Workers Group of the Russian Communist Party

Workers' Group
LeaderGavril Myasnikov
FoundedFebruary 1923 (1923-02)
Dissolvedc. 1930 (1930)
Preceded byWorkers' Opposition
HeadquartersMoscow
NewspaperThe Workers' Way to Power
IdeologyLeft communism
Council communism
Political positionFar-left
National affiliationRussian Communist Party
International affiliationCommunist Workers' International

The Workers Group of the Russian Communist Party (Russian: Рабочая группа РКП, romanized: Rabochaya gruppa RKP) was formed in 1923 to oppose the excessive power of bureaucrats and managers in the new soviet society and in the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks). Its leading member was Gavril Myasnikov.

The Workers Group defended that the Soviet state and public enterprises should be run by soviets elected from the workplace and that the New Economic Policy (NEP) was in danger of becoming a "New Exploitation of the Proletariat" if not controlled by the workers' democracy.

Its main activists were arrested in September 1923, and the group's activity was largely suppressed thereafter, although it continued to exist until the 1930s, inside prisons and possibly also underground.