fbpx
Wikipedia

Breton Democratic Union

Breton Democratic Union (French: Union démocratique bretonne, Breton: Unvaniezh Demokratel Breizh, UDB) is a Breton nationalist,[1] autonomist,[2] and regionalist[3][4] political party in Brittany (Bretagne administrée) and Loire-Atlantique. The UDB advocates devolution for Brittany as well as the promotion of its regional languages (Breton and Gallo) and its associated culture.

Breton Democratic Union
French nameUnion démocratique bretonne
Breton nameUnvaniezh Demokratel Breizh
Spokesperson(s)Lydie Massard
Pierre-Emmanuel Marais
Founded4 January 1964
Split fromMovement for the Organization of Brittany (MOB)
HeadquartersNantes
NewspaperLe Peuple breton
Youth wingUDB Youth (UDBy)
Membership (2010)850
IdeologyAutonomism
Environmentalism
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionLeft-wing
National affiliationRegions and Peoples with Solidarity (RPS)
European affiliationEuropean Free Alliance
ColorsYellow
Regional Council of Brittany
4 / 83
National Assembly (Breton seats)
0 / 27
Senate (Breton seats)
0 / 18
European Parliament
1 / 79
Website
www.udb.bzh

Politics of Brittany

The Breton Democratic Union has presently four seats in the Regional council of Brittany.

History Edit

 
Flag used by the party in the 1970s and 1980s

Foundation Edit

The UDB was founded in 1964 in Rennes by a group of about fifteen young people, most of them students, often from cultural organizations (Ar Falz, Bagadou, etc.) and influenced by socialist ideas. They included Ronan Leprohon (1939–2017).

The majority belonged to the MOB organization which also included former militants of Breton Nationalist Party and supporters of French Algeria, which was a cause of tensions.

The first congress of the UDB took place in December 1964 in Quimper, with a mere 18 participants.

The UDB was founded in opposition to the practice of torture in Algeria and compared the decolonization of the Maghreb to Brittany.

The structure of the new party was then close to that of those of the far-left with a strict internal discipline. Its charter, elaborated in 1964, supported a planned economy and the creation of a European Federation. It claimed to be hostile to militarism and colonialism, which was an innovation in the Breton movement at the time.

The creation of the UDB marked a rupture in the history of the Breton nationalist movement which, until then, was rather right-wing.

It took part in the 1965 local elections. Jean-Paul Berre was elected on a list of the Union of the left dominated by the French Communist Party in Guilvinec and becomes deputy-mayor and first elected official of the UDB.

Beginnings (1966–69) Edit

The first years were difficult. The party grew slowly and had few resources. It approached the other left-wing parties, in particular the PSU and FGDS. After 1967, however, recruitment intensified, in particular in student unions.

In the 1969 constitutional referendum, the UDB called for a "no" vote, like most of the left.

Crisis of 1969–70 Edit

Internal contradictions within the party exploded during the 1969 congress when Alain Guyader challenged the charter of the UDB and proposed a line inspired by Rosa Luxemburg's ideas. Moreover, he refused to condemn the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968.

The conflict led to the exclusion of Jean-Yves Guiomar and Alain Guyader in 1970 for "rejection of democratic centralism, constant undervaluation of the adversary, impatience and the theory of active minorities, and the idolization of spontaneity".

Success (1970–78) Edit

The party was rebuilt during the congress of Guidel and adopted democratic centralism. It also adopted a Marxist line and demanded in a modified version of its charter the abolition of capitalism and the collective appropriation of the means of production. At the same time, a UDB list won 11.5% of the votes in a local by-election in Auray, primarily thanks to the personality of its candidate Sten Kidna. In the 1971 local elections the UDB took part in the lists of the Union of the Left, except in Brest where it polled 4.8% running independently.

The number of party members – 243 in 1971 – grew throughout the 1970s, thanks to the involvement of the party in social conflicts.

During the 1973 general election, the UDB nominated five candidates who obtained between 0.8% and 3.2% of the vote despite a large showing by other left-wing parties. The most successful candidate, Erwan Evenou, won more than 3% in the Hennebont constituency.

During the cantonal elections held that same year, the party won 4.45% of the votes – 6.7% in Lorient. In the 1974 presidential election it campaigned in the second round for François Mitterrand.

In the 1976 cantonal elections the UDB ran nine candidates who won 5.27% on average. The local elections of 1977 enabled it to get 35 seats on the lists of the Union of the Left. In the 1978 general election, the party ran 17 candidates in a strongly polarized environment.

Crisis of 1978–84 Edit

Party growth slowed as a result of failure of the legislative elections and the collapse of the United Left, in which the UDB was firmly anchored. While the party scored encouraging results (5.63%) in the 1979 cantonal elections, these were marked by very low voter turnout.

The victory of the left in 1981, paradoxically, increased the UDB's loss of momentum. Although policies in line with UDB positions were passed (such as decentralization, the cancelling of the Plogoff nuclear plant and the abolition of the death penalty), the UDB could claim little responsibility for them compared to the then-triumphant PS, and its usefulness seemed questionable.

In 1984, during the Lorient congress, one of the sections from Léon, whose motion had won a third of the votes, created a splinter group, Frankiz Breizh, based primarily in Brest and its immediate surroundings.

Crisis of 1984–2001 Edit

After the departure of the Brest militants, the party was rebuilt and approached the European Free Alliance which then united about fifteen European regionalist parties of the centre-left. Despite considerable financial problems, it ran about thirty candidates in the 1985 cantonal elections and won on average 4.2%. Results in the Brest area, however, had considerably declined.

The 1986 regional elections, characterized by a strong bipolarization, were a failure for the party which won only 1.51%. During this time, contacts with Plaid Cymru became regular and in 1987 the UDB joined the European Free Alliance.

In the 1988 presidential election, the UDB supported the former Communist Pierre Juquin in the first round and François Mitterrand in the runoff.

In 1992, following the failure of negotiations with the Greens, the UDB presented its own list along with Emgann (which would eventually withdraw because of a nomination problem). The results were disappointing (2%) and strengthened the mistrust of the UDB towards alliances with the other nationalist groups.

The Saint-Brieuc congress, held in 1994, was an occasion for reconciliation with Frankiz Breizh whose political positions had never differed much from those of the UDB. In November of the same year the two organizations, together with the Occitan Party, the Party of the Corsican Nation, and Basque Solidarity, took part in the creation of the Federation of Regions and Peoples with Solidarity.

2001–present Edit

After 2001, the party experienced notable membership growth as well as an improvement in its electoral results.

In the 2001 local elections it chose to take part in lists presented by the united left except in Guingamp, Redon, Lannion and Saint-Nazaire. Their results varied between 6.02% in Saint-Nazaire and 13.7% in Guingamp. The UDB remained in the second round in Sarzeau and Guingamp. Moreover, the party participated in the victorious list of Christian Troadec in Carhaix.

This success encouraged the UDB to consider presenting an autonomous list in the 2004 regional elections. It finally resolved to open negotiations with The Greens. The UDB was in a strong position. A separate regionalist list could have won between three and five percent, thus cutting into the vote share of the ecologists and condemning their efforts to assert their independence from the Socialist Party.

The elections themselves were a success for The Greens-UDB list, which won nearly 10%. The UDB won three seats and a vice-presidency.

The 2005 French European Constitution referendum caused several well-known members of the UDB to call for a "no" vote, against the official position of the party which called for a vote in favour of the proposed constitution.

During the 2007 presidential election, the UDB supported Green candidate Dominique Voynet.

In the 2009 European Parliament election, the party supported the Europe Écologie electoral coalition, which included The Greens.

In June 2012 Paul Molac was elected to the National Assembly of France, the first Breton autonomist to do so.[5] He stood for the UDB as a Europe Ecology – The Greens candidate in Morbihan uncontested by their electoral allies, the Socialist Party.[6]

In the 2015 regional elections, the UDB made an alliance with Christian Troadec, one of the leaders of Breton autonomy. However, the UDB gained only 6.7% of votes, which was insufficient to ensure the election of regional councillors (a party must win at least 10% of the votes in order to go forward to the second round).[7]

During the 2017 legislative elections, the UDB, together with the MBP, reactivated the dynamics of "Oui la Bretagne" (Yes Brittany) by aligning 34 candidates on 37 constituencies. This coalition obtained 32,422 votes, its highest score in this type of election, which was unfavourable to it. At the same time, it gains its independence for access to public funding for political parties.

During the 2019 European elections, the UDB, through the federation Régions et Peuples Solidaires (R&PS) associated with EELV (the Greens), participates in the important score achieved by the national EELV list in Brittany, with 16.92% of the votes, while the average score of the list outside the zones where regionalists are associated is only 13.1% in the hexagon. François Alfonsi from Corsica (R&PS) was elected in 9th position on the list, Lydie Massard from the UDB, 14th on the list, was not elected with only 30,000 votes.

References Edit

  1. ^ Ellis, Peter Berresford (1985). The Celtic Revolution: A Study in Anti-imperialism. Y Lolfa. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-86243-096-2.
  2. ^ Sorens, Jason (13 February 2012). Secessionism: Identity, Interest, and Strategy. MQUP. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-7735-8751-9.
  3. ^ Fisera, Vladimir Claude; Jenkins, Peter (1982). "The Unified Socialist Party (PSU) since 1968". In Bell, David Scott (ed.). Contemporary French Political Parties. CUP Archive. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-7099-0633-9.
  4. ^ Escalona, Fabien; Labouret, Simon; Vieira, Mathieu (2013). "France:Regional Elections as Third-order Elections?". In Dandoy, Régis; Schakel, Arjan (eds.). Regional and National Elections in Western Europe: Territoriality of the Vote in Thirteen Countries. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-137-02544-9.
  5. ^ "Paul Molac, premier député autonomiste breton élu à l'assemblée nationale française". 17 June 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 October 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  7. ^ "Carhaix / Régionales 2015. Le pari raté de Christian Troadec et des autonomistes -". 8 December 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2016.

breton, democratic, union, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Breton Democratic Union news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Breton Democratic Union French Union democratique bretonne Breton Unvaniezh Demokratel Breizh UDB is a Breton nationalist 1 autonomist 2 and regionalist 3 4 political party in Brittany Bretagne administree and Loire Atlantique The UDB advocates devolution for Brittany as well as the promotion of its regional languages Breton and Gallo and its associated culture Breton Democratic UnionFrench nameUnion democratique bretonneBreton nameUnvaniezh Demokratel BreizhSpokesperson s Lydie MassardPierre Emmanuel MaraisFounded4 January 1964Split fromMovement for the Organization of Brittany MOB HeadquartersNantesNewspaperLe Peuple bretonYouth wingUDB Youth UDBy Membership 2010 850IdeologyAutonomismEnvironmentalismPro EuropeanismPolitical positionLeft wingNational affiliationRegions and Peoples with Solidarity RPS European affiliationEuropean Free AllianceColorsYellowRegional Council of Brittany4 83National Assembly Breton seats 0 27Senate Breton seats 0 18European Parliament1 79Websitewww wbr udb wbr bzhPolitics of FrancePolitical partiesElectionsPolitics of BrittanyThe Breton Democratic Union has presently four seats in the Regional council of Brittany Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Beginnings 1966 69 1 3 Crisis of 1969 70 1 4 Success 1970 78 1 5 Crisis of 1978 84 1 6 Crisis of 1984 2001 1 7 2001 present 2 ReferencesHistory Edit nbsp Flag used by the party in the 1970s and 1980sFoundation Edit The UDB was founded in 1964 in Rennes by a group of about fifteen young people most of them students often from cultural organizations Ar Falz Bagadou etc and influenced by socialist ideas They included Ronan Leprohon 1939 2017 The majority belonged to the MOB organization which also included former militants of Breton Nationalist Party and supporters of French Algeria which was a cause of tensions The first congress of the UDB took place in December 1964 in Quimper with a mere 18 participants The UDB was founded in opposition to the practice of torture in Algeria and compared the decolonization of the Maghreb to Brittany The structure of the new party was then close to that of those of the far left with a strict internal discipline Its charter elaborated in 1964 supported a planned economy and the creation of a European Federation It claimed to be hostile to militarism and colonialism which was an innovation in the Breton movement at the time The creation of the UDB marked a rupture in the history of the Breton nationalist movement which until then was rather right wing It took part in the 1965 local elections Jean Paul Berre was elected on a list of the Union of the left dominated by the French Communist Party in Guilvinec and becomes deputy mayor and first elected official of the UDB Beginnings 1966 69 Edit The first years were difficult The party grew slowly and had few resources It approached the other left wing parties in particular the PSU and FGDS After 1967 however recruitment intensified in particular in student unions In the 1969 constitutional referendum the UDB called for a no vote like most of the left Crisis of 1969 70 Edit Internal contradictions within the party exploded during the 1969 congress when Alain Guyader challenged the charter of the UDB and proposed a line inspired by Rosa Luxemburg s ideas Moreover he refused to condemn the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 The conflict led to the exclusion of Jean Yves Guiomar and Alain Guyader in 1970 for rejection of democratic centralism constant undervaluation of the adversary impatience and the theory of active minorities and the idolization of spontaneity Success 1970 78 Edit The party was rebuilt during the congress of Guidel and adopted democratic centralism It also adopted a Marxist line and demanded in a modified version of its charter the abolition of capitalism and the collective appropriation of the means of production At the same time a UDB list won 11 5 of the votes in a local by election in Auray primarily thanks to the personality of its candidate Sten Kidna In the 1971 local elections the UDB took part in the lists of the Union of the Left except in Brest where it polled 4 8 running independently The number of party members 243 in 1971 grew throughout the 1970s thanks to the involvement of the party in social conflicts During the 1973 general election the UDB nominated five candidates who obtained between 0 8 and 3 2 of the vote despite a large showing by other left wing parties The most successful candidate Erwan Evenou won more than 3 in the Hennebont constituency During the cantonal elections held that same year the party won 4 45 of the votes 6 7 in Lorient In the 1974 presidential election it campaigned in the second round for Francois Mitterrand In the 1976 cantonal elections the UDB ran nine candidates who won 5 27 on average The local elections of 1977 enabled it to get 35 seats on the lists of the Union of the Left In the 1978 general election the party ran 17 candidates in a strongly polarized environment Crisis of 1978 84 Edit Party growth slowed as a result of failure of the legislative elections and the collapse of the United Left in which the UDB was firmly anchored While the party scored encouraging results 5 63 in the 1979 cantonal elections these were marked by very low voter turnout The victory of the left in 1981 paradoxically increased the UDB s loss of momentum Although policies in line with UDB positions were passed such as decentralization the cancelling of the Plogoff nuclear plant and the abolition of the death penalty the UDB could claim little responsibility for them compared to the then triumphant PS and its usefulness seemed questionable In 1984 during the Lorient congress one of the sections from Leon whose motion had won a third of the votes created a splinter group Frankiz Breizh based primarily in Brest and its immediate surroundings Crisis of 1984 2001 Edit After the departure of the Brest militants the party was rebuilt and approached the European Free Alliance which then united about fifteen European regionalist parties of the centre left Despite considerable financial problems it ran about thirty candidates in the 1985 cantonal elections and won on average 4 2 Results in the Brest area however had considerably declined The 1986 regional elections characterized by a strong bipolarization were a failure for the party which won only 1 51 During this time contacts with Plaid Cymru became regular and in 1987 the UDB joined the European Free Alliance In the 1988 presidential election the UDB supported the former Communist Pierre Juquin in the first round and Francois Mitterrand in the runoff In 1992 following the failure of negotiations with the Greens the UDB presented its own list along with Emgann which would eventually withdraw because of a nomination problem The results were disappointing 2 and strengthened the mistrust of the UDB towards alliances with the other nationalist groups The Saint Brieuc congress held in 1994 was an occasion for reconciliation with Frankiz Breizh whose political positions had never differed much from those of the UDB In November of the same year the two organizations together with the Occitan Party the Party of the Corsican Nation and Basque Solidarity took part in the creation of the Federation of Regions and Peoples with Solidarity 2001 present Edit After 2001 the party experienced notable membership growth as well as an improvement in its electoral results In the 2001 local elections it chose to take part in lists presented by the united left except in Guingamp Redon Lannion and Saint Nazaire Their results varied between 6 02 in Saint Nazaire and 13 7 in Guingamp The UDB remained in the second round in Sarzeau and Guingamp Moreover the party participated in the victorious list of Christian Troadec in Carhaix This success encouraged the UDB to consider presenting an autonomous list in the 2004 regional elections It finally resolved to open negotiations with The Greens The UDB was in a strong position A separate regionalist list could have won between three and five percent thus cutting into the vote share of the ecologists and condemning their efforts to assert their independence from the Socialist Party The elections themselves were a success for The Greens UDB list which won nearly 10 The UDB won three seats and a vice presidency The 2005 French European Constitution referendum caused several well known members of the UDB to call for a no vote against the official position of the party which called for a vote in favour of the proposed constitution During the 2007 presidential election the UDB supported Green candidate Dominique Voynet In the 2009 European Parliament election the party supported the Europe Ecologie electoral coalition which included The Greens In June 2012 Paul Molac was elected to the National Assembly of France the first Breton autonomist to do so 5 He stood for the UDB as a Europe Ecology The Greens candidate in Morbihan uncontested by their electoral allies the Socialist Party 6 In the 2015 regional elections the UDB made an alliance with Christian Troadec one of the leaders of Breton autonomy However the UDB gained only 6 7 of votes which was insufficient to ensure the election of regional councillors a party must win at least 10 of the votes in order to go forward to the second round 7 During the 2017 legislative elections the UDB together with the MBP reactivated the dynamics of Oui la Bretagne Yes Brittany by aligning 34 candidates on 37 constituencies This coalition obtained 32 422 votes its highest score in this type of election which was unfavourable to it At the same time it gains its independence for access to public funding for political parties During the 2019 European elections the UDB through the federation Regions et Peuples Solidaires R amp PS associated with EELV the Greens participates in the important score achieved by the national EELV list in Brittany with 16 92 of the votes while the average score of the list outside the zones where regionalists are associated is only 13 1 in the hexagon Francois Alfonsi from Corsica R amp PS was elected in 9th position on the list Lydie Massard from the UDB 14th on the list was not elected with only 30 000 votes References Edit Ellis Peter Berresford 1985 The Celtic Revolution A Study in Anti imperialism Y Lolfa p 71 ISBN 978 0 86243 096 2 Sorens Jason 13 February 2012 Secessionism Identity Interest and Strategy MQUP p 180 ISBN 978 0 7735 8751 9 Fisera Vladimir Claude Jenkins Peter 1982 The Unified Socialist Party PSU since 1968 In Bell David Scott ed Contemporary French Political Parties CUP Archive p 114 ISBN 978 0 7099 0633 9 Escalona Fabien Labouret Simon Vieira Mathieu 2013 France Regional Elections as Third order Elections In Dandoy Regis Schakel Arjan eds Regional and National Elections in Western Europe Territoriality of the Vote in Thirteen Countries Palgrave Macmillan p 101 ISBN 978 1 137 02544 9 Paul Molac premier depute autonomiste breton elu a l assemblee nationale francaise 17 June 2012 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Morbihan Legislatives Paul Molac candidat du PS des ecolos et de l UDB a Ploermel Le Mensuel du Golfe du Morbihan Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Carhaix Regionales 2015 Le pari rate de Christian Troadec et des autonomistes 8 December 2015 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Breton Democratic Union amp oldid 1177770279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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