Girish Mahajan (Editor)

National Workers' Party

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Founded
  
23 May 1920

Merged into
  
Labor Party

Dissolved
  
9 October 1937

Headquarters
  
Warsaw, Poland

Merger of
  
National Party of Workers National Workers' Union

Newspaper
  
Sprawa Robotnicza Głos Robotnika

The National Workers' Party (Polish: Narodowa Partia Robotnicza, NPR) was a political party in Poland.

Contents

History

The NPR was established in Warsaw on 23 May 1920 by a merger of the National Workers' Union and the National Party of Workers. Strongest in Greater Poland, Pomerania, Łódź and Silesia, it had around 150,000 members by the following year. It received around 5% of the vote in the 1922 elections, winning 18 seats in the Sejm and three in the Senate.

The party was a member of the Józef Piłsudski governments until 1926, but then split into two factions; one retained the NPR name, whilst the other became known as NPR-Left. The NPR-Left supported Piłsudski's Sanation regime, whilst the NPR, which had been reduced to around 80,000 members, opposed it. The 1928 elections saw the NPR's vote share fall to 2%. As a result, it was reduced to 11 seats in the Sejm and two in the Senate.

In 1930 the NPR joined the Centrolew alliance, which contested the 1930 elections. The alliance won 79 seats, of which the NPR took eight. It later became part of the Front Morges, and by 1934 only had around 20,000 members. The party boycotted the 1935 elections, and in 1937 it merged with the Polish Christian Democratic Party to form the Labor Party.

Ideology

The party's platform in 1921 called for social solidarity and a strong parliamentary democracy, and supported autonomy for national minorities except Jews.

References

National Workers' Party Wikipedia