The Irish Workers' Group (IWG) was a Marxistpolitical party in Ireland. It originated as the Irish Workers Union, which later called itself the Irish Communist Group,[1] and contained a variety of people who all considered themselves to be Marxists. Some were from an Irish Republican background, and some, including Gerry Lawless,[2] also became involved in Saor Éire.[1][3]
In time the group developed distinct Trotskyist and Maoist wings. The latter broke away to form the Irish Communist Organisation, which evolved into the British and Irish Communist Organisation. The former became the Irish Workers' Group, set
up by Lawless.[2] The IWG produced a paper Irish Militant and a theoretical journal An Solas/Workers' Republic.
^ abcSee International Trotskyism, 1929-1985 by Robert Jackson Alexander, Duke University Press, 1991 (pg. 570).
^ ab"In 1965 he [Lawless] set up the Irish Workers Group (IWG), the first Irish Trotskyist group since the 1940s. The IWG was small, but politically formative for a number of people who subsequently played significant roles in the Irish left – in particular, the leaders of People’s Democracy in the North.Maverick socialist whose charm won him friends in unlikely places (Obituary of Gerald Lawless). The Irish Times, 28 January 2012. Retrieved 3 February 2012.
^Sunday Independent, "Extreme Communists plan branch in Dublin", 9 May 1965 (pgs. 1,6).This article describes
the ICG as a London-based Maoist group and states that Gerald Lawless, Angela Clifford, Brendan Clifford,
Michael Murphy, Tom O'Leary, Bernard P. Canavan and Liam Eamon Daltun are ICG members.
^Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations by Peter Barberis, John McHugh, Mike Tyldesley. Continuum 2005 (pg. 232).