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Socialist Party (France)

The Socialist Party (French: Parti socialiste [paʁti sɔsjalist], PS) is a French centre-left[2][3][4] and social-democratic political party.[5] It holds pro-European views.[6] The PS was for decades the largest party of the "French Left" and used to be one of the two major political parties in the French Fifth Republic, along with The Republicans. It replaced the earlier French Section of the Workers' International in 1969 and is currently led by First Secretary Olivier Faure. The PS is a member of the Party of European Socialists, Progressive Alliance and Socialist International.

Socialist Party
Parti socialiste
AbbreviationPS
First SecretaryOlivier Faure
President in the National AssemblyBoris Vallaud
President in the SenatePatrick Kanner
FoundersFrançois Mitterrand
Alain Savary
Founded4 May 1969; 54 years ago (1969-05-04)
Merger of
See list
Headquarters99 rue Molière, 94200 Ivry-sur-Seine
NewspaperLe Populaire (1969–1970)
Youth wingYoung Socialist Movement
LGBT wingHomosexualités et Socialisme
Membership (2023) 45,000
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left
National affiliationNew Ecological and Social People's Union
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
International affiliationProgressive Alliance
Socialist International
European Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Colours  Pink
Anthem
"Changer la vie" (1977–2010)[1]
"Changing Life"
"Il faut tourner la page" (2010–)
"We must turn the page"
National Assembly
32 / 577
Senate
66 / 348
European Parliament
3 / 79
Presidency of Regional Councils
5 / 17
Presidency of Departmental Councils
22 / 95
Website
www.parti-socialiste.fr

The PS first won power in 1981, when its candidate François Mitterrand was elected president of France in the 1981 presidential election. Under Mitterrand, the party achieved a governing majority in the National Assembly from 1981 to 1986 and again from 1988 to 1993. PS leader Lionel Jospin lost his bid to succeed Mitterrand as president in the 1995 presidential election against Rally for the Republic leader Jacques Chirac, but he became prime minister in a cohabitation government after the 1997 legislative election, a position Jospin held until 2002, when he was again defeated in the 2002 presidential election.

Ségolène Royal, the party's candidate for the 2007 presidential election, was defeated by conservative UMP candidate Nicolas Sarkozy. The PS won most of regional and local elections and for the first time in more than fifty years it won control of the Senate in the 2011 Senate election.[7] On 6 May 2012, François Hollande, the first secretary of the party from 1997 to 2008, was elected president and the next month the party won a majority in the 2012 legislative election. During his term, Hollande battled with high unemployment, multiple Jihadi terrorist attacks, poor opinion ratings and a splinter group of left-wing Socialist MPs known as frondeurs (rebels). On 1 December 2016, Hollande declined to seek re-election and the PS subsequently organized a presidential primary. Benoît Hamon, from the left wing of the party, was designated as the Socialist candidate after defeating former Prime Minister Manuel Valls. Facing the emergence of centrist Emmanuel Macron and left-winger Jean-Luc Mélenchon, Hamon failed to re-establish the PS leadership on the centre-left and finished 5th in the 2017 presidential election, gathering only 6.36 percent of the votes. The party then lost the majority of its MPs in the 2017 legislative election, securing just 26 seats, becoming the fourth-biggest group in the National Assembly.

Several figures who acted at the international level have also been members of the PS, including Jacques Delors, who was the president of the European Commission from 1985 to 1994 and the first person to serve three terms in that office;[8] Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who was the managing director of the International Monetary Fund from 2007 to 2011;[9] and Pascal Lamy, who was Director-General of the World Trade Organization from 2005 to 2013.[10] Party membership has declined precipitously, standing at 22,000 members in 2021,[11] down from 42,300 in 2016,[12] 60,000 in 2014[13] and 173,486 members in 2012.[14] However, before the start of the 2023 Marseille Congress, the party announced that it had more than 41,000 members,[15] almost double that of the previous count announced during the 2021 Villeurbanne Congress. At the end of July 2023, the Socialist Party claimed 45,000 members.[16]

History edit

French socialist movement and the SFIO edit

The defeat of the Paris Commune (1871) greatly reduced the power and influence of the socialist movements in France. Its leaders were killed or exiled. France's first socialist party, the Federation of the Socialist Workers of France (FTSF), was founded in 1879. It was characterised as "possibilist" because it promoted gradual reforms. Two parties split off from it: in 1882, the French Workers' Party (POF) of Jules Guesde and Paul Lafargue (the son-in-law of Karl Marx), then in 1890 the Revolutionary Socialist Workers' Party (POSR) of Jean Allemane. At the same time, the heirs of Louis Auguste Blanqui, a symbol of the French revolutionary tradition, created the Central Revolutionary Committee (CRC) led by Édouard Vaillant. There were also some declared socialist deputies such as Alexandre Millerand and Jean Jaurès who did not belong to any party.

In 1899, the participation of Millerand in Pierre Waldeck-Rousseau's cabinet caused a debate about socialist participation in a "bourgeois government". Three years later, Jaurès, Allemane and the possibilists founded the possibilist French Socialist Party, which supported participation in government, while Guesde and Vaillant formed the Socialist Party of France, which opposed such co-operation. In 1905, during the Globe Congress, the two groups merged in the French Section of the Workers International (SFIO). Leader of the parliamentary group and director of the party paper L'Humanité, Jaurès was its most influential figure.

The party was hemmed in between the middle-class liberals of the Radical Party and the revolutionary syndicalists who dominated the trade unions. Furthermore, the goal to rally all the Socialists in one single party was partially reached: some elects refused to join the SFIO and created the Republican-Socialist Party, which supported socialist participation in liberal governments. Together with the Radicals, who wished to install laicism, the SFIO was a component of the Left Block (Bloc des gauches) without to sit in the government. In 1906, the General Confederation of Labour trade union claimed its independence from all political parties.

The French socialists were strongly anti-war, but following the assassination of Jaurès in 1914 they were unable to resist the wave of militarism which followed the outbreak of World War I. They suffered a severe split over participation in the wartime government of national unity. In 1919 the anti-war socialists were heavily defeated in elections. In 1920, during the Tours Congress, the majority and left wing of the party broke away and formed the French Section of the Communist International (SFIC) to join the Third International founded by Vladimir Lenin. The right wing, led by Léon Blum, kept the "old house" and remained in the SFIO.

In 1924 and in 1932, the Socialists joined with the Radicals in the Coalition of the Left (Cartel des Gauches), but refused to join the non-Socialist governments led by the Radicals Édouard Herriot and Édouard Daladier. These governments failed because the Socialists and the Radicals could not agree on economic policy, and also because the Communists, following the policy laid down by the Soviet Union, refused to support governments presiding over capitalist economies. The question of the possibility of a government participation with Radicals caused the split of "neosocialists" at the beginning of the 1930s. They merged with the Republican-Socialist Party in the Socialist Republican Union.

In 1934, the Communists changed their line, and the four left-wing parties came together in the Popular Front, which won the 1936 elections and brought Blum to power as France's first SFIO Prime Minister. Indeed, for the first time in its history, the SFIO obtained more votes and seats than the Radical Party and it formed the central axis of a left-wing parliamentary majority. Within a year, however, his government collapsed over economic policy and also over the issue of the Spanish Civil War. The fall of the Popular Front caused a new split from the SFIO, with the departure of the left wing of the party, led by Marceau Pivert, to the Workers and Peasants' Socialist Party. The demoralised Left fell apart and was unable to resist the collapse of the French Third Republic after the military defeat of 1940.

After the liberation of France in 1944, the SFIO re-emerged in a coalition with a powerful French Communist Party (PCF), which became the largest left-wing party, and the Christian democratic Popular Republican Movement (MRP). This alliance installed the main elements of the French welfare state and the French Fourth Republic, but it did not survive the Cold War. In May 1947, the Socialist Prime Minister Paul Ramadier dismissed the Communist ministers. Blum proposed the construction of a Third Force with the centre-left and the centre-right, against the Gaullists and the Communists. However, his candidate to lead of the SFIO, Daniel Mayer, was defeated by Guy Mollet.

Mollet was supported by the left wing of the party. Paradoxically, he spoke a Marxist language without questioning the alliance with the centre and the centre-right. His leadership was shaken when the party divided in 1954 about the European Defence Community. Half of the SFIO parliamentary group voted "no", against the instructions of the party leaders. This led to the failure of the project. But later, Mollet got involved the SFIO in the build of a centre-left coalition, the Republican Front, which won a plurality in the 1956 elections. Consequently, he was Prime Minister at the head of a minority government. But the party was in decline, as were the Radicals, and the left never came close to forming a united front. Indeed, this led Mollet to assert, "the Communist Party is not on the left, but in the East". The repressive policy of Mollet in the Algerian War and his support for Charles de Gaulle's come-back in 1958 (the party lead called to vote "yes" in referendum on Fifth Republic's constitution) caused a split and the foundation of the dissident Unified Socialist Party (PSU). The SFIO returned to opposition in 1959. Discredited by its fluctuating policy during the Fourth Republic, it reached its lowest ebb in the 1960s.

Both because of its opposition to the principle of presidential election by universal suffrage and because De Gaulle's re-election appeared inevitable, the SFIO did not nominate a candidate for the 1965 presidential election. Consequently, it supported the candidacy of François Mitterrand, a former minister of the Fourth Republic who had been a conservative, then a leftist independent. He was resolutely anti-Gaullist. Supported by all the left-wing parties, he obtained a good result and faced De Gaulle in an unexpected second ballot, becoming the leader of the non-Communist left.

In order to exist between the Communist Party, leading the left, and the Gaullist Party, leading the country, the SFIO, Radicals, and left-wing republican groups created the Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left under Mitterrand's leadership. But unable to benefit from the May 1968 events, it imploded after its disastrous defeat at the June 1968 legislative elections. One year later, the SFIO candidate Gaston Defferre was eliminated in the first round of the 1969 presidential election, with only 5% of votes.

Foundation of the PS and the Union of the Left (1969–1981) edit

 
Logo of the PS

In 1969, during the Alfortville Congress, the SFIO was replaced by the Socialist Party (Parti socialiste or PS). It was joined by pro-Pierre Mendès-France clubs (Union of Clubs for the Renewal of the Left led by Alain Savary) and left-wing republican groups (Union of Socialist Groups and Clubs of Jean Poperen). During the Issy-les-Moulineaux Congress, Alain Savary was elected First Secretary with the support of his predecessor Guy Mollet. He proposed an "ideological dialogue" with the Communists. The new party inherited the old daily Le Populaire from the SFIO, but it ceased publication soon after on 28 February 1970.

Two years later, during the Epinay Congress, pro-François Mitterrand clubs (Convention of Republican Institutions), joined the party. Mitterrand defeated the Savary-Mollet duo by proposing an electoral programme with the Communists and took the lead. A new emblem, the fist and rose, was adopted to signal change in 1971.[17] In 1972, the Common Programme was signed with the PCF and Radical Party of the Left. During the Socialist International conference, he explained the alliance of left-wing parties is a yearning of French left-wing voters. In this, the goal of his strategy was "to regain 3 million of the 5 million of PCF voters". The left, and notably the Socialist Party, experienced an electoral recovery at the 1973 legislative election. Mitterrand, the candidate of the left-wing alliance, came close to winning the 1974 presidential election. Indeed, he obtained 49.2% of votes in the second round.

At the end of 1974, some PSU members, including leader Michel Rocard, re-joined the PS. They represented the "left-wing Christian" and non-Marxist group. The most conservative members of the PS, they advocated an alignment of French socialism along the lines of European social democracy, that is, a clear acceptance of the market economy. While the "Union of the Left" triumphed at the 1977 municipal election, the electoral rise of the PS worried the Communist Party. The two parties failed to update the Common Programme and the PCF leader Georges Marchais denounced a "turn towards the Right" of the PS.

In spite of positive polls, the "Union of the Left" lost the 1978 legislative election. For the first time since 1936, the Socialists scored better in the polls than the Communists, becoming the main left-wing party, but their defeat caused an internal crisis. Mitterrand's leadership was challenged by Rocard, who wanted to abandon the Common Programme which he considered archaic and unrealistic. Mitterrand felt that the left could not win without the alliance between the Socialists and the Communists. In 1979, Mitterrand won the Metz Congress, then, despite Rocard's popularity, was chosen as PS candidate for the 1981 presidential election.

Three major tendencies or factions emerged within the PS by the end of the Seventies. One was represented by the Mitterrandists who wanted reform but not a complete break with capitalism. A second faction was led by Michel Rocard and his supporters, who sought social democracy with a strong measure of autogestion, while a third faction formed around Jean-Pierre Chevènement and the CERES group which stood for revolutionary socialism.[18]

Mitterrand's presidency and the exercise of power (1981–1995) edit

In 1981, Mitterrand defeated the incumbent conservative, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, to become the first socialist of the Fifth Republic to be elected President of France by universal suffrage. He dissolved the National Assembly and, for the first time in their history, the French Socialists won an absolute majority of the seats. This landslide victory for the Socialists took place to the detriment of the right-wing parliamentary parties (Rally for the Republic and Union for French Democracy), as well as the Communist Party.

Mitterrand attempted to carry out socialist-inspired reforms (the 110 Propositions), furthering the dirigiste economic planning trends of the preceding conservative governments. The Prime Minister Pierre Mauroy nationalised the banks, the insurance industry and the defence industries, in accordance with the 1972 Common Program. Workers' wages were increased and working hours reduced to 39, and many other sweeping reforms carried out, but the economic crisis continued. Reforms included the abolition of death penalty, creation of a solidarity tax on wealth (ISF), introduction of proportional representation in legislative elections (which was applied only at the 1986 election), decentralization of the state (1982–83 laws), repeal of price liberalization for books (Lang Law of 1981), etc.

As early as 1982, Mitterrand faced a clear choice between maintaining France's membership in the European Monetary System, and thus the country's commitment to European integration, and pursuing his socialist reforms. He chose the former, starting the Socialist Party's acceptance of the private market economy. In 1984 Mitterrand and his second Prime Minister, Laurent Fabius, clearly abandoned any further socialist measures. The "Union of the Left" died and the Communist ministers resigned. Although there were two periods of mild economic reflation (first from 1984 to 1986 and again from 1988 to 1990), monetary and fiscal restraint was the essential policy orientation of the Mitterrand presidency from 1983 onwards.[19]

The PS lost its majority in the French National Assembly in 1986, forcing Mitterrand to "cohabit" with the conservative government of Jacques Chirac. Nevertheless, Mitterrand was re-elected President in 1988 with a moderate programme entitled "United France". He proposed neither nationalisations nor privatisations. He chose as Prime Minister the most popular and moderate of the Socialist politicians, Michel Rocard. His cabinet included four centre-right ministers but it was supported by only a plurality in the National Assembly elected in June 1988.

During his second term, Mitterrand focused on foreign policy and European integration. He convened a referendum for the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty. He left domestic policy to his prime ministers: Michel Rocard, Édith Cresson and Pierre Bérégovoy. The party was hit by scandals about its financing and weakened by the struggle between the heirs of "Mitterrandism".

In 1990, during the Rennes Congress, the "Mitterrandist group" split between the supporters of Laurent Fabius and the friends of Lionel Jospin. Furthermore, a part of the left wing of the party, led by Jean-Pierre Chevènement split off due to his opposition to the Gulf War and the Maastricht Treaty. This section created the Citizen and Republican Movement (MDC). Finally, many on the left were disappointed by the results of the Socialist governments. At the 1993 legislative election, the PS did poorly, returning to the levels of the SFIO in the 1960s. The Socialist group of the National Assembly numbered 53 deputies against 260 during the previous term.

Rocard became First Secretary of the party, and was considered the "natural candidate" for the next presidential election. He called for a political "big bang", an agreement with the centre and the centre-right, but his efforts were in vain. One year later, his party obtained only 14% of votes at the 1994 European Parliament election. He was overthrown by a motley coalition led by Henri Emmanuelli, a "Mitterrandist" left-winger. One year before the 1995 presidential election, the PS was affected by a leadership crisis. Rocard lost the most part of his followers after his 1994 electoral crash, Fabius was weakened by the infected blood scandal, the presidentiability of Emannuelli was questioned. The hope of some party members transferred to Jacques Delors, president of the European Commission and a favourite according to the polls, but he declined due to the radicalisation of the party which prevented his centrist strategy. Finally, Lionel Jospin, who had announced his political retirement after the loss of his parliamentary seat in 1993, came back and proposed to "take stock" of Mitterrand's inheritance. For the first time, the party members were called to nominate their candidate for presidency. Benefiting from a good image in the polls, a strong loyalty to the party (as former First Secretary) and governmental experience (as former Education Minister, and the teachers were numerous and influential in the PS), he defeated Emmanuelli in the internal ballot. Then, he was defeated by Jacques Chirac in the run-off election but, given the PS crisis, his result was judged good and he returned as First Secretary.

Jospin and the Plural Left (1995–2002) edit

In the legislature, the PS reconstructed a coalition with other left-wing parties: the French Communist Party, the Greens, the Radical Party of the Left, and the MDC. This "Plural Left" won the 1997 legislative election and Jospin became Prime Minister of the third "cohabitation".

His policy was broadly progressive. The Aubry laws reduced the working time to 35 hours a week, while Universal medical insurance was instituted. However, the policy of privatisation was pursued.

His coalition dissolved when the MDC leader Jean-Pierre Chevènement resigned from the Cabinet. The Green and Communist allies were weakened by their governmental participation.

The 2002 presidential election was focused on the theme of insecurity. Jospin, again the Socialists' candidate, was eliminated in the first round due to there being too many left-wing candidates who split the vote. He announced his retirement from politics, and the PS called on its supporters to vote for Chirac in order to defeat the far-right National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen, who had surprisingly advanced to the run-off. Two months later, the "Plural Left" lost the 2002 legislative election.

After the 2002 shock edit

François Hollande, who became First Secretary in 1997, was re-elected in 2003 during the Dijon Congress with the support of the main Socialist personalities, against the left wing of the party. In the 2004 regional elections, the Socialists had a major comeback. In coalition with the former "Plural Left", they gained power in 20 of the 22 metropolitan regions (all except Alsace and Corsica) and in the four overseas regions. The party benefited from increasing frustration with right-wing parties. However, the Socialist Party has experienced considerable difficulty in formulating an alternative to right-wing policy.

On 1 December 2004, 59% of Socialist Party members approved the proposed European Constitution. However, several well-known members of the Party, including Laurent Fabius, and left-wingers Henri Emmanuelli and Jean-Luc Mélenchon, asked the public for a "no" vote in the 29 May 2005 French referendum on the European Constitution, where the proposed Constitution was rejected. Fabius was ejected from the executive office of the party. The split over the European Constitution, as well as party leaders' competing ambitions to win the presidential nomination in 2007, led the party into considerable disarray.

In November 2005, during the Le Mans Congress, three main groups were present. The majority supported a moderate text and obtained 55%. Fabius's allies ("To Rally the Left") advocated more radical policies and gained 20%. Finally, another faction ("New Socialist Party") claimed it was necessary to renovate the party by proposing left-wing policies and a profound reform of French institutions. It obtained 25% of the vote. Virtually all factions agreed on a common agenda, broadly based on the moderate and pro-European majority's position with some left-wing amendments.

In anticipation of a Presidential primary and a special low membership rate, the party's membership grew from 127,000 to 217,000 between 2005 and 2006.[20]

2007 presidential election and its aftermath edit

 
From left to right: Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Bertrand Delanoë and Ségolène Royal sitting in the front row at a meeting held on 6 February 2007 by the PS at the Carpentier Hall in Paris

Many potential candidates appeared for the 2007 presidential election: François Hollande, Laurent Fabius (from the left wing of the party), Dominique Strauss-Kahn (who claimed to represent "social democracy"), Jack Lang, Martine Aubry and Ségolène Royal, who was favoured according to the polls. Some Socialist leaders asked Jospin to return. He declared he was "available" then finally refused.

On 16 November 2006, the members of the Socialist Party chose Ségolène Royal to be their candidate with a majority of 60%. Her challengers, Strauss-Kahn and Fabius, obtained 21% and 19% respectively.

After obtaining 25.87% of the vote in the first round of France's presidential elections, Royal qualified for the second round of voting but lost with 46.94% to Nicolas Sarkozy on 6 May 2007. Immediately after her defeat several party bosses (notably Strauss-Kahn), held Ségolène Royal personally responsible for the unsuccessful campaign. At the same time, some personalities of the right wing of the party (such as Bernard Kouchner) accepted to join the government nominated by Nicolas Sarkozy.

In the 10 and 17 June 2007 National Assembly elections, the Socialist Party won 186 out of 577 seats, and about 10 affiliated, gain of 40 seats.

After the winning March 2008 municipal election, the campaign with a view to the Reims Congress started. Some candidates proposed to succeed François Hollande, who had announced he will not compete for another term as First Secretary:

  • Ségolène Royal who wished to forge an alliance with the centrist party MoDem;
  • the Mayor of Paris Bertrand Delanoë, supported by Lionel Jospin and his friends, who wished to keep the status quo of the 2007 campaign and come back to the Plural Left;
  • Martine Aubry, supported by the followers of Laurent Fabius and Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who had the same electoral strategy as the Mayor of Paris but advocated reconciliation between the campaigners of the "yes" and the "no" to the European constitution; and
  • the young left-winger Benoît Hamon.

In the pre-vote, the text of Royal arrived the first with 29%, followed by Delanoë (25%), Aubry (25%) and Hamon (19%). A part of the left wing split and founded the Left Party. During the Reims Congress, which happened in a very tense climate, the leaders of the factions failed to form a majority. Consequently, the PS members had to elect directly the next First Secretary. Disappointed by his result in the pre-vote, Delanoë renounced and called to vote for Aubry.

On 22 November 2008, it was announced that Aubry had defeated Royal by the narrow margin of 42 votes, and Royal asked for a recount. After checking, Martine Aubry was elected by a margin of 102 votes and 50.03% of votes. Denouncing frauds, Royal's team threatened to lodge a complaint before to renounce.

After that, the public image of the party was deteriorated. In the 2009 European Parliament election, the PS did not succeed to benefit from the unpopularity of President Sarkozy. It obtained only 16.5% of the vote and only just got ahead of Europe Ecology (16.3%). However, the PS strengthened its network of local elects in winning comfortably the 2010 departmental and regional elections. In September 2011, for the first time a Socialist, Jean-Pierre Bel, was elected Chairman of the Senate of France.

2012 presidential election edit

Candidates for the presidency of France contested an open primary on 9 October 2011 to select the Socialist Party candidate for the 2012 presidential election. The nominations for the candidacy were opened on 28 June. Though he had not officially declared his candidacy, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, a prominent member of the Socialist Party and the managing director of the International Monetary Fund was the polls' clear favorite to defeat the incumbent conservative president, Nicolas Sarkozy.[21] But he faced a sex assault complaint in New York and was de facto eliminated from the primary.

Eventually, former party leader François Hollande won the primary and ran as the official Socialist Party candidate for President of France. He narrowly defeated incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy, becoming president-elect of France on Sunday 6 May 2012.

The idea for holding an open primary to choose the Socialist Party presidential candidate had first been suggested in 2008, by the independent left-leaning think tank Terra Nova.[22]

2017 presidential election edit

 
Rue de Solférino, a party seat in Paris which was sold to Apsys in December 2017 for 45.55 million euros

The Socialist Party decided to hold a presidential primary in 2017, against the backdrop of the unprecedented unpopularity of incumbent François Hollande, with a 4 percent approval rating, who announced on 1 December 2016 that he would not seek re-election, making him the first president of the Fifth Republic not to seek a second term. It was also set against the fragmentation of the left between three major candidates, with polls indicating that the party's candidate would come in fifth, behind the National Front's Marine Le Pen, François Fillon of the centre-right Republicans, Emmanuel Macron, former economy minister under Hollande who founded his centrist political movement, En Marche!, and left-wing ex-Socialist Jean-Luc Mélenchon under the banner of La France insoumise.[23] The primary was won by Socialist rebel Benoît Hamon, who defeated ex-Prime Minister Manuel Valls in the second round of the primary on 29 January 2017. Hamon finished fifth in the subsequent Presidential election, with 6.36% of the vote. In the 2017 legislative election that followed the election of President Emmanuel Macron, the Socialist party dropped from 280 to 30 seats in the National Assembly, leaving it in 4th place in terms of seats, and with 7.44% of the 1st round vote. The Parliamentary left group that it dominated (with 30 out of 45 seats after the election, down from 280 out of 331 seats before) finished as the 3rd largest group in the National Assembly. Following the election, Cambadélis resigned from the post of first secretary and Rachid Temal was appointed as acting secretary. The Socialist group was ultimately refounded as the New Left (NG).

On 1 July 2017, Hamon left the Socialist Party and founded the 1st July Movement (later renamed Génération.s). The Socialist Party abstained from the confidence vote on the Second Philippe government. The party later elected 78 senators in the 2017 election.

On 7–8 April 2018, the Aubervilliers Congress elected Olivier Faure as new first secretary of the party; Faure announced the party would be in opposition to Macron and Philippe. Because of financial problems, the party was forced to sell its historical seat in Rue de Solférino and moved into a smaller one in Rue Molière, on Ivry-sur-Seine.

Following the Benalla affair, the Socialist Party entered a motion of no confidence against the government, together with the French Communist Party and La France Insoumise. The motions obtained 63 ayes and failed to reach the quorum of 289 votes required in the National Assembly.

In 2018, the New Left group changed its name into Socialists and affiliated group.

On 12 October 2018, MEP Emmanuel Maurel left the party together with other elected officials and founded the Alternative for a republican, ecologist and socialist program (APRÉS).

For the 2019 European election, the Socialist Party formed a joint list with the Radical Party of the Left, Place Publique and New Deal, with Raphaël Glucksmann at its head. The list scored 6.19% of votes and elected three MEPs.

2022 presidential election edit

In the first round of voting in the 2022 French presidential election, the candidate Anne Hidalgo obtained the worst presidential election result in the party's history, with 1.75% of the total vote.[24]

2022 legislative elections edit

In advance of the 2022 French legislative election, the party entered into a left-wing alliance, the New Ecologic and Social People's Union (NUPES), joining Europe Ecology – The Greens, the French Communist Party, La France Insoumise and other minor left-wing parties.[25] Some Socialists like Sylvie Tolmont, disillusioned with the alliance, stood in the election as dissident candidates.[26] The Socialist Party was able to win 27 seats, becoming the second left-wing force in the National Assembly, after La France Insoumise.

First secretaries edit

Factions edit

Factions are organised in the Socialist Party through policy declarations called motions on which the party members vote at each party congress: [needs update]

Election results edit

Presidency edit

Presidency of the French Republic
Election year Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Rank Votes % Rank
1974 François Mitterrand 11,044,373 43.25   1st 12,971,604 49.19   2nd Lost
1981 7,505,960 25.85   2nd 15,708,262 51.76   1st Won
1988 10,367,220 34.10   1st 16,704,279 54.02   1st Won
1995 Lionel Jospin 7,097,786 23.30   1st 14,180,644 47.36   2nd Lost
2002 4,610,113 16.18   3rd Lost
2007 Ségolène Royal 9,500,112 25.87   2nd 16,790,440 46,94   2nd Lost
2012 François Hollande 10,272,705 28.63   1st 18,000,668 51.64   1st Won
2017 Benoît Hamon 2,291,288 6,36   5th Lost
2022 Anne Hidalgo 616,478 1.75   10th Lost

National Assembly edit

National Assembly
Year 1st round 2nd round Seats +/– Result Note
Votes % ± pp Rank Votes % ± pp Rank
1973 4,559,241 19.18%   2.65   3rd 5,564,610 23.72%   2.47   2nd
89 / 491
  32 Opposition In coalition with the MRG
1978 6,451,151 22.58%   3.40   2nd 7,212,916 28.31%   4.59   1st
104 / 491
  15 Opposition
1981 9,432,362 37.52%   14.94   1st 9,198,332 49.25%   20.94   1st
269 / 491
  165 Government In coalition with the MRG
1986 8,693,939 31.02%   6.50   1st
206 / 573
  63 Opposition
1988 8,493,702 34.77%   3.75   1st 9,198,778 45.31%   3.94   1st
260 / 577
  54 Government
1993 4,415,495 17.61%   17.16   3rd 6,143,179 31.01%   14.30   1st
59 / 577
  201 Opposition
1997 5,977,045 23.49%   5.88   1st 9,722,022 38.20%   7.19   1st
255 / 577
  196 Government
2002 6,086,599 24.11%   0.62   2nd 7,482,169 35.26%   2.94   2nd
140 / 577
  115 Opposition
2007 6,436,520 24.73%   0.62   2nd 8,624,861 42.27%   7.01   2nd
186 / 577
  46 Opposition
2012 7,618,326 29.35%   4.62   1st 9,420,889 40.91%   1.36   1st
279 / 577
  93 Government
2017 1,685,677 7.44%   21.91   5th 1,032,842 5.68%   35.23   4th
30 / 577
  249 Opposition
2022 860,201 3.78%   3.66   7th 1,084,909 5.23%   0.45   6th
28 / 577
  2 Opposition In coalition with the NUPES

European Parliament edit

European Parliament
Year Votes % ± pp Rank Seats +/– Note
1979 4,763,026 23.53% N/A 2nd
20 / 81
N/A In coalition with the MRG
1984 4,188,875 20.76%   2.77   2nd
20 / 81
 
1989 4,286,354 23.61%   2.85   2nd
17 / 87
  3 In coalition with the MRG
1994 2,824,173 14.49%   9.12   2nd
15 / 87
  2
1999 3,873,901 21.95%   7.46   1st
18 / 78
  3 In coalition with the PRG and the MDC
2004 4,960,756 28.90%   6.95   1st
31 / 74
  13
2009 2,838,160 16.48%   12.42   2nd
14 / 74
  17
2014 2,649,202 13.98%   2.50   3rd
12 / 74
  2 In coalition with the PRG
2019 1,403,170 6.19%   7.79   6th
3 / 79
  9 In coalition with the PPPRGND

Splinter parties edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Priestley, Pascal (11 May 2017). "Vies et morts du Parti socialiste français". tv5monde.com (in French).
  2. ^ Paul Statham (2007). "Political communication and European integration and the transformation of national public spheres: a comparison of Britain and France". In John Erik Fossum; Philip R. Schlesinger (eds.). The European Union and the Public Sphere: A Communicative Space in the Making?. Routledge. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-134-17462-1.
  3. ^ Liubomir K. Topaloff (2012). Political Parties and Euroscepticism. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-230-36176-8.
  4. ^ Chrisafis, Angelique (29 January 2017). "French Socialists choose leftwing rebel Benoît Hamon for Élysée fight". The Guardian. Paris.
  5. ^ The Parti Socialiste is widely described as social-democratic:
    • Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko; Matti Mälkiä, eds. (2007). Encyclopedia of Digital Government. Idea Group Inc (IGI). p. 397. ISBN 978-1-59140-790-4.
    • Dimitri Almeida (2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. CRC Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0.
    • Richard Collin; Pamela L. Martin (2012). An Introduction to World Politics: Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 218. ISBN 978-1-4422-1803-1.
    • Hans-Peter Kriesi; Edgar Grande; Martin Dolezal; Marc Helbling; Dominic Höglinger; Swen Hutter; Bruno Wüest (2012). Political Conflict in Western Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-107-02438-0.
    • Wolfgang Merkel; Alexander Petring; Christian Henkes; Christoph Egle (2008). Social Democracy in Power: The Capacity to Reform. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-07178-4.
  6. ^ "France".
  7. ^ Bremer, Catherine (25 September 2011). "French left seizes Senate majority, hurts Sarkozy". Reuters.
  8. ^ European Commission – Discover the former Presidents, retrieved 21 September 2009
  9. ^ "IMF Managing Directors". Retrieved 20 June 2012.
  10. ^ "Previous GATT and WTO Directors-General". WTO. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
  11. ^ "Olivier Faure réélu à la tête du Parti socialiste". 17 September 2021.
  12. ^ Ludovic Galtier (30 November 2016). "Parti socialiste : 42.300 adhérents seraient à jour de cotisation". RTL.
  13. ^ "PS : 60.000 militants PS à jour de cotisations". Parti socialiste. 30 November 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  14. ^ (PDF). Socialist Party. 12 October 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 November 2013.
  15. ^ web, À propos de l'auteur Fabrice de Comarmond Facebook Twitter Site. "Plus de 41 000 adhérents sont appelés à voter dans le cadre du Congrès de Marseille". Parti Socialiste (in French). Retrieved 5 February 2023. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  16. ^ ""Il y a besoin de gauche" : à un an des élections européennes, le Parti socialiste engrange de nouveaux et jeunes adhérents". 29 July 2023.
  17. ^ Cépède, Frédéric (January–March 1996). "« Le poing et la rose », la saga d'un logo". Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire (in French). 49. Paris: 18–30. doi:10.3406/xxs.1996.3481. ISSN 0294-1759. S2CID 144991176. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  18. ^ Mitterrand: A Political Biography by Wayne Northcutt
  19. ^ Smith, W.R. (1998). The Left's Dirty Job: The Politics of Industrial Restructuring in France and Spain. University of Pittsburgh Pre. p. 102. ISBN 9780822971894. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
  20. ^ Scarrow, Susan (27 November 2014). Beyond Party Members: Changing Approaches to Partisan Mobilization (1 ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 95. ISBN 9780191748332. Retrieved 15 June 2023.
  21. ^ "France's Sarkozy may not make 2012 runoff | Reuters". Uk.reuters.com. 9 May 2011.
  22. ^ . tnova.fr. Archived from the original on 22 January 2015. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
  23. ^ Pierre Briançon (28 November 2016). "French Socialists in chaos as Valls confronts Hollande". Politico Europe.
  24. ^ "Anne Hidalgo obtains the worst presidential election result in the history of the Parti Socialiste". Le Monde.fr. 11 April 2022. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  25. ^ "French left agrees rare coalition deal to take on Macron". Reuters.com. 4 May 2022. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  26. ^ Mortimer, Gavin (13 June 2022). "France's Socialists have been punished for their intolerance | The Spectator". The Spectator. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  27. ^ Arié, Elie (5 January 2014). "Hollande est-il "socialiste", "social-démocrate", "social-libéral" ou "libéral"?". Marianne (in French).
  28. ^ Buis, Sabine. (in French). Parti socialiste. Archived from the original on 20 October 2019. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  29. ^ "Max Lejeune", Website of the French Senate
  30. ^ Laurent de Boissieu, "Parti Martiniquais Socialiste (PMS)", France-politique.fr
  31. ^ Laurent de Boissieu, "Guadeloupe Unie, Socialisme et Réalités (GUSR)", France-politique.fr

Further reading edit

  • Bell, David S., and Byron Criddle. Exceptional Socialists: The Case of the French Socialist Party (2014).
  • Bell, David Scott, and Byron Criddle. The French Socialist Party: The emergence of a party of government (1988).
  • Bell, David. François Mitterrand: a political biography (2005).
  • Cole, Alistair. "The French Socialist Party and Its Radical Ambiguity." French Politics, Culture & Society (2011) 29#3 pp: 29–48.
  • Cole, A., S. Meunier, and V. Tiberj. "From Sarkozy to Hollande: The New Normal?" in Developments in French Politics 5 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), edited by A. Cole, S. Meunier, and V. Tiberj, pp 1–18.
  • Cole, Alistair. François Mitterrand: A study in political leadership (1994).
  • Cole, Alistair M. "Factionalism, the French socialist party and the fifth Republic: An explanation of intra‐party divisions." European Journal of Political Research (1989) 17#1 pp: 77-94.
  • Colton, Joel. Léon Blum: humanist in politics (1987).
  • Criddle, Byron. Socialists and European integration: a study of the French Socialist Party (1969).
  • Graham, Bruce Desmond. Choice and democratic order: the French Socialist Party, 1937-1950 (2006).
  • Greene, Nathanael. Crisis and decline: The French socialist party in the popular front era (1969).
  • Grunberg, Gérard (2014). "Le Socialisme français en crise". Modern & Contemporary France. 22 (4): 459–471. doi:10.1080/09639489.2014.957961. S2CID 144598638.
  • Noland, Aaron. The Founding of the French Socialist Party (1893-1905) (1956).
  • Northcutt, Wayne. Mitterrand: A political biography (1992).
  • Northcutt, Wayne. "François Mitterrand and the political use of symbols: the construction of a centrist republic." French Historical Studies (1991) pp: 141–158.
  • Northcutt, Wayne (1991). "François Mitterrand and the Political Use of Symbols: The Construction of a Centrist Republic". French Historical Studies. 17 (1): 141–158. doi:10.2307/286282. JSTOR 286282.
  • Ross, George (1995). "Machiavelli Muddling Through: The Mitterrand Years and French Social Democracy". French Politics and Society. 13 (2): 51–59. JSTOR 42844466.
  • Short, Philip. Mitterrand: A Study in Ambiguity (2013).
  • Wall, Irwin. France Votes: The Election of François Hollande (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).

External links edit

  • Official website   (in French)

socialist, party, france, socialist, party, france, redirects, here, confused, with, socialist, party, france, 1902, french, socialist, party, 1919, socialist, party, france, jean, jaurès, union, french, socialist, party, redirects, here, confused, with, frenc. Socialist Party of France redirects here Not to be confused with Socialist Party of France 1902 French Socialist Party 1919 or Socialist Party of France Jean Jaures Union French Socialist Party redirects here Not to be confused with French Socialist Party 1902 or French India Socialist Party The Socialist Party French Parti socialiste paʁti sɔsjalist PS is a French centre left 2 3 4 and social democratic political party 5 It holds pro European views 6 The PS was for decades the largest party of the French Left and used to be one of the two major political parties in the French Fifth Republic along with The Republicans It replaced the earlier French Section of the Workers International in 1969 and is currently led by First Secretary Olivier Faure The PS is a member of the Party of European Socialists Progressive Alliance and Socialist International Socialist Party Parti socialisteAbbreviationPSFirst SecretaryOlivier FaurePresident in the National AssemblyBoris VallaudPresident in the SenatePatrick KannerFoundersFrancois MitterrandAlain SavaryFounded4 May 1969 54 years ago 1969 05 04 Merger ofSee list SFIOCIRUCRGUGCSHeadquarters99 rue Moliere 94200 Ivry sur SeineNewspaperLe Populaire 1969 1970 Youth wingYoung Socialist MovementLGBT wingHomosexualites et SocialismeMembership 2023 45 000IdeologySocial democracyPolitical positionCentre leftNational affiliationNew Ecological and Social People s UnionEuropean affiliationParty of European SocialistsInternational affiliationProgressive AllianceSocialist InternationalEuropean Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and DemocratsColours PinkAnthem Changer la vie 1977 2010 1 Changing Life Il faut tourner la page 2010 We must turn the page National Assembly32 577Senate66 348European Parliament3 79Presidency of Regional Councils5 17Presidency of Departmental Councils22 95Websitewww wbr parti socialiste wbr frPolitics of FrancePolitical partiesElections The PS first won power in 1981 when its candidate Francois Mitterrand was elected president of France in the 1981 presidential election Under Mitterrand the party achieved a governing majority in the National Assembly from 1981 to 1986 and again from 1988 to 1993 PS leader Lionel Jospin lost his bid to succeed Mitterrand as president in the 1995 presidential election against Rally for the Republic leader Jacques Chirac but he became prime minister in a cohabitation government after the 1997 legislative election a position Jospin held until 2002 when he was again defeated in the 2002 presidential election Segolene Royal the party s candidate for the 2007 presidential election was defeated by conservative UMP candidate Nicolas Sarkozy The PS won most of regional and local elections and for the first time in more than fifty years it won control of the Senate in the 2011 Senate election 7 On 6 May 2012 Francois Hollande the first secretary of the party from 1997 to 2008 was elected president and the next month the party won a majority in the 2012 legislative election During his term Hollande battled with high unemployment multiple Jihadi terrorist attacks poor opinion ratings and a splinter group of left wing Socialist MPs known as frondeurs rebels On 1 December 2016 Hollande declined to seek re election and the PS subsequently organized a presidential primary Benoit Hamon from the left wing of the party was designated as the Socialist candidate after defeating former Prime Minister Manuel Valls Facing the emergence of centrist Emmanuel Macron and left winger Jean Luc Melenchon Hamon failed to re establish the PS leadership on the centre left and finished 5th in the 2017 presidential election gathering only 6 36 percent of the votes The party then lost the majority of its MPs in the 2017 legislative election securing just 26 seats becoming the fourth biggest group in the National Assembly Several figures who acted at the international level have also been members of the PS including Jacques Delors who was the president of the European Commission from 1985 to 1994 and the first person to serve three terms in that office 8 Dominique Strauss Kahn who was the managing director of the International Monetary Fund from 2007 to 2011 9 and Pascal Lamy who was Director General of the World Trade Organization from 2005 to 2013 10 Party membership has declined precipitously standing at 22 000 members in 2021 11 down from 42 300 in 2016 12 60 000 in 2014 13 and 173 486 members in 2012 14 However before the start of the 2023 Marseille Congress the party announced that it had more than 41 000 members 15 almost double that of the previous count announced during the 2021 Villeurbanne Congress At the end of July 2023 the Socialist Party claimed 45 000 members 16 Contents 1 History 1 1 French socialist movement and the SFIO 1 2 Foundation of the PS and the Union of the Left 1969 1981 1 3 Mitterrand s presidency and the exercise of power 1981 1995 1 4 Jospin and the Plural Left 1995 2002 1 5 After the 2002 shock 1 6 2007 presidential election and its aftermath 1 7 2012 presidential election 1 8 2017 presidential election 1 9 2022 presidential election 1 10 2022 legislative elections 2 First secretaries 3 Factions 4 Election results 4 1 Presidency 4 2 National Assembly 4 3 European Parliament 5 Splinter parties 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editFrench socialist movement and the SFIO edit Main article French Section of the Workers International The defeat of the Paris Commune 1871 greatly reduced the power and influence of the socialist movements in France Its leaders were killed or exiled France s first socialist party the Federation of the Socialist Workers of France FTSF was founded in 1879 It was characterised as possibilist because it promoted gradual reforms Two parties split off from it in 1882 the French Workers Party POF of Jules Guesde and Paul Lafargue the son in law of Karl Marx then in 1890 the Revolutionary Socialist Workers Party POSR of Jean Allemane At the same time the heirs of Louis Auguste Blanqui a symbol of the French revolutionary tradition created the Central Revolutionary Committee CRC led by Edouard Vaillant There were also some declared socialist deputies such as Alexandre Millerand and Jean Jaures who did not belong to any party In 1899 the participation of Millerand in Pierre Waldeck Rousseau s cabinet caused a debate about socialist participation in a bourgeois government Three years later Jaures Allemane and the possibilists founded the possibilist French Socialist Party which supported participation in government while Guesde and Vaillant formed the Socialist Party of France which opposed such co operation In 1905 during the Globe Congress the two groups merged in the French Section of the Workers International SFIO Leader of the parliamentary group and director of the party paper L Humanite Jaures was its most influential figure The party was hemmed in between the middle class liberals of the Radical Party and the revolutionary syndicalists who dominated the trade unions Furthermore the goal to rally all the Socialists in one single party was partially reached some elects refused to join the SFIO and created the Republican Socialist Party which supported socialist participation in liberal governments Together with the Radicals who wished to install laicism the SFIO was a component of the Left Block Bloc des gauches without to sit in the government In 1906 the General Confederation of Labour trade union claimed its independence from all political parties The French socialists were strongly anti war but following the assassination of Jaures in 1914 they were unable to resist the wave of militarism which followed the outbreak of World War I They suffered a severe split over participation in the wartime government of national unity In 1919 the anti war socialists were heavily defeated in elections In 1920 during the Tours Congress the majority and left wing of the party broke away and formed the French Section of the Communist International SFIC to join the Third International founded by Vladimir Lenin The right wing led by Leon Blum kept the old house and remained in the SFIO In 1924 and in 1932 the Socialists joined with the Radicals in the Coalition of the Left Cartel des Gauches but refused to join the non Socialist governments led by the Radicals Edouard Herriot and Edouard Daladier These governments failed because the Socialists and the Radicals could not agree on economic policy and also because the Communists following the policy laid down by the Soviet Union refused to support governments presiding over capitalist economies The question of the possibility of a government participation with Radicals caused the split of neosocialists at the beginning of the 1930s They merged with the Republican Socialist Party in the Socialist Republican Union In 1934 the Communists changed their line and the four left wing parties came together in the Popular Front which won the 1936 elections and brought Blum to power as France s first SFIO Prime Minister Indeed for the first time in its history the SFIO obtained more votes and seats than the Radical Party and it formed the central axis of a left wing parliamentary majority Within a year however his government collapsed over economic policy and also over the issue of the Spanish Civil War The fall of the Popular Front caused a new split from the SFIO with the departure of the left wing of the party led by Marceau Pivert to the Workers and Peasants Socialist Party The demoralised Left fell apart and was unable to resist the collapse of the French Third Republic after the military defeat of 1940 After the liberation of France in 1944 the SFIO re emerged in a coalition with a powerful French Communist Party PCF which became the largest left wing party and the Christian democratic Popular Republican Movement MRP This alliance installed the main elements of the French welfare state and the French Fourth Republic but it did not survive the Cold War In May 1947 the Socialist Prime Minister Paul Ramadier dismissed the Communist ministers Blum proposed the construction of a Third Force with the centre left and the centre right against the Gaullists and the Communists However his candidate to lead of the SFIO Daniel Mayer was defeated by Guy Mollet Mollet was supported by the left wing of the party Paradoxically he spoke a Marxist language without questioning the alliance with the centre and the centre right His leadership was shaken when the party divided in 1954 about the European Defence Community Half of the SFIO parliamentary group voted no against the instructions of the party leaders This led to the failure of the project But later Mollet got involved the SFIO in the build of a centre left coalition the Republican Front which won a plurality in the 1956 elections Consequently he was Prime Minister at the head of a minority government But the party was in decline as were the Radicals and the left never came close to forming a united front Indeed this led Mollet to assert the Communist Party is not on the left but in the East The repressive policy of Mollet in the Algerian War and his support for Charles de Gaulle s come back in 1958 the party lead called to vote yes in referendum on Fifth Republic s constitution caused a split and the foundation of the dissident Unified Socialist Party PSU The SFIO returned to opposition in 1959 Discredited by its fluctuating policy during the Fourth Republic it reached its lowest ebb in the 1960s Both because of its opposition to the principle of presidential election by universal suffrage and because De Gaulle s re election appeared inevitable the SFIO did not nominate a candidate for the 1965 presidential election Consequently it supported the candidacy of Francois Mitterrand a former minister of the Fourth Republic who had been a conservative then a leftist independent He was resolutely anti Gaullist Supported by all the left wing parties he obtained a good result and faced De Gaulle in an unexpected second ballot becoming the leader of the non Communist left In order to exist between the Communist Party leading the left and the Gaullist Party leading the country the SFIO Radicals and left wing republican groups created the Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left under Mitterrand s leadership But unable to benefit from the May 1968 events it imploded after its disastrous defeat at the June 1968 legislative elections One year later the SFIO candidate Gaston Defferre was eliminated in the first round of the 1969 presidential election with only 5 of votes Foundation of the PS and the Union of the Left 1969 1981 edit nbsp Logo of the PS In 1969 during the Alfortville Congress the SFIO was replaced by the Socialist Party Parti socialiste or PS It was joined by pro Pierre Mendes France clubs Union of Clubs for the Renewal of the Left led by Alain Savary and left wing republican groups Union of Socialist Groups and Clubs of Jean Poperen During the Issy les Moulineaux Congress Alain Savary was elected First Secretary with the support of his predecessor Guy Mollet He proposed an ideological dialogue with the Communists The new party inherited the old daily Le Populaire from the SFIO but it ceased publication soon after on 28 February 1970 Two years later during the Epinay Congress pro Francois Mitterrand clubs Convention of Republican Institutions joined the party Mitterrand defeated the Savary Mollet duo by proposing an electoral programme with the Communists and took the lead A new emblem the fist and rose was adopted to signal change in 1971 17 In 1972 the Common Programme was signed with the PCF and Radical Party of the Left During the Socialist International conference he explained the alliance of left wing parties is a yearning of French left wing voters In this the goal of his strategy was to regain 3 million of the 5 million of PCF voters The left and notably the Socialist Party experienced an electoral recovery at the 1973 legislative election Mitterrand the candidate of the left wing alliance came close to winning the 1974 presidential election Indeed he obtained 49 2 of votes in the second round At the end of 1974 some PSU members including leader Michel Rocard re joined the PS They represented the left wing Christian and non Marxist group The most conservative members of the PS they advocated an alignment of French socialism along the lines of European social democracy that is a clear acceptance of the market economy While the Union of the Left triumphed at the 1977 municipal election the electoral rise of the PS worried the Communist Party The two parties failed to update the Common Programme and the PCF leader Georges Marchais denounced a turn towards the Right of the PS In spite of positive polls the Union of the Left lost the 1978 legislative election For the first time since 1936 the Socialists scored better in the polls than the Communists becoming the main left wing party but their defeat caused an internal crisis Mitterrand s leadership was challenged by Rocard who wanted to abandon the Common Programme which he considered archaic and unrealistic Mitterrand felt that the left could not win without the alliance between the Socialists and the Communists In 1979 Mitterrand won the Metz Congress then despite Rocard s popularity was chosen as PS candidate for the 1981 presidential election Three major tendencies or factions emerged within the PS by the end of the Seventies One was represented by the Mitterrandists who wanted reform but not a complete break with capitalism A second faction was led by Michel Rocard and his supporters who sought social democracy with a strong measure of autogestion while a third faction formed around Jean Pierre Chevenement and the CERES group which stood for revolutionary socialism 18 Mitterrand s presidency and the exercise of power 1981 1995 edit In 1981 Mitterrand defeated the incumbent conservative Valery Giscard d Estaing to become the first socialist of the Fifth Republic to be elected President of France by universal suffrage He dissolved the National Assembly and for the first time in their history the French Socialists won an absolute majority of the seats This landslide victory for the Socialists took place to the detriment of the right wing parliamentary parties Rally for the Republic and Union for French Democracy as well as the Communist Party Mitterrand attempted to carry out socialist inspired reforms the 110 Propositions furthering the dirigiste economic planning trends of the preceding conservative governments The Prime Minister Pierre Mauroy nationalised the banks the insurance industry and the defence industries in accordance with the 1972 Common Program Workers wages were increased and working hours reduced to 39 and many other sweeping reforms carried out but the economic crisis continued Reforms included the abolition of death penalty creation of a solidarity tax on wealth ISF introduction of proportional representation in legislative elections which was applied only at the 1986 election decentralization of the state 1982 83 laws repeal of price liberalization for books Lang Law of 1981 etc As early as 1982 Mitterrand faced a clear choice between maintaining France s membership in the European Monetary System and thus the country s commitment to European integration and pursuing his socialist reforms He chose the former starting the Socialist Party s acceptance of the private market economy In 1984 Mitterrand and his second Prime Minister Laurent Fabius clearly abandoned any further socialist measures The Union of the Left died and the Communist ministers resigned Although there were two periods of mild economic reflation first from 1984 to 1986 and again from 1988 to 1990 monetary and fiscal restraint was the essential policy orientation of the Mitterrand presidency from 1983 onwards 19 The PS lost its majority in the French National Assembly in 1986 forcing Mitterrand to cohabit with the conservative government of Jacques Chirac Nevertheless Mitterrand was re elected President in 1988 with a moderate programme entitled United France He proposed neither nationalisations nor privatisations He chose as Prime Minister the most popular and moderate of the Socialist politicians Michel Rocard His cabinet included four centre right ministers but it was supported by only a plurality in the National Assembly elected in June 1988 During his second term Mitterrand focused on foreign policy and European integration He convened a referendum for the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty He left domestic policy to his prime ministers Michel Rocard Edith Cresson and Pierre Beregovoy The party was hit by scandals about its financing and weakened by the struggle between the heirs of Mitterrandism In 1990 during the Rennes Congress the Mitterrandist group split between the supporters of Laurent Fabius and the friends of Lionel Jospin Furthermore a part of the left wing of the party led by Jean Pierre Chevenement split off due to his opposition to the Gulf War and the Maastricht Treaty This section created the Citizen and Republican Movement MDC Finally many on the left were disappointed by the results of the Socialist governments At the 1993 legislative election the PS did poorly returning to the levels of the SFIO in the 1960s The Socialist group of the National Assembly numbered 53 deputies against 260 during the previous term Rocard became First Secretary of the party and was considered the natural candidate for the next presidential election He called for a political big bang an agreement with the centre and the centre right but his efforts were in vain One year later his party obtained only 14 of votes at the 1994 European Parliament election He was overthrown by a motley coalition led by Henri Emmanuelli a Mitterrandist left winger One year before the 1995 presidential election the PS was affected by a leadership crisis Rocard lost the most part of his followers after his 1994 electoral crash Fabius was weakened by the infected blood scandal the presidentiability of Emannuelli was questioned The hope of some party members transferred to Jacques Delors president of the European Commission and a favourite according to the polls but he declined due to the radicalisation of the party which prevented his centrist strategy Finally Lionel Jospin who had announced his political retirement after the loss of his parliamentary seat in 1993 came back and proposed to take stock of Mitterrand s inheritance For the first time the party members were called to nominate their candidate for presidency Benefiting from a good image in the polls a strong loyalty to the party as former First Secretary and governmental experience as former Education Minister and the teachers were numerous and influential in the PS he defeated Emmanuelli in the internal ballot Then he was defeated by Jacques Chirac in the run off election but given the PS crisis his result was judged good and he returned as First Secretary Jospin and the Plural Left 1995 2002 edit In the legislature the PS reconstructed a coalition with other left wing parties the French Communist Party the Greens the Radical Party of the Left and the MDC This Plural Left won the 1997 legislative election and Jospin became Prime Minister of the third cohabitation His policy was broadly progressive The Aubry laws reduced the working time to 35 hours a week while Universal medical insurance was instituted However the policy of privatisation was pursued His coalition dissolved when the MDC leader Jean Pierre Chevenement resigned from the Cabinet The Green and Communist allies were weakened by their governmental participation The 2002 presidential election was focused on the theme of insecurity Jospin again the Socialists candidate was eliminated in the first round due to there being too many left wing candidates who split the vote He announced his retirement from politics and the PS called on its supporters to vote for Chirac in order to defeat the far right National Front leader Jean Marie Le Pen who had surprisingly advanced to the run off Two months later the Plural Left lost the 2002 legislative election After the 2002 shock edit Francois Hollande who became First Secretary in 1997 was re elected in 2003 during the Dijon Congress with the support of the main Socialist personalities against the left wing of the party In the 2004 regional elections the Socialists had a major comeback In coalition with the former Plural Left they gained power in 20 of the 22 metropolitan regions all except Alsace and Corsica and in the four overseas regions The party benefited from increasing frustration with right wing parties However the Socialist Party has experienced considerable difficulty in formulating an alternative to right wing policy On 1 December 2004 59 of Socialist Party members approved the proposed European Constitution However several well known members of the Party including Laurent Fabius and left wingers Henri Emmanuelli and Jean Luc Melenchon asked the public for a no vote in the 29 May 2005 French referendum on the European Constitution where the proposed Constitution was rejected Fabius was ejected from the executive office of the party The split over the European Constitution as well as party leaders competing ambitions to win the presidential nomination in 2007 led the party into considerable disarray In November 2005 during the Le Mans Congress three main groups were present The majority supported a moderate text and obtained 55 Fabius s allies To Rally the Left advocated more radical policies and gained 20 Finally another faction New Socialist Party claimed it was necessary to renovate the party by proposing left wing policies and a profound reform of French institutions It obtained 25 of the vote Virtually all factions agreed on a common agenda broadly based on the moderate and pro European majority s position with some left wing amendments In anticipation of a Presidential primary and a special low membership rate the party s membership grew from 127 000 to 217 000 between 2005 and 2006 20 2007 presidential election and its aftermath edit See also 2006 French Socialist Party presidential primary nbsp From left to right Dominique Strauss Kahn Bertrand Delanoe and Segolene Royal sitting in the front row at a meeting held on 6 February 2007 by the PS at the Carpentier Hall in Paris Many potential candidates appeared for the 2007 presidential election Francois Hollande Laurent Fabius from the left wing of the party Dominique Strauss Kahn who claimed to represent social democracy Jack Lang Martine Aubry and Segolene Royal who was favoured according to the polls Some Socialist leaders asked Jospin to return He declared he was available then finally refused On 16 November 2006 the members of the Socialist Party chose Segolene Royal to be their candidate with a majority of 60 Her challengers Strauss Kahn and Fabius obtained 21 and 19 respectively After obtaining 25 87 of the vote in the first round of France s presidential elections Royal qualified for the second round of voting but lost with 46 94 to Nicolas Sarkozy on 6 May 2007 Immediately after her defeat several party bosses notably Strauss Kahn held Segolene Royal personally responsible for the unsuccessful campaign At the same time some personalities of the right wing of the party such as Bernard Kouchner accepted to join the government nominated by Nicolas Sarkozy In the 10 and 17 June 2007 National Assembly elections the Socialist Party won 186 out of 577 seats and about 10 affiliated gain of 40 seats After the winning March 2008 municipal election the campaign with a view to the Reims Congress started Some candidates proposed to succeed Francois Hollande who had announced he will not compete for another term as First Secretary Segolene Royal who wished to forge an alliance with the centrist party MoDem the Mayor of Paris Bertrand Delanoe supported by Lionel Jospin and his friends who wished to keep the status quo of the 2007 campaign and come back to the Plural Left Martine Aubry supported by the followers of Laurent Fabius and Dominique Strauss Kahn who had the same electoral strategy as the Mayor of Paris but advocated reconciliation between the campaigners of the yes and the no to the European constitution and the young left winger Benoit Hamon In the pre vote the text of Royal arrived the first with 29 followed by Delanoe 25 Aubry 25 and Hamon 19 A part of the left wing split and founded the Left Party During the Reims Congress which happened in a very tense climate the leaders of the factions failed to form a majority Consequently the PS members had to elect directly the next First Secretary Disappointed by his result in the pre vote Delanoe renounced and called to vote for Aubry On 22 November 2008 it was announced that Aubry had defeated Royal by the narrow margin of 42 votes and Royal asked for a recount After checking Martine Aubry was elected by a margin of 102 votes and 50 03 of votes Denouncing frauds Royal s team threatened to lodge a complaint before to renounce After that the public image of the party was deteriorated In the 2009 European Parliament election the PS did not succeed to benefit from the unpopularity of President Sarkozy It obtained only 16 5 of the vote and only just got ahead of Europe Ecology 16 3 However the PS strengthened its network of local elects in winning comfortably the 2010 departmental and regional elections In September 2011 for the first time a Socialist Jean Pierre Bel was elected Chairman of the Senate of France 2012 presidential election edit See also 2011 French Socialist Party presidential primary and 2012 French presidential election Candidates for the presidency of France contested an open primary on 9 October 2011 to select the Socialist Party candidate for the 2012 presidential election The nominations for the candidacy were opened on 28 June Though he had not officially declared his candidacy Dominique Strauss Kahn a prominent member of the Socialist Party and the managing director of the International Monetary Fund was the polls clear favorite to defeat the incumbent conservative president Nicolas Sarkozy 21 But he faced a sex assault complaint in New York and was de facto eliminated from the primary Eventually former party leader Francois Hollande won the primary and ran as the official Socialist Party candidate for President of France He narrowly defeated incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy becoming president elect of France on Sunday 6 May 2012 The idea for holding an open primary to choose the Socialist Party presidential candidate had first been suggested in 2008 by the independent left leaning think tank Terra Nova 22 2017 presidential election edit See also 2017 French legislative election 2017 French presidential election and 2017 French Socialist Party presidential primary nbsp Rue de Solferino a party seat in Paris which was sold to Apsys in December 2017 for 45 55 million euros The Socialist Party decided to hold a presidential primary in 2017 against the backdrop of the unprecedented unpopularity of incumbent Francois Hollande with a 4 percent approval rating who announced on 1 December 2016 that he would not seek re election making him the first president of the Fifth Republic not to seek a second term It was also set against the fragmentation of the left between three major candidates with polls indicating that the party s candidate would come in fifth behind the National Front s Marine Le Pen Francois Fillon of the centre right Republicans Emmanuel Macron former economy minister under Hollande who founded his centrist political movement En Marche and left wing ex Socialist Jean Luc Melenchon under the banner of La France insoumise 23 The primary was won by Socialist rebel Benoit Hamon who defeated ex Prime Minister Manuel Valls in the second round of the primary on 29 January 2017 Hamon finished fifth in the subsequent Presidential election with 6 36 of the vote In the 2017 legislative election that followed the election of President Emmanuel Macron the Socialist party dropped from 280 to 30 seats in the National Assembly leaving it in 4th place in terms of seats and with 7 44 of the 1st round vote The Parliamentary left group that it dominated with 30 out of 45 seats after the election down from 280 out of 331 seats before finished as the 3rd largest group in the National Assembly Following the election Cambadelis resigned from the post of first secretary and Rachid Temal was appointed as acting secretary The Socialist group was ultimately refounded as the New Left NG On 1 July 2017 Hamon left the Socialist Party and founded the 1st July Movement later renamed Generation s The Socialist Party abstained from the confidence vote on the Second Philippe government The party later elected 78 senators in the 2017 election On 7 8 April 2018 the Aubervilliers Congress elected Olivier Faure as new first secretary of the party Faure announced the party would be in opposition to Macron and Philippe Because of financial problems the party was forced to sell its historical seat in Rue de Solferino and moved into a smaller one in Rue Moliere on Ivry sur Seine Following the Benalla affair the Socialist Party entered a motion of no confidence against the government together with the French Communist Party and La France Insoumise The motions obtained 63 ayes and failed to reach the quorum of 289 votes required in the National Assembly In 2018 the New Left group changed its name into Socialists and affiliated group On 12 October 2018 MEP Emmanuel Maurel left the party together with other elected officials and founded the Alternative for a republican ecologist and socialist program APRES For the 2019 European election the Socialist Party formed a joint list with the Radical Party of the Left Place Publique and New Deal with Raphael Glucksmann at its head The list scored 6 19 of votes and elected three MEPs 2022 presidential election edit In the first round of voting in the 2022 French presidential election the candidate Anne Hidalgo obtained the worst presidential election result in the party s history with 1 75 of the total vote 24 2022 legislative elections edit In advance of the 2022 French legislative election the party entered into a left wing alliance the New Ecologic and Social People s Union NUPES joining Europe Ecology The Greens the French Communist Party La France Insoumise and other minor left wing parties 25 Some Socialists like Sylvie Tolmont disillusioned with the alliance stood in the election as dissident candidates 26 The Socialist Party was able to win 27 seats becoming the second left wing force in the National Assembly after La France Insoumise First secretaries editAlain Savary 1969 1971 Francois Mitterrand 1971 1981 Lionel Jospin 1981 1988 Pierre Mauroy 1988 1992 Laurent Fabius 1992 1993 Michel Rocard 1993 1994 Henri Emmanuelli 1994 1995 Lionel Jospin 1995 1997 Francois Hollande 1997 2008 Martine Aubry 2008 2012 Harlem Desir appointed on 30 June 2011 acting during Martine Aubry s candidacy in the 2011 French Socialist Party presidential primary 2012 2014 Jean Christophe Cambadelis 2014 2017 Rachid Temal 2017 2018 acting Olivier Faure 2018 present Factions editFactions are organised in the Socialist Party through policy declarations called motions on which the party members vote at each party congress needs update Royalists moderate social democracy Segolene Royal Gerard Collomb Jean Noel Guerini Gaetan Gorce Jean Louis Bianco Julien Dray Vincent Peillon Aurelie Filippetti Helene Mandroux Jean Jack Queyranne Francois Rebsamen and Manuel Valls Aubryists Christian left social democracy Martine Aubry Francois Lamy Sandrine Mazetier Pierre Mauroy Paulette Guinchard Kunstler Adeline Hazan and Arnaud Montebourg Renovate Now Fabiusians progressivism Laurent Fabius Claude Bartolone Marylise Lebranchu Alain Le Vern Alain Vidalies and Marie Noelle Lienemann Delanoistes social liberalism 27 Bertrand Delanoe Francois Hollande Jean Marc Ayrault Lionel Jospin Michel Rocard Jean Yves Le Drian Elisabeth Guigou Michel Sapin Alain Rousset Harlem Desir Pierre Cohen Michel Destot and Roland Ries New Socialist Party democratic socialism Henri Emmanuelli Benoit Hamon Jacques Fleury Michel Vergnier Andre Lejeune and Paul Quiles Eco socialists eco socialism and social ecology 28 Christophe Caresche Jean Louis Tourenne Nicole Bricq Genevieve Gaillard and Philippe TourtelierElection results editPresidency edit Presidency of the French Republic Election year Candidate First round Second round Result Votes Rank Votes Rank 1974 Francois Mitterrand 11 044 373 43 25 nbsp 1st 12 971 604 49 19 nbsp 2nd Lost 1981 7 505 960 25 85 nbsp 2nd 15 708 262 51 76 nbsp 1st Won 1988 10 367 220 34 10 nbsp 1st 16 704 279 54 02 nbsp 1st Won 1995 Lionel Jospin 7 097 786 23 30 nbsp 1st 14 180 644 47 36 nbsp 2nd Lost 2002 4 610 113 16 18 nbsp 3rd Lost 2007 Segolene Royal 9 500 112 25 87 nbsp 2nd 16 790 440 46 94 nbsp 2nd Lost 2012 Francois Hollande 10 272 705 28 63 nbsp 1st 18 000 668 51 64 nbsp 1st Won 2017 Benoit Hamon 2 291 288 6 36 nbsp 5th Lost 2022 Anne Hidalgo 616 478 1 75 nbsp 10th Lost National Assembly edit National Assembly Year 1st round 2nd round Seats Result Note Votes pp Rank Votes pp Rank 1973 4 559 241 19 18 nbsp 2 65 nbsp 3rd 5 564 610 23 72 nbsp 2 47 nbsp 2nd 89 491 nbsp 32 Opposition In coalition with the MRG 1978 6 451 151 22 58 nbsp 3 40 nbsp 2nd 7 212 916 28 31 nbsp 4 59 nbsp 1st 104 491 nbsp 15 Opposition 1981 9 432 362 37 52 nbsp 14 94 nbsp 1st 9 198 332 49 25 nbsp 20 94 nbsp 1st 269 491 nbsp 165 Government In coalition with the MRG 1986 8 693 939 31 02 nbsp 6 50 nbsp 1st 206 573 nbsp 63 Opposition 1988 8 493 702 34 77 nbsp 3 75 nbsp 1st 9 198 778 45 31 nbsp 3 94 nbsp 1st 260 577 nbsp 54 Government 1993 4 415 495 17 61 nbsp 17 16 nbsp 3rd 6 143 179 31 01 nbsp 14 30 nbsp 1st 59 577 nbsp 201 Opposition 1997 5 977 045 23 49 nbsp 5 88 nbsp 1st 9 722 022 38 20 nbsp 7 19 nbsp 1st 255 577 nbsp 196 Government 2002 6 086 599 24 11 nbsp 0 62 nbsp 2nd 7 482 169 35 26 nbsp 2 94 nbsp 2nd 140 577 nbsp 115 Opposition 2007 6 436 520 24 73 nbsp 0 62 nbsp 2nd 8 624 861 42 27 nbsp 7 01 nbsp 2nd 186 577 nbsp 46 Opposition 2012 7 618 326 29 35 nbsp 4 62 nbsp 1st 9 420 889 40 91 nbsp 1 36 nbsp 1st 279 577 nbsp 93 Government 2017 1 685 677 7 44 nbsp 21 91 nbsp 5th 1 032 842 5 68 nbsp 35 23 nbsp 4th 30 577 nbsp 249 Opposition 2022 860 201 3 78 nbsp 3 66 nbsp 7th 1 084 909 5 23 nbsp 0 45 nbsp 6th 28 577 nbsp 2 Opposition In coalition with the NUPES European Parliament edit European Parliament Year Votes pp Rank Seats Note 1979 4 763 026 23 53 N A 2nd 20 81 N A In coalition with the MRG 1984 4 188 875 20 76 nbsp 2 77 nbsp 2nd 20 81 nbsp 1989 4 286 354 23 61 nbsp 2 85 nbsp 2nd 17 87 nbsp 3 In coalition with the MRG 1994 2 824 173 14 49 nbsp 9 12 nbsp 2nd 15 87 nbsp 2 1999 3 873 901 21 95 nbsp 7 46 nbsp 1st 18 78 nbsp 3 In coalition with the PRG and the MDC 2004 4 960 756 28 90 nbsp 6 95 nbsp 1st 31 74 nbsp 13 2009 2 838 160 16 48 nbsp 12 42 nbsp 2nd 14 74 nbsp 17 2014 2 649 202 13 98 nbsp 2 50 nbsp 3rd 12 74 nbsp 2 In coalition with the PRG 2019 1 403 170 6 19 nbsp 7 79 nbsp 6th 3 79 nbsp 9 In coalition with the PP PRG NDSplinter parties edit1956 Guianese Socialist Party splinter from the French Section of the Workers International SFIO the predecessor of the Socialist Party 1970 1973 Party of Socialist Democracy PDS fr led by the deputy Emile Muller 1972 Guadeloupean Socialist Party PSG founded by the former senator Rene Toribio 1973 Socialist Democratic Movement of France MDSF led by the deputy Max Lejeune fr 29 1973 1995 fusion of PDS MDSF and other splinter groups Liberal Socialist Movement Democratic Socialism Socialism for Liberties and Democracy to form the Socialist Democratic Movement of France MDS renamed after the March 1973 legislative election Social Democratic Party PSD joined the centre right Union for French Democracy UDF in 1978 1986 Alsatian Democracy Movement MDA fr founded by Alfred Muller elected in 1993 as deputy with the endorsement of the PS 1990 Martinican Socialist Party PMS founded by Maurice Louis Joseph Dogue fr 30 1993 2002 Movement of Citizens MDC founded by the deputy Jean Pierre Chevenement renamed the Citizen and Republican Movement MRC in 2003 1994 United Guadeloupe Socialism and Realities formerly 1991 1994 the Reflexion and Action Group for Guadeloupe GRAP G faction inside the Guadeloupe federation of the Socialist Party 31 1996 Social Democratic Corsica CSD fr founded by Simon Renucci 2007 Modern Left LGM founded by the senator Jean Marie Bockel joined the centre right Union of Democrats and Independents UDI in 2012 2008 Left Party PG founded by senator Jean Luc Melenchon joined the Left Front in 2009 2013 New Deal ND 2015 Les Socialistes insoumis fr led by former MEP Liem Hoang Ngoc 2017 Generation s le mouvement fr led by former presidential candidate Benoit Hamon 2018 Republican and Socialist Left led by Emmanuel Maurel and Marie Noelle LienemannSee also edit nbsp France portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Socialism portal French Section of the Workers International New Left group Socialist and Republican group Terra Nova think tank Workers and Peasants Socialist Party PasokificationReferences edit Priestley Pascal 11 May 2017 Vies et morts du Parti socialiste francais tv5monde com in French Paul Statham 2007 Political communication and European integration and the transformation of national public spheres a comparison of Britain and France In John Erik Fossum Philip R Schlesinger eds The European Union and the Public Sphere A Communicative Space in the Making Routledge p 127 ISBN 978 1 134 17462 1 Liubomir K Topaloff 2012 Political Parties and Euroscepticism Palgrave Macmillan p 171 ISBN 978 0 230 36176 8 Chrisafis Angelique 29 January 2017 French Socialists choose leftwing rebel Benoit Hamon for Elysee fight The Guardian Paris The Parti Socialiste is widely described as social democratic Ari Veikko Anttiroiko Matti Malkia eds 2007 Encyclopedia of Digital Government Idea Group Inc IGI p 397 ISBN 978 1 59140 790 4 Dimitri Almeida 2012 The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties Beyond the Permissive Consensus CRC Press p 71 ISBN 978 1 136 34039 0 Richard Collin Pamela L Martin 2012 An Introduction to World Politics Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet Rowman amp Littlefield p 218 ISBN 978 1 4422 1803 1 Hans Peter Kriesi Edgar Grande Martin Dolezal Marc Helbling Dominic Hoglinger Swen Hutter Bruno Wuest 2012 Political Conflict in Western Europe Cambridge University Press p 52 ISBN 978 1 107 02438 0 Wolfgang Merkel Alexander Petring Christian Henkes Christoph Egle 2008 Social Democracy in Power The Capacity to Reform Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 07178 4 France Bremer Catherine 25 September 2011 French left seizes Senate majority hurts Sarkozy Reuters European Commission Discover the former Presidents retrieved 21 September 2009 IMF Managing Directors Retrieved 20 June 2012 Previous GATT and WTO Directors General WTO Retrieved 20 June 2012 Olivier Faure reelu a la tete du Parti socialiste 17 September 2021 Ludovic Galtier 30 November 2016 Parti socialiste 42 300 adherents seraient a jour de cotisation RTL PS 60 000 militants PS a jour de cotisations Parti socialiste 30 November 2014 Retrieved 30 November 2014 PS Resultats officiels valides PDF Socialist Party 12 October 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2013 web A propos de l auteur Fabrice de Comarmond Facebook Twitter Site Plus de 41 000 adherents sont appeles a voter dans le cadre du Congres de Marseille Parti Socialiste in French Retrieved 5 February 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first has generic name help Il y a besoin de gauche a un an des elections europeennes le Parti socialiste engrange de nouveaux et jeunes adherents 29 July 2023 Cepede Frederic January March 1996 Le poing et la rose la saga d un logo Vingtieme Siecle Revue d histoire in French 49 Paris 18 30 doi 10 3406 xxs 1996 3481 ISSN 0294 1759 S2CID 144991176 Retrieved 20 November 2022 Mitterrand A Political Biography by Wayne Northcutt Smith W R 1998 The Left s Dirty Job The Politics of Industrial Restructuring in France and Spain University of Pittsburgh Pre p 102 ISBN 9780822971894 Retrieved 11 February 2015 Scarrow Susan 27 November 2014 Beyond Party Members Changing Approaches to Partisan Mobilization 1 ed Oxford University Press p 95 ISBN 9780191748332 Retrieved 15 June 2023 France s Sarkozy may not make 2012 runoff Reuters Uk reuters com 9 May 2011 Pour une primaire a la Francaise Terra Nova tnova fr Archived from the original on 22 January 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2015 Pierre Briancon 28 November 2016 French Socialists in chaos as Valls confronts Hollande Politico Europe Anne Hidalgo obtains the worst presidential election result in the history of the Parti Socialiste Le Monde fr 11 April 2022 Retrieved 21 April 2022 French left agrees rare coalition deal to take on Macron Reuters com 4 May 2022 Retrieved 4 May 2022 Mortimer Gavin 13 June 2022 France s Socialists have been punished for their intolerance The Spectator The Spectator Retrieved 17 June 2022 Arie Elie 5 January 2014 Hollande est il socialiste social democrate social liberal ou liberal Marianne in French Buis Sabine Etre social ecologiste in French Parti socialiste Archived from the original on 20 October 2019 Retrieved 20 October 2019 Max Lejeune Website of the French Senate Laurent de Boissieu Parti Martiniquais Socialiste PMS France politique fr Laurent de Boissieu Guadeloupe Unie Socialisme et Realites GUSR France politique frFurther reading editBell David S and Byron Criddle Exceptional Socialists The Case of the French Socialist Party 2014 Bell David Scott and Byron Criddle The French Socialist Party The emergence of a party of government 1988 Bell David Francois Mitterrand a political biography 2005 Cole Alistair The French Socialist Party and Its Radical Ambiguity French Politics Culture amp Society 2011 29 3 pp 29 48 Cole A S Meunier and V Tiberj From Sarkozy to Hollande The New Normal in Developments in French Politics 5 Palgrave Macmillan 2013 edited by A Cole S Meunier and V Tiberj pp 1 18 Cole Alistair Francois Mitterrand A study in political leadership 1994 Cole Alistair M Factionalism the French socialist party and the fifth Republic An explanation of intra party divisions European Journal of Political Research 1989 17 1 pp 77 94 Colton Joel Leon Blum humanist in politics 1987 Criddle Byron Socialists and European integration a study of the French Socialist Party 1969 Graham Bruce Desmond Choice and democratic order the French Socialist Party 1937 1950 2006 Greene Nathanael Crisis and decline The French socialist party in the popular front era 1969 Grunberg Gerard 2014 Le Socialisme francais en crise Modern amp Contemporary France 22 4 459 471 doi 10 1080 09639489 2014 957961 S2CID 144598638 Noland Aaron The Founding of the French Socialist Party 1893 1905 1956 Northcutt Wayne Mitterrand A political biography 1992 Northcutt Wayne Francois Mitterrand and the political use of symbols the construction of a centrist republic French Historical Studies 1991 pp 141 158 Northcutt Wayne 1991 Francois Mitterrand and the Political Use of Symbols The Construction of a Centrist Republic French Historical Studies 17 1 141 158 doi 10 2307 286282 JSTOR 286282 Ross George 1995 Machiavelli Muddling Through The Mitterrand Years and French Social Democracy French Politics and Society 13 2 51 59 JSTOR 42844466 Short Philip Mitterrand A Study in Ambiguity 2013 Wall Irwin France Votes The Election of Francois Hollande Palgrave Macmillan 2014 External links editOfficial website nbsp in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Socialist Party France amp oldid 1220387898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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