User:SocDoneLeft/List of leftist organizations in the United States

The following is a list of political organizations in the United States which support left-wing politics: social democracy, socialism, communism, or anarchism.

The list below focuses on creation, splits, merges, and ends of various leftist organizations. This page hopes to outline the extremely messy organizational history of leftism and socialism in the United States. This page also hopes to help readers see that the US history of leftism and history of socialism has deep roots that stretch back to 1848 and earlier.

Groups included

This page focuses on mass organizations: Leftist orgs which have a mass dues-paying membership, which claimed to have one, or which planned to build one. Many are organized as political parties. Many reject electoral politics altogether. This criterion excludes most organizations focused on publishing media, small collectives with no focus on growth, terrorism, and clandestine cells. Some major paramilitary organizations are included, if they hoped to use propaganda of the deed to achieve socialist revolution or emerged from mass organizations (such as the Weathermen).

This page focus on overtly leftist organizations: Organizations which are capitalism-critical or anti-capitalist. Some progressive capitalist organizations are included, because they have a substantial leftist membership or were critical to the formation of a leftist group. Some major labor federations are included, despite few labor federations explicitly adopting anti-capitalist rhetoric, because labor federation competition is often intertwined with competition between leftist organizations.

Eras

The "eras" below describe major movements of socialists or which substantially affected the nature of socialist organizing in the United States.

List

NameStartedEndedHistory: Start, splits, merges, end
Extinction Rebellion (XR)
2018ActiveIdeology: Climate movement, civil disobedience, social democracy (minority), anti-capitalism (minority)
Independent Socialist Group (ISG)2019ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
  • 1974: Committee for a Workers' International (CWI or CWI-74) created in United Kingdom
  • 2018: in CWI, two factions form: In Defence of a Working Class and Trotskyist CWI (IDWCTCWI) and CWI Majority
  • 2019: IDWCTCWI faction won control of CWI-74; CWI Majority splits from CWI-74 and retains majority of CWI-74 country affiliates, including SAlt; IDWCTCWI "refounded" CWI as Committee for a Workers' International (CWI, Refounded CWI, or CWI-19)
  • 2019: minority of Socialist Alternative (SAlt) members who supported IDWCTCWI/CWI-19 leave and create Independent Socialist Group (ISG)
Black Hammer Party (BHP)
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2019ActiveIdeology: nominally Black liberation (2019), then revolutionary Black separatism and far-right politics; allegedly a cult
  • 2019: ex-members of the African People's Socialist Party (APSP) created Black Hammer Organization (BHO)
  • 2020: Gazi Kodzo emerged as leader of BHP; alleged to be a cult leader or charismatic authority
  • 2021: in May, BHP announced purchase of 200 acres of land to create all-POC town called Hammer City; later in May, all BHP members removed by police after BHP failed to actually purchase said land
  • 2021: BHP announced "alliance" with fascist paramilitary Proud Boys (PB)
  • 2021: Kodzo founds Unity Church International (UCI)
  • 2022: BHP headquarters raided by SWAT, which find the body of an 18-year-old dead from suicide
Socialist Rifle Association (SRA)
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2018ActiveIdeology: Multi-tendency socialism and mutual aid

Peak membership: 10,000 (2020)[2]

  • 2013: Socialist Rifle Association (SRA) started as semi-joke Facebook page
  • 2018: SRA restructured into organization with dues-paying members
Black Socialists in America (BSA)
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2018ActiveIdeology: Democratic socialism, libertarian socialism, African-American socialism
  • 2018: Black Socialists in America (BSA) created
Sunrise Movement (SM)
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2017ActiveIdeology: Environmentalism (majority) and ecosocialism (minority)
  • 2015: veterans of Momentum Community (Momentum)[3] create Sunrise Movement (SM)
  • 2017: SM restructured into an organization
  • 2018: SM members sat-in Nancy Pelosi's office to demand a Green New Deal
Justice Democrats (JD)
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2017ActiveIdeology: Social democracy and democratic socialism
Our Revolution (OR)
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2016ActiveIdeology: Democratic socialism and social democracy
Brand New Congress (BNC)
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20162023Ideology: Democratic socialism and social democracy
Colorado Springs Socialists (CSS)
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20162020Ideology: multi-tendency socialism
Working Class Party (WCP)
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2016ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
Red Guards (RG)
20152019Ideology: Maoism
People's Climate Movement (PCM)
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20142020Ideology: Climate movement, Progressive, anti-capitalism (minority)
Huey P. Newton Gun Club (HPNGC)
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2014ActiveIdeology: Anti-capitalism, open carry, and Black nationalism
  • 2014: Huey P. Newton Gun Club (HPNGC) created
Black Rose Anarchist Federation (BRAF)2000ActiveIdeology: Anarcho-communism, platformism
  • 2000: anarchists in New England, Ontario, and Quebec created Northeastern Federation of Anarchists Communists (NEFAC) or Fédération des communistes libertaires du Nord-Est (NEFAC)[a]
  • 2008: Quebec section of NEFAC split to create L'Union communiste libertaire (UCL) or Libertarian Communist Union (LCU); not to be confused with Union communiste libertaire (UCL) or Libertarian Communist Union (LCU) in France
  • 2011: Ontario and New England sections of NEFAC reorganized as Common Struggle Libertarian Communist Federation (CSLCF), usually called Common Struggle (CS)
  • 2014: UCL dissolved
  • 2014: NEFAC-CSLCF website stopped publishing
  • 2014: anarchist organizations, primarily Common Struggle, merged to create Black Rose Anarchist Federation (BRRN) or Federación Anarquista Rosa Negra (BRRN), commonly called Black Rose-Rosa Negra (BRRN)[b]
Democracy at Work (DAW)
2012ActiveIdeology: Market socialism, worker cooperative movement
Communist Party of Puerto Rico (PCPR)
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2010ActiveIdeology: Communism and Puerto Rican independence
  • 1991: Puerto Rican Communist Party (Partido Comunista Puertorriqueño, PCP) dissolved, former members created Communist Refoundation (Refundación Comunista, RF)
  • 2010: former PCP members in RF create Communist Party of Puerto Rico (Partido Comunista de Puerto Rico, PCPR)
Redneck Revolt (RnR)
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2009ActiveIdeology: Libertarian socialism, open carry, and mutual aid
Bash Back! (BB!)20072011Ideology: Insurrectionary anarchism
  • 2007: Bash Back! (BB!) emerged from scattered insurrectionary anarchists
  • 2011: BB! dissolved after internal dissent
  • 2023: anarchists inspired by BB! held a convergence but did not form an organization[4]
Oregon Progressive Party (OPP)
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2007ActiveIdeology: Democratic socialism, social democracy, progressivism
  • 2007: Oregon Peace Party (OPP) created
  • 2009: OPP renamed to Oregon Progressive Party
Rose City Antifa (RCA)
2007ActiveIdeology: Anti-fascism, Anti-racism, Anarchism
United States Pirate Party
2006ActiveIdeology: Pirate movement (non-socialist leftism), Direct democracy
  • 2006: USPP created by university students
  • 2012: USPP created Pirate National Committee (PNC)
  • 2022: USPP joined Pirate Parties International (PPI)
New Students for a Democratic Society (New SDS or SDS of 2006)
2006ActiveIdeology: Multi-tendency socialism and leftism
International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE)
2006ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism (SEP youth wing)
New Afrikan Black Panther Party (NABPP)
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2005ActiveIdeology: Black nationalism, Maoism
  • 2005: New Afrikan Black Panther Party (NABPP) created; inspired by but no organizational ties to Black Panther Party (BPP)
  • 2020: minority split behind Kevin "Rashid" Johnson to create Revolutionary Intercommunal Black Panther Party (RIBPP)
Bayan USA (Bayan)
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2005ActiveIdeology: National Democracy (Philippines), from Maoism
Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL)
2004ActiveIdeology: Marxism-Leninism

Election results: Party for Socialism and Liberation#Election results

Anarchist People of Color (APOC)20032010Ideology: Anarchism, anti-racism
Washington Progressive Party (WAPP)
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20022023Ideology: Democratic socialism, social democracy, progressivism
  • 2002: WAPP created
  • 2023: WAPP website ceased publication[5]
Federation of Revolutionary Anarchist Collectives (FRAC)20012006Ideology: Anarcho-communism
  • 2001: some former LRRAF members associated with Anti-Racist Action create Federation of Revolutionary Anarchist Collectives (FRAC) Great Lakes (FRAC-GL)
  • 2004: FRAC included BRICK in Chicago, IL, Burning River Revolutionary Anarchist Collective (BRRAC) in Cleveland, OH, Nightvision in Lansing, MI, and NorthStar Anarchist Collective (NSAC) in Minneapolis, MN
  • 2005: FRAC disbanded; BRRAC and NSAC survived
North Eastern Federation of Anarchist Communists (NEFAC)19992014Ideology: Anarcho-communism
  • 2000: after 1999 Seattle WTO protests, anarchists in northeast North America create North Eastern Federation of Anarchist Communists (NEFAC), also titled Fédération des Communistes Libertaires du Nord-Est (FCLNE); many members come from dissolved Love and Rage Network (LRN) and Atlantic Anarchist Circle (AAC)
  • XXX: renamed Common Struggle Libertarian Communist Federation (CSLCF), or Lucha Común Federación Comunista Libertaria (LCFCL)
  • 2014: CSLCF merged with "other anarchist organizations" and created Black Rose Anarchist Federation (BRAF)
International League of Peoples' Struggle (ILPS)
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1999ActiveIdeology: Maoism, operates through numerous front groups
  • 2001: Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) [Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (PKP)] leader creates International League of Peoples' Struggle (ILPS)
  • 2005: Bayan USA created (US affiliate of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan [Bayan], which affiliated with ILPS in 2001)
  • PCFS:
    • 2018: ILPS creates People's Coalition on Food Sovereignty (PCFS)[6]
    • 2021: PCFS created Global People’s Caravan (GPC)[7][8]
  • APRN:
    • 1997: ILPS created Asia Pacific Research Network (APRN)[9]
    • 2020: APRN created International People's Research Network (IPRN)[10]
  • IPF:
    • 2019: ILPS created International Solidarity (IS)[11] as umbrella organization for other organizations
    • 2022: IS renamed to International Coordination Network (ICN)[12]
    • 2022: ICN renamed to International People's Front (IPF)[13]
  • PRCJ:
    • 2021: ILPS created Southern People’s Action on COP26 (SPAC26)[14]
    • 2022: SPAC26 renamed to People Rising for Climate Justice (PRCJ)[15][16]
  • RUSWM:
    • 2017: ILPS created Solidarity Fight Back (SFB)[17]
    • 2018: SFB renamed to Resist US-led War Movement (RUSWM): [18]
  • 2008: ILPS created International Migrants Alliance (IMA)[19]
  • 2011: ILPS created Workers International Struggles Initiatives (WORKINS)[20]
  • 2011: ILPS created International Women's Alliance (IWA)[21]
  • 2016: ILPS created People Over Profit (POP)
  • 2018: ILPS created Indigenous Peoples Movement for Self Determination & Liberation (IPMSDL)
Left Turn (LT)
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19992011Ideology: Trotskyism
Left Voice (LV)1998ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism and Morenoism
Black Radical Congress (BRC)
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19982015Ideology: Racial equality, Economic justice, African-American socialism
Working Families Party (WFP)
1998ActiveIdeology: Social democracy and democratic socialism
Anti-Capitalist Convergences (ACCs)19962004Ideology: Anarchism, direct action, anti-globalization
  • TODO XXX review these dates
  • late 1990s: ACCs spring up in cities around US, usually to organize anti-globalization protests
  • 2000: anarchists in Washington, DC create local ACC before A16 protests
  • 2001: in Quebec, Convergence des Luttes Anti-Capitalistes (CLAC) is formed; CLAC was most successful and durable ACC
  • 2000s: nearly all still-extant ACCs dissolve
Atlantic Anarchist Circle (AAC)19971999Ideology: Anarchism, anti-globalization
Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP)
1996ActiveIdeology: Jewish left, anti-Zionism
  • 1996: JVP created as volunteer group
  • 2002: JVP reorganized with aims of mass membership
Green Party of the United States (Greens or GPUS)
1996ActiveIdeology: social democracy (majority), democratic socialism and ecosocialism (minority)

Elected officials: List of Green politicians who have held office in the United States

History: History of the Green Party of the United States

  • 1984: Green movement leaders create Green Committees of Correspondence (GCoC)
  • 1991: realo members of the GCoC created the Green Party Organizing Committee (GPOC)
  • 1991: fundi members of GCoC, especially the Left Green Network (LGN), took control of GCoC and restructured it into Greens/Green Party USA (G/GPUSA)
  • 1992: GPOC dissolved; former GPOC members create Green Politics Network (GPN)
  • 1996: GPN hosts Third Parties National Conference for 3rd-party presidential candidates
  • 1996: GPN helps run Ralph Nader 1996 presidential campaign
  • 1996: GPN restructures as Association of State Green Parties (ASGP), which also includes some realo members of the G/GPUSA
  • 2000: ASGP attempted to merge with Greens/Green Party USA (G/GPUSA) under Feinstein/Hawkins Proposal, which G/GPUSA did not adopt
  • 2001: ASGP attempted to merge with G/GPUSA under Boston Agreement; majority faction of G/GPUSA voted for, but failed to obtain 2/3 supermajority; many G/GPUSA members left G/GPUSA for ASGP
  • 2001: ASGP renamed and reorganized as Green Party of the United States (Greens or GPUS)
South Carolina Workers' Party (SCWP)
1996ActiveIdeology: Social democracy and democratic socialism
  • 1991: Tony Mazzocchi, influential labor organizer, begins to organize toward a labor party
  • 1996: a coalition of dozens of unions created as Labor Party (LP) in association with a dozen national unions, in attempt to make a national labor party
  • 2002: Mazzocchi dies
  • 2007: suspended active operations
  • 2023: renamed to South Carolina Workers Party (SCWP)
CrimethInc. ex-Workers Collective (CWC)
1996ActiveIdeology: Anarchism
Black Riders Liberation Party (BRLP)1996ActiveIdeology: Revolutionary socialism and Black nationalism
Anarchist Black Cross Federation (ABCF)
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1995ActiveIdeology: anarchist collective network for support of political prisoner and prisoners of war (PP/POW)
  • 1907: first US Anarchist Black Cross (ABC) chapter created in New York City in 1907
  • 1917: ABC in NYC dissolved as members left for Soviet Union
  • 1937: all ABC members in the Soviet Union had "disappeared" during the Great Purge
  • 1968: an international of ABC's was reorganized
  • 1995: Anarchist Black Cross Federation (ABCF) was created by merger of several ABC chapters
  • 1996: the Anarchist Black Cross Confederation (ABCC) split from the ABCF
  • 1998: ABCC dissolved
  • 2001: the Anarchist Black Cross Network (ABCN) run by the Break the Chains Collective (BCC) split from ABCF
  • 2003: Break the Chains Conference helped ABCF and ABCN to coordinate
  • 2007: ABNC/BCC ceased publication
New Panther Vanguard Movement (NPVM)19942002Ideology: Black nationalism, Intercommunalism
  • 1994: created as New African American Vanguard Movement (NAAVM) with former Black Panther Party members as leadership
  • 1997: renamed as New Panther Vanguard Movement (NPVM)
  • 2002: dissolved
Black Autonomy Federation (BAF)1994ActiveIdeology: Anarchism, Black anarchism
  • 1994: Atlanta, GA anarchists create Let's Organize the 'Hood – Black Autonomy Federation (BAF)
Revolutionary Black Panther Party (RBPP)
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1992ActiveIdeology: Black nationalism, Marxism-Leninism
New Party (NP of 1992)
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19921998Ideology: Progressivism, social democracy, democratic socialism
Revolutionary Communists of America (RCA)
1992ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism (CCDS)
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1991ActiveIdeology: Multi-tendency democratic socialism
Greens/Green Party USA (G/GPUSA)19912019Ideology: social democracy (majority), democratic socialism and ecosocialism (minority)
  • 1984: Green movement leaders create Green Committees of Correspondence (GCoC)
  • 1991: fundi members of GCoC, especially the Left Green Network (LGN), took control of GCoC and restructured it into Greens/Green Party USA (G/GPUSA)
  • 1996: some realo G/GPUSA members split to join Association of State Green Parties (ASGP)
  • 2000: Association of State Green Parties (ASGP) attempted to merge with Greens/Green Party USA (G/GPUSA) under Feinstein/Hawkins Proposal, which G/GPUSA did not adopt
  • 2001: ASGP attempted to merge with G/GPUSA under Boston Agreement; majority faction of G/GPUSA voted for, but failed to obtain 2/3 supermajority; many G/GPUSA members left G/GPUSA for ASGP
  • 2001: G/GPUSA was allowed to merge with ASGP, but would have had to drop "Party" from name, becoming Greens USA (GUSA)
  • 2019: G/GPUSA dissolved
Fire By Night Organizing Committee (FBNOC)19981999Ideology: Maoism, Anarchism
Bring the Ruckus (BTR)19972012Ideology: Anarchism, anti-racism
Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation (LRRAF)19901998Ideology: Anarchism, platformism
  • 1986-88: annual anarchist convergences spur interest in national anarchist organization
  • 1989: Revolutionary Socialist League (RSL) dissolved
  • 1989: anarchists and former members of RSL create Love and Rage newspaper
  • 1991: membership around Love and Rage reorganized into more formal Love and Rage Network (LRN)
  • 1993: LRN reorganized into more formal membership-based organization Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation (LRRAF)
  • 1998: LRRAF split and dissolved
  • 1998: some former LRRAF members favorable to Maoism create Fire By Night Organizing Committee (FBNOC)
  • 1999: some former LRRAF members, especially those from RSL, joined North Eastern Federation of Anarchist Communists (NEFAC)
  • 1999: some former LRRAF members joined Bring the Ruckus collective
  • 2001: some former LRRAF members associated with Anti-Racist Action create Federation of Revolutionary Anarchist Collectives (FRAC)
Socialist Front (FS)19902012Ideology: multi-tendency Communism and Puerto Rican independence
  • 1990: PRTP co-founded the Socialist Front (Frente Socialista, FS) coalition co-founded by Workers' Socialist Movement (Movimiento Socialista de los Trabajadores, MST), Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers' Party-Macheteros Partido Revolucionario de los Trabajadores Puertorriqueños-Macheteros, PRTP), and the Political Education Workshop (Taller de Formacion Politica, TFP)
  • 2001: Communist Refoundation (Refundación Comunista, RF) joined FS
  • 2005: MST left FS
  • 2008: TFP left FS
  • 2008: PRTP left FS
  • 2012: FS ceased publication and website closed[24]
Profane Existence (PE)1989ActiveIdeology: Anarchism, anarcho-punk
  • 1989: Minneapolis anarchists create Profane Existence (PE)
  • 1998: PE dissolves
  • 2000: PE reforms
New Black Panther Party (NBPP)1989ActiveIdeology: Black separatism, anti-capitalism, anti-Jewish bigotry, anti-white bigotry
Left Green Network (LGN)19881993Ideology: Ecosocialism
Anti-Racist Action (ARA) Network19872022Ideology: Multi-tendency anti-fascist collective network, mostly anarchist
Solidarity
1986ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
Socialist Alternative (SAlt)
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1986ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism

Election results: List of Socialist Alternative election results

Peak membership: 1,000 (2020)[27]

  • 1974: Committee for a Workers' International (CWI or CWI-74) created in United Kingdom
  • 1986: CWI members moved to the United States and created the Labor and Trade Union Group (LTUG)
  • 1990s: proto-SAlt created as Labor Militant (LM)
  • 1992: CWI expelled minority faction, who became International Marxist Tendency (IMT), whose US affiliate is Socialist Revolution (SR)
  • 1996: LM renamed as Socialist Alternative (SAlt)
  • 1996: SAlt obtained leadership of New York chapter Labor Party (LP)
  • 1998: LP shuts down New York chapter after failed 3rd-party campaigns
  • 2018: in CWI, two factions form: In Defence of a Working Class and Trotskyist CWI (IDWCTCWI) and CWI Majority
  • 2018: SAlt members begin to join the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) caucus Reform and Revolution (RnR)
  • 2019: IDWCTCWI faction won control of CWI-74; CWI Majority splits from CWI-74 and retains majority of CWI-74 country affiliates, including SAlt; IDWCTCWI "refounded" CWI as Committee for a Workers' International (CWI, Refounded CWI, or CWI-19)
  • 2019: minority of SAlt members who supported IDWCTCWI/CWI-19 leave and create Independent Socialist Group (ISG)
  • 2019: minority subfaction within IDWCTCWI splits from CWI-74 and CWI-19 to create International Revolutionary Left (IRL), with no obvious US affiliate
  • 2020: CWI Majority creates second CWI-74 successor, International Socialist Alternative (ISA)
  • 2020: SAlt members begin to join DSA while remaining in SAlt, in order to win Kshama Sawant's 2021 recall election
  • 2022: SAlt members disengage from DSA, while RnR remains within DSA
  • 2024: drama
Socialist Unity (SU of 1985)[28]19851986Ideology: Trotskyism
Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO)
1985ActiveIdeology: Marxism-Leninism and anti-revisionism

Peak membership: 1,000 (2021)[29]

Subgroups and front groups: National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression (NAARPR), New Students for a Democratic Society (SDS of 2006), US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN),

Workers' Solidarity Alliance (WSA)
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1984ActiveIdeology: Anarcho-syndicalism
Organization for Revolutionary Unity (ORU)19831986Ideology: New Communist Movement, Marxism-Leninism
  • 1983: ORU created as merge of Committee for a Proletarian Party (CPP) and the Communist Organization, Bay Area (COBA)
  • 1986: ORU merged into Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO)
Maoist Internationalist Movement (MIM)19832011Ideology: Maoism–Third Worldism
  • 1983: founded as Revolutionary Internationalist Movement (RIM), not to be confused with the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP)'s identically-named organization
  • 2011: MIM ceased publication after MIM founder died
Socialist Action (SAct)
1983ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism

Election results: Socialist Action (United States)#Election results

  • 1983: created as split from Socialist Workers Party (SWP)
  • 1985: minority faction split to create Socialist Unity (SU of 1985)
North Star Network (NSN)19831990Ideology: Trotskyism (early) then democratic socialism (late)
Fourth Internationalist Tendency (FIT)19831995Ideology: Trotskyism
Democratic Socialists of America (DSA)
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1983ActiveIdeology: Democratic socialism

Elected officials: List of Democratic Socialists of America public officeholders

Workers' Socialist Movement (MST)
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1982ActiveIdeology: multi-tendency Communism and Puerto Rican independence
  • 1982: Popular Socialist Movement (Movimiento Socialista Popular, MSP) merged with Revolutionary Socialist Party Partido Socialista Revolucionario, PSR) to create Workers' Socialist Movement (Movimiento Socialista de los Trabajadores, MST)
  • 1984: the Workers' Internationalist League (Liga Internacionalista de los Trabajadores, LIT) dissolved into MST
  • 1990: MST co-founded the Socialist Front (Frente Socialista, FS) coalition along with Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers' Party-Macheteros Partido Revolucionario de los Trabajadores Puertorriqueños-Macheteros, PRTP) and the Political Education Workshop (Taller de Formacion Politica, TFP)
  • 2005: MST left the FS
Internationalist Workers Party (Fourth International) [(IWP or IWP(FI) or IWPfi]1982ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism and Morenoism
Vermont Progressive Party (VPP)
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1981ActiveIdeology: Democratic socialism, social democracy, progressivism
Black Workers for Justice (BWFJ)
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1981ActiveIdeology: social democracy and African-American socialism
Citizens Party (CP of 1979)19791986Ideology: Progressivism, social democracy, economic democracy
Greenpeace USA (Greenpeace)
1979ActiveIdeology: Environmentalism, anti-nuclear, nonviolence, progressivism, anti-capitalism (minority)
  • 1969: anti-nuclear protesters created The Don't Make a Wave Committee (TDMWC)
  • 1972: TDMWC renamed to Greenpeace
  • 1970s: early slogans include "I'm not a Red, I'm a Green"[30][31]
  • 1975: first Greenpeace chapters created in US
  • 1979: Greenpeace USA (Greenpeace)
  • 1995: Greenpeace lobbying encouraged and strengthened Basel Convention
  • 2006: Greenpeace created Project Hot Seat (PHS)
  • 2007: Greenpeace endorsed TrueMajority principles
  • 2009: PHS renamed to Climate Rescue
John Brown Anti-Klan Committee (JBAKC)19781991Ideology: Anti-racism
May 19th Communist Organization (M19CO)19781985Ideology: Marxism-Leninism, propaganda of the deed

Note: Name is reference to shared birthday of Malcolm X and Ho Chi Minh, not a date in organization's history.

Center for Democratic Renewal (CDR)19781980Ideology: anti-fascism
Committee for a Revolutionary Socialist Party (CRSP)19781980Ideology: Trotskyism
League of Revolutionary Struggle (Marxist–Leninist) [LRS or LRS(ML) or LRS(M-L)]19781990Ideology: Marxism-Leninism, New Communist movement
Organizing Committee for an Ideological Center (OCIC)19781982Ideology: Maoism and New Communist Movement
  • 1978: five Maoist local organizations ("Committee of Five") convened to create OCIC, part of the broader The Trend movement
  • 1981: OCIC organizations split and most membership left
  • 1982: OCIC dissolved
Anarchist Communist Federation (ACF)19781984Ideology: Anarchism
Revolutionary Workers Headquarters (RWH or RWHq)19771985Ideology: Marxism-Leninism
Workers Power19771986Ideology: Trotskyism
Line of March (LOM)19761996Ideology: moderate between pro-Soviet and pro-China (New Communist Movement) views
Revolutionary Workers League (RWL of 1976)19762006Ideology: Trotskyism
Puerto Rican Workers' Revolutionary Party (PRTP or PRTP-Macheteros)1976ActiveIdeology: Marxism-Leninism and Puerto Rican independence movement
  • 1976: Puerto Rican Workers' Revolutionary Party (Partido Revolucionario de los Trabajadores Puertorriqueños, PRTP) created
  • 1978: PRTP creates Boricua Popular Army (Ejército Popular Boricua, EPB or Macheteros, lit.'machete wielders')
  • 1984: EPB split from PRTP
  • 1990: PRTP co-founded the Socialist Front (Frente Socialista, FS) coalition along with Workers' Socialist Movement (Movimiento Socialista de los Trabajadores, MST) and the Political Education Workshop (Taller de Formacion Politica, TFP)
  • 2008: PRTP left FS
League for the Revolutionary Party (LRP)1976ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
International Socialist Organization (ISO)
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19762019Ideology: Trotskyism

Peak membership: 1,500 (2013)[35]

Combahee River Collective (CRC)19741980Ideology: Women's liberation, Black liberation, anti-capitalism
Popular Socialist Movement (MSP)19741982Ideology: Marxism-Leninism, Guevarism, and Puerto Rican independence
  • 1974: former Puerto Rican Independence Party (Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño, PIP) youth wing members split and create Popular Socialist Movement (Movimiento Socialista Popular, MSP)
  • 1982: MSP merged with Revolutionary Socialist Party Partido Socialista Revolucionario, PSR) to create Workers' Socialist Movement (Movimiento Socialista de los Trabajadores, MST)
Democratic Workers Party (DWP)19731975Ideology: New Communist movement, alleged political cult
  • 1972: Marlene Dixon leads group of ex-Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) students to create Workers Party for Proletarian Socialism (WPPS)
  • 1974: WPPS renamed to Workers Party (WP)
  • 1976: WP renamed to Democratic Workers Party (DWP)
  • 1978: DWP created Grass Roots Alliance (GRA) as front organization
  • 1980: began working with Peace and Freedom Party (PFP)
  • 1986: members expelled Dixon and dissolved DWP
Class Struggle League (CLS)19731975Ideology: Trotskyism
Communist Workers' Party (CWP)19731987Ideology: New Communist Movement and Maoism (until 1980), then social democracy
  • 1973: former Progressive Labor Party (PLP) member creat Asian Study Group (ASG)
  • 1976: ASG renamed Workers' Viewpoint Organization (WVO)
  • 1979: WVO renamed Communist Workers' Party (CWP)
  • 1979: CWP members killed in Greensboro massacre by Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and American Nazi Party (ANP) members
  • 1985: CWP renamed as New Democratic Movement (NDM) and adopted social democracy
  • 1987: NDM dissolved, except for Greensboro Justice Fund
Revolutionary Socialist League (RSL)19731989Ideology: Trotskyism (until 1985), platformist anarchism (1985-1989)
Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA)[e]
19731975Ideology: Maoism
  • 1973: Venceremos members split and create Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA)
  • 1975: SLA dissolved after many members arrested
Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (DSOC)
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19721983Ideology: Democratic socialism
Social Revolutionary Anarchist Federation (SRAF)19721988Ideology: Multi-tendency anarchism, network of anarchist writers
  • 1972: created
  • 1977: Social Revolutionary Anarchist Federation (SRAF) members form Anarchist Communist Tendency (ACT) faction
  • 1978: ACT faction splits from SRAF to create Anarchist Communist Federation (ACF)
  • late 1980s: SRAF faded away
Social Democrats, USA (SDUSA)
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1972ActiveIdeology: Social democracy
  • 1972: SDUSA created as reorganization of Socialist Party of America (SPA); dissident factions of SPA created Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (DSOC) and Socialist Party USA (SPUSA)
  • 1994: SDUSA held final national convention
  • 1999: SDUSA created New Economy Information Service (NEIS)
  • 2005: national SDUSA became inactive after leader Penn Kemble died
  • 2008: Pennsylvania SDUSA members relaunched organization
  • 2008: minority faction with Gabe Ross splits to create Social Democrats, USA – Socialist Party USA (SDUSA-SPUSA)
Socialist Party USA (SPUSA)
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1972ActiveIdeology: Democratic socialism
African People's Socialist Party (APSP)
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1972ActiveIdeology: African socialism
Communist Party USA (Provisional) [CPUSA(P)][f]1972ActiveIdeology: likely Marxist–Leninist; alleged cult led by charismatic leaders; unlike most groups on this list, is extremely secretive and builds mass membership through targeted recruitment and cold calling through a list of several dozen "entities" (front organizations)
Movement for a New Society (MNS)19711988Ideology: A radical pacifist, anti-racist, and feminist collective network, influential in anarchist movements
  • 1966: A Quaker Action Group created by pacifist Quakers
  • 1971: MNS created by former members of AQAG
  • 1988: MNS dissolved, former members created New Society Publishers
  • 1996: NSP dissolved
New American Movement (NAM)19711983Ideology: Democratic socialism
Puerto Rican Socialist Party (PSP)
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19711993Ideology: Socialism and Puerto Rican independence
Sojourner Truth Organization (STO)19711985Ideology: Anti-racism and workplace organizing
People's Party (PP of 1971)19711977Ideology: left-wing populism, social democracy, and democratic socialism
  • has no organizational ties to People's Party (1892-1900)
  • 1971: People's Party of 1971 created by Peace and Freedom Party (PFP), Commongood People's Party (CPP), Country People's Caucus (CPC), Human Rights Party (HRP), Liberty Union (LU), New American Party (NAP), New Party of Arizona (NP), and No Party (NP)
  • 1977: PP of 1971 dissolves
  • 1979: after dissolution, many PP of 1971 members joined the Citizens Party (CP of 1979)
Trotskyist Organization of the United States (TOUS)19711985Ideology: Trotskyism
  • 1971: Socialist Workers Party (SWP) expels Communist Faction, who joined the Turnerites or International Socialists (IS)
  • 1973: IS dissolves, former Communist Faction XXX
  • 1973: the Class Struggle League (CSL), also formed by ex-SWP members, collapses; Leninist Faction joins TOUS
  • 1974: TOUS created from Soviet Defensist Minority faction purged from Revolutionary Socialist League (RSL)
  • 1975: CSL dissolves; Leninist faction joins TOUS
  • 1980s: TOUS fades away
Communist Party (Marxist-Leninist) [CP(ML)]19711982Ideology: New Communist Movement (NCM), Marxism-Leninism
Liberty Union Party (LUP)
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1971ActiveIdeology: Democratic socialism, social democracy, progressivism
  • 1970: Liberty Union Party (LUP) created
  • 1971: Bernie Sanders joined LUP
  • 1977: Sanders resigned from LUP
  • 2016: began supporting Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL) candidates for President
  • 2021: LUP renamed to Green Mountain Peace and Justice Party (GMPJP)
Congress of Afrikan People (CAP)19701980Ideology: Black nationalism and Maoism
  • 1970: first Congress of Afrikan People (CAP) meeting held
  • 1974: CAP reorganized as Revolutionary Communist League (Marxist-Leninist-Mao Tse-tung Thought) [RCL(ML-MZT) or RCL of 1974]
  • 1980: RCL merges into League of Revolutionary Struggle (Marxist–Leninist) [LRS or LRS(ML)]
La Raza Unida Party (LRUP)19701978Ideology: Democratic socialism and Chicano nationalism
Human Rights Party of Michigan (HRP)
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19701977Ideology: Democratic socialism, social democracy
El Comité-MINP (El Comité or MINP)19701981Ideology: Puerto Rican organizing (early), then New Communist movement (later)
  • 1970: after Young Lords Organization (YLO) began to collapse, Puerto Ricans created El Comité (lit.'The Committee'), as part of broader The Trend movement
  • 1975: El Comité reorganized as Movimiento de Izquierda Nacional Puertorriquena (MINP) [National Puerto Rican Leftist Movement]
  • 1982: MINP faded away[37]
Black Liberation Army (BLA)
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19701981Ideology: Black liberation; direct action
Gay Liberation Front (GLF)19691980Ideology: Gay liberation, various flavors of socialism (majority)
Socialist Union (SU of 1969)[g]19691980Ideology: Trotskyism
  • 1969: SU of 1969 created as Friends of the Panthers, led by Milton Zaslow and former members of the Socialist Union of America (SUA or Cochranites)
  • 1969: SU of 1969 renamed as Liberation Union (LU)
  • 1974: LU merged in Internationalist Tendency (IT), who had been expelled from the Socialist Workers Party (SWP)
  • 1974: LU renamed as Socialist Union (SU of 1974)
  • 1974: SU of 1974 attempted to re-join the SWP, then broke off negotiations; many IT members rejoined SWP
  • 1978: SU of 1974 merged into Committee for a Revolutionary Socialist Party (CRSP)
  • 1980: SU of 1974 withdrew from CRSP; no longer mentioned in historical records, likely faded away
I Wor Kuen (IWK) [义和拳; 義和拳; Yìhé quán, lit.'Fists of Harmony and Justice']
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19691978Ideology: Maoism
Venceremos Organization (VO)
19691973Ideology: Maoism and Chicano nationalism
Weathermen or Weather Underground Organization (WUO)
19691977Ideology: Communism, direct action, and New Left
League of Revolutionary Black Workers (LRBW)19691971Ideology: Marxism-Leninism and Black liberation
Rainbow Coalition19691974Ideology: Revolutionary socialism, anti-racism
Revolutionary Communist League (Internationalist) [RCL or RCL(I) or RCL of 1968]19681995Ideology: Trotskyism and Marcyism
  • 1968: split from Spartacist League (SLUS) to create Revolutionary Communist League (RCL or RCL of 1968)
  • 1968: RCL merged with Workers World Party (WWP)
  • 1971: RCL members drifted out of WWP to create New York Revolutionary Committee (NYRC)
  • 1972: NYRC reorganized into the Revolutionary Communist League (Internationalist) [RCL(I)]
  • 1982: RCL attempted to merge into WWP again, but was rejected
  • 1986: RCL merged into Socialist Action (SAct)
  • late 1980s: RCL expelled from SAct
  • 1995: RCL merged into Communist Party USA (CPUSA)
American Workers Communist Party (AWCP)19681979Ideology: anti-revisionist Marxism-Leninism or Maoism
  • 1968: the Provisional Organizing Committee to Reconstitute a Marxist–Leninist Party (POC) splits in two: majority faction stays and creates California Communist League (CL), minority faction leaves and creates American Workers Communist Party (AWCP)
  • 1979: AWCP fades away
Dodge Revolutionary Union Movement (DRUM)19681975Ideology: African-American socialism, unionism
Republic of New Afrika (RNA)
19681973Ideology: African-American socialism, Black separatism
LaRouche movement (LaRouchites)
1968ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism (1968-1975); after 1975, increasingly a syncretic LaRouchism: economic nationalism and far-right anti-NWO; allegedly similar to National Bolshevism; allegedly a political cult
Third World Liberation Front (TWLF)19681969Ideology: Socialism and anti-racism
Young Patriots Organization (YPO)
19681973Ideology: Revolutionary socialism, anti-racism, and left-wing nationalism
Young Lords[h]
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19681976Ideology: Marxism-Leninism and Puerto Rican independence
  • 1960: Young Lords Organization (YLO) created as leftist Puerto Rican group
  • 1968: YLO reorganized as socialist organization
  • 1969: YLO joined Rainbow Coalition
  • 1971: former YLO members create Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization (PRRWO)
  • 1976: most YLO chapters dissolved; Chicago and New York chapters re-emerged but far smaller
Revolutionary Communist Party, USA (RCP or RCPUSA)
1968ActiveIdeology: Maoism and New Communist movement; allegedly a political cult centered on Bob Avakian
Revolutionary Youth Movement (RYM)
19681970Ideology: multi-tendency communism
The Spark1968ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism and Voix Ouvrière
White Panther Party (WPP)
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19681983Ideology: Communism and anti-racism
Turnerites or Vanguard Newsletter Group (VNL or VNG)19671989Ideology: Trotskyism
Marxist–Leninist Party, USA (MLP)19671993Ideology: Marxism-Leninism
  • 1967: Cleveland Draft Resistance Union (CDRU) created as US wing of Communist Party of Canada (Marxist–Leninist) [CPC(ML)]
  • 1968: CDRU reorganized as Workers Action Committee (WAC)
  • 1969: WAC renamed as American Communist Workers' Movement (Marxist-Leninist) [ACWM(ML)]
  • 1973: ACWM(ML) renamed as Central Organization of US Marxist–Leninists [COUS(ML)]
  • 1980: COUS(ML) split into Marxist–Leninist Party USA (MLP) and US Marxist-Leninist Organization (MLO)
  • 1993: MLO dissolved, many remnant members joined Communist Voice Organization (CVO)
Black Panther Party (BPP)
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19661982Ideology: Maoism, intercommunalism, and mutual aid
Jews for Urban Justice (JUJ)19661971Ideology: Socialism, anti-racism, Jewish left
  • 1966: JUJ created
  • 1971: JUJ dissolved
Freedom Socialist Party (FSP)
1966ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
Newman Tendency
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1966ActiveIdeology: an (alleged) therapy cult led by Fred Newman on the basis of social therapy; nominally Maoist (1960-1976), socialist (1979-1993), then supported centrist and far-right candidates
Black Mask19661971Ideology: Anarchism
  • 1966: Black Mask formed by New York anarchists[39][40]
  • 1967: Black Mask marched through New York in black balaclavas with "Wall St. Is War St." signs, in first documented instance of black bloc tactics
  • 1967: Black Mask defended Valerie Solanas's attempted killing of Andy Warhol
  • 1968: Black Mask began primarily using name Up Against the Wall, Motherfucker! (UAW/MF, UAWMF, or UAW-MF); also used names "International Werewolf Conspiracy" (IWC) externally and "The Family", internally
  • 1969: UAW/MF cut fences at Woodstock to allow people in for free
  • 1971: UAW/MF left New York and appeared to fizzle out
Pennsylvania Consumer Party (PCP of 1966)[i]19662000Ideology: Progressivism, social democracy, economic democracy
  • 1966: created as Consumer Education and Protective Association (CEPA) as progressive consumer advocacy organization in Philadelphia, PA
  • 1967: CEPA created Pennsylvania Consumer Party (PCP of 1966)
  • 1979: members of PCP of 1966 helped create Citizens Party (CP of 1979)
  • 1998: key leaders of CEPA left organization
  • after 2000: PCP faded away TODO
Communist Party USA (Marxist–Leninist) [CPUSA(ML)]19651969Ideology: Marxism-Leninism
New York Federation of Anarchists (NYFA)19641967Ideology: Anarchism
  • 1964: created by Murray Bookchin; sometimes called Anarchist Federation (AF)
  • 1967: dissolved
Socialist Equality Party (SEP)
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1964ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism

Election results: Socialist Equality Party (United States)#Election results

Spartacist League (SLUS)1964ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
  • 1962: proto-SLUS began as Revolutionary Tendency (RT) faction within Socialist Workers Party (SWP)
  • 1964: Spartacist League of the United States (Sparts, SL-US, or SLUS) created by members of RT purged from SWP
  • 1967: members expelled from SLUS created Turnerites
  • 1968: members split from SLUS created The Spark
  • 1977: majority faction of Red Flag Union (RFU) members merged into SLUS
Facing Reality (FR)19621970Ideology: Trotskyist, mostly focused on publication
Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM)19621969Ideology: Revolutionary socialism and black nationalism
Progressive Labor Party (PLP or PL)
1961ActiveIdeology: Maoism and Anti-revisionism
  • 1961: in December 1961, informal "Call Group" created by members purged from Communist Party USA (CPUSA)
  • 1962: formalized as Progressive Labor Movement (PLM)
  • 1965: renamed as Progressive Labor Party (PLP)
  • 1960's: supported Worker Student Alliance (WSA) caucus inside the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) against Revolutionary Youth Movement (RYM) faction
  • 1969: SDS mostly dissolved; WSA retained control of some local chapters (SDS-WSA)
  • 1970: remaining SDS chapters all WSA-controlled
  • 1974: SDS-WSA reorganized as Committee Against Racism (CAR), soon renamed as International Committee Against Racism (InCAR)
  • 1996: InCAR dissolved and merged into PLP
Revolutionary Organization of Labor, USA (ROL or ROLUSA)[41]19612020Ideology: Anti-revisionist Marxism-Leninism, Hoxhaism
  • 1961: former Communist Party USA (CPUSA) members split (based on disagreement with Khrushchev's 1953 Secret Speech) and created Hammer & Steel (H&S) and Hammer and Steel Newsletter
  • 1968: renamed to Youth for Stalin (YfS)
  • 1969: renamed to Stalinist Workers Group for African-American Liberation & a New Communist International (SWG) and Stalinist Workers Group Bulletin
  • 1976: renamed to Ray O. Light Group (ROL) and Ray O. Light Newsletter
  • 2008: renamed to Revolutionary Organization of Labor, USA (ROL)[42]
  • 2020: ROL newsletter ceased publication[43]
Young Socialist Alliance (YSA)1960ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism (youth group of SWP)
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
19601969Ideology: Multi-tendency leftism, socialism, and communism

Peak membership: 35,000 (1968)[44]

Workers World Party (WWP)
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1959ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism and Marcyism
  • 1948: the Global Class War Tendency (GCWT) formed within the Socialist Workers Party (SWP)
  • 1959: the GCWT split from the SWP
  • 1960: renamed as Worker's World Party (WWP)
  • 2004: Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL) created as split from WWP
  • 2011: WWP created United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC)
  • 2014: Caleb Maupin left WWP and would go on to create Center for Political Innovation (CPI)
International Socialists (IS)19581986Ideology: Trotskyism
League of Revolutionaries for a New America (LRNA)1958ActiveIdeology: anti-revisionist Marxism-Leninism
  • 1958: members of Communist Party USA (CPUSA) split to create the Provisional Organizing Committee to Reconstitute a Marxist–Leninist Party (POC)[j]
  • 1965: POC splits in two: majority faction stays in POC, minority faction joins Communist Party USA (Marxist–Leninist) [CPUSA(ML)]
  • 1968: POC splits in two: majority faction stays and creates California Communist League (CL), minority faction leaves and creates American Workers Communist Party (AWCP)
  • 1968: a split from League of Revolutionary Black Workers (LRBW) merged into CL
  • 1974: CL reorganized as Communist Labor Party of North America [CLP or CLP(USNA)]
  • 1993: CLP dissolved
  • 1993: remnants of CLP create National Organizing Committee (NOC)
  • 1993: NOC reorganized into League of Revolutionaries for a New America (LRNA)[45]
Democratic Socialist Federation (DSF)19571972Ideology: Democratic socialism
Independent-Socialist Party (ISP)[k]19561960Ideology: Communism, united front
University Pro-Independence Federation of Puerto Rico (FUPI)1956ActiveIdeology: Socialism and Puerto Rican independence
  • 1956: created as University Pro-Independence Federation (Federación de Universitarios Pro Independencia, FUPI)
News and Letters Committees (NLCs)1955ActiveIdeology: Trotskyist, focused on publication
Socialist Union of America (SUA or Cochranites)19531959Ideology: Trotskyism and Pabloism
Johnson-Forest Tendency (JFT)19511962Ideology: Trotskyism, focused on publication
National Guardian (NG)[l]19481992Ideology: Progressive and Socialist (until 1968), then New Communist movement
  • 1948: created alongside Henry Wallace's presidential campaign on the Progressive Party of 1948-1955 (PP of 1948) line
  • 1948: alleged to be a front for the Communist Party USA (CPUSA), but not substantiated
  • 1958: many members join with Independent-Socialist Party (ISP) in New York
  • 1960: ISP dissolves
  • 1968: National Guardian renamed to The Guardian, began to support New Communist movement and joined The Trend
  • 1970: minority split from The Guardian to create The Liberated Guardian, which quickly folded but permanently damaged The Guardian
  • 1979: The Guardian began creating Guardian Clubs
  • 1979: Irwin Silber left The Guardian to focus on Guardian Clubs and to work with Line of March (LOM), where he published Frontline, a competitor newspaper
  • 1992: The Guardian dissolved
Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP)
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1946ActiveIdeology: democratic socialism (1970s), Social democracy (modern), Puerto Rican independence
Progressive Party of 1948-1955 (PP of 1948)19461955Ideology: Progressive capitalism, Social democracy, democratic socialism

Not formally connected with Roosevelt's Progressive Party of 1912-1920 (PP of 1912) or La Follette's Progressive Party of 1924-1934 (PP of 1924)

National Council of Arts, Sciences and Professions (ASP)19451950Ideology: Anti-war, liberalism (majority), socialism (minority)
Libertarian League and Book Club (LLBC)19451965Ideology: Anarchism
  • 1945: Libertarian Book Club (LBC) created by New York anarchists
  • 1954: Libertarian League (LL) created by LBC members
  • 1965: LL and LBC dissolved
An Anarchist Quarterly (AAQ)19421951Ideology: Anarchism
  • 1942: group of New York anarchists begin publishing Retort
  • 1947: Retort renamed to An Anarchist Quarterly (AAQ)
  • 1951: AAQ ceases publication
Why? Group19421954Ideology: Anarchism
  • 1942: New York anarchists create Why? Group to publish Why? An Anarchist Bulletin
  • 1940s: worked closely with An Anarchist Quarterly (AAQ), then Retort
  • 1947: Why? Group renames itself to Resistance Group and its publication to Resistance
  • 1954: Resistance Group dissolves
National Federation for Constitutional Liberties (NFCL)19401946Ideology: Progressive legal advocacy, allegedly Communist Party USA (CPUSA) front
Workers Party (WP) or Schachtmanites19401958Ideology: Trotskyism and Shachtmanism
Socialist Workers Party (SWP)
1938ActiveIdeology: Trotskyism
Jewish Culture Association (JCA) [יידישער קולטור-פאַרבאַנד or Yidisher Kultur Farband (YKUF)]19382006Ideology: Marxism-Leninism (CPUSA ethnic association)
  • 1922: created as Morgen Freiheit [Morning Freedom] newspaper
  • 1929: Proletpen created to organize Freiheit-associated writers
  • 1938: Proletpen replaced by Yidisher Kultur-Farband (YKUF)
  • 1988: Morgen Freiheit halts publication
  • 1990s: began working with Congress for Jewish Culture
  • 2006: ceased operation
Marxist Workers Party (MWP)19371940Ideology: Communism
American Labor Party (ALP of 1936)19361956Ideology: Social democracy, Labour movement
Revolutionary Workers League (RWL of 1935 or Oehlerites)19351946Ideology: Trotskyism (until 1938), then Leninism
Council Communists (CC)19341943Ideology: Left communism
Puerto Rican Communist Party (PCP)
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19341991Ideology: Communism and Puerto Rican independence
  • 1934: Puerto Rican Communist Party (Partido Comunista Puertorriqueño, PCP) created with Communist Party USA (CPUSA) support
  • 1991: PCP dissolved, former members created Communist Refoundation (Refundación Comunista, RF or RFPR)
  • 2010: former PCP members in RF create Communist Party of Puerto Rico (Partido Comunista de Puerto Rico, PCPR)
Social Democratic Federation (SDF of 1936)19341957Ideology: Democratic socialism

Note: An earlier organization, also named Social Democratic Federation (SDF), existed from 1889 to 1897.

Workers Party of the United States (WPUS of 1934)19341936Ideology: Trotskyism
End Poverty in California (EPIC)19331938Ideology: Social democracy, job guarantee
Catholic Worker Movement (CWM)1933ActiveIdeology: Christian pacifism, Christian anarchism
American Workers Party (AWP)19331934Ideology: Socialism and unionism
Vanguard Group19321939Ideology: Anarchism
  • 1932: New York anarchists around Road to Freedom create Vanguard Group to publish Vanguard: A Libertarian Communist Journal
  • 1939: Vanguard Group dissolves
  • 1942: former Vanguard Group members join Why? Group
American Labor Party (ALP of 1932)19321935Ideology: Marxism, De Leonism
  • 1932: expelled members of Industrial Union League (IUL) split to create Industrial Union Alliance (IUA)
  • 1933: original IUL began reorganizing into a political party; in response, IUA renamed to Industrial Union Party (IUP)
  • 1933: original IUL also renamed to Industrial Union Party (IUP) and sued IUA to prevent them from using that name
  • 1933: IUL renamed to American Labor Party (ALP of 1932)
  • 1935: ALP of 1932 paper ceased publication
National Student League (NSL)19311935Ideology: Communism
Communist League of Struggle (CLS)19311937Ideology: Trotskyism
International Workers Order (IWO)
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19291956Ideology: mutual aid organization led by Communist Party of America (CPUSA) members

Peak membership: 155,000 (1941)[47]

  • 1922: emerged as Left Wing faction of The Workers Circle
  • 1925: Left Wing faction reorganized as Left Wing Alliance, in control of ~1 in 4 chapters
  • 1929: CPUSA members split Circle to create International Workers Order (IWO) after Socialist Party of America (SPA) members (who dominated leadership) repeatedly expelled Left Wing faction members and chapters; just ~5,000 members of Circle joined IWO
  • 1930's: IWO grew dramatically, to >150,000 members
  • 1954: under pressure from House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), the New York State Insurance Department (NYSID) forced the IWO to liquidate
Lovestoneites
19291941Ideology: Communism, Right Opposition, Bukharinism
  • late 1920s: faction formed within the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) to support Nikolai Bukharin (of the Right Opposition) against Joseph Stalin (of the "center")
  • 1929: faction members expelled from CPUSA, attempted to rejoin, were rejected
  • 1929: faction members create Communist Party (Majority Group) [CPMG or CP(MG)] led by Jay Lovestone which endorses CPUSA candidates until 1932
  • 1931: minority faction left CPMG to join Conference for Progressive Labor Action (CPLA)
  • 1932: CPLA renamed as Communist Party of the USA (Opposition) [CPO or CP(O) or CPUSA(O)]
  • 1933: minority faction led by Benjamin Gitlow left CPO to join Workers Communist League (WCL)
  • 1937: CPO renamed as Independent Communist Labor League (ICLL)
  • 1938: ICLL renamed as Independent Labor League of America (ILL or ILLA)
  • 1941: dissolved
League for Independent Political Action (LIPA)19281936Ideology: alliance of progressive liberals and socialists

Peak membership: 6062 (1931)[48]

Communist League of America [CLA or CLA(O)][m]19281934Ideology: Communism, Left Opposition, Trotskyism
Socialist Labor Party dissidents19272005Ideology: De Leonism and revolutionary industrial unionism

Note: The Socialist Labor Party (SLP) expelled many dissidents, most of whom still held to De Leonism, and who almost all accumulated into one parallel organization.

  • 1927: SLP expels many Section Bronx members (key among them Sam Brandon and Joseph Brandon)
  • 1928: Section Bronx members create Industrial Union League (IUL)
  • 1932: IUL creates Industrial Union Party (IUP)
  • 1932: expelled IUL members create American Labor Party (ALP of 1932)
  • 1935: SLP expels more members, key among them Abraham Ziegler
  • 1939: Ziegler splits from IUP to create Socialist Union Party (SUP)
  • 1941: SUP dissolved
  • 1950: IUP dissolves but retains informal membership
  • 1967: SLP expels dissident members (key among them Eric Hass)
  • 1969: expelled members create the Socialist Committee of Correspondence (SCC) with former IUP members
  • 1970: SCC reorganizes as Daniel De Leon League (DDDL)
  • 1971: DDDL reorganizes as Socialist Reconstruction (SR), later renamed League for Socialist Reconstruction (LSR)
  • 1980: SLP members in Minnesota split to create New Unionists (NU)
  • 1980: New Unionists and League for Socialist Reconstruction (LSR) merge to create New Union Party (NUP)
  • 2005: NUP ceased newspaper publication
International Labor Defense (ILD)19251956Ideology: , civil rights advocacy, allegedly CPUSA front
War Resisters League (WRL)1923ActiveIdeology: Radical pacifism and anti-racism; has included anti-war progressives, anarchists, socialists, and other pacifists
United Farmers Educational League (UFEL)19231935Ideology: Progressive capitalism, Social democracy, democratic socialism
Progressive Party of 1924-34 (PP of 1924)19241924Ideology: Progressive capitalism, Social democracy, democratic socialism

Not formally connected with Roosevelt's Progressive Party of 1912-1920 (PP of 1912) or Progressive Party of 1948-1955 (PP of 1948).

Conference for Progressive Political Action (CPPA)19221925Ideology: Progressive capitalism, Social democracy, democratic socialism
Workers' Council of the United States (WCUS)19211921Ideology: Communism
Workers' Council of 1921 (WC of 1921)19211921Ideology: Communism
Communist Party of America (Central Caucus) [CPA-CC]19211922Ideology: Communism
Western Progressive Farmers (WPF)19211936Ideology: Progressivism (factions), Socialism (factions), Communism (factions)
Jewish Socialist Verband (JSV) [Yidisher Sotsyalisṭisher Farband (YSF), lit.'Jewish Socialist Association' (JSA)]19211972Ideology: Socialism, Jewish leftism
United Toilers of America (UTA)19211929Ideology: Communism
  • 1921: proto-UTA faction developed in Communist Party of America (CPA)
  • 1922: UTA split from CPA
  • 1922: after Third International (ComIntern) demands, vast majority of UTA members join CPA; small remainder stayed "underground"
  • 1929: underground is still active
Communist Party USA (CPUSA or CPA)
1921ActiveIdeology: Communism and Marxism-Leninism (until 2000), then democratic socialism

Elected officials: List of Communist Party USA members who have held office in the United States

History: History of the Communist Party USA

Subgroups and front groups: Young Communist League USA (YCL or YCLUSA), United Farmers Educational League (UFEL), Trade Union Educational League (TUEL)

Peak membership: 66,000 (1939)[49]

Current membership: 5,000 (2017)[50]

Trade Union Educational League (TUEL) / Trade Union Unity League (TUUL)19201935Ideology: Communism, Boring from within (1920-1929), Dual unionism (1929-1935)
Young Communist League USA (YCL or YCLUSA)19202015Ideology: Marxism-Leninism (until 2000), then democratic socialism (CPUSA youth wing)
  • 1920: created as below-ground youth section of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) by dissident splitters from Young People's Socialist League (YPSL), the youth section of the Socialist Party of America (SPA)
  • 1922: above-ground youth section recreated as Young Workers League of America (YWL)
  • 1922: children's section created as Junior Section of the YWL
  • 1923: below-ground YCL dissolved
  • 1925: youth section renamed Young Workers (Communist) League (YWCL)
  • 1925: children's section renamed as Young Pioneers of America (YPA)
  • 1936: children's section dissolved, replaced with Junior Section of the International Workers Order (IWO)
  • 1943: YWL "dissolved" itself in order to better support FDR (and the Soviet Union) against Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan; it was renamed as American Youth for Democracy (AYD)
  • 1946: AYD entered the Young Progressives of America (YPA) of the Progressive Party (PP of 1948)
  • 1949: the AYD was recreated as Labor Youth League (LYL)
  • 1963: CPUSA funded youth clubs, W.E.B. Du Bois Clubs of America (Du Bois Clubs), in dozens of colleges
  • 1970: Du Bois Clubs renamed Young Workers Liberation League (YWLL)
  • 1984: YWLL renamed as Young Communist League (YCL)
  • 2015: CPUSA delegates voted to absorb and dissolve the YCL
  • 2019: CPUSA votes to re-establish the YCL
Proletarian Party of America (PPA)
19201971Ideology: Communism
Rummagers League (RL)19191923Ideology: Communism
  • 1919: in November 1919, created as Industrial Communists (IC)
  • 1921: renamed as Proletarian Socialist Party (PSP)
  • 1922: in December 1922, renamed as Rummagers League (RL)
  • 1923: dissolved, members joined Communist Party, USA (CPUSA)
Communist Party of America (CPA of 1919)
19191921Ideology: Communism
Communist Labor Party of America (CLPA)
19191921Ideology: Communism
Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party (FLP or MFLP)
19181944Ideology: Left-wing populism, social democracy, democratic socialism
Farmer–Labor Party of the United States (FLP or FLPUS)
19181936Ideology: Democratic socialism, social democracy
Committee of 48 (48ers)
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19191923Ideology: Social democracy, American liberalism
Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party (Left Wing)19191919Ideology: Communism
African Blood Brotherhood (ABB) and CPUSA successors
19191947Ideology: Communism, African-American leftism, decolonization, and black repatriation
Farmer–Labor Party (FLP)19181944Ideology: todo
National Party (NP of 1917)19171919Ideology: Progressivism and social democracy
Social Democratic League of America (SDLA)19171920Ideology: Social democracy, pro-war patriotism
American Alliance for Labor and Democracy (AALD)19171919Ideology: pro-war patriotism
People's Council of America for Democracy and the Terms of Peace (People's Council)19171920Ideology: anti-war, contained socialists and pacifists
Non-Partisan League of North Dakota (NPL)19151956Ideology: Left-wing populism, social democracy, democratic socialism
Russian Socialist Federation (RSF) [Российская Социалистическая Федерация or Rossiyskaya Sotsialisticheskaya Federatsiya (RSF)]19151921Ideology: Communism and Russian American leftism
Non-Partisan League (NPL)19151956Ideology: left-wing populism, democratic socialism, and agrarianism
Jewish Socialist Federation (JSF)19121921Ideology: Communism (faction), Socialism (faction), Jewish leftism
Poale Zion (פועלי ציון‎), lit.'Workers of Zion'
19031971Ideology: Socialism, Jewish leftism, and Labor Zionism
Wage Workers Party (WWP of 1909)19091910Ideology: Socialism
Federation of the Union of Russian Workers (URW, UORW, or FURW) [Союз Русских Рабочих (SRR)]19081919Ideology: anarcho-communism (until 1912), then anarcho-syndicalism

Peak membership: 10,000 (1917)[51]

Irish Socialist Federation (ISF)19071910Ideology: Socialism and Irish republicanism
Finnish Socialist Federation (FSF) [Suomalainen Sosialisti Järjestö (SSJ)]19061983Ideology: Socialism (1906-1936), then social democracy (1936-1980)
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW or "Wobblies")
1905ActiveIdeology: General unionism and industrial unionism
League for Industrial Democracy (LID)19052012Ideology: Democratic socialism (SPA youth wing)
Union Labor Party of California 1901 (ULP of California 1901)19011912Ideology: Unionism, anti-Chinese bigotry
Socialist Party of America (SPA)
19011972Ideology: Democratic socialism

Peak membership: 113,000 (1912)[52]

Socialist Party of Puerto Rico (SP)18991956Ideology: Socialism and Puerto Rico statehood
  • 1899: Free Federation of Workers (Federación Libre de Trabajadores, FLT) members create the Labor Party (Partido Obrero, PO) of Puerto Rico, also known as the Socialist Labor Party (Partido Obrero Socialista, POS)
  • 1915: PO formally re-founded as the Socialist Party (Partido Socialista, PS)
  • 1956: PS dissolved, encouraged voters to voter for Popular Democratic Party of Puerto Rico (Partido Popular Democrático, PPD).
  • 1959: the unrelated pro-independence Puerto Rican Socialist Party (Partido Socialista Puertorriqueño, PSP) is formed
Social Democratic Party of America (SDP or Chicago SDP)
18981901Ideology: Democratic socialism
  • 1898:
Social Democracy of America (SDA)
18971924Ideology: Democratic socialism
Brotherhood of the Cooperative Commonwealth (BCC)
18941906Ideology: socialist electoral victory through colonization of intentional communities; Bellamyism
  • 1895: first local organization created
  • 1896: national organization National Union of the Brotherhood of the Cooperative Commonwealth (BCC) created
  • 1897: Equality Colony created, named after Equality
  • 1899: national organization mostly dissolved
  • 1906: major fire destroyed barn and cattle, ending Equality Colony
The Workers Circle
75px
1892ActiveIdeology: democratic socialism/social democracy (before 1940's), liberalism (after 1940's), mutual aid (until 2000's), Jewish leftism

Peak membership: 84,000 (1920)[53]

Current membership: 10,000 (2010)[54]

  • 1892: created as Workingmen's Circle Society of New York, a
  • 1900: reorganized as The Workmen's Circle [Der Arbeter Ring], a national organization
  • 1929: Communist Party of America (CPUSA) members split to create International Workers Order (IWO) after Socialist Party of America (SPA) members (who dominated Circle leadership) repeatedly expelled Left Wing faction members and chapters
  • 1940's: during New Deal, shifted from democratic-socialist and social-democratic politics to progressive and liberal politics
  • 2000's: closed down most mutual aid programs
  • 2019: renamed as The Workers Circle
People's Party or Populist Party (PP of 1892 or Populists)
18921900Ideology: Agrarianism, bimetallism, left-wing populism, and social democracy

Peak membership: "anywhere from 25 to 45 percent of the electorate in twenty-odd states" (1893)[55]

Social Democratic Federation (SDF of 1889)18891898Ideology: Democratic socialism

Note: A later organization, also named Social Democratic Federation (SDF), existed from 1936 to 1957.

  • 1889: in September 1889, proto-SDF created by minority split from Socialist Labor Party (SLP) into "Rosenberg Group" or "SLP of the Cincinnati Persuasion"
  • 1896: SDF renamed as Social Democratic Federation (SDF)
  • 1898: in August 1898, SDF merged into Social Democracy of America (SDA)
Society of Christian Socialists (SCS)18891891Ideology: Christian socialism
Nationalist Clubs (Nationalists)18881896Ideology: Democratic socialism and social democracy
Union Labor Party (ULP of 1886)18861892Ideology: Unionism, social democracy (majority), socialism (minority)
Italian-American anarchist circoli and gruppi in New York City18861887Ideology: Anarchism, Italian-American leftism
United Labor Party (ULP of New York 1886)18861887Ideology: unionism, democratic socialism (until 1887), and Georgism
International Working People's Association (IWPA or Black International)[o]18811887Ideology: Revolutionary socialism, anarchism, and syndicalism
New York Social Revolutionary Club (NYSRC)18801883Ideology: Revolutionary socialism, anarchism, and syndicalism
International Labor Union (ILU)18781887Labor union federation; Ideology: unionism and Marxism/revolutionary socialism
Socialist Labor Party (SLP or SLPA or SLPUS)
75px
18762011Ideology before 1883: Multi-tendency socialism, Lassallism/democratic socialism (majority) and Marxism/revolutionary socialism (minority) and anarchism/propaganda of the deed (minority); revolutionary industrial unionism

Ideology after 1883: De Leonism and revolutionary industrial unionism

Lehr und Wehr Verein (LWV), lit.'Education and Defense Society'18751887Ideology: Marxism and German American leftism
Social Democratic Workingmen's Party of North America (SDWP or SDWPNA)18741876Ideology: Marxism and German American leftism
Greenback Labor Party (GLP)18731888Ideology: unionism, anti-monopolism, and inflationism)
  • 1873: Independent Party (IP of 1874) created in Indiana
  • 1874: IP of 1874 attempted to organize prospective National Independent Party (NIP)
  • 1876: NIP formally organized as national party, either "National Independent Party" (NIP) or "National Party" (NP)
  • 1878: NIP formally renamed to Greenback Labor Party (GLP)
  • 1874-1880: local NIP/GLP affiliates used variety of names, including "Greenback Party" (GP), "Greenback Labor Party" (GLP), and "Greenback Labor and Socialist Party" (GLSP)
  • 1884: in 1884 United States House of Representatives elections, GLP wins zero seats
  • 1884-1888: GLP slowly fades away
  • 1888: GLP defunct after convention made no nominations
  • 1888: in Milwaukee, WI GLP merged into Union Labor Party (ULP of 1886) in alliance with urban trade unions
  • 1892: across country, many former GLP members join People's Party (PP of 1892)
Workingmen's Party of Illinois (WPI)18731876Ideology: Marxism and German American leftism
Knights of Labor (K of L, KofL, KOL)
18691949Labor union federation; Ideology: unionism, progressivism, and anti-Chinese bigotry
Allgemeiner Deutscher Arbeiterverein (ADAV)18671869Ideology: Socialism and German American leftism
National Labor Union (NLU)18661873Labor union federation; Ideology: Eight-hour day movement, unionism
Eight-Hour Leagues18651873Ideology: Eight-hour day movement
International Workingmen's Association (IWA) or First International[s]
18641876Ideology: Eight-hour day movement; would split between Marxism/revolutionary socialism and Bakunism/anarchism
Chicago Workers' Society (CWS)18571904Ideology: Communism, humanism, abolitionism, and German American leftism
New York Communist Club (NYCC)18571867Ideology: Communism, humanism, abolitionism, and German American leftism
American Workers League (AWL)[t]18521855Ideology: Marxism and German American leftism
  • 1852: Proletarierbund (PB, Proletariat's League [PL]) was created by Joseph Weydemeyer as explicitly Marxist organization
  • 1853: PB reorganized as Amerikanische Arbeiterbund (AAB, American Workers League [AWL]), with membership largely German American, many of whom 48'ers
  • 1855: AWL and other immigrant groups came under attack from Know Nothing Party
  • 1855: Wedyemeyer left AWL leadership, which faded away
  • 1857: Weydemeyer joins New York Communist Club (NYCC)
General Working-Men's League (AAB)[u]18501860Ideology: Utopian socialism (akin to Owenism) and German American leftism
  • 1850: Wilhelm Weitling creates Central Committee of United Trades (CCUT) in New York City, with membership largely German American, many of whom 48'ers
  • 1850: CCUT reorganized as Allgemeiner Arbeiterbund (AAB, General Working-Men's League)
  • 1853: organization fails to organize 2nd convention
  • 1857: after period of inactivity, AAB re-founded
  • 1860: AAB executive committee resigns; Chicago Workers' Society takes leadership role
Turnvereine (Turners)18501917Ideology: Fitness culture and German American leftism
  • 1842: Prussia establishes gymnastics as part of curricula across country; turnen means "to practice gymnastics" in German
  • 1848: first Turnverein (Gymnastics Union) opened in Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 1850: first national Turner organization created, Vereinigte Turnvereine Nordamerica (VTVNA, United Gymnastic Unions of North America)[v]
  • 1851: VTVNA renamed to Socialistischer Turnerbund von Nordamerika (STBNA, Socialist Gymnastic Union of North America)[w]
  • 1850s: Turners associate with Free-Soil Party (FSP)
  • 1861: STBNA loses strength during Civil War years
  • 1865: STBNA reorganized and renamed to Nordamerikanischer Turnerbund (NATB, North American Gymnastic Union)
  • 1860s: Turners become substantially more conservative after civil war
  • 1892: many socialist Turners supported People's Party (PP of 1892)
  • 1894: Turners reach high point of membership
  • 1900: Turners begin to fade away
  • 1917: most Turnvereine collapse during anti-German bigotry during World War 1
Icarian movement18401898Ideology: Communitarianism, intentional community, profit sharing
Fourier movement
18401892Ideology: Communitarianism, intentional community, phalanstère, profit sharing
Working Men's Party (WMP)18291831Ideology: Communitarianism, utopian socialism, anti-corruption
Owenite movement
18251829Ideology: Communitarianism, intentional community, worker cooperatives, profit sharing

Notable socialist organizations with no mass membership

Non-notable socialist organizations

These groups are not notable and are also not clearly tied to any notable groups:

Notable non-socialist organizations sometimes labelled as socialist

The organizations below have sometimes been, incorrectly, described as having socialist politics:

TODO: """ACORN in the West, Massachusetts Fair Share in the East, the Highlander Center in Appalachia, TWO in Chicago, SEASHA and the Federation of Southern Cooperatives in the South are some of the many ongoing democratic experiments that deserve support and encouragement. [....] The lesson of recent history is that such programs need to be shaped and instituted by citizens themselves. This requires marshalling of power at the ballot box and within the only political party at all receptive to the needs of the disenfranchised, the Democratic party.""" https://democracyjournalarchive.files.wordpress.com/2015/06/berman_mainstream-politics-democracy-3-2_-may-1983.pdf

Trade unions without substantial socialist leadership

Other acronyms

todo

prog ? =

black lib ?

  • Network of Black Organizers (NBO)
  • Malcolm X Grassroots Movement (MXGM)
  • Hampton Institute (2013) (HI) 2013-2023[72]

black crm

https://www.search.com.vn/wiki/en/Draft:Caleb_Maupinhttps://www.search.com.vn/wiki/en/Colored_Conventions_Movementhttps://www.search.com.vn/wiki/en/National_Equal_Rights_Leaguehttps://www.search.com.vn/wiki/en/Booker_T._Washingtonhttps://www.search.com.vn/wiki/en/American_Negro_Labor_Congresshttps://www.search.com.vn/wiki/en/Colored_National_Labor_Unionhttps://www.search.com.vn/wiki/en/NAACPhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/27557254

anarchist

  • 1970s: Black Panther Party (BPP) member and former SNCC organizer Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin imprisoned
  • 1970s: in prison, Ervin began working with [Social Revolutionary Anarchist Federation]] (SRAF)
  • 1979: Ervin released, started working with African People's Socialist Party (APSP)
  • 1990s: Ervin, then a member of Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation (LRRAF) helps create Black Autonomy Network of Community Organizers (BANCO)
  • 2003: BANCO appears to have been renamed Black Autonomy Network Community Organization (BANCO)
  • 1994: Ervin helps create Federation of Black Community Partisans (FBCP), which seems to run through 1997 and publishes Black Autonomy
  • """The emergence of radical feminism, with its anti-hierarchical ethos, afforded another opportunity for the rediscovery of anarchism. Throughout the 1970s, Peggy Kornegger and others contributed to a growing body of anarcho-feminist theory. Meanwhile, although black radicals tended to take Third World Marxist movements as their model, some looked back to anarchism; the Black Panthers reprinted Nechaev’s Catechism of the Revolutionary, and in 1979, a former Panther disenchanted with communism, Lorenzo Komboa Ervin (b. 1947), published his seminal pamphlet, Anarchism and the Black Revolution, introducing the concept of a “Black Anarchism” to radical debate. Another ex-Panther, Ashanti Alston Omowali (b. 1954), began publishing a zine titled Anarchist Panther in 1999.""" [73]
  • terminology note: Black autonomy used as anarchist alternative to Black nationalism and Black separatism; sometimes quilombo mentioned
  • terminology note: "anarchistic franchise organizations" (AFOs): anarchist inspired groupings with the same name, yet no centralized coordination (Williams 2012)

Black Autonomy Network Community Organization

labor

See also

Endnotes

References

External links

{{DEFAULTSORT:Socialist organizations in the United States}}[[Category:Socialism-related lists]][[Category:Left-wing organizations in the United States]][[Category:Socialist organizations in the United States| ]][[Category:Socialism in the United States|Organizations]]