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Prometheus Research Series 1 |
August 1988 |
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Resolution
on the Organization of the Communist International
Adopted at the 24th Session of the Third Congress
of the Communist International, 12 July 1921 |
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The Executive of the CI shall be enlarged so as to enable
it to take a position on all questions demanding action by the proletariat.
Above and beyond the general calls issued on such critical questions up
to now, the Executive shall increasingly go over to finding ways and means
to initiate in practice a unified organizational and propagandistic intervention
in international issues by the various sections. The CI must mature into
an International of the deed, into the international leadership of the
common daily struggle of the revolutionary proletariat of all countries.
The prerequisites for this are:
1. The member parties of the CI must do their utmost
to maintain the closest and most active ties with the Executive: they
must not only provide the best representatives of their country for the
Executive but must judiciously and persistently supply the Executive with
constant and reliable information so that the Executive can take positions
on political problems that arise based on actual documents and comprehensive
materials. In order to use this material productively, the Executive must
organize departments for all specialized fields. In addition, an international
economics/statistics institute for the workers movement and communism
is to be established, attached to the Executive.
2. The member parties must maintain the closest
informational and organizational ties among themselves, particularly when
they are in neighboring countries and therefore have an equally intense
interest in the political conflicts arising from capitalist antagonisms.
This relationship of common action can at present be initiated most effectively
by sending representatives to each others most important conferences
and by the exchange of suitable personnel. This exchange of suitable personnel
must immediately become a permanent arrangement for all sections which
are in any way capable of it.
3. The Executive shall promote the necessary fusion
of all national sections into a unified international party of common
proletarian propaganda and action by publishing a political correspondence
in western Europe in all major languages, through which the application
of the communist idea must be made steadily clearer and more uniform,
and which, by providing reliable and steady information, will create the
basis for active, simultaneous intervention by the various sections.
4. By sending fully empowered representatives of
the Executive to the sections, the Executive can give effective organizational
support to the effort to achieve a genuine International of the common
daily struggle of the proletariat of all countries. The task of these
representatives is to acquaint the Executive with the particular conditions
under which the Communist Parties of the capitalist and colonial countries
must struggle. They must also make sure that these parties maintain the
most intimate ties both with the Executive and with one another, increasing
the striking power of each. The Executive, along with the parties, shall
ensure that communication between it and the individual member parties—both
in person through trusted representatives and by means of written correspondence—shall
take place more frequently and more quickly than it has to date, so that
a common position on all major political questions will be arrived at.
5. To be able to take on this extraordinarily increased
activity, the Executive must be considerably expanded. The sections which
were granted 40 votes by the Congress shall each have two votes in the
Executive, as shall the Executive of the Communist Youth International;
the sections which had 30 and 20 votes at the Congress shall each have
one vote. The Communist Party of Russia shall have five votes at its disposal,
as in the past. The representatives of the remaining sections shall have
consultative votes. The president of the Executive shall be elected by
the Congress. The Executive is instructed to appoint three secretaries,
to be drawn from different sections if possible. In addition to them,
the members of the Executive sent by the sections are obligated to take
part in carrying out the ongoing work through their particular national
departments or by taking over the handling of entire specific fields as
rapporteurs. The members of the administrative smaller bureau are elected
specially by the Executive, as a rule from among the members of the Executive;
exceptions are permissible in special cases.
6. The seat of the Executive is Russia, the first
proletarian state. The Executive shall, however, attempt to expand its
sphere of activity, including organizing conferences outside of Russia,
in order to more firmly centralize the organizational and political leadership
of the entire International. |