Anti-Parliamentary Communist Federation
The Anti-Parliamentary Communist Federation (APCF) was a communist group in the United Kingdom. It was founded by the group around Guy Aldred's Spur newspaper – mostly former Communist League members – in 1921. They included John McGovern.
Ramsay MacDonald, the first Prime Minister from the Labour Party.
Tyldesley miners outside the Miners Hall during the 1926 General Strike.
Unemployed people in front of a workhouse in London, during the Great Depression.
Guy Aldred, leader of the APCF until 1933, when he split off to form the United Socialist Movement.
Guy Alfred Aldred was a British anarcho-communist and a prominent member of the Anti-Parliamentary Communist Federation (APCF). He founded the Bakunin Press publishing house and edited five Glasgow-based anarchist periodicals: The Herald of Revolt, The Spur, The Commune, The Council, and The Word, where he worked closely with Ethel MacDonald and his later partner Jenny Patrick.
Guy Aldred
Mast head of The Indian Sociologist