Workers'_Front_(Spain)

Workers' Front (Spain)

Workers' Front (Spain)

Political party in Spain


Workers' Front (Spanish: Frente Obrero, FO) is a Spanish political party. The party was founded as a mass organization by the anti-revisionist PML (RC) in October 2018 and registered as a separate political party in March 2019.

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History

The Workers' Front was established on October 14, 2018 at the Ateneo de Madrid as a front organization of the PML(RC).[2] Subsequently, the Workers' Front expanded to several cities in Spain, such as La Coruña, León, Ponferrada, Zaragoza, and Cádiz.[3]

On June 12, 2022, their first congress was held. During the congress the decision to become a political party was approved by the members. Representatives from other organizations, such as the Polisario Front, spoke during the congress.[4]

In late 2023, the group announced they would be participating in the 2023 Spanish protests against the PSOE government.[1]

Ideology

Despite being strongly connected with the PML(RC) and supporting far-left ideologies such as Marxism-Leninism, the FO is not explicitly communist. Their political ideology is a syncretic combination of left-wing economic positions and right-wing cultural and ethical viewpoints.[5]

In their program A Spain for the Workers, they defend national sovereignty, Hispanic identity, free university education, the nationalization of strategic economic sectors, energy sovereignty, nuclear energy, increasing the minimum wage, supporting the rural sector, promoting birth rates, creating more public housing, introducing rent control and limiting immigration.[6]

They oppose capitalism, the European Union, NATO, surrogacy, feminism, deindustrialization, queer theory, the Trans Law, affirmative action, islamization,[7] cosmopolitanism and political correctness.

Criticism

The party has been criticized by other organizations as transphobic, reactionary and racist, as well as compared (negatively) to the radical right-wing party Vox.[8][9] It has also been accused of giving credit to the Great Replacement theory.[10]

In 2023, FO was accused of having received money from the Algerian government by Euromagreb. This was later denied by the party.[11]

Elections

The FO participated in elections for the first time in the 2023 Spanish local elections. They ran in Villalba de los Arcos, Santa Margalida, Mislata, and Mandayona, winning one seat in Mandayona.

Election results

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The FO then contested the 2023 general election, fielding candidates in 50 of the 52 constituencies.[12] They received 46,605 (0,19%) votes, but no seats.

Cortes Generales

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See also


References

  1. "Un grupo radical de izquierda alienta una protesta en Ferraz contra la amnistía". El Debate. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
  2. "LA MARCHA DEL FRENTE OBRERO" (PDF). UNION. January 2018. p. 10.
  3. I CONGRESO DEL FRENTE OBRERO, retrieved 2023-07-09
  4. "Return of the Old Left: A Look at the Spanish Worker's Front". europeanconservative.com. 2023-03-25. Retrieved 2023-07-09.
  5. "PROGRAMA". Frente Obrero España (in Spanish). 2022-09-07. Retrieved 2023-07-09.
  6. "Frente Obrero, un discurso político homofóbico y racista que promueve la división de la clase trabajadora". La Izquierda Diario - Red internacional (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-07-09.
  7. "BOLETÍN OFICIAL DEL ESTADO" (PDF). JUNTAS ELECTORALES PROVINCIALES. 21 June 2023. Retrieved 9 July 2023.

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