捷摩共:KSCM-简介 0 30 March 1990: CPBM formed as a territorial organisation of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Gl dH SCy $ $W{HsX U`HXsq
p} 7Q<Kha October 1990: became an independent party at its 1st Congress and the successor of the former Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSC) 0]/,m4a#n #%9oQ6nO ZJ)3GF}4 Political programme &T5fH!?4 -O>^eMWywo e@6RC bj At its 5th Congress in December 1999, the party adopted two major programmes, The CPBM at the Turn of the Millennium and a Programme of Renewal. The first outlines the party’s more long-term programme and aims, while the second contains its proposals for solving the economic, social and political crisis in which the Czech Republic finds itself fifteen years after the change of regime in November 1989 and the restoration of capitalism. Its proposals include calls for an appropriate degree of state ownership in key sectors of the economy (banking, transport, telecommunications, energy, the extractive industries etc.) and the development of a modern large-scale agriculture. ^M[-K`c } jcT{ugpq {-:4O\/ _m)gO/02A The importance of winning the active support of the people for the party’s anti-crisis programme and their involvement in implementing it is stressed. To this end, the Congress also approved a popular ten-point summary of the CPBM’s proposals, called A Better Way for Our Country. {yul.m ~Tpe,juG_ :9v*,*@x w+URCj The party vigorously opposed the Czech Republic’s membership of NATO and its war of aggression against Yugoslavia. The Congress endorsed a policy of withdrawal from NATO, after an initial stage of suspension of membership. u)N2 ~m009 dVjcK/T< L5i#Kh_ While supporting the processes of European integration, the Congress declared its opposition to membership of the European Union in its present form. A8CIP:Z \pT^Zhp) g!~-^_F "P>$=X~Zi As the programme to be adopted at the CPBM’s 6th Congress in May 2004, Hope for the Czech Republic represents a creative application of Marxism to the new economic, social, political and cultural conditions established since the restoration of capitalism during the 1990s. It is in fact the CPBM’s alternative economic and political strategy. It details the party’s main priorities, the first of which is job creation, fairer wages for Czech workers and protection of the country’s poor and at-risk groups. nEeQL~: d"QM;9 YqK+F=0 j=!(F`/ The document is divided into five sections, dealing in turn with the economic steps which the party sees as fundamental to all other aspects of the programme, the CPBM’s environmental policy, the creation of an education- and information-based society accessible to all, international affairs, including the party’s perspective on the European Left, and the creation of a civil society and law-governed democratic state. It shares Marx’s view that ”philosophers have only interpreted the world, but the point is to change it.” 'Y~8_+J? BLsdx} 60.[t9pk6 /gMa" 5?, At The CPBM´s 7th. Congress in May 17 and 18, 2008 in Hradec Kralove, there a Declaration on Socialism was adopted, stressing the social ownership of means of production as the economic basic of socialism, characterizing the socialist society as a society of free and equal citizens, socially just and economically prosperous, the basic aim of which is an all-round increase of the life quality of all the citizens, and an Appeal to the Radical Left of Europe stressing the necessity of Unity of Actions of the left. ?HEo9/*7 .rD#1)O #VP-T; Ahe Wo<PmSt9i Election results -k|g04Q? At the 2002 general election the CPBM won 18.5% of the vote – compared with 11% at the previous election in 1998. It increased its number of seats in the 200-member Chamber of Deputies (the lower house of the Parliament of the Czech Republic) from 24 to 41, making it the third strongest parliamentary party. At the 2006 general elections the CPBM won 12,81% of the vote, losing 15 seats in the Parliament; the CPBM keeps now 26 seats (of a total 200). It is still the third strongest parliamentary party in the Czech Republic. H-nFsJ(R!c tIc0S!H# G
"c&C tU-#pB>H At the 2010 general election the CPBM won 11,27% of the vote, confirming its 26 seats (of a total 200). After this general election, the CPBM is the fourth strongest parliamentary party in the Czech Republic. 8YT_DM5iI UeutFNp \#IJ=+z P 'FPe55F At the local election in November 2002 it had 5,699 local Councillors, 374 Mayors, 362 Deputies Mayors, 2 Lords Mayors and 3 Deputies Lords Mayors. At the local elections in October 2006 it had 4,268 local Councillors, 284 Mayors and 247 Deputies Mayors. G!>iqG Y`E{E|J BWqik_ >llwNT In 2002 Senate election, to be held in the same time, it won 3 Senators (out of total 81). In the Senate election held in 2004, it won 3 Senators (of total 81). 1"~O"m sb S|O%h}AH; EU&6Tg K{eqB!@j In the EP election in June 2004, it won 25% of the Czech Republic seats in EP. It has 6 members in EP. @U 7#, G y^0HCp{ vfk7J5y v '"1/% L In the EP election in June 2009, it won 14.18 %, what means 4 seats in the EP. cQUH %7m ~jgN_jz E.WNykF- C.Wms}XA Opinion polls i`ZHjW~` According to the public opinion polls on voting intentions, the CPBM is currently the third strongest party. Its public support has risen since the 2002 general election to 25.6 % in April 2005 then came down to 15% before 2006 general elections and to 13.5% in April 2009 respectively. 62k9"xSH cP$wI;P )l 4>=y Q0[CH~ Membership TV$\v@\ = At present, the CPBM has 66 627 members in 4 039 branches (up to 1. 1. 2010). ~{3o(gzl ]k3GFPw In 2008 the CPBM had 75 000 members. In 2006 the CPBM had 82, 894, in 2005 the CPBM had 90,000 members (44% of them were women), compared with 100,781 in 2004, 136,516 in 1999, 142, 490 in 1998, 354,549 in 1992. OXa5Jg}= 71}L#nQ Membership dues for employed members are 0.5% of earnings. However, the approximate age of Party members is very high, about 70 years of age. UeK,q>i \ _-kOS 7>c 0V& `% #zMS Party organisation l>[QrRXiSN a) Branches (4,039 in 2009, 4,691 in 2004, 4,456 in 2005 and 4,378 in 2006). |zRoXO`]-* )edU <1P b) District organisations, led by District Committees (86 in 2008), to which city and town committees are responsible -=v/p*v0o )f:!#v(K c) Regional Councils (14, following the local government structure) DLg `Q0`M5 6cgpg+-a d) Central organisation:
zO7lsx2= `gBXeG2fn 1. National Congress (held once every four years). The last was held in May 2008, where each of the 276 delegates represented approx.300 members. 2s]]!{Z# %Hl:nT2M 2. Central Committee: 93 members. 86 of them each represent a district organisation; they are nominated by pre-congress district conferences and confirmed by the National Congress. *h5ld P D!OG307P 3. Executive Committee: 21 members, elected by the CPBM Central Committee. !`d832 !)l%EJngL 4. Leadership inq4CGY (<g;-pZH% · Chair, elected directly by the Congress - Vojtech FILIP. ,/[dmoe q:D0$YY0 · 4 vice-chairs, elected by the Central Committee: currently, Milan BICIK (responsible the Party's internal performing, the elections organisation and the local government policy), Stanislav GROSPIC (responsible for the party’s specialist groups), Miloslava VOSTRA (responsible for the party’s central financial management), and Jiri MASTALKA (responsible for the international policy and the European integration). ,_TH@0{ s$+: F$Y0 ,]>`guDV leX7(Y;!a7 Party finances ,~ia$vI}R The party is financed from the following sources: membership dues, donations from supporters, a state grant based on election results, and rental income from rooms in the Central Committee building. nJM9c[Ou^H f;_K}23 56j/w[&8 \V!X& a Annual budgets have been prepared, to be based on the law on political parties. fs)q7 7g ??esB& |