Communist Party of Finland (1994)

The Communist Party of Finland (Finnish: Suomen Kommunistinen Puolue, abbr. SKP; Swedish: Finlands kommunistiska parti, abbr. FKP) or New Communist Party of Finland (Finnish: Uusi Suomen Kommunistinen Puolue, abbr. USKP; Swedish: Finlands nya kommunistiska parti, abbr. FNKP) is a political party in Finland. It was founded in the mid-1980s as Communist Party of Finland (Unity) (Finnish: Suomen Kommunistinen Puolue (yhtenäisyys), abbr. SKPy; Swedish: Finlands kommunistiska parti (enhet), abbr. FKP(e)) by the former opposition of the old Communist Party of Finland (1918–1992). SKP has never been represented in the Parliament of Finland, but the party has had local councillors in some municipalities, including the city councils of major cities such as Helsinki and Tampere. SKP claims 2,500 members.

Communist Party of Finland
Suomen Kommunistinen Puolue (Finnish)
Finlands kommunistiska parti (Swedish)
AbbreviationSKP
ChairpersonLiisa Taskinen
General SecretaryTiina Sandberg
Vice chairJiri Mäntysalo
Founded1984 (SKP organizations)
1986 (SKP Unity)
1994 (new SKP)
Registered1997
Split fromCommunist Party of Finland
HeadquartersViljatie 4 B, 00700 Helsinki
NewspaperTiedonantaja
Youth wingCommunist Youth of Finland
Membership (2013)c. 2,000–3,000[1]
IdeologyCommunism
Marxism-Leninism
Political positionFar-left
European affiliationParty of the European Left
International affiliationIMCWP[2]
Colors  White
  Red
  Crimson
Eduskunta
0 / 200
European Parliament
0 / 15
Municipalities
0 / 8,859
County seats
0 / 1,379
Website
www.skp.fi/english Edit this at Wikidata

The party has been officially registered since 1997. In the 1980s, when the opposition and the organizations it controlled were expelled from the SKP led by Arvo Aalto, the SKPy, however, chose not to register since they considered themselves the real SKP and claimed Aalto had illegally taken control of the party. The courts later ruled all the expulsions illegal.[citation needed]

History

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The opposition inside SKP

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The internal conflict of Finnish communists began in the mid-1960s, when the party led by the new chairman Aarne Saarinen, began to modernize the party line / outlook. A minority of the party cadre didn't accept this and they accused the SKP leadership of being revisionist. SKP didn't break up in the 1960s and the party was formally united until the mid-1980s. After the 20th party congress in 1984 things, however, changed as Arvo Aalto was elected chairperson, after which the opposition did not participate in (or was left out of) the SKP central committee. The opposition was also known as "the taistoists".

The founding of SKPy

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The central committee of the SKP expelled eight opposition district organizations from the party 13 October 1985. Also, 494 other basic organizations and 17 city or regional organizations were expelled 13 June 1986, which the expelled then dubbed "Black Friday". The opposition considered the actions to be against the law. They took the conflict to courts and because of minor technicalities Helsingin Hovioikeus court overruled SKP's decision 11 June 1987. SKP then re-expelled these same organizations in its 21st party congress (12–14 June 1987). However, a week before this happened, the newly founded SKP (Unity) held its own "21st" party congress. The ambiguities in the expelling process and the opposition's firm belief in its own cause gave it the justification it needed and they considered SKPy to be the real SKP. They claimed Aalto had illegally seized the party with "paper members". SKPy was never taken to the official party register of Finland as the party considered that to have been voluntary resignation and admission of SKPy not being the real SKP.

On 26 April 1986, a meeting of "the representatives of SKP organizations" was held in Tampere and those present elected a new central committee. The leader of the new central committee was Taisto Sinisalo, former vice chairman of the SKP and the most well-known figure of the opposition, who already had led Committee of SKP Organizations founded in November 1985. In the SKPy's 21st party congress Sinisalo was re-elected. Yrjö Hakanen and Marja-Liisa Löyttyjärvi became the vice chairmen while the former SKP chairman Jouko Kajanoja was elected party secretary. In his congress speech, Sinisalo told that the suffix "unity" meant "strong intention to gather all the forces of the SKP". The congress, however, also was heading to future and building of a new party, or "rebuilding" as they thought it. Before the name SKPy was adopted the party was known in media as the unity or Tiedonantaja group.

SKP and the Soviet Union

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SKPy was very committed to the Soviet Union and the political line of its Communist Party (CPSU), which was going through great changes during Gorbachev's time. SKPy supported perestroika but criticized those who claimed to have been "Gorbachevist" even before Gorbachev's time. SKPy claimed SKP to be anti-SU and tried to give the Finnish people as positive a picture as possible of that country. When SKP split the monetary support from Soviet Union was halted and, for example, the very profitable publishing deals of the SKP had gone to SKPy. Gorbachev's CPSU, however, had relations with both parties.

KTP splits from SKPy

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In the late 1970s, the opposition of SKP began to split as those supporting a more traditional version of Marxism–Leninism began to criticize opposition leaders. When it was decided that SKPy would not be registered as an official party, some communists protested and demanded registration. They thought SKPy was clinging to the unity slogan in a situation in which it no longer seemed realistic. In the 1987 party congress, these people were warned by the SKPy leadership but they chose to ignore the advice and oriented themselves toward founding a new party. Communist Workers' Party – For Peace and Socialism (Kommunistinen Työväenpuolue – Rauhan ja Sosialismin puolesta, KTP) was founded early in the year 1988. Founders of KTP felt to be securing the existence of a Marxist-Leninist party in Finland while criticizing SKPy for being revisionist and supporting Mikhail Gorbachev. The most famous figure in the new party was probably Markus Kainulainen, a longtime SKP district secretary of Uusimaa and a former MP.

The founding of Left Alliance

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Esko-Juhani Tennilä, a member of the Parliament of Finland, was elected new chairman of SKPy 22 October 1989 when Kajanoja decided to resign while strongly criticizing his comrades. Tennilä has later told he took the job to secure that the founding of a new united left party would not be sabotaged by his own party comrades many of which were quite critical of it. The Left Alliance (Vasemmistoliitto) was founded in spring 1990 and members of SKPy and its electoral front Deva also joined even though prejudices were very high on both sides at this point.

Dispute over double membership

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Members of the Left Alliance (LA) disliked that many of their members were also members of the SKPy. It was thus decided that SKPy members couldn't participate in the LA's electoral lists, even though they could be members. Because of this, Tennilä also had to quit his job as party chairman when joining LA group in parliament. Yrjö Hakanen was chosen Tennilä's successor. The dispute over double membership, as it was called, led to many SKPy members leaving LA and relations between the two parties got even colder. On the other hand, many former SKPy members were actively participating in LA.

 
A Communist Party of Finland tent during the 2015 World Village Festival.

The "new" SKP

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In its 1993 party congress (August 28–29), SKPy oriented towards founding a new officially registered communist party and drafting of a new party program. A new party logo was also introduced to mark renewal. It was suggested that a congress to continue SKP's work should be held and that happened next year (November 26–27). In the congress, the suffix "unity" was dropped from the name as SKPy now considered to consist of all those comrades who wanted to have an independent communist party. An athletic club was made the basis of new organization and renamed SKP. The decision split the party as some supporters would have preferred SKP to have a lesser role as "Marxist forum" of some kind. Leadership of Left Alliance was also not pleased with those plans. SKP would have wanted to stay inside LA but that wasn't possible and the parties split in the spring of 1994. SKP wasn't however "re-registered" until 1997. There was some confusion, as the new SKP didn't accept responsibility for debts of the old one, which had gone bankrupt.

Organization

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Chairpeople
1986–1988 Taisto Sinisalo [3]
1988–1989 Jouko Kajanoja [3]
1989–1990 Esko-Juhani Tennilä [3]
1990–2013 Yrjö Hakanen [3][4]
2013–2022 Juha-Pekka Väisänen [5]
2022–present Liisa Taskinen [6]
General secretaries
1986–1988 Jouko Kajanoja [3]
1988–1990 Yrjö Hakanen [3]
1990–2010 Arto Viitaniemi [3]
2010–2013 Juha-Pekka Väisänen [7]
2013–2016 Heikki Ketoharju [8]
2016–2018 Petra Packalén
2018–present Tiina Sandberg
Vice chairpeople
1986–1988 Yrjö Hakanen 1. vpj. [4]
1986–1987 Marita Virtanen 2. vpj. [3]
1987–1989 Marja-Liisa Löyttyjärvi
2. vpj.
[3]
1988–1989 Esko-Juhani Tennilä [3]
1990–1991 Kristiina Nieminen [3]
1991–? Kirsti Kasnio [3]
1994–2004 Riitta Tynjä
2004–2007 Kaija Kiessling
2007–2013 Lena Huldén
2013–2016 Emmi Tuomi [9]
2013–2016 Pauli Schradrin [9]
2016–2019 Miguel López
2016–2019 Susanna Rissanen
2019–2022 Liisa Taskinen
2020–2022 Mervi Grönfors
2022–present Jiri Mäntysalo

SKP has a nationwide organization consisting of 14 district organizations. The central committee has 41 members and the politburo 10. The organ of SKP is Tiedonantaja, which was founded in the 1960s. Tiedonantaja was also the organ of Deva during 1986–1990. The editor-in-chief is Marko Korvela since 2012. SKP also has some local papers.

As the SKPy considered itself to be the real SKP, it also had the same organizational structure. It was based on Leninist principle of democratic centralism and the party rules of 1958 (modified in 1978).

Deva – SKPy's electoral front

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While SKPy was never officially registered, its supporters founded an electoral front Democratic Alternative (Demokraattinen vaihtoehto, syllabic abbreviation: Deva). Those MPs of Finnish People's Democratic League (Suomen kansan demokraattinen liitto, abbr. SKDL, a front organization dominated by SKP) who were against expulsions were expelled from SKDL and they found the parliament group of Deva. Deva was SKPy's SKDL and it was supposed to attract some democratic allies. The small Socialist Workers Party (Sosialistinen työväenpuolue, STP) didn't join Deva but it had members on the DEVA list. Young supporters of SKPy and Deva founded Revolutionary Youth League (Vallankumouksellinen nuorisoliitto, VKN) which was Deva's youth organization. SKDL's Socialist Student League (Sosialistinen opiskelijaliitto, SOL) also joined. Deva was led by actress Kristiina Halkola.

In the 1987 parliamentary elections, Deva got 4.3% of votes and four MPs. In the 1988 presidential elections, Deva candidate Jouko Kajanoja received under 2% of the votes. Not even all members of SKPy supported Kajanoja, who was the party chairman. Deva was closed down in 1990 after Left Alliance was founded and most of its members joined the new party.

Party congresses

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21st party congress of the SKP(y) 5–7.6.1987 Espoo
Party congress of the SKP(y) (party conference) 27.8–28.8.1988 Turku
Party congress of the SKP(y) 18–19.5.1991 Lahti
Party congress of the SKP(y) (party conference) 28–29.8.1993 Helsinki
Party congress for the continuation of SKP 26–27.11.1994 Helsinki
Extraordinary party congress of the SKP 31.8.1996 Helsinki
Party congress of the SKP 6–7.6.1998 Helsinki
Party congress of the SKP 19–20.5.2001 Turku
Party congress of the SKP 15–16.5.2004 Vantaa
Party congress of the SKP 9–10.6.2007 Helsinki
Party congress of the SKP 15–16.5.2010 Vantaa
Party congress of the SKP 8–9.6.2013 Vantaa
Party congress of the SKP TBD 2016 TBD

Elections

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Members of the party SKP at the 2023 Helsinki Pride.

Electoral results

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Parliament

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Election year # of overall votes % of overall vote # of overall seats won +/-
as part of Democratic Alternative (Deva)
1987 122 181 4.2
4 / 200
new
as part of Left Alliance (Vasemmisto)
1991 274 639 10.1
19 / 200
new
1995 310 340 11.2
22 / 200
  3
as Communist Party of Finland (SKP)
1999 20,442 0.8
0 / 200
new
2003 21,079 0.8
0 / 200
  0
2007 18,277 0.7
0 / 200
  0
2011 9,232 0.3
0 / 200
  0
2015 7,529 0.3
0 / 200
  0
2019 4,305 0.14
0 / 200
  0
2023 3,044 0.10
0 / 200
  0

European Parliament

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Election year # of overall votes % of overall vote # of overall seats won +/-
as part of the Left Alliance (Vasemmisto)
1999 236,490 10.5
2 / 16
new
as Communist Party of Finland (SKP)
2004 10,134 0.6
0 / 14
new
2009 8,089 0.5
0 / 13
  0
2014 5,932 0.3
0 / 13
  0
Results
Municipal council
Year Councillors Votes
2000 14 10,460 0.47%
2004 16 12,844 0.53%
2008 9 13,986 0.55%
2012 9 11,174 0.45%
2017 2 7,600 0.3%
2021 0 2,073 0.1%

The SKP participates in parliamentary, European Parliament and municipal elections. The party has not put up candidates in recent presidential elections. No national representatives has been elected from the SKP lists but the party has a few local councillors. The SKP also participates in trade union and cooperative elections.

The SKP first took part in parliamentary elections in 1999. The party had electoral alliances with small parties of Muutos 99 coalition. It was the first time the Finnish electorate had an opportunity to vote for a list named Communist Party of Finland. In 2003, the vote-puller for the party was rock musician Kari Peitsamo (1,803 votes) and in 2007 rap artist Seppo "Steen1" Lampela (1,842).

In municipal elections, the SKP has had elected councillors in a total of ten different municipalities. The party has got its strongest support in Nokia, where there are three SKP councillors. The communists also briefly had three councillors in the Jyväskylä city council until early 2008.

The SKP has made electoral coalitions with other small parties, especially the Communist Workers Party (KTP). Communist League members were on SKP lists before they in 2006 founded the Workers' Party of Finland (STP). The SKP condemned the STP for scattering communist forces.[10] The parties have made some limited electoral cooperation since. The Left Alliance has never been interested in coalitions with the communists,[11] although the parties have had coalitions in few municipalities.

The former SKP chairperson Yrjö Hakanen has been an elected member of the S Group worker cooperative council since 1999. The SKP represented a joint list with the KTP.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Facts about CPF Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine (SKP 2010)
  2. ^ "20 IMCWP, Participants List". SolidNet. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Poliittinen kalenteri: SKP:n hajotuksesta puolueen uudelleenrekisteröintiin. in Kolme kirjainta. SKP:n yhdeksän vuosikymmentä Marxilainen foorumi 43 (TA-Tieto 2008), p. 154–164.
  4. ^ a b CV Archived 2011-07-20 at the Wayback Machine (www.yrjohakanen.fi 2008)
  5. ^ "Communists elect gay artist as new leader". Yle Uutiset. 9 June 2013.
  6. ^ "Liisa Taskinen has been elected as the new SKP chairperson". Suomen kommunistinen puolue (in Finnish). 22 June 2022. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
  7. ^ Eroon korruptiohallituksesta ja rahalla ostetuista kansanedustajista Archived 2010-08-05 at the Wayback Machine (SKP 2010)
  8. ^ "Juha-Pekka Väisänen SKP:n johtoon". Tiedonantaja. SKP. Archived from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
  9. ^ a b Ilpo, Pajunen (9 June 2013). "Käsitetaiteilija SKP:n johtoon". Yleisradio. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
  10. ^ KTP:stä erotetut hajottivat Vaihtoehtoväen (Tiedonantaja 22.9.2006)
  11. ^ Vasemmistoliitto torjui vaaliliitot SKP:n kanssa Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine (Tiedonantaja 11.8.2006)
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