National conventions of the Communist Party USA
Highest decision-making body and quadrennial event of the Communist Party USA
30th convention in Chicago
The Communist Party USA has held thirty-two official conventions including nomination conventions and conventions held while the party was known as the Workers Party of America , the Workers (Communist) Party of America and the Communist Political Association . There were also a number of congresses held by the earlier (though often underground) organizational predecessors of the party, including the Communist Labor Party of America , the United Communist Party and two groups known as the Communist Party of America . The Communist Party's 31st National Convention took place in Chicago from June 13 to 15 in 2019.[ 1]
Left-wing conference
A resolution for a national conference of left leaning organizations within the Socialist Party of America had been adopted by the Boston local in May 1919 and endorsed by a number of other locals. Admittance as left-wing was defined as endorsement of the left-wing program adopted by the Left Wing Section of Greater New York.[ 2] When the conference met the delegates divided between a group around the periodical The Revolutionary Age that wanted to infiltrate the Socialist Party's convention in Chicago that September and those who wished to create a Communist Party immediately. The minority withdrew and formed the National Organization Committee for a Communist Party. This group was mainly made up of the suspended language federations and the Socialist Party of Michigan .
The majority formed a national left-wing council and attempted to arrange a take over of the Socialist Party's convention. However, by late August the majority decided to forgo this plan and joined with the National Organization Committee to create a new party at a convention in Chicago. A minority, led by Ben Gitlow and John Reed split with the majority and attempted to infiltrate the Socialist Party convention alone.[ 3]
Communist Party of America (1919)
Communist Labor Party/United Communist Party
Communist Party of America (1921)
Convention
City
Date
Notes
Joint Unity
Woodstock, New York
May 15–28, 1921
CPA and UCP merge
Second
Bridgman, Michigan
August 17–22, 1922
Raided by the Justice Department Reds in America; the present status of the revolutionary movement in the U. S. based on documents seized by the authorities in the raid upon the convention of the Communist party at Bridgman, Mich., Aug. 22, 1922, together with descriptions of numerous connections and associations of the Communists among the Radicals, Progressives, and Pinks
Third
New York
April 7, 1923
Dissolves underground CPA into aboveground Workers Party of America
Workers Party of America
Convention
City
Date
Notes
Founding
New York
December 23–26, 1921
Merges the Workers Council , the CPAs aboveground American Labor Alliance and other groups to form the Workers Party of America Program and constitution, Workers Party of America, adopted at national convention, New York City, December 24, 25, 26, 1921
Second
New York
December 24–26, 1922
Constitution of the Workers Party of America, as amended by the Second National Convention, New York December 24-25 and 26, 1922
Third
Chicago
December 30, 1923 – January 2, 1924
The second year of the Workers Party of America report of the Central Executive Committee to the Third National Convention held in Chicago, Ill., Dec. 30, 31, 1923 and Jan. 1, 2, 1924 : theses, program, resolutions . Program and constitution
Nominating
Chicago
July 10, 1924
Nominates William Z. Foster for President and Benjamin Gitlow for Vice President
Workers (Communist) Party of America
Communist Party USA
Convention
City
Date
Notes
Sixth
New York
March 4–10, 1929
Adopts current name. Lovestone faction wins majority, but replaced by Gitlow as Executive Secretary by the Comintern
Seventh
New York
June 21–25, 1930
Elects Earl Browder General Secretary
Nominating
Chicago
May 28–29, 1932
Nominates William Z. Foster for President and James Ford for Vice President
Eighth
Cleveland
April 2–8, 1934
Report of the Central Committee to the Eighth Convention of the Communist Party of the USA, Held in Cleveland, Ohio, April 2–8, 1934.
Ninth
New York
June 24–28, 1936
Report of the Central Committee to the ninth National Convention of the Communist Party of the U.S.A. ; Democracy or Fascism report of the Central Committee to the ninth National Convention of the Communist Party of U.S.A., and speech in reply to discussion ; Resolutions: ninth convention of the Communist Party of the U.S.A.
Tenth
New York
May 27–31, 1938
Report to the Tenth National Convention of the Communist Party on Behalf of the Central Committee. ; Resolutions of the 10th convention of the Communist Party, U.S.A.
Eleventh
New York
May 30–June 2, 1940
Special
New York
November 16, 1940
Twelfth
New York
May 20–22, 1944
Changes name to Communist Political Association ; The road ahead to victory and lasting peace,
Thirteenth
New York
July 26–28, 1945
Readopts current name; removes Browder as General Secretary, replaced by Eugene Dennis
Fourteenth
New York
August 2–6, 1948
Endorses Henry Agard Wallace for President; Eugene Dennis indicts the Wall Street conspirators.
Fifteenth
New York
December 28–30, 1950
What it means to be a Communist ; On Guard against Browderism, Titoism, Trotskyism.
Sixteenth
New York
February 9–12, 1957
Seventeenth
New York
December 10–13, 1959
Eighteenth
New York
June 22–26, 1966
Nineteenth
New York
April 30 – May 4, 1969
Twentieth
New York
February 18–21, 1972
Toward Chicano liberation; the Communist Party position.
Twenty-first
Chicago
June 26–29, 1975
Twenty-second
Detroit
August 23–26, 1979
Resolution on the path to native American liberation : adopted at the 22nd Convention, CPUSA, August 23-26, 1979.
Twenty-third
Cleveland
November 10–13, 1983
Twenty-fourth
Chicago
August 13–16, 1987
Twenty-fifth
Cleveland
December 5–8, 1991
First convention after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the failed August coup
Twenty-sixth
Cleveland
March 1–3, 1996
First convention after the dissolution of the Soviet Union
Twenty-seventh
Milwaukee
July 6–8, 2001
First convention after the death of Gus Hall ; "Bill of Rights Socialism" becomes policy; archived website
Twenty-eighth
Chicago
July 1–3, 2005
Archived web page
Twenty-ninth
New York
May 21–23, 2010
Convention web page
Thirtieth
Chicago
June 13–15, 2014
Convention web page
Thirty-first
Chicago
June 21-23, 2019
Convention web page
Thirty-second
Chicago
June 7-9, 2024
Convention web page
William Z. Foster, History of the Communist Party of the United States . New York: International Publishers, 1952. Appendix A. Gives starting dates of all conventions up to 1951.
See also
External links
Nominees
Presidential Vice Presidential
Leaders Prominent members Litigation State parties
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