Everything about The Puerto Rican Socialist Party totally explained
The
Puerto Rican Socialist Party (
Spanish:
Partido Socialista Puertorriqueño, PSP) was a
Marxist and
pro-independence political party in
Puerto Rico.
The PSP originated as the
Pro-Independence Movement (
Movimiento Pro-Independencia, MPI), founded on
January 11,
1959, in the city of
Mayagüez. The MPI was formed by a group of dissidents from the
Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP). Over the following years the group was greatly influenced by the
Cuban Revolution. During the
1964 elections, the MPI promoted a
boycott, and throughout the decade campaigned against the presence of US corporations on the island.
At its Eighth General Assembly on
November 28,
1971, the MPI renamed itself the Puerto Rican Socialist Party and endorsed
Marxism-Leninism.
Juan Mari Brás was named the PSP's
general secretary, and
Carlos Gallisá Bisbal later became party president. The party gained a following in the
labor movement,
student movement and
community organizations. It was a fraternal party of the
Progressive Labor Party in the United States.
PSP branches also emerged in the
United States beginning in
1973, most prominently in the Puerto Rican neighborhoods of
New York City and
Chicago. One of its most prominent leaders in the US was
Luis Gutierrez, who later became a Chicago alderman in the 1980s and a
US Congressman in the 1990s. The PSP was primarily responsible for a pro-independence rally that drew 20,000 people to
Madison Square Garden on
October 27,
1974. PSP members were also active in the movement against the
Vietnam War.
The PSP faced disruption from the
FBI's COINTELPRO program and attacks from
anticommunist forces on the island. Mari Brás's son,
Santiago Mari Pesquera, was murdered mysteriously in March
1976, and the offices of the PSP newspaper
Claridad were bombed. Several party members narrowly escaped murder attempts.
Disagreements arose within the party over whether to engage in
guerrilla warfare or to enter
electoral politics. After a poor showing in the
1976 elections, these disagreements over tactics paralysed the PSP. The party's membership and following declined in the
1980s, and it formally disbanded in
1993. However,
Claridad continues to be published as a
weekly newspaper. Mari Brás and other former PSP leaders later became involved in the
Hostosian National Independence Movement (MINH).
On May 5, 2007 at Hostos Community College in the Bronx, NY, former members of the PSP, now working under the name of the
October 27th Committee, held a small conference on, "
Desde Las Entrañas 30 Years Later: Implications for the Independence Movement."
Desde Las Entranas was the political declaration of the First Congress of the United States Branch of the Puerto Rican Socialist Party, approved on April 1, 1973. This 77-page document, examined, "the nature of Puerto Rican immigration to this country; its present composition, its attitudes and behavior, its experience within the system of exploitation imposed by the ruling class of this country, the relationship between its working class and the exploited countries of the Third World, the super-exploited sectors of this country and their role; the nature of national liberation struggles and their relation to the class struggles of the United States working class; the future that this system assigns to our youth and, finally, the present situation of the left in the United States." (1976 translation) Organized by
José "Che" Velazquez, speakers at this 2007 conference included
Andres Torres,
Raquel Rivera and
Angelo Falcón.
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