Kuomintang: Difference between revisions

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| secretary_general = Justin Huang
| secretary_general = Justin Huang
| foundation      = 10 October 1919
| foundation      = 10 October 1919
| political_orientation        = [[Nationalism|Chinese nationalism]]<br>[[Tridemism]]<br>'''Before 1925:'''<br>[[Republicanism]]<br>[[Bourgeois revolution|Liberal radicalism]]<br>[[Socialism]] (factions)<br>'''After 1925:'''<br>[[Conservatism]]<br>[[Anti-communism]]<br>[[Fascism]] (factions)<br>'''After 1975:'''<br>[[Neoliberalism]]<br>Anti-communism
| political_orientation        = [[Nationalism|Chinese nationalism]]<br>{{show|[[Tridemism]]|'''Before 1925:'''<br>[[Republicanism]]<br>[[Bourgeois revolution|Liberal radicalism]]<br>[[Socialism]] (factions)<br>'''After 1925:'''<br>[[Conservatism]]<br>[[Anti-communism]]<br>[[Fascism]] (factions)<br>'''After 1975:'''<br>[[Neoliberalism]]<br>Anti-communism}}
| abbreviation    = KMT
| abbreviation    = KMT
}}
}}

Revision as of 12:56, 23 September 2025

Kuomintang

中國國民黨
Abbreviation KMT
Chairperson Eric Chu
Secretary-General Justin Huang
Founded 10 October 1919
Political orientation Chinese nationalism
Before 1925:
Republicanism
Liberal radicalism
Socialism (factions)
After 1925:
Conservatism
Anti-communism
Fascism (factions)
After 1975:
Neoliberalism
Anti-communism

The Kuomintang[a] (KMT) are one of the three major parties in the Republic of China (Taiwan) and formerly mainland China's ruling party from 1928 to 1949. Although they maintained a few short-term alliances with the Communist Party of China for opportunistic reasons, the Kuomintang have always constituted the largest anti-communist force endemic to China. The party is associated with notorious reactionary Chiang Kai-shek.

The Kuomintang, unlike its later reactionary stance, was initially a relatively progressive, bourgeois revolutionary party which stood against the feudal Manchu-dominated Qing dynasty. While never a Marxist himself, Sun Yat-sen was to some extent influenced by Leninist organizational structure and additionally had correspondence with the Communist International. However, Sun Yat-sen ultimately rejected Marxism and believed that a model similar to that the Soviet model would be impossible to apply to China. Thus, the path taken by the Kuomintang under Sun Yat-sen would still inevitably be one of bourgeois democracy.[1][2]

See also

References

  1. Dirlik, Arif "I. The Origins", Marxism and the Chinese Revolution
  2. Hoxha, Enver Can the Chinese Revolution be called a Proletarian Revolution? (1979) November 8th Publishing House. pp. 1-9

Notes

  1. (Chinese: 国民党 "Nationalist Party"; also romanized Komintang or Guomindang