Republican Congress

Republican Congress newspaper had an editorial Offices; 112 Marlboro Street, Dublin. The publication ran with a subheading; "We cannot conceive of a Free Ireland with a Subject Working Class."--Connolly The Republican Congress ( An Chomhdháil Phoblachtach) was an Irish republican and Marxist-Leninist political organisation.

Republican Congress newspaper had an editorial Offices; 112 Marlboro Street, Dublin. The publication ran with a subheading;  "We cannot conceive of a Free Ireland with a Subject Working Class."--Connolly
The Republican Congress (Irish: An Chomhdháil Phoblachtach) was an Irish republican and Marxist-Leninist political organisation

Founded in 1934, when pro-communist republicans left the Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army. The Republican Congress was led by such anti-Treaty veterans as Peadar O'Donnell, Frank Ryan and George Gilmore. In their later phase, they were involved with the Communist International and International Brigades paramilitary; the Connolly Column. An attempt to form a 100-member military-style organisation to infiltrate the political, social and trade union movements came to nothing, and in 1936 the party ran out of money. It briefly replaced its weekly newspaper, Republican Congress, with a new publication, the Irish People.

   Edition Count       Page Count          Years           
                 1934-1935
             73           338    *Out of print