Asalewan Section of the Workers' International: Difference between revisions
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The Asalewan Section of the Workers' International traces it roots to the left-wing of the [[Pan-Bahianism|Pan-Bahian]] movement in the early twentieth century. After the 1907 [[Conference for the Promotion of the Pan-Bahian Idea]], the Conference's left-wing founded the Pan-Bahian Section of the Workers' International and later organizationally split in accordance with the divisions of various colonial territories in 1912. The Asalewan Section grew rapidly in the 1910s and 1920s, its membership and support base expanding from the intelligentsia to the working-class and eventually the peasantry. The Section subsquently waged the [[Asalewan Revolution]] for over thirty years, emerging victorious in 1953. The Section subsequently governed as the {{wp|people's democracy (Marxism-Leninism)|senior partner in a powersharing agreement}} and {{wp|united front}} from 1953 to 1958, and then as the {{wp|single-party state|sole legal party}} from 1958 to 1969. The [[Protective-Corrective Revolution]] eroded the Section's influence, leading to the end of direct Section rule and the establishment of a multi-party system. The Section now no longer contests elections, but retains considerable influence over the country's politics and society. The Section {{wp|Guardian Council|enjoys the right to veto candidates in the country's elections}}, has ''de facto'' control over Asalewan foreign policy, and counts over 90% of Asase Lewa's population as members of its {{wp|Communist party#Mass organizations|mass organizations}}, a virtual requirement to participate in Asalewan civic and social life. | The Asalewan Section of the Workers' International traces it roots to the left-wing of the [[Pan-Bahianism|Pan-Bahian]] movement in the early twentieth century. After the 1907 [[Conference for the Promotion of the Pan-Bahian Idea]], the Conference's left-wing founded the Pan-Bahian Section of the Workers' International and later organizationally split in accordance with the divisions of various colonial territories in 1912. The Asalewan Section grew rapidly in the 1910s and 1920s, its membership and support base expanding from the intelligentsia to the working-class and eventually the peasantry. The Section subsquently waged the [[Asalewan Revolution]] for over thirty years, emerging victorious in 1953. The Section subsequently governed as the {{wp|people's democracy (Marxism-Leninism)|senior partner in a powersharing agreement}} and {{wp|united front}} from 1953 to 1958, and then as the {{wp|single-party state|sole legal party}} from 1958 to 1969. The [[Protective-Corrective Revolution]] eroded the Section's influence, leading to the end of direct Section rule and the establishment of a multi-party system. The Section now no longer contests elections, but retains considerable influence over the country's politics and society. The Section {{wp|Guardian Council|enjoys the right to veto candidates in the country's elections}}, has ''de facto'' control over Asalewan foreign policy, and counts over 90% of Asase Lewa's population as members of its {{wp|Communist party#Mass organizations|mass organizations}}, a virtual requirement to participate in Asalewan civic and social life. | ||
Organizationally, the Section synthesizes a {{wp|democratic centralism|democratic centralist}} structure on most levels, under which open discussion is allowed on the basis of complete unity among members, with a {{wp|corporatism|corporatist}} system of representation in the Section's {{wp|Politburo|Presidium}} and {{wp|Central Committee}}, as certain proportions of Presidium and Central Committee seats are reserved for leaders of allied segments of Asalewan society, namely the military, intelligentsia, the Section's mass organizations, and elected officials. The Presidium retains power over Asalewan foreign policy and Section affairs in-between sessions of the {{wp|party congress|Section Congress}}, the supreme decisionmaking body on Section affairs elected by Section members, in accordance with the {{wp|Elections_in_China#Local_People's_Congresses|Three Ups, Three Downs}} system. The Section enjoys especially close links with the country's politically-powerful military, the {{wp|military|People's Revolutionary Army}}; both institutions have considerable influence over one another and the People's Revolutionary Army was instrumental in the success over Section leaders' ''de facto'' {{wp|self-coup|self-coups}} in 1979 and 2014, which led to mass expulsions of Section members and the temporary re-imposition of direct Section rule over the country, a legally-formalized {{wp|state of exception}} ideologically justified through the doctrine of [[Perpetual-Cyclical Revolution]]. | Organizationally, the Section synthesizes a {{wp|democratic centralism|democratic centralist}} structure on most levels, under which open discussion is allowed on the basis of complete unity among members, with a {{wp|corporatism|corporatist}} system of representation in the Section's {{wp|Politburo|Presidium}} and {{wp|Central Committee}}, as certain proportions of Presidium and Central Committee seats are reserved for leaders of allied segments of Asalewan society, namely the military, the intelligentsia, the Section's mass organizations, and elected officials. The Presidium retains power over Asalewan foreign policy and Section affairs in-between sessions of the {{wp|party congress|Section Congress}}, the supreme decisionmaking body on Section affairs elected by Section members, in accordance with the {{wp|Elections_in_China#Local_People's_Congresses|Three Ups, Three Downs}} system. The Section enjoys especially close links with the country's politically-powerful military, the {{wp|military|People's Revolutionary Army}}; both institutions have considerable influence over one another and the People's Revolutionary Army was instrumental in the success over Section leaders' ''de facto'' {{wp|self-coup|self-coups}} in 1979 and 2014, which led to mass expulsions of Section members and the temporary re-imposition of direct Section rule over the country, a legally-formalized {{wp|state of exception}} ideologically justified through the doctrine of [[Perpetual-Cyclical Revolution]]. | ||
Ideologically, the Section is committed to {{wp|council communism|Councilism}} and {{wp|Communism}}, and adheres to [[Nemtsovism-Adelajism-Edudzism]], its claimed adaptation of {{wp|Marxism|Nemtsovism}} and Councilism to Asalewan and Bahian conditions that synthesizes Nemtsovism and Councilism with [[Pan-Bahianism]], [[Tretyakism]], and, especially, the writings of the Section's historic leading figures [[Adelaja Ifedapo]] and [[Edudzi Agyeman]]. Since the Asalewan Revolution, the Section organized the country according to a {{wp|command economy}} and, after the Protective-Corrective Revolution and in consultation with various rebel organizations, {{wp|participatory economics}}. The Section retains close ties with other Councilist parties through the [[Congress of the Workers' International]], ties supplemented since the collapse of socialism throughout the rest of Bahia in the 1970s and 1980s by attempts to forge links with other {{wp|left-wing}} parties in [[Bahia]] and left-wing parties the Section views as representing the interests of {{wp|African diaspora in the Americas|Bahio-Asterians}} in the [[Asterias]]. | Ideologically, the Section is committed to {{wp|council communism|Councilism}} and {{wp|Communism}}, and adheres to [[Nemtsovism-Adelajism-Edudzism]], its claimed adaptation of {{wp|Marxism|Nemtsovism}} and Councilism to Asalewan and Bahian conditions that synthesizes Nemtsovism and Councilism with [[Pan-Bahianism]], [[Tretyakism]], and, especially, the writings of the Section's historic leading figures [[Adelaja Ifedapo]] and [[Edudzi Agyeman]]. Since the Asalewan Revolution, the Section organized the country according to a {{wp|command economy}} and, after the Protective-Corrective Revolution and in consultation with various rebel organizations, {{wp|participatory economics}}. The Section retains close ties with other Councilist parties through the [[Congress of the Workers' International]], ties supplemented since the collapse of socialism throughout the rest of Bahia in the 1970s and 1980s by attempts to forge links with other {{wp|left-wing}} parties in [[Bahia]] and left-wing parties the Section views as representing the interests of {{wp|African diaspora in the Americas|Bahio-Asterians}} in the [[Asterias]]. |
Revision as of 09:27, 20 February 2023
Asalewan Section of the Workers' International Dɔwɔlawo ƒe Dukɔwo Dome Habɔbɔ ƒe Asaselewatɔwo ƒe Akpa | |
---|---|
General Secretary | Kwassi Kodjo |
Presidium | Presidium of the Asalewan Section of the Workers' International |
"Eternal Chairman" | Edudzi Agyeman |
Founder | Adelaja Ifedapo |
Founded | 10 July 1912 |
Preceded by | Pan-Bahian Section of the Workers' Internatinal |
Headquarters | Palace of the Workers |
Newspaper | Red Horizon |
Student wing | Adelaja Ifedapo Student Workers' League |
Youth wing | Junior Workers' League |
Women's wing | All-Asase Lewa Women's Federation |
Pioneer wing | Pioneer Workers' League |
Mass wing | Revolutionary Councilist Defence Committees |
Membership (2023) | 4,591,359 |
Ideology | |
Political position | Far-left |
National affiliation | Democratic Front (1949-1958) |
Regional affiliation | All-Bahian Workers' Congress |
International affiliation | Congress of the Workers' International |
Colors | Red |
Slogan | Serve the People |
Anthem | The Internationale |
The Asalewan Section of the Workers' International (Asalewan: Dɔwɔlawo ƒe Dukɔwo Dome Habɔbɔ ƒe Asaselewatɔwo ƒe Akpa) is the founding party in the Bahian Council Republic of Asase Lewa. Considered by most scholars to be the most influential political organiation in Asase Lewa's history, the Asalewan Section of the Workers' International led the Asalewan Revolution and founded the modern Asalewan state in the 1950s and 1960s. Nearly 4.6 million people, approximately 10% of Asase Lewa's adult population, are full members of the organization, which the Asalewan public and media refer to simply as "the Section."
The Asalewan Section of the Workers' International traces it roots to the left-wing of the Pan-Bahian movement in the early twentieth century. After the 1907 Conference for the Promotion of the Pan-Bahian Idea, the Conference's left-wing founded the Pan-Bahian Section of the Workers' International and later organizationally split in accordance with the divisions of various colonial territories in 1912. The Asalewan Section grew rapidly in the 1910s and 1920s, its membership and support base expanding from the intelligentsia to the working-class and eventually the peasantry. The Section subsquently waged the Asalewan Revolution for over thirty years, emerging victorious in 1953. The Section subsequently governed as the senior partner in a powersharing agreement and united front from 1953 to 1958, and then as the sole legal party from 1958 to 1969. The Protective-Corrective Revolution eroded the Section's influence, leading to the end of direct Section rule and the establishment of a multi-party system. The Section now no longer contests elections, but retains considerable influence over the country's politics and society. The Section enjoys the right to veto candidates in the country's elections, has de facto control over Asalewan foreign policy, and counts over 90% of Asase Lewa's population as members of its mass organizations, a virtual requirement to participate in Asalewan civic and social life.
Organizationally, the Section synthesizes a democratic centralist structure on most levels, under which open discussion is allowed on the basis of complete unity among members, with a corporatist system of representation in the Section's Presidium and Central Committee, as certain proportions of Presidium and Central Committee seats are reserved for leaders of allied segments of Asalewan society, namely the military, the intelligentsia, the Section's mass organizations, and elected officials. The Presidium retains power over Asalewan foreign policy and Section affairs in-between sessions of the Section Congress, the supreme decisionmaking body on Section affairs elected by Section members, in accordance with the Three Ups, Three Downs system. The Section enjoys especially close links with the country's politically-powerful military, the People's Revolutionary Army; both institutions have considerable influence over one another and the People's Revolutionary Army was instrumental in the success over Section leaders' de facto self-coups in 1979 and 2014, which led to mass expulsions of Section members and the temporary re-imposition of direct Section rule over the country, a legally-formalized state of exception ideologically justified through the doctrine of Perpetual-Cyclical Revolution.
Ideologically, the Section is committed to Councilism and Communism, and adheres to Nemtsovism-Adelajism-Edudzism, its claimed adaptation of Nemtsovism and Councilism to Asalewan and Bahian conditions that synthesizes Nemtsovism and Councilism with Pan-Bahianism, Tretyakism, and, especially, the writings of the Section's historic leading figures Adelaja Ifedapo and Edudzi Agyeman. Since the Asalewan Revolution, the Section organized the country according to a command economy and, after the Protective-Corrective Revolution and in consultation with various rebel organizations, participatory economics. The Section retains close ties with other Councilist parties through the Congress of the Workers' International, ties supplemented since the collapse of socialism throughout the rest of Bahia in the 1970s and 1980s by attempts to forge links with other left-wing parties in Bahia and left-wing parties the Section views as representing the interests of Bahio-Asterians in the Asterias.