Communist Party of Switzerland
Communist Party of Switzerland (German: Kommunistische Partei der Schweiz), known as the "Old Communists" (Altkommunisten), was a historical Communist party, section of the Communist International.
Communist Party of Switzerland  Kommunistische Partei der Schweiz  | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | KPS | 
| Leader | Fritz Platten | 
| President | Franz Welti | 
| General Secretary | Marino Bodenmann | 
| Founded | March 6, 1921 | 
| Banned | November 26, 1940 | 
| Split from | PS/SP | 
| Succeeded by | Party of Labour | 
| Newspaper | Kämpfer | 
| Membership | 6,000 | 
| Ideology | Communism | 
| Political position | Far-left | 
| International affiliation | Comintern | 
The Party originated from a group of dissidents who were expelled from the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland in 1918. Fritz Platten was a central leader in the new Party.[1]
The Swiss Communist Party was banned in 1940 because of their support of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, the non-aggression pact between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany.[2] In 1944 some of its leading members founded the Swiss Party of Labour to replace the old Communist Party.
Endnotes
    
- Zapantis, Andrew L. (1982). Greek-Soviet relations, 1917-1941. East European Monographs. p. 155. ISBN 9780880330046.
 - Molin, Karl (1982). Hemmakriget. Stockholm. p. 118. ISBN 91-550-2785-7.)
 
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