Labour Gathering Party
The Labour Gathering Party (Spanish: Partido Concentración Obrera) was a political party in Argentina, led by José Penelon. It emerged from a dissident wing of the Communist Party of Argentina in the late 1920s. The party would exist for decades, mainly based in Buenos Aires, but its influence waned over the years.
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The split
The party was formed as Communist Party of the Argentine Region (Partido Comunista de la Región Argentina), founded after a split in the Communist Party of Argentina.[1] Penelon and his followers were expelled from the Communist Party in 1927.[2] The Penelon group began publishing Adelante ('Forward') in that year.[3][4] The Communist Party of the Argentine Region was founded in January 1928.[5]
Most of the cadres of the Communist Youth Federation sided with Penelon in the split.[1] Penelon also won over a large chunk of the Workers Sport Federation.[4] Penelon's followers labelled people the Communist Party as 'radishes' (red on the outside, white on the inside) and those from the Workers Communist Party as 'police agents'.[5][6]
Appeals for a United Front
Penelon argued for unification of the trade union movement, a line the Communist Party denounced as 'capitulation' to reformists. He opposed the policy of 'dual unionism' put forth by the Communist International.[7] At the time of the 1928 elections, Adelante argued for a united front with the Socialist Party and the trade union centres.[5] Likewise the party also appealed to the Socialist Party, the Independent Socialist Party, the Argentine Anti-Imperialist Alliance, the Red Argentine Anti-Imperialist Alliance and the autonomous trade union centres for a unified May Day celebration.[8]
Communist Party of the Argentine Republic
The party soon changed its name to the Communist Party of the Argentine Republic (Partido Comunista de la República Argentina).[9] The change of the name was caused by a decision of the Central Electoral Junta.[10]
Uriburu period
In 1930 general José Félix Uriburu came to power in Argentina and the party lost its legal status.[11] The party changed its name to Partido Concentración Obrera, and was thus able to regain legal status in a period of repression.[1][12] The party would cease to be a communist party as such.[6][13]
In the City Council
Penelon was re-elected to the Buenos Aires City Council in 1932 (he had previously been the sole Communist Party member in the council).[6][14] The party maintained some influence in the suburbs of Buenos Aires until the 1940s.[9][15] Penelon remained in the City Council until 1954.[2]
Later period
Penelon ran for Vice President of Argentina in the 1951 election. He obtained merely 3,183 votes.[16] Ahead of the election the Trotskyist Revolutionary Workers Party had begun 'entryism' into Concentración Obrera, but pulled out after the meager election result.[17] After the fall of Perón in 1955, the party was closely linked to the Democratic Socialist Party (the right-wing tendency in the socialist movement).[6] The party merged into the Democratic Socialist Party in the early 1970s.[18]
References
- Gilbert, Isidoro. La Fede: alistándose para la revolución : la Federación Juvenil Comunista, 1921–2005. Buenos Aires: Editorial Sudamericana, 2009. p. 1923
- Munck, Ronaldo, Ricardo Falcón, and Bernardo Galitelli. Argentina From Anarchism to Peronism : Workers, Unions and Politics, 1855–1985. London: Zed Books, 1987. p. 104
- Todo es historia, Eds. 152–157. Todo es Historia, 1980. p. 72
- Alabarces, Pablo, Roberto di Di Giano, and Julio David Frydenberg. Deporte y sociedad: selección de los trabajos presentados ante las 1 jornadas nacionales "Deporte y Ciencias Sociales" ; entre el 21 y el 23 de agosto 1997, Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires: Inst. de Investigaciones Gino Germani, Fac. de Ciencias Sociales, UBA, 1998. p. 80
- Biagini, Hugo E., Arturo Andrés Roig, and Carlos Alemián. El pensamiento alternativo en la Argentina del siglo XX. Buenos Aires: Editorial Biblos, 2004. pp. 282–283
- Redding, Forest William. Latin American Political Parties: Agents of Modernization. Thesis (A.M.)--Indiana University, 1967. p. 396
- Alexander, Robert Jackson. The Right Opposition: The Lovestoneites and the International Communist Opposition of the 1930s. Westport: Conn, 1981. p. 274
- Vargas, Otto. El marxismo y la revolución argentina, Vol 2. Buenos Aires: Editorial Agora, 1999. p. 391
- Puiggrós, Rodolfo. Historia crìtica de los partidos políticos argentinos. Buenos Aires: J. Alvarez, 1965. p. 94
- Corbière, Emilio J. Orígenes del comunismo argentino: el Partido Socialista Internacional. Buenos Aires: Centro Editor de América Latina, 1984. p. 79
- Filippo, Virgilio. El monstruo comunista; conferencias Radiotelefónicas irradiadas el año 1938, los domingos a las 13 horas, desde L.R. 8 Radio Paris de Bs. Aires. Buenos Aires: Editorial Tor, 1939. p. 195
- Paso, Leonardo. Historia de los partidos políticos en la Argentina, 1900–1930. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Ediciones Directa, 1983. p. 539
- Silveyra, Carlos M., Adolf Hitler, and Carlos M. Silveyra. El comunismo en la Argentina: origen, desarrollo, organización actual. Buenos Aires: [Editorial "Patria"], 1936. p. 41
- Walter, Richard J. Politics and Urban Growth in Buenos Aires, 1910–1942. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press, 2002. p. 173
- Concheiro, Elvira, Massimo Modonesi, and Horacio Gutiérrez Crespo. El comunismo: otras miradas desde América Latina. México, D.F.: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2007. p. 173
- Esto es, Eds. 87–105. 1955
- Biagini, Hugo E., Arturo Andrés Roig, and Carlos Alemián. El pensamiento alternativo en la Argentina del siglo XX. Buenos Aires: Editorial Biblos, 2004. p. 298
- Alexander, Robert J. Political Parties of the Americas: Canada, Latin America, and the West Indies. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 1982. p. 67