The attempt of the Polish bourgeois authorities to outlaw the Communist Party of Poland (KPP) has, once again, failed. Despite a high-profile ruling by the Constitutional Tribunal declaring the party unconstitutional, the KPP has been reinstated in the official register of political parties and continues to operate legally. The removal of the party from the register in December—following a motion by far-right President Karol Nawrocki—has now been effectively reversed.

According to Rzeczpospolita, the same Warsaw court that ordered its deletion has re-entered it, exposing the legal and political fragility of the entire anti-communist offensive. The decisive factor lies in the fact that the Tribunal’s ruling was neither final nor formally published, rendering the procedure legally incomplete. The KPP challenged the decision on precisely these grounds, and the court ultimately accepted the appeal.

This development marks yet another defeat for the long-standing campaign of the Polish right to suppress communist political activity through legal means. For over a decade, leading figures of the conservative establishment—including Zbigniew Ziobro and other Law and Justice politicians—have attempted to criminalize and ban the KPP, invoking constitutional provisions that equate communism with so-called “totalitarianism.” Yet time and again, these efforts have run into contradictions within the legal system itself.

The latest move by Nawrocki, which led to a rapid ruling by the Constitutional Tribunal against the party, was intended to deliver a decisive blow. Instead, it has once more demonstrated that anti-communism, while central to the ideological arsenal of the ruling class, cannot be so easily enforced when confronted with legal inconsistencies and institutional conflicts.

For now, the Communist Party of Poland remains legal. The episode reveals both the persistence of anti-communist repression and its limits, as the ruling class—despite its efforts—fails to eliminate a political force rooted in the traditions of the workers’ movement.

I****N DEFENSE OF COMMUNISM©


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