Left Fraction
Revolutionary Socialist League (UK, 1938), Leon Trotsky, Workers' International League (1937), Labour Party (UK)
978-620-0-57900-3
6200579008
96
2012-02-09
34.00 €
eng
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/230x230/9786200579003.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/230x230/9786200579003.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/2000x/9786200579003.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/2000x/9786200579003.jpg
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The Left Fraction, sometimes calling itself the Left Fraction, British Section of the Fourth International (In Opposition), was a Trotskyist organisation in the United Kingdom. The group formed as a tendency of the Revolutionary Socialist League (RSL) in 1940. It was described by other tendencies in the disintegrating organisation as pacifist. The group opposed Trotsky's Proletarian Military Policy, and were expelled in 1943. One the first day of conference held by the Fourth International in 1944, the Left Fraction and also the Trotskyist Opposition and the Left Fraction were reunited with the RSL. Despite the objections of the Left Fraction, the second day saw the reformed RSL unified with the rival Workers International League – on the WIL's terms – to form the new Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP). The Left Fraction initially remained within the RCP, but refused to accept the authority of its leadership. They published their own newspaper, the Militant Miner, aimed at coalminers, and determined instead to pursue a policy of entrism within the Labour Party.
https://morebooks.de/books/gb/published_by/chrono-press/189860/products
Political science
https://morebooks.de/store/gb/book/left-fraction/isbn/978-620-0-57900-3