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・ Workers Compensation Act 1987
・ Workers Compensation Board of Manitoba
・ Workers Compensation Commission of New South Wales
・ Workers Defense Union
・ Workers Democracy Group
・ Workers Democratic Party
・ Workers Film and Photo League
・ Workers for Freedom
・ Workers Front for Indochina
・ Workers Group of the Russian Communist Party
・ Workers in the Dawn
・ Workers Indoor Arena
・ Workers International Relief
・ Workers International to Rebuild the Fourth International
・ Workers International Vanguard League
Workers League (Ireland)
・ Workers League (UK)
・ Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory
・ Workers Left Unity – Iran
・ Workers Nationalist Youth
・ Workers of the world, unite!
・ Workers Organisation for Socialist Action
・ Workers Party (Marxist–Leninist)
・ Workers Party (Reconstituted) of Bangladesh
・ Workers Party (Republic of Macedonia)
・ Workers Party (United States)
・ Workers Party of Acapulco
・ Workers Party of America
・ Workers Party of Bangladesh
・ Workers Party of Bangladesh (reconstituted)


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Workers League (Ireland) : ウィキペディア英語版
Workers League (Ireland)

The Workers League was a Trotskyist political party in Ireland.
The group's origins lay in the League for a Workers Republic, an associate of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI). As that organisation began to split between the supporters of the Socialist Labour League (SLL) in Britain and those of the Internationalist Communist Organisation (OCI) in France. The majority of the League for a Workers Republic sided with the OCI, but a minority broke away in 1970 to form the League for a Workers Vanguard.
When the ICFI split in 1972, the League for a Workers Vanguard changed its name to the "Workers League" and became an official affiliate of an ICFI dominated by Gerry Healy's Socialist Labout League. The Leagues activities involved general recruitment, the running of classes in Marxism, the selling of, first, ''The Workers' Press'' and, later, ''News Line''- both published in England - and attempting interventions in industrial disputes'. In the mid-seventies, the League ran a Right to Work Campaign which involved a number of demonstrations in Dublin, one of which culminated in a 'mass' meeting in the Mansion House. Jack O'Connor, who would later become General President of SIPTU in 2003, and President of ICTU in 2009, was an activist and organiser with the League for much of the 1970s. In the early 1970s, the League's General Secretary was Donal O'Sullivan. For a while, the League published ''Marxist Journal'' a general magazine that dealt with political and theoretical issues, which was edited by Paul McGuirk. The League became moribund sometime around 1978.




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