Polish Socialist Party of Lithuania and Belarus explained

Polish Socialist Party of Lithuania and Belarus
Native Name:Polska Partia Socjalistyczna Litwy i Białorusi
Colorcode:Red
Ideology:Left-wing nationalism
Revolutionary socialism
Position:Left-wing
Headquarters:Vilnius
Country:Lithuania
Leader1 Title:Leader
Leader1 Name:Aleksander Zasztowt

Polish Socialist Party of Lithuania and Belarus was a left-wing political party, that was an autonomous branch of Polish Socialist Party, and which operated in Lithuania and Belarus in the late 1910s and early 1920s. Its political programme was identical with the one of Polish Socialist Party, and was based around left-wing nationalism and revolutionary socialism.

History

In the late 1910s, it operated in the area of Lithuania and Belarus, as an autonomous branch of Polish Socialist Party, which operated in Poland. Its political programme was identical with the one of Polish Socialist Party, and was based around left-wing nationalism and revolutionary socialism.[1] In 1918, Aleksander Zasztowt became its leader and remained as such until 1923.[2] Since 1920, it was active in the Republic of Central Lithuania, and following the 1922 general elections, it held 3 seats in the Sejm of Central Lithuania. It as present in the Sejm until March 1922, when it was disbanded, and Central Lithuania incorporated into Poland shortly after that.[3]

Citations

References

Notes and References

  1. Sejm Wileński 1922 : przebieg posiedzeń według sprawozdań stenograficznych w opracowaniu kancelarji sejmowej, Vilanous, 1922.
  2. H. Dubowik (edditor), J. Malinowski (edditor), J. Andruszkiewicz (development): Wileński słownik biograficzny, Bydgoszcz: Towarzystwo Miłośników Wilna i Ziemi Wileńskiej, 2002, ISBN 83-87865-28-1, OCLC 830347331.
  3. Wincenty Witos; Eugeniusz Karczewski: Dzieła wybrane: Moja tułaczka w Czechosłowacji / do druku ... (1995). (in Polish). 3. Warsaw: Ludowa Spółdzielnia Wyd. p. 542. ISBN 83-205-3497-6.