Socialist Workers Party (Finland) Explained

Socialist Workers' Party
Native Name:Sosialistinen Työväenpuolue
Founded:[1]
Split:Socialist Union of Workers and Smallholders
Merged:Left Alliance
Newspaper:Päivän Uutiset 1973–1976
Youth Wing:Socialist Youth League of Finland
Wing1 Title:Women's wing
Wing1:Social Democratic Women's League of Finland
Wing2 Title:Children's wing
Wing2:Varhaisnuorisoliitto Haukat
Ideology:Socialism
Position:Left-wing
Country:Finland

Socialist Workers' Party (Finnish: Sosialistinen Työväenpuolue, Swedish: Socialistiska Arbetarepartiet) was a political party in Finland. The STP was founded in 1973 as split from Social Democratic Union of Workers and Smallholders (TPSL). STP emerged from a group that did not approve of the return of TPSL to the Social Democratic Party.

STP had electoral alliances with Finnish People's Democratic League (SKDL), the mass front dominated by the Communist Party of Finland (SKP) but with little success. When SKP (and SKDL) split in 1985-1986 STP cooperated with Democratic Alternative which was founded by Communist Party of Finland (Unity) (SKPy).

In February 1990, STP chairman Pentti Waltzer said the party would join the new Left Alliance if Democratic Alternative decided to merge with it,[2] which later happened.

Elections

style=background:#cccccc valign="top" colspan=4Parliament
YearMPsVotes
1975--9 4570.34%
1979--2 9550.10%
style=background:#cccccc valign="top" colspan=4Municipal
YearCouncillorsVotes
197621 9010.07%
style=background:#cccccc valign="top" colspan=4Presidential
YearElectorsVotes
1978--2 1870.1%

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Mitä missä milloin 1975 (Otava 1974), p. 178.
  2. Marja Haapio & Matti Virtanen: Vasemmistoliiton "torikokous" kerää monenlaisia sosialisteja (Helsingin Sanomat 8.2.1990)