[3] It aimed to train young members on political theory, speech making, district work, and public policy research for nurturing the vision for youth.
[4] Proletariat Political Institute quit the LSD when Wong and another legislator Albert Chan Wai-yip split with the LSD in 2011, due to their dissatisfaction with the policies of the then chairman Andrew To Kwan-hang and his faction, especially To's decision not to spin the Democratic Party, the flagship pro-democratic party, which negotiated with the Beijing government in secret and supported the government's reform proposal.
It organised memorials for the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, in opposition to the main candlelight vigil held by the pan-democrats' Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China (HKASPDMC), which they criticised it for having a Chinese nationalistic theme.
The Proletariat Political Institute, Civic Passion, and other localist groups organised an alternative 4 June rally in Tsim Sha Tsui.
[9][10] In 2016, the Proletariat Political Institute, Civic Passion, and Hong Kong Resurgence Order, headed by the "mentor" of the localism Chin Wan, announced that they would form an alliance for the upcoming 2016 Legislative Council election.