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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Leaders  



1.1  Party leaders (19441990)  





1.2  Prime Ministers of the Slovak Socialist Republic (19691990)  







2 Election results  



2.1  Slovak assembly elections  







3 See also  














Communist Party of Slovakia (1939)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Communist Party of Slovakia
Komunistická strana Slovenska
FoundedMay 1939
Dissolved22 November 1990
Preceded byCommunist Party of Czechoslovakia
Succeeded byParty of the Democratic Left
NewspaperPravda
Ideology
  • Marxism–Leninism
  • Stalinism (until 1956)
  • Political positionFar-left
    National affiliationCommunist Party of Czechoslovakia (1948–1990)
    National organizationNational Front (1944–1990)
  • Political parties
  • Elections
  • Political parties
  • Elections
  • The Communist Party of Slovakia (Slovak: Komunistická strana Slovenska, KSS) was a communist partyinSlovakia. It was formed in May 1939, when the Slovak Republic was created, as the Slovak branches of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) were separated from the mother party. When Czechoslovakia was again established as a unified state, the KSS was still a separate party for a while (1945–1948). On 29 September 1948, it was reunited with the KSČ and continued to exist as an "organizational territorial unit of the KSČ on the territory of Slovakia". Its main organ (and thus the main newspaper in Slovakia at the time) was Pravda.

    After the merger KSS functioned as a regional affiliate of the KSČ, not as an independent political institution. Therefore, the organizational structure of the KSS mirrored that of the KSČ: the KSS Congress held session for several days every five years (and just before the KSČ's Congress), selecting its Central Committee members and candidate members, who in turn selected a Presidium, a Secretariat, and a First Secretary (i.e. party leader).

    The most important first secretaries were Alexander Dubček (1963–1968) and Jozef Lenárt (1970–1988). Following the March 1986 party congress, the KSS Presidium consisted of 11 members; the Secretariat included, in addition to Lenárt, three secretaries and two members; and the Central Committee comprised 95 full members and 36 candidate members. The KSS in 1986 also had its own Central Control and Auditing Commission, four other commissions, twelve party departments, and one training facility.

    KSS ceased to exist in 1990 (following the Velvet Revolution), when it was transformed into the independent social-democratic party called the Party of Democratic Left (SDĽ). Most of that party, in turn, is now part of Direction – Social Democracy, which had separated from the SDĽ in 2000.

    A new Communist Party of Slovakia was, however, founded in 1992 from a merger of the Communist Party of Slovakia – 91 and Communist League of Slovakia.

    Leaders[edit]

    Party leaders (1944–1990)[edit]

    Prime Ministers of the Slovak Socialist Republic (1969–1990)[edit]

    Election results[edit]

    Slovak assembly elections[edit]

    Date Leader Votes Seats Position
    # % # ± Size
    1938 Banned. Hlinka's Slovak People's Party sole legal party.
    1946 Karol Šmidke 489,596 30.61
    31 / 100

    Increase31 2nd Coalition
    1948 Štefan Bašťovanský as part of National Front
    75 / 100

    Increase75 1st Majority
    1954 Karol Bacílek
    47 / 103

    Decrease28 1st Majority
    1960 Karol Bacílek
    34 / 100

    Decrease13 1st Majority
    1964 Alexander Dubček
    58 / 92

    Increase24 1st Majority
    1971 Jozef Lenárt
    102 / 150

    Increase44 1st Majority
    1976 Jozef Lenárt
    102 / 150

    Steady 0 1st Majority
    1981 Jozef Lenárt
    102 / 150

    Steady 0 1st Majority
    1986 Jozef Lenárt
    103 / 150

    Increase1 1st Majority
    1990 Peter Weiss 450,855 13.35
    22 / 150

    Decrease81 4th Opposition

    See also[edit]

  • t
  • e

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Communist_Party_of_Slovakia_(1939)&oldid=1196778034"

    Categories: 
    1939 establishments in Slovakia
    1990 disestablishments in Slovakia
    Comintern sections
    Communist parties in Slovakia
    Communist Party of Czechoslovakia
    Defunct political parties in Slovakia
    Parties of one-party systems
    Political parties in Czechoslovakia
    Political parties disestablished in 1990
    Political parties established in 1939
    Direction  Social Democracy
    Eastern European political party stubs
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    This page was last edited on 18 January 2024, at 11:54 (UTC).

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