the aim of improving or defending their lives" part of the class struggle.[52]

Imperialism and war edit

The Communist Party maintains that developments within the foreign policy of the United States—as reflected in the rise of neoconservatives and other groups associated with right-wing politics—have developed in tandem with the interests of large-scale capital such as the multinational corporations. The state thereby becomes thrust into a proxy role that is essentially inclined to help facilitate "control by one section of the capitalist class over all others and over the whole of society".[52]

Accordingly, the Communist Party holds that right-wing policymakers such as the neoconservatives, steering the state away from working-class interests on behalf of a disproportionately powerful capitalist class, have "demonized foreign opponents of the U.S., covertly funded the right-wing-initiated civil war in Nicaragua, and gave weapons to the Saddam Hussein dictatorship in Iraq. They picked small countries to invade, including Panama and Grenada, testing new military equipment and strategy, and breaking down resistance at home and abroad to U.S. military invasion as a policy option".[52]

From its ideological framework, the Communist Party understands imperialism as the pinnacle of capitalist development: the state, working on behalf of the few who wield disproportionate power, assumes the role of proffering "phony rationalizations" for economically driven imperial ambition as a means to promote the sectional economic interests of big business.[52]

In opposition to what it considers the ultimate agenda of the conservative wing of American politics, the Communist Party rejects foreign policy proposals such as the Bush Doctrine, rejecting the right of the American government to attack "any country it wants, to conduct war without end until it succeeds everywhere, and even to use 'tactical' nuclear weapons and militarize space. Whoever does not support the U.S. policy is condemned as an opponent. Whenever international organizations, such as the United Nations, do not support U.S. government policies, they are reluctantly tolerated until the U.S. government is able to subordinate or ignore them".[52]

Juxtaposing the support from the Republicans and the right-wing of the Democratic Party for the Bush administration-led invasion of Iraq with the many millions of Americans who opposed the invasion of Iraq from its beginning, the Communist Party notes the spirit of opposition towards the war coming from the American public:

Thousands of grassroots peace committees [were] organized by ordinary Americans ... neighborhoods, small towns and universities expressing opposition in countless creative ways. Thousands of actions, vigils, teach-ins and newspaper advertisements were organized. The largest demonstrations were held since the Vietnam War. 500,000 marched in New York after the war started. Students at over 500 universities conducted a Day of Action for "Books not Bombs."

Over 150 anti-war resolutions were passed by city councils. Resolutions were passed by thousands of local unions and community organizations. Local and national actions were organized on the Internet, including the "Virtual March on Washington DC" .... Elected officials were flooded with millions of calls, emails and letters.

In an unprecedented development, large sections of the US labor movement officially opposed the war. In contrast, it took years to build labor opposition to the Vietnam War. ... For example in Chicago, labor leaders formed Labor United for Peace, Justice and Prosperity. They concluded that mass education of their members was essential to counter false propaganda, and that the fight for the peace, economic security and democratic rights was interrelated.[54]

The party has consistently opposed American involvement in the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the First Gulf War and the post-September 11 conflicts in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Communist Party does not believe that the threat of terrorism can be resolved through war.[55]

Women and minorities edit

 
Robert G. Thompson and Benjamin J. Davis leaving the courthouse during the Smith Act trials of Communist Party leaders in 1949–1958

The Communist Party Constitution defines the U.S. working class as "multiracial and multinational. It unites men and women, young and old, gay and straight, native-born and immigrant, urban and rural." The party further expands its interpretation to include the employed and unemployed, organized and unorganized, and of all occupations.[49]

The Communist Party seeks equal rights for women, equal pay for equal work and the protection of reproductive rights, together with putting an end to sexism.[56] They support the right of abortion and social services to provide access to it, arguing that unplanned pregnancy is prejudiced against poor women.[57] The party's ranks include a Women's Equality Commission, which recognizes the role of women as an asset in moving towards building socialism.[58]

Historically significant in American history as an early fighter for African Americans' rights and playing a leading role in protesting the lynchings of African Americans in the South, the Communist Party in its national program today calls racism the "classic divide-and-conquer tactic".[note 3][59] From its New York City base, the Communist Party's Ben Davis Club and other Communist Party organizations have been involved in local activism in Harlem and other African American and minority communities.[60] The Communist Party was instrumental in the founding of the progressive Black Radical Congress in 1998, as well as the African Blood Brotherhood.[61]

Historically significant in Latino working class history as a successful organizer of the Mexican American working class in the Southwestern United States in the 1930s, the Communist Party regards working-class Latino people as another oppressed group targeted by overt racism as well as systemic discrimination in areas such as education and sees the participation of Latino voters in a general mass movement in both party-based and nonpartisan work as an essential goal for major left-wing progress.[62]

The Communist Party holds that racial and ethnic discrimination not only harms minorities, but is pernicious to working-class people of all backgrounds as any discriminatory practices between demographic sections of the working class constitute an inherently divisive practice responsible for "obstructing the development of working-class consciousness, driving wedges in class unity to divert attention from class exploitation, and creating extra profits for the capitalist class".[63][note 4]

The Communist Party supports an end to racial profiling.[51] The party supports continued enforcement of civil rights laws as well as affirmative action.[51]

Geography edit

The Communist Party garnered support in particular communities, developing a unique geography. Instead of a broad nationwide support, support for the party was concentrated in different communities at different times, depending on the organizing strategy at that moment.

Before World War II, the Communist Party had relatively stable support in New York City, Chicago and St. Louis County, Minnesota. However, at times the party also had strongholds in more rural counties such as Sheridan County, Montana (22% in 1932), Iron County, Wisconsin (4% in 1932), or Ontonagon County, Michigan (5% in 1934).[64] Even in the South at the height of Jim Crow, the Communist Party had a significant presence in Alabama. Despite the disenfranchisement of African Americans, the party gained 8% of the votes in rural Elmore County. This was mostly due to the successful biracial organizing of sharecroppers through the Sharecroppers' Union.[64][65]

Unlike open mass organizations like the Socialist Party or the NAACP, the Communist Party was a disciplined organization that demanded strenuous commitments and frequently expelled members. Membership levels remained below 20,000 until 1933 and then surged upward in the late 1930s, reaching 66,000 in 1939 and reaching its peak membership of over 75,000 in 1947.[66]

The party fielded candidates in presidential and many state and local elections not expecting to win, but expecting loyalists to vote the party ticket. The party mounted symbolic yet energetic campaigns during each presidential election from 1924 through 1940 and many gubernatorial and congressional races from 1922 to 1944.

The Communist Party organized the country into districts that did not coincide with state lines, initially dividing it into 15 districts identified with a headquarters city with an additional "Agricultural District". Several reorganizations in the 1930s expanded the number of districts.[67]

Relations with other groups edit

United States labor movement edit

 
May Day parade with banners and flags, New York

The Communist Party has sought to play an active role in the labor movement since its origins as part of its effort to build a mass movement of American workers to bring about their own liberation through socialist revolution.

Soviet funding and espionage edit

From 1959 until 1989, when Gus Hall condemned the initiatives taken by Mikhail Gorbachev in the Soviet Union, the Communist Party received a substantial subsidy from the Soviets. There is at least one receipt signed by Gus Hall in the KGB archives.[68][69] Starting with $75,000 in 1959, this was increased gradually to $3 million in 1987. This substantial amount reflected the party's loyalty to the Moscow line, in contrast to the Italian and later Spanish and British Communist parties, whose Eurocommunism deviated from the orthodox line in the late 1970s. Releases from the Soviet archives show that all national Communist parties that conformed to the Soviet line were funded in the same fashion. From the Communist point of view, this international funding arose from the internationalist nature of communism itself as fraternal assistance was considered the duty of communists in any one country to give aid to their allies in other countries. From the anti-Communist point of view, this funding represented an unwarranted interference by one country in the affairs of another. The cutoff of funds in 1989 resulted in a financial crisis, which forced the party to cut back publication in 1990 of the party newspaper, the People's Daily World, to weekly publication, the People's Weekly World (see references below).

Somewhat more controversial than mere funding is the alleged involvement of Communist members in espionage for the Soviet Union. Whittaker Chambers alleged that Sandor Goldberger—also known as Josef Peters, who commonly wrote under the name J. Peters—headed the Communist Party's underground secret apparatus from 1932 to 1938 and pioneered its role as an auxiliary to Soviet intelligence activities.[70] Bernard Schuster, Organizational Secretary of the New York District of the Communist Party, is claimed to have been the operational recruiter and conduit for members of the party into the ranks of the secret apparatus, or "Group A line".

Stalin publicly disbanded the Comintern in 1943. A Moscow NKVD message to all stations on September 12, 1943, detailed instructions for handling intelligence sources within the Communist Party after the disestablishment of the Comintern.

There are a number of decrypted World War II Soviet messages between NKVD offices in the United States and Moscow, also known as the Venona cables. The Venona cables and other published sources appear to confirm that Julius Rosenberg was responsible for espionage. Theodore Hall, a Harvard-trained physicist who did not join the party until 1952, began passing information on the atomic bomb to the Soviets soon after he was hired at Los Alamos at age 19. Hall, who was known as Mlad by his KGB handlers, escaped prosecution. Hall's wife, aware of his espionage, claims that their NKVD handler had advised them to plead innocent, as the Rosenbergs did, if formally charged.[71]

It was the belief of opponents of the Communist Party such as J. Edgar Hoover, longtime director of the FBI; and Joseph McCarthy, for whom McCarthyism is named; and other anti-Communists that the Communist Party constituted an active conspiracy, was secretive, loyal to a foreign power and whose members assisted Soviet intelligence in the clandestine infiltration of American government. This is the traditionalist view of some in the field of Communist studies such as Harvey Klehr and John Earl Haynes, since supported by several memoirs of ex-Soviet KGB officers and information obtained from the Venona project and Soviet archives.[72][73][74]

At one time, this view was shared by the majority of the Congress. In the "Findings and declarations of fact" section of the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. Chap. 23 Sub. IV Sec. 841), it stated:

[T]he Communist Party, although purportedly a political party, is in fact an instrumentality of a conspiracy to overthrow the Government of the United States. It constitutes an authoritarian dictatorship within a republic ... the policies and programs of the Communist Party are secretly prescribed for it by the foreign leaders ... to carry into action slavishly the assignments given .... [T]he Communist Party acknowledges no constitutional or statutory limitations .... The peril inherent in its operation arises [from] its dedication to the proposition that the present constitutional Government of the United States ultimately must be brought to ruin by any available means, including resort to force and violence ... its role as the agency of a hostile foreign power renders its existence a clear present and continuing danger.[75]

In 1993, experts from the Library of Congress traveled to Moscow to copy previously secret archives of the party records, sent to the Soviet Union for safekeeping by party organizers. The records provided an irrefutable link between Soviet intelligence and information obtained by the Communist Party and its contacts in the United States government from the 1920s through the 1940s. Some documents revealed that the Communist Party was actively involved in secretly recruiting party members from African American groups and rural farm workers. Other party records contained further evidence that Soviet sympathizers had indeed infiltrated the State Department, beginning in the 1930s. Included in Communist Party archival records were confidential letters from two American ambassadors in Europe to Roosevelt and a senior State Department official. Thanks to an official in the Department of State sympathetic to the party, the confidential correspondence, concerning political and economic matters in Europe, ended up in the hands of Soviet intelligence.[72][76][77]

Counterintelligence edit

In 1952, Jack and Morris Childs, together codenamed SOLO, became FBI informants. As high-ranking officials in the American Communist Party, they informed on the CPUSA for the rest of the Cold War, monitoring the Soviet funding.[78][79] They also traveled to Moscow and Beijing to meet USSR and PRC leadership.[80] Jack and Morris Childs both received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1987 for their intelligence work. Morris's son stated, "The CIA could not believe the information the FBI had because the American Communist Party had links directly into the Kremlin."[81]

According to intelligence analyst Darren E. Tromblay, the SOLO operation, and the Ad Hoc Committee, were part of "developing geopolitical awareness" by the FBI about factors such as the Sino-Soviet split.[82] The Ad Hoc Committee was a group within CPUSA that circulated a pro-Maoist bulletin in the voice of a "dedicated but rebellious comrade." Allegedly an operation, it caused a schism within the CPUSA.[83]

Criminal prosecutions edit

When the Communist Party was formed in 1919, the United States government was engaged in prosecution of socialists who had opposed World War I and military service. This prosecution was continued in 1919 and January 1920 in the Palmer Raids as part of the First Red Scare. Rank and file foreign-born members of the Communist Party were targeted and as many as possible were arrested and deported while leaders were prosecuted and, in some cases, sentenced to prison terms. In the late 1930s, with the authorization of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the FBI began investigating both domestic Nazis and Communists. In 1940, Congress passed the Smith Act, which made it illegal to advocate, abet, or teach the desirability of overthrowing the government.

In 1949, the federal government put Eugene Dennis, William Z. Foster and ten other Communist Party leaders on trial for advocating the violent overthrow of the government. Because the prosecution could not show that any of the defendants had openly called for violence or been involved in accumulating weapons for a proposed revolution, it relied on the testimony of former members of the party that the defendants had privately advocated the overthrow of the government and on quotations from the work of Marx, Lenin and other revolutionary figures of the past.[84] During the course of the trial, the judge held several of the defendants and all of their counsel in contempt of court. All of the remaining eleven defendants were found guilty, and the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of their convictions by a 6–2 vote in Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494 (1951). The government then proceeded with the prosecutions of more than 140 members of the party.[85]

Panicked by these arrests and fearing that the party was dangerously compromised by informants, Dennis and other party leaders decided to go underground and to disband many affiliated groups. The move heightened the political isolation of the leadership while making it nearly impossible for the party to function. The widespread support of action against communists and their associates began to abate after Senator Joseph McCarthy overreached himself in the Army–McCarthy hearings, producing a backlash. The end of the Korean War in 1953 also led to a lessening of anxieties about subversion. The Supreme Court brought a halt to the Smith Act prosecutions in 1957 in its decision in Yates v. United States, 354 U.S. 298 (1957), which required that the government prove that the defendant had actually taken concrete steps toward the forcible overthrow of the government, rather than merely advocating it in theory.

African Americans edit

 
1976 presidential campaign poster

The Communist Party played a significant role in defending the rights of African Americans during its heyday in the 1930s and 1940s. The Alabama Chapter of the Communist Party USA played a highly important role in organizing the unemployed Black workers, the Alabama Sharecroppers' Union and numerous anti-lynching campaigns. Further, the Alabama chapter organized many young activists that would later go on to be prominent members in the civil rights movement, such as Rosa Parks.[65] Throughout its history many of the party's leaders and political thinkers have been African Americans. James Ford, Charlene Mitchell, Angela Davis and Jarvis Tyner, the current executive vice chair of the party, all ran as presidential or vice presidential candidates on the party ticket. Others like Benjamin J. Davis, William L. Patterson, Harry Haywood, James Jackson, Henry Winston, Claude Lightfoot, Alphaeus Hunton, Doxey Wilkerson, Claudia Jones and John Pittman contributed in important ways to the party's approaches to major issues from human and civil rights, peace, women's equality, the national question, working class unity, socialist thought, cultural struggle and more. African American thinkers, artists and writers such as Claude McKay, Richard Wright, Ann Petry, W. E. B. Du Bois, Shirley Graham Du Bois, Lloyd Brown, Charles White, Elizabeth Catlett, Paul Robeson, Gwendolyn Brooks and many more were one-time members or supporters of the party and the Communist Party also had a close alliance with Harlem Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr.[86] The party's work to appeal to African Americans continues to this day. It was instrumental in the founding of the Black Radical Congress in 1998.

Gay rights movement edit

One of the most prominent sexual radicals in the United States, Harry Hay, developed his political views as an active member of the Communist Party. Hay founded in the early 1950s the Mattachine Society, America's second gay rights organization. However, gay rights were not seen as something the party should associate with organizationally. Most party members saw homosexuality as something done by those with fascist tendencies (following the lead of the Soviet Union in criminalizing the practice for that reason). Hay was expelled from the party as an ideological risk. In 2004, the editors of Political Affairs published articles detailing their self-criticism of the party's early views of gay and lesbian rights and praised Hay's work.[87]

The Communist Party endorsed LGBT rights in a 2005 statement.[88] The party affirmed the resolution with a statement a year later in honor of gay pride month in June 2006.[89]

United States peace movement edit

The Communist Party opposed the United States involvement in the early stages of World War II (until June 22, 1941, the date of the German invasion of the Soviet Union), the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the invasion of Grenada and American support for anti-Communist military dictatorships and movements in Central America. Meanwhile, some in the peace movement and the New Left rejected the Communist Party for what it saw as the party's bureaucratic rigidity and for its close association with the Soviet Union.

The Communist Party was consistently opposed to the United States' 2003–2011 war in Iraq.[90] United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) includes the New York branch of the Communist Party as a member group, with Communist Judith LeBlanc serving as the co-chair of UFPJ from 2007 to 2009.[91]

Presidential tickets edit

Communist Party USA candidates for president and vice president
Year President Vice President Votes Percent Name
1924  
William Z. Foster
 
Benjamin Gitlow
38,669 0.1% Workers Party of America
1928  
William Z. Foster
 
Benjamin Gitlow
48,551 0.1% Workers (Communist)
Party of America
1932  
William Z. Foster
James W. Ford 103,307 0.3% Communist Party USA
1936  
Earl Browder
James W. Ford 79,315 0.2%
1940  
Earl Browder
James W. Ford 48,557 0.1%
1948  
No candidate;
endorsed Henry Wallace
 
No candidate;
endorsed Glen H. Taylor
N/A
1952  
No candidate;
endorsed Vincent Hallinan
 
No candidate;
endorsed Charlotta Bass
1968  
Charlene Mitchell
 
Michael Zagarell
1,077 nil%
1972  
Gus Hall
 
Jarvis Tyner
25,597 nil%
1976  
Gus Hall
 
Jarvis Tyner
58,709 0.1%
1980  
Gus Hall
 
Angela Davis
44,933 0.1%
1984  
Gus Hall
 
Angela Davis
36,386 nil%

Best results in major races edit

Office Percent District Year Candidate
President 1.5% Florida 1928 William Z. Foster
0.8% Montana 1932 Earl Browder
0.6% New York 1936
US Senate 1.2% New York 1934 Max Bedacht
0.6% New York 1932 William Weinstone
0.4% Illinois 1932 William E. Browder
US House 6.2% California District 5 1934 Alexander Noral
5.2% California District 5 1936 Lawrence Ross
4.8% California District 13 1936 Emma Cutler

Party leaders edit

Party leaders of the Communist Party USA
Name Period Title
Charles Ruthenberg[92] 1919–1927 Executive Secretary of old CPA (1919–1920); Executive Secretary of WPA/W(C)P (May 1922 – 1927)
Alfred Wagenknecht 1919–1921 Executive Secretary of CLP (1919–1920); of UCP (1920–1921)
Charles Dirba 1920–1921 Executive Secretary of old CPA (1920–1921); of unified CPA (May 30, 1921 – July 27, 1921)
Louis Shapiro 1920 Executive Secretary of old CPA
L.E. Katterfeld 1921 Executive Secretary of unified CPA
William Weinstone 1921–1922 Executive Secretary of unified CPA
Jay Lovestone 1922; 1927–1929 Executive Secretary of unified CPA (February 22, 1922 – August 22, 1922); of W(C)P/CPUSA (1927–1929)
James P. Cannon[93] 1921–1922 National Chairman of WPA
Caleb Harrison 1921–1922 Executive Secretary of WPA
Abram Jakira 1922–1923 Executive Secretary of unified CPA
William Z. Foster[94] 1929–1934; 1945–1957 Party Chairman
Earl Browder 1934–1945 Party Chairman
Eugene Dennis 1945–1959 General Secretary
Gus Hall 1959–2000 General Secretary
Sam Webb 2000–2014 Chairman
John Bachtell 2014–2019 Chairman
Rossana Cambron 2019–present Co-chair
Joe Sims 2019–present Co-chair

Notable CPUSA members edit

Well-Known Organizers and Other Members of the Party
Name Years Active Title Notes
Angela Davis 1969–1991 Member, California Communist Party A supporter of the Communist Party until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 following the revolutions of 1989, which ended communism in most countries worldwide. Davis then created the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism, a former reformist faction within the Communist Party, which is now independent and promotes democratic socialism.
Charles E. Taylor ? Member, Montana Communist Party; State Senator Started a left-wing newspaper called "Producers News" in Sheridan County, Montana after being sent there by the Nonpartisan League of North Dakota. The newspaper slandered members of the community, sparking a libel case and newspaper war.[95][96]
Dorothy Ray Healey 1920s–1973 Member, California Communist Party An early supporter of the Communist Party, she became disillusioned with the leadership of Gus Hall and furthermore was against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. Healey criticized CPUSA orthodoxy after the crimes of Stalin were exposed by Nikita Khrushchev. She eventually left the party and joined the New America Movement, an organization promoting new-left activism.
Elizabeth Benson 1939–1968[97] Party Organizer A child prodigy, Benson moved to Houston at the age of 22 to organize the area for the national party.[98] Benson is best known for leading Texas organizing during the 1939 convention in San Antonio, where 5,000 people surrounded the building and rioted at the opening ceremonies. Benson and several others were escorted out by police.
Emma Tenayuca 1936–1939(?) Party Organizer Emma Tenayuca (December 21, 1916 – July 23, 1999), also known as Emma Beatrice Tenayuca, was an American labor leader, union organizer and educator. She is best known for her work organizing Mexican workers in Texas during the 1930s, particularly for leading the 1938 San Antonio pecan shellers strike.
Homer Brooks 1938–1943 Texas State Party Chair; 1938 Candidate for Governor First husband of Emma Tenayuca. Brooks faced a draft evasion charge that became an exercise in red-baiting. He was sentenced to 60 days in prison, but the charge was overturned.[98]
Richard Durham 1940s Member Creator and writer of the Destination Freedom radio series in Chicago. Durham was a CPUSA member while writing for New Masses, the Chicago Defender, the Chicago Star, and the Illinois Standard newspapers.[99][100][101]
Tupac Shakur ? Member, Baltimore Young Communist League[102][103] Known for his career as a rapper and actor, Tupac Shakur was at one time a member of the Young Communist League in Baltimore. He found the platform of the party appealing, having grown up in poverty. Shakur also dated the daughter of the director of the local Communist Party.[103]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The party voted to dissolve its youth wing in 2015 and voted to re-establish it in 2019. Final Resolutions for the 31st National Convention. June 10, 2019.
  2. ^ She mentions James Barrett, Maurice Isserman, Robin D. G. Kelley, Randi Storch and Kate Weigand.
  3. ^ See also The Communist Party and African-Americans and the article on the Scottsboro Boys for the Communist Party's work in promoting minority rights and involvement in the historically significant case of the Scottsboro Boys in the 1930s.
  4. ^ See also Executive Vice Chair Jarvis Tyner's ideological essay "The National Question". CPUSA Online. August 1, 2003. Retrieved April 7, 2009.

References edit

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  4. ^ Ali Swenson, Rebeccca Santana and (June 24, 2023).
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  6. ^ a b c . Communist Party of the United States of America. 2001. Archived from the original on January 21, 2014.
  7. ^ "Bill of Rights Socialism". CPUSA Online. May 1, 2016. Retrieved October 30, 2017.
  8. ^ Pierard, Richard (1998). "American Extremists: Militias, Supremacists, Klansmen, Communists, & Others. By John George and Laird Wilcox. Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Press, 1996. 443 pp. $18.95". Journal of Church and State. Oxford Journals. 40 (4): 912–913. doi:10.1093/jcs/40.4.912.
  9. ^ "The name of this organization shall be the Communist Party of the United States of America. Art. I of the "Constitution of the Communist Party of the United States of America".
  10. ^ a b c Goldfield, Michael (2009). "Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA)". In Ness, Immanuel (ed.). The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. pp. 1–9. doi:10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp0383. ISBN 978-1405198073.
  11. ^ Shannon, David A. (1967). "The Rise of the Communist Party USA during the Great Depression". Journal of American History, 54(2), 351-365.
  12. ^ Kann, Kenneth (2014). "Comrades and Critics: The Communist Party's Role in the New Deal Era". American Communist History, 13(2-3), 123-142.
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  40. ^ "New CPUSA Constitution (final draft)".
  41. ^ Klehr, Harvey; Haynes, John Earl; Gurvitz, David (February 15, 2017). "Two Worlds of a Soviet Spy – The Astonishing Life Story of Joseph Katz". Commentary Magazine. Commentary, Inc. Retrieved June 4, 2017.
  42. ^ Henry Felix Srebrnik, Dreams of Nationhood: American Jewish Communists and the Soviet Birobidzhan Project, 1924–1951. Brighton, MA: Academic Studies Press, 2010; p. 2.
  43. ^ Yates v. United States, 354 U.S. 298 (1957)
  44. ^ "About People's World". People's World. August 25, 2009.
  45. ^ "Opening of the Communist Party's 30th national convention". People's World. June 13, 2014. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
  46. ^ "It's time to run candidates: A call for discussion and action". April 9, 2021.
  47. ^ . Steven Estrada for District One. Archived from the original on April 26, 2021. Retrieved April 26, 2021.
  48. ^ "Steven Estrada - Ballotpedia". Retrieved October 21, 2023.
  49. ^ a b "CPUSA Constitution". Amended July 8, 2001, at the 27th National Convention, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Retrieved November 11, 2011.
  50. ^ "CPUSA Constitution". Communist Party USA. September 20, 2001. from the original on November 17, 2011. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  51. ^ a b c "Communist Party Immediate Program for the Crisis". Archived July 8, 2009, at the Portuguese Web Archive. Retrieved August 29, 2006.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Program of the Communist Party".
  53. ^ See Karl Marx, The Communist Manifesto, Chapter 2.
  54. ^ Bachtell, John. "The Movements Against War and Capitalist Globalization". CPUSA Online. July 17, 2003. Retrieved April 15, 2009. "CPUSA Online – the movements against war and capitalist globalization". Archived from the original on November 7, 2003. Retrieved April 15, 2009.
  55. ^ "War Will Not End Terrorism". CPUSA Online. October 8, 2001. Retrieved April 6, 2009.
  56. ^ Myles, Dee. "Remarks on the Fight for Women's Equality". Speech given at the 27th National Convention of the CPUSA. Communist Party USA. CPUSA Online. July 7, 2001. Retrieved April 7, 2009.
  57. ^ Kern, Michelle (June 27, 2016). "What is the CPUSA's position on abortion rights?". Cpusa.org. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
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  59. ^ Section 3d: "The Working Class, Class Struggle, Democratic Struggle, and Forces for Progress: The Working Class and Trade Union Movement Democratic Struggle and its Relation to Class Struggle Special Oppression and Exploitation. Multiracial, Multinational Unity for Full Equality and Against Racism". CPUSA Online. May 19, 2006. Retrieved April 7, 2009.
  60. ^ "CPUSA Members Mark 5th Anniversary of the War: Ben Davis Club Remembers Those Lost". CPUSA Online. March 20, 2008. Retrieved April 7, 2009. . Archived from the original on July 19, 2009. Retrieved April 7, 2009.
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Further reading edit

  • Arnesen, Eric, "Civil Rights and the Cold War at Home: Postwar Activism, Anticommunism, and the Decline of the Left", American Communist History (2012), 11#1 pp 5–44.
  • Draper, Theodore, The Roots of American Communism. New York: Viking, 1957.
  • Draper, Theodore, American Communism and Soviet Russia: The Formative Period. New York: Viking, 1960.
  • Draper, Theodore, The Roots of American Communism. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers (Originally published by Viking Press in 1957). ISBN 0765805138.
  • Howe, Irving and Lewis Coser, The American Communist Party: A Critical History. Boston: Beacon Press, 1957.
  • Isserman, Maurice, Which Side Were You On?: The American Communist Party During the Second World War. Wesleyan University Press, 1982 and 1987.
  • Jaffe, Philip J., Rise and Fall of American Communism. Horizon Press, 1975.
  • Klehr, Harvey. The Heyday of American Communism: The Depression Decade, Basic Books, 1984.
  • Klehr, Harvey and Haynes, John Earl, The American Communist Movement: Storming Heaven Itself, Twayne Publishers (Macmillan), 1992.
  • Klehr, Harvey, John Earl Haynes, and Fridrikh Igorevich Firsov. The Secret World of American Communism. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995.
  • Klehr, Harvey, Kyrill M. Anderson, and John Earl Haynes. The Soviet World of American Communism. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998.
  • Lewy, Guenter, The Cause That Failed: Communism in American Political Life. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
  • McDuffie, Erik S., Sojourning for Freedom: Black Women, American Communism, and the Making of Black Left Feminism. Durham: Duke University Press, 2011
  • Ottanelli, Fraser M., The Communist Party of the United States: From the Depression to World War II. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1991.
  • Maurice Spector, James P. Cannon, and the Origins of Canadian Trotskyism, 1890–1928. Urbana, IL: Illinois University Press, 2007
  • Palmer, Bryan, James P. Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary Left, 1890–1928. Urbana, IL: Illinois University Press, 2007.
  • Service, Robert. Comrades!: a history of world communism (2007).
  • Shannon, David A., The Decline of American Communism: A History of the Communist Party of the United States since 1945. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1959.
  • Starobin, Joseph R., American Communism in Crisis, 1943–1957. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1972.
  • Zumoff, Jacob A. The Communist International and US Communism, 1919–1929. [2014] Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2015.

Archives edit

  • "Communist Party of the United States of America Records", Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, New York University Special Collections
  • Communist Party of the United States of America Records, 1956–1960. At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
  • Communist Party of the United States of America, Washington State District Records, 1919–2003. At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
  • Marion S. Kinney Papers, 1930–1983. At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Communist Party USA at Wikimedia Commons
  • Young Communist League USA – youth group
  • People's World – weekly newspaper
  • Manifesto and program. Constitution. Report to the Communist International – first pamphlet of the Communist Party of America
  • Manifesto to the workers of America
  • FBI files on the CPUSA on the Internet Archive

communist, party, american, communists, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, contain, excessive, inappropriate, references, self, published, sources, please, help, improve, removing, references, unreliable, sources, where, they, used, i. American Communists redirects here For other uses see Communist Party USA disambiguation This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self published sources Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately May 2023 template removal help Communist Party USA officially the Communist Party of the United States of America CPUSA 9 also known as the American Communist Party is a communist party in the United States which was established in 1919 after a split in the Socialist Party of America following the Russian Revolution 6 10 Communist Party USAAbbreviationCPUSAPresidiumNational Convention 1 Co chairsJoe SimsRossana CambronFounderC E Ruthenberg 2 FoundedSeptember 1 1919 104 years ago 1919 09 01 Split fromSocialist Party of AmericaHeadquarters235 W 23rd St New York NY 10011 Manhattan New YorkNewspaperPeople s World 3 Youth wingYoung Communist League note 1 Membership 2023 est 15 000 4 IdeologyCommunism 5 Marxism Leninism 6 Bill of Rights socialism 7 Political positionFar left 8 International affiliationIMCWP since 1998 Comintern until 1943 Colors RedSlogan People and Planet Before Profits Party flagWebsitewww wbr cpusa wbr orgPolitics of United StatesPolitical partiesElectionsThe history of the CPUSA is closely related to the history of the American labor movement and the history of communist parties worldwide Initially operating underground due to the Palmer Raids which started during the First Red Scare the party was influential in American politics in the first half of the 20th century and it also played a prominent role in the history of the labor movement from the 1920s through the 1940s playing a key role in the founding of the Congress of Industrial Organizations 10 The party was unique among labor activist groups of the time in being outspokenly anti racist and opposed to racial segregation after sponsoring the defense for the Scottsboro Boys in 1931 The party reached the apex of its influence in US politics during the Great Depression playing a prominent role in the political landscape as a militant grassroots network capable of effectively organizing and mobilizing workers and the unemployed in support of cornerstone New Deal programs principally Social Security unemployment insurance and the Works Progress Administration 11 12 13 The transformative changes of the New Deal era combined with the US alliance with the Soviet Union during World War II created an atmosphere in which the CPUSA wielded considerable influence with about 70 000 vetted party members 14 Under the leadership of Earl Browder the party was critically supportive of President Franklin D Roosevelt and branded communism as 20th Century Americanism 15 Envisioning itself as becoming engrained within the established political structure in the post war era the party was dissolved in 1944 to become the Communist Political Association 16 However as Cold War hostility ensued the party was restored but struggled to maintain its influence amidst the second Red Scare and McCarthyism Its opposition to the Marshall Plan and the Truman Doctrine failed to gain traction and its endorsed candidate Henry A Wallace of the Progressive Party under performed in the 1948 presidential election The party itself imploded following the public condemnation of Stalin by Nikita Khrushchev in 1956 with membership sinking to a few thousand who were increasingly alienated from the rest of the American Left for their support of the Soviet Union 10 The CPUSA received significant funding from the Soviet Union and crafted its public positions to match those of Moscow 17 The CPUSA also used a covert apparatus to assist the Soviets with their intelligence activities in the United States and utilized a network of front organizations to shape public opinion 18 The CPUSA opposed glasnost and perestroika in the Soviet Union and as a result major funding from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ended in 1991 19 Contents 1 History 2 Beliefs 2 1 Constitution program 2 2 Bill of Rights socialism 2 3 Living standards 2 4 Imperialism and war 2 5 Women and minorities 3 Geography 4 Relations with other groups 4 1 United States labor movement 4 2 Soviet funding and espionage 4 2 1 Counterintelligence 4 3 Criminal prosecutions 4 4 African Americans 4 5 Gay rights movement 4 6 United States peace movement 5 Presidential tickets 5 1 Best results in major races 6 Party leaders 7 Notable CPUSA members 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 Archives 13 External linksHistory editMain article History of the Communist Party USA nbsp Charter for a local unit of the CPUSA dated October 24 1919During the first half of the 20th century the Communist Party was influential in various struggles Historian Ellen Schrecker concludes that decades of recent scholarship note 2 offer a more nuanced portrayal of the party as both a Stalinist sect tied to a vicious regime and the most dynamic organization within the American Left during the 1930s and 40s 20 It was also the first political party in the United States to be fully clarification needed racially integrated 21 By August 1919 only months after its founding the Communist Party claimed to have 50 000 to 60 000 members Its members also included anarchists and other radical leftists At the time the older and more moderate Socialist Party of America suffering from criminal prosecutions for its antiwar stance during World War I had declined to 40 000 members The sections of the Communist Party s International Workers Order IWO organized for communism around linguistic and ethnic lines providing mutual aid and tailoring cultural activities to an IWO membership that peaked at 200 000 at its height 22 During the Great Depression some Americans were attracted by the visible activism of Communists on behalf of a wide range of social and economic causes including the rights of African Americans workers and the unemployed 23 The Communist Party played a significant role in the resurgence of organized labor in the 1930s 24 Still others alarmed by the rise of the Falangists in Spain and the Nazis in Germany admired the Soviet Union s early and staunch opposition to fascism Party membership swelled from 7 500 at the start of the decade to 55 000 by its end 25 Party members also rallied to the defense of the Spanish Republic during this period after a nationalist military uprising moved to overthrow it resulting in the Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 26 The Communist Party of the Soviet Union along with leftists throughout the world raised funds for medical relief while many of its members made their way to Spain with the aid of the party to join the Lincoln Brigade one of the International Brigades 27 26 nbsp The Washington Commonwealth Federation newspaper after the signing of the Molotov Ribbentrop pact original scan The Communist Party was adamantly opposed to fascism during the Popular Front period Although membership in the party rose to about 66 000 by 1939 28 26 nearly 20 000 members left the party by 1943 26 While general secretary Browder at first attacked Germany for its September 1 1939 invasion of western Poland on September 11 the Communist Party received a communique from Moscow denouncing the Polish government 29 Between September 14 16 party leaders bickered about the direction to take 29 On September 17 the Soviet Union invaded eastern Poland and occupied the Polish territory assigned to it by the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact followed by co ordination with German forces in Poland 30 31 The Communist Party then turned the focus of its public activities from anti fascism to advocating peace opposing military preparations The party criticized British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and French leader Edouard Daladier but it did not at first attack President Roosevelt reasoning that this could devastate American Communism blaming instead Roosevelt s advisors 32 The party spread the slogans The Yanks Are Not Coming and Hands Off set up a perpetual peace vigil across the street from the White House and announced that Roosevelt was the head of the war party of the American bourgeoisie 33 The party was active in the isolationist America First Committee 34 In October and November after the Soviets invaded Finland and forced mutual assistance pacts from Estonia Latvia and Lithuania the Communist Party considered Russian security sufficient justification to support the actions 35 Comintern and its leader Georgi Dimitrov demanded to Browder to change the party s support for Roosevelt 35 On October 23 the party began attacking Roosevelt 33 The party changed this policy again after Hitler broke the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact by attacking the Soviet Union on June 22 1941 In August 1940 after NKVD agent Ramon Mercader killed Trotsky with an ice axe Browder perpetuated Moscow s line that the killer who had been dating one of Trotsky s secretaries was a disillusioned follower 36 The Communist Party s early labor and organizing successes did not last long As the decades progressed the combined effects of the second Red Scare McCarthyism Nikita Khrushchev s 1956 Secret Speech in which he denounced the previous decades of Joseph Stalin s rule and the adversities of the continuing Cold War mentality steadily weakened the party s internal structure and confidence Party membership in the Communist International and its close adherence to the political positions of the Soviet Union gave most Americans the impression that the party was not only a threatening subversive domestic entity it was also a foreign agent which espoused an ideology which was fundamentally alien and threatening to the American way of life Internal and external crises swirled together to the point when members who did not end up in prison for party activities either tended to disappear quietly from its ranks or they tended to adopt more moderate political positions which were at odds with the party line By 1957 membership had dwindled to less than 10 000 of whom some 1 500 were informants for the FBI 37 The party was also banned by the Communist Control Act of 1954 although it was never really enforced and Congress later repealed most provisions of the act also with some declared unconstitutional via the court system 38 The party attempted to recover with its opposition to the Vietnam War during the civil rights movement in the 1960s but its continued uncritical support for an increasingly stultified and militaristic Soviet Union further alienated it from the rest of the left wing in the United States which saw this supportive role as outdated and even dangerous At the same time the party s aging membership demographics distanced it from the New Left in the United States 39 With the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev and his effort to radically alter the Soviet economic and political system from the mid 1980s the Communist Party finally became estranged from the leadership of the Soviet Union itself In 1989 the Soviet Communist Party cut off major funding to the American Communist Party due to its opposition to glasnost and perestroika With the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 the party held its convention and attempted to resolve the issue of whether the party should reject Marxism Leninism The majority reasserted the party s now purely Marxist outlook prompting a minority faction which urged social democrats to exit the now reduced party The party has since adopted Marxism Leninism within its program 6 In 2014 the new draft of the party constitution declared We apply the scientific outlook developed by Marx Engels Lenin and others in the context of our American history culture and traditions 40 nbsp The 30th National Convention was held in Chicago in 2014The Communist Party is based in New York City From 1922 to 1988 it published Morgen Freiheit a daily newspaper written in Yiddish 41 42 For decades its West Coast newspaper was the People s World and its East Coast newspaper was The Daily World 43 The two newspapers merged in 1986 into the People s Weekly World The People s Weekly World has since become an online only publication called People s World It has since ceased being an official Communist Party publication as the party does not fund its publication 44 The party s former theoretical journal Political Affairs is now also published exclusively online but the party still maintains International Publishers as its publishing house In June 2014 the party held its 30th National Convention in Chicago 45 The party announced on April 7 2021 that it intended to run candidates in elections again after a hiatus of over thirty years 46 Steven Estrada who ran for city council in Long Beach was one of the first candidates to run as an open member of the CPUSA again although Long Beach local elections are officially non partisan 47 Estrada received 8 5 of the vote 48 Beliefs editConstitution program edit According to the constitution of the party adopted at the 30th National Convention in 2014 the Communist Party operates on the principle of democratic centralism 49 its highest authority being the quadrennial National Convention Article VI Section 3 of the 2001 Constitution laid out certain positions as non negotiable 50 S truggle for the unity of the working class against all forms of national oppression national chauvinism discrimination and segregation against all racist ideologies and practices against all manifestations of male supremacy and discrimination against women against homophobia and all manifestations of discrimination against gays lesbians bisexuals and transgender people Among the points in the party s Immediate Program are a 15 hour minimum wage for all workers national universal health care and opposition to privatization of Social Security Economic measures such as increased taxes on the rich and corporations strong regulation of the financial industry regulation and public ownership of utilities and increased federal aid to cities and states are also included in the Immediate Program as are opposition to the Iraq War and other military interventions opposition to free trade treaties such as the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA nuclear disarmament and a reduced military budget various civil rights provisions campaign finance reform including public financing of campaigns and election law reform including instant runoff voting 51 Bill of Rights socialism edit Main article Bill of Rights socialism The Communist Party emphasizes a vision of socialism as an extension of American democracy Seeking to build socialism in the United States based on the revolutionary traditions and struggles of American history the party promotes a conception of Bill of Rights Socialism that will guarantee all the freedoms we have won over centuries of struggle and also extend the Bill of Rights to include freedom from unemployment as well as freedom from poverty from illiteracy and from discrimination and oppression 52 Reiterating the idea of property rights in socialist society as it is outlined in Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels s Communist Manifesto 1848 53 the Communist Party emphasizes Many myths have been propagated about socialism Contrary to right wing claims socialism would not take away the personal private property of workers only the private ownership of major industries financial institutions and other large corporations and the excessive luxuries of the super rich 52 Rather than making all wages entirely equal the Communist Party holds that building socialism would entail eliminating private wealth from stock speculation from private ownership of large corporations from the export of capital and jobs and from the exploitation of large numbers of workers 52 Living standards edit Among the primary concerns of the Communist Party are the problems of unemployment underemployment and job insecurity which the party considers the natural result of the profit driven incentives of the capitalist economy Millions of workers are unemployed underemployed or insecure in their jobs even during economic upswings and periods of recovery from recessions Most workers experience long years of stagnant and declining real wages while health and education costs soar Many workers are forced to work second and third jobs to make ends meet Most workers now average four different occupations during their lifetime many involuntarily moved from job to job and career to career Often retirement age workers are forced to continue working just to provide health care for themselves and their families Millions of people continuously live below the poverty level many suffer homelessness and hunger Public and private programs to alleviate poverty and hunger do not reach everyone and are inadequate even for those they do reach With capitalist globalization jobs move from place to place as capitalists export factories and even entire industries to other countries in a relentless search for the lowest wages 52 The Communist Party believes that class struggle starts with the fight for wages hours benefits working conditions job security and jobs But it also includes an endless variety of other forms for fighting specific battles resisting speed up picketing contract negotiations strikes demonstrations lobbying for pro labor legislation elections and even general strikes 52 The Communist Party s national programs considers workers who struggle against the capitalist class or any part of it on any issue with the aim of improving or defending their lives part of the class struggle 52 Imperialism and war edit The Communist Party maintains that developments within the foreign policy of the United States as reflected in the rise of neoconservatives and other groups associated with right wing politics have developed in tandem with the interests of large scale capital such as the multinational corporations The state thereby becomes thrust into a proxy role that is essentially inclined to help facilitate control by one section of the capitalist class over all others and over the whole of society 52 Accordingly the Communist Party holds that right wing policymakers such as the neoconservatives steering the state away from working class interests on behalf of a disproportionately powerful capitalist class have demonized foreign opponents of the U S covertly funded the right wing initiated civil war in Nicaragua and gave weapons to the Saddam Hussein dictatorship in Iraq They picked small countries to invade including Panama and Grenada testing new military equipment and strategy and breaking down resistance at home and abroad to U S military invasion as a policy option 52 From its ideological framework the Communist Party understands imperialism as the pinnacle of capitalist development the state working on behalf of the few who wield disproportionate power assumes the role of proffering phony rationalizations for economically driven imperial ambition as a means to promote the sectional economic interests of big business 52 In opposition to what it considers the ultimate agenda of the conservative wing of American politics the Communist Party rejects foreign policy proposals such as the Bush Doctrine rejecting the right of the American government to attack any country it wants to conduct war without end until it succeeds everywhere and even to use tactical nuclear weapons and militarize space Whoever does not support the U S policy is condemned as an opponent Whenever international organizations such as the United Nations do not support U S government policies they are reluctantly tolerated until the U S government is able to subordinate or ignore them 52 Juxtaposing the support from the Republicans and the right wing of the Democratic Party for the Bush administration led invasion of Iraq with the many millions of Americans who opposed the invasion of Iraq from its beginning the Communist Party notes the spirit of opposition towards the war coming from the American public Thousands of grassroots peace committees were organized by ordinary Americans neighborhoods small towns and universities expressing opposition in countless creative ways Thousands of actions vigils teach ins and newspaper advertisements were organized The largest demonstrations were held since the Vietnam War 500 000 marched in New York after the war started Students at over 500 universities conducted a Day of Action for Books not Bombs Over 150 anti war resolutions were passed by city councils Resolutions were passed by thousands of local unions and community organizations Local and national actions were organized on the Internet including the Virtual March on Washington DC Elected officials were flooded with millions of calls emails and letters In an unprecedented development large sections of the US labor movement officially opposed the war In contrast it took years to build labor opposition to the Vietnam War For example in Chicago labor leaders formed Labor United for Peace Justice and Prosperity They concluded that mass education of their members was essential to counter false propaganda and that the fight for the peace economic security and democratic rights was interrelated 54 The party has consistently opposed American involvement in the Korean War the Vietnam War the First Gulf War and the post September 11 conflicts in both Iraq and Afghanistan The Communist Party does not believe that the threat of terrorism can be resolved through war 55 Women and minorities edit nbsp Robert G Thompson and Benjamin J Davis leaving the courthouse during the Smith Act trials of Communist Party leaders in 1949 1958The Communist Party Constitution defines the U S working class as multiracial and multinational It unites men and women young and old gay and straight native born and immigrant urban and rural The party further expands its interpretation to include the employed and unemployed organized and unorganized and of all occupations 49 The Communist Party seeks equal rights for women equal pay for equal work and the protection of reproductive rights together with putting an end to sexism 56 They support the right of abortion and social services to provide access to it arguing that unplanned pregnancy is prejudiced against poor women 57 The party s ranks include a Women s Equality Commission which recognizes the role of women as an asset in moving towards building socialism 58 Historically significant in American history as an early fighter for African Americans rights and playing a leading role in protesting the lynchings of African Americans in the South the Communist Party in its national program today calls racism the classic divide and conquer tactic note 3 59 From its New York City base the Communist Party s Ben Davis Club and other Communist Party organizations have been involved in local activism in Harlem and other African American and minority communities 60 The Communist Party was instrumental in the founding of the progressive Black Radical Congress in 1998 as well as the African Blood Brotherhood 61 Historically significant in Latino working class history as a successful organizer of the Mexican American working class in the Southwestern United States in the 1930s the Communist Party regards working class Latino people as another oppressed group targeted by overt racism as well as systemic discrimination in areas such as education and sees the participation of Latino voters in a general mass movement in both party based and nonpartisan work as an essential goal for major left wing progress 62 The Communist Party holds that racial and ethnic discrimination not only harms minorities but is pernicious to working class people of all backgrounds as any discriminatory practices between demographic sections of the working class constitute an inherently divisive practice responsible for obstructing the development of working class consciousness driving wedges in class unity to divert attention from class exploitation and creating extra profits for the capitalist class 63 note 4 The Communist Party supports an end to racial profiling 51 The party supports continued enforcement of civil rights laws as well as affirmative action 51 Geography editThe Communist Party garnered support in particular communities developing a unique geography Instead of a broad nationwide support support for the party was concentrated in different communities at different times depending on the organizing strategy at that moment Before World War II the Communist Party had relatively stable support in New York City Chicago and St Louis County Minnesota However at times the party also had strongholds in more rural counties such as Sheridan County Montana 22 in 1932 Iron County Wisconsin 4 in 1932 or Ontonagon County Michigan 5 in 1934 64 Even in the South at the height of Jim Crow the Communist Party had a significant presence in Alabama Despite the disenfranchisement of African Americans the party gained 8 of the votes in rural Elmore County This was mostly due to the successful biracial organizing of sharecroppers through the Sharecroppers Union 64 65 Unlike open mass organizations like the Socialist Party or the NAACP the Communist Party was a disciplined organization that demanded strenuous commitments and frequently expelled members Membership levels remained below 20 000 until 1933 and then surged upward in the late 1930s reaching 66 000 in 1939 and reaching its peak membership of over 75 000 in 1947 66 The party fielded candidates in presidential and many state and local elections not expecting to win but expecting loyalists to vote the party ticket The party mounted symbolic yet energetic campaigns during each presidential election from 1924 through 1940 and many gubernatorial and congressional races from 1922 to 1944 The Communist Party organized the country into districts that did not coincide with state lines initially dividing it into 15 districts identified with a headquarters city with an additional Agricultural District Several reorganizations in the 1930s expanded the number of districts 67 Relations with other groups editUnited States labor movement edit Main articles Communists in the United States labor movement 1919 1937 and Communists in the United States labor movement 1937 1950 nbsp May Day parade with banners and flags New YorkThe Communist Party has sought to play an active role in the labor movement since its origins as part of its effort to build a mass movement of American workers to bring about their own liberation through socialist revolution Soviet funding and espionage edit From 1959 until 1989 when Gus Hall condemned the initiatives taken by Mikhail Gorbachev in the Soviet Union the Communist Party received a substantial subsidy from the Soviets There is at least one receipt signed by Gus Hall in the KGB archives 68 69 Starting with 75 000 in 1959 this was increased gradually to 3 million in 1987 This substantial amount reflected the party s loyalty to the Moscow line in contrast to the Italian and later Spanish and British Communist parties whose Eurocommunism deviated from the orthodox line in the late 1970s Releases from the Soviet archives show that all national Communist parties that conformed to the Soviet line were funded in the same fashion From the Communist point of view this international funding arose from the internationalist nature of communism itself as fraternal assistance was considered the duty of communists in any one country to give aid to their allies in other countries From the anti Communist point of view this funding represented an unwarranted interference by one country in the affairs of another The cutoff of funds in 1989 resulted in a financial crisis which forced the party to cut back publication in 1990 of the party newspaper the People s Daily World to weekly publication the People s Weekly World see references below Somewhat more controversial than mere funding is the alleged involvement of Communist members in espionage for the Soviet Union Whittaker Chambers alleged that Sandor Goldberger also known as Josef Peters who commonly wrote under the name J Peters headed the Communist Party s underground secret apparatus from 1932 to 1938 and pioneered its role as an auxiliary to Soviet intelligence activities 70 Bernard Schuster Organizational Secretary of the New York District of the Communist Party is claimed to have been the operational recruiter and conduit for members of the party into the ranks of the secret apparatus or Group A line Stalin publicly disbanded the Comintern in 1943 A Moscow NKVD message to all stations on September 12 1943 detailed instructions for handling intelligence sources within the Communist Party after the disestablishment of the Comintern There are a number of decrypted World War II Soviet messages between NKVD offices in the United States and Moscow also known as the Venona cables The Venona cables and other published sources appear to confirm that Julius Rosenberg was responsible for espionage Theodore Hall a Harvard trained physicist who did not join the party until 1952 began passing information on the atomic bomb to the Soviets soon after he was hired at Los Alamos at age 19 Hall who was known as Mlad by his KGB handlers escaped prosecution Hall s wife aware of his espionage claims that their NKVD handler had advised them to plead innocent as the Rosenbergs did if formally charged 71 It was the belief of opponents of the Communist Party such as J Edgar Hoover longtime director of the FBI and Joseph McCarthy for whom McCarthyism is named and other anti Communists that the Communist Party constituted an active conspiracy was secretive loyal to a foreign power and whose members assisted Soviet intelligence in the clandestine infiltration of American government This is the traditionalist view of some in the field of Communist studies such as Harvey Klehr and John Earl Haynes since supported by several memoirs of ex Soviet KGB officers and information obtained from the Venona project and Soviet archives 72 73 74 At one time this view was shared by the majority of the Congress In the Findings and declarations of fact section of the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950 50 U S C Chap 23 Sub IV Sec 841 it stated T he Communist Party although purportedly a political party is in fact an instrumentality of a conspiracy to overthrow the Government of the United States It constitutes an authoritarian dictatorship within a republic the policies and programs of the Communist Party are secretly prescribed for it by the foreign leaders to carry into action slavishly the assignments given T he Communist Party acknowledges no constitutional or statutory limitations The peril inherent in its operation arises from its dedication to the proposition that the present constitutional Government of the United States ultimately must be brought to ruin by any available means including resort to force and violence its role as the agency of a hostile foreign power renders its existence a clear present and continuing danger 75 In 1993 experts from the Library of Congress traveled to Moscow to copy previously secret archives of the party records sent to the Soviet Union for safekeeping by party organizers The records provided an irrefutable link between Soviet intelligence and information obtained by the Communist Party and its contacts in the United States government from the 1920s through the 1940s Some documents revealed that the Communist Party was actively involved in secretly recruiting party members from African American groups and rural farm workers Other party records contained further evidence that Soviet sympathizers had indeed infiltrated the State Department beginning in the 1930s Included in Communist Party archival records were confidential letters from two American ambassadors in Europe to Roosevelt and a senior State Department official Thanks to an official in the Department of State sympathetic to the party the confidential correspondence concerning political and economic matters in Europe ended up in the hands of Soviet intelligence 72 76 77 Counterintelligence edit In 1952 Jack and Morris Childs together codenamed SOLO became FBI informants As high ranking officials in the American Communist Party they informed on the CPUSA for the rest of the Cold War monitoring the Soviet funding 78 79 They also traveled to Moscow and Beijing to meet USSR and PRC leadership 80 Jack and Morris Childs both received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1987 for their intelligence work Morris s son stated The CIA could not believe the information the FBI had because the American Communist Party had links directly into the Kremlin 81 According to intelligence analyst Darren E Tromblay the SOLO operation and the Ad Hoc Committee were part of developing geopolitical awareness by the FBI about factors such as the Sino Soviet split 82 The Ad Hoc Committee was a group within CPUSA that circulated a pro Maoist bulletin in the voice of a dedicated but rebellious comrade Allegedly an operation it caused a schism within the CPUSA 83 Criminal prosecutions edit When the Communist Party was formed in 1919 the United States government was engaged in prosecution of socialists who had opposed World War I and military service This prosecution was continued in 1919 and January 1920 in the Palmer Raids as part of the First Red Scare Rank and file foreign born members of the Communist Party were targeted and as many as possible were arrested and deported while leaders were prosecuted and in some cases sentenced to prison terms In the late 1930s with the authorization of President Franklin D Roosevelt the FBI began investigating both domestic Nazis and Communists In 1940 Congress passed the Smith Act which made it illegal to advocate abet or teach the desirability of overthrowing the government In 1949 the federal government put Eugene Dennis William Z Foster and ten other Communist Party leaders on trial for advocating the violent overthrow of the government Because the prosecution could not show that any of the defendants had openly called for violence or been involved in accumulating weapons for a proposed revolution it relied on the testimony of former members of the party that the defendants had privately advocated the overthrow of the government and on quotations from the work of Marx Lenin and other revolutionary figures of the past 84 During the course of the trial the judge held several of the defendants and all of their counsel in contempt of court All of the remaining eleven defendants were found guilty and the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of their convictions by a 6 2 vote in Dennis v United States 341 U S 494 1951 The government then proceeded with the prosecutions of more than 140 members of the party 85 Panicked by these arrests and fearing that the party was dangerously compromised by informants Dennis and other party leaders decided to go underground and to disband many affiliated groups The move heightened the political isolation of the leadership while making it nearly impossible for the party to function The widespread support of action against communists and their associates began to abate after Senator Joseph McCarthy overreached himself in the Army McCarthy hearings producing a backlash The end of the Korean War in 1953 also led to a lessening of anxieties about subversion The Supreme Court brought a halt to the Smith Act prosecutions in 1957 in its decision in Yates v United States 354 U S 298 1957 which required that the government prove that the defendant had actually taken concrete steps toward the forcible overthrow of the government rather than merely advocating it in theory African Americans edit Main article Communist Party USA and African Americans nbsp 1976 presidential campaign posterThe Communist Party played a significant role in defending the rights of African Americans during its heyday in the 1930s and 1940s The Alabama Chapter of the Communist Party USA played a highly important role in organizing the unemployed Black workers the Alabama Sharecroppers Union and numerous anti lynching campaigns Further the Alabama chapter organized many young activists that would later go on to be prominent members in the civil rights movement such as Rosa Parks 65 Throughout its history many of the party s leaders and political thinkers have been African Americans James Ford Charlene Mitchell Angela Davis and Jarvis Tyner the current executive vice chair of the party all ran as presidential or vice presidential candidates on the party ticket Others like Benjamin J Davis William L Patterson Harry Haywood James Jackson Henry Winston Claude Lightfoot Alphaeus Hunton Doxey Wilkerson Claudia Jones and John Pittman contributed in important ways to the party s approaches to major issues from human and civil rights peace women s equality the national question working class unity socialist thought cultural struggle and more African American thinkers artists and writers such as Claude McKay Richard Wright Ann Petry W E B Du Bois Shirley Graham Du Bois Lloyd Brown Charles White Elizabeth Catlett Paul Robeson Gwendolyn Brooks and many more were one time members or supporters of the party and the Communist Party also had a close alliance with Harlem Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr 86 The party s work to appeal to African Americans continues to this day It was instrumental in the founding of the Black Radical Congress in 1998 Gay rights movement edit One of the most prominent sexual radicals in the United States Harry Hay developed his political views as an active member of the Communist Party Hay founded in the early 1950s the Mattachine Society America s second gay rights organization However gay rights were not seen as something the party should associate with organizationally Most party members saw homosexuality as something done by those with fascist tendencies following the lead of the Soviet Union in criminalizing the practice for that reason Hay was expelled from the party as an ideological risk In 2004 the editors of Political Affairs published articles detailing their self criticism of the party s early views of gay and lesbian rights and praised Hay s work 87 The Communist Party endorsed LGBT rights in a 2005 statement 88 The party affirmed the resolution with a statement a year later in honor of gay pride month in June 2006 89 United States peace movement edit The Communist Party opposed the United States involvement in the early stages of World War II until June 22 1941 the date of the German invasion of the Soviet Union the Korean War the Vietnam War the invasion of Grenada and American support for anti Communist military dictatorships and movements in Central America Meanwhile some in the peace movement and the New Left rejected the Communist Party for what it saw as the party s bureaucratic rigidity and for its close association with the Soviet Union The Communist Party was consistently opposed to the United States 2003 2011 war in Iraq 90 United for Peace and Justice UFPJ includes the New York branch of the Communist Party as a member group with Communist Judith LeBlanc serving as the co chair of UFPJ from 2007 to 2009 91 Presidential tickets editCommunist Party USA candidates for president and vice president Year President Vice President Votes Percent Name1924 nbsp William Z Foster nbsp Benjamin Gitlow 38 669 0 1 Workers Party of America1928 nbsp William Z Foster nbsp Benjamin Gitlow 48 551 0 1 Workers Communist Party of America1932 nbsp William Z Foster James W Ford 103 307 0 3 Communist Party USA1936 nbsp Earl Browder James W Ford 79 315 0 2 1940 nbsp Earl Browder James W Ford 48 557 0 1 1948 nbsp No candidate endorsed Henry Wallace nbsp No candidate endorsed Glen H Taylor N A1952 nbsp No candidate endorsed Vincent Hallinan nbsp No candidate endorsed Charlotta Bass1968 nbsp Charlene Mitchell nbsp Michael Zagarell 1 077 nil 1972 nbsp Gus Hall nbsp Jarvis Tyner 25 597 nil 1976 nbsp Gus Hall nbsp Jarvis Tyner 58 709 0 1 1980 nbsp Gus Hall nbsp Angela Davis 44 933 0 1 1984 nbsp Gus Hall nbsp Angela Davis 36 386 nil Best results in major races edit Office Percent District Year CandidatePresident 1 5 Florida 1928 William Z Foster0 8 Montana 1932 Earl Browder0 6 New York 1936US Senate 1 2 New York 1934 Max Bedacht0 6 New York 1932 William Weinstone0 4 Illinois 1932 William E BrowderUS House 6 2 California District 5 1934 Alexander Noral5 2 California District 5 1936 Lawrence Ross4 8 California District 13 1936 Emma CutlerParty leaders editParty leaders of the Communist Party USA Name Period TitleCharles Ruthenberg 92 1919 1927 Executive Secretary of old CPA 1919 1920 Executive Secretary of WPA W C P May 1922 1927 Alfred Wagenknecht 1919 1921 Executive Secretary of CLP 1919 1920 of UCP 1920 1921 Charles Dirba 1920 1921 Executive Secretary of old CPA 1920 1921 of unified CPA May 30 1921 July 27 1921 Louis Shapiro 1920 Executive Secretary of old CPAL E Katterfeld 1921 Executive Secretary of unified CPAWilliam Weinstone 1921 1922 Executive Secretary of unified CPAJay Lovestone 1922 1927 1929 Executive Secretary of unified CPA February 22 1922 August 22 1922 of W C P CPUSA 1927 1929 James P Cannon 93 1921 1922 National Chairman of WPACaleb Harrison 1921 1922 Executive Secretary of WPAAbram Jakira 1922 1923 Executive Secretary of unified CPAWilliam Z Foster 94 1929 1934 1945 1957 Party ChairmanEarl Browder 1934 1945 Party ChairmanEugene Dennis 1945 1959 General SecretaryGus Hall 1959 2000 General SecretarySam Webb 2000 2014 ChairmanJohn Bachtell 2014 2019 ChairmanRossana Cambron 2019 present Co chairJoe Sims 2019 present Co chairNotable CPUSA members editWell Known Organizers and Other Members of the Party Name Years Active Title NotesAngela Davis 1969 1991 Member California Communist Party A supporter of the Communist Party until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 following the revolutions of 1989 which ended communism in most countries worldwide Davis then created the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism a former reformist faction within the Communist Party which is now independent and promotes democratic socialism Charles E Taylor Member Montana Communist Party State Senator Started a left wing newspaper called Producers News in Sheridan County Montana after being sent there by the Nonpartisan League of North Dakota The newspaper slandered members of the community sparking a libel case and newspaper war 95 96 Dorothy Ray Healey 1920s 1973 Member California Communist Party An early supporter of the Communist Party she became disillusioned with the leadership of Gus Hall and furthermore was against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 Healey criticized CPUSA orthodoxy after the crimes of Stalin were exposed by Nikita Khrushchev She eventually left the party and joined the New America Movement an organization promoting new left activism Elizabeth Benson 1939 1968 97 Party Organizer A child prodigy Benson moved to Houston at the age of 22 to organize the area for the national party 98 Benson is best known for leading Texas organizing during the 1939 convention in San Antonio where 5 000 people surrounded the building and rioted at the opening ceremonies Benson and several others were escorted out by police Emma Tenayuca 1936 1939 Party Organizer Emma Tenayuca December 21 1916 July 23 1999 also known as Emma Beatrice Tenayuca was an American labor leader union organizer and educator She is best known for her work organizing Mexican workers in Texas during the 1930s particularly for leading the 1938 San Antonio pecan shellers strike Homer Brooks 1938 1943 Texas State Party Chair 1938 Candidate for Governor First husband of Emma Tenayuca Brooks faced a draft evasion charge that became an exercise in red baiting He was sentenced to 60 days in prison but the charge was overturned 98 Richard Durham 1940s Member Creator and writer of the Destination Freedom radio series in Chicago Durham was a CPUSA member while writing for New Masses the Chicago Defender the Chicago Star and the Illinois Standard newspapers 99 100 101 Tupac Shakur Member Baltimore Young Communist League 102 103 Known for his career as a rapper and actor Tupac Shakur was at one time a member of the Young Communist League in Baltimore He found the platform of the party appealing having grown up in poverty Shakur also dated the daughter of the director of the local Communist Party 103 See also editEnglish language press of the Communist Party USA annotated list of titles History of Soviet espionage in the United States International Publishers Jencks v United States Language federation National conventions of the Communist Party USA Non English press of the Communist Party USA annotated list of titles Progressive Labor Party United States Revolutionary Communist Party USA Socialist Workers Party United States W E B Du Bois Clubs of America Young Communist League USA List of Communist Party USA members who have held office in the United StatesNotes edit The party voted to dissolve its youth wing in 2015 and voted to re establish it in 2019 Final Resolutions for the 31st National Convention June 10 2019 She mentions James Barrett Maurice Isserman Robin D G Kelley Randi Storch and Kate Weigand See also The Communist Party and African Americans and the article on the Scottsboro Boys for the Communist Party s work in promoting minority rights and involvement in the historically significant case of the Scottsboro Boys in the 1930s See also Executive Vice Chair Jarvis Tyner s ideological essay The National Question CPUSA Online August 1 2003 Retrieved April 7 2009 References edit CPUSA Organizational Chart March 26 2020 The Soviet World of American Communism Yale University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0300138009 People s World Library of Congress OCLC 09168021 Retrieved January 21 2019 Ali Swenson Rebeccca Santana and June 24 2023 What to Know About Trump s Vow to Keep Communists and Marxists Out of the U S CPUSA Constitution CPUSA Online September 20 2001 Retrieved October 30 2017 a b c Constitution of the Communist Party of the United States of America Communist Party of the United States of America 2001 Archived from the original on January 21 2014 Bill of Rights Socialism CPUSA Online May 1 2016 Retrieved October 30 2017 Pierard Richard 1998 American Extremists Militias Supremacists Klansmen Communists amp Others By John George and Laird Wilcox Amherst N Y Prometheus Press 1996 443 pp 18 95 Journal of Church and State Oxford Journals 40 4 912 913 doi 10 1093 jcs 40 4 912 The name of this organization shall be the Communist Party of the United States of America Art I of the Constitution of the Communist Party of the United States of America a b c Goldfield Michael 2009 Communist Party of the United States of America CPUSA In Ness Immanuel ed The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 1 9 doi 10 1002 9781405198073 wbierp0383 ISBN 978 1405198073 Shannon David A 1967 The Rise of the Communist Party USA during the Great Depression Journal of American History 54 2 351 365 Kann Kenneth 2014 Comrades and Critics The Communist Party s Role in the New Deal Era American Communist History 13 2 3 123 142 Ottanelli Fraser M 1991 From the Margins to the Mainstream The Transformation of the Communist Party USA in the 1930s The Journal of American East European Relations 1 2 185 209 Gregory James Communist Party Membership by Districts 1922 1950 Civil Rights and Labor History Consortium University of Washington Browder Earl 1936 Communism and 20th Century Americanism Political Affairs p 123 In this seminal work Browder himself brands communism as 20th Century Americanism outlining his perspective on the relationship between communism and American national identity Minutes of the Communist Party Convention Saturday May 20 1944 Published in The Path to Peace Progress and Prosperity Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of the Communist Political Association New York May 20 22 1944 Harvey Klehr John Earl Haynes and Kyrill M Anderson The Soviet World of American Communism Yale University Press 1998 ISBN 0300071507 p 148 Harvey Klehr John Earl Haynes and Kyrill M Anderson The Soviet World of American Communism Yale University Press 1998 ISBN 0300071507 p 74 Klehr Harvey 2017 The Communist Experience in America A Political and Social History Routledge ISBN 978 1351484749 Ellen Schrecker Soviet Espionage in America An Oft Told tale Reviews in American History Volume 38 Number 2 June 2010 p 359 Schrecker goes on to explore why the Left dared to spy Rose Steve January 24 2016 Racial harmony in a Marxist utopia how the Soviet Union capitalised on US discrimination The Guardian Retrieved March 25 2019 Klehr Harvey 1984 The Heyday of American Communism The Depression Decade Basic Books pp 3 5 number of members ISBN 978 0465029457 Frances Fox Piven and Richard Cloward Poor People s Movements Why They Succeed How They Fail New York Vintage Books 1978 ISBN 0394726979 pp 52 58 Hedges Chris 2018 America The Farewell Tour Simon amp Schuster p 109 ISBN 978 1501152672 The breakdown of capitalism saw a short lived revival of organized labor during the 1930s often led by the Communist Party Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History gilderlehrman org a b c d Crain Caleb April 11 2016 The American Soldiers of the Spanish Civil War The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Retrieved November 27 2019 Soviet Union and the Spanish Civil War Spartacus Educational Retrieved November 27 2019 Soviet and American Communist Parties in Revelations from the Russian Archives Library of Congress January 4 1996 Retrieved August 29 2006 a b Ryan J G 1997 Earl Browder the failure of American communism University of Alabama Press p 162 ISBN 978 0 585 28017 2 Roberts Geoffrey 2006 Stalin s Wars From World War to Cold War 1939 1953 Yale University Press p 44 ISBN 978 0 300 11204 7 Sanford George 2005 Katyn and the Soviet Massacre of 1940 Truth Justice And Memory London New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 33873 5 Ryan J G 1997 Earl Browder the failure of American communism University of Alabama Press pp 164 165 ISBN 978 0 585 28017 2 a b Ryan J G 1997 Earl Browder the failure of American communism University of Alabama Press p 168 ISBN 978 0 585 28017 2 Selig Adler 1957 The isolationist impulse its twentieth century reaction pp 269 270 274 ISBN 9780837178226 a b Ryan J G 1997 Earl Browder the failure of American communism University of Alabama Press p 166 ISBN 978 0 585 28017 2 Ryan J G 1997 Earl Browder the failure of American communism University of Alabama Press p 189 ISBN 978 0 585 28017 2 Gentry Kurt J Edgar Hoover The Man and the Secrets W W Norton amp Company 1991 P 442 ISBN 0393024040 Click Kane Madison Communist Control Act of 1954 www mtsu edu Retrieved November 27 2019 Naison Mark The Communist Party USA and Radical Organizations 1953 1960 PDF New CPUSA Constitution final draft Klehr Harvey Haynes John Earl Gurvitz David February 15 2017 Two Worlds of a Soviet Spy The Astonishing Life Story of Joseph Katz Commentary Magazine Commentary Inc Retrieved June 4 2017 Henry Felix Srebrnik Dreams of Nationhood American Jewish Communists and the Soviet Birobidzhan Project 1924 1951 Brighton MA Academic Studies Press 2010 p 2 Yates v United States 354 U S 298 1957 About People s World People s World August 25 2009 Opening of the Communist Party s 30th national convention People s World June 13 2014 Retrieved June 16 2014 It s time to run candidates A call for discussion and action April 9 2021 Steven Estrada for District One Steven Estrada for District One Archived from the original on April 26 2021 Retrieved April 26 2021 Steven Estrada Ballotpedia Retrieved October 21 2023 a b CPUSA Constitution Amended July 8 2001 at the 27th National Convention Milwaukee Wisconsin Retrieved November 11 2011 CPUSA Constitution Communist Party USA September 20 2001 Archived from the original on November 17 2011 Retrieved February 8 2020 a b c Communist Party Immediate Program for the Crisis Archived July 8 2009 at the Portuguese Web Archive Retrieved August 29 2006 a b c d e f g h i j Program of the Communist Party See Karl Marx The Communist Manifesto Chapter 2 Bachtell John The Movements Against War and Capitalist Globalization CPUSA Online July 17 2003 Retrieved April 15 2009 CPUSA Online the movements against war and capitalist globalization Archived from the original on November 7 2003 Retrieved April 15 2009 War Will Not End Terrorism CPUSA Online October 8 2001 Retrieved April 6 2009 Myles Dee Remarks on the Fight for Women s Equality Speech given at the 27th National Convention of the CPUSA Communist Party USA CPUSA Online July 7 2001 Retrieved April 7 2009 Kern Michelle June 27 2016 What is the CPUSA s position on abortion rights Cpusa org Retrieved August 22 2018 Trowbdrige Carolyn Communist Party Salutes Women CPUSA Online March 8 2009 Retrieved April 7 2009 Section 3d The Working Class Class Struggle Democratic Struggle and Forces for Progress The Working Class and Trade Union Movement Democratic Struggle and its Relation to Class Struggle Special Oppression and Exploitation Multiracial Multinational Unity for Full Equality and Against Racism CPUSA Online May 19 2006 Retrieved April 7 2009 CPUSA Members Mark 5th Anniversary of the War Ben Davis Club Remembers Those Lost CPUSA Online March 20 2008 Retrieved April 7 2009 CPUSA Online CPUSA members mark 5th anniversary of the war Archived from the original on July 19 2009 Retrieved April 7 2009 Blacks and the CPUSA by L Proyect www columbia edu Retrieved November 27 2019 Garcia Mario T Mexican Americans Leadership Ideology and Identity 1930 1960 New Haven Conn Yale University Press 1991 ISBN 978 0300049848 CPUSA Constitution Amended July 8 2001 at the 27th National Convention Milwaukee Wisconsin Retrieved August 29 2006 a b Communist Party votes by county depts washington edu Retrieved July 20 2017 a b Kelley Robin D G 1990 Hammer and hoe Alabama Communists during the Great Depression 2nd ed Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press pp 2 10 ISBN 0807819212 Communist Party membership by Districts 1922 1950 Mapping American Social Movements depts washington edu Retrieved December 9 2022 Communist Party Membership by Districts 1922 1950 Klehr Harvey Haynes John Earl Anderson Kyrill M 2008 The Soviet World of American Communism Yale University Press p 155 ISBN 978 0300138009 Dobbs Michael February 8 1992 U S Party Said Funded by Kremlin Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved November 10 2021 Chambers Whittaker 1987 1952 Witness New York Random House p 799 ISBN 978 0895267894 LCCN 52005149 NOVA Online Secrets Lies and Atomic Spies Read Venona Intercepts www pbs org Retrieved August 14 2021 a b Haynes John Earl and Klehr Harvey Venona Decoding Soviet Espionage in America Yale University Press 2000 Schecter Jerrold and Leona Sacred Secrets How Soviet Intelligence Operations Changed American History Potomac Books 2002 Sudoplatov Pavel Anatoli Schecter Jerrold L and Schecter Leona P Special Tasks The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness A Soviet Spymaster Little Brown Boston 1994 Title 50 gt Chapter 23 gt Subchapter IV gt 841 Findings and declarations of fact U S Code collection on the site of Cornell University Retrieved August 30 2006 Retrieved Papers Shed Light On Communist Activities In U S Associated Press January 31 2001 Weinstein Allen and Vassiliev Alexander The Haunted Wood Soviet Espionage in America the Stalin Era New York Random House 1999 Klehr Harvey July 3 2017 Opinion American Reds Soviet Stooges The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 10 2021 Babcock Charles R September 17 1981 Soviet Secrets Fed to FBI for More Than 25 Years Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved November 10 2021 The SOLO File Declassified Documents Detail The FBI s Most Valued Secret Agents of the Cold War nsarchive2 gwu edu Retrieved November 15 2021 Carl N Freyman 85 Chicago Tribune June 4 2001 Retrieved November 15 2021 Tromblay Darren E January 2 2020 From Old Left to New Left The FBI and the Sino Soviet Split International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence 33 1 97 118 doi 10 1080 08850607 2019 1670207 ISSN 0885 0607 S2CID 214529143 Tromblay Darren E 2015 The U S Domestic Intelligence Enterprise History Development and Operations CRC Press pp 384 387 ISBN 978 1482247749 Taylor Clarence 2011 The First Wave of Suspensions and Dismissals Reds at the Blackboard Communism Civil Rights and the New York City Teachers Union Columbia University Press pp 141 142 ISBN 978 0231526487 Retrieved June 4 2020 Urofsky Melvin I 2012 Eugene Dennis 100 Americans Making Constitutional History A Biographical History CQ Press pp 44 46 doi 10 4135 9781452235400 ISBN 978 1452235400 Retrieved June 4 2020 Mink Gwendolyn and Alice O Connor Poverty in the United States An Encyclopedia of History Politics and Policy ABC CLIO 2004 p 194 ISBN 978 1576075975 In this issue Political Affairs April 2004 Retrieved August 29 2006 Communist Party USA Resolution on Lesbian Gay Bisexual amp Transgender Rights Convention Resolution on July 20 2005 CPUSA Online Retrieved August 20 2012 Gay Pride Month Communists stand in solidarity CPUSA Online June 24 2006 Retrieved August 20 2012 No to Bush s War CPUSA Online Archived on the Internet Archive on April 7 2003 Judith LeBlanc C SPAN org www c span org Retrieved November 13 2021 C E Ruthenberg Page The James P Cannon Library William Z Foster Archived February 23 2019 at the Wayback Machine Charles E Taylor Ballotpedia Retrieved January 31 2023 The Communists of Sheridan County Montana Senior News December 1 2019 Retrieved January 31 2023 Daugherty Greg Smithsonian Magazine a b Carleton Don 1985 Red Scare Rightwing Hysteria Fifties Fanatacism and their Legacy in Texas Austin TexasMonthly Press p 30 ISBN 0932012906 Library of Congress Chronicling America The Chicago Star Chicago Ill 1946 1948 Library of Congress Chronicling America The Illinois Standard Chicago Ill 1948 1949 Pecinovsky Tony December 9 2015 Word Warrior a good book on democratic media People s World Reviewing the book Word Warrior by Sonja D Williams Farrar Jordan May 13 2011 Baltimore students protest cuts People s World Chicago Illinois Long View Publishing Co Archived from the original on August 18 2012 Retrieved June 9 2021 a b Bastfield Darrin Keith Bastfield 2002 Chapter 7 A Revolutionary Back in the Day My Life and Times with Tupac Shakur Cambridge Mass Da Capo London Kluwer Law International ISBN 0306812959 Further reading editFor a selection of the most important titles see bibliography on American Communism Arnesen Eric Civil Rights and the Cold War at Home Postwar Activism Anticommunism and the Decline of the Left American Communist History 2012 11 1 pp 5 44 Draper Theodore The Roots of American Communism New York Viking 1957 Draper Theodore American Communism and Soviet Russia The Formative Period New York Viking 1960 Draper Theodore The Roots of American Communism New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers Originally published by Viking Press in 1957 ISBN 0765805138 Howe Irving and Lewis Coser The American Communist Party A Critical History Boston Beacon Press 1957 Isserman Maurice Which Side Were You On The American Communist Party During the Second World War Wesleyan University Press 1982 and 1987 Jaffe Philip J Rise and Fall of American Communism Horizon Press 1975 Klehr Harvey The Heyday of American Communism The Depression Decade Basic Books 1984 Klehr Harvey and Haynes John Earl The American Communist Movement Storming Heaven Itself Twayne Publishers Macmillan 1992 Klehr Harvey John Earl Haynes and Fridrikh Igorevich Firsov The Secret World of American Communism New Haven Yale University Press 1995 Klehr Harvey Kyrill M Anderson and John Earl Haynes The Soviet World of American Communism New Haven Yale University Press 1998 Lewy Guenter The Cause That Failed Communism in American Political Life New York Oxford University Press 1997 McDuffie Erik S Sojourning for Freedom Black Women American Communism and the Making of Black Left Feminism Durham Duke University Press 2011 Ottanelli Fraser M The Communist Party of the United States From the Depression to World War II New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press 1991 Maurice Spector James P Cannon and the Origins of Canadian Trotskyism 1890 1928 Urbana IL Illinois University Press 2007 Palmer Bryan James P Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary Left 1890 1928 Urbana IL Illinois University Press 2007 Service Robert Comrades a history of world communism 2007 Shannon David A The Decline of American Communism A History of the Communist Party of the United States since 1945 New York Harcourt Brace and Co 1959 Starobin Joseph R American Communism in Crisis 1943 1957 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1972 Zumoff Jacob A The Communist International and US Communism 1919 1929 2014 Chicago Haymarket Books 2015 Archives edit Communist Party of the United States of America Records Tamiment Library and Robert F Wagner Archives New York University Special Collections Communist Party of the United States of America Records 1956 1960 At the Labor Archives of Washington University of Washington Libraries Special Collections Communist Party of the United States of America Washington State District Records 1919 2003 At the Labor Archives of Washington University of Washington Libraries Special Collections Marion S Kinney Papers 1930 1983 At the Labor Archives of Washington University of Washington Libraries Special Collections External links edit nbsp Media related to Communist Party USA at Wikimedia Commons Young Communist League USA youth group People s World weekly newspaper Communism in Washington State History and Memory Project Manifesto and program Constitution Report to the Communist International first pamphlet of the Communist Party of America Manifesto to the workers of America FBI files on the CPUSA on the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Communist Party USA amp oldid 1185751445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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