The Mountain (1849)

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The Mountain
La Montagne
Republicanism
Utopian socialism
Political positionLeft-wing
Colours  Red

The Mountain (

political group of the French Second Republic
.

The group drew its name from

.

The Mountain achieved 25% of the vote, compared to 53% for the Party of Order. It was led by Alexandre Auguste Ledru-Rollin, one of the members of the Second Republic's early provisional government.

History

Performance by department of the Democratic Socialists on the May 1849 legislative election

After 1849, the Odilon Barrot's Party of Order-backed government sought to repress protests against alcohol excises and the 45 centime land tax as well as demand for cheap credit and other grievances. The Democratic Socialists clandestinely organized this dissent in the face of press censorship, restrictions on political meetings and harassment. The Mountain's broader strategy was to prepare for the 1852 legislative and presidential elections by continuing to espouse its 'utopian' Christian socialist message alongside attempts to politicize the three million voters who had been disenfranchised in 1850 despite the Republic's constitution proclaiming universal manhood suffrage. Karl Marx again found cause for criticism, accusing The Mountain of impotently "prophesying future victories".[1] On the 1849 legislative election, there were more votes cast for The Mountain candidates than for Ledru-Rollin (Democratic Socialist) and Raspail (Socialist) combined in the 1848 presidential election.[2]

The causes behind The Mountain's success amongst particular demographics are disputed. Ted Margadant,

coup d'état of 1851
and the end of the Second Republic.

For the remainder of the

Protestant
areas that The Mountain derived its most cohesive support.

Ideology

Alexandre Auguste Ledru-Rollin led The Mountain of 1849

The Mountain stood on a platform of low taxation, which made it popular with peasants, especially in industries that were suffering, such as agriculture and forestry. France sustained steady economic growth during the latter part of the Restoration and the July Monarchy, although the late 1840s witnessed a downturn, which was one of the factors behind the 1848 Revolution.

The

left-wing politicians The Mountain was particularly successful in rural areas such as central France and the western and central départments in and around the Massif Central
. The Mountain promised to end the land tax of 45 centimes used to finance the National Workshops, reform military service and develop education.

Traditionally pro-revolutionary, left-wing and Protestant areas of the south, affected by a slump in the wine trade, also backed The Mountain in 1849. Friedrich Engels and later Marx attributed the relative lack of support for The Mountain in the urban proletariat to distrust engendered by Alexandre Auguste Ledru-Rollin's involvement in and refusal to condemn the suppression of the June Days uprising.[3][4]

Later in

The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napoleon, Marx cited The Mountain's formation in the Second Republic as one of the many instances in this regime of history repeating itself "as farce".[5]

Notable members

Members of The Mountain at the National constituent assembly in 1848

Electoral results

National Assembly
Election year No. of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
No. of
overall seats won
+/– Leader
1848 705,180 (3rd) 9.1
80 / 880
1849 1,955,000 (2nd) 29.6
180 / 705
Increase 100
Alexandre Ledru-Rollin

References

  1. ^ Karl Marx (1852). "The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, Chapter III". Die Revolution, 1852, New York. Retrieved 30 August 2009. Source: "[B]ased on the third edition, prepared by Engels (1885), as translated and published by Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1937".
  2. ^ Agulhon 1983, p. 77.
  3. ^ Friedrich Engels (December 1848). "The French Working Class and the Presidential Elections". Neue Rheinische Zeitung. Retrieved 29 August 2009. Source: MECW Volume 8. p. 123. First published in Marx-Engels-Gesamtausgabe, Abt. 1, Bd. 7.
  4. ^ Karl Marx (21 June 1849). "The 13th of June". Der Volksfreund. Retrieved 29 August 2009. Source: MECW Volume 9. p. 477. First published in Der Volksfreund. No. 26. 29 June 1849.
  5. ^ Karl Marx (1852). "The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, Chapter I". Die Revolution. New York. Retrieved 30 August 2009. Source: "[T]ranslated by Saul K. Padover from the German edition of 1869".