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The German Communist Party (, DKP) is a in . The DKP supports far-left positions and was an observer member of the European Left before leaving in February 2016.


History
The DKP considered itself a reconstitution of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD), which had been banned by the Federal Constitutional Court in 1956 for its aggressively militant opposition to the West German constitution. The new party was formed on 25 September 1968. "30 Jahre DKP: Eine Veranstaltung in der Offenbacher Stadthalle" ("30 years DKP: An event in the Offenbach town hall"), by Rudi Hechler, September 30, 1998, DKP of Hesse website

The foundation was preceded by talks between former KPD functionaries and , the West German minister of justice, who explained to them that while a refounding of a banned party was not legally possible, Communists were free to form an entirely new party.Helmut Bilstein et al, Organisierter Kommunismus in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Opladen 1977, p. 16. Even though the close links to the banned KPD made the new party vulnerable to be declared illegal, no such declaration was requested by the German government as West German authorities the attitude towards the and in particular.

The DKP remained on the political fringe, never winning more than 0.3% of the total votes in federal elections. Deutsche Welle - Wahl 2005 It had relatively greater local support in the 1970s: it achieved up to 2.2% of the vote in , 3.1% in and 2.7% in the , yet still not enough to enter any Landtags. However, the party enjoyed some success in municipal elections, two patterns of municipalities can be identified in which the DKP was able to win seats: on the one hand working-class residential communities with a long left-wing tradition such as in the Ruhr area or Mörfelden-Walldorf in Hesse, and on the other university towns such as or Tübingen.

(1990). 9783923208241
Following German reunification, the DKP entered a steady decline.

The DKP received national public attention in early 2008 when , elected to the state parliament of on the list of as the first DKP member of a state parliament, allegedly endorsed the , the and other aspects of the East German state in an interview. This caused embarrassment to the national Left Party leadership. Despite denying that she made the controversial statements (at least in the form that was reported), she was expelled from the Left Party faction a few days later.

On 2 and 3 March 2013, the 20th party congress of the DKP took place in Mörfelden-Walldorf (). The election for the party chairmanship between the incumbent Bettina Jürgensen and her challenger Patrik Köbele came down to a tight contestafter a years-long dispute over direction within the party. Köbele won the election and wanted to position the party as “more militant and revolutionary, re-emphasizing the class struggle, class consciousness and the vanguard role of the Communist Party”. “The distance to those forces that prefer reforms within the existing social system to anti-imperialist revolutionary rhetoric without social backing as a short-term goal will increase,” Köbele emphasized when he took office.

The DKP ended its observer status in the Party of the European Left on 27 February 2016.

The group around the former chairpersons Bettina Jürgensen, Heinz Stehr and the “architect of the reform course” in the party, Leo Meyer, organized itself in the “Communist Network” and in the association “Marxist Left” (MaLi). MaLi is the official “partner movement” of the European Left Party.

In the course of the internal discussion about the party's orientation in relation to the anti-monopolistic strategy (AMS), some, mainly young members left the party and the youth organization SDAJ because they rejected the AMS. They initially founded the group “What next?”, from which the Communist Organization (KO) emerged in mid-2018 and the Communist Party (KP) emerged in 2024.


Media
The party publishes a , ().


Election results

Bundestag
+ ! Election year ! # of total votes ! % of overall vote ! # of seats


European Parliament


See also
  • Communist Party of Germany (1918)
  • Communist Party of Germany (1990)


Footnotes

External links

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