Sports instructor and journalist After the collapse of the , the Communist-oriented party of the organization split off in 1921 and created the (FDTJ). Gottwald was able to unify the organization to gain considerable power in the local districts, and became the of the 20th district of the FDTJ. In June 1921, he participated in the first
Spartakiada in
Prague. In September 1921 he moved from
Rousinov to
Banská Bystrica, where he became the editor of the communist magazine ("Voice of the people" in Slovak). At the same time, he was planning FDTJ events at the
Banská Bystrica district. He became the local of the district, and was the managing director of the 47th district of the FDTJ. Later, he moved to
Žilina and became editor in chief of magazine. In 1922 he moved to
Vrútky, where by decision of the
Communist Party Central Committee, they merged a number of communist magazines and consolidated editors. In 1924, the editorial staff, along with Gottwald, moved to
Ostrava.
Beginning of political activity In 1926, Gottwald became a
functionary of the
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ), and editor of the Communist Press. From 1926 to 1929 he worked in Prague, where he aided the Secretariat of the KSČ to form a pro-Moscow opposition against the anti-Moscow leadership then in power. From 1928 he was a member of the
Comintern. Following a Comintern policy initiated by Stalin, he carried out the
Bolshevization of the Party. In February 1929, at the of the KSČ, Gottwald was elected party general secretary, alongside ,
Jan Šverma,
Rudolf Slánský,
Václav Kopecký and , together known as the . In the second half of 1930, the Communist Party carried out a number of reforms in accordance and response with the changes in those of the foreign policy of the
Soviet Union, namely the introduction of the policy on the formation of a
popular front against fascism. In September and October 1938, Gottwald was one of the main leaders of the opposition against the adoption of the
Munich Agreement.
Exile to the USSR at the
7th World Congress, 1935.
Seated (L-R): Georgi Dimitrov,
Palmiro Togliatti,
Wilhelm Florin,
Wang Ming.
Standing: Otto Kuusinen,
Dmitry Manuilsky,
Klement Gottwald,
Wilhelm Pieck. After the banning of the Communist Party, Gottwald emigrated to
the Soviet Union in November 1938. While there, he opposed the party policy of backing the
Molotov–Ribbentrop pact of 1939. After the
attack on the Soviet Union in June 1941, Soviet leadership saw the front against fascism as a great opportunity to assert themselves in
Czechoslovakia, promoting interest in supporting Gottwald after the liberation of Czechoslovakia. In 1943, Gottwald agreed with representatives of the
Czechoslovak government-in-exile located in London, along with President
Edvard Beneš, to unify domestic and foreign anti-fascist resistance and form the
National Front. This proved helpful for Gottwald as it helped secure Communist influence in post-war Czechoslovakia.
Return to Czechoslovakia and events leading up to the coup In 1945, Gottwald gave up the general secretary's post to
Rudolf Slánský and was elected to the new position of party chairman. On 10 May 1945, Gottwald returned to Prague as the deputy premier under
Zdeněk Fierlinger and as the chairman of the
National Front. In March 1946, he became prime minister after leading the KSČ to a 38% share of the vote. This was easily the best showing for a Czechoslovak party in a free election at the time; previously, no party had ever won more than 25 percent. Gottwald was a firm supporter of the
expulsion of ethnic Germans from Czechoslovakia, gaining mainstream credibility with many Czechs through the use of nationalist rhetoric, exhorting the population to "prepare for the final retribution for
White Mountain, for the return of the Czech lands to the Czech people. We will expel for good all descendants of the alien German nobility." == Сoup d'état ==