Due to its position towards the October Revolution and being a strong supporter of the Russian Constituent Assembly, the party was banned from soviets dominated by the Bolsheviks, but did not fully dissolve until 1928.
After the JCP(PZ) had merged into the Communist Party by 1922, the JSDLP(PZ) changed name to the Jewish Communist Labour Party (Poalei Zion) (known by its Yiddish acronym א.ק.א.פ.
[1][2] Its Yiddish organ, Der proletarisher gedank ('Proletarian Thought'), was published from Moscow between 1926 and 1927, replacing its Moscow central Russian organ Evreiskaya proletarskaya mysl ('Jewish Proletarian Thought', 1920-1926).
[4] The party opposed the policy of regionalization of the Soviet Union.
[6] Another Poalist, Solomon Goldelman, was deputy minister of trade and industry and of labour in the Directory of the Ukrainian National Republic (state authority created by the Ukrainian National Union on 14 November 1918).