Carl Winberg

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Carl Winberg

SP
K
S
Carl Winberg.jpg
Carl Winberg c. 1945
Leader of the Communist party
In office
1917–1918
Serving with
Zeth Höglund
Preceded byPosition created
Succeeded byErnst Åström & Karl Kilbom
Member of the Riksdag's Second Chamber
In office
1911–1912
ConstituencyStockholm City constituency
In office
1912–1917March
In office
1914Sep1917
ConstituencyStockholm City second constituency
Member of the Riksdag's Fist Chamber
In office
1919–1922
ConstituencyNorrbotten County
In office
1922–1930
ConstituencyVästerbotten and Norrbotten County
Personal details
Born(1867-07-06)6 July 1867
Karlstad, Karlstad Municipality, Värmland County, Sweden
Died22 February 1954(1954-02-22) (aged 86)
Stockholm, Stockholm County, Sweden
NationalitySwedish
Political partySweden's Social Democratic Left Party/ Communist Party (1917-1929)
Socialist Party (he joined the faction in 1929)
Other political
affiliations
Social Democratic Party (until 1917)
ProfessionPolitician, news editor

Carl Winberg, (born July 6, 1867 in Karlstad, died February 22, 1954 in Stockholm) was a Swedish communist politician and newspaper editor.

Biography[]

Winberg was (1891-1906) worked as a locomotive cleaner and belonged to the Kilboms faction in the Swedish Communist Party. He was (1906-1909) a member of the Swedish Rail Workers’ Union, a faction in the Swedish Trade Union Confederation, and in 1909 became an editor for the union's newspaper Signalen.

He was from 1911 to 1914 an Member of Parliament (social democrat) in the Swedish Riksdag's lower house (also known as Andra kammaren or Second Chamber) for the Stockholm City constituency and from 1912 till 1914 for Stockholm City second constituency. He wasn't reelected at the March general elections but returned in the September general election and served from 1914Sep till 1917 (social democrat) for the same constituency. Together with the left-socialist opposition inside the social democrats, he left the party in 1917 and formed Sweden's Social Democratic Left Party, with the Social Democratic Left-Group as their parliament party. From the early Riksdag from 1919 to 1930 (communist) Winberg belonged to the upper house of the Riksdag (första kammaren or First Chamber) for the constituency of Norrbotten County until 1921 and from 1922 onwards, he served the constituency of Västerbotten and Norrbotten County.[1]

Winberg belonged to the faction inside the Social Democratic Left Party that changed the name from Social Democratic Left Party (SSV) to Sweden's Communist Party in 1921. During the 1924 split in the communist party, he joined the Moscow-friendly faction, and when there was another split in the Moscow-friendly faction in 1929, Winberg joined the Kilboms-faction that later became the Socialist Party. Together with Ture Nerman, they were the only two communists in the First Chamber.

Later in 1929, Winberg was expelled together with the majority of the Communist Party's members as the Party followed the Stalinist course. In the 1930s, Winberg was active in the Communist opposition led by Karl Kilbom, independent from Moscow and opposing Stalinism.

Winberg's memoir titled From Kvarnberget to Helgeandsholmen: the fate of a crofter's boy's fate (Från Kvarnberget till Helgeandsholmen : en torparpojkes livsöden) was published in 1945.

Revolutionary Committee[]

In 1917 during the Russian Revolution, and the  [sv] (Swedish July riots), Winberg had assembled a secret revolutionary committee with the purpose of appointing a revolutionary government. It was decided to pause the development of the committee and to wait for a signal.[2]

Carl Winberg, sitting in the right corner, together with the other communists in the Riksdag in 1922.

References[]

  1. ^ "Nordisk familjebok / Uggleupplagan. 38. Supplement. Riksdagens bibliotek - Öyen. Tillägg". Nordisk familjebok. Archived from the original on 1 October 2016. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  2. ^ Anton Nilson: Dömd till döden för Amalthea. Bonniers 1962, page 244.
  • Tvåkammarriksdagen 1867-1970 (Almqvist & Wiksell International 1992), volume 5, page 446

More literature[]

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