The Polish Socialist Party (PPS) was founded in Paris in 1892, during the period known as the
Great Emigration. In 1893, a faction called the
Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL) split from the PPS. The PPS focused more on nationalism and Polish independence, while the SDKPiL adopted a far-left (Marxist), internationalist stance. In November 1892, key members of the PPS developed a political program that, for its time, was notably progressive. The program called for an independent Republic of Poland founded on democratic principles, direct universal voting rights, equal rights for all citizens regardless of religion or gender, freedom of the press, speech, and assembly, progressive taxation, an eight-hour workday, a minimum wage, equal pay for men and women, a ban on child labor (under age 14), free education, and social support for workers injured on the job. After the
Revolution of 1905 in the
Russian Empire, the party membership drastically increased from several hundred active members to a mass movement of about 60,000 members. Another split in the party occurred in 1906, with the
Revolutionary Faction following
Józef Piłsudski, who supported the nationalist and independence ideals, and the
Left faction which allied itself with the SDKPiL. However, the Revolutionary Faction became dominant and renamed itself back again to the PPS, while the Left was eclipsed, and in 1918 merged with SDKPiL forming the
Communist Party of Poland. In 1917-18 the party participated in the
Central Council of Ukraine and the
Government of Ukraine. During the
Second Polish Republic, the PPS at first supported
Józef Piłsudski (himself a former Socialist), including his
May Coup, but later moved into the opposition to his authoritarian
Sanacja regime by joining the democratic '
centrolew' (center-left) opposition movement. Many PPS leaders and members were put on
trial by Piłsudski's regime and jailed in the infamous
Bereza Kartuska prison. The party was a member of the
Labour and Socialist International between 1923 and 1940. The party supported the
Polish resistance during as the underground
Polish Socialist Party – Freedom, Equality, Independence (
Polska Partia Socjalistyczna – Wolność, Równość, Niepodległość). In 1948 it suffered a fatal split, as the
Communists applied the
salami tactics to dismember any opposition. One faction, which included
Edward Osóbka-Morawski wanted to join forces with the
Polish Peasant Party and form a united front against the Communists. Another faction, led by
Józef Cyrankiewicz, argued that the
Socialists should support the Communists in carrying through a socialist program while opposing the imposition of one-party rule. Pre-war political hostilities continued to influence events, and
Stanisław Mikołajczyk, leader of the Peasant Party, would not agree to form a united front with the Socialists. The Communists played on these divisions by dismissing Osóbka-Morawski and making Cyrankiewicz the Prime Minister. In 1948, Cyrankiewicz's faction of
Socialists merged with the Communist
Polish Workers' Party (PPR) to form the
Polish United Workers' Party (
Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza; PZPR), the ruling party in the
Polish People's Republic; remnants of the other faction survived on emigration in the
Polish government-in-exile and because of that Polish Socialist Party was still active on emigration. Cyrankiewicz's faction isn't really treated as proper PPS. ==Refoundation and present==