League of Communists of Macedonia

League of Communists of Macedonia
Сојуз на комунистите на Македонија
Leader see full list below
Founded 1943
Dissolved 1991
Succeeded by League of Communists of Macedonia - Party for Democratic Change (SKM-PDP)
After 20 April 1991 Social Democratic Union of Macedonia
Headquarters Skopje, SR Macedonia, SFR Yugoslavia
Ideology Communism
Marxism-Leninism
Titoism
Colours Red
Party flag

Macedonian branch of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia

League of Communists of Macedonia (Macedonian: Сојуз на комунистите на Македонија, Sojuz na Komunistite na Makedonija, СКМ) was the Macedonian branch of the ruling League of Communists of Yugoslavia during the period 1943 1990. It was formed under the name Communist Party of Macedonia (in Macedonian: Комунистичка партија на Македонија, Komunistichka partija na Makedonija, KPM) during the antifascist National Liberation War of Macedonia in the Second World War. It retained that name until April 1952.

The League of Communists of Macedonia was the ruling political party in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia. Its successor after the introduction of political pluralism in 1990 was the socialist party League of Communists of Macedonia - Party for Democratic Change (Сојуз на Комунистите на Македонија - Партија за Демократска Преобразба, СКМ-ПДП; Sojuz na Komunistite na Makedonija - Partija za Demokratska Preobrazba, SKM-PDP) led by Petar Gošev, which took part in the first democratic elections in the same year. On its 11th Congress on April 20, 1991, the party was reformed, changing socialist ideology with social democracy, move to neoliberal direction and dropped the "communist" reference from its name and changed it to the current Social Democratic Union of Macedonia. There was a small minority which retained the old name and constituted itself as a distinct political entity. This organization was founded in 1992 under the name League of Communists of Macedonia - Freedom Movement.

Party leaders

  1. Lazar Koliševski (March 1943 - July 1963) (b. 1914 - d.2000)
  2. Krste Crvenkovski (July 1963 - March 1969) (b. 1921 - d.2001)
  3. Angel Čemerski (March 1969 - May 1982) (b. 1923 - d.2005)
  4. Krste Markovski (May 1982 - 5 May 1984) (b. 1925)
  5. Milan Pančevski (5 May 1984 - Jun 1986) (b. 1935)
  6. Jakov Lazarovski (Jun 1986 - 1989) (b. 1949)
  7. Petar Gošev (1989 - April 1991) (b. 1948)

See also

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