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・ Socialist Workers and Peasants Party of Latvia
・ Socialist Workers Front (Marxist–Leninist)
・ Socialist Workers League
・ Socialist Party of New Jersey
・ Socialist Party of New York
・ Socialist Party of Nigeria
・ Socialist Party of North America
・ Socialist Party of North Dakota
・ Socialist Party of Northern Ireland
・ Socialist Party of Ohio
・ Socialist Party of Oklahoma
・ Socialist Party of Ontario
・ Socialist Party of Oregon
・ Socialist Party of Oregon (Columbia County, Oregon)
・ Socialist Party of Peru (1930)
Socialist Party of Romania
・ Socialist Party of Romania (present-day)
・ Socialist Party of Senegal
・ Socialist Party of Serbia
・ Socialist Party of Slovenia
・ Socialist Party of Sri Lanka
・ Socialist Party of Tajikistan
・ Socialist Party of Texas
・ Socialist Party of Thailand
・ Socialist Party of the Basque Country – Basque Country Left
・ Socialist Party of the Czechoslovak Working People
・ Socialist Party of the Island of Cuba
・ Socialist Party of the Islands
・ Socialist Party of the National Left
・ Socialist Party of the Oppressed


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Socialist Party of Romania : ウィキペディア英語版
Socialist Party of Romania

The Socialist Party of Romania ((ルーマニア語、モルドバ語():Partidul Socialist din România), commonly known as ''Partidul Socialist'', PS) was a Romanian socialist political party, created on December 11, 1918 by members of the Social Democratic Party of Romania (PSDR), after the latter emerged from clandestinity. Through its PSDR legacy, the PS maintained a close connection with the local labor movement and was symbolically linked to the first local socialist group, the Romanian Social-Democratic Workers' Party. Its creation coincided with the establishment of Greater Romania in the wake of World War I; after May 1919, it began a process of fusion with the social democratic groups of ethnic Romanians in Austria-Hungary — the Social Democratic Party of Transylvania and Banat and the Romanian Social Democratic Party of Bukovina. The three groups adopted a common platform in October 1920. Progressively influenced by Leninism, the PS became divided between a maximalist majority supporting Bolshevik guidelines and a reformist-minded minority: the former affiliated with the Comintern as the Socialist-Communist Party in May 1921 (officially known as Communist Party of Romania from 1922), while the minority eventually established a new Romanian Social Democratic Party.
The PS had its headquarters in Bucharest, at the Socialist Club on Sfântul Ionică Street No.12, near the old National Theater (located just north of University Square, the street is currently a section of Ion Câmpineanu Street, after the latter was rerouted).〔Cioroianu, p.23; Diac; Felea, p.43; Liveanu, p.37, 38〕 The building eventually also housed all Romanian trade unions of the period, as well as the ''General Trade Unions' Commission''.〔Felea, p.43〕 The Socialists edited the newspaper ''Socialismul'', headquartered on Academiei Street.〔Cioroianu, p.23〕
==History==


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