French Social Party
French Social Party | |
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Political position | Right-wing to far-right |
Colours | Black |
The French Social Party (
Background and origins (1927–36)
La Rocque envisioned the PSF as the more explicitly-political successor of the
Though the Croix-de-Feu participated in the demonstrations of 6 February 1934, La Rocque forbade its members from involving themselves in the subsequent riot, thus demonstrating a respect for republican legality that the PSF would also uphold as one of its essential political principles. La Rocque, who had previously maintained a certain mystique with regard to his attitude towards the Republic, explicitly rallied to it and denounced in a speech on 23 May 1936 totalitarianism (both Nazi and Soviet) along with racism (with regard to which he explicitly rejected anti-Semitism) and class struggle, as the principal obstacles to "national reconciliation".[6]
Nevertheless, critics of the left and centre denounced the Croix-de-Feu, together with the other leagues, as fascist organizations. A desire to defend the republic was not their sole motivation. Politicians of the centre-right and left alike opposed La Rocque because of the perceived threat of his success in mobilising a mass base within their traditional particularly working-class constituencies.[7]
The disruptive nature of the leagues' activities made Pierre Laval's government outlaw paramilitary groups on 6 December 1935. Although that decision was succeeded by the law of 10 January 1936 regulating militias and combat organizations, the law was only partially implemented. Of all the leagues, only Action Française was dissolved, and the Croix-de-Feu was allowed to continue its activities essentially unimpeded. After the victory of the Popular Front, which had included in its electoral programme a promise to dissolve the right-wing leagues in the parliamentary elections of May 1936, the government issued a decree banning the Croix-de-Feu, along with the Mouvement social français, on 18 June. Within weeks, on 7 July, La Rocque founded the French Social Party to succeed the defunct league.
Political success and co-operation (1936–40)
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Organisation and mass mobilisation
The PSF inherited the large popular base of the Croix-de-Feu (450,000 members in June, 1936, most of them having joined since 1934)[8] and, mirroring the contemporary Popular Front, achieved considerable success in mobilizing it through a variety of associated organizations: sporting societies, labour organizations and leisure and vacation camps. PSF members also orchestrated the development of "professional unions" (syndicats professionels), envisioned as a means of organising management against labour militancy, which espoused class collaboration and claimed 1,000,000 members by 1938.[9]
Unlike established right-wing parties such as the
The party's central committee included its president, La Rocque, vice-presidents Jean Mermoz and Noël Ottavi , Edmond Barrachin , Charles Vallin, Jean Ybarnégaray, Jean Borotra, and Georges Riché . The party had two newspapers: Le Flambeau and Le Petit Journal.

Electoral success
Six members of the nascent PSF were elected to the
Competition with established right-wing parties
Of all the PSF's successes, it was the party's popularity among the middle classes, the peasants, shopkeepers, and clerical workers, who had been hardest hit by the Great Depression. They generated the most fear from the left. That demographic had historically been one of the primary bastions of the Radical-Socialist Party, and its falling under the influence of the "fascist" right was viewed by Popular Front leaders as a serious threat to the stability of the republic. The PSF, for its part, actively courted the middle classes and argued that their traditional Radical defenders had abandoned them by supporting the Popular Front.[10]
Despite that demographic threat, however, the PSF generated the most fervent hostility within the parties of the established parliamentary right, most notably the conservative Republican Federation. The tensions between the Federation and the PSF were demonstrated as early as 1937 by a Normandy by-election in which the Federation candidate, after being behind the PSF candidate in the first round, initially refused to stand down and support the latter in the runoff round. The rancor of the feuding parties, despite the Federation candidate's eventual endorsement of the PSF, resulted in the seat falling to the centre, which demonstrated to Federation and PSF leaders alike the undesirability of co-existence. Thus, although the two parties were in fact in agreement on many questions of ideology, notably their defense of the far-right leagues, the PSF was viewed by the long-established Federation as a rival "to its own electoral fortunes".[14]
A second victim of the PSF's popularity was
In March 1937, Doriot proposed the formation of a Front de la Liberté ("Front of Liberty") with the objective of unifying the right in opposition to the Popular Front. Although the Republican Federation, followed by several small right-wing parties that stood to lose little from allying themselves to the more extremist PPF, quickly accepted Doriot's proposal, it was rejected both by the moderate Democratic Alliance and by La Rocque, who identified the Front as an attempt to "annex" the popularity of his party.[16] His insistence on the PSF's independence got La Rocque attacked violently by other figures on the right, including former Croix-de-Feu members who had abandoned the more moderate Social Party.[17]
Rapprochement with Radical Party
The major parties of the right fell in disarray after their electoral defeat and the
Thus, the
Wartime activities (1940–45)
The
After the
La Rocque's attitude towards the Vichy government was initially ambiguous. As stated, he continued to affirm his loyalty to Pétain and was amenable to certain of the more moderate aspects of Vichy's reactionary program, the
In August 1940, La Rocque began actively to participate in the
As with nearly all other political parties that had existed under the Third Republic, the PSF produced both collaborators with and resisters of the Vichy regime. In most cases, individual circumstances dictated more ambiguous loyalties and actions. Although former PSF deputy
Postwar legacy (1945–58)
Official continuation
In August 1945, after the
Ideological successors
Despite the postwar insignificance of the party itself, elements of the PSF's and La Rocque's ideology strongly influenced the political formations of right and the centre during the
PSF ideology, particularly its corporatist emphasis on the association of capital and labour and its advocacy of a strong stable
Historiography
Historical debate over the PSF, like its predecessor, the Croix-de-Feu, has been driven by the question of whether they can be considered in at least some respects as the manifestations of a "French
The lasting confusion over the "fascist" tendencies of the PSF can be ascribed in part to two factors. Firstly, the PSF's predecessor, the Croix-de-Feu, had aspired to a paramilitary aesthetic (described by
A number of foreign historians, however, have questioned those defences of La Rocque and the PSF.
See also
- Far right leagues
- History of far right movements in France
- Interwar France
- François de La Rocque
- Travail, Famille, Patrie, PSF motto appropriated by Vichy
References
- ^ https://www.britannica.com/topic/fascism
- ^ Jacques Nobécourt, lecture at the Academy of Rouen, 7 February 1998; published in AL № 59, July 1998.
- ^ P. Machefer. "Les Croix-de-Feu 1927-1936", Information historique, № 1 (1972), p. 28-33.
- ^ François de La Rocque. Service public (1934).
- ^ La Rocque (1934).
- ^ François de La Rocque. "Bulletin d'information du PSF du 8 juillet 1938, discours au Congrés PSF de Marseille, le 8 juin 1937", Bulletin des Amis de La Rocque, № 60 (1998).
- ^ William D. Irvine. French Conservatism in Crisis (Louisiana State University Press, 1979), p. 93.
- ^ Julian Jackson. The Popular Front in France: Defending Democracy, 1934-38 (Cambridge, 1988), p. 252.
- ^ P. Machefer. "Les Syndicats professionels français (1936-39)", MS (1982), p. 90-112.
- ^ a b Jackson (1988), p. 254.
- ^ Jackson (1988), p. 219-20.
- ^ Jacques Nobécourt, La Rocque (Fayard, 1996), p. 646.
- ^ a b Nobécourt (1996), p. 647.
- ^ Irvine (1979), p. 157.
- ^ a b Jackson (1988), p. 255.
- ^ P. Machefer. "L'Union des droites, le PSF et le Front de la Liberté, 1936-37", Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine, Vol. 17 (1970), p. 112-26.
- ^ Machefer (1970).
- ^ Jackson (1988), p. 257.
- ^ Cited in Nobécourt (1996), p. 1063, note 58. In the original French: "le bloc PSF-Radicaux devient une réalité courante de la vie politique".
- ^ William Shirer. The Collapse of the Third Republic: An Inquiry Into the Fall of France in 1940 (New York, 1969), p. 434.
- ^ Jean Lacouture. Mitterrand, une histoire de Français (Le Seuil, 1998), p. 55.
- ^ a b Nobécourt (1998).
- ^ Robert O. Paxton. Vichy France (Columbia, 2001), note p. 212.
- ^ Éric Duhamel. "Matériaux pour l'histoire du Rassemblement des Gauches Républicaines (RGR)", Recherches contemporaines, № 5 (1998-99), p. 178. The article is available for download here (1) Archived 2008-07-16 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Nobécourt (1998). In the original French: "[...] Un tiers parti, franchement républicain, très hardi d'un point de vue social".
- ^ Éric Duhamel. L'UDSR ou la genèse de François Mitterrand (Paris, 2007).
- ^ René Rémond. La Droite en France (Aubier-Montaigne, 1968).
- ^ Pierre Milza. La France des années 30 (Armand Colin, 1988), p. 132.
- ^ Lacouture (1998), p. 29.
- ^ Rémond (1968). In the original French of the 1952 edition: "Loin d'avoir représenté une forme française du fascisme devant le Front populaire, La Rocque contribua à préserver la France du fascisme".
- ^ Nobécourt (1998). In the original French: "La Rocque évita à la France l'aventure du totalitarisme avant guerre".
- ^ Jackson (1988), p. 253.
- ^ Zeev Sternhell. Neither Right Nor Left: Fascist Ideology in France (University of California Press, 1995).
- ^ Robert Soucy. Fascismes français? : 1933-39 (Autrement, 2004).
- ^ Michel Dobry. Le Mythe de l'allergie française au fascisme (Albin Michel, 2003).
Further reading
- Dobry, Michel. Le Mythe de l'allergie française au fascisme, Paris: Albin Michel, 2003.
- Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1979.
- , 1988. Specifically, see Chapter 9, 'The view from the right', p. 249-68.
- Kennedy, Sean. Reconciling France Against Democracy: The Croix-de-Feu and the Parti Social Français, 1927-45, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2007.
- Machefer, P. "Les Croix-de-Feu 1927-36", Information historique, No. 1 (1972).
- Machefer, P. "Le Parti social français en 1936-37", Information historique, No. 2 (1972).
- Milza, Pierre. La France des années 30, Paris: Armand Colin, 1988.
- Nobécourt, Jacques. Le colonel de La Rocque, ou les pièges du nationalisme chrétien, Paris: Fayard, 1996.
- Rémond, René. La Droite en France, Paris: Aubier-Montaigne, 1968.
- Sternhell, Zeev. Neither Right Nor Left: Fascist Ideology in France, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.