Young Communist League leadership Temple was supported by YCL General Secretary Tom Bell as his potential successor. During the late 1970s she was
general secretary of the Young Communist League and became a prominent member of the
Eurocommunist faction within the party. Under her leadership, the YCL embraced progressive social policies, including being the first communist youth organisation to push for recognition of gay rights within the Communist Party, which caused considerable debate within the party in 1976. Temple's YCL also modernised its cultural approach, with a report to the League's 1979 Congress celebrating that their publication
Challenge had "tuned into punk and reggae, unemployment and anti-racism, far ahead of the rest of the left and popular press". However, these changes contributed to the organisation's decline, and within a few years of significant structural and policy changes, the YCL was effectively dissolved in 1989.
Rise in the Communist Party She became a member of the CPGB executive in 1979, and then a member of the Political Committee in January 1982. She was the Press and Publicity Officer of the CPGB from January 1983 until 1989, when she became the last general secretary of the party in January 1990, aged 33. She pledged to make the party "feminist and green, as well as democratically socialist."
Dissolution and Democratic Left In this role Temple became one of the leading proponents of the
dissolution of the CPGB in November 1991, and the founding of its
legal successor, the
Democratic Left, proclaiming that "The internationalism of the 1990s will be as much informed by Greenpeace and Oxfam, as communism once was by Marx and Engels". The dissolution was controversial within the communist movement. Many members disagreed with the decision to dissolve the CPGB and instead joined the
Communist Party of Britain, which had broken away from the CPGB in 1988, while some Scottish members formed the
Communist Party of Scotland. Temple supported the transformation of the CPGB into Democratic Left, which was established as a reformist political organisation rather than a traditional political party. ==Think tanks==