fbpx
Wikipedia

History of far-right movements in France

The far-right (French: Extrême droite) tradition in France finds its origins in the Third Republic with Boulangism and the Dreyfus affair. In the 1880s, General Georges Boulanger, called "General Revenge" (Général Revanche), championed demands for military revenge against Imperial Germany as retribution for the defeat and fall of the Second French Empire during the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71). This stance, known as revanchism, began to exert a strong influence on French nationalism. Soon thereafter, the Dreyfus affair provided one of the political division lines of France. French nationalism, which had been largely associated with left-wing and Republican ideologies before the Dreyfus affair, turned after that into a main trait of the right-wing and, moreover, of the far right. A new right emerged, and nationalism was reappropriated by the far-right who turned it into a form of ethnic nationalism, blended with anti-Semitism, xenophobia, anti-Protestantism and anti-Masonry. The Action française, first founded as a journal and later a political organization, was the matrix of a new type of counter-revolutionary right-wing, which continues to exist today. During the interwar period, the Action française (AF) and its youth militia, the Camelots du Roi, were very active. Far right leagues organized riots.

After World War II, the Organisation armée secrète (OAS) was created in Madrid in 1961 by French military personnel opposed to the independence of Algeria. Jean-Marie Le Pen founded the Front National (FN) party in 1972. At the 1986 legislative elections, the FN managed to obtain 35 seats, with 10% of the votes. Mark Frederiksen, a French Algeria activist, created in April 1966 a neo-Nazi group, the FANE (Fédération d'action nationaliste et européenne, Nationalist and European Federation of Action). However, in 1978, neo-Nazi members of the GNR-FANE broke again with the FN. During the 1980s, the National Front managed to gather, under Jean-Marie Le Pen's leadership, most rival far-right tendencies of France, following a succession of splits and alliances with other, minor parties, during the 1970s.

Third Republic (1871–1914) edit

The Dreyfus affair was a turning point in the political history of France and in the Third Republic (1871–1940), established after the 1870 Franco-Prussian War and the 1871 Paris Commune. The modern "far right" or radical right, grew out of two separate events of 1889.

The Socialist International was formed at the Paris Conference, which imposed doctrinal orthodoxy on socialists and demanded their allegiance to the international working class rather than their nation. This forced patriotic socialists to choose either their nation or the international workers' movement. Many chose their nation and fell into violent conflict with their former socialist comrades. Those who chose the nation and retained the strategy of violence, then used most often against their former comrades, formed much of the base of the radical right. Many of those people also proved susceptible to the blandishments of anti-Semitism, which has long been a hallmark of the radical right. This would include (socialist) Maurice Barrès, (communardes) Henri Rochefort and Gustave Paul Cluseret, (Blanquists) Charles Bernard and Antoine Jourde, among others.[1][2]

 
Georges Ernest Boulanger (1837–1891)

A second event of 1889 was the culmination of the "Boulanger Affair" which championed the vague demands of the former Minister of War General Georges Boulanger. Boulanger had attracted the support of many socialists by ordering lenient treatment of strikers when the army was called upon to suppress strikes. He also rattled his saber against Germany, which pleased French patriots intent on taking revenge. But this alarmed the other ministers, who dropped Boulanger from the government. When his champions mounted an electoral campaign to have him elected to the Chamber of Deputies, the government reacted by forcing him out of the army. His backers then elected him to the Chamber again from Paris, where he gained the support of both conservatives, who loathed the Republic, and socialists with their own ideas about how the Republic should be remade. This joining of the left and right against the center formed the foundation upon which the radical right was built in subsequent years. Violent agitation in Paris on the election night in 1889 convinced the government to prosecute Boulanger in order to remove him from the political scene. Instead of facing trumped up charges, Boulanger fled to Belgium. His supporters, "Boulangists" afterward nursed an intense grievance against the Republic and reunited during the Dreyfus affair to oppose the Republic and "back the army" once again.[3][4][5]

Dreyfus affair and foundation of the Action française edit

 
Degradation of Alfred Dreyfus, 1895

In 1894, a Jewish officer, Alfred Dreyfus, was arrested on accusations of treason and sharing intelligence with the German Empire. The Dreyfus affair provided one of the political fault lines of France. Nationalism, which had been before the Dreyfus affair a left-wing and Republican ideology, turned after that to be a main trait of the right-wing and, moreover, of the far-right.[6]

Émile Zola entered the political scene with his open letter "J'Accuse…!", followed by other writers, artists and scholars supporting him with a "Manifesto of the Intellectuals", helping to define the meaning of the term "intellectual",[7] while the left and right were at loggerheads, mainly over the questions of militarism, nationalism, justice and human rights. Until then, nationalism was a Republican, left-wing ideology, related to the French Revolution and the Revolutionary Wars. It was a liberal nationalism, formulated by Ernest Renan's definition of the nation as a "daily plebiscite" and as formed by the subjective "will to live together". Related to "revanchism", the belligerent will to take revenge against Germany and retake control of Alsace-Lorraine, nationalism could then be sometimes opposed to imperialism. In the 1880s, a debate thus opposed those who opposed the "colonial lobby", such as radical Georges Clemenceau, who declared that colonialism diverted France from the "blue line of the Vosges" (referring to Alsace-Lorraine), socialist Jean Jaurès and nationalist Maurice Barrès, against Moderate Republican Jules Ferry, republican Léon Gambetta and Eugène Etienne, the president of the parliamentary colonial group.

However, in the midst of the Dreyfus affair, a new right emerged, and nationalism was appropriated by the far right who turned it into a form of ethnic nationalism, itself blended with anti-Semitism, xenophobia, anti-Protestantism and anti-Masonry. Charles Maurras (1868–1952), founder of "integralism" (or "integral nationalism"), created the term "Anti-France" to stigmatize "internal foreigners", or the "four confederate states of Protestants, Jews, Freemasons and foreigners" (his actual word for the latter being the far less polite métèques). A few years later, Maurras would join the monarchist Action française, created by Maurice Pujo and Henri Vaugeois in 1898. Maurras, who was an agnostic, spearheaded a monarchist and Catholic revival. He pragmatically conceived of religion as an ideology useful to unify the nation. Most French Catholics were conservatives, a trait that continues today. On the other hand, most Protestants, Jews and atheists belonged to the left. Henceforth, the republicans' conception was, to the contrary, that only state secularism could peacefully bind together diverse religious and philosophical tendencies, and avoid any return to the Wars of Religion. Furthermore, Catholic priests were seen as a major reactionary force by the republicans, among whom anti-clericalism became common. The Ferry laws on public education had been a first step for the Republic in rooting out the clerics' influence: they would be completed by the 1905 law on the separation of Church and State.

Action française, first founded as a review, was the matrix of a new type of counter-revolutionary right-wing, and continues to exist today. Action française was quite influential in the 1930s, in particular through its youth organization, the Camelots du Roi, founded in 1908, and which engaged in many street brawls, etc. The Camelots du Roi included such figures as Catholic writer Georges Bernanos and Jean de Barrau, member of the directing committee of the National Federation, and particular secretary of the duc d'Orléans (1869–1926), the son of the Orléanist count of Paris (1838–1894) and hence Orléanist heir to the throne of France. Many members of the OAS terrorist group during the Algerian War (1954–62) were part of the monarchist movement. Jean Ousset, Maurras' personal secretary, created the Catholic fundamentalist organization Cité catholique, which would include OAS members and founded a branch in Argentina in the 1960s.

Apart from the Action française, several far-right leagues were created during the Dreyfus affair. Mostly anti-Semitic, they also represented a new right-wing tendency, sharing common traits such as anti-parliamentarism, militarism, nationalism, and often engaged in street brawls. Thus, the nationalist poet Paul Déroulède created in 1882 the anti-semitic Ligue des patriotes (League of Patriots), which at first focused on advocating 'revanche' (revenge) for the French defeat during the Franco-Prussian War. Along with Jules Guérin, the journalist Edouard Drumont created the Antisemitic League of France in 1889. Also anti-Masonic, the League became at the start of the 20th century the Grand Occident de France, a name chosen in reaction against the Masonic lodge of the Grand Orient de France.

Between the wars edit

During the interwar period, the Action française (AF) and its youth militia, the Camelots du Roi, were very active in Paris.[8] Apart from the AF, various far-right leagues were formed and opposed both Cartel des gauches (Coalition of the left) governments. Pierre Taittinger thus formed the Jeunesses Patriotes in 1924, which imitated the style of the Fascists, although it remained a more traditional authoritarian movement. The following year, Georges Valois created Le Faisceau, heavily inspired by Benito Mussolini's Fascism. In 1933, the year Adolf Hitler gained power in Germany, perfumer François Coty founded Solidarité française and Marcel Bucard formed the Francisme, which was subsidised by Mussolini. Another important league was François de la Rocque's Croix de Feu, which formed the base for the Parti Social Français (PSF), the first mass party of the French right-wing. Mussolini was much more popular in right-wing circles than Hitler due to the negative reaction many French conservatives had to Hitler's repression of dissident German conservatives and Catholics in 1933 and 1934.[9]

Apart from the leagues, a group of Neosocialists (Marcel Déat, Pierre Renaudel, etc.) were excluded in November 1933 from the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO, the socialist party) because of their revisionist stances and admiration for fascism. Déat would become one of the most ardent collaborationists during World War II.

Another major player in France's right-wing world between the wars was Jacques Doriot. Doriot had been expelled by the French Communist Party after proposing a Popular Front with other leftist parties, which at that time was seen as heresy by his party's hierarchy. Personally hurt and embittered by his expulsion, Doriot would slowly change sides, eventually openly denouncing communism and going on to found the Parti Populaire Francais or PPF, the largest pre-war right wing party. Other important figures of the 1930s include Xavier Vallat, who would become General Commissioner for Jewish Affairs under Vichy, members of the Cagoule terrorist group (Eugène Deloncle, Eugène Schueller (the founder of L'Oréal cosmetic firm), Jacques Corrèze, Joseph Darnand, who later founded the Service d'ordre légionnaire militia during Vichy, etc.). To obtain arms from fascist Italy, the group assassinated two Italian antifascists, the Rosselli brothers,[10][11] on June 9, 1937, and sabotaged aeroplanes clandestinely supplied by the French government to the Second Spanish Republic. They also attempted a coup against the Popular Front government, elected in 1936, leading to arrests in 1937, ordered by Interior Minister Marx Dormoy, during which the police seized explosives and military weapons, including anti-tank guns.[12]

Far right leagues organised major riots on 6 February 1934.[13] The groups did not coordinate their efforts and the riots were suppressed by the police and military. Elements on the left were convinced that unity was essential to suppress fascism, and in 1936 they formed the Popular Front and dissolved the leagues. However the right-wing leagues promptly reorganized as political parties and continued vocal attacks on the left.[14]

Vichy France edit

Fifth Republic edit

The Organisation armée secrète (OAS) was created in Madrid by French military officers opposed to the independence of Algeria. Many of its members would later join various anti-communist struggles around the world. Some, for example, joined the Cité catholique fundamentalist group and went to Argentina, where they were in contact with the Argentine Armed Forces. Jean Pierre Cherid, former OAS member, took part in the 1976 Montejurra massacre against left-wing Carlists.[15][16] He was then part of the Spanish GAL death squad, and participated in the 1978 assassination of Argala, one of the ETA members who had killed Franco's Prime minister, Luis Carrero Blanco, in 1973.

Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour was the far-right candidate at the 1965 presidential election. His campaign was organised by Jean-Marie Le Pen. Charles de Gaulle said of Tixier-Vignancourt: "Tixier-Vignancour, that is Vichy, the Collaboration proud of itself, the Milice, the OAS".

 
Jean-Marie Le Pen founded the Front National in 1972 and led it until 2011

Jean-Marie Le Pen founded the Front National (FN) party in 1972, along with former Occident member Jacques Bompard, former Collaborationist Roland Gaucher, François Duprat, who introduced the negationist thesis to France,[17] and others nostalgics of Vichy France, Catholic fundamentalists, etc.[18] Le Pen presented himself for the first time in the 1974 presidential election, obtaining 0.74%.[18] The electoral rise of the FN did not start until Jean-Pierre Stirbois's victory, in 1983, in Dreux. The FN became stronger throughout the 1980s, managing to unite most far-right tendencies, passing electoral alliances with the right-wing Rally for the Republic (RPR), while some FN members quit the party to join the RPR or the Union for a French Democracy (UDF). At the 1986 legislative elections, the FN managed to obtain 35 seats, with 10% of the votes.

Meanwhile, other far-right tendencies gathered in Alain de Benoist's Nouvelle Droite think-tank, heading a pro-European and neopagan line. Some radical members of the "national revolutionary" tendency quit the FN to form other minor parties (Party of New Forces, PFN, and French and European Nationalist Party, PNFE).

French Third Position's relations with the National Front edit

Mark Frederiksen, a French Algeria activist, created in April 1966 a neo-Nazi group, the FANE (Fédération d'action nationaliste et européenne, Nationalist and European Federation of Action). The FANE boasted at most a hundred activists, including members such as Luc Michel, now leader of the Parti communautaire national-européen (National European Communautary Party), Jacques Bastide, Michel Faci, Michel Caignet and Henri-Robert Petit, a journalist and former Collaborationist who directed under the Vichy regime the newspaper Le Pilori. The FANE maintained international contacts with the British group the League of Saint George.[19]

The FANE rallied Jean-Marie Le Pen's National Front in 1974, gathered around François Duprat and Alain Renault's Revolutionary Nationalist Groups (GNR), which represented the nationalist revolutionary tendency of the FN.

But in 1978, neo-Nazi members of the GNR-FANE broke again with the FN, taking with them sections of the FN youth movement, the Front National de la Jeunesse.[20] On the other hand, GNR activists closer to the Third Position (Jacques Bastide and Patrick Gorre)[20] joined Jean-Gilles Malliarakis to found, on February 11, 1979, the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (Mouvement nationaliste révolutionnaire), which became in 1985 Third Way (Troisième Voie).

After this brief passage at the National Front, Mark Fredriksen created the Faisceaux nationalistes européens (FANE) in July 1980. These would eventually merge with the Mouvement national et social ethniste in 1987, and then with the PNFE (French and European Nationalist Party) in January 1994, which also gathered former National Front members.

Dissolved first in September 1980 by Raymond Barre's government, Fredriksen's group was recreated, and dissolved again in 1985 by Laurent Fabius' government. Finally, it was dissolved a third time in 1987 by Jacques Chirac's government, on charges of "violent demonstrations organised by this movement, which has as one of its expressed objective the establishment of a new Nazi regime", the "paramilitary organisation of this association and its inciting of racial discrimination".

Alain de Benoist's Nouvelle Droite and the Club de l'Horloge edit

In the 1980s, Alain de Benoist became chief theorist of the Nouvelle Droite movement, creating the think-tank GRECE in 1968, some of whose members were involved with the formation of the Club de l'Horloge in 1974. They advocated an ethno-nationalist stance focused on European culture, which advocated a return of paganism. Members of the GRECE quit the think tank in the 1980s, such as Pierre Vial who joined the FN, or Guillaume Faye who quit the organisation along with others members in 1986. Faye participated in 2006 in a conference in the US organised by American Renaissance, a white separatist magazine published by the New Century Foundation.

Alain de Benoist occasionally contributed to the Mankind Quarterly review, which supports hereditarianism and is associated with the US think tank the Pioneer Fund, headed by J. Philippe Rushton, the author of Race, Evolution and Behavior (1995), which argues in favour of a biological conception of "race". GRECE and the Pioneer Fund are actively involved in the race and intelligence debate, postulating that there is an identifiable link between levels of intelligence and distinct ethnic groups.

The Club de l'horloge itself had been founded by Henry de Lesquen, a former member of the conservative Rally for the Republic, which he quit in 1984. Others members of the Club de l'horloge, such as Bruno Mégret, later joined the FN after a short time in the RPR.

Rise of the National Front in the 1980s and Mégret's split edit

During the 1980s, the National Front managed to gather, under Jean-Marie Le Pen's leadership, most rival far-right tendencies of France, following a succession of splits and alliances with other, minor parties, during the 1970s.

Party of New Forces edit

One of those parties, the Party of New Forces (PFN, Parti des forces nouvelles), was an offshoot of the National Front, formed from a 1973 split headed by Alain Robert and François Brigneau who first organised the Comité faire front which subsequently merged into the PFN.

The PFN was formed mainly by former members of New Order (Ordre nouveau, 1969–1973), who had refused to merge into the FN at its 1972 creation. New Order, dissolved by Interior Minister Raymond Marcellin in 1973, was itself a successor to Occident (1964–1968) and of the Union Defense Group (GUD, Groupe union défense).

Close to the Third Position and supporting a "national-revolutionary" thesis, this tendency maintained links with the FN, despite some tensions. The GUD, in particular, had published the satiric monthly Alternative with the Youth Front (Front de la jeunesse), the youth organisation of the FN. They also had attempted alliances with other far-right parties in Europe, with New Order organising the alliance "A Fatherland for Tomorrow" (Une patrie pour demain) with the Spanish Falange, the Italian Social Movement (MSI) and the German National Democratic Party.

This European strategy was continued by the PFN, who launched the Euroright alliance, with the MSI, the Spanish New Force and the Belgian PFN, for the 1979 European elections. Headed by Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour, the PFN won 1.3% of the vote. This electoral failure prompted Roland Gaucher and François Brigneau to quit the party and join Le Pen's National Front.

1981 presidential election edit

The French far-right was divided in the 1981 presidential election, with both Pascal Gauchon (PFN) and Le Pen (FN) attempting, without success, to secure the 500 signatures from mayors necessary to stand as candidates. François Mitterrand (Socialist Party) won those elections, competing against Jacques Chirac (Rally for the Republic, RPR).

1983 elections and rise edit

These succeeding electoral defeats prompted the far-right to unify itself. In 1983, the FN managed to make its first electoral breakthrough, taking control of the town of Dreux: Jean-Pierre Stirbois obtained 17% of the votes in the first round, for the FN municipal list. In the second round, he merged his list with Chirac's RPR list (headed by Jean Hieaux), enabling the right to claim a victory against the left. Chirac supported the alliance with the far-right, claiming that the Socialist Party, allied with the Communist Party in government, had no lessons to give.[21]

This first electoral success was confirmed at the 1984 European elections, the FN obtaining 10% of the votes. Two years later, the FN gained 35 deputies (nearly 10% of the votes) at the 1986 legislative elections, running under the label of "Rassemblement national. Those elected included the monarchist Georges-Paul Wagner.

Internal disputes continued however to divide the far-right. Following the 1986 elections, which brought Jacques Chirac to power as Prime Minister, some hardliners inside the FN broke away to create the French and European Nationalist Party (PNFE, Parti Nationaliste Français et Européen), along with members of Mark Frederiksen's Third Position FANE. Three former members of the PNFE were charged of having desecrated, in 1990, a Jewish cemetery in Carpentras.[22] The PNFE was also implicated in the 1988 Cannes and Nice attacks.

Mégret's split, Le Pen's 2002 score and subsequent electoral fall edit

The most important split, however, was headed by Bruno Mégret in 1999. Taking many FN elected representatives and party officials with him, he then created the National Republican Movement (MNR). However, with an eye to the 2007 legislative elections, he supported Le Pen's candidacy for the presidential election.

During these presidential elections, Jean-Marie Le Pen only took 10.4% of the vote, compared to his 16.9% first round result in 2002, qualifying him for the second round, where he achieved 17.79% against 82.21% for Jacques Chirac (Rally for the Republic, RPR).

With only 1.85% in the second round of the 2002 legislative elections, the FN failed to gain any seats in the National Assembly. In the 2007 presidential election, Le Pen finished fourth, behind Nicolas Sarkozy, Ségolène Royal and François Bayrou. Philippe de Villiers, the Catholic traditionalist candidate of the Movement for France (especially strong in the conservative Vendée region), was sixth, obtaining 2.23% of the vote.

This electoral slump for the FN was confirmed at the 2007 legislative elections, the FN obtaining only 0.08% of the votes in the second round, and therefore no seats.

Le Pen's succession edit

 
Marine Le Pen succeeded her father as Front National leader in 2011

These electoral defeats, which contrasted with the high score obtained at the 2002 presidential elections, caused financial problems for the FN, which was forced to sell its headquarters, the Paquebot, in Saint-Cloud. Le Pen then announced, in 2008, that he would not compete again in presidential elections, leaving the way for contest for the leadership of the FN between his daughter, Marine Le Pen, whom he favoured, and Bruno Gollnisch.[23] The latter had been condemned in January 2007 for Holocaust denial,[24] while Marine Le Pen attempted to follow a slicker strategy to give the FN a more "respectable" image.

FN 2010s surge edit

Since her election as the leader of the party in 2011, the popularity of the FN continued to grow apace as the party won several municipalities at the 2014 municipal elections; it topped the poll in France at the 2014 European elections with 25% of the vote; and again won more votes than any other party in the 2015 departmental elections.[25] The party once again came in first place in the 2015 regional elections with a historic result of just under 28% of the vote.[26] By 2015, the FN had established itself as one of the largest political forces in France, unusually being both most popular and most controversial political party.[27][28][29][30]

For the 2012 presidential election, Le Pen came third in the first round, scoring 17.9% – the partys then best showing ever for the FN.

For the 2017 presidential election, Le Pen came second in the first round, scoring 21.3% – the best showing ever for the FN. in the second round she came second with 33.9% a best for NF.

In 2018, the National Front was renamed National Rally.[31]

2020s edit

In the run up to the 2022 presidential election, Éric Zemmour, a noted far-right pundit with no previous party affiliation or political experience, created his own party, Reconquête,[32] and overtook Le Pen in the polls.[33]

For the 2022 presidential election, Le Pen came second in the first round, scoring 23.15% – the best showing ever for the RN. Zemmour got 7.07%. Total Far Right vote was 32%, the highest vote ever in a French election.

Le Pen came second in the second round, scoring 41.46% – the best showing ever for the RN or for a Far Right candidate.

In the June 2022 Assemblée Nationale election, the RN gained 89 seats in the national assembly, winning the party enough seats to form a parliamentary group for the first time since 1986.

Individuals and groups edit

Individuals edit

Other minor groups edit

Other minor groups that are or have been active in the Fifth Republic include:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Zeev Sternhell, La Droite Révolutionaire, les origines françaises du fascisme, 1885-1914 (Paris: Ed. du Seuil, 1978)
  2. ^ Robert Lynn Fuller, The Origins of the French Nationalist Movement, 1886-1914 (McFarland, 2012)
  3. ^ Fredric Seager, The Boulanger Affair, The Political Crossroads of France, 1886-1889 (Cornell University Press, 1969)
  4. ^ William Irvine, The Boulanger Affair Reconsidered, Royalism, Boulagism, and the Origins of the Radical Right in France(Oxford University Press, 1989)
  5. ^ Patrick Hutton The Cult of the Revolutionary Tradition: Blanquists in French Politics, 1864-1893 (U. of California Press, 1981)
  6. ^ Winock, Michel (dir.), Histoire de l'extrême droite en France (1993)
  7. ^ Read, Piers Paul (2012). "Dreyfus and the Birth of Intellectual Protest". Standpoint. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  8. ^ Eugen Weber, Action Française: Royalism and Reaction in Twentieth Century France (1962).
  9. ^ Robert J. Soucy, "French press reactions to Hitler's first two years in power". Contemporary European History 7.1 (1998): 21-38.
  10. ^ Stanislao G. Pugliese Death in Exile: The Assassination of Carlo Rosselli, Journal of Contemporary History, 32 (1997), pp. 305-319
  11. ^ M. Agronsky, Foreign Affairs 17#391 (1938)
  12. ^ . Time. November 29, 1937.
  13. ^ William D. Irvine, . French Conservatism in Crisis: The Republican Federation of France in the 1930s (1979)
  14. ^ Martin S. Alexander; Helen Graham (2002). The French and Spanish Popular Fronts: Comparative Perspectives. Cambridge UP. pp. 40–43.
  15. ^ MONTEJURRA: LA OPERACIÓN RECONQUISTA Y EL ACTA FUNDACIONAL DE LAS TRAMAS ANTITERRORISTAS. Fuente "INTERIOR" Por Santiago Belloch 2007-02-28 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  16. ^ Rodolfo Almirón, de la Triple A al Montejurra 2007-03-06 at the Wayback Machine, PDF (in Spanish)
  17. ^ Henry Rousso, "Les habits neufs du négationniste", in L'Histoire n°318, March 2007, pp.26-28 (in French)
  18. ^ a b Le Pen, son univers impitoyable, Radio France Internationale, September 1, 2006 (in French)
  19. ^ R. Hill & A. Bell, The Other Face of Terror- Inside Europe's Neo-Nazi Network, London: Collins, 1988, pp.186-189
  20. ^ a b Annuaire de l'extrême droite en France (in French)
  21. ^ Franz-Olivier Giesbert, La Tragédie du Président, 2006, p 37-38
  22. ^ La profanation de Carpentras a été longuement préméditée, L'Humanité, 7 August 1996 (in French)
  23. ^ Succession : Le Pen confie préférer sa fille à Bruno Gollnisch, Nouvel Observateur, 16 September 2008
  24. ^ Bruno Gollnisch condamné pour ses propos sur l'Holocauste 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, REUTERS cable published by L'Express on January 18, 2007 — URL accessed on January 18, 2007 (in French) délit de contestation de l'existence de crime contre l'humanité par paroles
  25. ^ "Local elections confirm a quarter of French voters support Front National". openeurope.org.uk. 23 March 2015.
  26. ^ "Régionales 2015: le Front national en tête dans six régions – L'Express". Lexpress.fr. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  27. ^ (PDF). Odoxa.fr. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 June 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  28. ^ "Elections européennes – Le Front National, premier parti de France" (in French). Parismatch.com. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  29. ^ John Lichfield (1 March 2015). "Rise of the French far right: Front National party could make sweeping gains at this month's local elections". Independent. London. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  30. ^ . France24.com. Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  31. ^ "Marine Le Pen annonce que le Front national devient Rassemblement national". Le Monde. 1 June 2018. from the original on 1 June 2018. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  32. ^ Galindo, Gabriela (5 December 2021). "They're off: Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Eric Zemmour launch French presidential bids". Politico. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  33. ^ "Eric Zemmour: Far-right journalist cast as Macron election rival". BBC News. 2021-10-19. Retrieved 2021-10-23.

Bibliography edit

  • Davies, Peter. The National Front in France. Ideology, Discourse and Power (Routledge, 1999)
  • Fuller, Robert Lynn. The Origins of the French Nationalist Movement, 1886-1914 (McFarland, 2012)
  • Hainsworth, Paul. "The Extreme Right in France: From Pétain to Le Pen". Modern & Contemporary France (2012) 20#3 pp: 392-392.
  • Hutton, Patrick. "Popular Boulangism and the Advent of Mass Politics in France, 1886-90" Journal of Contemporary History (1976) 11#1 pp. 85–106 in JSTOR
  • Irvine, William. The Boulanger Affair Reconsidered, Royalism, Boulangism, and the Origins of the Radical Right in France (Oxford University Press, 1989)
  • Irvine, William D. French Conservatism in Crisis: The Republican Federation of France in the 1930s (1979).
  • Kalman, Samuel, and Sean Kennedy, eds. The French Right Between the Wars: Political and Intellectual Movements From Conservatism to Fascism (Berghahn Books; 2014) 264 pages; scholars examine such topics as veterans and the extreme right, female right-wing militancy, and visions of masculinity in the natalist-familialist movement.
  • Millington, Chris. A History of Fascism in France: From the First World War to the National Front (Bloomsbury, 2019) online review
  • Passmore, Kevin. "The Historiography of 'Fascism' in France", French Historical Studies 37 (2014): 469-499
  • Passmore, Kevin. The Right in France from the Third Republic to Vichy (Oxford University Press, 2013)
  • Russo, Luana. "France: The historic victory of the Front National". in The European Parliament Elections of 2014 (2014): 181-88 online
  • Shields, James. "Marine Le Pen and the 'New' FN: A Change of Style or of Substance?" Parliamentary affairs (2013) 66#1 pp: 179–196. abstract
  • Weber, Eugen. L'Action Française, Royalism and Reaction in Twentieth-Century France (Stanford University Press, 1962)
  • Winock, Michel. Nationalism, anti-semitism, and fascism in France (Stanford University Press, 1998)

In French

  • Bertrand Joly, Nationalistes et Conservateurs en France, 1885-1902 (Les Indes Savantes, 2008)
  • Winock, Michel (dir.), Histoire de l'extrême droite en France (1993)

history, right, movements, france, right, french, extrême, droite, tradition, france, finds, origins, third, republic, with, boulangism, dreyfus, affair, 1880s, general, georges, boulanger, called, general, revenge, général, revanche, championed, demands, mili. The far right French Extreme droite tradition in France finds its origins in the Third Republic with Boulangism and the Dreyfus affair In the 1880s General Georges Boulanger called General Revenge General Revanche championed demands for military revenge against Imperial Germany as retribution for the defeat and fall of the Second French Empire during the Franco Prussian War 1870 71 This stance known as revanchism began to exert a strong influence on French nationalism Soon thereafter the Dreyfus affair provided one of the political division lines of France French nationalism which had been largely associated with left wing and Republican ideologies before the Dreyfus affair turned after that into a main trait of the right wing and moreover of the far right A new right emerged and nationalism was reappropriated by the far right who turned it into a form of ethnic nationalism blended with anti Semitism xenophobia anti Protestantism and anti Masonry The Action francaise first founded as a journal and later a political organization was the matrix of a new type of counter revolutionary right wing which continues to exist today During the interwar period the Action francaise AF and its youth militia the Camelots du Roi were very active Far right leagues organized riots After World War II the Organisation armee secrete OAS was created in Madrid in 1961 by French military personnel opposed to the independence of Algeria Jean Marie Le Pen founded the Front National FN party in 1972 At the 1986 legislative elections the FN managed to obtain 35 seats with 10 of the votes Mark Frederiksen a French Algeria activist created in April 1966 a neo Nazi group the FANE Federation d action nationaliste et europeenne Nationalist and European Federation of Action However in 1978 neo Nazi members of the GNR FANE broke again with the FN During the 1980s the National Front managed to gather under Jean Marie Le Pen s leadership most rival far right tendencies of France following a succession of splits and alliances with other minor parties during the 1970s Contents 1 Third Republic 1871 1914 1 1 Dreyfus affair and foundation of the Action francaise 2 Between the wars 3 Vichy France 4 Fifth Republic 4 1 French Third Position s relations with the National Front 4 2 Alain de Benoist s Nouvelle Droite and the Club de l Horloge 4 3 Rise of the National Front in the 1980s and Megret s split 4 3 1 Party of New Forces 4 3 2 1981 presidential election 4 3 3 1983 elections and rise 4 3 4 Megret s split Le Pen s 2002 score and subsequent electoral fall 4 3 5 Le Pen s succession 4 4 FN 2010s surge 4 5 2020s 5 Individuals and groups 5 1 Individuals 5 2 Other minor groups 6 See also 7 References 8 BibliographyThird Republic 1871 1914 editFurther information Third French Republic The Dreyfus affair was a turning point in the political history of France and in the Third Republic 1871 1940 established after the 1870 Franco Prussian War and the 1871 Paris Commune The modern far right or radical right grew out of two separate events of 1889 The Socialist International was formed at the Paris Conference which imposed doctrinal orthodoxy on socialists and demanded their allegiance to the international working class rather than their nation This forced patriotic socialists to choose either their nation or the international workers movement Many chose their nation and fell into violent conflict with their former socialist comrades Those who chose the nation and retained the strategy of violence then used most often against their former comrades formed much of the base of the radical right Many of those people also proved susceptible to the blandishments of anti Semitism which has long been a hallmark of the radical right This would include socialist Maurice Barres communardes Henri Rochefort and Gustave Paul Cluseret Blanquists Charles Bernard and Antoine Jourde among others 1 2 nbsp Georges Ernest Boulanger 1837 1891 A second event of 1889 was the culmination of the Boulanger Affair which championed the vague demands of the former Minister of War General Georges Boulanger Boulanger had attracted the support of many socialists by ordering lenient treatment of strikers when the army was called upon to suppress strikes He also rattled his saber against Germany which pleased French patriots intent on taking revenge But this alarmed the other ministers who dropped Boulanger from the government When his champions mounted an electoral campaign to have him elected to the Chamber of Deputies the government reacted by forcing him out of the army His backers then elected him to the Chamber again from Paris where he gained the support of both conservatives who loathed the Republic and socialists with their own ideas about how the Republic should be remade This joining of the left and right against the center formed the foundation upon which the radical right was built in subsequent years Violent agitation in Paris on the election night in 1889 convinced the government to prosecute Boulanger in order to remove him from the political scene Instead of facing trumped up charges Boulanger fled to Belgium His supporters Boulangists afterward nursed an intense grievance against the Republic and reunited during the Dreyfus affair to oppose the Republic and back the army once again 3 4 5 Dreyfus affair and foundation of the Action francaise edit Main articles Dreyfus affair Action francaise and French far right leagues nbsp Degradation of Alfred Dreyfus 1895 In 1894 a Jewish officer Alfred Dreyfus was arrested on accusations of treason and sharing intelligence with the German Empire The Dreyfus affair provided one of the political fault lines of France Nationalism which had been before the Dreyfus affair a left wing and Republican ideology turned after that to be a main trait of the right wing and moreover of the far right 6 Emile Zola entered the political scene with his open letter J Accuse followed by other writers artists and scholars supporting him with a Manifesto of the Intellectuals helping to define the meaning of the term intellectual 7 while the left and right were at loggerheads mainly over the questions of militarism nationalism justice and human rights Until then nationalism was a Republican left wing ideology related to the French Revolution and the Revolutionary Wars It was a liberal nationalism formulated by Ernest Renan s definition of the nation as a daily plebiscite and as formed by the subjective will to live together Related to revanchism the belligerent will to take revenge against Germany and retake control of Alsace Lorraine nationalism could then be sometimes opposed to imperialism In the 1880s a debate thus opposed those who opposed the colonial lobby such as radical Georges Clemenceau who declared that colonialism diverted France from the blue line of the Vosges referring to Alsace Lorraine socialist Jean Jaures and nationalist Maurice Barres against Moderate Republican Jules Ferry republican Leon Gambetta and Eugene Etienne the president of the parliamentary colonial group However in the midst of the Dreyfus affair a new right emerged and nationalism was appropriated by the far right who turned it into a form of ethnic nationalism itself blended with anti Semitism xenophobia anti Protestantism and anti Masonry Charles Maurras 1868 1952 founder of integralism or integral nationalism created the term Anti France to stigmatize internal foreigners or the four confederate states of Protestants Jews Freemasons and foreigners his actual word for the latter being the far less polite meteques A few years later Maurras would join the monarchist Action francaise created by Maurice Pujo and Henri Vaugeois in 1898 Maurras who was an agnostic spearheaded a monarchist and Catholic revival He pragmatically conceived of religion as an ideology useful to unify the nation Most French Catholics were conservatives a trait that continues today On the other hand most Protestants Jews and atheists belonged to the left Henceforth the republicans conception was to the contrary that only state secularism could peacefully bind together diverse religious and philosophical tendencies and avoid any return to the Wars of Religion Furthermore Catholic priests were seen as a major reactionary force by the republicans among whom anti clericalism became common The Ferry laws on public education had been a first step for the Republic in rooting out the clerics influence they would be completed by the 1905 law on the separation of Church and State Action francaise first founded as a review was the matrix of a new type of counter revolutionary right wing and continues to exist today Action francaise was quite influential in the 1930s in particular through its youth organization the Camelots du Roi founded in 1908 and which engaged in many street brawls etc The Camelots du Roi included such figures as Catholic writer Georges Bernanos and Jean de Barrau member of the directing committee of the National Federation and particular secretary of the duc d Orleans 1869 1926 the son of the Orleanist count of Paris 1838 1894 and hence Orleanist heir to the throne of France Many members of the OAS terrorist group during the Algerian War 1954 62 were part of the monarchist movement Jean Ousset Maurras personal secretary created the Catholic fundamentalist organization Cite catholique which would include OAS members and founded a branch in Argentina in the 1960s Apart from the Action francaise several far right leagues were created during the Dreyfus affair Mostly anti Semitic they also represented a new right wing tendency sharing common traits such as anti parliamentarism militarism nationalism and often engaged in street brawls Thus the nationalist poet Paul Deroulede created in 1882 the anti semitic Ligue des patriotes League of Patriots which at first focused on advocating revanche revenge for the French defeat during the Franco Prussian War Along with Jules Guerin the journalist Edouard Drumont created the Antisemitic League of France in 1889 Also anti Masonic the League became at the start of the 20th century the Grand Occident de France a name chosen in reaction against the Masonic lodge of the Grand Orient de France Between the wars editDuring the interwar period the Action francaise AF and its youth militia the Camelots du Roi were very active in Paris 8 Apart from the AF various far right leagues were formed and opposed both Cartel des gauches Coalition of the left governments Pierre Taittinger thus formed the Jeunesses Patriotes in 1924 which imitated the style of the Fascists although it remained a more traditional authoritarian movement The following year Georges Valois created Le Faisceau heavily inspired by Benito Mussolini s Fascism In 1933 the year Adolf Hitler gained power in Germany perfumer Francois Coty founded Solidarite francaise and Marcel Bucard formed the Francisme which was subsidised by Mussolini Another important league was Francois de la Rocque s Croix de Feu which formed the base for the Parti Social Francais PSF the first mass party of the French right wing Mussolini was much more popular in right wing circles than Hitler due to the negative reaction many French conservatives had to Hitler s repression of dissident German conservatives and Catholics in 1933 and 1934 9 Apart from the leagues a group of Neosocialists Marcel Deat Pierre Renaudel etc were excluded in November 1933 from the French Section of the Workers International SFIO the socialist party because of their revisionist stances and admiration for fascism Deat would become one of the most ardent collaborationists during World War II Another major player in France s right wing world between the wars was Jacques Doriot Doriot had been expelled by the French Communist Party after proposing a Popular Front with other leftist parties which at that time was seen as heresy by his party s hierarchy Personally hurt and embittered by his expulsion Doriot would slowly change sides eventually openly denouncing communism and going on to found the Parti Populaire Francais or PPF the largest pre war right wing party Other important figures of the 1930s include Xavier Vallat who would become General Commissioner for Jewish Affairs under Vichy members of the Cagoule terrorist group Eugene Deloncle Eugene Schueller the founder of L Oreal cosmetic firm Jacques Correze Joseph Darnand who later founded the Service d ordre legionnaire militia during Vichy etc To obtain arms from fascist Italy the group assassinated two Italian antifascists the Rosselli brothers 10 11 on June 9 1937 and sabotaged aeroplanes clandestinely supplied by the French government to the Second Spanish Republic They also attempted a coup against the Popular Front government elected in 1936 leading to arrests in 1937 ordered by Interior Minister Marx Dormoy during which the police seized explosives and military weapons including anti tank guns 12 Far right leagues organised major riots on 6 February 1934 13 The groups did not coordinate their efforts and the riots were suppressed by the police and military Elements on the left were convinced that unity was essential to suppress fascism and in 1936 they formed the Popular Front and dissolved the leagues However the right wing leagues promptly reorganized as political parties and continued vocal attacks on the left 14 Vichy France editFurther information Vichy France and Revolution nationaleFifth Republic editThe Organisation armee secrete OAS was created in Madrid by French military officers opposed to the independence of Algeria Many of its members would later join various anti communist struggles around the world Some for example joined the Cite catholique fundamentalist group and went to Argentina where they were in contact with the Argentine Armed Forces Jean Pierre Cherid former OAS member took part in the 1976 Montejurra massacre against left wing Carlists 15 16 He was then part of the Spanish GAL death squad and participated in the 1978 assassination of Argala one of the ETA members who had killed Franco s Prime minister Luis Carrero Blanco in 1973 Jean Louis Tixier Vignancour was the far right candidate at the 1965 presidential election His campaign was organised by Jean Marie Le Pen Charles de Gaulle said of Tixier Vignancourt Tixier Vignancour that is Vichy the Collaboration proud of itself the Milice the OAS nbsp Jean Marie Le Pen founded the Front National in 1972 and led it until 2011 Jean Marie Le Pen founded the Front National FN party in 1972 along with former Occident member Jacques Bompard former Collaborationist Roland Gaucher Francois Duprat who introduced the negationist thesis to France 17 and others nostalgics of Vichy France Catholic fundamentalists etc 18 Le Pen presented himself for the first time in the 1974 presidential election obtaining 0 74 18 The electoral rise of the FN did not start until Jean Pierre Stirbois s victory in 1983 in Dreux The FN became stronger throughout the 1980s managing to unite most far right tendencies passing electoral alliances with the right wing Rally for the Republic RPR while some FN members quit the party to join the RPR or the Union for a French Democracy UDF At the 1986 legislative elections the FN managed to obtain 35 seats with 10 of the votes Meanwhile other far right tendencies gathered in Alain de Benoist s Nouvelle Droite think tank heading a pro European and neopagan line Some radical members of the national revolutionary tendency quit the FN to form other minor parties Party of New Forces PFN and French and European Nationalist Party PNFE French Third Position s relations with the National Front edit Further information Third Position Mark Frederiksen a French Algeria activist created in April 1966 a neo Nazi group the FANE Federation d action nationaliste et europeenne Nationalist and European Federation of Action The FANE boasted at most a hundred activists including members such as Luc Michel now leader of the Parti communautaire national europeen National European Communautary Party Jacques Bastide Michel Faci Michel Caignet and Henri Robert Petit a journalist and former Collaborationist who directed under the Vichy regime the newspaper Le Pilori The FANE maintained international contacts with the British group the League of Saint George 19 The FANE rallied Jean Marie Le Pen s National Front in 1974 gathered around Francois Duprat and Alain Renault s Revolutionary Nationalist Groups GNR which represented the nationalist revolutionary tendency of the FN But in 1978 neo Nazi members of the GNR FANE broke again with the FN taking with them sections of the FN youth movement the Front National de la Jeunesse 20 On the other hand GNR activists closer to the Third Position Jacques Bastide and Patrick Gorre 20 joined Jean Gilles Malliarakis to found on February 11 1979 the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement Mouvement nationaliste revolutionnaire which became in 1985 Third Way Troisieme Voie After this brief passage at the National Front Mark Fredriksen created the Faisceaux nationalistes europeens FANE in July 1980 These would eventually merge with the Mouvement national et social ethniste in 1987 and then with the PNFE French and European Nationalist Party in January 1994 which also gathered former National Front members Dissolved first in September 1980 by Raymond Barre s government Fredriksen s group was recreated and dissolved again in 1985 by Laurent Fabius government Finally it was dissolved a third time in 1987 by Jacques Chirac s government on charges of violent demonstrations organised by this movement which has as one of its expressed objective the establishment of a new Nazi regime the paramilitary organisation of this association and its inciting of racial discrimination Alain de Benoist s Nouvelle Droite and the Club de l Horloge edit In the 1980s Alain de Benoist became chief theorist of the Nouvelle Droite movement creating the think tank GRECE in 1968 some of whose members were involved with the formation of the Club de l Horloge in 1974 They advocated an ethno nationalist stance focused on European culture which advocated a return of paganism Members of the GRECE quit the think tank in the 1980s such as Pierre Vial who joined the FN or Guillaume Faye who quit the organisation along with others members in 1986 Faye participated in 2006 in a conference in the US organised by American Renaissance a white separatist magazine published by the New Century Foundation Alain de Benoist occasionally contributed to the Mankind Quarterly review which supports hereditarianism and is associated with the US think tank the Pioneer Fund headed by J Philippe Rushton the author of Race Evolution and Behavior 1995 which argues in favour of a biological conception of race GRECE and the Pioneer Fund are actively involved in the race and intelligence debate postulating that there is an identifiable link between levels of intelligence and distinct ethnic groups The Club de l horloge itself had been founded by Henry de Lesquen a former member of the conservative Rally for the Republic which he quit in 1984 Others members of the Club de l horloge such as Bruno Megret later joined the FN after a short time in the RPR Rise of the National Front in the 1980s and Megret s split edit During the 1980s the National Front managed to gather under Jean Marie Le Pen s leadership most rival far right tendencies of France following a succession of splits and alliances with other minor parties during the 1970s Party of New Forces edit One of those parties the Party of New Forces PFN Parti des forces nouvelles was an offshoot of the National Front formed from a 1973 split headed by Alain Robert and Francois Brigneau who first organised the Comite faire front which subsequently merged into the PFN The PFN was formed mainly by former members of New Order Ordre nouveau 1969 1973 who had refused to merge into the FN at its 1972 creation New Order dissolved by Interior Minister Raymond Marcellin in 1973 was itself a successor to Occident 1964 1968 and of the Union Defense Group GUD Groupe union defense Close to the Third Position and supporting a national revolutionary thesis this tendency maintained links with the FN despite some tensions The GUD in particular had published the satiric monthly Alternative with the Youth Front Front de la jeunesse the youth organisation of the FN They also had attempted alliances with other far right parties in Europe with New Order organising the alliance A Fatherland for Tomorrow Une patrie pour demain with the Spanish Falange the Italian Social Movement MSI and the German National Democratic Party This European strategy was continued by the PFN who launched the Euroright alliance with the MSI the Spanish New Force and the Belgian PFN for the 1979 European elections Headed by Jean Louis Tixier Vignancour the PFN won 1 3 of the vote This electoral failure prompted Roland Gaucher and Francois Brigneau to quit the party and join Le Pen s National Front 1981 presidential election edit The French far right was divided in the 1981 presidential election with both Pascal Gauchon PFN and Le Pen FN attempting without success to secure the 500 signatures from mayors necessary to stand as candidates Francois Mitterrand Socialist Party won those elections competing against Jacques Chirac Rally for the Republic RPR 1983 elections and rise edit These succeeding electoral defeats prompted the far right to unify itself In 1983 the FN managed to make its first electoral breakthrough taking control of the town of Dreux Jean Pierre Stirbois obtained 17 of the votes in the first round for the FN municipal list In the second round he merged his list with Chirac s RPR list headed by Jean Hieaux enabling the right to claim a victory against the left Chirac supported the alliance with the far right claiming that the Socialist Party allied with the Communist Party in government had no lessons to give 21 This first electoral success was confirmed at the 1984 European elections the FN obtaining 10 of the votes Two years later the FN gained 35 deputies nearly 10 of the votes at the 1986 legislative elections running under the label of Rassemblement national Those elected included the monarchist Georges Paul Wagner Internal disputes continued however to divide the far right Following the 1986 elections which brought Jacques Chirac to power as Prime Minister some hardliners inside the FN broke away to create the French and European Nationalist Party PNFE Parti Nationaliste Francais et Europeen along with members of Mark Frederiksen s Third Position FANE Three former members of the PNFE were charged of having desecrated in 1990 a Jewish cemetery in Carpentras 22 The PNFE was also implicated in the 1988 Cannes and Nice attacks Megret s split Le Pen s 2002 score and subsequent electoral fall edit The most important split however was headed by Bruno Megret in 1999 Taking many FN elected representatives and party officials with him he then created the National Republican Movement MNR However with an eye to the 2007 legislative elections he supported Le Pen s candidacy for the presidential election During these presidential elections Jean Marie Le Pen only took 10 4 of the vote compared to his 16 9 first round result in 2002 qualifying him for the second round where he achieved 17 79 against 82 21 for Jacques Chirac Rally for the Republic RPR With only 1 85 in the second round of the 2002 legislative elections the FN failed to gain any seats in the National Assembly In the 2007 presidential election Le Pen finished fourth behind Nicolas Sarkozy Segolene Royal and Francois Bayrou Philippe de Villiers the Catholic traditionalist candidate of the Movement for France especially strong in the conservative Vendee region was sixth obtaining 2 23 of the vote This electoral slump for the FN was confirmed at the 2007 legislative elections the FN obtaining only 0 08 of the votes in the second round and therefore no seats Le Pen s succession edit nbsp Marine Le Pen succeeded her father as Front National leader in 2011 These electoral defeats which contrasted with the high score obtained at the 2002 presidential elections caused financial problems for the FN which was forced to sell its headquarters the Paquebot in Saint Cloud Le Pen then announced in 2008 that he would not compete again in presidential elections leaving the way for contest for the leadership of the FN between his daughter Marine Le Pen whom he favoured and Bruno Gollnisch 23 The latter had been condemned in January 2007 for Holocaust denial 24 while Marine Le Pen attempted to follow a slicker strategy to give the FN a more respectable image FN 2010s surge edit Since her election as the leader of the party in 2011 the popularity of the FN continued to grow apace as the party won several municipalities at the 2014 municipal elections it topped the poll in France at the 2014 European elections with 25 of the vote and again won more votes than any other party in the 2015 departmental elections 25 The party once again came in first place in the 2015 regional elections with a historic result of just under 28 of the vote 26 By 2015 the FN had established itself as one of the largest political forces in France unusually being both most popular and most controversial political party 27 28 29 30 For the 2012 presidential election Le Pen came third in the first round scoring 17 9 the partys then best showing ever for the FN For the 2017 presidential election Le Pen came second in the first round scoring 21 3 the best showing ever for the FN in the second round she came second with 33 9 a best for NF In 2018 the National Front was renamed National Rally 31 2020s edit In the run up to the 2022 presidential election Eric Zemmour a noted far right pundit with no previous party affiliation or political experience created his own party Reconquete 32 and overtook Le Pen in the polls 33 For the 2022 presidential election Le Pen came second in the first round scoring 23 15 the best showing ever for the RN Zemmour got 7 07 Total Far Right vote was 32 the highest vote ever in a French election Le Pen came second in the second round scoring 41 46 the best showing ever for the RN or for a Far Right candidate In the June 2022 Assemblee Nationale election the RN gained 89 seats in the national assembly winning the party enough seats to form a parliamentary group for the first time since 1986 Individuals and groups editIndividuals edit Raymond Abellio Marc Augier Jacques Bainville Maurice Barres Rene Benjamin Jacques Benoist Mechin Henri Beraud Abel Bonnard Paul Bourget Pierre Boutang Robert Brasillach Renaud Camus Louis Ferdinand Celine Jacques Chardonne Alphonse de Chateaubriant Leon Daudet Pierre Drieu La Rochelle Edouard Drumont Andre Fraigneau Pierre Gaxotte Pierre Gripari Kleber Haedens Marcel Jouhandeau Jacques de Lacretelle Jean Mabire Henri Massis Thierry Maulnier Charles Maurras Jean Pierre Maxence Henry de Monfreid Lucien Rebatet Hugues Rebell Paul Serant Pierre Sidos Alain Soral Georges Vacher de Lapouge Dominique Venner Pierre Vial Eric Zemmour Other minor groups edit Other minor groups that are or have been active in the Fifth Republic include Groupe Union Defense is French far right student association Bastion Social is a nationalist youth movement Unite Radicale one of its members Maxime Brunerie tried to assassinate President Jacques Chirac in 2002 Les Identitaires formerly Bloc identitaire an offshoot of Unite Radicale dissolved after Brunerie s assassination attempt which publicly distributes so called identity soups soupes identitaires that is popular soups with pork in order to exclude religious Jews and Muslims from them Parti Nationaliste Francais et Europeen PNFE a Pan European nationalist group with which Brunerie was also associated Parti des forces nouvelles formed from an early anti Le Pen faction of the Front National Reseau Radical a study group Troisieme Voie a Third Position movement with links to the far right student movement Groupe Union Defense See also editRock identitaire francais Breton Social National Workers Movement Radical rightReferences edit Zeev Sternhell La Droite Revolutionaire les origines francaises du fascisme 1885 1914 Paris Ed du Seuil 1978 Robert Lynn Fuller The Origins of the French Nationalist Movement 1886 1914 McFarland 2012 Fredric Seager The Boulanger Affair The Political Crossroads of France 1886 1889 Cornell University Press 1969 William Irvine The Boulanger Affair Reconsidered Royalism Boulagism and the Origins of the Radical Right in France Oxford University Press 1989 Patrick Hutton The Cult of the Revolutionary Tradition Blanquists in French Politics 1864 1893 U of California Press 1981 Winock Michel dir Histoire de l extreme droite en France 1993 Read Piers Paul 2012 Dreyfus and the Birth of Intellectual Protest Standpoint Retrieved 14 October 2018 Eugen Weber Action Francaise Royalism and Reaction in Twentieth Century France 1962 Robert J Soucy French press reactions to Hitler s first two years in power Contemporary European History 7 1 1998 21 38 Stanislao G Pugliese Death in Exile The Assassination of Carlo Rosselli Journal of Contemporary History 32 1997 pp 305 319 M Agronsky Foreign Affairs 17 391 1938 Terrible Gravity Time November 29 1937 William D Irvine French Conservatism in Crisis The Republican Federation of France in the 1930s 1979 Martin S Alexander Helen Graham 2002 The French and Spanish Popular Fronts Comparative Perspectives Cambridge UP pp 40 43 MONTEJURRA LA OPERACIoN RECONQUISTA Y EL ACTA FUNDACIONAL DE LAS TRAMAS ANTITERRORISTAS Fuente INTERIOR Por Santiago Belloch Archived 2007 02 28 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Rodolfo Almiron de la Triple A al Montejurra Archived 2007 03 06 at the Wayback Machine PDF in Spanish Henry Rousso Les habits neufs du negationniste in L Histoire n 318 March 2007 pp 26 28 in French a b Le Pen son univers impitoyable Radio France Internationale September 1 2006 in French R Hill amp A Bell The Other Face of Terror Inside Europe s Neo Nazi Network London Collins 1988 pp 186 189 a b Annuaire de l extreme droite en France in French Franz Olivier Giesbert La Tragedie du President 2006 p 37 38 La profanation de Carpentras a ete longuement premeditee L Humanite 7 August 1996 in French Succession Le Pen confie preferer sa fille a Bruno Gollnisch Nouvel Observateur 16 September 2008 Bruno Gollnisch condamne pour ses propos sur l Holocauste Archived 2007 09 30 at the Wayback Machine REUTERS cable published by L Express on January 18 2007 URL accessed on January 18 2007 in French delit de contestation de l existence de crime contre l humanite par paroles Local elections confirm a quarter of French voters support Front National openeurope org uk 23 March 2015 Regionales 2015 le Front national en tete dans six regions L Express Lexpress fr Retrieved 9 December 2015 Rapport de force aux elections departementales PDF Odoxa fr Archived from the original PDF on 18 June 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Elections europeennes Le Front National premier parti de France in French Parismatch com Retrieved 31 March 2015 John Lichfield 1 March 2015 Rise of the French far right Front National party could make sweeping gains at this month s local elections Independent London Retrieved 31 March 2015 France Poll gives France s far right National Front party boost ahead of regional vote France24 com Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Marine Le Pen annonce que le Front national devient Rassemblement national Le Monde 1 June 2018 Archived from the original on 1 June 2018 Retrieved 1 June 2018 Galindo Gabriela 5 December 2021 They re off Jean Luc Melenchon and Eric Zemmour launch French presidential bids Politico Retrieved 5 December 2021 Eric Zemmour Far right journalist cast as Macron election rival BBC News 2021 10 19 Retrieved 2021 10 23 Bibliography editDavies Peter The National Front in France Ideology Discourse and Power Routledge 1999 Fuller Robert Lynn The Origins of the French Nationalist Movement 1886 1914 McFarland 2012 Hainsworth Paul The Extreme Right in France From Petain to Le Pen Modern amp Contemporary France 2012 20 3 pp 392 392 abstract Hutton Patrick Popular Boulangism and the Advent of Mass Politics in France 1886 90 Journal of Contemporary History 1976 11 1 pp 85 106 in JSTOR Irvine William The Boulanger Affair Reconsidered Royalism Boulangism and the Origins of the Radical Right in France Oxford University Press 1989 Irvine William D French Conservatism in Crisis The Republican Federation of France in the 1930s 1979 Kalman Samuel and Sean Kennedy eds The French Right Between the Wars Political and Intellectual Movements From Conservatism to Fascism Berghahn Books 2014 264 pages scholars examine such topics as veterans and the extreme right female right wing militancy and visions of masculinity in the natalist familialist movement Millington Chris A History of Fascism in France From the First World War to the National Front Bloomsbury 2019 online review Passmore Kevin The Historiography of Fascism in France French Historical Studies 37 2014 469 499 Passmore Kevin The Right in France from the Third Republic to Vichy Oxford University Press 2013 Russo Luana France The historic victory of the Front National in The European Parliament Elections of 2014 2014 181 88 online Shields James Marine Le Pen and the New FN A Change of Style or of Substance Parliamentary affairs 2013 66 1 pp 179 196 abstract Weber Eugen L Action Francaise Royalism and Reaction in Twentieth Century France Stanford University Press 1962 Winock Michel Nationalism anti semitism and fascism in France Stanford University Press 1998 In French Bertrand Joly Nationalistes et Conservateurs en France 1885 1902 Les Indes Savantes 2008 Winock Michel dir Histoire de l extreme droite en France 1993 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of far right movements in France amp oldid 1222018522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.