United Left (East Germany) Explained

United Left
Native Name:Vereinigte Linke
Colorcode:
  1. FF0000
Dissolution:~1992
Membership Year:1989
Membership:1,500
Ideology:Socialism
Factions:
Communism
Trotskyism
Christian socialism
Titoism
Colors:Red
Country:East Germany

The United Left (German: Vereinigte Linke) was an alliance of several leftist opposition groupings in the German Democratic Republic.[1] [2] Among them were Christian socialists, Trotskyists, adherents of the Titoist system of workers' self-management and some Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) members, who were critical of their party's policy.

History

Founded on 2 October 1989, only a few weeks before the fall of the Berlin Wall, the United Left demanded a reformation of socialism with the stated goal of creating a free and democratic GDR. At the end of the year 1989 the party had 1,500 members with focal points in Berlin and Halle. In contrast to other East German opposition groups, the United Left received less support from Western governments and political parties. Organisational issues and internal tensions between the various ideological factions meant that the United Left only achieved limited political success during its existence.

At the first free elections in the GDR in March 1990, the United Left started together with "" ("The Carnations"), a Marxist party. The electoral alliance with the name "" gained 0.18% of the votes and one seat in the Volkskammer, which would be held by Thomas Klein. The United Left fell apart in the years after German reunification, but some members were elected to the Bundestag through a party-list of the PDS or The Greens.

Election results

GDR Parliament (Volkskammer)

Notes and References

  1. Book: Olivo, C. . Creating a Democratic Civil Society in Eastern Germany: The Case of the Citizen Movements and Alliance 90 . 3 May 2001 . Springer . 978-0-312-29959-0 . 190–196 . en.
  2. Jünke . Christoph . December 2007 . A New Formation with Potential Pitfalls: The New German Linkspartei . Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe . en . 15 . 3 . 307–319 . 10.1080/09651560701711646 . 144959401 . 0965-156X.