It would be easy, and not altogether inaccurate, to begin and end an article on Cambodian politics with the observation that Prince Sihanouk's leadership of the country has rendered political parties unnecessary. Since the establishment of the Sangkum Reastr Niyurn, the People's Socialist Community, in 1955, this political movement — the distinction is one made by its founder — has dominated Cambodian politics and succeeded in eclipsing the parties which existed up to 1955, with one minor exception. This exception is the Pracheachon, a partly clandestine front party for the Cambodian Communist Party. Its importance is negligible in a country in which social grievances, in contrast to so much of the rest of Asia, are limited, particularly in the countryside, where the peasant is normally a land-holder unencumbered by major problems of land indebtedness or land shortage.