Workers' Party
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Workers' Party is a name used by a number of political parties throughout the world. It is perhaps one of the few standard party names that does not have an association with any particular ideology[dubious — see talk page], having been used by a wide range of groups - both left and right - in various places at various times:
- Algeria: Workers' Party (Algeria)
- Argentina: Workers' Party (Argentina)
- Bangladesh: Workers Party of Bangladesh
- Barbados: Workers Party of Barbados
- Brazil: Workers' Party (Brazil)
- Ecuador: Workers' Party of Ecuador
- France: Workers' Party (France)
- Guinea-Bissau: Workers' Party (Guinea-Bissau)
- Hungary: Workers Party (Hungary)
- India: Workers Party of India
- Ireland: The Workers Party (Ireland)
- Turkey: Kurdistan Workers Party
- Macedonia: Workers Party (Macedonia)
- New Zealand: Workers Party of New Zealand
- North Korea: Korean Workers' Party
- Paraguay: Workers Party (Paraguay)
- Singapore: Workers' Party of Singapore
- Sweden: Social Democratic Workers Party
- Turkey: Workers Party (Turkey)
Defunct parties include
- Germany: German Workers' Party
- Hungary: Hungarian Workers Party
- Ireland: Irish Workers Party (not related to the current party above)
- Mexico: Mexican Workers' Party
- Romania: name used by the Romanian Communist Party between 1948 and 1965
- South Africa: Workers Party of South Africa
- Spain: Workers' Party of Marxist Unification
- United Kingdom: International Leninist Workers Party, Workers Party of Scotland
- United States of America: Workers' Party (Third International), Workers' Party of the United States, Workers Party, Workers Party, USA