The Communist Party of Britain was established in April 1988 The party did not withdraw support for
Marxism Today, but the editorial board did introduce a disclaimer that 'the views expressed by authors are personal and not necessarily those of the editor or editorial board', marking the journal's deviation from the party line. Both publications came to characterise separate visions for the future of the party; the internal opposition rallied around the
Morning Star and the reformist leadership around
Marxism Today. These early signs of trouble attracted international attention, notably from the East German
SED which was concerned about the
Eurocommunist tendency in the CPGB. At the CPGB's 38th congress in November 1983,
Tony Chater the editor of the
Morning Star, as well as the assistant editor David Whitfield, were both removed from their positions on the party's executive. However, they were able to keep their positions at the paper, as it is owned and managed separately by the
People's Press Printing Society co-operative. The following year at the PPPS Annual General Meeting in June 1984, a majority of delegates re-elected Chater and Whitfield to the management committee of the newspaper, against the wishes of the CPGB leadership. In November 1984, the North-West District Congress elected an opposition majority to its District Committee, to which the leadership responded by declaring the district election illegitimate. A similar movement was brewing in London, where the CPGB General Secretary
Gordon McLennan pre-emptively dissolved the London District Congress and 11 members of the District Committee were suspended. In Scotland, 20 branches were brought under disciplinary sanctions. The CPGB Executive Committee then brought the dispute to a special congress on 18–20 May 1985, with a draft resolution condemning the
Morning Star and the group around it. Over 650 amendments were submitted to the resolution, which was eventually passed after a long debate, and followed up by the expulsion of eighteen members. In June 1985, dissident and expelled members of the CPGB formed the Communist Campaign Group. This group declared itself loyal to the party programme, and stated its aim was to prevent the liquidation of the party. The Campaign Group was provided an office within the premises of the
Morning Star. The first post-congress meeting of the new CPGB Executive Committee in July 1985 dropped the commitment for party members to support the
Morning Star; it concluded with the dissolution of more branches and further disciplinary measures, such as the expulsion of
Ken Gill. For two years, the Campaign Group organised within the CPGB to defend the party's Marxist–Leninist principles. However, at the 1987 party congress the Campaign Group failed to shift the leadership, and the direction of the CPGB diverted towards transformation into a social-democratic party. Kevin Halpin was invited to Moscow to discuss the possibility that the CPGB would break apart, he was advised by the
CPSU that the Campaign Group should continue working within the existing party structures. On 8 January 1988 the Campaign Group called a press conference to announce the formation of the Communist Party. The re-establishment congress took place over the weekend of 23–24 April 1988, where one of the prominent leaders of the Campaign Group,
Mike Hicks, was elected to the position of General Secretary. Chater emphasised the continuity with the CPGB at the congress, explaining at the time: The first party card was issued to
Andrew Rothstein, who had also been one of the founding members of the CPGB. Many members of the
Straight Left faction who had stayed in the CPGB formed a group called "Communist Liaison" which later opted to join the CPB. Others remained in the Democratic Left or joined the
Labour Party. The party still has members who were active in the CPGB, some of whom were active in the
Anti-Apartheid Movement and trade union disputes such as the
Upper Clyde work-in or the
miners' strike of 1984–1985.
Since 1998 In 1998, Hicks was ousted as such in a 17–13 vote moved by
John Haylett (who was also editor of the
Morning Star) at a meeting of the party's executive committee. Hicks' supporters on the Management Committee of the
Morning Star responded by suspending and then sacking Haylett, which led to a prolonged strike at the
Morning Star, ending in victory for Haylett and his reinstatement. Some of Hicks' supporters were expelled and others resigned in protest. They formed a discussion group called
Marxist Forum, which is now defunct.
Andrew Murray was a Communist Party member until late 2016. Prior to the formation of the
Respect – The Unity Coalition, with the support of the
Socialist Workers Party, the party engaged in a debate about whether to join an electoral alliance with Respect and
George Galloway. Those in favour, including general secretary
Rob Griffiths, Andrew Murray and
Morning Star editor
John Haylett, were, however, defeated at a Special Congress in 2004. In 2009, the party was one of the founder organisations of the
No2EU electoral alliance alongside the
RMT and a number of other left parties. The alliance stood in the
2009 and
2014 European Parliament elections on a platform of opposition to the
European Union, which it considers undemocratic and neo-liberal. In 2010, the party was part of "Unity for Peace and Socialism". Later the party went on to lead a
Left Leave Campaign (which was chaired by the party's General Secretary Robert Griffiths) along with the
Socialist Workers Party, advocating the progressive case for a leave vote in the 2016
referendum on EU membership. The party was a founding member of the
People's Assembly Against Austerity in 2013, along with a number of other political and campaign groups, to create a broad organisation in opposition to austerity policies of the major political parties of Britain and of the European Union.
The People's Charter, which the Communist Party had helped create several years earlier, was subsequently voted to be incorporated into the People's Assembly. At the
2017 general election, the party fielded no candidates and gave its support to the Labour Party under the leadership of
Jeremy Corbyn. The CPB said it was the first election at which neither it nor the CPGB had fielded any candidates. In March 2018,
Susan Michie, a leading member of the CPB, said that the party would no longer stand against Labour in general elections. CPB members should be "working full tilt" for the election of Corbyn as prime minister, she said. In the
2019 general election, the party again fielded no candidates and gave its support to the Labour Party. However following the resignation of Corbyn as leader of the Labour Party and the
election of
Keir Starmer as his successor, the CPB again decided to field candidates in elections. In February 2021, the party's executive committee decided to mount one of the biggest electoral campaigns since the early 1980s. In 2021, the party contested parliamentary seats in the
Scottish parliamentary election, all regional lists in the
Welsh Senedd election and seats across
England in the
May local elections. The party briefly had a Councillor on
Barrow Borough Council, after he left the
Labour Party in February 2023, until the council was abolished in April the same year. In 2024, the party contested 14 parliamentary seats at the
general election, the most it has fought since its formation in 1988. In the
1987 election the
CPGB, its predecessor, fielded candidates in 19 seats, and the CPB split from it the year after. It won none of the 14 seats fought in 2024 but won 2,622 votes, its best result at a general election. ==Ideology==