Jump to content

Party of Labour of Austria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Party of Labour of Austria
Partei der Arbeit Österreichs
ChairpersonTibor Zenker[1]
Founded12 October 2013; 11 years ago (12 October 2013)[1]
Split fromCommunist Party of Austria
Preceded byCommunist_Initiative
HeadquartersDrorygasse 21, Vienna
NewspaperZeitung der Arbeit
Youth wingJugendfront (Youth Front)
Ideology
Political positionFar-left
European affiliationINITIATIVE (2013–2023)
ECA (2023–)[2]
International affiliationIMCWP
Colours  Red
Website
http://www.parteiderarbeit.at/

The Party of Labour of Austria (German: Partei der Arbeit Österreichs, PdA) is a communist party in Austria. PdA was founded on 12 October 2013 by the Communist Initiative, a Marxist-Leninist breakaway faction of the Communist Party of Austria (KPÖ), who were dissatisfied with the party's ideological orientation.[1]

History

[edit]

Communist Initiative was an internal group in the Communist Party of Austria, founded in 2004 to promote Marxist–Leninist ideas in the party.[1] The Initiative broke with the KPÖ in 2005, citing a lack of internal democracy.[1]

PdA's founding conference was attended by delegates from the Communist Party of Greece (KKE), Hungarian Workers' Party (Munkáspárt), German Communist Party (DKP), Communist Party of the Workers of Spain (PCTE), and Communist Party of Turkey (TKP).[3] The party has particularly close fraternal relations with the KKE. The founding conference was also attended by Yahima Martínez, the ambassador to Austria from Cuba.[3]

Elections

[edit]

The PdA contested the elections for the Vienna City Council in 2015 in six different districts, namely Leopoldstadt, Favoriten, Simmering, Meidling, Ottakring and Donaustadt. All together the PdA gained 441 votes (between 0,1 and 0,18%). This was insufficient to gain a seat in any of the district councils. In 2020 the PdA only contested the Ottakring district, gaining 79 votes (0,21%).[4]

Party chairpersons

[edit]
Name Period Notes
Otto Bruckner 2013–2019
Tibor Zenker 2019–

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e ""Wechsel in der Partei der Arbeit" (in German)". Young World. 20 January 2020. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  2. ^ "European Communist Action's Founding Declaration". 27 November 2023. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Party of Labour of Austria founded! (in German)". labournetaustria.at. 14 October 2013. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  4. ^ "16., Ottakring - Bezirksvertretungswahlen 2020, Ergebnisse der Wiener Wahlbehörden". www.wien.gv.at. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
[edit]