CPN-UML bets on a grassroots surge with a 10-point membership push
CPN-UML has wrapped up a Kathmandu workshop with a 10-point resolution that puts membership renewal and expansion at the center of its organizational strategy, including a plan for each organized member to recruit three more.
The CPN-UML Organization Department has concluded its workshop on membership renewal and motivation in Kathmandu with a 10-point resolution that puts recruitment and renewal at the center of the party’s organizational drive.
The most notable move is a directive aimed at strengthening the party from the ground up: each organized member is expected to bring in at least three new members. The resolution signals a more aggressive membership expansion strategy as the party looks to widen its base and energize its internal structure.
Alongside the recruitment push, the party also plans to speed up online membership renewal. Even with the digital process in focus, the renewal workflow will still require the physical presence of the individuals involved, suggesting the party wants both convenience and verification built into the system.
The Kathmandu workshop appears to be part of a broader effort to tighten party organization, improve member engagement, and prepare for future political mobilization. By combining renewal, verification, and recruitment targets in one resolution, CPN-UML is clearly betting on a more disciplined grassroots network.
For the party, this is more than an administrative update. It is a message that organizational strength matters, and that membership growth is being treated as a measurable task rather than a vague ambition.
The strategy also reflects a familiar challenge in party politics: keeping existing members active while continuously expanding the rank and file. CPN-UML’s new resolution suggests it wants to do both at once, using structured renewal and direct member-to-member recruitment to reinforce its organizational machine.