Elizabete, Aleksejs, Peteris Cedrins, thank you for your fast replies!
If I got well from your words, then the Communist Party was banned over there?
Yes, Lembergs was a Second Secretary of the Komsomol and Propaganda Secretary for the Ventspils Party Committee. Later he was the Secretary for Industry in the Ventspils Region Committee. Re Šķēle—I don’t know, but if he was—I don’t think he held a position.
To answer Kiskun’s question—the Party split in April 1990. The pro-independence wing became the Democratic Labor Party and eventually fused with the Social Democratic Workers’ Party (Latvia’s oldest party, which had survived in exile).
The pro-Moscow wing was led by Rubiks, who was imprisoned for his part in the August coup. The illegalized Party re-emerged as the Socialist Party—it now shares a list with Harmony Center (the “moderate” “Russian party") and is still led by Rubiks, who can’t be elected to Parliament because those who remained active in the Party after the violence of the “January events” of 1991 began cannot stand… he could theoretically be elected to the European Parliament, however.
Most entered or founded other parties across the political spectrum—one of the founders of the rightist LNNK, now fused with the Fatherlanders, for example, was Eduards Berklavs, who was a “national Communist” in the 1950s but helped draft lists of “anti-Soviet and bourgeois elements” to be deported back in 1940.
The first head of state of independent Latvia—before the Presidency was restored—was Anatolijs Gorbunovs, who had been the Ideological Secretary of the Party.
Regards,
/P
So, did the new Socialist Party along with the Harmony Center ever get into the government?
