J. P. Dahlén

Jonas Petter Dahlén (also called "Dahlén i Kiruna", meaning 'Dahlén in Kiruna'; 14 November 1881 in Ragunda – 23 January 1938 in Jukkasjärvi) was a Swedish mine worker and politician.[1]

J. P. Dahlén
J. P. Dahlén in 1922
Member of the Swedish Parliament
for Norrbotten
In office
1920–1932
Personal details
Died1938
Jukkasjärvi
Political partySocial Democrat (–1917), Left Socialist/Communist (1917–1929), Communist (Kilbom group) (1930–)
ProfessionMiner

Dahlén was elected to the second chamber of the Swedish parliament, from the northern constituency of Norrbotten, representing the Social Democratic Left Party.[1][2] He was one of seven members of parliament belonging to the Social Democratic Left Party. When the party metamorphosed into the Communist Party of Sweden upon adopting the twenty-one conditions of the Communist International, Dahlén was the sole parliamentarian that remained in the party.[2][3] He was re-elected in 1921 as a Communist Party candidate. He remained in parliament until 1932.[1][2]

In October 1929, the Communist Party went through a major split. The group led by Karl Kilbom and Nils Flyg was expelled by the Executive Committee of the Communist International. The expelled grouping reorganized themselves as a separate Communist Party of Sweden. All communist parliamentarians, except for Dahlén, sided with Kilbom. Dahlén did however, after a few months of vacillating, join the Kilbom-led Communist Party.[4]

References

  1. Tvåkammarriksdagen 1867-1970 (Almqvist & Wiksell International 1992), band 5, pp. 411-412
  2. Henningsson, Börje. Det röda Dalarna: socialdemokrater, anarkosyndikalister och kommunister inom Dalarnas arbetarrörelse 1906-1937 = Dalarna became red : Social Democrats, Anarcho-Syndicalists, and Communists of the labour movement in Dalarna 1906-1937. Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 2004. p. 126
  3. "Nile article". Archived from the original on 23 August 2011. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  4. Kennerström, Bernt. Mellan två internationaler - Socialistiska Partiet 1929-37
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