Communist Workers' Party of Germany

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The Communist Workers' Party of Germany (German: Kommunistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands; KAPD) was an anti-parliamentarian and left communist party that was active in Germany during the Weimar Republic. It was founded in 1920 in Heidelberg as a split from the Communist Party of Germany (KPD).[1] Originally the party remained a sympathising member of Communist International. In 1922, the KAPD split into two factions, both of whom kept the name, but are referred to as the KAPD Essen Faction and the KAPD Berlin Faction.

Communist Workers' Party of Germany
Kommunistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands (KAPD)
FoundedApril 1920 (1920-04)
DissolvedMarch 1933 (1933-03)
Split fromCommunist Party of Germany
Merged intoCommunist Workers Union of Germany
NewspaperKommunistische Arbeiter-Zeitung
Membership (1921)43,000
IdeologyLeft communism
Revolutionary socialism
Council communism
Political positionFar-left
International affiliationCommunist Workers' International
ColoursRed

The KAPD Essen Faction was linked to the Communist Workers International. The Entschiedene Linke joined the KAPD in 1927.[2]

History

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The roots of the KAPD lie in the left-wing split from the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), calling itself the International Socialists of Germany (ISD). The ISD consisted of elements which were to the left of the Spartacus League of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht. The Spartacists and the ISD entered the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD), the centrist split from SPD, in 1915 as an autonomous tendency within the party. The left-wing of the USPD, consisting of Spartacists and ultra-left council communists went on to form the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1918. In 1920, the ultra-lefts of this party, mainly consisting of council communist members whose origins lay in the ISD, split from it to form the KAPD.[3]

Founding Conference, 4–5 April, 1920 Berlin

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The KAPD was formed on 4 April 1920 by members of the left wing of the KPD who had been excluded at the Heidelberg Party Conference of the KPD (20–23 October 1919) by the central leadership under Paul Levi. Their main goal was an immediate abolition of bourgeois democracy and the constitution of a dictatorship of the proletariat, although they decided against a one-party dictatorship in the Russian model. The KAPD especially rejected the Leninist form of organisation along with democratic centralism, participation in elections, and activism within reformist trade unions, unlike the KPD. The Dutch communist theoreticians Anton Pannekoek and Herman Gorter played an important role within the KAPD; they had, on the model of the KAPD, formed the Communist Workers' Party of the Netherlands (KAPN), which however never attained a similar status to that of the KAPD.

The conference was attended by 11 delegates from Berlin with 24 from further afield, who together represented about 38,000 members.[4]

The origins of the KAPD's establishment lay in the Kapp Putsch. In the view of KPD's left wing, this event had shown that the behaviour of the KPD party leadership was synonymous with giving up the revolutionary fight, as the KPD's position on the general strike had changed several times, and in the Bielefeld Agreement of 24 March 1920 the KPD had consented to the disarmament of the Ruhr Red Army. The Berlin district group on 3 April 1920 called a congress of the left wing. There it was decided to form the KAPD. The delegates, according to estimates, represented 80,000 KPD members. The newly formed party advocated the ending of parliamentary activities, and the active fight against the bourgeois state. In the coming period it worked closely with the General Workers' Union of Germany (AAUD). The main bastions of the party were in Berlin, Hamburg, Bremen and East Saxony, all places in which a large part of KPD members switched allegiance to the new party.

First Ordinary Party Congress, 1–4 August 1920

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The Congress was held in the Zum Prälaten restaurant, Alexanderplatz

The Congress was held in the Zum Prälaten restaurant, Berlin. In August 1920, the founding members of the Hamburg branch were expelled, Heinrich Laufenberg and Fritz Wolffheim, who had advocated National Bolshevist ideas. Two months later another founding member, Otto Rühle, was expelled. From 1920 to 1921 the KAPD was a coopted member of the Third International.

In 1921 the KAPD cooperated again with the KPD during the March Action. This was triggered by Weimar Republic troops marching into the industrial region of Central Germany, and the KAPD and KPD's fear that the military intended to occupy the factories.

In 1921 a further fragmentation occurred, when parts of the AAUD around Rühle, Franz Pfemfert and Oskar Kanehl broke off from the KAPD and formed the AAUE.

After 1921, when the KAPD still had over 43,000 members, the party's influence declined more and more, and it separated in 1922 into the Berlin Tendency and the Essen Tendency around Alexander Schwab, Arthur Goldstein, Bernhard Reichenbach and Karl Schröder. The main reason was the Essen Faction's rejection of participation in workers' struggles in factories, in a situation seen as revolutionary. The Essen Tendency founded the Communist Workers' International, but dissolved in 1927. The Berlin Tendency was the larger and more enduring group, surviving until 1933, when it merged into the Communist Workers' Union.[5]

Affiliated unionen

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Poster issued by the KAPD/AAUD in 1919

The AAUD, which was formed as factory organisations in opposition to the traditional trade unions, affiliated with the KAPD. The AAUD was formed by the German leftists who considered organising based on trades as being an outmoded form of organisation and instead advocated organising workers based on factories, thus forming the AAUD. The factory organisations in the AAUD consisted the basis for organising workers' councils.

A section led by Otto Rühle, based in Essen, split from the AAUD, forming the General Workers' Union of Germany – Unitary Organization (AAUD-E).[3]

Kommunistische Arbeiter Jugend

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The youth wing of the party was the Kommunistische Arbeiter Jugend (KAJ) or Communist Workers Youth. They published a "struggle-organ", Rote Jugend, or Red Youth.[6]

Relations with the Comintern

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The delegates of the KAPD to the 2nd World Congress of the Comintern were scorned and their speeches were restricted to a mere ten minutes. This was following the publication of Lenin's Left Wing Communism, which was written as a critique of the left-wing ideas of the KAPD, among other parties, the KAPN and related leftist parties. Theses on the Role of the Communist Party in the Proletarian Revolution,[7] adopted by the 2nd World Congress also explicitly criticize KAPD for their position about the role of the Communist Party. Following the exclusionary attitude shown towards them by the Comintern, the KAPD broke with the International in 1921.[8] Historian E.H. Carr has argued that the 2nd World Congress—to some extent unintentionally and unconsciously—was the first to "establish Russian leadership of Comintern on an impregnable basis."[9]

Relations with the (Italian) Communist Left

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Although German left-communists from KAPD are often understood as same opposition towards the Comintern as Italian Communist Left from then Communist Party of Italy, PCd'I, a tendency also known as Sinistra Comunista, nowadays represented by International Communist Party, between these two lefts were fundamental political divergencies - party role, trade unions, class and party, anti-parliamentarism in principle, - Sinistra held same criticism towards KAPD as the Comintern on 2nd World Congress and these divergencies were not patched[10] up with progressive stalinization of the Comintern. Amadeo Bordiga, leader of Sinistra in that time, who met members of KAPD in person in Berlin on his route to Moscow, was in a later letter to Karl Korsch[11] from 1926 even sceptical of possilibity of join activity between the two lefts because of fundamental political divergencies and stated: (...) We agree with Lenin's theses at the 2nd Congress. (...).

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The party published a paper, Kommunistische Arbeiter-Zeitung. It also published a monthly theoretical magazine, Der Proletarier, between 1920 and 1927.[12]

Prominent members of the KAPD

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ La gauche allemande: Textes du KAPD, de L'AAUD, de L'AAUE et de la KAI (1920–1922), La Vecchia Talpa, Invariance, La Vieille Taupe, 1973, p2
  2. ^ Die Entstehung der GIK, 1927-1933, accessed 13 July 2010
  3. ^ a b Dauvé, Gilles; Authier, Denis. "The Communist Left in Germany 1918-1921". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  4. ^ "BERICHT ÜBER DEN GRÜNDUNGSPARTEITAG DER KAPD AM 4. UND 5. APRIL 1920 IN BERLIN" (PDF). No. 90. Kommunistischen Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands. 23 April 1920.
  5. ^ Philippe Bourrinet, The Dutch and German Communist Left (1900–1968)
  6. ^ "Rote Jugend Jahr 2" (PDF). Association Archives Antonie Pannekoek. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  7. ^ Theses on the Role of the Communist Party in the Proletarian Revolution, adopted by the Second Congress of the Communist International, 1920
  8. ^ Bernhard Reichenbach, The KAPD in Retrospect: An Interview with a Member of the Communist Workers Party of Germany
  9. ^ Carr, A History of Soviet Russia, vol. 3, pg. 197.
  10. ^ http://pcint.org/40_pdf/18_publication-pdf/EN/Tragedy-w.pdf, The Tragedy of the german Proletariat after the First World War
  11. ^ http://www.quinterna.org/lingue/english/historical_en/letter_to_korsch.htm, Letter from Amadeo Bordiga to Karl Korsh, 1926
  12. ^ John Riddell, ed. (2015). To the Masses. Proceedings of the Third Congress of the Communist International, 1921. Vol. 91. Leiden; Boston: Brill. p. 1214. doi:10.1163/9789004288034_038. ISBN 9789004288034.
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