Polish Socialist Party - Left
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Polish Socialist Party - Left also known as Young Faction (Polish:Polska Partia Socjalistyczna - Lewica, - Młodzi, or PPS-L) was one of two factions into which Polish Socialist Party divided itself in 1906. Its primary goal was transform Poland into a socialist country, established through proletarian revolution, and likely a member of some international communist country.
Its opposition was the Polish Socialist Party - Revolution Faction (also known as Old Faction - Starzy) which wanted to restore independent Poland, which was envisioned as a representative democracy. Its opposition was the Polska Partia Socjalistyczna - Lewica.
PPS-L for a time gathered most of the former PPS members, but with the failure of the Russian Revolution of 1905 and corresponding revolution in the Kingdom of Poland (1905-1907), it has lost popularity. In 1909 PPS-FR renamed itself back to Polska Partia Socjalistyczna (Polish Socialist Party); the increasingly marginal PPS-L - opposing the First World War and supporting the Russian revolution of 1917 - eventually merged with Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania in 1918 to form the Communist Party of Poland.
Activists of PPS-L: Maria Koszutska, Stefan Królikowski, Paweł Lewinson, Maksymilian Horwitz-Walecki.