Communist Party of Belgium

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Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Communist Party of Belgium (Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA"., KPB; Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA"., PCB) was a political party in Belgium from 1921 to 1989. The youth wing of KPB/PCB was known as the Communist Youth of Belgium. The party published a newspaper known as Le Drapeau Rouge in French and De Roode Vaan in Dutch.

History

The Communist Party of Belgium was formed at a congress in Anderlecht, Brussels on 3–4 September 1921. KPB/PCB was formed through the unification of two groups, the Communist Party led by War Van Overstraeten and the Belgian Communist Party led by Joseph Jacquemotte, following a split from the Belgian Workers Party. At the time of its foundation, KPB/PCB had around 500 members.[1] KPB/PCB became the Belgian section of the Communist International. The party gained parliamentary presence in 1925, as both Van Overstraeten and Jacquemotte were elected to the Chamber of Representatives. By 1935 KPB/PCB had 9 deputies in the Chamber and 4 members in the Senate. In 1938 it had a membership of about 8,500.

During the Second World War, the party had to go underground during German occupation. The party was also closely affiliated with the Partisans Armés, a resistance group during the occupation, however in 1943 much of the party leadership was arrested by German forces. After the end of the war, the party was strengthened and obtained 25% in the parliamentary elections. The party participated in a coalition government with the socialists and the liberals from 1946 to 1947.

On 18 August 1950 the party chairman, Julien Lahaut, was assassinated. No one was ever sentenced for the murder. In 2015, however, a team of Belgian historians concluded that it had been orchestrated by anti-communist elements inside the intelligence services, with a prominent role for the agent André Moyen.[2]

In the mid 1960s the U.S. State Department estimated the party membership to be approximately 9,890.[3]

The party briefly flirted with the Eurocommunist tendency in the 1970s, but retained an ambiguous relationship with Eurocommunism: it did not entirely reject the Soviet model and remained sceptical towards the formation of a Western European power bloc.[4]

KPB/PCB lost its parliamentary presence in 1985.[5]

In 1989 KPB/PCB was divided into two separate parties, Kommunistische Partij in Flanders and Parti Communiste in Wallonia.

Several foreign communist parties, American, British, German, French and Dutch, had branches in Belgium.[6]

Chairmen of KPB/PCB

General Secretaries of KPB/PCB

Notable members

Communist burgomasters (mayors)

Election results

Election year Votes Seats Change
Number Percentage
1925 34,149 1.64% Template:Composition bar Steady
1929 43,237 1.94% Template:Composition bar 9 1
1932 64,552 2.90% Template:Composition bar Increase 2
1936 143,223 6.06% Template:Composition bar Increase 6
1939 90,856 4.65% Template:Composition bar Steady
1946 300,099 12.69% Template:Composition bar Increase 14
1949 376,765 7.49% Template:Composition bar 9 11
1950 234,541 4.75% Template:Composition bar 9 5
1954 184,108 3.57% Template:Composition bar 9 3
1958 100,145 1.89% Template:Composition bar 9 2
1961 162,238 3.08% Template:Composition bar Increase 3
1965 247,311 4.77% Template:Composition bar Increase 1
1965 247,311 4.77% Template:Composition bar Increase 1
1968 170,625 3.30% Template:Composition bar 9 1
1971 91,726

67,487

159,213

1.74%

1.28%

3,02%

Template:Composition bar

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Steady
1974 107,481 2.04% Template:Composition bar<templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>[b] 9 3
1977 37,104

62,410

99,514

0.67%

1.12%

1,79%

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Template:Composition bar

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Steady
1978 180,234 3.26% Template:Composition bar Increase 2
1981 138,978 2.31% Template:Composition bar 9 2
1985 71,695 1.18% Template:Composition bar 9 2
1987 51,046 0.80% Template:Composition bar Steady

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See also

Sources

References

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  1. 1921-1996: PC Template:Webarchive
  2. Emmanuel Gerard (red.), Wie heeft Lahaut vermoord? De Koude Oorlog in België, Davidsfonds (2015), Template:ISBN.
  3. Benjamin, Roger W.; Kautsky, John H.. Communism and Economic Development, in The American Political Science Review, Vol. 62, No. 1. (Mar., 1968), pp. 122.
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  5. Official results of the 1978 and 1981 parliamentary elections in the Brussels-Hal-Vilvorde arrondissement; Template:Ill and Template:Ill, the two last PCB MP's, during the 1981 to 1985 legislature, were elected in Wallonia
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Further reading

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