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Sammarinese Communist Refoundation

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Sammarinese Communist Refoundation ( Italian : Rifondazione Comunista Sammarinese , RCS) was a communist political party in San Marino . It was a member of the European Left .

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22-676: It emerged in 1992 when the old Sammarinese Communist Party evolved into the Sammarinese Democratic Progressive Party and some members, on the example of the Italian Communist Refoundation Party , decided not to join the new party. In the 2001 general election RCS won 3.4% of the vote, while in 2006 it gained 8.7% and 5 members of the Grand and General Council as part of the United Left , including

44-472: A 10-member Executive Committee from its ranks to handle daily party governance. The General Secretary of the organization from its 1940 reformation until the early 1970s was Ermenegildo Gasperoni. In 1973, Gasperoni was moved into the more ceremonial role of party chairman, with Umberto Barulli (1921–1993) taking the helm as General Secretary. Barulli was replaced in turn as General Secretary by Gilberto Ghiotti in 1984, with Ghiotti remaining in power until

66-672: A 1986 corruption scandal shattered the Socialists, with the Communists remaining in government through an unlikely coalition with the center-right Sammarinese Christian Democratic Party (PDCS) until 1992. At the national election held on May 29, 1988, the PCS garnered 28.7% of the votes cast, winning 18 of 60 seats on the General Council. The PCS was governed by a 17-member Central Committee, elected at periodic party congresses. This body selected

88-514: A Communist Party as a participant in a governing coalition. A scheduled election held on May 29, 1983 saw the PCs receiving 24.3% of the vote cast for the General Council (parliament), thereby electing 15 Communists to the body. These were joined by 9 Socialists, and 8 members of the SUP — a total of 32 of the 60 seats as part of a new Communist-Socialist unity government. This government remained in power until

110-592: A recognized independent member of the international communist movement, sending delegations to international conferences in 1957, 1959, and 1960 and to the 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in October 1961. With the split of the world communist movement into pro-Soviet and pro-Chinese factions during the 1960s, the PCS remained firmly pro-Soviet. In national elections held on September 8, 1974 ,

132-496: A single party, absorbing RCS. Sammarinese Communist Party The Sammarinese Communist Party ( Italian : Partito Comunista Sammarinese , abbreviated PCS ) was a Marxist political party in the small European republic of San Marino . It was founded in 1921 as a section of the Communist Party of Italy (PCI). The organization existed for its first two decades as an underground political organization. Between 1945 and

154-483: A split of communist hard-liners who formed the Sammarinese Communist Refoundation (RCS). With the renaming of the organization at the 12th Party Congress of April 1990, the name of the official organ was changed from La Scintilla to Progresso . The party's former hammer-and-sickle logo was dropped at this time, replaced by a drawing of a dove by Pablo Picasso . 22nd Congress of

176-595: The Left Party , a splinter group from the Party of Democrats . Since then it had been part of the 2006–2008 governing coalition along with the Party of Socialists and Democrats and Popular Alliance until tensions between its grouping, United Left , and the latter caused the coalition to disintegrate. In the 2008 general election , United Left , the Sammarinese Communist Refoundation's political grouping,

198-520: The Arctic Circle, creating the largest man-made explosion in history. They also accepted the removal of Stalin's remains from the Lenin Mausoleum , the renaming of several cities named after Stalin and other Stalin-era politicians, and Khrushchev's declaration and plans to build communism in 20 years . Historian Archie Brown wrote that the program was "the last authoritative document produced by

220-507: The Communist Party of San Marino, (Partito Communista di San Marino) , or PCS. The organization was established as a section of the Communist Party of Italy (PCI). The party's first two decades were spent in the political underground, as San Marino was dominated — as was Italy — by the fascist movement in the form of the Sammarinese Fascist Party , which held all 60 of the seats in the country's unicameral parliament from

242-656: The Communist Party of the Soviet Union The 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ( Russian : XXII съезд КПСС ) was held from 17 to 31 October 1961. In fourteen days of sessions (22 October was a day off), 4,413 delegates, in addition to delegates from 83 foreign Communist parties , listened to Nikita Khrushchev and others review policy issues. At the Congress, the Sino-Soviet split hardened, especially due to Soviet de-Stalinization efforts, and it

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264-436: The Communist Party of the Soviet Union to take entirely seriously the building of a communist society." Nikita Khrushchev also proposed to revise CPSU's statutes and implement a "systematic renewal of cadres" that would limit terms of individuals in elected party posts and rules for turnover in other Party bodies, worrying that "a gradual freezing of personnel policy would block up the system, and stagnation would occur." However,

286-452: The PCS formally renounced communism and relaunched itself Sammarinese Democratic Progressive Party (PPDS). San Marino is a European microstate , considered the third smallest in Europe with an area of just 61 square kilometers (24 square miles). Despite its small size and tiny population, the tiny nation — wholly surrounded by Italy — was the home of a communist political party from 1921,

308-636: The PCS received 3,246 votes (23% of those cast) and won 16 seats to the Great and General Council — a gain of 1 seat from the previous election, held in 1969. In 1978 the PCS returned to government as part of a coalition with the Socialist Party and a new organization formed three years earlier, the Unitary Socialist Party (PSU). This made San Marino in 1978 the only country in Western Europe with

330-615: The PCS was the newspaper La Scintilla , a publication which was not produced on a regular chronological basis. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990, in parallel to the transformation of PCI into the Democratic Party of the Left (PDS) in Italy, the PCS formally renounced communism and remade itself as the Sammarinese Democratic Progressive Party (PPDS). This change was followed by

352-492: The coalition lost its majority when a socialist deputy crossed over to the opposition, reducing the number of pro-coalition deputies to 29. The tenure of the assembly ended on October 1, 1957, placing the government in constitutional limbo. The Christian Democratic deputies refused to attend session; instead, they occupied a factory in Rovereta and set up a provisional government there. The Italian and U.S. government pledged support to

374-597: The election of 1923 until the end of the Second World War in 1945. The party was refounded in 1940 under the leadership of Ermenegildo Gasperoni (1906–1994). The PCS was a governing party of San Marino in coalition with the Socialist Party of San Marino (PSSM) from 1945 until March 1957. Following events in the Eastern Bloc in 1956, some of the socialist deputies abandoned the coalition. On September 18, 1957,

396-551: The end of the party in 1990. The PCS was the chief sponsor of two subsidiary organizations, the Federation of Communist Women of San Marino and the Communist Youth Federation of San Marino. Party membership in 1965 was estimated at 960 out of a total national population of about 17,000. In 1976 total membership was estimated by another scholar at about 300 from a national population of 19,000. The official organ of

418-592: The provisional government, whilst the communist-socialist coalition (with support of Italian communists) sought to resist the attempt to establish a provisional government. After the failed attempt at a coup in 1957, the PCS remained an opposition party in San Marino, excluded from the government coalition. The new non-communist government won reelection in September 1959, with the PCS's parliamentary delegation falling to 16 members, joined by 8 Socialists. The PCS remained

440-469: The spring of 1957 the PCS governed the country in coalition with the Sammarinese Socialist Party (PSS). The communist-socialist coalition lost power in the events known as Fatti di Rovereta . The PCS returned to membership in a governing parliamentary coalition in 1978, with its adherents remaining as part of the leadership group until 1992. In 1991, with the fall of the Soviet Union ,

462-525: Was part of the Reforms and Freedom electoral coalition which won 25 seats out of 60 in the Grand and General Council gaining 45.78% of the national vote. The Sammarinese Communist Refoundation gained a few seats and a small percentage of the national vote as part of United Left which itself gained 5 seats and 8.57% of the national vote. During the legislature, the United Left was restructured from an alliance to

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484-759: Was the last Congress to be attended by the Chinese Communist Party . The Congress elected the 22nd Central Committee . Other than Sino-Soviet disputes, matters dealt with at the Congress included accepting the Third Program of the CPSU and statute, and the opening of the Volgograd Hydroelectric Plant , the largest in Europe or Russia at the time. The Soviets also tested the world's most powerful thermonuclear bomb (" Tsar Bomba ") in Novaya Zemlya in

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