Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Progressive Republicans (France)

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Founded
  
1889 (1889)

Dissolved
  
1901 (1901)

Leader
  
Jean Casimir-Perier Alexandre Ribot Jules Méline

Preceded by
  
Opportunist Republicans

Succeeded by
  
Democratic Republican Alliance, Republican Federation

Ideology
  
Liberalism Liberal conservatism

The Progressive Republicans (French: Républicains progressistes) were a parliamentary group in France active during the late 19th century, during the Third French Republic. The group was formed in 1889 after a split from the Moderate Republican majority, and constituted the parliamentary right-wing after the monarchists' decline during the end of the century. The Progressive Republicans were later reunited into the Liberal Republican Union (French: Union libérale républicaine, ULR).

Contents

Origins

Until the 1880s, the French political landscape consisted of two main groups: the left-wing republicans, initially divided into the "Republican Left" of Jules Grévy and the "Republican Union" of Léon Gambetta, and the right-wing monarchists, separated into Orléanists, Legitimists and Bonapartists. In 1885, the two republican groups merged to form the "Democratic Union" to prevent a return of the monarchy. However, the Union was unable to effectively change the political system, characterised by its instability, and in 1887, the parliamentary opposition (socialists, radicals and monarchists) to the republican majority rallied around the figure of General Georges Boulanger, former War Minister excluded by the government for his radical nationalism. Facing the threat from the popular Boulanger, the republican group became divided into two opposing factions: on one side, the old republican guard, led by Jules Ferry, founded in 1888 the self-declared leftist National Republican Association; on the other side, the conservative republicans, led by Georges Patinot, launched the Liberal Union in 1889.

The Liberal Union

The Liberal Union claimed the heritage of Adolphe Thiers' liberalism, but while strong in the Senate, was in the minority in the Chamber of Deputies, where it had only eight deputies. However, the Liberal Union was supported by Patinot's Journal des débats, and depicting Boulanger as "a new Napoleon", the party claimed an agreement between moderate republicans and anti-Bonapartist monarchists reminiscent of the 1863 legislative election. The Liberal Union started to depict itself as "liberal and unswervingly conservative", opposing the imposition of an income tax and separation of Church and state, and after fractures inside the Boulangist movement, became the party of farmers, Catholics, bankers, industrialists, lawyers and journalists.

The chair committee of the Liberal Union was headed by Henri Barboux, and composed of prominent personalities including Léon Say, Émile de Marcère, Georges Picot and Anatole Leroy-Beaulieu. The party was also financed by the Duke of Aumale, the Orléanist pretender to the Throne. Thanks to the downfall of General Boulanger, accused of conspiracy against the Republic, the moderate republicans won the 1889 legislative election by a landslide, and the Liberal Union gained six seats in the Chamber of Deputies. The members of the Liberal Union in the Parliament called themselves "Progressives", joining the Moderates in the "Republican Concentration." However, in the elections of 1893, many Catholics left the Liberal Union for the new "Rallies" movement, characterized by its political Catholicism and allied with the monarchists. Rejecting monarchism, the Liberal Union added the appeal "Republican" to its name, in opposition to the Liberal Union of the Rights of the conservative monarchists.

Divisions and dissolution

However, the presence of Progressives caused the Republican Concentration to move toward the parliamentary centre. In the late 1890s, the Liberal Republican Union also lost its free market tradition of protectionism, supported by prominent politician Jules Méline. This change led to the departure of Léon Say from the party in 1896. The Union remained united until the Dreyfus affair in 1894, when the Liberal Union opposed both "radical socialists" and "rebel nationalists", condemning the rampant anti-semitism in public life and supporting, along with the socialists, Prime Minister Pierre Waldeck-Rousseau, a moderate republican, in 1899.

So two factions developed in the Union: Méline's supporters, who were generally anti-Dreyfusard and anti-socialist, and Barboux's liberals, who supported the government. However, after the fall of Waldeck-Rousseau Cabinet in 1902, the Liberal Republican Union returned to opposing both socialists and nationalists. In the early 1900s, with the formation of the first political parties in France, the Radical-Socialist Party (PRRRS) and the Democratic Republican Alliance (ARD), the Union tried to create a "Progressive Party", which would have personified the conservative spirit of the Republic, along with the liberal ARD and the radical PRRRS. Jacques Piou, member of the "Rallies", supported the idea of a "Tory party" in France, born by the fusion of conservative republicans and the rallies. The journalist Ernest Daudet also supported this idea, and in 1902 many progressives joined the new Liberal Action of Piou. The following year year, in 1903, the Liberal Republican Union merged with the National Republican Association to form the liberal-conservative Republican Federation, led by Auguste Isaac. With the creation of the National Bloc in 1919, Liberal Action merged into the Republican Federation, completing the union of the republican right.

References

Progressive Republicans (France) Wikipedia