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Productive People's Party 生产人民党 | |
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General Secretary | Chen Mingshu |
Founded | 24 November 1933 |
Dissolved | Mid-January 1934 |
Split from | Kuomintang |
Succeeded by | Chinese Peasants' and Workers' Democratic Party |
Headquarters | Fuzhou (1933) British Hong Kong (1934) |
Membership | 200+[1] |
Ideology | Anti-imperialism Chinese nationalism Left wing nationalism |
Flag of the Fujian People's Government[note 1] was designed by the Productive People's Party | |
The Productive People's Party (Chinese: 生产人民党) was a short-lived leftist political party formed during the Fujian Rebellion in November 1933. It was formed by officers of the National Revolutionary Army's 19th Route Army. They were disaffected by Chiang Kai-shek's domination of both the Kuomintang and the Republic of China. The party's general secretary was Chen Mingshu.
The platform consisted of anti-imperialism, especially against Japan, democracy, overthrow of Chiang and the right-wing of the Nationalist Party, rule of the workers and peasants, land reform, and so on.
When the rebellion collapsed in January 1934, the party fled to Hong Kong where it self-dissolved. It was succeeded by the Chinese Peasants' and Workers' Democratic Party.
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