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Communist Party of Cuba
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===History=== Cuba had a number ofĀ communistĀ andĀ anarchistĀ organizations from the early period of theĀ RepublicĀ (founded in 1902). The original "internationalised" Communist Party of Cuba formed in the 1920s. In 1944, it renamed itself as theĀ Popular Socialist PartyĀ for electoral reasons. In July 1961, two years after the successful overthrow ofĀ [[Fulgencio Batista]]Ā and the creation of a revolutionary government. On 26 March 1962, the ORI became the United Party of the Cuban Socialist Revolution (PURSC), which in turn became the Communist Party of Cuba on 3 October 1965. In Article 5 of the Cuban constitution of 1976, the Communist Party is recognized as "the superior guiding force of society and of the State, that organizes and orients common efforts toward the high goals of the construction of socialism and the advancement toward communist society". All parties, including the Communist Party, are prohibited from publicly advertising their organizations. For the first fifteen years of its formal existence, the Communist Party was almost completely inactive outside of theĀ Politburo. The 100 person Central Committee rarely met and it was ten years after its founding that the first regularĀ party CongressĀ was held. In 1969, membership of the party was only 55,000 or 0.7% of the population, making the PCC the smallest ruling communist party in the world. In the 1970s, the party's apparatus began to develop. By the time of the first party Congress in 1975, the party had grown to just over two hundred thousand members, the Central Committee was meeting regularly and provided the organizational apparatus giving the party the leading role in society that ruling Communist parties generally hold. By 1980, the party had grown to over 430,000 members and it grew further to 520,000 by 1985. Apparatuses of the party had grown to ensure that its leading cadres were appointed to key government positions.
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