Rally of the Republican Lefts

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The Rally of the Republican Lefts (Rassemblement des gauches républicaines or RGR) was an electoral entity under the French Fourth Republic composed of the Radical Party, the Democratic and Socialist Union of the Resistance (UDSR) and several conservative groups. Headed by Jean-Paul David, founder of the anti-Communist movement Paix et Liberté (Peace and Freedom), it was in fact a right-of-center conservative coalition, which presented candidates to the 1946 and 1951 legislative elections. Its name, alleging a left-wing membership, was a popular misnamer of French conservatives who refused to label themselves as conservatives or right-wing — this phenomena has been identified as sinistrisme (from the Italian sinistra, left). The party was subsided by French employers, who saw in it the best defense against Communism and the defender of economic liberalism, in a context marked by various nationalizations supported both by the French Communist Party (PCF), the SFIO and the Gaullist movement. Employers conceived the RGR as such until at least the 1951 creation of the National Centre of Independents and Peasants (CNIP) gathering independent conservative deputies.

[edit] Composition of the coalition

The RGR was mostly composed of the Radicals-Socialists, who had governed France during most of the Third Republic, and of the conservative Union démocratique et socialiste de la Résistance (UDSR), to which belonged René Pleven and François Mitterrand. The UDSR was a founding member of the Liberal International in 1947. Others parties included:

  • the Parti républicain social de la réconciliation française (Republican and Social Party of French Reconciliation), founded by former members of Colonel de la Rocque's Parti Social Français (PSF)
  • the Alliance Démocratique (AD, Democratic Alliance), main right-wing party during the interwar period
  • the Parti socialiste démocratique (PSD, Socialist Democratic Party) of Paul Faure, which gathered former SFIO members ineligible because of Collaborationism
  • the Independent Radicals (Radicaux Indépendants), radicals refusing the Radical-Socialist Party alliance with the left-wing during the Cartel des gauches, issued from a scission in 1928; the group is reconstituted at the Liberation by the mayor of Nice, Jacques Médecin
  • the Parti républicain-socialiste (Republican-Socialist Party) created by independent socialists who had refused the unification of the socialist movement in 1905 in the SFIO, which was, as the Independent Radicals, almost an empty shell

[edit] Foundation

After World War II, France was governed by the Three-parties alliance composed of the Communists (PCF), the Socialists (SFIO) and the Christian-Democrats (MRP).

The Radical Party and the pre-war right-wing groups were considered jointly responsible for the 1940 collapse of the Third Republic. In the same time, the attempt to gather the non-Communist Resistance in a new party, the UDSR, failed. In 1946, they formed a coalition to resist to the Three-parties alliance in the legislative elections.

They defined themselves as "left-wing republicans" whereas they opposed left-wing policies. Indeed, until the end of the 19th century, the French left was defined as republican and the right as pro-monarchy. Then, when the republic was no longer questioned, the conservative republican groups, who had sat at the center-left of the assemblies, moved to the right-wing seats, but they continued to consider themselves as left-wingers: this is known as sinistrisme. That is why some right-wing groups called themselves "left-wing republicans".

When the Communists were ejected from the government during the May 1947 crisis, the RGR joined the government of the Third force with the SFIO, the MRP, then the National Center of Independents and Peasants.

The RGR obtained 11.6% of the votes in 1946, 11,1% in 1951 and 3.9% of 1956 (most of the Radicals had decided to present themselves as members of the Front républicain of Pierre Mendès-France.)

In 1955, under the leaderships of Pierre Mendès-France and François Mitterrand, the Radical Party and the UDSR advocated left-wing policies and left the RGR. Their internal opponents pursued the RGR, which became a small center-right party led by Prime Minister Edgar Faure and composed of Radicals expelled from the party. It disappeared in 1958, many Radicals joining again the Radical party while Jean-Paul David created the Parti libéral européen (European Liberal Party), which would eventually fusion in 1978 with the Parti Radical Valoisien.

[edit] See also

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