Radical Party (France)
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| Parti Radical | |
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| Leader | Jean-Louis Borloo |
| Founded | 1901 |
| Headquarters | 1, place de Valois 75001 Paris |
| Political Ideology | Radicalism (historically), Liberalism, Social liberalism, Centrism (currently) |
| European Affiliation | none |
| International Affiliation | none |
| Colours | Blue, Red |
| National Assembly | 18 (UMP) |
| Senate | 7 (4 RDSE, 3 UMP) |
| EU Parliament | 2 (EPP–ED) |
| Website | www.partiradical.net |
| See also | Constitution of France France Politics |
The Radical Party (Parti radical, Rad., also called Parti radical valoisien after the scission of the Radical Party of the Left in 1972) is a liberal and centrist French political party.
Founded in 1901 as Republican, Radical and Radical-Socialist Party (Parti républicain, radical et radical-socialiste) is the oldest French political party among the active ones. Coming from the Radical Republican left-wing tradition, the Radical Party always upheld the principles of private property and secularism. The Radicals were considered in the 1880s as a far-left group, but with the emergence of the Socialists in 1905, they shifted to the centre-left. Sinche then they shifted increasingly to the centre and finally to the centre-right. They are currently an associate party of the Union for a Popular Movement.
[edit] History
[edit] Radicals before the Radical Party
After the collapse of Napoleon's Empire (1815), a monarchic Restoration took place. The Republicans constituted the left-wing opposition. During the July Monarchy (1830-1848), the word "Radical" was used to name the uncompromising part of the Republican left. It advocated democratic reforms, notably universal suffrage, freedom of press, right of meeting, etc. Led by figures such as Alexandre Ledru-Rollin or Louis Blanc, it took a major part in the 1848 Revolution and the foundation of the Second Republic. The first election by universal suffrage was won, however, by the conservatives, and Napoléon III established the Second Empire after the 1851 coup.
From opposition, Radicals criticized personal power and the attacks on freedoms. At the end of the 1860s, with the Belleville Programme (supported by Léon Gambetta), they advocated the election of civil servants and mayors, the proclamation of the so-called "great liberties", free public teaching, and the separation between Church and State.
After the collapse of the Second Empire following the 1870 Franco-Prussian War, the Third Republic was proclaimed in September 1870. The Orleanists and Legitimists monarchists won the first elections in February 1871, but eventually the Republicans won the 1876 elections, leading to the firm establishment of the Republic. Radicals formed the far-left opposition to the moderate Republican ("Opportunist Republicans") governments. Georges Clemenceau was the leader of the parliamentary group, who criticized colonial policy as a form of diversion from "revenge" against Prussia, and, due to his ability, was a protagonist of the collapse of many governments.
In the 1890s, Léon Bourgeois renewed the Radical doctrine, including social reforms such as the progressive income tax and social insurance schemes. After the Dreyfus Affair, Radicals joined forces with other Republicans and some Socialists in Pierre Waldeck-Rousseau's cabinet (1899-1902). The 1901 Act on the right of association was voted, and the Radicals created their party in 1901 in order to defend governmental policy from the Roman Catholic Church's influence and the conservative opposition.
The Republican, Radical and Radical-Socialist Party was the first large political party established at a national level in France, which contrasted with previous parliamentary groups or local electoral committees. The idea of establishing a national party deeply modified the political scene. Several Radical figures had already been presidents of the Council (Ferdinand Buisson, Emile Combes, Charles Floquet, etc.) and the Radicals already benefited from a strong implantation in the country. The party was composed of an heterogeneous alliance of electoral committees, masonic lodges, sections of the Ligue des droits de l'homme (Human Rights League) and of the Ligue française de l'enseignement (French Teaching League, which was active in favor of public, secular education, an aim achieved first by the Jules Ferry Laws and then by Combes' cabinet at the turn of the century).
[edit] The Radical Republic and the Sacred Union (1901-1919)
At 1902 legislative election, the Radicals allied themselves with the Radical-Socialists and the Socialists in the Bloc des gauches (Left-Wing Blocks) coalition and became the main political force. Émile Combes took the head of the Bloc des gauches cabinet and led a resolute anti-clerical policy culminating in the 1905 secularity law which, along with the Jules Ferry laws on public education voted in the 1880s, formed the backbone of laïcité, France's separation of Church and State. After the withdrawal of the Socialist ministers from the government following the International Socialist Congress of Amsterdam in 1904, the coalition dissolved and the Radicals went alone into the 1906 legislative elections.
For the latter part of the Third Republic (1870-1940), Radicals, generally representing anti-clerical peasant and bourgeois voters, were usually the largest party in parliament, but with their anti-clerical agenda accomplished, the party lost their driving force. Its leader before World War I (1914-18), Joseph Caillaux, was generally more noted for his advocacy of better relations with Germany than for his reformist agenda.
During World War I, the Radical Party was the keystone of the Sacred Union and its historical leader, Georges Clemenceau, led the cabinet from 1917 to 1919. He appeared as the architect of the victory, but his relation with the party deteriorated and Radicals lost the 1919 legislative election
[edit] After World War I: from the Cartels des Gauches to the overthrow of the Republic
By the end of the First World War the Radical Party, now led by Édouard Herriot, were generally a moderate centre-left party, faced with the rise, on its left, of SFIO and PCF. With these political forces, Radicals shared anti-clericalism and the struggle for "social progress". But, unlike the other left parties, they defended the principle of private property.
In 1924, and again in 1932, Radicals formed electoral alliances with the Socialists, but then gradually drifted to the right, moving from Radical governments supported by the non-participating Socialists (called "Cartels des gauches" or "Coalitions of the Left" - 1924-1926, 1932-1934) to coalitions with more conservative parties (1926-1928, 1934-1936). After the fall of the first Cartel a group of Radicals defected They formed the Independent Radicals group, who opposed left-wing alliances and were close to the conservative Democratic Alliance.
The second Cartel des gauches fell on 7 February 1934, following riots organized by the far-right leagues the night before. Radical Camille Chautemps's government had been replaced by a government led by his popular party rival Édouard Daladier in January, after accusations of corruption against Chautemps' government in the wake of the Stavisky Affair and other similar scandals.
This pattern of initial alliance with a socialist party unwilling to join in active government, followed by disillusionment and alliance with the right seemed to be broken in 1936, when the Popular Front electoral alliance with the Socialists and the Communists led to the accession of Socialist leader Léon Blum as Prime Minister in a coalition government in which the Radical leaders Camille Chautemps and Édouard Daladier (representing respectively left and right of the Radical Party) took important roles. For the first time of its history, the Radical Party obtained less votes than the SFIO.
Over the tempestuous life of the coalition, however, the Radicals began to become concerned at the perceived radicalism of their coalition partners. Hence, they opposed themselves to Blum's intention to help the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War (1936-39), forcing him to adopt a non-interventionist policy. Following the failure of Blum's second government in April 1938, Daladier formed a new government in coalition with conservative parties.
After the 29 September 1938 Munich Agreement, which handed over Sudetenland to Germany in exchange for what proved to be a temporary peace, Daladier was acclaimed upon his return to Paris as the man who had avoided the war. However, with the invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939, two days later the French government led by Daladier made good on its guarantees to Poland, by declaring war alongside Britain. Following the 23 August 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact between Germany and the Soviet Union, Daladier engaged in an anti-communist policy, prohibiting PCF's activities and the party's newspaper, L'Humanité.
Furthermore, Daladier moved increasingly to the right, notably repealing the 40 hour work week which had been the Popular Front's most visible accomplishment. Daladier would eventually resign on March 1940, and take part in Paul Reynaud's (Democratic Republican Alliance, center-right) government as minister of National Defense and of War. After the defeat of the Battle of France, the French army being overwhelmed by the Nazi Blitzkrieg, the French government declared Paris an "open city" on 10 June and flew to Bordeaux. The same month, Daladier would escape to Morocco in the Massilia. Thus, he wasn't there during the controversial 10 July 1940 vote of the full powers to Marshall Pétain. Charles de Gaulle and several historians (Michel Winock, etc.) refused to recognize this vote, arguing that although it had superficially respected legality, it had taken place amid lies from Pierre Laval, pressure on deputies, and the absence of the main political figures such as Daladier, despite the 1875 Constitutional amendments which prohibited any interference with the Republican nature of the regime (see Vichy France).
[edit] The Fourth Republic (1946-1958)
After World War II (1939-45), Radicals, like many of the other political parties, were discredited by their earlier support for granting emergency powers to Marshal Philippe Pétain on 10 July 1940, which led to the establishment of the Vichy regime (Etat Français), although such senior Radical leaders as Edouard Herriot, then President of the Chamber of Deputies, had been ambivalent.
Daladier was tried in 1942 by the Vichy regime (see the Riom Trial), which accused him, as well as other political leaders such as Socialist Léon Blum and conservative Paul Reynaud, of being morally and strategically responsible for the loss of the Battle of France.
After the war, the Radical Party was reconstituted, and formed one of the important parties of the Fourth Republic (1946-58), but never recovered the dominant pre-war position. Along with Democratic and Socialist Union of the Resistance, it formed an electoral entity, the Rally of the Republican Lefts. It participated to the Third Force coalition with the SFIO, the christian-democratic Popular Republican Movement and the liberal-conservative National Centre of Independents and Peasants.
In the early years of the Fourth Republic the party returned to the moderate left under the leadership of Pierre Mendès-France, a strong opponent of French colonialism whose premiership from 1954 to 1955 saw France's withdrawal from Indochina and the agreement for French withdrawal from Tunisia. Mendès-France, a very popular figure who helped renew the Radical Party after its discredit, was indeed elected on the pledge to stop Indochina War (1946-54).
Mendès-France hoped to make the Radicals the party of the mainstream centre-left in France, taking advantage of the difficulties of the SFIO. The more conservative elements in the party, led by Edgar Faure, resisted these policies, leading to the fall of Mendès-France's government in 1955. Another split, this time over France's policy at the beginning of the Algerian War (1954-62), led to his resignation as party leader and the party's move in a distinctly conservative direction.
The Fourth Republic was characterized by constant parliamentary instability because of divisions between major parties over the Algerian War, which was officially called a "public order operation" until 1990s. Mendès-France opposed the war and colonialism, while the SFIO led by prime minister Guy Mollet supported it. Because of the start of the Cold War, all political parties, even the SFIO, opposed the French Communist Party (PCF), which was very popular due to its role during the Resistance (it was known as the parti des 75,000 fusillés, "party of the 75,000 executed people"). The PCF was also opposed to French Algeria and supported its independence.
In the midst of this parliamentary instability and divisions of the political class, Charles de Gaulle took advantage of the May 13, 1958 crisis to return to power. On 13 May European colonists seized the governor general's building in Alger, while Opération Résurrection was launched by the right-wing insurrectionary Comité de Salut Public. De Gaulle, who had deserted the political arena during a decade by disgust over the parliamentary system and its chronic unstability (the système des partis which he severely criticized), appeared on this day as the only man able to reconciliate the far-right and the European settlers, which were threatening Paris of a coup d'état, with the Republic. He was thus called to power and proclaimed the end of the Fourth Republic, according to him too weak because of its parliamentarism, and replaced it by the Fifth Republic, a hybrid presidential-parliamentary system tailored for himself.
The Radical Party supported de Gaulle at this crucial moment, leading Pierre Mendès-France to quit the party. Opposed to the proposed constitution, Mendès-France campaigned for the "no" on the 28 September 1958 referendum. However, the new Constitution was finally adopted and proclaimed on 4 October 1958.
[edit] The Fifth Republic (1958)
Popular figure Pierre Mendès-France (or PMF as he was familiarly called) thus quit the Radical Party, which had crossed the threshold to the centre-right, as early moderate Republicans did at the beginning of the Third Republic, when the Radical Party, appearing to their left, pushed them over the border between the left-wing and the right-wing, a process dubbed sinistrisme.
Mendès-France then founded the Centre d'Action Démocratique (CAD), which would later join the Autonomous Socialist Party (PSA, which had split from the SFIO), which in turn would fuse into the Unified Socialist Party (PSU) on 3 April 1960. This new socialist party thus gathered all the dissidents from the Radical Party and the SFIO who were opposed to both the Algerian War and the proclamation of the new presidential regime. Mendès-France would officially become a member of the PSU in 1961, a year before the 18 March 1962 Evian Accords which put an end to the Algerian War.
The Radical Party returned from support of the government to opposition in 1959 and declined throughout all the 1960s. Allied with the SFIO in the Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left, it supported François Mitterrand for the 1965 presidential election. This federation later split, in 1968.
Under the leadership of Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber, President since 29 October 1969 issued from the left-wing, the party again made tentative moves to the left in the 1970s, but stopped short of an alliance with Socialist François Mitterrand and his Communist allies, leading to a final split in 1972 when the remaining left-wing Radicals left the party and eventually became the Movement of the Radical-Socialist Left. This group wanted to be a part of the left-wings Common Program spinned-out to create the Movement of the Left Radicals (MRG) and supported the candidate of the left-wing, François Mitterrand, at the 1974 presidential election.
[edit] Radical Party valoisien
Henceforth, the Radical Party began to be known as valoisien, from the location of its national headquarters at the Place de Valois in Paris, in order to distinguish it from the MRG. Opposed to an electoral alliance with the French Communist Party (PCF) — which was the foundations of the 1972 Common Program — the Radicals were still anti-Gaullists. They supported most reforms of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing's presidency (in particular the authorization of the contraceptive pill, recognition of women's rights, etc.). This evolution, brought by Servan-Schreiber's influence, would end with the latter's failure during the 1979 European elections.
Following the left-wing scission in 1971, the Radical Party valoisien maintained the judicial rights to the official name of Republican, Radical and Radical-Socialist Party and is its legal continuation. The Valoisien Radicals do not use the term "Socialist" anymore since 1981, although the term is still present in their official denomination.[citation needed]
After the failure of the alliance with the Christians Democrats into the Reforming Movement, the Radical Party maintained its influence by participating to the creation of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing's Union for French Democracy (UDF) in 1978. It was one of its six components, along with the centrists of the Centre des démocrates sociaux, the liberals of the Republican Party and of the National Federation of Perspectives and Realities Clubs, the social-democrats of the Socialist-Democratic Movement and of the new members of the UDF. Through the UDF, the Radical Party participated to all of the governments issued from parliamentary majorities of the Rally for the Republic (RPR)/UDF.
[edit] Association with the Union for a Popular Movement
An important split took place after the 1998 regional elections during which some members of the party composed electoral alliances with the far-right National Front party. Those members created the Liberal Democracy party, while the Radical Party remained a member of the UDF. During the 2002 presidential election, François Bayrou presented himself as a candidate for the UDF, while the Radical Party supported his rival, Jacques Chirac (RPR).
After Chirac's re-election in 2002, most radicals participated to the creation of his new party, the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP). The Radical Party then quit the UDF to associate itself with the UMP, sharing its memberships and budget with the latter. Some members, however, such as Thierry Cornillet, continue to be part of UDF. It was then headed by Jean-Louis Borloo and André Rossinot.
After the rise of Nicolas Sarkozy to the leadership of UMP, Radicals launched a sort of re-foundation of their party in order to create a counterbalancing moderate and social wing within the UMP. The party soon started to attract other centrists (as Jean-Louis Borloo, Renaud Dutreil, Véronique Mathieu and Françoise Hostalier) and even some anti-Sarkozy neo-Gaullists (as Serge Lepeltier and Alain Ferry).
As a result, the Radical Party is having an unexpected comeback in French politics. It now has 18 deputies (1 more from those elected in 2002), 7 senators (two more from 2002) and 8,000 members. Jean-Louis Borloo is a high-ranking minister in François Fillon's government, as Minister of the Environment and Minister of State.
Even today, Radical senators of both left and right-wing sit in the same group, the "Democratic, Social and European Rally", and their anti-clericalism, although softened, still separates them from the conservatives on specific and exceptional issues (such as the conservatives' demonstrations in the 1980s against president François Mitterrand's bill on private schools, which are mostly Roman Catholic).
[edit] Trivia
The youth organizations of the Radical Party and the Radical Party of the Left called for, on 16 May 2007, for the "re-unification" of the two parties, claiming as common values Republicanism and European federalism.
[edit] Leadership
This is a list of party Presidents since 1901:
- Gustave Mesureur (1901-1902)
- Jean Dubief (1902-1903)
- Maurice Faure (1903-1904)
- Maurice Berteaux (1904-1905)
- Émile Combes (1905-1906)
- Camille Pelletan (1906-1907)
- Auguste Delpech (1907-1908)
- Louis Lafferre (1908-1909)
- Ernest Vallé (1909-1910)
- Émile Combes (1910-1913)
- Joseph Caillaux (1913-1917)
- Charles Debierre (1917-1918)
- André Renard (1918-1919)
- Édouard Herriot (1919-1920)
- Maurice Sarraut (1920-1927)
- Édouard Daladier (1927-1931)
- Édouard Herriot (1931-1936)
- Édouard Daladier (1936-1944)
- Édouard Herriot (1944-1957)
- Édouard Daladier (1957-1958)
- 1958-1961 : Félix Gaillard (1958-1961)
- Maurice Faure (1961-1965)
- René Billères (1965-1969)
- Maurice Faure (1969-1971)
- Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber (1971-1975)
- Gabriel Péronnet (1975-1977)
- Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber (1977-1979)
- Didier Bariani (1979–1983)
- André Rossinot (1983–1988)
- Yves Galland (1988–1993)
- André Rossinot (1993–1997)
- Thierry Cornillet (1997–1999)
- François Loos (1999–2003)
- André Rossinot (2003–2005)
- Jean-Louis Borloo and André Rossinot (Co-Presidents, 2005–2007)
- Jean-Louis Borloo (2007–...)
[edit] References
[edit] See also
- History of the Left in France
- Liberalism and radicalism in France
- French Third Republic (1871–1940)
- French Fourth Republic (1946–1958)
- French Fifth Republic (1958–present)
[edit] External links
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