• Home
  • About Us
  • Programme
  • Constitution
  • Leadership
  • Elections
  • Contact Us
ACCESSIBILITY
Links
  • Press Releases
  • Documents
    • CC Reports
    • Party Congress
    • Other Documents
  • Issues
    • Dalits
    • Tribals
    • Minorities
    • Others
  • Campaigns
    • Price Rise & Food Security
  • Journals
    • People's Democracy
    • The Marxist
  • Publications
    • LeftWord
    • Other Publications
  • Dailies
    • Deshabhimani
    • Desharkatha
    • Ganashakti
    • Prajashakti
    • Theekkathir
  • Left View
    • Nuclear Deal
    • Others

Video thumbnail. Click to play
United Front Politics:  Pramode Dasgupta Lecture: 13/07/2010, Kolkata

About Us

 1st Polit Bureau

The CPI(M) was formed at the Seventh Congress of the Communist Party of India held in Calcutta from October 31 to November 7, 1964. The CPI(M) was born in the struggle against revisionism and sectarianism in the communist movement at the international and national level, in order to defend the scientific and revolutionary tenets of Marxism-Leninism and its appropriate application in the concrete Indian conditions. The CPI(M) combines the fine heritage of the anti-imperialist struggle and the revolutionary legacy of the undivided Communist Party which was founded in 1920. Over the years, the Party has emerged as the foremost Left force in the country.

The CPI(M) has grown steadily since its formation in 1964. The membership of the Party, which was 118,683 at the time of its formation, has grown to 10,42,287 in 2009. The Party has sought to independently apply Marxism-Leninism to Indian conditions and to work out the strategy and tactics for a people's democratic revolution, which can transform the lives of the Indian people. The CPI(M) is engaged in bringing about this basic transformation by carrying out a programme to end imperialist, big bourgeois and landlord exploitation. The CPI(M) as the leading Left party is committed to build a Left and democratic front which can present a real alternative to the existing bourgeois-landlord policies.

In the last few elections, contesting on an average 15 percent of the total seats, the CPI(M) has been getting around 5-6 percent of the votes. (India follows the “first past the post” system and not proportional representation) In the 2009 elections to the Lok Sabha (lower house of the Indian Parliament) the CPI(M) won 16 seats. The Lower House of Parliament has a strength of 543. In the Rajya Sabha (Upper House) the CPI(M) has 15 members.

The CPI(M) is heading one state government. The Left Front government headed by the CPI(M) was  uninterruptedly in power in West Bengal since 1977 upto May 2011. In Kerala, it has been in and out of office. Currently, the Left Democratic Front headed by the CPI(M) is in oppositon. In Tripura, the CPI(M) was first elected to office in 1977. Though it lost the subsequent election due to largescale rigging, in all elections since 1988 it has been voted to office. Though uneven, the CPI(M) has representation in nine state legislative assemblies.

Latest Updates

Amendments: Party Constitution

Draft Res. Ideological Issues

Draft Pol. Res: 20th Congress

Oppose FDI In Retail

Note Submitted at NIC Meeting

Memo to PM by Bengal LF

Lok Pal: Govt. Should Respond

Booklet Against Corruption

Pamphlet Against Corruption

CPI(M) Stand on Lokpal

Bengal: Post-Poll Violence

Memo Submitted to PM

Attack on Democratic Rights

Killings & Arson

446 Martyrs Since May 16 2009

Maoist Killings In West Bengal

Booklet on Maoist  Violence

TMC-Maoist Nexus

Defeat Politics of Violence

Updates in Hindi
Review of Assembly Elections
Solidarity With West Bengal
Extended CC Pol. Resolution
Maovadi Hinsa Ko Tukravo
Extended CC Meeting
Inaugural Speech
Martyrs Resolution
Condolence Resolution
Political  Resolution
Political Resolution (Hindi)
Bengal/Kerala Elections
View Webcast
Photos of the Meeting
MarxistIndia
Syndicate content
 
Feb. 22 2012

  Privacy Policy | Sitemap
We Support Free Software, Site best viewed with Mozilla Firefox.

spacer