Social Democratic Party (Laeral)
Social Democratic Party Parti Social-Démocrate | |
|---|---|
| Mandarin name | 社会民主党 |
| Abbreviation | SDP |
| Founder | Réne Gramont, Jean-Philippe Salaun, Sun Jia-wei, Julien Cheng, Zhou Wei-lin |
| Founded | February 7, 1922 |
| Dissolved | September 1, 1986 |
| Split from | Progressive Party of Laeral |
| Succeeded by | Republic Party |
| Headquarters | Hanshui (1922-1924) Laeralsford (1924-1965) |
| Newspaper | Social Democratic Appeal |
| Think tank | Five Pillars Policy Office |
| Student wing | National Students' Union of Laeral |
| Youth wing | Social Democratic Youth Congress |
| Women's wing | All-Laeral Women's Congress |
| Oversight Wing | Social Democratic Internal Investigations Office |
| Labor wing | Congress of Laeralian Trade Unions |
| Paramilitary wing | Rose Banner Brigades (1922-1929) |
| Membership (1951) | 18,550,000 |
| Ideology | Gramontism, Social Democracy, Democratic Socialism |
| Political position | Center-left to Left-wing |
| Colors | Red |
The Social Democratic Party (French: Parti Social-Démocrate; Mandarin: 社会民主党/Shèhuì mínzhǔdǎng) was a Gramontist, social-democratic Laeralian political party which was the dominant party in the autocratic Republican Era. Established in 1922 by the former Committee for Democracy and Progress upon their victory in the Laeralian Civil War, the party used malapportionment, vote-buying, and the suppression of political opponents to remain the dominant party in Laeral until the party's schism at the Seventh Social Democratic Party Congress in 1952 and the ensuing Bloody Summer, which led to the writing of the 1954 Laeralian Constitution and the transition to full democracy.
The SDP was a center-left to left-wing political party based upon Gramontism and the Five Pillars espoused by the party's founding elite, the Gang of Five. These principles of republicanism, reformism, socialism, secularism, and anti-imperialism were enacted through the Rose Revolution, a series of social reforms taking place throughout Laeral's Republican Era. A schism in the party between pro-democracy and hardliner factions led to the decisive victory of Sun Jia-wei's reformist "scarlet" faction following the Bloody Summer, leading to the first fully-free elections in 1954. The party initially received electoral success even once free elections had been instituted, forming majority governments in the National Assembly until 1964. However, the excesses of the Emergency Period, when Social Democratic President Réne Gramont suspended civil liberties, led the party to officially reconstitute itself as the Republic Party in 1965. Today, the Social Democratic legacy remains a matter of contention in Laeral, while the Progressive Party identifies itself as the spiritual successor to the SDP.
History
Founding and Early Republican Era
The SDP was founded by the Gang of Five in Hanshui during the fading days of the Laeralian Civil War as an instrument of control over the forthcoming Republic of Laeral. Party membership was extended to all who had fought under the banner of the Committee for Democracy and Progress. Réne Gramont was the founding Party Secretary, and the only figure to hold the position of President of Laeral alongside Party Secretary of the Social Democratic Party, as the positions were formally made separate at the 1932 Third Social Democratic Party Congress. During the early years of the Republican Era, the Army of the Committee for Democracy and Progress remained under arms as the Rose Banner Brigades, paramilitary troops of the SDP, but were dissolved in 1927 with the end of the Brissac War.
Gramont's 1922 to 1932 tenure as Party Secretary saw the party developed into a robust organization encompassing youth, women's and organized labor wings, with the intent of embedding Social Democratic Party institutions into the daily life of Laeralites. Party membership became a swift ticket to social advancement, with the ranks of state-run corporation leaders, the military officer corps, and political office being drawn almost entirely from SDP members.
Salaun and Zhou Eras
At the 1932 Third Social Democratic Party Congress, party procedures were revamped to meet the needs of the party's growing membership. Rather than aspiring to count "two in three Laeralites" as party members, as Sun Jia-wei had previously advocated, membership was made contingent upon a thorough background check, a probationary period, and proven knowledge of the Five Pillars and Gramontism. J.P. Salaun's tenure as president, from 1932 to 1942, saw the expansion of Rose Revolution programs, an increased focus on secularist ideology, and the further development of the planned economy, while organized political opposition was permitted via the Liberal Democratic Party, Laeralian National Congress, and National Cooperative Party. Salaun also presided over the May 21st Affair, in which eight leading members of the National Assembly, public companies, and provincial governments were arrested and imprisoned on corruption charges by the Social Democratic Internal Investigations Office.

Zhou Wei-lin's nomination as president at the 1942 Fifth Social Democratic Party Congress was seen as a victory for liberalizers within the party, as restrictions on the press were lifted, broader criticism of party programs was tolerated, and political participation was further expanded, although opposition parties never held a realistic chance of winning control of the National Assembly. A growing party backlash to Zhou's reforms, however, as well as Zhou's outreach to Libertas Omnium Maximus and other "imperialist" foreign nations, led to a hotly-contested nomination race at the Sixth Social Democratic Party Congress in 1947. As it became clear that Zhou lacked support from delegates to pursue another term as president, Sun Jia-wei, the favored choice of moderates, narrowly defeated hardliner Hong Kuo-shu, who was forced to accept the position of Party Secretary. Sun's first term as president was largely consumed by the Accession of Lienne, known also as the Second Fellsian War, when Laeral intervened militarily to support the border region of Lienne's bid for independence from High Fells.
Seventh Social Democratic Party Congress and Bloody Summer
By 1952, the date of the Seventh Social Democratic Party Congress, tensions within the party between President Sun's "scarlet" or "presidential" faction, seen as favoring reform, and Hong Kuo-shu's "vermilion" or "countryside" faction, which opposed reform, had risen. In an extraordinary session of the Central Working Committee in November 1951, Fai Chao-ming, leader of the powerful Social Democratic Internal Investigations Office, was forcibly removed by scarlet faction members after he had moved to arrest several SDP grandees on charges seen as politically-motivated. However, the Central Working Committee did not muster the votes to remove Fai from party leadership. The incident stoked tensions between the party's two factions, leading Fai to call for Party Secretary Hong Kuo-shu, the leader of the vermilion faction, to replace Sun Jia-wei as the party's presidential nominee for the 1952 election. Fai and other vermilion Social Democrats sought to win a majority on the Executive Central Committee during the elections at the Seventh SDP Congress, yet over a marathon four-day session, were defeated, with Sun narrowly winning renomination.
Emboldened by this victory, the reformist wing of the SDP moved to purge the vermilion faction from leadership entirely, leading to violence when Hong's supporters in the Laeralian Army, led by General Alain Mette, attempted a coup against President Sun. This Bloody Summer resulted in immense street violence and the supposedly-accidental death of former SDP President Jean-Philippe Salaun at the hands of vermilion faction members of the Laeralian Army. The defeat and treason trial of the conspirators of the Bloody Summer coup attempt emboldened Sun, Zhou Wei-lin, and other SDP reformists to call a new constitutional convention at which the Second Allied Provinces of Laeral was founded.
Post-Republic Activities
Organization
- Executive Central Committee- formal annual decisions - Central Working Committee- day to day - Central Policy Affairs Committee - develops five-year plans - Central Internal Affairs Committee - internal stuff - Central Campaign Committee - elections