- History of far right movements in France
The far-right tradition in France founds its origins, as the distinction of left and right in politics itself, to the 1789
French Revolution .Counter-revolutionaries and Legitimists
The first representants of this tendency were the
counter-revolutionaries (Louis de Bonald ,Joseph de Maistre , etc.), whoseideology would be politically translated in theUltra-royalist movement, which imposed theWhite Terror after theRestauration . The "Chambre introuvable " dominated by them, and thenVillèle 's "Chambre retrouvée", which voted the 1830Anti-Sacrilege Act , belong to this ultra group, "more monarchist than the king" ("plus royaliste que le roi"). After the 1830July Revolution , they would be represented by theLegitimist s.The Third Republic from 1871 to 1914
The
Dreyfus Affair was a turning point in the political history of France and in the Third Republic (1871-1940), established after the 1870Franco-Prussian War and the 1871Paris Commune .The May 16, 1877 crisis
Following the defeat of the Commune, the elections had brought upon a monarchist majority, divided into
Legitimists andOrleanist s, which conceived the republican institutions created by the fall ofNapoleon III in 1870 as a transitory state. Until theMay 16, 1877 crisis , the royalist movement dominated the legislature, thus creating the paradox of a Republic led by anti-republicans. The royalist deputies supportedMarshall MacMahon , a declared monarchist of the legitimist party, as president of the Republic. His term was set to seven years - the time to find a compromise between the two rival royalist families.In 1873, a plan to reset
Henri, comte de Chambord , head of the Bourbon branch supported by Legitimists, back on the throne had failed over the comte's intransigency. President MacMahon was supposed to lead him to the National Assembly and have him acclaimed as King. However, the Comte de Chambord rejected this plan by the "white flag manifest" ofJuly 5 ,1871 , reiterated by anOctober 23 ,1873 letter, in which he explained that under no case would he abandon the white flag, symbol of the monarchy (with itsfleur-de-lis ), in exchange of the republican tricolor. Chambord's decision thus ruined the hopes of a quick restoration of the monarchy.In 1875, the Orleanist
Adolphe Thiers , known as the "repressor of the Commune," pragmatically rallied the Republic, and voted with the moderate Republicans (Opportunist Republicans )Jules Ferry andLéon Gambetta the Constitutional laws of the regime. The next year, the elections gave a large majority to the Republicans in the Assembly, but a one-vote majority to the monarchists in the Senate. With a royalist President, the conflict was inevitable.The May 16, 1877 crisis was triggered by the royalist president MacMahon who dismissed the moderate Republican and president of the Council
Jules Simon , leading to a conflict between the executive power and the legislative on one hand, and on the other hand between the advocates of a return to the "Ancien régime" and the Republicans. MacMahon dismissed the Assembly, but the new elections gave a crushing majority to the Republicans. The president resigned in 1879: the Republicans had won, while the parliamentary nature of the regime had been established. This was confirmed byCardinal Lavigerie 's toast in favour of the Rallying to the Republic of the Catholics.A few years later, the
Jules Ferry laws of 1881-82 implemented free, mandatory and laic education. These public education laws were a crucial step in firmly establishing the Third Republic. In 1883, the Comte de Chambord died, leading several Orleanists to follow on Adolphe Thiers' step and rally the Republic. Hereafter, only the Legitimists remained in the anti-Republican opposition.The Dreyfus Affair and the foundation of the Action française
However, a few years later, a Jewish officer,
Alfred Dreyfus , was arrested (in 1894), accused of treason and of intelligence with the German Empire. TheDreyfus Affair provided one of the political division line of France.Nationalism , which had been before the Dreyfus Affair a left-wing and Republican ideology, turned after that to be a main trait of the right-wing and, moreover, of the far right [ Winock, Michel (dir.), "Histoire de l'extrême droite en France" (1993)] .Emile Zola entered the political scene as the first "intellectual " of history, while left and right-wing opposed themselves, mainly over the questions ofmilitarism ,nationalism ,justice andhuman rights . Until then, nationalism was a Republican, left-wing ideology, related to theFrench Revolution and theRevolutionary Wars . It was aliberal nationalism , formulated byErnest Renan 's definition of the nation as a "daily plebiscite" and as formed by the subjective "will to live together." Related to "revanchism", the belligerent will to take revenge against Germany and retake control ofAlsace-Lorraine , nationalism could then be sometimes opposed toimperialism . In the 1880s, a debate thus opposed those who opposed the "colonial lobby", such asGeorges Clemenceau (Radical), who declared that colonialism diverted France from the "blue line of the Vosges" (referring to Alsace-Lorraine),Jean Jaurès (Socialist) andMaurice Barrès (nationalist), against Jules Ferry (moderate republican), Léon Gambetta (republican) andEugène Etienne , the president of the parliamentary colonial group.But in the midst of the Dreyfus Affair, a new right emerged, and nationalism was reappropriated by the far-right who turned it into a form of
ethnic nationalism , itself blended with anti-Semitism,xenophoby , anti-Protestantism andanti-Masonry .Charles Maurras (1868-1952), founder of "integralism " (or "integral nationalism"), created the term "Anti-France" to stigmatize "internal foreigners", or the "four confederate states of Protestants, Jews, Freemasons and foreigners" (his actual word for the latter being the far less polite "métèques "). A few years later, Maurras would join the monarchist "Action française ", created byMaurice Pujo andHenri Vaugeois in 1898. Maurras, who was an agnostic, spearheaded a monarchist and Catholic revival. He pragmatically conceived of religion as anideology useful to unify the nation. Most Catholics were conservatives, a trait which continues to exist today. On the other hand, most Protestants, Jews and atheists belonged to the left-wing. Henceforth, the Republicans' conception was, to the contrary, that onlystate secularism could pacifically gather the diversity of religious and philosophial tendencies, and avoid any return to the Wars of Religion. Furthermore, Catholic priests were seen as a major, reactionary force by the Republicans, among whichanti-clericalism became a common spread. The Ferry laws on public education had been a first step for the Republic in rooting out the clerics' influence ; they would be completed by the 1905 law on the separation of Church and State.The Action française, first founded as a review, was the matrix of a new type of counter-revolutionary right-wing, and continues to exist today. The Action française was quite influent in the 1930s, in particular through its youth organization, the
Camelots du Roy , founded in 1908, and which engaged in many street brawls, etc. The Camelots du Roy included such figures as Catholic writerGeorges Bernanos orJean de Barrau , member of the directing committee of the National Federation, and particular secretary of the duc d'Orléans (1869-1926), the son of theOrleanist count of Paris (1838-1894) and hence Orleanist heir to the throne of France. Many members of the OAS terrorist group during theAlgerian War (1954-62) were part of the monarchist movement.Jean Ousset , Maurras' personal secretary, created theCité catholique Catholic fundamentalist organization, which would include OAS members and founded a branch in Argentina in the 1960s.Apart from the Action française, several
far-right league s were created during the Dreyfus Affair. Mostly anti-Semitic, they also represented a new right-wing tendency, sharing common traits such asanti-parliamentarism , militarism, nationalism, and often engaged in street brawls. Thus, the nationalist poetPaul Déroulède created in 1882 the anti-semiticLigue des patriotes (Patriot's League), which at first focused on advocating 'revanche' (revenge) for the French defeat during theFranco-Prussian War . Along withJules Guérin , the journalistEdouard Drumont created theAntisemitic League of France in 1889. Also anti-masonry, the League became at the turn of the century the "Grand Occident de France ", a name chosen in reaction against the masonic lodge of the "Grand Orient de France ".The Boulangiste crisis
During the Boulangisme crisis, Déroulède co-opted the ligue to support the general, alienating many Republican members. After Boulanger's exile in 1889 the Ligue was suppressed by the French government. Most of the far-right leagues of the Dreyfus Affair disappeared during before World War I, but would return on the scene in the interwar period.
Between the wars
During the
interwar period , the "Action française " (AF) and its youth militia, the "Camelots du Roi ", were very active, in particular in theQuartier Latin of Paris. Apart of the AF, variousfar-right leagues were formed and opposed both "Cartel des gauches " (Left-wings coalition) governments.Pierre Taittinger thus formed the "Jeunesses Patriotes " in 1924, which imitatedFascism style although it remained a more traditional authoritarian movement. The following year,Georges Valois created "Le Faisceau ", heavily inspired by Mussolini's Fascism. Finally, in 1933, the year Hitler gained power, the wealthy perfumerFrançois Coty founded "Solidarité française " andMarcel Bucard formed the "Francisme ", which was subsided by Mussolini. Another important league wasFrançois de la Rocque 's "Croix de Feu ", which formed the base for the "Parti Social Français " (PSF), the first mass party of the French right-wing.Apart of the leagues, a group of
Neosocialist s (Marcel Déat ,Pierre Renaudel , etc.) were excluded in November 1933 from theSFIO socialist party because of their revisionist stances and admiration for fascism. Déat would become one of the most ardent Collaborationists during World War II.Others important figures of the 1930s include
Xavier Vallat , who would become General Commissionner for Jewish Affairs under Vichy, members of the "Cagoule" terrorist group (Eugène Deloncle ,Eugène Schueller , the founder of "L'Oréal " cosmetic firm,Jacques Corrèze ,Joseph Darnand , latter founded of the "Service d'ordre légionnaire " militia during Vichy, etc.). In order to obtain arms fromfascist Italy , the group assassinated two Italian antifascists, the Rosselli brothers, [ Stanislao G. Pugliese [http://www.jstor.org/pss/260963 Death in Exile: The Assassination of Carlo Rosselli] , "Journal of Contemporary History ", 32 (1997), pp. 305-319] [M. Agronsky, "Foreign Affairs " 17 391 (1938)] on June 9, 1937, and sabotaged airplanes clandestinely supplied by the French government to theSpanish Republic . They also attempted a coup against the Popular Front government, elected in 1936, leading to arrests in 1937, ordered by Interior MinisterMarx Dormoy , during which the police seized explosives and military weapons, including anti-tank guns [TIME Magazine [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,758460,00.html Terrible Gravity] Monday, Nov. 29, 1937] .6 February 1934
Far right leagues organized these riots which led to the fall of the SecondCartel des gauches . These leagues were then dissolved on 18 January 1936 by the Popular Front.Vichy
Fourth Republic and the Algerian War
The
Organisation de l'armée secrète (OAS) was created in Madrid by French military opposed to the independence of Algeria. Many of its members would later join variousanti-communist struggles around the world. Some, for example, joined theCité catholique fundamentalist group and going to Argentina, where they were in contact with theArgentine Armed Forces .Jean Pierre Cherid , former OAS member, took part in the 1976Montejurra massacre against left-wing Carlists. [ [http://www.eka-partidocarlista.com/asesinatos.htm MONTEJURRA: LA OPERACIÓN RECONQUISTA Y EL ACTA FUNDACIONAL DE LAS TRAMAS ANTITERRORISTAS. Fuente "INTERIOR" Por Santiago Belloch] es icon ] [http://www.eka-partidocarlista.com/almiron.pdf Rodolfo Almirón, de la Triple A al Montejurra] , PDF es icon ] He was then part of the Spanish GAL death squad, and participated in the 1978 assassination ofArgala , one of the "etarra" who had killed Franco's Prime minister,Luis Carrero Blanco , in 1973.Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour was the far-right candidate at the 1965 presidential election. His campaign was organized byJean-Marie Le Pen .Charles de Gaulle said of Tixier-Vignancourt: "Tixier-Vignancour, that is Vichy, the Collaboration proud of itself, the Militia, the OAS".Fifth Republic
Jean-Marie Le Pen founded the Front National (FN) party in 1972, along with former OAS memberJacques Bompard , formerCollaborationist Roland Gaucher ,François Duprat , who introduced thenegationist thesis to France [Henry Rousso , "Les habits neufs du négationniste," in "L'Histoire " n°318, March 2007, pp.26-28 fr icon ] , and others nostalgics ofVichy France ,Catholic fundamentalist s, etc [http://www.rfi.fr/francais/actu/articles/081/article_45894.asp Le Pen, son univers impitoyable] , "Radio France Internationale ", September 1, 2006 fr icon ] . Le Pen presented himself for the first time in the 1974 presidential election, obtaining 0.74% . The electoral rise of the FN did not start untilJean-François Stirbois 's victory, in 1983, inDreux . The FN became stronger through-out the 1980s, managing to unite most far-right tendencies, passing electoral alliances with the right-wingRally for the Republic (RPR), while some FN members quit the party to join the RPR or theUnion for a French Democracy (UDF). At the 1986 legislative elections, the FN managed to obtain 35 seats, with 10% of the votes.Meanwhile, other far-right tendencies gathered in
Alain de Benoist 's "Nouvelle Droite " think-tank, heading a pro-European line. Some radical members of the "national revolutionary" tendency quit the FN to form other minor parties (Party of New Forces , PFN, andFrench and European Nationalist Party , PNFE).The French Third Position's relations with the National Front
Mark Frederiksen , a French Algeria activist, created in April 1966 aNeo-Nazi group, theFANE ("Fédération d'action nationaliste et européenne", Nationalist and European Federation of Action). The FANE boasted at most a hundred activists, including members such asLuc Michel , now leader of the "Parti communautaire national-européen " (National European Communautary Party),Jacques Bastide ,Michel Faci ,Michel Caignet andHenri-Robert Petit , a journalist and formerCollaborationist who directed under theVichy regime the newspaper "Le Pilori ". The FANE maintained international contacts with the British group theLeague of Saint George [ R. Hill & A. Bell, "The Other Face of Terror- Inside Europe’s Neo-Nazi Network", London: Collins,1988 , pp.186-189 ] .The FANE rallyed
Jean-Marie Le Pen 's National Front in 1974, gathered aroundFrançois Duprat andAlain Renault 'sRevolutionary Nationalist Groups (GNR), which represented the nationalist revolutionary tendency of the FN.But in 1978, Neo-nazi members of the GNR-FANE broke again with the FN, taking with them parts of the
FNJ members (youth organization of the FN) [http://www.france-politique.fr/annuaire-extreme-droite.htm Annuaire de l'extrême droite en France] fr icon] . On the other hand, GNR activists closer to theThird Position (Jacques Bastide and Patrick Gorre ) joinedJean-Gilles Malliarakis to found, on February 11, 1979, the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement ("Mouvement nationaliste révolutionnaire"), which became in 1985 Third Way ("Troisième Voie").After this brief passage at the National Front, Mark Fredriksen created the "Faisceaux nationalistes européens" (
FANE ) in July of 1980. These would eventually merge with the "Mouvement national et social ethniste " in 1987, and then with thePNFE (French and European Nationalist Party) in January 1994, which also gathered former National Front members.Dissolved first in September 1980 by
Raymond Barre 's government, Fredriksen's group was recreated, and dissolved again in 1985 byLaurent Fabius 's government. Finally, it was dissolved a third time in 1987 byJacques Chirac 's government, on charges of "violent demonstrations organized by this movement, which has as one of its expressed objective the establishment of a newNazi regime," the "paramilitary organisation of this association and its incitations toracial discrimination ."Alain de Benoist's "Nouvelle Droite" and the "Club de l'Horloge"
In the 1980s,
Alain de Benoist theorized the "Nouvelle Droite " movement, creating theGRECE in 1968 with theClub de l'Horloge . They advocated anethno-nationalism stance focused on European culture, which advocated a return ofpaganism . Members of the GRECE quit the think tank in the 1980s, such asPierre Vial who joined the FN, orGuillaume Faye who quit the organization along with others members in 1986. Faye participated in 2006 in a conference in the US organized by the American Renaissancewhite separatist magazine published by theNew Century Foundation .On the other hand, Alain Benoist occasionally contributed to the "
Mankind Quarterly " review which insists onhereditarianism and associated with the US think tankPioneer Fund , headed byJ. Philippe Rushton , author of "Race, Evolution and Behavior " (1995) which argues in favour of a biological conception of "race." GRECE, as well as the Pioneer Fund, are actively involved in the "race and intelligence " debate, postulating that there is an identifiable link between levels of intelligence and distinctethnic group s.The Club de l'horloge itself had been founded by
Henry de Lesquen , a former member of the conservativeRally for the Republic , which he quit in 1984. Others members of the Club de l'horloge, such asBruno Mégret , later joined the FN after a short time in the RPR.Rise of the National Front in the 1980s and Mégret's split
During the 1980s, the National Front managed to gather, under
Jean-Marie Le Pen 's leadership, most rival far-right tendencies of France, following a succession of splits and alliances with other, minor parties, during the 1970s.Party of New Forces
One of those party, the
Party of New Forces (PFN, "Parti des forces nouvelles"), was an offshoot of the National Front, issued from a 1973 split headed byAlain Robert andFrançois Brigneau who first organized the "Comité faire front " before merging in the PFN.The PFN was formed mainly by former members of New Order ("Ordre nouveau", 1969-1973), whom had refused to merge in the FN at its 1972 creation. New Order, dissolved by Interior Minister
Raymond Marcellin in 1973, was itself a successor to Occident (1964-1968) and of the Union Defense Group (GUD, "Groupe union défense").Close to the
Third Position and "national-revolutionary" thesis, this tendency maintained links with the FN, despite some tensions. The GUD, in particular, had published the satiric monthly "Alternative" with the Youth Front ("Front de la jeunesse"), youth organization of the FN. They also had attempted alliances with other far-right parties in Europe, with New Order organizing the alliance "A Fatherland for Tomorrow" ("Une patrie pour demain") with the SpanishFalange , theItalian Social Movement (MSI) and the German National Democratic Party.This European strategy was continued by the PFN, who launched the
Euroright alliance, with the MSI, the Spanish New Force and the BelgianPFN , for the 1979 European elections. Headed byJean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour , the PFN won 1.3% of the vote. This electoral failure promptedRoland Gaucher andFrançois Brigneau to quit the party and join Le Pen's National Front.1981 Presidential election
The French far-right went divided to the 1981 presidential election, with both
Pascal Gauchon (PFN) and Le Pen (FN) attempting, without success, to secure from mayors the 500 signatures necessary to present themselves as candidates.François Mitterrand (Socialist Party) won those elections, competing againstJacques Chirac (Rally for the Republic , RPR).1983 elections and rise
These succeding electoral defeats prompted the far-right to unify itself. In 1983, the FN managed to make its first electoral breakthrought, taking control of the town of
Dreux .Jean-Pierre Stirbois , obtained 17% of the votes at the first round, for the FN municipal list. At the second round, he merged his list with Chirac's RPR list (headed byJean Hieaux ), enabling the right a victory against the left. Chirac supported the alliance with the far-right, claiming the Socialist Party, allied with the Communist Party in government, had no lessons to give [Franz-Olivier Giesbert , "La Tragédie du Président", 2006, p 37-38 ] .This first electoral success was confirmed at the 1984 European elections, the FN obtaining 10% of the votes. Two years later, the FN gained 35 deputies (nearly 10% of the votes) at the 1986 legislative elections, under the appellation of "Rassemblement national"." These included the monarchist
Georges-Paul Wagner .Internal disputes continued however to divise the far-right. Following the 1986 elections, which brought
Jacques Chirac as Prime minister, some hardliners inside the FN spin-off to create theFrench and European Nationalist Party (PNFE, Parti Nationaliste Français et Européen), along with members ofMark Frederiksen 's Third PositionFANE . Three former members of the PNFE were charged of having profanated, in 1990, a Jewish cemetery inCarpentras [ [http://www.humanite.fr/1996-08-07_Articles_-La-profanation-de-Carpentras-a-ete-longuement-premeditee La profanation de Carpentras a été longuement préméditée] , "L'Humanité ", 7 August 1996 fr icon] .Mégret's split, Le Pen's 2002 score and subsequent electoral fall
The most important split, however, was headed by
Bruno Mégret in 1999. Taking with him many elected members of the FN and electoral troops, he then created theNational Republican Movement (MNR). However, in view of the 2007 legislative elections, he accepted to support Le Pen's candidacy for the presidential election.During these presidential elections,
Jean-Marie Le Pen only made 10.4%, compared to his stunning 16.9% finish in 2002, during which he reached the second round, achieving 17.79% against 82.21% forJacques Chirac (Rally for the Republic , RPR).With only 1.85 % at the second round of the 2002 legislative elections, the FN failed to gain any seat in the National Assembly. At the 2007 presidential election, Le Pen arrived fourth, with 10,4% of the votes at the first round, behind
Nicolas Sarkozy ,Ségolène Royal andFrançois Bayrou .Philippe de Villiers , Catholic traditionalist candidate of theMovement for France (especially present in the traditionalistVendée region), arrived sixth, obtaining 2,23% of the vote.This electoral downfall of the FN was confirmed at the 2007 legislative elections, the FN obtaining only 0.08% of the votes at the second round, and therefore no seats.
Le Pen's succession
These electoral defeats, which contrasted with the high score obtained at the 2002 presidential elections, have caused financial problems to the FN, who was forced to sell its headquarters, the "
Paquebot ", inSaint-Cloud . Le Pen then announced, in 2008, that he would not compete again in presidential elections, leaving the way for the competition for the control of the FN between his daughter,Marine Le Pen , whom he favored, andBruno Gollnisch [ [http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/actualites/politique/20080915.OBS1393/succession__le_pen_confie_preferer_sa_fille_a_bruno_gol.html Succession : Le Pen confie préférer sa fille à Bruno Gollnisch] , "Nouvel Observateur ", 16 September 2008 ] . The latter had been condemned in January 2007 forHolocaust denial [ [http://www.lexpress.fr/info/quotidien/actu.asp?id=8443 Bruno Gollnisch condamné pour ses propos sur l'Holocauste] ,REUTERS cable published by "L'Express" on January 18, 2007 — URL accessed on January 18, 2007 fr icon "délit de contestation de l'existence de crime contre l'humanité par paroles" ] , while Marine Le Pen attempted to follow a smoother strategy, in order to give the FN a more "respectable" image.Other minor groups
Other minor groups that are or have been active in the Fifth Republic include:
*Unité Radicale (one of its members,Maxime Brunerie , tried to assassinate PresidentJacques Chirac in 2002)
*Bloc identitaire , an off-shoot of Unité Radicale, dissolved after Brunerie's assassination attempt, which organizes so-called "identity soups" ("soupes identitaires"), that is "popular soups" with pork in order to exclude religious Jews and Muslims from them.
*Parti Nationaliste Français et Européen (PNFE), a Pan-European nationalist group with which Brunerie was also associated.
*Parti des forces nouvelles , an early anti-Le Pen faction of the Front National.
*Réseau Radical , a study group.
*Troisième Voie , aThird Position movement with links to the far right student movementGroupe Union Défense .References
Bibliography
*Winock, Michel (dir.), "Histoire de l'extrême droite en France" (1993)
See also
*
Breton Social-National Workers' Movement
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.