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The Frontist Party (), also known as the Common Front or Social Front, was a political party in
France France, officially the French Republic, is a country located primarily in Western Europe. Overseas France, Its overseas regions and territories include French Guiana in South America, Saint Pierre and Miquelon in the Atlantic Ocean#North Atlan ...
founded in 1936 by Gaston Bergery and Georges Izard. It was a founding member of the Popular Front.


Gaston Bergery and the 'Common Front Against Fascism'

Bergery had originally been the leading figure of the most left-wing faction of France's dominant centre-left progressive party, the Radical-Socialist Party. An undersecretary to the President of the Council (prime minister) during the first
Cartel des Gauches The Cartel of the Left ( ) was the name of the governmental alliance between the Radical-Socialist Party, the socialist French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), and other smaller left-republican parties that formed on two occasions in ...
(coalition of the left) in 1924, he had been heavily disappointed by the coalition's collapse in 1926. Thereafter, he advocated a close cooperation of the left-wing parties - chiefly the Radical-Socialists and the
Socialist Party Socialist Party is the name of many different political parties around the world. All of these parties claim to uphold some form of socialism, though they may have very different interpretations of what "socialism" means. Statistically, most of th ...
- around a programme of state-intervention in the economy and opposition to
fascism Fascism ( ) is a far-right, authoritarian, and ultranationalist political ideology and movement. It is characterized by a dictatorial leader, centralized autocracy, militarism, forcible suppression of opposition, belief in a natural social hie ...
. This policy found little popularity within the Radical-Socialist Party (where Bergery was mocked as a "Radical-
Bolshevik The Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin, were a radical Faction (political), faction of the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) which split with the Mensheviks at the 2nd Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, ...
"), and in early 1933 Bergery quit the party. In the wake of the anti-parliamentary riots of February 1934 the mood in France changed: the centre-left coalition collapsed bringing down the Radical-Socialist government, replaced by a government of the right which the Left feared was a prelude to fascism. Dissidents from the three major left-wing parties, Bergery the ex-Radical-Socialist,
Jacques Doriot Jacques Doriot (; 26 September 1898 – 22 February 1945) was a French politician, initially communist, later fascist, before and during World War II. In 1936, after his exclusion from the French Communist Party, he founded the French Popular Pa ...
the number-two
Communist Communism () is a sociopolitical, philosophical, and economic ideology within the socialist movement, whose goal is the creation of a communist society, a socioeconomic order centered on common ownership of the means of production, di ...
leader, and the prominent socialist Georges Monnet, broke with their respective parties to form a 'Common Front Against Fascism', designed as a network where Anti-fascism, anti-fascists could coordinate resistance against further dictatorial trends, independently of party lines. Bergery had thought that the Common Front would fill a much-demanded empty niche in French politics: a centre-left progressive party that was explicitly committed to opposing
fascism Fascism ( ) is a far-right, authoritarian, and ultranationalist political ideology and movement. It is characterized by a dictatorial leader, centralized autocracy, militarism, forcible suppression of opposition, belief in a natural social hie ...
and defending parliamentary institutions, while also addressing financial and economic issues through state intervention, and formally allying with the Socialist Party to do so. But it found no support from the main parties: the Socialist and Communist parties banned their members from participating, while the Radical-Socialist Party initially sided with the National government before gradually adopting the very ideas that Bergery had advocated. Bergery imagined that the public would prove more enthusiastic than the party leaders. To prove the point he resigned from Chamber of Deputies (France), Parliament (20 February 1934) to run again in the name of the antifascist Common Front; instead, opposed by the leadership of the Radical-Socialist Party and supported only by the local socialists and Radical-Socialists, he ended up losing his seat.


Georges Izard and ''Troisième Voie''

This electoral setback prompted Bergery to look to other like-minded allies. However, while the Communist, Socialist and Radical-Socialist Parties all had factions with similar ideas, none would quit their party over the issue. This led Bergery to turn to the small Catholic-socialist group ''Troisième Voie'' (Third Way). ''Troisième Voie'' had begun as a reflection circle linked with ''Esprit,'' a Social Catholic, progressive Catholic journal concerned with discovering a solution to the Great Depression in France, economic crisis, via a 'third way' between socialism and laissez-faire liberalism. Georges Izard, a Catholic intellectual and former ministerial undersecretary, disagreed with the prevailing tendency within ''Esprit'' to pursue this third way through a modernised social-Catholicism. In 1933 he left to found ''Troisième Force.''


The Social Front

In November 1934 Bergery's Common Front and Izard's ''Troisième Voie'' held an assembly and merged into a unified party. This was initially named the Social Front, as the Socialist and Communist parties had formed an alliance also labelled the term 'Common front, Common Front' had recently begun to be largely associated with the recent alliance of the Marxist French Communist Party, PCF, Proletarian Unity Party (France), PUP and French Section of the Workers' International, SFIO parties. In July 1935 an alliance of anti-fascist parties and civil society organisations was founded, known as the Popular Front. The Social Front was one of the original signatories. In early1936, to avoid confusion between the Popular Front and Social Front, the latter renamed itself as the more distinctive Frontist Party.


The Frontist Party and the Popular Front

By mid-1935 all of the three major left-wing parties had converged onto an agreement on the need to cooperate on a programme of anti-fascism, state-intervention and the defence of liberal parliamentary institutions. The existence of the Popular Front, therefore, undercut the Frontist Party's very raison d'etre. In the 1936 French legislative election, elections of 1936, the Frontist Party had little success. Its two co-founders, Bergery and Izard, were both elected to Parliament, but two deputies was too few to form a distinct parliamentary group and thus during the 1936 French legislative election, 1936-1940 legislature had to sit among the other left-leaning independents and minor parties, in the Independent Left technical group. The fact that the Frontist Party had just two deputies, each of them a co-founder of the party and each originally from a distinct political tradition, Radicalism and social-Catholicism, meant that the party was permanently split in two. The ''Troisième Force'' wing of the party concluded that the weak showing in the elections of 1936 signalled the failure of the Frontist Party's political goals, and in November 1937 they broke away from the Frontist Party. Meanwhile, under the Léon Blum, Léon Blum government (1936–37), Bergery grew increasingly critical of the Soviet Union and the French Communist Party. He distanced himself from the rest of the Popular Front, and increasingly adopted a tone of 'Révolution nationale, national revolution' that converged in some aspects with the very same fascist right that he had originally set out to oppose. This trajectory would ultimately bring him on board with the Vichy Regime.


References


Sources

*Burrin, Philippe. ''La dérive fasciste : Doriot, Déat, Bergery (1933-1945).'' Paris, 2003. *Jolly, Jean, ed. "Gaston Bergery". ''Dictionnaire des parlementaires français (1889-1940).'' Paris, 1960 {{Portal, Organized Labour Defunct political parties in France Political parties of the French Third Republic Left-wing parties in France