Communist Party of Moldavia | |
Native Name: | Partidul Comunist al Moldovei |
Flag: | Flag of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic (1952–1990).svg |
Foundation: | 15 August 1940 |
Position: | Far-left |
Headquarters: | Chişinău |
Country: | Moldova |
Banned: | 23 August 1991 |
National: | Communist Party of the Soviet Union |
Colours: | Red |
Predecessor: | Moldavia Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine |
Successor: | Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova |
The Communist Party of Moldavia (Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Partidul Comunist al Moldovei, PCM, Moldovan Cyrillic: Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Партидул Комунист ал Молдовей; Russian: Коммунистическая партия Молдавии|translit=Kommunisticheskaya partiya Moldavii) was the ruling and the sole legal political party in the Moldavian SSR, and one of the fifteen republic-level parties that formed the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) until the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. During World War II, it was the driving force of the Moldovan resistance against Axis occupation.
The party began to weaken politically during the Perestroika period, which was marked by riots against Soviet rule.[1] [2] The party leader, Semion Grossu was replaced with Petru Lucinschi on November 16, 1989.[3]
On August 23, the Communist Party was banned;[4] subsequently, on 27 August 1991 Moldova declared Independence and the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic came to an end. On 7 September 1993, the Parliament of Moldova lifted the ban on communist activities.
See also: Moldavia Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine.
Picture | Name | Took office | Left office | Political party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First Secretary | |||||
1 | Pyotr Borodin (1905–1986) | 15 August 1940 | 11 February 1942 | CPM/CPSU | |
2 | Nikita Salogor (1901–1982) | 13 February 1942 | 5 January 1946 | ||
3 | Nicolae Coval (1904–1970) | 5 January 1946 | 3 November 1950 | ||
4 | Leonid Brezhnev (1906–1982) | 3 November 1950 | 16 April 1952 | ||
5 | Dimitri Gladki (1911–1959) | 16 April 1952 | 7 February 1954 | ||
6 | Zinovie Serdiuk (1903–1982) | 8 February 1954 | 29 May 1961 | ||
7 | Ivan Bodiul (1918–2013) | 29 May 1961 | 30 December 1980 | ||
8 | Semion Grossu (born 1934) | 30 December 1980 | 16 November 1989 | ||
9 | Petru Lucinschi (born 1940) | 16 November 1989 | 4 February 1991 | ||
10 | Grigore Eremei (born 1935) | 4 February 1991 | August 1991 |
In 1993, former PCM members founded the Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova (PCRM), which became the largest party in Moldova since the 2001 elections, and the ruling party from 2001 to 2009. In 2011 a group of communists led by the executive secretary of the old Communist Party of Moldova, Igor Cucer, came to the public attention, claiming that they are the "real communists" and they want to revive the party (PCM) formally;[5] they also stated that the PCRM has become a pseudo-Communist and liberal-bourgeois party serving the interests of one of the county’s richest men, Oleg Voronin, son of president of Moldova from 2001 to 2009 and leader of the PCRM Vladimir Voronin. Cucer claimed then: "The PCRM's 8-year rule made the poor poorer and the rich richer".
The Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Moldova was created in 2010 to study and analyze the 1917–1991 period of the communist regime.