Euskadiko Ezkerra

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Basque Country (autonomous community)

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Their initial logo had half an ikurriña (Basque flag) in the left side, and two white and black capital E's in the right side.
Their initial logo had half an ikurriña (Basque flag) in the left side, and two white and black capital E's in the right side.

Euskadiko Ezkerra (Basque Country Left, in Basque) or EE was a Basque socialist political organisation. It was founded as a coalition of Euskal Iraultzarako Alderdia (EIA, Basque Party for Revolution or Party for Basque Revolution) and other Basque Marxist forces in 1977 to present lists for the Spanish general elections in the constituencies of Biscay, Guipúzcoa and Álava, while Unai, an allied coalition, was to present a list in the constituency of Navarre.

EE's list in Guipúzcoa won one seat in the Spanish Congress for Francisco Letamendía, one in the Senate for Juan María Bandrés, a lawyer for ETA members, and none in the other constituencies. Many prominent members of EE (including candidates from these lists, as Pedro Solabarría, Jon Idígoras, Santiago Brouard, Félix Eguía "Argala", and Ignacio Esnaola) eventually separated from the coalition and formed Herri Batasuna. EE called for "no" in the Referendum for Spanish Constitution in 1978.

Several of the militants of ETA (pm) joined peaceful political action in EE after they abandoned violence and negotiated pardons with the Spanish government.

Later EE logo with the Gernika Oak.
Later EE logo with the Gernika Oak.

In 1982 it merged with some sectors of PCE-EPK (the Basque branch of PCE) and became a party under the name EE-IPS, Euskadiko Ezkerra-Izquierda para el Socialismo ("Left for Socialism"), while often using the simpler name Euskadiko Ezkerra. Its general secretary in this period was Mario Onaindia Nachiondo, a former ETA member during the Franco era, later replaced by Kepa Aulestia.

EE called for a "no" on the membership of Spain in NATO in the referendum held in 1986. While the "yes" vote won nationally, the "no" campaign triumphed in the Basque Autonomous Community.

After the split of the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) and the creation of Eusko Alkartasuna (EA) in 1987, EE established several coalitions with the latter. In 1991 EE entered in the government of the Basque Autonomous Community in coalition with both PNV and EA.

Later on, in 1991, a majority of party affiliates approved a merger with Socialist Party of the Basque Country (PSE), the branch of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) for the Basque Autonomous Community. The resulting party is the current PSE-EE. Yet, still a section of Euskadiko Ezkerra (including deputy Xabier Albistur) disagreed with the PSE absortion, and, since the Euskadiko Ezkerra name was retained by the majority of members who aproved to merge the PSE, this remaining faction went to create a new party, Euskal Ezkerra (EuE, Basque Left) which, in turn, merged soon after with Eusko Alkartasuna.

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