Communist Movement of Aragon

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Communist Movement of Aragon
Movimento Comunista
Catalan name Moviment Comunista d'Aragó
Aragonese name Movimiento Comunista d'Aragón
Leader Alícia Francisca Mas Arrondo
Mercedes Gallizo
Founded 1976; 48 years ago (1976)
Dissolved 1991; 33 years ago (1991)
Merged into Liberazión
Newspaper Servir al Pueblo
Aragón Obrero y Campesino
Youth wing Aragonese Revolutionary Youth
Union affiliation Comisiones Obreras
Student wings Comités de Estudiantes Revolucionarios de Zaragoza (University of Zaragoza)
Comités de Estudiantes de Enseñanza Media
Ideology Communism
Marxism-Leninism
Aragonese nationalism
Feminism
Antimilitarism
Until 1983:
Maoism
Political position Radical left
National affiliation Communist Movement
Town councillors in Aragón (1979-1983)
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Politics of Spain
Political parties
Elections

Communist Movement of Aragón (in Spanish: Movimiento Comunista de Aragón. MCA) was the federated political party of the Communist Movement (MC) in Aragón. The MCA was founded in 1976, as the cotinuation of the Communist Organization of Zaragoza

Ideology

Originally the MCA was a Maoist party, inspired by the Chinese Cultural Revolution, but over the years, specially after 1981-82, the organization gradually abandoned its previous ideologies (Orthodox Marxism, Leninism, Maoism) in favour of more heterodox forms of Marxism. The party was also supportive of the Feminist, Aragonese language, LGBT and Insurbordinate social movements.

History

The MCA was founded by the members of the Communist Organization of Zaragoza and the militants of the Communist Movement in Aragón in early 1976. At the time the party was illegal. The MCA decided to run for the Spanish elections of 1977, the first democratic ones since 1936. The party was illegal so it had to run as the Aragonese Autonomist Front, in a coalition with the Carlist Party of Aragón. The coalition was only present in the Province of Zaragoza, where they gained 4,906 votes, the 1.11% of the total, failing to win any seat.

The MCA campaigned against the 1978 Spanish Constitution. The party was finally legalized the same year. In 1979 the Organization of the Communist Left of Asturias joined the MCA.

Liberazión

In 1991, after several years of collaboration, the MCA and the LCR decided to merge, resulting in Lliberación. In 1993 the members of the LCR left Liberazión.

References

  • Laíz, Consuelo: La lucha final. Los partidos de la izquierda radical durante la transición española. Madrid: Libros de la Catarata, 1995.
  • Roca, José Manuel: Una aproximación sociológica, política e ideológica a la izquierda comunista revolucionaria en España. in Roca, José Manuel: El proyecto radical. Auge y declive de la izquierda revolucionaria en España (1964-1992). Madrid: Los libros de la Catarata, 1994.