1921–1945 The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia was founded at the congress of the Czechoslovak Social-Democratic Party (Left), held in
Prague May 14–16, 1921.
Rudé právo, previously the organ of the Left Social-Democrats, became the main organ of the new party. As a first chairman was elected Václav Šturc, first vice-chairman was
Bohumír Šmeral and second vice-chairman was Vaclav Bolen. The party was one of some twenty political parties that competed within the democratic framework of the
First Czechoslovak Republic, but it was never in government. In
1925 parliamentary election the party gained 934,223 votes (13.2%, 2nd place) and 41 seats. The party was the Czechoslovak section of the
Communist International. As of 1928, the party was the second-largest section of the International, with an estimated membership of around 138,000, more than twice the membership of the
French Communist Party and nearly five times the membership of the
Chinese Communist Party at the time. , leader of the party from 1929 until his death in 1953 In 1929
Klement Gottwald became party Secretary-General after the purging from it of various oppositional elements some of whom allied themselves to
Trotsky and the International Left Opposition. In
1929 parliamentary election the party gained 753,220 votes (10.2%, 4th place) and 30 seats. In
1935 parliamentary election the party held its 30 seats with 849,495 votes (10.3%, 4th place). The party was banned on 20 October 1938 during the
Second Republic, but continued to exist as an underground organisation. Following the signing of the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, anti-German protests broke out in Prague in October 1939. In response, the Comintern ordered the party to oppose the protests, which they blamed on "chauvinist elements". In the early 1960s, Czechoslovakia underwent an economic downturn, and in 1968, the KSČ was taken over by reformers led by
Alexander Dubček. He started a period of liberalization known as the
Prague Spring in which he attempted to implement "
socialism with a human face". The Soviet Union believed the process of liberalization would end state socialism in the country and on 21 August 1968,
Warsaw Pact forces invaded. Subsequently, the Soviet justification for the invasion would become known as the
Brezhnev Doctrine.
1969–1992 In April 1969, Dubček was removed as party General Secretary (replaced by
Gustáv Husák) and expelled in 1970. During the period of
normalization that followed, the party was dominated by two factions: moderates and hardliners.
Moderates and pragmatists Moderates and pragmatists were represented by Gustáv Husák who led the
neo-stalinist wing of KSČ leadership. As a moderate or pragmatic, he was pressed by hardliners, most notably
Vasil Biľak. An important Slovak Communist Party functionary from 1943 to 1950, Husák was arrested in 1951 and sentenced to three years, later increased to life imprisonment, for "bourgeois nationalism" during the Stalinist purges of the era. Released in 1960 and rehabilitated in 1963, Husák refused any political position in
Antonín Novotný's régime but after Novotný's fall he became deputy prime minister during the
Prague Spring. After Dubček's resignation Husák was named KSČ First Secretary in April 1969 and president of the republic in July 1975. Above all, Husák was a survivor who learned to accommodate the powerful political forces surrounding him and he denounced Dubček after 1969. Other prominent moderates/pragmatics who were still in power by 1987 included: •
Lubomír Štrougal, Premier of Czechoslovakia; •
Peter Colotka, Premier of the Slovak Socialist Republic; •
Jozef Lenárt, First Secretary of the
KSS; • Josef Kempný, Chairman of the
Czech National Council. , leader of the party between 1969–87 and president of Czechoslovakia in 1975–89 These leaders generally supported the reforms instituted under Dubček during the late 1960s but successfully made the transition to orthodox party rule following the invasion and Dubček's decline from power. Subsequently, they adopted a more flexible stance regarding economic reform and dissident activity.
Hardliners Key members of this faction included: •
Vasiľ Biľak, their leader, had been a member of the Presidium since 1968 and was chairman of the party's Ideological Commission •
Karel Hoffman, a Central Committee Secretary and Presidium member; • , Presidium member; •
Jan Fojtík, Secretary; •
Alois Indra, Presidium member and Chairman of the Federal Assembly (replaced the National Assembly under 1968 federation law); and •
Miloš Jakeš, Chairman of the Central Supervisory and Auditing Commission and Presidium member (replaced Gustáv Husák as the Party's General Secretary in 1987). These hardliners opposed economic and political reforms and took a harsh stand on dissent. , the last communist leader (1987–89) The party's hegemony ended with the
Velvet Revolution in 1989. In November, Jakeš and the entire Presidium resigned. Jakeš was succeeded by
Karel Urbanek, who only held power for about a month before the party formally abandoned power in December. Later that month, Husák, who retained the presidency after standing down as general secretary, was forced to swear in the country's first non-Communist government in 41 years.
Federal party and dissolution At the 18th party congress held November 3–4, 1990, the party was rebaptized as KSČS and became a federation of two parties: the
Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSČM) and the Communist Party of Slovakia (KSS).
Pavol Kanis served as the chairman of the Federal Council of KSČS. However, the two constituent organizations of the federal party were moving in different directions politically and there was great tension between them. In August 1991, upon the request of SDL, the party mutated into the
Federation of the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia and the Party of the Democratic Left (
Federácie KSČM a SDĽ). KSČM unsuccessfully appealed to two Slovak communist splinter parties, the
Communist Party of Slovakia – 91 (KSS '91) and the
Union of Communists of Slovakia (ZKS), to join the Federation. At the first SDL congress in December 1991, SDL formally withdrew from the Federation with the KSČM.
Claimed reformation On 10 March 1995 a party named
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia was registered as a political party in the
Czech Republic and on the 22 April 1995
Miroslav Štěpán was elected its General Secretary. The party claimed to be the heir to KSČ and rejected the claims of KSČM on the basis of their
revisionist positions. The majority of remaining communists rejected their claim to represent the old party and continued their political career as members of KSČM. In 1999 the party changed its name to The
Party of Czech Communists (SČK)
. Their official page is http://www.ksc.cz/ and still uses the old acronym. In 2001 the party underwent its first split, when a part of it split off to form the
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia – Czechoslovak Labour Party (KSČ-ČSSP) led by Ludvík Zifčák, a former member of
the National Police, who infiltrated the student protesters during the
Velvet Revolution. The false story that a student named
Martin Šmíd was killed by the state police was likely aided by the demonstrators confusing memories of him with a dead body of a student, because he was accidentally struck by his colleagues and blacked out. After Štěpán died in 2014 and was replaced as General Secretary by Jiří Vábr, the party had another split. Vojtěch Mišičák accused the party of passivity and broke off a new group called the
Czech Communist Party 21 (KSČ21), whose current general secretary is Zdeněk Klímek. None of these parties ever had any electoral successes on the rare occasion they even ran candidates. Štěpán was a candidate in the
1996 and
1998 Czech Senate election for
Bruntál. In 1996 he came fifth with 627 votes and the KSČM candidate Rostislav Harazin came 3rd with 5 294 votes. In 1998 he came seventh with 716 votes and Harazin won with 7 852 votes in the first round and 10 154 in the second. == Organisation ==