Workers International to Rebuild the Fourth International

In the wide universe of topics that current society addresses, Workers International to Rebuild the Fourth International has stood out as a topic of absolute relevance. Whether due to its impact on people's daily lives, its influence in the workplace or its historical significance, Workers International to Rebuild the Fourth International has captured the attention of a wide audience of various ages and professions. In this article, we will explore the various facets of Workers International to Rebuild the Fourth International, from its origins to its evolution today, with the aim of providing a global perspective on this much-discussed topic.

The Workers International to Rebuild the Fourth International (WIRFI) is a Trotskyist international organisation. It was formed and based in the United Kingdom and originally consisted of a remnant of the Workers Revolutionary Party.

The organisation was founded in 1990 to regroup the international supporters of the Workers Revolutionary Party (Workers Press) WRP(WP), following the split of some of their supporters to join the International Workers League (Fourth International). Led by Cliff Slaughter and Dot Gibson, it initially had support in the Workers Revolutionary Party (Namibia) and a South African section which renamed itself WIRFI and took 5,481 votes in the 1994 South African general election, as well as Michel Varga's Group of Opposition and Continuity of the Fourth International.

The majority of the South African section left the international in 1996 and renamed itself the Workers International Vanguard League.

Following the WRP(WP)'s dissolution and reconstitution as the Movement for Socialism (Britain), Gibson and Bob Archer led the remainder of the international in splitting from Slaughter.

The organisation retained its British section and has the support of the WRP of Namibia and remnants of the South African group. It publishes the "Workers International Journal".

In Britain, the group's supporters were active in the Socialist Alliance and then the Democracy Platform of that grouping. By 2004 they had also become involved with the Liverpool-based Campaign for a Mass Workers Party and its offshoot, the United Socialist Party.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Andrew Nash on South Africa: Is the Revolution Over?". Archived from the original on 2004-08-09. Retrieved 2006-06-29.

External links