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Communist Party in Denmark ( Danish : Kommunistisk Parti i Danmark ) is a communist party in Denmark .

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12-592: KPID may refer to: Kommunistisk Parti i Danmark (KPiD), known in English as Communist Party in Denmark Komisyon para sa mga Pilipino sa Ibayong Dagat (KPID), known in English as Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title KPiD . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

24-705: A daily newspaper, and distributes the Patrick Mac Manus prize, for political activism on behalf of revolutionary workers' movements. The KP has fielded candidates in local elections in Copenhagen , Aarhus , Aalborg and Hvidovre . The party has thus far not competed in elections for the Folketing or the European Parliament . This article about a political party in Denmark

36-520: A unified communist party have failed. The last attempt failed in 2019. The main differences between the parties are on a personal, cultural and historical level. However the three parties differ little ideologically. The fourth communist party, the Workers' Communist Party (APK) refused to participate in the talks. These unity talks resumed after the Unity List adopted several resolutions in which

48-676: The Communist Party of Denmark and various changing small factions and parties since the 1970s. Of these smaller parties, Fælles Kurs achieved representation in the Folketing, while DKP/ML's forerunner, the Communist Workers' Party (KAP), did not. The party held its third congress in Copenhagen from 18 to 20 November 2011. Here it was decided to run in the local elections in 2013, form a youth organization and develop

60-662: The Unity List (Enhedslisten). As a result, the founders of KPiD split from the DKP and organized themselves under the label 'Communist Forum,' but after three years, on November 7, 1993, they changed their name to the Communist Party in Denmark. The KPiD was one of four active communist parties in Denmark. In the last few decades, various attempts of the DKP , the KPiD and the KP to form

72-465: The KPiD and two other communist parties. Cheller and the others then joined the Communist Party (KP). Rikke Frydensbjerg Carlsson was subsequently elected as the new leader of the party. The party published the monthly newspaper Kommunist. Communist Party (Denmark) The Communist Party ( Danish : Kommunistisk Parti , or KP) is a communist political party in Denmark . The party

84-442: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=KPiD&oldid=1177074803 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Kommunistisk Parti i Danmark At the Communist Party of Denmark (DKP) party congress in 1990,

96-470: The party accepted Denmark's membership of NATO and the EU , which is unacceptable to both the DKP and KPiD. The KPiD temporarily dropped its demand that the DKP would prohibit dual membership with Unity List, in order for the merger to go ahead. In September of 2023, KPiD merged (described by both parties as a 'reunion') with DKP. Betty Frydensbjerg Carlsson was the party leader from the party's founding until

108-707: The party chose to break from its historical ties to the Soviet Union and the former communist regimes in Eastern Europe. The founders of the KPID did not believe there was any reason for such a break or a change in policy. They also could not accept that the DKP formed electoral alliances with the Left Socialists (VS) and the Socialist Workers' Party (SAP). In 1989 these three parties formed

120-456: The party congress in May 2015, where she chose to step down. Arne Cheller was elected as the new leader. After being unanimously reelected to the national leadership at the 12th congress in 2018. However, chairman Arne Cheller and other members of the national leadership resigned from the party only a few days earlier. The reason behind the resignation was a conflict on the unification process between

132-640: The party's daily newspaper Arbejderen. The local elections are the party's first participation in elections, previously the party has recommended voting on the Unity List or the People's Movement against the EU . With several candidates in Copenhagen, the party is listed as List R, this list was supported by the other communist parties DKP and KPiD. Together with the KPiD the party formed a unity list in Aarhus . The party publishes Dagbladet Arbejderen (The Daily Worker),

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144-480: Was formed in 2006 through the merger of Communist Party of Denmark (Marxist-Leninist) (DKP/ML) and Communist Unification (KS). The latter of which consisted of a group of breakaways from the KPiD , who chose to leave the party in 2005 in protest against the party's reluctance for a merger with DKP/ML . The party was founded as part of an attempt to unite the communist forces in Denmark, which had been divided between

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