League of Communists of Macedonia
Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The League of Communists of Macedonia (Template:Langx; Sojuz na komunistite na Makedonija, SKM) was the Macedonian branch of the ruling League of Communists of Yugoslavia during the period 1943 – 1990. It was formed on the basis of the Regional Committee of Communists in Macedonia under the name Communist Party of Macedonia (Комунистичка партија на Македонија (КПМ); Komunistička partija na Makedonija, KPM) during the World War II in Yugoslav Macedonia (National Liberation Struggle). It retained that name until April 1952.
The League of Communists of Macedonia was the ruling political party in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia. After the introduction of political pluralism in 1990, the party renamed itself to League of Communists of Macedonia – Party for Democratic Change (Template:Langx [СКМ-ПДП]; Script error: No such module "Lang"., [SKM-PDP]) and was led by Petar Gošev, taking part in the first democratic elections in the same year. On its 11th Congress on 20 April 1991, the party was reformed, changing its socialist ideology to social democracy (similar to other former communist bloc countries), and refounding itself as the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia. There was a small minority which retained the old name and constituted itself as a distinct political entity. This party was founded in 1992 under the name Communist Party of Macedonia – Freedom Movement, in 2015 they became one of the principal creators of the far-left party The Left.
History
Background
During World War II, in 1941 and throughout 1942, the resistance against the Axis powers in occupied Yugoslav Macedonia lagged behind than in other parts of Yugoslavia.Template:Sfn After the Bulgarian takeover of most of then Vardar Banovina in April 1941, the local communists fell into the sphere of influence of the Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP).Template:Sfn The BCP supported the idea of a independent and unified Macedonia, contrary to the stance of the Yugoslav communists.Template:Sfn At that time most Macedonian communists were not yet lured to Yugoslav communists' agenda as they feared a reestablishment of the previous oppressive rule and the regional committee was de facto under control of the BCP.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As a result, the factionalist struggle between the pro-Bulgarian and the pro-Yugoslav Macedonians exacerbated.Template:Sfn
Foundation
The situation began to change by the end of 1942 and after February 1943, when Tito's envoy Svetozar Vukmanović arrived in Macedonia as a representative of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia's central committee and Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ). The Supreme Headquarters of AVNOJ realized that securing mass participation would require to "Macedonianize" the struggle's form and content.Template:Sfn The Communist Party of Yugoslavia's plan was to have the party operate only in Vardar Macedonia and include only activists loyal to the Yugoslav agenda.Template:Sfn The Communist Party of Macedonia (CPM) was created on 19 March 1943 by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia in Tetovo in the Italian-occupation zone of Yugoslavia (in then Kingdom of Albania), on the basis of the previous Regional Committee of Communists in Macedonia. The first Central Committee consisted of Kuzman Josifovski Pitu, Bane Andreev, Cvetko Uzunovski, Strahil Gigov, Mara Naceva and Lazar Koliševski. Naceva and Koliševski were absent, as they were imprisoned in Bulgaria at the time.Template:Sfn The CPM would lead the struggle, not for the restoration of old Yugoslavia but for above all liberation and unification of Macedonia within a new federal union of Yugoslav peoples with an extension of its prewar territory.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Yugoslav era
After 1944, the CPM became the main ruling party of the People's Republic of Macedonia. The party initiated pro-Bulgarian purges in January 1945.Template:Sfn The party's first congress was held in 1948. The CPM was renamed to League of Communists of Macedonia (LCM) in April 1952. The party was under the control of Macedonians, who dominated the membership. Under the direction of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (CPY), it regulated the new republic's relations with ethnic minorities and inter-ethnic relations.Template:Sfn In 1965, LCLM proceeded to increase minority representation in the highest bodies of the party.Template:Sfn In mid-1989, during the revolutions, LCM committed itself to introducing a multi-party system in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia.Template:Sfn The party held its Tenth Congress in Skopje from 26 to 28 November 1989, when Petar Gošev became its leader. The old dogmatic party leadership, which had been pro-Serbian, was replaced.Template:Sfn It renamed itself to League of Communists of Macedonia – Party for Democratic Transformation.Template:Sfn On 7 April 1990, the party decided to leave the League of Communists of Yugoslavia.Template:Sfn The party took part in the first multi-party elections in December, when it was defeated by the nationalist VMRO-DPMNE but it gained 31 seats.Template:Sfn In 1991, the party was succeeded by the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia on 20 April 1991.Template:Sfn
Gallery
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Part of the delegates at the I Congress of the CPM, held on December 20, 1948, Skopje.
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Part of the delegates at the II Congress of the CPM, held on May 29, 1954, Skopje.
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Delegates at the III Congress of the CPM, held on June 22, 1959, Skopje.
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1963 Skopje earthquake: The building of the Central Committee of the CPM
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Portraits of part of the members of the first Central Committee of CPM in 1943
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The house of the Jovanov family in the old part of Tetovo in which CPM was formed
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Inside the Museum of CPM
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Hideout room in the ground behind the house museum
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Memorial plaque for the hideout room in which materials were written, with whom the population was informed and mobilized for the resistance
Party leaders
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The official name of the office was changed in May 1982 from Secretary of the Central Committee to President of the Presidency of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Macedonia.
- Lazar Koliševski (September 1944 – July 1963)
- Krste Crvenkovski (July 1963 – March 1969)
- Angel Čemerski (March 1969 – May 1982)
- Krste Markovski (May 1982 – 5 May 1984)
- Milan Pančevski (5 May 1984 – June 1986)
- Jakov Lazaroski (June 1986 – 1989)
- Petar Gošev (1989 – 20 April 1991)
References
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Bibliography
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Template:League of Communists of Yugoslavia Template:Authority control
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- Communist parties in North Macedonia
- Political parties established in 1943
- Political parties disestablished in 1991
- Parties of one-party systems
- Socialist Republic of Macedonia
- Politics of Yugoslavia
- League of Communists of Macedonia
- League of Communists of Yugoslavia