Formation of a socialist wing at a communist rally in
Kerala,
India, of a young farmer and worker. From the 1920s to 1930s, peasants and workers became increasingly involved in the anti-colonial struggles in the
Malabar district,
Cochin Kingdom and
Travancore Kingdom. These three regions would later constitute the
Kerala state, along with some regions from
South Kanara. The peasant and labour movements of the 1930s were, to a great extent, the cause as well as the consequence of the emergence of a powerful left wing in Indian politics. In 1934, the left anti-colonials joined and organised the Congress Socialist Party with
C. K. Govindan Nair as Secretary within the
Congress Party. A powerful factor that helped the growth of the leftist movement was the support it received from the radical section of the anti-colonial native Muslims in Malabar. Leftist groups started functioning in several parts of Malabar. Soon, the
Kerala Provincial Congress Committee (KPCC) was dominated by them. By 1938 to 1939, the
Malabar district,
Cochin Kingdom and
Travancore Kingdom were fully drawn into the anti-British struggle for self-rule as well as the struggle for responsible government in the
Princely States. Leftists preferred to remain organisationally within the Congress, calling themselves socialists. Both left and right-wing groups joined forces in order to ensure the success of the Congress candidates in the 1936 Malabar district elections.
Birth of the Communist Party of India in Kerala The rift between the major bloc of Indian National Congress and its socialist wing came into the open with the outbreak of
World War II, the resignation of the provincial Congress ministers, and the beginning of individual
satyagraha. The communists were expelled from the Congress Socialist Party in March 1940, after allegations that they had disrupted party activities and were intent on co-opting party organisations. Indeed, by the time the communists were expelled, they had gained control over the Congress Socialist Party units in what were to become the southern states of Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Andhra Pradesh. The left-dominated Kerala Provincial Congress Committee, contrary to directive of the Congress, did not take action. The left wing of Kerala met in a secret enclave at Parapram, Pinarayi, near
Thalassery, and in December 1939, the CPI was founded. In 1957, the CPI was elected to rule the state government of Kerala, only to have the government dismissed and
president's rule declared in 1959 following the
Vimochana Samaram. In 1964, in conjunction with the
widening rift between China and the Soviet Union, a large leftist faction of the CPI leadership, based predominantly in Kerala and West Bengal, split from the party to form the Communist Party of India (Marxist), or CPI (M). In Kerala, the CPI (M) — in coalition with other parties — wrested control from the Congress and its allies (frequently including the CPI) in 1967, in 1980, and in 1987. Support for the CPI (M) in Kerala in general elections has ranged from 19 percent to 26 percent, but the party has never won more than nine of Kerala's twenty seats in Parliament. But with the Left Democratic Front coalition, they won 19 seats out of 20 in 2004. == Communism in practice ==