During early 1928, the PSDR decision to run on a common platform with the centre-left
National Peasants' Party (PNŢ) against the ruling
National Liberal Party (PNL), and its ban on local collaboration with communist-influenced organisations, resulted in tensions between the central leadership and the Bucharest section. After calls to subordination issued in March–April were ignored, the direct confrontation that took place in May between
Lothar Rădăceanu,
Ilie Moscovici, and
Ioan Flueraş, representing the Executive Committee, on one side, and the local leaders ,
Ştefan Voitec,
Vasile Anagnoste, and , on the other side, only served to heighten the conflict. Consequently, the Executive Committee dissolved the leadership of the Bucharest section at the end of May. Furthermore, Ghelerter, himself a member of the Executive Committee, was expelled from the PSDR in July, accused of criticising the alliance with the Peasants' Party as well as protecting and encouraging communist elements within his section. On July 15, 1928, a day after the PSDR appointed a new leadership for its Bucharest section, Ghelerter called on a meeting of his supporters. In the presence of a large number of former members of the section, as well as representatives from major industrial centres from the
Old Kingdom, the meeting adopted a manifesto authored by Ghelerter, Voitec and
Petre Zissu. The manifesto announced the creation of the ''Socialist Workers' Party
as a party dedicated to social revolution, opposed to any collaboration with bourgeois'' parties, seen as supporters of the
class-based society. Affirming its commitment to
class struggle, it called on the peasantry to follow the lead of the working class in its struggle with
capitalism, whose foremost representative in Romania was considered the National Liberal Party. The document further condemned PSDR's collaboration with the Peasants' Party, and criticised its position asserting social revolution would be possible in Romania only after the success of socialism in Western Europe. At the same meeting, a Committee of the Bucharest section was elected and tasked to work with militants from
Ploieşti,
Galaţi,
Câmpina, and
Botoşani towards calling a country-wide Congress. ==Activities==