Popular Socialist Party (Cuba) Explained

Popular Socialist Party
Native Name:Partido Socialista Popular
Leader1 Title:General Secretary
Leader1 Name:Blas Roca Calderio (longest-serving)
Merged:Integrated Revolutionary Organizations
Headquarters:Havana
Newspaper:Spanish; Castilian: Hoy
Youth Wing:Popular Socialist Youth
Wing1 Title:Labor wing
Wing1:Spanish; Castilian: [[Confederación Nacional Obrera de Cuba]]
International:Comintern (1925–1943)
Position:Far-left
National:Democratic Socialist Coalition (1939–1944)
Colors: Red
Flag:Popular Socialist Party (Cuba) flag.svg200px
Country:Cuba

The Popular Socialist Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Socialista Popular, PSP) was a communist party in Cuba. It was founded in 1925 as the Cuban Communist Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Comunista Cubano) by José Miguel Pérez, Carlos Baliño, Alfonso Bernal del Riesgo, and Julio Antonio Mella. The party later merged with the Revolutionary Union (Spanish; Castilian: Unión Revolucionaria) to form the Communist Revolutionary Union (Spanish; Castilian: Unión Revolucionaria Comunista) on 13 August 1939. The party was renamed Popular Socialist Party on 22 January 1944, but with the Spanish; Castilian: [[Partido Auténtico|Auténticos]]|italics=no' victory in the 1944 elections, the party went into decline.

The party published the daily newspaper Spanish; Castilian: Hoy ("Today") until 1950.

History

The party was founded in 1925 with the help of Soviet officials. It immediately became the Cuban representative for the Comintern and would remain a member until the Comintern's dissolution in 1943.

The party supported the first presidency of Fulgencio Batista from 1940 to 1944, primarily due to his early advocacy of strengthening labour laws and labour unions, as well as his pro-American stance during World War II. As a result, two of the party's leaders, Juan Marinello Vidaurreta and Carlos Rafael Rodríguez, were successively appointed ministers without portfolio.[1]

The party formed an alliance with the Orthodox Party in the 1944 general elections, but was defeated by the Auténticos-Republican alliance, winning only four seats in the House of Representatives. They went on to win five seats in the 1946 mid-term elections.

In the 1948 general election, the party put forward Juan Marinello as its presidential candidate. While he finished fourth, the party won five seats in the House elections. They later won four in the 1950 mid-term elections.

The Spanish; Castilian: Auténticos|italics=no government under President Carlos Prío Socarrás banned the party's daily newspaper, Spanish; Castilian: Hoy, in 1950. Following Fulgencio Batista's 1952 coup d'état, the party itself was banned, but it managed to continue publishing its newspaper.

The party was initially critical of Fidel Castro. In 1961, the party merged into the Integrated Revolutionary Organizations (ORI), the precursor to the current Communist Party of Cuba.

References

Sources

Books

Journal articles

Notes and References

  1. Hoy, 13 July 1940.