The All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks (VKPB; ; Vsesoyuznaya kommunisticheskaya partiya bolshevikov, VKPB) is an unregistered anti-revisionist MarxistâÂÂLeninist communist party operating in Russia and other former Soviet states. It was founded in November 1991 and led by Nina Andreyeva, a university teacher who was well known for her 1988 open letter "", published in the newspaper Sovetskaya Rossiya.
The party is known for its sectarian positions. It opposes the Communist Party of the Russian Federation due to its "reformist" character and has refused to back its candidates for presidential election. It is also outspokenly critical of the Russian church and religion in general, demanding the separation of church and state, and Vladimir Putin's regime.
The VKPB has its origins in the Bolshevik Platform of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which was formed on 13 July 1991. This platform directly opposed the official party leadership under Mikhail Gorbachev, considering Perestroika to be destructive to the socialist system in the USSR. The platform was led by Nina Andreyeva, a lecturer at the Leningrad Technological Institute.
On 21 September 1991, a conference of the All-Union Society "Unity for Leninism and Communist Ideals" was held in the Leningrad Oblast, along with members of the Organizing Committee of the Bolshevik Platform in the CPSU. The conference decided to prepare for the founding congress of the Bolshevik-Leninist Party. As a result, the founding congress of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks was held semi-legally in Leningrad on 8 November 1991. The party's founders declared their inheritance of revolutionary traditions and a complete break with the "anti-people policy of the opportunist leadership" of the CPSU, which had initiated "the destruction of the socialist system, the collapse of the country, and the liquidation of the party created by Lenin."
It published a newspaper called (), (), (), (), (), (), (), () and (). Its youth section is the All-Union Young Guard Bolsheviks.
During its history, the party has experienced several splits. Splinters often took similar names.
In December 2021, a joint plenum of the Central Committees of the VKPB and VKP(b) was held, where a decision was made to prepare for a unification congress.
In November 2022, the VKP(b) and VKPB (Sverdlovsk Congress) held a unification congress. The new party was named the MarxistâÂÂLeninist Party of Bolsheviks (MLPB) (). However, this decision was not made by all the primary organizations of the VKP(b).
The official ideology of the VKPB is Bolshevism in its orthodox, revolutionary form, endorsing the creative development of Marxist-Leninist theory as pioneered by Joseph Stalin. The VKPB actively condemns revisionism in the communist movement. It considers its primary goal to be a socialist revolution, followed by the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat.