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Radical Party of the Left

The Radical Party of the Left (French: Parti radical de gauche, PRG) is a social-liberal[1][2] political party in France. A party in the Radical tradition, since 1972 the PRG was a close ally of the major party of the centre-left in France, the Socialist Party (French: Parti socialiste, PS).[7] After the 2017 presidential and legislative elections, negotiations to merge the PRG with the Radical Party (from which the PRG emerged in 1972) began and the refounding congress to reunite the parties into the Radical Movement was held on 9 and 10 December 2017.[8][9] However, a faction of ex-PRG members, including its last president Sylvia Pinel, split from the Radical Movement in February 2019 due to its expected alliance with La République En Marche in the European elections and resurrected the PRG.[10]

Radical Party of the Left
Parti radical de Gauche
AbbreviationPRG
President Guillaume Lacroix
FounderMaurice Faure
Founded1971; 52 years ago (1971) (GEARS)
1972; 51 years ago (1972) (MGRS)
1973; 50 years ago (1973) (MRG)
1994; 29 years ago (1994) (Radical)
1996; 27 years ago (1996) (PRS)
1998; 25 years ago (1998) (PRG)
2019; 4 years ago (2019) (PRG, refoundation)
Dissolved9 December 2017; 5 years ago (2017-12-09) (1998 PRG)
Split fromRadical Party
Radical Movement (2019 PRG)
Merged intoRadical Movement (majority)
Headquarters13, Rue Duroc
F - 75007, Paris
Youth wingYoung Radicals of the Left
IdeologySocial liberalism[1][2]
Pro-Europeanism[3]
Radicalism
European federalism
Political positionCentre-left[4][5][6]
European Parliament groupERA (1994–1999)
S&D (2014–2017)
Colours  Yellow   Blue
National Assembly
1 / 577
Senate
2 / 348
European Parliament
0 / 79
Presidency of Regional Councils
0 / 17
Presidency of Departmental Councils
2 / 95
Website
www.partiradicaldegauche.fr

History

The party was formed in 1972 by a split from the Republican, Radical, and Radical-Socialist Party, once the dominant party of the French Left. It was founded by Radicals who opposed Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber's centrist direction and chose to join the Union of the Left and agreed to the Common Programme signed by the Socialist Party (PS) and the French Communist Party (PCF). At that time, the party was known as the Movement of the Radical Socialist Left (French: Parti républicain, radical et radical-socialiste, MGRS), then as the Movement of Radicals of the Left (French: Mouvement des Radicaux de Gauche, MRG) after 1973.

Led by Robert Fabre during the 1970s, the party was the third partner of the Union of the Left. Nevertheless, its electoral influence did not compare with those of its two allies, which competed for the leadership over the left. Robert Fabre sought to attract left-wing Gaullists to the party and gradually became close to President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, who nominated him as Mediator of the Republic in 1978. He and his followers were excluded from the party by those who strongly supported the alliance with the PS.

Michel Crépeau was nominated by the party for the 1981 presidential election and obtained a disappointing 2.09% in the first round. He and his party in the runoff endorsed PS candidate François Mitterrand, who eventually won. The MRG won 14 seats in the subsequent 1981 legislative election and participated in PS-led governments between 1981 and 1986 and again between 1988 and 1993.

In the 1984 European elections, the MRG formed a common list with Brice Lalonde's environmentalists and Olivier Stirn, a centre-right deputy. The list styled as the Radical and Ecologist Agreement won 3.32%, but no seats.[11] The party resumed its customary alliance with the PS in the 1986 legislative election and supported President Mitterrand's 1988 reelection bid by the first round.

At the beginning of the 1990s, under the leadership of the popular businessman Bernard Tapie the party benefited from an ephemeral upswing in its popularity while the governing SP was in disarray. The list led by Tapie won 12.03% and 13 seats[12] of the votes in the 1994 European Parliament election. However, Tapie retired from politics due to his legal problems and the party, renamed the Radical Socialist Party (French: Parti radical-socialiste, PRS), returned to its lowest ebb.

After the Radical Party opened legal proceedings against the PRS, it was forced to change its name to the Radical Party of the Left (French: Parti radical de gauche, PRG). Between 1997 and 2002, it was a junior partner in Lionel Jospin's Plural Left coalition government. In the 2002 presidential election, the PRG nominated its own candidate, former MEP and French Guiana deputy Christiane Taubira, for the first time since 1981. However, some members of the party including Émile Zuccarelli and PRG senator Nicolas Alfonsi supported Jean-Pierre Chevènement's candidacy. Taubira won 2.32% of the vote.[13] Taubira gave her name to the 2001 law which declared the Atlantic slave trade a crime against humanity.[14]

In the 2007 presidential election, while the party supported the PS candidate Ségolène Royal, Bernard Tapie, who had been a leading figure in the PRG, supported Nicolas Sarkozy. In the 2007 legislative election, the party won eight seats, including a seat in French Guiana (Taubira) and Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon.

The party split on Nicolas Sarkozy's constitutional reforms in 2008. Six deputies (Gérard Charasse, Paul Giacobbi, Annick Girardin, Joël Giraud, Dominique Orliac and Sylvia Pinel) and three senators (Jean-Michel Baylet, André Boyer and François Vendasi) opted to vote in favour, hence allowing for its passage.

The PRG's then-president Jean-Michel Baylet ran in the 2011 SP presidential primaries, the only non-PS candidate in the field, but was placed last with only 0.64% of the vote in the primary. The PRG supported François Hollande, the eventual winner of the primaries and the 2012 presidential election. In the 2012 legislative election, the PRG won 12 seats. With four additional members, it formed its own parliamentary group in the National Assembly, the Radical, Republican, Democratic and Progressive group.

Although the PRG remained a close and loyal ally of the PS, it has also cooperated with the small Ecology Generation (GE) party since December 2011.[15][16]

In the 2014 European elections, the party received 13.98% of the vote on a joint list with the PS, electing one MEP Virginie Rozière, who joined the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) group with PS MEPs.

In the 2017 SP presidential primary, PRG candidate Sylvia Pinel received 2% of the vote in the first round election held on 22 January 2017. In the 2017 French legislative election, the party only re-elected three MPs; Annick Girardin, Jeanine Dubié and Sylvia Pinel.

In 2019, the party was relaunched.[17]

The party supports Christiane Taubira in the 2022 French presidential election.[18]

Following the 2022 French legislative election, the party's only deputy is Olivier Falorni representing Charente-Maritime's 1st constituency. It was the only centre-left party on the French mainland with representation in the National Assembly to refuse to join the leftist electoral coalition NUPES, headed by Jean-Luc Mélenchon.[19]

Ideology

The PRG advocates social liberalism, radicalism, secularism to its French extent known as laïcité, progressivism, European federalism, and individual freedom; it differs from the social democrats of the Socialist Party mainly by its strong attachment to private property.

The party was a member of the European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party before 2012.[20]

Factions

Under Baylet, the PRG's party line was centre-left, socially liberal and pro-European. Nevertheless, there were internal divisions in the party. Former cabinet minister and former deputy Émile Zuccarelli is a left-wing republican who strongly opposed Corsican nationalism[citation needed] and supported the no vote in the 2005 European constitutional referendum, positions much closer to Jean-Pierre Chevènement's Citizen and Republican Movement (MRC)[citation needed]. Similarly, Christiane Taubira supported the no vote in 2005 and endorsed Arnaud Montebourg rather than Baylet in the 2011 primary[citation needed].

Elected officials

Popular support

The PRG remained rather weak on its own electorally, averaging around 2% of the vote (2002 presidential candidate Christiane Taubira won 2.32% of the vote); which explains why the party depended on its stronger ally, the PS for support and parliamentary representation. Almost all of the party's deputies and local officials were elected with no official PS opposition. It retained some support among middle class voters and in traditional Radical areas in the South West.

The major exception was in Corsica, where the party was historically the largest party on the non-nationalist French Left and remains so to its time of dissolution due to a tradition of political dynasties (such as the Giacobbi family) and the weak infrastructure of the PS on the island. Paul Giacobbi represented Haute-Corse in the National Assembly until he stood down at the 2017 elections (Émile Zuccarelli, an internal rival of Giacobbi and current mayor of Bastia, also represented the island in Paris until his 2007 defeat) and Senators Nicolas Alfonsi and François Vendasi represented the Corsican PRG in the Senate. Giacobbi is also President of the General Council of Haute-Corse.

In metropolitan France, the PRG was able to sustain a long-lasting Radical tradition dating back to the French Third Republic, most notably in the southwest or departments such as the Eure-et-Loir and Eure.

The party was represented overseas in French Guiana by Taubira's Walwari, one of the major parties of the local left.

Presidential elections

President of the French Republic
Election Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Votes %
1981 Michel Crépeau 642,847 2.21% - - Lost
2002 Christiane Taubira 660,447 2.32% - - Lost

Legislative elections

French National Assembly
Election year No. of first round votes % of first round vote No. of seats Swing
1973 Classified as PS
13 / 490
[21]
New
1978 603,932 2.11%
10 / 491
  −3
1981 Classified as PS
14 / 491
[21]
  +4
1986 107,769 0.38%
7 / 577
[b]
  −7
1988 272,316 1.11%
9 / 575
  +2
1993 Classified as PS or DVG
6 / 577
  −3
1997 389,782 1.53%
12 / 577
  +6
2002 388,891 1.54%
7 / 577
  −5
2007 343,565 1.32%
7 / 577
  
2012 429,059 1.65%
12 / 577
  +5
2017 106,311 0.47%
3 / 577
  −9
2022 126,689 0.56%
1 / 577
  −2

European Parliament elections

European Parliament
Election year Number of votes % of overall vote No. of seats won Swing
1979 Ran on PS list
2 / 81
New
1984 670,474 3.32%[c]
0 / 81
  −2
1989 Ran on PS list
2 / 81
  +2
1994 2,344,457 12.03%
13 / 87
  +11
1999 Ran on PS list
2 / 87
  −11
2004 121,573 0.71%
0 / 78
  −2
2009 Did not run N/A   
2014 Ran on PS list
1 / 74
  +1
2019 Ran on PS list
0 / 74
  −1

Leadership

Party presidents:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ replacing Annick Girardin while she is a cabinet minister
  2. ^ Including 5 elected on PS-MRG lists in various departments.
  3. ^ Results of the Entente radicale écologiste pour les États-Unis d'Europe which included the MRG, but also ecologists (Brice Lalonde) and centrists (Olivier Stirn).

References

  1. ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram (2017). "France". Parties and Elections in Europe.
  2. ^ a b Udo Kempf (2007). Das politische System Frankreichs. Springer DE. p. 190. ISBN 978-3-531-32973-4.
  3. ^ David S. Bell (2012). "The 'European Integration' Cleavage in the Party System: The French Case". In Erol Külahci (ed.). Europeanisation and Party Politics: How the EU affects Domestic Actors, Patterns and Systems. ECPR Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-907301-84-1.
  4. ^ Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko; Matti Mälkiä (2007). Encyclopedia of Digital Government. Idea Group Inc (IGI). p. 389. ISBN 978-1-59140-790-4. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  5. ^ Aurélien Mondon (2013). The Mainstreaming of the Extreme Right in France and Australia: A Populist Hegemony?. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-4724-0526-5. Retrieved 27 July 2013.
  6. ^ Nicolas Hubé (2013). "France". In Nicolò Conti (ed.). Party Attitudes Towards the EU in the Member States: Parties for Europe, Parties Against Europe. Routledge. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-317-93656-5.
  7. ^ David S. Bell (2002). French Politics Today. Manchester University Press. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-7190-5876-9. Retrieved 27 July 2013.
  8. ^ Marion Mourgue (17 September 2017). "Les radicaux font un pas de plus vers l'unité... et l'indépendance". Le Figaro. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  9. ^ Charline Hurel (16 September 2017). "Les radicaux de gauche et de droite en voie de réunion pour peser au centre". Le Monde. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  10. ^ Tristan Quinault-Maupoil (11 February 2019). "À gauche, les échéances électorales divisent les radicaux". Le Figaro. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  11. ^ Alistair Cole; Brian Doherty (2006). "France: Pas come les autres – the French Greens at the crossroads". In Dick Richardson; Chris Rootes (eds.). The Green Challenge: The Development of Green Parties in Europe. Routledge. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-134-84403-6.
  12. ^ . Dev.ulb.ac.be. Archived from the original on 25 July 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  13. ^ . Dev.ulb.ac.be. Archived from the original on 25 July 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  14. ^ "La Loi Taubira". 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Human Rights League (France).
  15. ^ "Baptême du Pôle Radical et Ecologique". Archived 4 June 2012 at archive.today. Génération écologie. 21 December 2011.
  16. ^ Création du "pôle radical et écologique". 30 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Parti radical de gauche. 21 December 2011.
  17. ^ "Le PRG choisit son nouveau président". ladepeche.fr (in French). Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  18. ^ Belaïch, Charlotte. "Présidentielle : Christiane Taubira se jette dans la fosse à l'union". Libération (in French). Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  19. ^ "Le Parti radical de gauche dénonce les négociations pour une union autour de La France insoumise". Le Monde.fr (in French). 2 May 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  20. ^ Libdemvoice.org. 18 May 2012. Archived from the original on 13 July 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  21. ^ a b "Chronologie des radicaux de gauche MRG PRG". France-politique.fr. 17 February 2007. Retrieved 12 March 2013.

External links

  • Official website

radical, party, left, confused, with, radical, party, france, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2011, . Not to be confused with Radical Party France This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Radical Party of the Left news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Radical Party of the Left French Parti radical de gauche PRG is a social liberal 1 2 political party in France A party in the Radical tradition since 1972 the PRG was a close ally of the major party of the centre left in France the Socialist Party French Parti socialiste PS 7 After the 2017 presidential and legislative elections negotiations to merge the PRG with the Radical Party from which the PRG emerged in 1972 began and the refounding congress to reunite the parties into the Radical Movement was held on 9 and 10 December 2017 8 9 However a faction of ex PRG members including its last president Sylvia Pinel split from the Radical Movement in February 2019 due to its expected alliance with La Republique En Marche in the European elections and resurrected the PRG 10 Radical Party of the Left Parti radical de GaucheAbbreviationPRGPresidentGuillaume LacroixFounderMaurice FaureFounded1971 52 years ago 1971 GEARS 1972 51 years ago 1972 MGRS 1973 50 years ago 1973 MRG 1994 29 years ago 1994 Radical 1996 27 years ago 1996 PRS 1998 25 years ago 1998 PRG 2019 4 years ago 2019 PRG refoundation Dissolved9 December 2017 5 years ago 2017 12 09 1998 PRG Split fromRadical PartyRadical Movement 2019 PRG Merged intoRadical Movement majority Headquarters13 Rue Duroc F 75007 ParisYouth wingYoung Radicals of the LeftIdeologySocial liberalism 1 2 Pro Europeanism 3 Radicalism European federalismPolitical positionCentre left 4 5 6 European Parliament groupERA 1994 1999 S amp D 2014 2017 Colours Yellow BlueNational Assembly1 577Senate2 348European Parliament0 79Presidency of Regional Councils0 17Presidency of Departmental Councils2 95Websitewww wbr partiradicaldegauche wbr frPolitics of FrancePolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 2 Ideology 3 Factions 4 Elected officials 5 Popular support 5 1 Presidential elections 5 2 Legislative elections 5 3 European Parliament elections 6 Leadership 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditThe party was formed in 1972 by a split from the Republican Radical and Radical Socialist Party once the dominant party of the French Left It was founded by Radicals who opposed Jean Jacques Servan Schreiber s centrist direction and chose to join the Union of the Left and agreed to the Common Programme signed by the Socialist Party PS and the French Communist Party PCF At that time the party was known as the Movement of the Radical Socialist Left French Parti republicain radical et radical socialiste MGRS then as the Movement of Radicals of the Left French Mouvement des Radicaux de Gauche MRG after 1973 Led by Robert Fabre during the 1970s the party was the third partner of the Union of the Left Nevertheless its electoral influence did not compare with those of its two allies which competed for the leadership over the left Robert Fabre sought to attract left wing Gaullists to the party and gradually became close to President Valery Giscard d Estaing who nominated him as Mediator of the Republic in 1978 He and his followers were excluded from the party by those who strongly supported the alliance with the PS Michel Crepeau was nominated by the party for the 1981 presidential election and obtained a disappointing 2 09 in the first round He and his party in the runoff endorsed PS candidate Francois Mitterrand who eventually won The MRG won 14 seats in the subsequent 1981 legislative election and participated in PS led governments between 1981 and 1986 and again between 1988 and 1993 In the 1984 European elections the MRG formed a common list with Brice Lalonde s environmentalists and Olivier Stirn a centre right deputy The list styled as the Radical and Ecologist Agreement won 3 32 but no seats 11 The party resumed its customary alliance with the PS in the 1986 legislative election and supported President Mitterrand s 1988 reelection bid by the first round At the beginning of the 1990s under the leadership of the popular businessman Bernard Tapie the party benefited from an ephemeral upswing in its popularity while the governing SP was in disarray The list led by Tapie won 12 03 and 13 seats 12 of the votes in the 1994 European Parliament election However Tapie retired from politics due to his legal problems and the party renamed the Radical Socialist Party French Parti radical socialiste PRS returned to its lowest ebb After the Radical Party opened legal proceedings against the PRS it was forced to change its name to the Radical Party of the Left French Parti radical de gauche PRG Between 1997 and 2002 it was a junior partner in Lionel Jospin s Plural Left coalition government In the 2002 presidential election the PRG nominated its own candidate former MEP and French Guiana deputy Christiane Taubira for the first time since 1981 However some members of the party including Emile Zuccarelli and PRG senator Nicolas Alfonsi supported Jean Pierre Chevenement s candidacy Taubira won 2 32 of the vote 13 Taubira gave her name to the 2001 law which declared the Atlantic slave trade a crime against humanity 14 In the 2007 presidential election while the party supported the PS candidate Segolene Royal Bernard Tapie who had been a leading figure in the PRG supported Nicolas Sarkozy In the 2007 legislative election the party won eight seats including a seat in French Guiana Taubira and Saint Pierre et Miquelon The party split on Nicolas Sarkozy s constitutional reforms in 2008 Six deputies Gerard Charasse Paul Giacobbi Annick Girardin Joel Giraud Dominique Orliac and Sylvia Pinel and three senators Jean Michel Baylet Andre Boyer and Francois Vendasi opted to vote in favour hence allowing for its passage The PRG s then president Jean Michel Baylet ran in the 2011 SP presidential primaries the only non PS candidate in the field but was placed last with only 0 64 of the vote in the primary The PRG supported Francois Hollande the eventual winner of the primaries and the 2012 presidential election In the 2012 legislative election the PRG won 12 seats With four additional members it formed its own parliamentary group in the National Assembly the Radical Republican Democratic and Progressive group Although the PRG remained a close and loyal ally of the PS it has also cooperated with the small Ecology Generation GE party since December 2011 15 16 In the 2014 European elections the party received 13 98 of the vote on a joint list with the PS electing one MEP Virginie Roziere who joined the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats S amp D group with PS MEPs In the 2017 SP presidential primary PRG candidate Sylvia Pinel received 2 of the vote in the first round election held on 22 January 2017 In the 2017 French legislative election the party only re elected three MPs Annick Girardin Jeanine Dubie and Sylvia Pinel In 2019 the party was relaunched 17 The party supports Christiane Taubira in the 2022 French presidential election 18 Following the 2022 French legislative election the party s only deputy is Olivier Falorni representing Charente Maritime s 1st constituency It was the only centre left party on the French mainland with representation in the National Assembly to refuse to join the leftist electoral coalition NUPES headed by Jean Luc Melenchon 19 Ideology EditThe PRG advocates social liberalism radicalism secularism to its French extent known as laicite progressivism European federalism and individual freedom it differs from the social democrats of the Socialist Party mainly by its strong attachment to private property The party was a member of the European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party before 2012 20 Factions EditUnder Baylet the PRG s party line was centre left socially liberal and pro European Nevertheless there were internal divisions in the party Former cabinet minister and former deputy Emile Zuccarelli is a left wing republican who strongly opposed Corsican nationalism citation needed and supported the no vote in the 2005 European constitutional referendum positions much closer to Jean Pierre Chevenement s Citizen and Republican Movement MRC citation needed Similarly Christiane Taubira supported the no vote in 2005 and endorsed Arnaud Montebourg rather than Baylet in the 2011 primary citation needed Elected officials EditCurrent Deputies Olivier Falorni Charente Maritime 1 Former Ministers Annick Girardin Jacques Mezard Former Deputies Stephane Claireaux Saint Pierre et Miquelon a Jeanine Dubie Hautes Pyrenees Sylvia Pinel Tarn et Garonne Senators RDSE group Joseph Castelli Haute Corse Yvon Collin Tarn et Garonne Philippe Esnol Yvelines Francois Fortassin Hautes Pyrenees Francoise Laborde Haute Garonne Jacques Mezard Cantal Jean Claude Requier Lot Popular support EditThe PRG remained rather weak on its own electorally averaging around 2 of the vote 2002 presidential candidate Christiane Taubira won 2 32 of the vote which explains why the party depended on its stronger ally the PS for support and parliamentary representation Almost all of the party s deputies and local officials were elected with no official PS opposition It retained some support among middle class voters and in traditional Radical areas in the South West The major exception was in Corsica where the party was historically the largest party on the non nationalist French Left and remains so to its time of dissolution due to a tradition of political dynasties such as the Giacobbi family and the weak infrastructure of the PS on the island Paul Giacobbi represented Haute Corse in the National Assembly until he stood down at the 2017 elections Emile Zuccarelli an internal rival of Giacobbi and current mayor of Bastia also represented the island in Paris until his 2007 defeat and Senators Nicolas Alfonsi and Francois Vendasi represented the Corsican PRG in the Senate Giacobbi is also President of the General Council of Haute Corse In metropolitan France the PRG was able to sustain a long lasting Radical tradition dating back to the French Third Republic most notably in the southwest or departments such as the Eure et Loir and Eure The party was represented overseas in French Guiana by Taubira s Walwari one of the major parties of the local left Presidential elections Edit President of the French Republic Election Candidate First round Second round ResultVotes Votes 1981 Michel Crepeau 642 847 2 21 Lost2002 Christiane Taubira 660 447 2 32 LostLegislative elections Edit French National Assembly Election year No of first round votes of first round vote No of seats Swing1973 Classified as PS 13 490 21 New1978 603 932 2 11 10 491 31981 Classified as PS 14 491 21 41986 107 769 0 38 7 577 b 71988 272 316 1 11 9 575 21993 Classified as PS or DVG 6 577 31997 389 782 1 53 12 577 62002 388 891 1 54 7 577 52007 343 565 1 32 7 577 2012 429 059 1 65 12 577 52017 106 311 0 47 3 577 92022 126 689 0 56 1 577 2European Parliament elections Edit European Parliament Election year Number of votes of overall vote No of seats won Swing1979 Ran on PS list 2 81 New1984 670 474 3 32 c 0 81 21989 Ran on PS list 2 81 21994 2 344 457 12 03 13 87 111999 Ran on PS list 2 87 112004 121 573 0 71 0 78 22009 Did not run N A 2014 Ran on PS list 1 74 12019 Ran on PS list 0 74 1Leadership EditParty presidents Robert Fabre 1972 1978 Michel Crepeau 1978 1981 Roger Gerard Schwartzenberg 1981 1983 Jean Michel Baylet 1983 1985 Francois Doubin 1985 1988 Yvon Collin 1988 1989 Emile Zuccarelli 1989 1992 Jean Francois Hory 1992 1996 Jean Michel Baylet 1996 2016 Sylvia Pinel 2016 2017 Guillaume Lacroix 2019 present See also EditEuropean Radical Alliance French Left Liberalism and radicalism in France Radicalism historical SinistrismeNotes Edit replacing Annick Girardin while she is a cabinet minister Including 5 elected on PS MRG lists in various departments Results of the Entente radicale ecologiste pour les Etats Unis d Europe which included the MRG but also ecologists Brice Lalonde and centrists Olivier Stirn References Edit a b Nordsieck Wolfram 2017 France Parties and Elections in Europe a b Udo Kempf 2007 Das politische System Frankreichs Springer DE p 190 ISBN 978 3 531 32973 4 David S Bell 2012 The European Integration Cleavage in the Party System The French Case In Erol Kulahci ed Europeanisation and Party Politics How the EU affects Domestic Actors Patterns and Systems ECPR Press p 22 ISBN 978 1 907301 84 1 Ari Veikko Anttiroiko Matti Malkia 2007 Encyclopedia of Digital Government Idea Group Inc IGI p 389 ISBN 978 1 59140 790 4 Retrieved 19 July 2013 Aurelien Mondon 2013 The Mainstreaming of the Extreme Right in France and Australia A Populist Hegemony Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 27 ISBN 978 1 4724 0526 5 Retrieved 27 July 2013 Nicolas Hube 2013 France In Nicolo Conti ed Party Attitudes Towards the EU in the Member States Parties for Europe Parties Against Europe Routledge p 24 ISBN 978 1 317 93656 5 David S Bell 2002 French Politics Today Manchester University Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 7190 5876 9 Retrieved 27 July 2013 Marion Mourgue 17 September 2017 Les radicaux font un pas de plus vers l unite et l independance Le Figaro Retrieved 27 October 2017 Charline Hurel 16 September 2017 Les radicaux de gauche et de droite en voie de reunion pour peser au centre Le Monde Retrieved 27 October 2017 Tristan Quinault Maupoil 11 February 2019 A gauche les echeances electorales divisent les radicaux Le Figaro Retrieved 18 February 2019 Alistair Cole Brian Doherty 2006 France Pas come les autres the French Greens at the crossroads In Dick Richardson Chris Rootes eds The Green Challenge The Development of Green Parties in Europe Routledge p 36 ISBN 978 1 134 84403 6 CEVIPOL Electoral results France European elections of 1994 Dev ulb ac be Archived from the original on 25 July 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2013 CEVIPOL Electoral results France Presidential elections of 2002 Dev ulb ac be Archived from the original on 25 July 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2013 La Loi Taubira Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Human Rights League France Bapteme du Pole Radical et Ecologique Archived 4 June 2012 at archive today Generation ecologie 21 December 2011 Creation du pole radical et ecologique Archived 30 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine Parti radical de gauche 21 December 2011 Le PRG choisit son nouveau president ladepeche fr in French Retrieved 15 January 2022 Belaich Charlotte Presidentielle Christiane Taubira se jette dans la fosse a l union Liberation in French Retrieved 15 January 2022 Le Parti radical de gauche denonce les negociations pour une union autour de La France insoumise Le Monde fr in French 2 May 2022 Retrieved 3 May 2022 ELDR Council between a rock and some very hard places indeed Libdemvoice org 18 May 2012 Archived from the original on 13 July 2014 Retrieved 12 March 2013 a b Chronologie des radicaux de gauche MRG PRG France politique fr 17 February 2007 Retrieved 12 March 2013 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radical Party of the Left amp oldid 1130970862, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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