Overview
During the revolutionary era, Roddy Connolly’s Communist Party robbed banks to fund its activities, and 20-year-old Connolly engaged in gun-running for the IRA while struggling to maintain control of his fractious party. In a later period of retreat, James Larkin refused to submit to the ‘imperialistic’ British Communist Party or follow the dictates of Moscow’s Stalinist bureaucracy, resisting its policies and practices on instinct.
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Communist Politics in Ireland 1916–1945: Volume 1: Pursuit of the Workers’ Republic in the Post-Connolly and Larkin Era, 1916–1928
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