''The Cuban Revolutionary Party is the Cuban people"
José Martí, April 3, 1892.
"With all and for the good of everyone" and "The new pines": two Martí speeches that revived a new organizational stage for the independence movement unleashed in the early years of the 1890s. The idea of ordering a future revolution was the true origin of the Cuban Revolutionary Party (PRC), a political organization officially founded on April 10, 1892 by José Martí.
With its creation, bases and statutes would be created to direct and carry out what Martí described as the Necessary War, aimed at preventing the expansion of the United States to the South by rejecting any link with the US government or politics.
From then on, the Party would be a political-military organization in order to have a dignified and prosperous country, always at the service of the nation. The workers were its fundamental base, especially cigar workers and others belonging to weak sectors of the petty bourgeoisie, such as the intellectuals. This party would function as the party of the Cuban popular masses and was projected according to the interests of the Cuban people. Because of its radical nature, the party became the promoter of the most democratic revolutionary work on the continent.
José Martí was his delegate for a long time together with treasurer Benjamín Guerra. In order to fulfill their projections, the presidents of the Council Corps cooperated actively after reaffirming the patriotism achieved by the grassroots bodies. There were also women like Inocencia Martínez, María Cabrales or Clemencia Báez, who prepared the future and became a necessary part of the national-liberation process.
The Cuban Revolutionary Party of Martí and of its people spread through several countries in the world in associations, its center was established in the United States.. Gradually it reached Central America, the Antilles and Europe. Its democratic and liberating character enhanced Martí's personality and demonstrated that it was a work of the insular anticolonialist independence movement.