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Encyclopedia > Polish Workers' Party
This article is part
of the series:
Polish Secret State
Kotwica
History of Poland

The Polish Workers' Party (Polska Partia Robotnicza, PPR) was a communist party in Poland from 1942 to 1948. It was founded as a reconstitution of the Communist Party of Poland, and merged into the Polish Socialist Party in 1948 to form the Polish United Workers' Party. Polish Secret State (also known as Polish Underground State; Polish Polskie Państwo Podziemne) is a term coined by Jan Karski in his book Story of a Secret State; it is used to refer to all underground resistance organizations in Poland during World War II, both military and civilian. ... Unofficial flag of the Armia Krajowa and the Polish Secret State. ... Main article: Polish government in exile On 1 September 1939, without a formal declaration of war, Germany invaded Poland. ... In modern usage, a communist party is a political party which promotes communism, a sociopolitical philosophy based on the particular interpretation of Marxism put forth by Vladimir Lenin. ... This article is about the year. ... 1948 (MCMXLVIII) is a leap year starting on Thursday (link will take you to calendar). ... This article is about the 1918-1938 Communist Party of Poland. ... The Polish Socialist Party (Polska Partia Socjalistyczna, PPS) was one of the two most important Polish political parties from its inception in 1892 until 1948, when it merged with the Stalinist Polish Workers Party (PPR) to form the Polish United Workers Party (PZPR), the ruling party in the Peoples... The Polish United Workers Party (PUWP; in Polish, Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza, PZPR), was the governing political party in communist_ruled Poland from its creation (through a fusion of the communist Polish Workers Party and the left wing of the Polish Socialist Party) in December 1948 until the regimes electoral...


The Polish Workers Party


The history of Poland’s Communist Party was determined by Josef Stalin’s plans for Poland. In 1938, Stalin liquidated the Communist Party for Poland purging it for its Trotskyite line and executing and imprisoning 5,000 of its members. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Stalin was persuaded by Wanda Wasilewska, a Polish émigrés in the Soviet Union, to restore Communist presence in Poland. In January 1942, an “initiative group” of Polish Communists, Marceli Nowotko, Pawel Finder and Boleslaw Molojoc gained Stalin’s permission to form a communist party for Poland, (Polska Partia Robotnicza), PPR. They avoided using the word “communist” in the title to evade the perception of a party controlled by a foreign power. They were cautious of communism’s unpopularity and limited appeal among the Polish citizenry. With Nowotko’s death, and Finder’s arrest, Wladyslaw Gomulka became secretary of the Central Committee of the PPR from 1943 until its end in 1948. The PPR struggled to establish itself with Stalin and the Polish people. Stalin, suspicious of foreign communist parties, preferred to rely on institutions and people directly under his control. Although all decisions in the PPR required Soviet approval, there were no direct orders issued from Moscow. In Poland the party was unable to attract members because the old political parties maintained to hold popular support and were well established in the underground government. The PPR’s policy to recognize Soviet Union’s new possessions in Eastern Poland antagonized nationalistic feeling. In November of 1943 the PPR set out to gain legitimacy by appealing to the nationalist cause with the publication of the Manifesto “What Are We Fighting For”. This outlined the party’s goal for independence and its socialist revolution. This recognition of the nationalist cause and the willingness to join in governing with the other parties was a break from its predecessor, the old communist party’s unpopular policy of hostility towards participating in the bourgeois state and parliament. The internationally recognized representative for Poland was the government in exile in London, the (Delegatura): this Home Delegation headed the administration of the entire underground state in Poland. It consisted of the major political parties and was lead by Stanislaw Mikolajezyk, the leader of the popular Peasant Party. Their underground armed militia the (Armia Krajowa), Home Army, AK, had a large activist membership dwarfing the small military wing of the PPR’s ( Armia Ludowa), People’s Army. The PPR wanted to gain political recognition by joining in with the Delegatura and the AK; however, their attempts were unsuccessful as they were perceived as Soviet spies. The condition to renounce membership in the Communist International and to object to the loss of the Eastern territories to the Soviet Union was unacceptable. There was conflict within the communist movement over the methods needed to implement power. It was difference of opinion between the Polish émigrés trained in the Soviet Union represented by Boleslaw Bierut following strict Stalin policy, and the Polish Communists such as Gomulka. Stalin mindful of appeasing the Western Allies negotiated with them in forming an acceptable provisional government for Poland. With the prospect of the Red Army liberating Warsaw, the Polish communists favored a more aggressive approach of forming a parallel separate shadow government. Gomulka wanted to broaden the party’s political base by including other leftist and populist parties. As there was difficulty in communicating with Moscow, this step was taken without Stalin’s approval and therefore met with Bierut’s objection. The refusal of the major parties to join the PPR necessitated the formation of various subsidiary organizations and parties with parallel names of existing workers and peasant parties. This gave the façade of broad political support. Unable to negotiate with the Delegatura, Stalin changed his tactics and forged ahead with forming a provisional government for the liberated territories that excluded them. On 22 July 1944, Stalin announced the creation of the Polish Committee of National Liberation, Polski Komitet Wyzwolenia Narodowego, the PKWN. The PPR benefited from various powerful institutions and events that enhanced its position. The failed Warsaw uprising decimated the AK, removing a popular and powerful opponent. The Soviet army liberation of Warsaw increased the political standing of the PPR. In January 1945 they benefited from Stalin’s recognition of it. The Western Allies found it difficult to fully support the Delegatura’s interagency and refusal to recognize the new Polish border, and Stalin succeeded in removing them from the negotiations by refusing to negotiate with them as the sole representative of Poland. The power and coherence of the Delegatura was destroyed when Stalin manipulated its sacked leader Stanislaw Mikolayczk, the leader of the powerful Peasant Party, into joining in the PKWN. This lead to the creation in 28 June 1945 of a new Provisional Government of National Unity, Tymczasowy Rzad Jednosci Narodowej, TRJN, which was eventually recognized by the Western Allies as the new government of Poland. It consisted of the PPR, the large Peasant and Socialist Parties, and the smaller Democratic and Labour Parties. The PPR and communists from other smaller parties controlled the direction of the new government policies by controlling seventeen out of twenty one ministries. The PPR utilized methods similar to the ones used by communist parties in Eastern Europe, the provisional government didn’t wait till elections; they instituted land reform to win over the peasants. They offered amnesty to wean away soldiers from the opposition AK militia. In April 1946, a new volunteer citizen militia was formed to eliminate any armed opposition to the government. The Soviet security force, the NKVD, arrested, harassed, and used propaganda to discredit popular opponents. The AK seen as representing the Delegatura, was discredited with accusations of fratricide for the failed Warsaw uprising. After it had eliminated all the legitimate opposition outside the government, the PPR concentrated on gaining power within the coalition of the provisional government. The PPR was weak, it faced strong opposition from the Socialist and Peasant parties, and unlike the communist parties in Eastern Europe it could not win enough votes in an election to be a strong partner in an elected coalition. Using arguments of preventing civil war in society, it suggested an alternative to freely held elections by presenting a “Democratic Block”, a unified list of candidates to the electorate. The Socialist Party being more plaint agreed to join in the Democratic Block, the popular Peasant Party refused. The PPR adopted the strategy of delaying elections by holding a Referendum which gave it powers to change the political structure of the Senate. It targeted the Peasant Party by arresting its candidates, harassing, denying them access to publicity by organizing workers to refuse to work for them. The Referendum result was falsified to give the Democratic Block a majority. After each successful stage of establishing its power, the PPR relied less on the facade of cooperating with political opponents and more on demonstrating its power using threats and intimidation. The Democratic Block won 80% of the votes in the July 1946 election. The election results eliminated the popular Peasant Party from the political scene and demonstrated to the public that there was no political route left for opposition. The PPR dominated the government through their control of placing communist deputies in all ministries. Although the Socialist Party held ministerial portfolios, they had no voice in formulating policies; the work was accomplished by the communist deputies. The PPR strengthened its monopoly by removing any perceived threat, and closing of any avenues for opposition. It pressurized the Socialist Party to agree to unification in order to save their party from liquidation. It increased fear in society by introducing new criteria of offences such as the concept of “whispered propaganda”: this made it a crime to disseminate any news that could threaten the regime. The Yugoslavian split with the Soviet Union resulted in a change of policy. Gomulka’s criticism of Soviet policy for a united Germany was seen as narrow minded and inappropriately nationalistic. Gomulka “Polish road to socialism” adapting to conditions specific to Poland, was no longer needed. Stalin tightened his control on the PPR. In August 1948, the Politburo installed Bierut as the general secretary of the PPR. The Socialist party was liquidated and fully merged with the PPR. It signaled the emergence of a new Communist party, the Polish United Worker’s Party, (Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza), PZPR. It differed from its predecessor for now it was no longer possible for a fusion of western ideas with communism, but to follow the strict Soviet lead of true communism and transform Polish society on the Stalinist model.


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The Polish United Workers' Party (PUWP; in Polish, Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza, PZPR), was a Polish communist party.
It was the governing political party in communist-ruled People's Republic of Poland from its creation (through a fusion of the communist Polish Workers' Party and the left wing of the Polish Socialist Party) in December 1948 until the regime's electoral defeat in 1989.
In January 1990 the party reconstituted itself as the Social Democracy of the Republic of Poland Socjaldemokracja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej, SdRP), since April 1999 the principal constituent of the Alliance of the Democratic Left (Sojusz Lewicy Demokratycznej, SLD).
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