European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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But the name was a diversion, it was a socialistic, an Austro-Marxian party.
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Our party did not belong to the ‘1st Internationale’ but to the ‘2.5th Internationale’,
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the ‘Vienna Internationale’, with the slogan:
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No social democratic opportunism and no Bolshevistic dogmatism.
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We worked according to this guideline,
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but of course even in this party and in the youth association, which was a part of the party,
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there were different positions.
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That showed especially in 1936, when the popular front became relevant,
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but the politics of the popular front demanded
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for working closely together with the communists.
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The ideological discrepancies were known.
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They were out of question.
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and which had to be fought together - within the popular front.
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In Léon Blum in France we had the example of a socialist of the popular front, socialists, communists and the radical socialists.
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That were the civil liberals, who wanted to fight the fascism together and with us it was the same.
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