Polish Socialist Party – Left


Polish Socialist Party – Left, also known as the Young Faction, was one of two factions into which Polish Socialist Party divided itself in 1906. Its primary goal was transform Poland into a socialist country, established through proletarian revolution, and likely a member of some international communist country.
Its opposition was the Polish Socialist Party - Revolutionary Faction which wanted to restore independent Poland, which was envisioned as a representative democracy.
PPS–L for a time gathered most of the former PPS members, but with the failure of the Russian Revolution of 1905 and corresponding revolution in the Kingdom of Poland, it has lost popularity. In 1909 PPS–FR renamed itself back to Polska Partia Socjalistyczna ; the increasingly marginal PPS–L – opposing the First World War and supporting the Russian revolution of 1917 – eventually merged with Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania in 1918 to form the Communist Party of Poland.
One member of Lewica was elected to the Central Executive Committee of Ukraine at the Second All-Ukrainian Congress of Soviets in Katerynoslav on 19 March 1918.
Activists of PPS–L: Maria Koszutska, Stefan Królikowski, Paweł Lewinson, Henryk Walecki.
PPS–L was recreated in 1926 by PPS activists who opposed PPS involvement with Józef Piłsudski. It was delegalized in 1931.