Welsh Socialist Republican Movement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Welsh Socialist Republican Movement (Mudiad Sosialaidd Gweriniaethol Cymru) was a short-lived nationalist political movement[1][2] which was born out of frustration with Plaid Cymru's failure to oppose the first referendum on Welsh Devolution in 1979 in order to map out a specific policy of arguing for Independence. It was also an attempt to develop a Welsh Socialist alternative to Plaid Cymru and it produced pamphlets and a newspaper called Y Faner Goch (The Red Flag).

The WSRM was socialist and republican but there was a fundamental contradiction between those positions which was never resolved and was the basic reason it fell apart the moment that the police, following undercover operations targeting student circles in Aberystwyth and Bangor in the early 1980s,[3] arrested and prosecuted WSRM members for conspiracy to cause explosions.

After its collapse around half a dozen members joined the Communist Party of Great Britain,[4] some returned to Plaid Cymru, and others became active in issue-orientated movements.[5]

The socialist remnants published a couple more copies of Y Faner Goch ("The Red Flag")[6] and then reformed in the late 1980s to create Cymru Goch (Red Wales), a small socialist political party that lasted another 20 years, publishing Y Faner Goch until 2003 and establishing The Red Poets' Society, an annual poetry magazine that is active today.

References[]

  1. ^ Ellis, Peter Berresford (1985). The Celtic Revolution: A Study in Anti-Imperialism. Y Lolfa. pp. 94–95. ISBN 9780862430962.
  2. ^ Minahan, James (2002). Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World, Vol 4. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 2050. ISBN 9780313323843.
  3. ^ Weichlein, S., Nationalbewegungen und Nationalismus in Europa — Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft (2013). ISBN 978-3534256020.
  4. ^ "A Communist Christmas: In Conversation with Rob Griffiths". Soundcloud (Podcast). Desolation Radio. Jan 2018. Event occurs at 19:40.
  5. ^ Jenkins, Mike (7 August 2012). "The Legacy of Cymru Goch".
  6. ^ Crick, Bernard (1981). Unemployment. Routledge. p. 130. ISBN 9780416324709.

Further reading[]

  • Osmond, John (1984). Police conspiracy?. Y Lolfa. ISBN 9780862430771.


Retrieved from ""