The Taiwan Revolutionary Party (TRP) was a left-wing nationalist party in Taiwan.
Taiwan Revolutionary Party 台灣革命黨 | |
---|---|
General Secretary | Cary S. Hung |
Founder | Cary S. Hung Hsu Hsin-liang |
Founded | January 1, 1985 |
Dissolved | March 23, 1987 |
Ideology | Taiwanese independence Left-wing nationalism Revolutionary socialism Anti-Chinese nationalism Factions: Marxism–Leninism[1] |
Political position | Left-wing to far-left |
The TRP sought to organize partisans to end the Kuomintang (KMT) rule, stating that it "promotes the independence and foundation of the Taiwanese people" (推動台灣人民獨立建國), and that "the Taiwanese revolution is a national liberation movement" (臺灣革命是一場民族解放運動). The TRP advocated for labor and other social movements and supported the liberation of Taiwanese nation. The TRR also referred to the PRC as "great power" (列強) rather than an anti-imperialist state. So they were against the Chinese Communist Party, although there was a Marxist–Leninist element.[2]
In May 1986, Hsu Hsin-liang defected from the Taiwan Revolutionary Party, saying, "If the KMT sincerely promotes democratization, it[clarification needed] has no intention of overthrowing the KMT regime in a revolutionary way".[citation needed] The TRP disbanded on March 23, 1987.[3][better source needed]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Mei-ling T. Wang (1999). The Dust that Never Settles; The Taiwan Independence Campaign and U.S.-China Relations. University Press of America. p. 256.
... the "Taiwan Revolutionary Party" that openly advocated a Marxist and Leninist approach to independence.
- ^ 台灣革命黨建黨委員會,1984,〈籌建台灣革命黨聲明書〉。《台灣與世界》 11:10-11
- ^ 洪哲勝,1987,〈台灣革命黨解散說明〉。(洪哲勝於1987年3月23日在記者招待會中所作有關台灣革命黨解散的說明,未出版)