Marxist Leninist Maoist Party

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     Marxist Leninist Maoist Party
Basics
Political beliefPeople's Democracy, Left-Wing Populism
Members
Values

The Marxist Leninist Maoist Party is a left-wing party founded by Lieutenant Quattro.

History

After the forced dissolution of the Zeonist Party, Lt.Quattro would eventually create a new party based off Maoism and Communism. His constant opposition to the government made him popular among some in the Sim.

History (Lore)

The Marxist-Leninist-Maoist Party (MLMP) emerged in the early 1980s as a militant splinter faction of the Workers' Party, rejecting what it saw as the mainstream left's "revisionist" compromises with capitalism. Led by hardline labor organizer Lo Chun-fai, the party adopted its contradictory name not out of genuine adherence to Maoist doctrine, but as a symbolic rebuke to both Western imperialism and Soviet-style socialism, which it viewed as bureaucratically decayed. Despite its name, the MLMP's ideology was always more nationalist than Maoist, combining state-socialist economics with deep social conservatism. It called for nationalizing key industries, land redistribution, and worker-controlled enterprises, but also rejected progressive social movements, opposing feminism, LGBTQ+ rights, and immigration as "Western cultural imperialism." This odd fusion of radical economics and reactionary values made it a political outlier—too extreme for mainstream leftists, yet too economically left-wing for the right.

The MLMP never achieved mass appeal, remaining a small but vocal force in Tsz Kong politics. It found a niche among disillusioned industrial workers and rural traditionalists who felt abandoned by both the Social Democratic Workers' Party (SDWP) and the rising liberal New Democratic Covenant (NDC). During the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, the MLMP gained brief traction by blaming "foreign capitalist looters" for the economic collapse, but its refusal to ally with other leftist groups (whom it dismissed as "bourgeois reformers") kept it marginalized. By the 2010s, as Tsz Kong's political landscape polarized between the TKNP's right-wing populism and the NDC's liberalism, the MLMP became even more isolated, reduced to street protests and radical pamphleteering.

In the 2020s and 2030s, the MLMP has become little more than a political curiosity. Its aging base of old-guard Marxists and socially conservative laborers is shrinking, and its refusal to engage with modern issues like climate change or digital labor rights has rendered it irrelevant to younger activists. Yet, in a strange twist, some of its economic rhetoric has been co-opted by the Tsz Kong Nationalist Party (TKNP), which borrows its anti-globalization and protectionist language—while stripping away the socialist elements. Meanwhile, the Democratic Socialist Greens (DSG) dismiss the MLMP as a relic of a bygone era, its rigid dogma unfit for the challenges of the 21st century. Yet because of a solid voter base, largely consisted of certain trade unions, and disillusioned youth from the western districts, it has remained relevant to this day.

Members

Name Notes
Lieutenant Quattro Leader
King ronak Member
Greentea Member