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WIKIPEDIA ARTICLE This article is about the party founded by Jose Maria Sison in 1968. For the original Communist Party of the Philippines founded in 1930, see Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas-1930 (Partido_Komunista_ng_Pilipinas-1930). The Communist Party of the Philippines (Filipino (Filipino_language): Partido Communist Party of the Philippines Komunista ng Pilipinas) is a revolutionary organization Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (Revolutionary_movement) and the leading communist party (Communist_party) in the Philippines (Philippines), formed by Jose Maria Sison (Jose_Maria_Sison) on December 26, 1968. It is considered a terrorist group (List_of_designated_terrorist_groups) by current Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte (Rodrigo_Duterte). It has been fighting a guerrilla war (Guerrilla_warfare) against the state since the late 1960s. Initially numbering to just around 500 (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_the_Communist_Party_of_the_Philippines.svg) combatants, the communist members grew exponentially due to the declaration Founded December 26, 1968 Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas-1930 (Partido_Komunista_ng_Pilipinasand imposition of martial law (Martial_law) by former president Ferdinand Split from 1930) Newspaper Ang Bayan (Ang_Bayan) Marcos (Ferdinand_Marcos) during much of his 21-year rule. By the end of the Armed wing (Military) New People's Army (New_People%27s_Army) Marcos dictatorship, the communist combatants grew to more than 10,000 Youth wing (Youth_wing) Kabataang Makabayan (Kabataang_Makabayan) Popular front National Democratic Front (National_Democratic_Front_(Philippines)) fighters, making it hard for the next administrations to safeguard nonCommunism (Communism) Ideology communists in the rural provinces. Former president Corazon Aquino Marxism–Leninism–Maoism (List_of_political_ideologies) (Marxism%E2%80%93Leninism%E2%80%93Maoism) (Corazon_Aquino) noted during her speech in the US Congress that Political position Far-left (Far-left_politics) communism grows by the wrong means it is stifled, which was largely used by (Political_spectrum) National Democracy Movement numerous governments as a lesson in dealing with communist insurgencies. By National affiliation (National_Democracy_Movement_(Philippines)) Colours Red (Red) 2016, under Noynoy Aquino (Noynoy_Aquino), the communist members Anthem "Pandaigdigang Awit ng mga Manggagawa" (The_Internationale) dwindled to around 500 after three decades of government operations. However, Party flag their numbers rose again to around 1,000 after the declaration of martial rule in Mindanao (Mindanao) by president Rodrigo Duterte (Rodrigo_Duterte) in 2017. The communist party has remained an underground political organization and has been operating in a clandestine manner since its founding. It aims to overthrow the Philippine government (Government_of_the_Philippines) through armed revolution, though at some point in time, it has engaged with the (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_the_Communist_Party_of_the_Philippines_(alternative_II).svg) Politics of Philippines (Politics_of_Philippines) government's proposal for integration. The negotiations, however, would always break down within a year, effectively resuming the rebellion. The party has direct Political parties (List_of_political_parties_in_Philippines) leadership over the New People's Army (New_People%27s_Army), which Elections (Elections_in_Philippines) serves as its armed wing, and the National Democratic Front (National_Democratic_Front_(Philippines)).
Communist parties (List_of_communist_parties)
Main article: First Great Rectification Movement (First_Great_Rectification_Movement) The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) was reestablished on December 26, 1968, coinciding with the 75th birthday of Mao Zedong (Mao_Zedong), the Chinese communist leader of the People's Republic of China (People%27s_Republic_of_China) (PRC).
(http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hammer_and_sickle_red_on_transparent.svg)
Africa Algeria (Algerian_Party_for_Democracy_and_Socialism) Benin (Communist_Party_of_Benin) Burkina Faso (Voltaic_Revolutionary_Communist_Party)
Amado Guerrero, then a central committee member of Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (Partido_Komunista_ng_Pilipinas) or PKP-1930, lead the reestablishment of the party. Jose Maria Sison (Jose_Maria_Sison), allegedly the man behind the nom de guerre (Nom_de_guerre) Amado Guerrero, confirmed its birth at Barangay Dulacac in the tri-boundary of Alaminos (Alaminos,_Pangasinan), Bani (Bani,_Pangasinan) and Mabini (Mabini,_Pangasinan) in the province of Pangasinan (Pangasinan). This is where the CPP's "Congress of Reestablishment" was held on December 26, 1968, at a hut near the house of the Navarettes, the parents-in-law of Arthur Garcia, one of the CPP founders.
Egypt (Egyptian_Communist_Party) Lesotho (Communist_Party_of_Lesotho) Libya (Libyan_Communist_Party) Madagascar (Congress_Party_for_the_Independence_of_Madagascar) Namibia (Communist_Party_of_Namibia_(2009)) Morocco (Democratic_Way) Réunion (Communist_Party_of_R%C3%A9union) Senegal (Party_of_Independence_and_Labour) South Africa (South_African_Communist_Party) South Sudan (Communist_Party_of_South_Sudan) Sudan (Sudanese_Communist_Party) Swaziland (Swaziland_Communist_Party) Tunisia (Workers%27_Party_(Tunisia))
Jose Maria Sison (Jose_Maria_Sison) is the central figure behind the CPP and its formation. According to Party documents, in the 1960s, a massive leftist unrest called First Quarter Storm (First_Quarter_Storm) occurred in the country to protest against the government policies, graft and corruption and decline of the economy during the presidency of Ferdinand Marcos (Ferdinand_Marcos). The unrest was also inspired by the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (Great_Proletarian_Cultural_Revolution), the Vietnam War (Vietnam_War) and other revolutionary struggles abroad against United States (United_States) imperialist aggression. One of the leaders of this leftist movement was Jose Maria Sison (Jose_Maria_Sison), a founder of Kabataang Makabayan (Kabataang_Makabayan). He was soon recruited to be a member of Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (Partido_Komunista_ng_Pilipinas) (PKP-1930). During that time the new PKP members, independently from the incumbent PKP members, were conducting clandestine theoretical and political education on Marxism–Leninism (Marxism%E2%80%93Leninism), with special attention dedicated to workers, peasants and youth. This would eventually lead to a significant split between the PKP members. The new members advocated to resume what they regarded as the unfinished armed revolution against foreign and feudal domination, referring to the legacy and de facto continuation of the Philippine–American War (Philippine%E2%80%93American_War) of 1899, combat subjectivism and opportunism in the history of the old merger party and fight modern revisionism then being promoted by the Soviet Union (Soviet_Union). This ideology was the basis for the split from the PKP-1930, the (re)creation of the CPP, and the subsequent "Congress of Reestablishment."
Ivory Coast (Revolutionary_Communist_Party_of_C%C3%B4te_d%27Ivoire) Americas Argentina PCA (Communist_Party_of_Argentina) PCCE (Communist_Party_of_Argentina_(Extraordinary_Congress)) PCRA (Revolutionary_Communist_Party_of_Argentina) Bolivia (Communist_Party_of_Bolivia) Brazil PCdoB (Communist_Party_of_Brazil) PCB (Brazilian_Communist_Party) PCR (Revolutionary_Communist_Party_(Brazil)) Canada (Socialism_in_Canada) CPoC (Communist_Party_of_Canada) MLPoC (Communist_Party_of_Canada_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)) Chile PCCh (Communist_Party_of_Chile) PC(AP) (Chilean_Communist_Party_(Proletarian_Action)) Colombia PCC (Colombian_Communist_Party) PC de C (M-L) (Communist_Party_of_Colombia_(Marxist-Leninist)) Cuba (Communist_Party_of_Cuba) Dominican Republic (Communist_Party_of_Labor) Ecuador PCE (Communist_Party_of_Ecuador) PCMLE (Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist_Communist_Party_of_Ecuador) Mexico PC (Communist_Party_of_Mexico_(2011)) PPS (Popular_Socialist_Party_(Mexico)) PPSM (Popular_Socialist_Party_of_Mexico) PCMML (Communist_Party_of_Mexico_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)) Panama PPP (People%27s_Party_of_Panama)
Reestablishment Congress
PC(ml)P (Communist_Party_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)_of_Panama)
Irreconcilable differences occurred between the new party members with the leadership of the PKP under Jose Lava (Jose_Lava). Sison, was tasked by PKP to conduct a review of the party history of the old merger party.
Paraguay (Paraguayan_Communist_Party) Peru (Communism_in_Peru) PCP (Peruvian_Communist_Party) PCdelP–PR (Communist_Party_of_Peru_%E2%80%93_Red_Fatherland) Uruguay (Communist_Party_of_Uruguay)
However, on his report, leaders of the PKP headed by Jesus Lava (Jesus_Lava) disagreed with Sison's findings that criticized the major errors of the PKP which caused the almost total destruction of the revolutionary movement in the 1950s. A sharp division and struggle developed between them in ideological and political issues, Sison and his group led the reestablishment of the party after he and his colleagues bolted out from the PKP. Jesus Lava (Jesus_Lava), the General Secretary of the PKP, was labelled a "counterrevolutionary revisionist", and the new leaders also attacked what they called "the gangster clique" of Pedro Taruc-Sumulong in the old people's army of the Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan (HMB), remnant of the Hukbalahap (Hukbalahap) in Central Luzon.
United States CPUSA (Communist_Party_USA) WWP (Workers_World_Party) PSL (Party_for_Socialism_and_Liberation) RCPUSA (Revolutionary_Communist_Party,_USA) APL (American_Party_of_Labor) Venezuela PCV (Communist_Party_of_Venezuela) PCMLV (Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist_Communist_Party_of_Venezuela)
Asia Bahrain (National_Liberation_Front_%E2%80%93_Bahrain) Bangladesh CPB (Communist_Party_of_Bangladesh)
The Party issued the document of rectification, "Rectify Errors and Rebuild the Party," and promulgated the Programme for a People's Democratic Revolution and the new Party Constitution in its Congress of Reestablishment. The two communist parties deviation was clear ideologically when the Lava's PKP was supporting the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Communist_Party_of_the_Soviet_Union) whom Sison's group considered revisionist while the latter supported the line of the Chinese Communist Party (Chinese_Communist_Party).
WPB (Workers_Party_of_Bangladesh) Burma (Communist_Party_of_Burma) China (PRC) (Communist_Party_of_China) India (Communism_in_India) CPI (Communist_Party_of_India) CPI(M) (Communist_Party_of_India_(Marxist)) CPI(Mst) (Communist_Party_of_India_(Maoist)) SUCI(C) (Socialist_Unity_Centre_of_India_(Communist)) MCPM (Maoist_Communist_Party_of_Manipur) Iran
The reestablishment was centered on a comprehensive and thoroughgoing criticism and repudiation of and of the leadership of the Lavas in Manila as well as the Taruc-Sumulong grouping which had usurped authority over remnants of the HMB.
CPI (Communist_Party_of_Iran) Tudeh (Tudeh_Party_of_Iran) Toufan (Labour_Party_of_Iran) Iraq (Iraqi_Communist_Party) Israel (Maki_(political_party))
The party congress was attended by 12 members, namely Jose Maria Sison, Monico Atienza, Rey Casipe, Leoncio Co, Manuel Collantes, Arthur Garcia, Herminihildo Garcia, Ruben Guevara, Art Pangilinan, Nilo Tayag, Fernando Tayag at Ibarra Tubianosa. Jose Luneta was counted as the 13th member. He was elected in the Central Committee in absentia, since he was still in China.
Japan (Japanese_Communist_Party) Jordan (Jordanian_Communist_Party) Kazakhstan CPK (Communist_Party_of_Kazakhstan) CPPK (Communist_People%27s_Party_of_Kazakhstan) Kyrgyzstan (Communist_Party_of_Kyrgyzstan) Laos (Lao_People%27s_Revolutionary_Party) Lebanon (Lebanese_Communist_Party)
Soon after its reestablishment, the Party linked up with the other cadres and commanders of the HMB and engaged them in ideological and political studies, mass work and politico-military training. On March 29, 1969, the New People's Army (New_People%27s_Army) was established and on April 24, 1973 the National Democratic Front (Philippines) (National_Democratic_Front_(Philippines)).
Nepal CPN–UML (Communist_Party_of_Nepal_(Unified_Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)) CPN(M-C) (Communist_Party_of_Nepal_(Maoist-Centre)) CPN(M-L) (Communist_Party_of_Nepal_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)_(2002)) NWPP (Nepal_Workers_Peasants_Party) CPN (United) (Communist_Party_of_Nepal_(United)) CPN-M (Communist_Party_of_Nepal%E2%80%94Maoist) CPN (M) (Communist_Party_of_Nepal_(Maoist)(2014))
Afterwards, the CPP launched the "protracted people's war (People%27s_war)" a strategical line developed by Mao Zedong during the phase of guerrilla warfare (Guerrilla_warfare) of the Communist Party of China (Communist_Party_of_China). The eventual objective is to install a "people’s revolutionary government" via a two-stages revolution: National Democratic Revolution followed by a Socialist Revolution.
CPN (Communist_Party_of_Nepal_(2013)) CPN (Marxist) (Communist_Party_of_Nepal_(Marxist)_(2006)) Pakistan (Communist_Party_of_Pakistan) Palestine (Palestinian_People%27s_Party) Philippines CPP PKP-1930 (PKP-1930) Sri Lanka (Communist_Party_of_Sri_Lanka)
The reestablishment was considered by the party as the First Great Rectification Movement, criticizing the errors of the old Party. The CPP adheres to Marxism-Leninism-Maoism (MarxismLeninism-Maoism) as its guiding ideology in analyzing and summing up the experience of the party and its creative application to the concrete conditions in the Philippines in fighting US imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism. It considers Maoism (Marxism-Leninism-Maoism) as the highest development of Marxism-Leninism.
Syria
It considers the Philippine society as semicolonial (Semicolonial) and semifeudal (Semifeudal), the character of the present revolution as national democratic of the new type (led by the proletariat), the motive forces, the targets, the strategy and tactics and the socialist perspective of the Philippine revolution.
Cambodia
SCP (Bakdash) (Syrian_Communist_Party_(Bakdash)) SCP (Unified) (Syrian_Communist_Party_(Unified)) Tajikistan (Communist_Party_of_Tajikistan) Taiwan TCP (Taiwan_Communist_Party) CPRC (Communist_Party_of_the_Republic_of_China) Vietnam (Communist_Party_of_Vietnam) Former parties
KPK (Cambodian_People%27s_Party) KPRP (Kampuchean_People%27s_Revolutionary_Party) Indonesia (Communist_Party_of_Indonesia) Korea (Communist_Party_of_Korea) Malaya and Singapore (Malayan_Communist_Party) Marxist–Leninist (Communist_Party_of_Malaya/Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)
Despite the arrests of CPP Central Committee members in 1973, 1974, 1976 and 1977, the erstwhile skeletal regional Party organizations gained flesh and muscle from the growth of the armed revolutionary movement and the urban underground.
Revolutionary Faction (Communist_Party_of_Malaya/Revolutionary_Faction) Philippines (Partido_Komunista_ng_Pilipinas-1930) Saudi Arabia (Communist_Party_in_Saudi_Arabia) Sarawak (North_Kalimantan_Communist_Party) Taiwan (Taiwanese_Communist_Party) Thailand (Communist_Party_of_Thailand)
Main article: Second Great Rectification Movement (Second_Great_Rectification_Movement) In the 10th plenum of the CPP, the Party engaged in a "second rectification movement" that reviewed and correct the erroneous errors that created a havoc on the revolutionary movement for more than a decade since its founding in 1968.
Europe Albania (Communist_Party_of_Albania_(1991)) Armenia (Armenian_Communist_Party) Austria KPÖ (Communist_Party_of_Austria) PdA (Party_of_Labour_of_Austria) KI (Communist_Initiative)
Armando Liwanag, chairman of CPP issued a document Reaffirm Our Basic Principles and Carry the Revolution Forward that repudiated the deviations of leading party cadres in the country that resulted to the gravest setbacks and destruction to the Party and the revolutionary movement, first in one major island and subsequently on a nationwide scale.
Azerbaijan (Azerbaijan_Communist_Party_(1993)) Belarus (Communist_Party_of_Belarus) Belgium PvdA/PTB (Workers%27_Party_of_Belgium) KP (Communist_Party_(Flanders)) PC (Communist_Party_(Wallonia))
This erroneous policies has caused setbacks through a process of self-constriction and has inflicted unprecedentedly heavy losses in the strength of the Party and the people's army and gross reductions of mass base.
Bosnia and Herzegovina (Workers%27_Communist_Party_of_Bosnia_and_Herzegovina) Bulgaria KPB (Communist_Party_of_Bulgaria) SKB (Union_of_Communists_in_Bulgaria) Croatia (Socialist_Labour_Party_of_Croatia)
With the criticism and debates that ensued between the leading party cadres resulted to the expulsion of advocates of "left and right opportunism" notably forming the so-called "rejectionists" and "reaffirmist" factions.
Cyprus (Progressive_Party_of_Working_People) Czech Republic (Communist_Party_of_Bohemia_and_Moravia) Denmark DKP (Communist_Party_of_Denmark) KPiD (Communist_Party_in_Denmark)
The rejectionist banners the line of "strategic counteroffensive", "regularization", and combining military adventurism with insurrectionism from 1980 onward that overlapped with reaffirmist that upholds the correct revolutionary of the people's war.
APK (Workers%27_Communist_Party_(Denmark)) Estonia (Communist_Party_of_Estonia_(1990)) Finland (Communist_Party_of_Finland_(1994)) France PCF (French_Communist_Party)
The rectification movement was aimed to defeat the wrong line in a comprehensive and thoroughgoing manner and strengthen the Party ideologically, politically and organizationally. Thus, the rectification movement came into force in 1992, especially after the Plenum of the Central Committee approved the rectification documents.
PCOF (Workers%27_Communist_Party_of_France) PRCF (Pole_of_Communist_Revival_in_France) Georgia (United_Communist_Party_of_Georgia) Germany KPD (Communist_Party_of_Germany_(1990)) DKP (German_Communist_Party) MLPD (Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist_Party_of_Germany)
Not all CPP cadres abided by the "Reaffirm" document penned by Liwanag. Those who affirmed the Maoist orthodoxy was called the "Reaffirmists", or RA, while those who rejected the document were called "Rejectionists" or RJ. In July 1993, the Komiteng Rehiyon ng Manila-Rizal (KRMR), one of the Rejectionists, declared its autonomy from the central leadership:
Greece (Communist_Party_of_Greece) (Communist_Organization_of_Greece) (Renewing_Communist_Ecological_Left) Anasintaxi (Movement_for_the_Reorganization_of_the_Communist_Party_of_Greece_1918-1955) Hungary (Hungarian_Workers%27_Party) Ireland
From this day on, we sever our ties with the illegal and absolutist circle that passes itself off as the 'Central Committee' of the CPP...It is a principled declaration of independence...not a secession from the entire Party organization.
CPI (Communist_Party_of_Ireland) WPI (Workers%27_Party_of_Ireland) Italy PC (Communist_Party_(Italy)) PRC (Communist_Refoundation_Party) PMLI (Italian_Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist_Party) CP (Communist_Platform_(Italy)) Latvia (Socialist_Party_of_Latvia)
— CPP Manila-Rizal
Lithuania (Socialist_People%27s_Front)
Within a few months, several of the Party's regional formations and bureaus followed suit: Central Mindanao, Western Mindanao, Negros and Central Visayas, the Visayas Commission (VisCom) staff and New People's Army (New_People%27s_Army) units under its control, the National Peasant Secretariat, the United Front Commission and the Home Bureau and Western Europe committee.
Luxembourg (Communist_Party_of_Luxembourg)
The KRMR, VisCom and the Central and Western Mindanao regional committees will later merge to form the Rebolusyonaryong Partido ng Manggagawa - Pilipinas (Revolutionary_Workers%27_Party_(Philippines)) (RPM-P) in 1998. However the Mindanao-based cadres will later leave the RPM-P after a debate regarding the RPM-P's signing of a peace pact with the government then led by Joseph Estrada (Joseph_Estrada), they formed the Rebolusyonaryong Partido ng Manggagawa Mindanao (RPM-M) which joined the Fourth International (Fourth_International_(postreunification)) in 2003.
Portugal
Malta (Communist_Party_of_Malta) Moldova (Party_of_Communists_of_the_Republic_of_Moldova) Netherlands (New_Communist_Party_of_the_Netherlands) Norway NKP (Communist_Party_of_Norway) MLGR (Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist_Group_Revolution) Poland (Polish_Communist_Party_(2002)) PCP (Portuguese_Communist_Party) PCTP (Portuguese_Workers%27_Communist_Party) Romania (Communist_Party_(Nepeceri%C8%99ti)) Russia KR (Communists_of_Russia) CPRF (Communist_Party_of_the_Russian_Federation) CPSJ (Communist_Party_of_Social_Justice) PDP (Party_of_the_Dictatorship_of_the_Proletariat) RCWP-CPSU (Russian_Communist_Workers%27_Party_of_the_Communist_Party_of_the_Soviet_Union) RMP (Russian_Maoist_Party) RULF (Russian_United_Labour_Front)
The KRMR faction led by Filemon Lagman (Filemon_Lagman) was earlier expelled from the RPM-P due to his "liquidationist" attitude and refusal to help in Party preparations and functions. He will then form the Partido ng Manggagawang Pilipino (PMP), however his closest associates, led by Sonny Melencio, bolted to form the legal political party Sosyalistang Partido ng Paggawa (SPP) in 1998.
San Marino (Sammarinese_Communist_Refoundation) Serbia (New_Communist_Party_of_Yugoslavia) Slovakia (Communist_Party_of_Slovakia) Spain PCE (Communist_Party_of_Spain) PCC (Party_of_the_Communists_of_Catalonia) PCPE (Communist_Party_of_the_Peoples_of_Spain)
The United Front Commission cadres formed the Partido Proletaryo Demokratiko (PPD) which will then merge with Lagman's PMP and Melencio's SPP to give rise to the Partido ng Manggagawang Pilipino-Pinagsanib (PMP-Pinagsanib). But in 2007 another reported split occurred due to the rift between Lagman and Melencio supporters.
PCE (M-L) (Communist_Party_of_Spain_(Marxist-Leninist)) Sweden KP (Communist_Party_(Sweden)) SKP (Communist_Party_of_Sweden_(1995)) Switzerland (Swiss_Party_of_Labour) Turkey DHKP/C (Revolutionary_People%27s_Liberation_Party%E2%80%93Front)
In 1997 several cadres from the Central Luzon committee was accused of sowing factionalism and "civilianization" of the NPA units. These cadres earlier supported the "Reaffirm" document by CPP Chairman Armando Liwanag and would attempt to appeal for the Chairman's support. The expected support did not materialize though, and the cadres formed the (MLPP) and organized the armed wing (RHB). The MLPP-RHB maintains the national-democratic framework of social analysis by the CPP, although slightly modified. They also maintain the strategy of people's war, but are more akin to Vietnamese and Nepalese revolutionary strategies.
EMEP (Labour_Party_(Turkey)) HTKP (People%27s_Communist_Party_of_Turkey) KDH/L (Communist_Revolution_Movement/Leninist_(Turkey)) KKP (Communist_Party_of_Kurdistan) TKP (Communist_Party_(Turkey,_2014)) MKP (Maoist_Communist_Party_(Turkey)) MLKP (Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist_Communist_Party_(Turkey/Northern_Kurdistan)) TDKP (Revolutionary_Communist_Party_of_Turkey) TKEP (Communist_Labour_Party_of_Turkey) TKEP/L (Communist_Labour_Party_of_Turkey/Leninist) TKIP (Communist_Workers_Party_of_Turkey) TKP/ML (Communist_Party_of_Turkey/Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)
It participates in the Maoist International Conference of Marxist–Leninist Parties and Organizations (International_Conference_of_Marxist-
Ukraine KPU (Communist_Party_of_Ukraine) SKU (Union_of_Communists_of_Ukraine) United Kingdom CPB (Communist_Party_of_Britain) CPB-ML (Communist_Party_of_Britain_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)) CPGB-ML (Communist_Party_of_Great_Britain_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)) CPGB-PCC (Communist_Party_of_Great_Britain_(Provisional_Central_Committee)) CPS (Communist_Party_of_Scotland) NCPB (New_Communist_Party_of_Britain) RCG (Revolutionary_Communist_Group_(UK)) RCPB-ML (Revolutionary_Communist_Party_of_Britain_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)) Former parties Albania (Party_of_Labour_of_Albania) Czechoslovakia (Communist_Party_of_Czechoslovakia) East Germany (Socialist_Unity_Party_of_Germany) Italy PCI (Italian_Communist_Party) PdCI (Party_of_Italian_Communists) Netherlands (Communist_Party_of_the_Netherlands) Poland (Polish_United_Workers%27_Party) Romania (Romanian_Communist_Party) Soviet Union (Communist_Party_of_the_Soviet_Union) Turkey (Communist_Party_of_Turkey_(historical)) United Kingdom (Communist_Party_of_Great_Britain) West Germany (Communist_Party_of_Germany) Yugoslavia (League_of_Communists_of_Yugoslavia) Oceania Australia Communist Alliance (Communist_Alliance) CPA (Communist_Party_of_Australia_(1971)) CPA(ML) (Communist_Party_of_Australia_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)) Resistance (Resistance_(socialist_youth_organisation)) Socialist Alliance (Socialist_Alliance_(Australia)) New Zealand CL (Communist_League_(New_Zealand)) CPA (Communist_Party_of_Aotearoa) OMU (Organisation_for_Marxist_Unity_%E2%80%93_New_Zealand) SPA (Socialist_Party_of_Aotearoa) Former parties Australia CPA (Communist_Party_of_Australia) DSP (Democratic_Socialist_Perspective) RSP (Revolutionary_Socialist_Party_(Australia)) Victorian Socialist Party (Victorian_Socialist_Party) New Zealand CPNZ (Communist_Party_of_New_Zealand) SUP (Socialist_Unity_Party_of_New_Zealand) CL (Communist_League_(New_Zealand))
Related topics Communism (Communism) (history (History_of_communism)) Marxism–Leninism (Marxism%E2%80%93Leninism) Democratic centralism (Democratic_centralism)
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Basic concepts Antagonistic contradiction (Antagonistic_contradiction) Anti-revisionism (Anti-revisionism) Cultural Revolution (Cultural_Revolution) Marxism–Leninism (Marxism%E2%80%93Leninism) Mass line (Mass_line) New Democracy (New_Democracy) People's war (People%27s_war) Revolutionary base area (Revolutionary_base_area) Self-criticism (Self-criticism) Social imperialism (Social_imperialism) Tendencies Deng Xiaoping Theory (Deng_Xiaoping_Theory) Xi Jinping Thought (Xi_Jinping_Thought) Maoism (Third Worldism) (Maoism_(Third_Worldism)) Mao-Spontex (Mao-Spontex) Marxism–Leninism–Maoism (Marxism%E2%80%93Leninism%E2%80%93Maoism) Marxism–Leninism–Maoism–Prachanda Path (Marxism%E2%80%93Leninism%E2%80%93Maoism%E2%80%93Prachanda_Path) Prominent Maoists Mao Zedong (Mao_Zedong) Akram Yari (Akram_Yari) Chen Boda (Chen_Boda) Abimael Guzmán (Abimael_Guzm%C3%A1n) İbrahim Kaypakkaya (%C4%B0brahim_Kaypakkaya) Lin Biao (Lin_Biao) Charu Majumdar (Charu_Majumdar) Siraj Sikder (Siraj_Sikder) Pierre Mulele (Pierre_Mulele) Huey P. Newton (Huey_P._Newton) Mohan Baidya (Mohan_Baidya) Jiang Qing (Jiang_Qing) Chin Peng (Chin_Peng) Jose Maria Sison (Jose_Maria_Sison) Yao Wenyuan (Yao_Wenyuan) Zhang Chunqiao (Zhang_Chunqiao) Li Minqi (Li_Minqi) Charles Bettelheim (Charles_Bettelheim) Afzal Bangash (Afzal_Bangash) International Conference of Marxist-Leninist Parties and Organizations (International_Conference_of_Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist_Parties_and_Organizations_(International_Newsletter)) Revolutionary Internationalist Movement (Revolutionary_Internationalist_Movement) CCOMPOSA (Coordination_Committee_of_Maoist_Parties_and_Organisations_of_South_Asia) Key books Quotations from Chairman Mao (Quotations_from_Chairman_Mao_Tse-tung) On Contradiction (On_Contradiction) On Practice (On_Practice) On Guerrilla Warfare (On_Guerrilla_Warfare) On Protracted War (On_Protracted_War) A Critique of Soviet Economics (A_Critique_of_Soviet_Economics) Historic Eight Documents (Historic_Eight_Documents) Related topics Communism (Communism) Communist Party of China (Communist_Party_of_China) Thought reform in China (Thought_reform_in_China) CPP–NPA–NDF rebellion (CPP%E2%80%93NPA%E2%80%93NDF_rebellion) Naxalite (Naxalite) Naxalite–Maoist insurgency (Naxalite%E2%80%93Maoist_insurgency) Communist insurgency in the Philippines (CPP%E2%80%93NPA%E2%80%93NDF_rebellion) Nepalese Civil War (Nepalese_Civil_War) Guevarism (Guevarism) Internal conflict in Peru (Internal_conflict_in_Peru) Maoist insurgency in Turkey (Maoist_insurgency_in_Turkey) Red Guards (China) (Red_Guards_(China)) Communism portal (Portal:Communism) Socialism portal (Portal:Socialism)
Leninist_Parties_and_Organizations_(International_Newsletter)). It heads the broad revolutionary front organization, the National Democratic Front (National_Democratic_Front_(Philippines)). The People's Republic of China's (PRC) relations with the CPP have supposedly "been severed since the 1980s," although Chinese underground support systems to the rebellion have surfaced from time to time. Regarding to Stefan Engel, Main Coordinator of International Coordination of Revolutionary Parties and Organizations (International_Coordination_of_Revolutionary_Parties_and_Organizations) (ICOR), CPP is willing to join ICOR, as he said in a 2015 interview.
The Communist Party of the Philippines, which promotes Marxism–Leninism–Maoism (Marxism%E2%80%93Leninism%E2%80%93Maoism) (MLM), is a revolutionary proletarian party that looks upon the legacies of past Philippine rebellions and revolutions from the perspective of the theories of Karl Marx (Karl_Marx), Friedrich Engels (Friedrich_Engels), Vladimir Lenin (Vladimir_Lenin), Joseph Stalin (Joseph_Stalin), and Mao Zedong (Mao_Zedong). It assists the progress of theory and practice in the world proletarian revolution (Proletarian_revolution) that is guided by Marxism–Leninism–Maoism (Preamble, Constitution of the Communist Party of the Philippines, 1968).
So long as it resolutely, militantly and thoroughly carries out its ideological, political and organizational building, the Communist Party of the Philippines is certain to lead the broad masses of the Filipino people of various nationalities and ethno-linguistic communities to total victory in the national democratic revolution against US imperialism (Imperialism) and the local reactionaries; and bring about the start of the socialist revolution (Socialist_revolution). — Armando Liwanag, Chairman, Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Philippines
On September 5, 2007, President Gloria MacapagalArroyo (Gloria_Macapagal-Arroyo) signed Amnesty Proclamation 1377 for members of the Communist Party of the Philippines and its armed wing, the New People's Army (New_People%27s_Army) (NPA); other communist rebel groups; and their umbrella organization, the National Democratic Front (National_Democratic_Front_(Philippines)). The amnesty will cover the crime of rebellion and all other crimes "in pursuit of political beliefs," but not including crimes against chastity, rape, torture, kidnapping for ransom, use and trafficking of illegal drugs (Illegal_drugs) and other crimes for personal ends and violations of international law or convention and protocols "even if alleged to have been committed in pursuit of political beliefs." The National Committee on Social Integration (NCSI) will issue a Certificate of Amnesty to qualified applicants. Implementing rules and regulations are being drafted and the decree will be submitted to the Senate of the Philippines (Senate_of_the_Philippines) and the House of Representatives of the Philippines (House_of_Representatives_of_the_Philippines) for their concurrence. The proclamation becomes effective only after Congress has concurred.
In 2009, the CPP leadership, in its 41st anniversary statement, boldly called for an advance in the revolutionary struggle and touted its forces to make a great advance in the people’s war for new democracy. It declared its determination to strive within the next five years to make the great advance from the stage of strategic defensive to the strategic stalemate, fulfilling all the requirements and without skipping any necessary phase. It also predicted that a revolutionary government will win the revolution by toppling the current Philippine government and establish a new state led by the Maoists in ten years.
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The strategic stalemate means that the revolutionary armed forces shall have achieved parity in the revolutionary war against the armed forces of the reactionary government. The strategic stalemate paves the way for the next stage in the protracted people’s war, namely the strategic offensive, which pushes towards the nationwide victory in the struggle for national and social liberation. — Armando Liwanag, Chairman, Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Philippines Referring to Maoist military doctrine, the CPP-lead NPA adheres to the three progressive phases of protracted warfare—strategic defensive, strategic stalemate, and strategic offensive (see Mobile warfare (Mobile_Warfare)). According to the CPP's calculations in the statement, they considered the present revolution to be at an advance sub-stage of strategic defensive.
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Executive (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Seal_of_the_President_of_the_Philippines.svg) President of the Philippines (President_of_the_Philippines) Rodrigo Duterte (Rodrigo_Duterte)
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Paghimakas (Struggle) - Newspaper of the Communist Party of the Philippines in the island of Negros (Negros_Island) Pakigbisog (Struggle) - Publication of the revolutionary people of Central Visayas (Central_Visayas) Pasa Bilis (Courier) - Published by the National Democratic Front - Southern Mindanao (Southern_Mindanao) Pilipinas (Philippines) - Revolutionary newspaper from the Christians for National Liberation (NDF member representing priests and religious personnel) Silyab (Spark) - Published by the Communist Party of the Philippines-New Peoples Army in Bicol (Bicol_Region) Asdang (Advance) - Published by the National Democratic Front - Far South Mindanao (SOCCSKSARGEN)
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