"Creating the UCP reflected the need for organizational unification of all who stand in positions of scientific communism in favor of socialism, democracy, internationalism and secularism, the party is not opposed to the other working-class parties, the proletarian movement is not customized for any sectarian principles. The party aims at the development of class consciousness in the masses of workers and the organization of their struggle for power.
The immediate task of the Party is the intensification of the struggle of the working people - the working class and its allies - for their political and economic rights and interests.
The UCP organizes its activities based on the principle of democratic centralism, the party of ideas of community and camaraderie".
The Third Congress of the United Communist Party will be held on February 9, 2019 in the city of Moscow, due to the decision of the Sixth Plenum of the Central Committee of the Party. At the Congress there will be presented the reports of the Central Committee and the Central Auditing Commission of the UCP. and the Congress will discuss amendments to the Program and the Charter of UCP, The elections of new structures of the bodies will be held. The Congress will discuss the situation in the country, the world communist movement and the party. On the eve of the Congress, a report-election campaign was announced in all party groups, which is to be held in September-December 2018.
Expansion
The UCP aspires for unity among socialist forces in Russia. In 2018 another left-wing Russian party, New Communist Movement, merged with the UCP.
Criticism
Political analysist Sean Guillory wrote about the radical Left in Russia on the eve of the Russian presidential election in May 2018. In this section of Russian politics he included a range of organisations, which included the United Communist Party. Guillory stated that he sees the radical Left in Russia as limited by a number of factors. These include state repression, ideological differences, a generational divide and a lack of money. Despite their aspiration to develop a parallel media that is representative of “the majority of the Russian population” the Russian left Guillory argues are “resource poor.” There is, according to Guillory a clear generational divide within the Russian Left that has a detrimental effect on the United Communist Party. Older parties such as the UCP identify with the Soviet Union with a membership and support base that “tends to be older, even elderly”. Newer groups don’t employ as much Soviet Union symbolism and have members and supporters who are younger. Young Russians who start to develop a class consciousness and interest in political affairs are attracted to the newer groups. Failure to attract younger members and supporters has a terminal effect. This further accelerates the decline of the older Russian left organisations.