Pole of Communist Revival in France
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The Pole of Communist Revival in France (French: Pôle de renaissance communiste en France, PRCF) is a French political party founded in January 2004. It was an internal tendency of the French Communist Party (PCF) that left the party, rejecting the PCF's "mutation" beginning in the early 1990s.
Organisation
The president-delegate of the PRCF is Leon Landini, the president of the National Political Committee (CPN) is Jean-Pierre Hemmen, the national, directing political spokesman of Communist Initiative is Georges Gastaud, and Georges Hage, a former member of parliament for the Nord departement and senior of the National Assembly, is the honorary president.
The PRCF is organized in associations in the French départements, sections and cells (democratic centralism). It is based on the theory of scientific socialism of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin and other revolutionary thinkers.[6] The PRCF publishes the Initiative communiste (Communist Initiative) monthly magazine and the theoretical review EtincelleS.
The organisation broadcasts a programme called Convergence each Monday from 8 to 9 pm on Radio Galère. Its youth wing, Young People for the Communist Revival in France (JRCF), took part in the mass movement against the Contrat première embauche in 2006.
References
- ^ Gastaud, Georges (2 May 2019). "La classe ouvrière à l'avant-garde du combat patriotique". INITIATIVE COMMUNISTE (in French). Retrieved 11 October 2020.
- ^ "« Frexit : en sortir pour s'en sortir » : le PRCF à l'offensive depuis... 2004 !". INITIATIVE COMMUNISTE (in French). 24 June 2018. Retrieved 11 October 2020.
- ^ "Pôle de renaissance communiste en France - Vie des partis". politiquemania.com.
- ^ "Pôle de Renaissance Communiste en France (PRCF) — France Politique". www.france-politique.fr.
- ^ "Paris Declaration: The rising tide of global war and the tasks of anti-imperialists". World Anti-Imperialist Platform. 14 October 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ^ "PRCF (Pôle de Renaissance Communiste en France)". Initiative Communiste (in French). 18 April 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2020.
External links
- Official website
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- Ludovic-Oscar Frossard (1921–1923)
- Louis Sellier and Albert Treint (1923–1924)
- Louis Sellier (1924)
- Pierre Semard (1924–1929)
- Henri Barbé, Pierre Célor, Benoît Frachon and Maurice Thorez (1929–1930)
- Maurice Thorez (1930–1950)
- Jacques Duclos (1950–1953)
- Maurice Thorez (1953–1964)
- Waldeck Rochet (1964–1969)
- Georges Marchais (1969–1972)
- Waldeck Rochet (1972)
- Georges Marchais (1972–1994)
- Robert Hue (1994–2001)
- Marie-George Buffet (2001–2010)
- Pierre Laurent (2010–2018)
- Fabien Roussel (2018–present)
- History of the French Communist Party
- List of French Communist Party congresses
- French Section of the Workers' International
- Tours Congress
- Headquarters
- Mouvement Jeunes Communistes de France
- Union of Communist Students
- National Front (French Resistance)
- Francs-Tireurs et Partisans (FTP-MOI)
- Union of Russian Patriots
- French Resistance
- National Council of the Resistance
- May 1947 crises
- MRAP
- Institut Maurice Thorez
- Programme commun
- Unitary Left
- Marxism–Leninism
- Eurocommunism
- Cité Gagarine
- Socialist-Communist Union
- Workers and Peasants Party
- Proletarian Unity Party
- French Popular Party
- Federation of Marxist-Leninist Circles in France / Marxist-Leninist Communist Party of France
- Workers' Communist Party of France
- Convention for a Progressive Alternative
- Pole of Communist Revival in France
- Movement of Progressives
- Popular Front (1936–1938)
- French Committee of National Liberation (1940–1947)
- Plural Left (1997–2002)
- Left Front (2008–present)
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