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Encyclopedia > Communist Party of Slovakia

Old party

In the past, the Communist Party of Slovakia (Slovak: Komunistick strana Slovenska -- KSS) was a communist party in Slovakia. It was formed in March 1939, when the WWII Slovakia was created, from the KSC. Although formally independent, it was led by the KSC leaders, who were in exile in Moscow during the war. When Czechoslovakia was established again, the KSS was still a separate party for a while (1945-1948). On September 29, 1948, it was reunited with the KSC and continued to exist as a "organizational territorial unit of the KSC on the territory of Slovakia". Its (thus also Communist Slovakia's) main newspaper was the Pravda. It ceased to exist in 1990, when it was transformed into the independent Social Democratic party called the Party of Democratic Left. A new Communist Party of Slovakia was soon founded, however (see below).


The old KSS functioned solely as a regional affiliate of the KSC, not as an independent political institution. Therefore, the organizational structure of the KSS paralleled that of the KSC: The KSS party congress met for several days every five years (just before the KSC party congress), and it selected its central committee members and candidate members, who in turn selected a presidium, a secretariat, and a first secretary (i.e. party leader).


The most important first secretaries were Alexander Dubček (19631968) and Jozef Lenart (19701988). Following the March 1986 party congress, the KSS Presidium consisted of 11 members; the Secretariat included, in addition to Lenart, 3 secretaries and 2 members; and the Central Committee comprised 95 full members and 36 candidate members. The KSS in 1986 also had its own Central Control and Auditing Commission, four other commissions, twelve party departments, and one training facility.


Current party

The modern Communist Party of Slovakia (Slovak: Komunistick strana Slovenska -- KSS) is a communist party in Slovakia. It was formed in 1992. This Communist Party of Slovakia is strongly opposed to the Party of Democratic Left and the other center-left parties in Slovakia that virtually replaced the PDL in the meantime (as of 2003). The KSS officially upholds Marxism.


In the 2002 elections, the KSS received 6% of the vote and got 11 seats in the Slovak parliament (for the first time since its formation).


See also:

External links

  • KSS web site in English (http://kss.jaso.sk/index.php?jaz=en)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (3648 words)
The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, in Czech and in Slovak: Komunistická strana Československa (KSČ) was a political party in Czechoslovakia that existed between 1921 and 1992.
In the Act on Lawlessness of the Communist Regime and Resistance against It, (passed 1993), the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia was declared a condemnable and criminal organization.
The Fifteenth Party Congress was held in April 1976; the sixteenth, in April 1981; and the seventeenth, in March 1986.
Gustáv Husák: Information from Answers.com (1768 words)
From 1946 - 1950, he was a kind of quasi Prime Minister of Slovakia, and as such he strongly contributed to the liquidation of the Democratic Party of Slovakia, which had won 62% in the 1946 elections in Slovakia, thus preventing the Communists from seizing power in Czechoslovakia.
Supported by Moscow, he was appointed leader of the Communist Party of Slovakia in as early as August 1968, and he succeeded Dubček as first secretary (title changed to general secretary in 1971) of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia in April 1969.
Communist rule collapsed in Czechoslovakia in late 1989, and that December Husák resigned as president.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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