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The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw a division between those who reacted against Marxism, leading to social-democratic parties, and those who emphasized the original revolutionary significance of Marx's teachings. Weakened by these divisions, the second International (founded in 1889) collapsed after 1914, with right-wing socialists in all countries supporting participation in World War I while the left opposed it. The Russian Revolution took socialism from the sphere of theory to that of practice, and was followed in 1919 by the foundation of the Third International, which cemented the division between right and left. This lack of unity, in spite of the temporary successes of the popular fronts in France and Spain 193638, helped the rise of fascism and Nazism.
After World War II socialist and communist parties tended towards formal union in Eastern Europe, although the strict communist control that followed was later modified in some respects in, for example, Poland, Romania, and Yugoslavia. Subsequent tendencies to broaden communism were suppressed in Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968). In 1989, however, revolutionary change throughout Eastern Europe ended this rigid control; this was followed in 1991 by the disbanding of the Soviet Communist Party and the resulting disintegration of the USSR. In Western Europe a communist takeover of the Portuguese revolution failed 197576, and elsewhere, as in France under François Mitterrand (president 198195), attempts at socialist-communist cooperation petered out. Most countries in Western Europe have a strong socialist, or social democratic, party; for example, the Social Democratic Party in Germany, the Labour Party in the UK, the Socialist Worker's Party in Spain, and the Panhellenic Socialist Movement in Greece.
Red and white are the national colours, derived from a 13th-century emblem bearing a white eagle on a red field. Effective date: 23 March 1956.
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