Revolutionary Left Party Explained

Revolutionary Left Party
Native Name:Partido de la Izquierda Revolucionaria
Leader:José Antonio Arze
Dissolved: 1964
Predecessor:Bolivian Left Front
Ideology:Communism
Marxism
Position:Left-wing to far-left
Country:Bolivia

The Revolutionary Left Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido de la Izquierda Revolucionaria, PIR) was a communist party in Bolivia. It was founded by Dr. José Antonio Arze and other Bolivian intellectuals on 26 July 1940 during a left-wing congress held in Oruro.[1]

The PIR was sympathetic to the Communist International, but did not become an affiliate to the International. The PIR began to organize the country's miners, but it did so cautiously for fear that strikes would hinder supplies for the Allies during World War II. Except for the pro-Axis Gualberto Villarroel, the PIR generally supported all of Bolivia's war-time presidents to assure the nation remained an Allied power. Because of the party's hesitation to engage in domestic issues, it lost much of its working-class support to the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) and the Revolutionary Workers' Party (POR).

In 1950, a section of the PIR membership broke away and founded the Communist Party of Bolivia (PCB). By the 1960s, the PCB had to a large extent replaced the PIR. Following the military coup in 1964, the PIR went underground and disintegrated into warring factions. A reconstituted PIR emerged in the late 1970s as a puppet party of the dictator Hugo Banzer. In 1979, it dissolved into Banzer's new Nationalist Democratic Action (ADN).

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: REJECTED LOYALTY . Departamento de Historia, Universidad de Santiago de Chile . 2017 .