Democratic Left (Great Britain)
1990s UK political party / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Democratic Left was a post-communist political organisation in the United Kingdom during the 1990s, growing out of the Eurocommunist strand within the Communist Party of Great Britain and its magazine Marxism Today (which closed around the same time).
Predecessor | Communist Party of Great Britain |
---|---|
Successor | New Politics Network Democratic Left Scotland |
Formation | 11 November 1991 |
Dissolved | December 1998 |
Type | Think Tank, Campaign group |
Legal status | Dissolved |
Headquarters | 6 Cynthia Street, London N1 9JF |
Region | England, Scotland, Wales |
Membership | 1,600 (1991) 836 (1998)[1] |
Secretary | Nina Temple |
It was established in 1991 when the CPGB decided to reform itself into a left-leaning reformist political multi-issue grassroots think-tank based on the party's Manifesto for New Times.[2][3] Its secretary was Nina Temple, the last general secretary of the CPGB.[4]
Many members of the CPGB disagreed with this decision and joined the Communist Party of Britain, which had broken away from the CPGB in 1988, while some Scottish members formed the Communist Party of Scotland.[1]