Communist Party of Ireland | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | CPI |
General Secretary | Seán Murray |
Founded | June 1933 |
Dissolved | 10 July 1941 |
Preceded by | Revolutionary Workers' Groups |
Merged into | Labour Party |
Succeeded by | Communist Party of Ireland |
Newspaper | The Irish Workers' Voice |
Membership (1938) | 200≈ members [1] |
Ideology | |
The Communist Party of Ireland (CPI) was a political party founded in June 1933 in the Irish Free State. It was the second party to call itself by this name, being preceded by Socialist Party of Ireland which used the name Communist Party of Ireland briefly in the early 1920s. The party found it extremely difficult to operate in 1930s Ireland and never gained much traction. The party was involved in the failed attempt to unite the various left-wing political factions in Ireland into one force known as the Republican Congress. Following the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, many of the CPI's members volunteered on the Republican side. Following the entry of the Soviet Union in World War II in 1941, the party was disbanded in July 1941 and its members were encouraged to join the Labour Party.
The Communist Party of Ireland emerged from the Revolutionary Workers' Groups (RWG) in June 1933. [2] [3] [4] [5] The RWG were located at Connolly House in Dublin and their most prominent early member was James Larkin Jnr (son of James Larkin). After being outlawed under the government of W. T. Cosgrave in 1931 (as part of a wider crackdown on Peadar O'Donnell's Saor Éire and the IRA), the RWG was legalised in 1932 under Éamon de Valera's government and subsequently transformed into the Communist Party of Ireland in 1933 under general secretary Seán Murray, who had attended the Lenin School in Moscow. [4] [6] Murray's January 1933 draft, The Irish Case for Communism, was adopted as the CPI manifesto Ireland's Path to Freedom at its June 1933 congress. The manifesto advocated replacing Fianna Fáil and the Irish Republican Army in leading the national struggle, aiming to establish a "workers' and farmers' republic." [6]
The Communist Party of Ireland was involved in establishing the Republican Congress in 1934, bringing communists, republicans, trade unionists and tenants' organisations together. [7] [2] The Communist Party had long sought alliances with left-leaning republicans, engaging with groups like Saor Éire and the IRA, though the latter banned communist membership in 1933. While they saw republicanism's leftward shift as promising, the CPI aimed to integrate republicans into the party rather than form a competing entity; the CPI asserted that only the Communist Party could lead the working class through "revolutionary Marxism". [1]
At a September 1934 conference of the Republican Congress, COMINTERN instructed the CPI to discourage the forming of a new party. COMINTERN also instructed the CPI to advocate for a "Workers' Republic" rather than a "Irish Republic." At the meeting, CPI general secretary Seán Murray argued that achieving socialism required first ousting British imperialism (rather than the other way around), a stance backed by Nora Connolly O'Brien and others. However, the final vote favoured the broader republican goal, causing a split as O'Brien and Michael Price led a faction out. Frustrated, the COMINTERN declared the split a crisis for the CPI and appointed the Communist Party of Great Britain's Pat Devine to supervise Irish operations, curbing the CPI's brief period of independent leadership. [1]
A strong anti-communist public backlash in Ireland occurred around the time of the Spanish Civil War due to the perception that the Popular Front cause was anti-Catholic. The already small CPI found it very difficult to organise. [5] Nevertheless, some CPI members fought in the conflict, alongside Republican Congress members, under the XV International Brigade. The CPI provided most of the Irish volunteers on the Republican side in the 1936–39 Spanish Civil War, losing members who were killed in action.
Some Irish communists opposed Ireland being brought into the Second World War and particularly opposed conscription into the British Armed Forces being applied to Northern Ireland in the conflict. Some members were held in Curragh Camp by the government during the Emergency, including Michael O'Riordan. During the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact (1939–41) period, the CPI condemned the war as "British imperialist" while advocating for immediate peace. In October 1940, CPI activists William McCullough and Betty Sinclair received prison sentences, later reduced on appeal, for distributing seditious material, including a republican perspective on the war in the CPI's Red Hand publication. [8]
However, following the entry of the Soviet Union into World War II, the CPI was forced into an about-face and instructed to rally support for the war. Faced with the challenge of completely altering their talking points on war and promoting a pro-war position in neutral Ireland, the CPI voted 11–9 on 10 July 1941 "to suspend independent activity and to apply the forces of the Branch to working in the Labour and trade union organisations in order to carry forward the fight against the heavy attacks now being launched against the workers." [1]
Afterwards, its members were instructed to join the Labour Party en masse, with Jim Larkin mostly notably taking the lead. [9] [2] [6] In Northern Ireland, the membership formed the Protestant-dominated Communist Party of Northern Ireland. [2]
Maurice Twomey was an Irish republican and the longest serving chief of staff of the Irish Republican Army (IRA).
Michael Fitzpatrick was an Irish republican, Chief of Staff of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and Clann na Poblachta politician.
Saor Éire was a far-left political organisation in the Irish Free State established in September 1931 by communist-leaning members of the Irish Republican Army, with the backing of the IRA leadership. Notable among its founders was Peadar O'Donnell, former editor of An Phoblacht and a leading far-left figure in the IRA. Saor Éire described itself as "an organisation of workers and working farmers".
James Anthony Lane is an Irish republican and socialist from Cork. He was a central figure in left-wing politics in Cork city during the 1960s to late 1980s and involved in many campaigns. He was also influential in republican circles nationally and a well known advocate of socialist republicanism of a Marxist-Leninist hue.
The Communist Party of Northern Ireland was a small communist party operating in Northern Ireland. The party merged with the Irish Workers' Party in 1970 to form the reunited Communist Party of Ireland.
The Connolly Column was the name given to a group of Irish republican socialist volunteers who fought for the Second Spanish Republic in the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. They were named after James Connolly, the executed leader of the Irish Citizen Army. They were a company-strength unit of the XV International Brigade, which also included the US, British and Latin American battalions in Spain. The name is now retroactively applied to all Irish volunteers who fought for the Spanish Republic.
Roderick James Connolly was a socialist politician in Ireland. He was also known as "Roddy Connolly" and "Rory Connolly".
Peadar O'Donnell was one of the foremost radicals of 20th-century Ireland. O'Donnell became prominent as an Irish republican, socialist politician and writer.
The Republican Congress was an Irish republican political organisation founded in 1934, when pro-communist republicans left the Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army. The Congress was led by such anti-Treaty veterans as Peadar O'Donnell, Frank Ryan and George Gilmore. In their later phase they were involved with the Communist International and International Brigades paramilitary; the Connolly Column.
Seán McGuinness, born John McGuinness, was an Irish republican who fought in the Irish War of Independence as well as the Irish Civil War. After the wars, he was elected to Dáil Éireann but did not take his seat and was later disqualified for allegedly assaulting a member of the Garda Siochana. Following a period of exile in the United States, McGuinness returned to Ireland where he resumed his membership of the IRA and continued to push for radical action as well as becoming a founder of the Saor Éire party. Over the years, McGuinness repeatedly clashed with the leadership of the IRA over the direction they should take in the post-Civil War era, with McGuinness being amongst those in the IRA who believed the organisation needed to be tied to social issues in order to receive public support.
Saor Éire, also known as the Saor Éire Action Group, was an armed Irish republican organisation composed of Trotskyists and ex-IRA members. It took its name from a similar organisation of the 1930s.
The Irish Worker League was an Irish communist party, established in September 1923 by Jim Larkin, following his return to Ireland. Larkin re-established the newspaper The Irish Worker. The Irish Worker League (IWL) superseded the Revolutionary Workers' Groups circa 1930.
Peadar Cowan was an Irish soldier, lawyer, and politician.
Sean Murray was an Irish Communist political activist, and organiser, born in 1898 the son of a small farmer in Cushendall, Co. Antrim. His grandfather was a United Irishman during the 1798 rebellion. In 1919 Murray joined the IRA and was arrested and detained in the Curragh Camp during the Irish War of Independence. Following the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 he sided with the Anti-Treaty side.
Revolutionary Workers' Groups (RWG) were left wing groups in Ireland officially founded in 1930 with the objective of creating a Revolutionary Workers' Party. Formed initially as the Preparatory Committee for the Formation of a Workers’ Revolutionary Party, it changed its name in November 1930. It was helped to be established by Bob Stewart and Tom Bell from the Communist Party of Great Britain and Comintern. In 1933 they disbanded and established the Communist Party of Ireland.
Seán McLoughlin was an Irish nationalist and communist activist. When only twenty, he was made a commandant-general during the Easter Rising. He was then prominent in Irish and British socialist parties before fighting with the Irish Republican Army during the Irish Civil War. He was also a leader in Na Fianna Éireann.
The Socialist Party of Ireland (SPI) was a small political party in Ireland associated with James Connolly.
Brian O'Neill was an Irish journalist and Communist activist who worked mostly in London and Dublin between the 1920s and the 1970s.
Michael ("Mick") Price was an Irish republican, revolutionary and political activist born in Phibsboro, Dublin. Although he served in the British Army during World War I, Price became involved with the Irish Volunteers c. 1918 and their successors the Irish Republican Army thereafter. Price was imprisoned multiple times for his activities, including his participation in IRA operations during the Irish War of Independence and Irish Civil War. He held significant roles in the Anti-Treaty IRA during the Civil War, such as quartermaster and OC of the 1st Eastern Division.
The 1933 Dublin riot, also known as the Siege of Connolly House, was a multi-night anti-communist riot that occurred in Dublin, Ireland between 27 and 30 March 1933. The riot took place during a time of heavy political unrest in Ireland, occurring after the tense 1932 and 1933 Irish general elections. The riot was also spurred on by Anti-Communist rhetoric preached by clerics in the Catholic Church in Ireland. The primary target of the riot was "Connolly House", located on Great Strand Street near Bachelors Walk, which served as the headquarters of the Revolutionary Workers' Groups (RWG), a communist political party. A crowd reportedly as large as 6,000 people gathered outside the building and attempted to gain access. They eventually succeeded, and several buildings were set alight during the riot and reportedly over 20 people were injured. Other locations in Dublin associated with left-wing politics were also attacked over four nights. The riot has been described as the most intense political violence the Irish Free State had experienced to that point since the Irish civil war of the early 1920s.
In 1933 the Revolutionary Workers' Groups, including many women members, became the Communist Party of Ireland.