East Germany,
Czechoslovakia,
Poland and
Bulgaria operated bloc party systems where non-communist parties were constituent members of an official coalition. A similar system operates in
China today.
East Germany In the German Democratic Republic, the
National Front was the umbrella organisation which included the ruling
Socialist Unity Party of Germany, other political parties and various non-party organisations. Germany was since 1945 divided into four occupation zones. Each occupying power decided which parties it allowed. Four parties were initially allowed in all four zones: •
Communist Party of Germany (KPD), which was built by a
leadership group that survived the Second World War in Moscow. •
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). In the Soviet zone, the Soviets
forced it to unite with the KPD in 1946. This created the
Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED). •
Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU or CDUD). Although originally independent, in the Soviet Zone it was forced to follow Communist guidelines. •
Liberal Democratic Party of Germany (LDPD). In the East, it was also forced to follow Communist guiding principles. The Soviet occupying government also allowed two other parties. They were both founded in 1948 on the initiative of the communists: •
Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany (DBD). It was supposed to take voters away from the CDU in rural areas. •
National Democratic Party of Germany (NDPD). It was supposed to take in National Socialists and former soldiers of the Wehrmacht. All parties in the
Soviet zone had to work together in the National Front under the leadership of the communists. This organisation also included so-called mass organisations, such as the communist-led trade union and the women's association or the youth association. The National Front determined the electoral list for the parliamentary elections: There was only one unified list of the entire National Front in a parliamentary election in the GDR. As the Communists consolidated their power, the bloc parties all jettisoned their original programs. All of them nominally embraced "socialism", becoming loyal partners of the SED. With few exceptions, they voted unanimously for all government proposals. One of the few notable dissensions of a bloc party occurred in 1972 when members of the CDU in the
Volkskammer took a stand against the legalisation of abortion, with the party's deputies either voting against the law or abstaining. During
the 'peaceful revolution' of 1989, the bloc parties began to assert themselves and emerge as independent parties, leading to the first and only
free election to the Volkskammer in 1990. During the process of
German reunification, the bloc parties merged with their western counterparts. Non-party organisations such as the
Free German Youth,
Kulturbund and the
Democratic Women's League of Germany broke their formal affiliation with the former ruling party, but only the Free German Youth still operates today.
China In China, under the premise of
united front, eight
democratic parties in the People's Republic of China have been recognized by the government. All the eight parties established in China before the creation of
People's Republic of China, and are willing to collaborate with the
Chinese Communist Party administration, have been recognized as "parties that can help joint administration of the country under Chinese Communist Party's lead". These parties are tasked to accept Chinese Communist Parties' leadership as well as political principle and direction.
Czechoslovakia The
1946 elections saw only parties of the
National Front, dominated by the
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, take part. However, elections were competitive, with the Communists and
Social Democrats prevailing in the Czech lands, and the anti-Communist
Democratic Party winning a comfortable majority in Slovakia. In 1948, however, the Communists
seized power and non-Marxist parties were made subordinate to the Communists. During the
Velvet Revolution, the parties became more assertive in pressuring for change, and transformed themselves for democratic politics. The Christian democratic
Czechoslovak People's Party remains a player in Czech parliamentary politics.
Poland The
1947 elections were blatantly rigged in favour of the Democratic Bloc, with Communist and Socialist parties being merged to form the
Polish United Workers' Party (PZPR). In 1952 the
Front of National Unity was formed, including the PZPR, the agrarian
United People's Party (ZSL) and the centrist
Democratic Party (SD), while up to three Catholic associations also had representation in the
Sejm. Occasionally, deputies from these groups (most notably the Catholic
Znak) offered limited criticism of government policies. A number of deputies from bloc parties also voted against the imposition of
martial law in Poland, after which the Front of National Unity was replaced by the
Patriotic Movement for National Rebirth which included the same as well as additional member organisations. In 1989,
partly free elections were held in which
Solidarity won an overwhelming majority of freely contestable seats – only 35% of the Sejm – while the PZPR and bloc parties were reserved 65% of the seats. The ZSL and SD formed a coalition government with Solidarity, thus forming Poland's first non-Communist government since World War II. The SD continues today, whereas the ZSL eventually evolved into today's
Polish People's Party. Two of the Catholic associations with Sejm representation continue today as lay Catholic organisations.
Bulgaria During Communist rule in Bulgaria, the
Bulgarian Agrarian National Union was the only other legal party than the
Bulgarian Communist Party as a member of the
Fatherland Front. A number of successor parties exist in post-Communist Bulgaria.
South Yemen The rival
FLOSY collapsed in 1967, leaving the
National Liberation Front as the sole liberation front in
South Yemen. It formed with the assadist
People's Vanguard Party and the marxist Democratic Popular Union Party the "Unified Nationalist Front Political Organization" before merging into the
Yemeni Socialist Party in 1978.
Other examples In countries like
North Korea or
Vietnam (until 1988), bloc parties also exist, playing a subordinate role to ruling Communist parties as constituent members of official coalitions. In some countries, there were bloc parties before they were merged into the communist party. The members of the
Hungarian National Independence Front were merged into the
Hungarian Working People's Party in 1949. The
People's Front of Yugoslavia originally had other party members. By 1953, the remaining bloc parties in the
People's Democratic Front of Romania had been dissolved. The
National United Front of Kampuchea included monarchist
Khmer Rumdo and pro-North Vietnamese
Khmer Issarak. The alliance between
Khmer Rouge and monarchists was later revived in the
Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea as the internally recognised government-in-exile against the likewise communist dominated
People's Republic of Kampuchea. ==In non-communist regimes==