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From 2002 to 2011 there were two active organisations called the 'Revolutionary Workers' Party'. In April 2011, activists from one of the two, centred in Perm, merged their organisation into the Russian Socialist Movement. In May 2019 part of the RWP split and merged into the International Marxist Tendency, naming themselves Marxist Tendency.
Russia Today drew particular attention worldwide for its coverage of the 2008 South Ossetia war. [99] [100] [101] RT named Georgia as the aggressor [101] against the separatist governments of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which were protected by Russian troops. [102] RT saw this as the incident that showcased its newsgathering abilities to the ...
Hong Kong – Revolutionary Communist Party of China (October Review), Socialist Action Chile – Revolutionary Workers Party, Movimiento Anticapitalista, [11] Colombia – Presents for Socialism Costa Rica – New Socialist Party, Socialist Organization, Workers' Party Cyprus – New Internationalist Left, Workers' Democracy
According to paragraph 1 of Article 3 of the Federal Law of the Russian Federation No. 95-FZ “On Political Parties”, a political party in Russia is recognized as "a public association created for the purpose of participation of citizens of the Russian Federation in the political life of society through the formation and expression of their ...
The Russian Socialist Movement was officially founded on 7 March 2011 as a merger of the Socialist League "Vpered" (Forward, Russian section of the Fourth International) and Socialist Resistance. The move had been agreed upon by the sixth congress of Vpered and the separate Socialist Resistance conference, held a day earlier on March 6.
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (of Internationalists) members (2 P) ... Socialist Revolutionary Party politicians (1 C, 86 P) T. Tatar revolutionaries (10 P)
The party was one of a number of groups barred from taking part in the 1993 Duma elections because they were linked, or perceived to be linked, to the October insurgency of that same year. [2] In October 2001, it merged with the Russian Party of Communists to form the Russian Communist Workers' Party – Revolutionary Party of Communists.
[2] [3] The party had its roots in a Minsk workers' study circle founded in 1895. In 1899 the group had around sixty members. [3] The party directed most of its agitation towards Jewish workers, a fact that differed the party from other narodnik groups. [3] The main base of the party was found in Bielorussia (which had a large Jewish population ...