- Parti Populaire Français
The Parti Populaire Français (French Popular Party) (28th June, 1936–February 22, 1945) was a
fascist political party led byJacques Doriot before and duringWorld War II . It is generally regarded as the farthest to the right, most pro-Nazi, of France's collaborationist parties.Formation and early years
The party was formed on the 28 June 1936, by Doriot and a number of fellow former members of the
French Communist Party (includingHenri Barbé andPaul Marion ) who had moved towards thenationalist right in opposition to the Popular Front. The PPF initially centered around the town of Saint-Denis, of which Doriot was mayor (as a Communist) from 1930-1934, and drew its support from the largeworking class population in the area. Although not avowedly fascist at this point, the PPF adopted many aspects of fascist politics, imagery and ideology, and quickly became popular among conservative nationalists, attracting to its ranks former members of such groups asAction Française ,Jeunesses Patriotes ,Croix de Feu andSolidarité Française . The party held a number of large rallies following their formation and adopted as the party flag aCeltic cross against a red, white and blue background. Members wore light blue shirts, dark blue trousers, berets and armbands bearing the party symbol as a uniform, although the uniform was not as ubiquitous as in other far right movements.Despite the Communist origins of much of its leadership (which retained the name
Politburo ), the party was virulently anti-Marxist. Physical violence by PPF members (especially the PPF paramilitary wing, the "Service d'Ordre") against Communist Party supporters and other perceived enemies was not uncommon. The PPF, in its initial, working class, phase, was economically populist and anti-banking. It moved closer to capitalism in 1937 when Doirot was deserted by his traditional working class base in losing the mayoral election in Saint-Denis, and the party began receiving financial support from right wing leaders of business and finance, such as the General Manager of theBanque Worms ,Gabriel Leroy-Ladurie . Doriot proposed to ColonelFrançois de La Rocque uniting hisParti Social Français with the PPF to form an anti-communist alliance to be called the "Front de la Liberté", but La Rocque, who was a conservative and not a fascist, rejected the move. That same year, the PPF contacted the Mussolini regime to request support. According to the private diary of CountGaleazzo Ciano (Benito Mussolini 's Foreign Minister and son-in-law): "Doriot's right-hand-man has asked me to continue to pay subsidies and provide weapons. He envisages a winter filled with conflicts "(Ciano diary, Sept. 1937 [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:2h0ryrqqdmMJ:www.raslfront.org/publications/publi_resist/54.html+doriot+balthazar&hl=en&lr=&strip=1] ) Ciano paid 300,000 francs from the coffers of Fascist Italy toVictor Arrighi (head of theAlgiers section of the PPF).These funds from the Italian Fascists and French banking and business interests were used to purchase a number of newspapers, including "La Liberté", which became the official party organ. After this, as its funding base shifted to big business, the PPF became increasingly pro-capitalist. In time, as the Nazi regime began to contribute a greater share of the PPF's funds, it began to advocate
corporatism , and pushed for closer ties withNazi Germany and Fascist Italy in a grand alliance against theSoviet Union .Ideology and fascism of PPF
The PPF's ardent advocacy of collaboration with the Nazis was accompanied, somewhat discordantly, with nationalistic rhetoric. Members of the PPF were required to take the following oath:
"In the name of the people and of the fatherland, I swear fidelity and devotion to the Parti Populaire Français, its ideals, and its leader. I swear to serve until the supreme sacrifice the cause of national and popular revolution which will leave a new, free and independent France."
The PPF is generally regarded to be afascist party in its ideological, as well as its practical, orientation. The party denounced parliamentarianism and sought to limit French democracy and remake French society according to its own, authoritarian beliefs. It was vehemently opposed to bothCommunism andliberalism and also wished to rid France ofFreemasonry , about which it was greatly concerned (as were most other Fascist groups of the time). The PPF were critical of the supremacy ofrationalism in politics and desired a move towards politics dictated by emotion and will rather thanreason . Intellectuals who are often viewed as fascists, notablyPierre Drieu La Rochelle ,Ramón Fernandez ,Alexis Carrel ,Paul Chack , andBertrand de Jouvenel , were members of the PPF at various times. Moreover, the PPF was anti-semitic. They had initially been ambiguous towardsanti-Semitism , expressing a negative view of Jews in their literature (associating Jews with banking interests) but allowing a Jew, Alexandre Abremski, to sit on their Politburo until his death in 1938. In 1936, Doriot stated: "Our party [the PPF] is not anti-Semitic. It is a great national party that has better things to do than fight Jews." [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:tnSupSpS4nsJ:www3.uakron.edu/hfrance/reviews/soucy2.html+jews+doriot&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=36] By 1938, PPF literature was filled with references to the "Judeo-masonic-bolshevik" conspiracy. As the PPF moved to the right, and especially after the French defeat and the establishment ofVichy France , anti-Semitism became much more a central feature of party policy. In 1941, Doriot, writing in the journal "Au Pilori ", would write: (t)he Jew is not a man. He's a stinking beast." This overt anti-semitic ideology was manifested in the PPF paramilitary ("Gardes Françaises" formerly the "Service d'Ordre") participating in wide-scale violence against Jews in France and North Africa, and actively participating in the mass-deportation of Jews to concentration camps.PPF under Vichy
After the France's defeat in the
Battle of France and the establishment of the regime ofPhilippe Pétain atVichy , the PPF received additional support from Germany and increased their activities. The U.S. State Department placed them on a list of organizations under the direct control of the Nazi regime. [http://foia.state.gov/masterdocs/09fam/0940035aX2.pdf] The PPF staked out a position to the right of Petain, criticizing the regime for being too moderate, and advocating closer military and other collaboration with Germany (such as sending troops to the Russian front), and modeling French government, and its racial policies, directly on Nazi Germany. The PPF increasingly placed anti-Semitism at their core as they collaborated with units of theGestapo and theMilice , the French secret police force led by PPF memberJoseph Darnand , in violently rounding up Jews for deportation toconcentration camp s. The PPF paramilitaries participated in beatings, torture, assassinations and summary execution of Jews and political enemies of the Nazis. For this, the Germans rewarded them by allowing them the right to steal property from the Jews they arrested.After
Pierre Laval ascended of to leadership of the government on April 18, 1942 , he requested thatNazi Germany allow him to force the PPF to merge into his own supporters, but the Nazis denied that request. However, as Laval moved France closer to the Nazi regime, the PPF ceased to be as useful to the Nazis as advocates of greater collaboration. As a result, the PPF was politically marginalized and their role as critics of the regime was diminished, although it did not cease entirely. By the end of the war, the PPF had virtually ceased to function as a political party, the attention of its leader and many of its members turning more directly to participation in the Nazi war effort. In 1941, Doriot urged PPF members to join the newly formedLégion des Volontaires Français (LVF) to fight on the eastern front. The unit's performance was poor and the following year it was removed to anti-partisan actions inBelarus . In 1944 the LVF, along with separate unit the Waffen-SS Französische SS-Freiwilligen-Grenadier-Regiment (Waffen-SS French SS-Volunteer Grenadier Regiment) and French collaborators fleeing the Allied advance in the west were amalgamated into the Waffen-Grenadier-Brigade der SS "Charlemagne". In February 1945 the unit was officially upgraded to a division and renamed 33.Waffen-Grenadier-Division der SS "Charlemagne".In 1943, Doriot had moved to Germany where he became part of the so-called Vichy government-in-exile. On February 22, 1945, Doriot, attired in his SS uniform and being driven in a Nazi officer's car, was killed by Allied strafers near Mengen, Württemberg, Germany, while en route from Mainau to Sigmaringen. The PPF movement did not survive the death of its leader, and no attempt was made to revive it in post-War France.
Members
"See ."
ee also
*
Jeunesse Populaire Française References
* Robert Soucy, "French Fascism: The Second Wave 1933-1939", 1995
* G. Warner, 'France', in SJ Woolf, "Fascism In Europe", 1981
* Christopher Lloyd, "Collaboration and Resistance in Occupied France: Representing Treason and Sacrifice", Palgrave MacMillan 2003
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