The
Fatherland Front (FF) (Отечествен фронт) was originally a
Bulgarian political
resistance movement during
World War II. The
Zveno movement, the communist Bulgarian Workers Party, a wing of the
Agrarian Union and the Bulgarian Social Democratic Party, were all part of the FF. The constituent groups of the FF had widely contrasting ideologies and had only united in face of the pro-German, militarist dictatorship in Bulgaria. Still, initially the members of the FF worked together, without a single dominating group. However, the
Bulgarian Communist Party began to dominate soon. In
1944, after the
Soviet Union had declared war on Bulgaria, the FF committed a coup d'état and they declared war on Germany, Italy and the other
Axis nations. The FF government, headed by
Kimon Georgiev (Zveno), immediately signed a
ceasefire treaty with the
Soviet Union. Soon the
Bulgarian Communist Party became dominant in the organization. In
1946 Georgiev resigned and his successor was
Georgi Dimitrov, a communist, and
Bulgaria became a
People's Republic. The parties within the Front ceased to exist, but it became a mass organisation for the communists. In
1989 it was dissolved.