French Parliament (1958–1967)

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A01=Philip M. Williams
Adoption Bill
Algerian war
Annual Period
Author_Philip M. Williams
British government
Category=JPHC
Conference Committee
Conferring
Constitutional Council
De Gaulle
Enabling Act
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fifth Republic
Fifth Republic institutions
Follow
Fourth Republic
Fourth Republican Politicians
France
French Parliament
Gaullism political theory
Gaullist party
General de Gaulle
legislative case studies France
legislative process France
Opposition
Oral Questions
ORTF
Package Vote
parliamentary
parliamentary oversight mechanisms
peacetime
Place De La Concorde
political parties analysis
Post-war
postwar French governance
President de Gaulle
pressure groups
Private Members
Ratification Bill
RPF
sample bills
social background
Social Scourges
Spokesman
UNR
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032130415
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1968, this book set out to give a brief but complete account of the French Parliament as it had worked in practice since the advent of President de Gaulle. A number of different aspects are discussed, from the social background of the members to the debates on five sample bills, and from the strategy of pressure groups to the organisation and character of the Gaullist party (about which very little had been written). While the legal framework within which the new parliament works is comprehensively described, attention is mainly focused on a political situation transformed by the end of the Algerian war and by the speed of social change in France itself at the time.

Earlier books on the Fifth Republic naturally concentrated heavily on the spectacular crises of its early years and on the exceptional personality of its president. Remarkably little, therefore, had been written on the recent development of its institutions and politics in the peacetime conditions which France had enjoyed since 1962 for the first time for over twenty years.

There was a Gaullist myth that the new regime had reformed the system and, against the obstructive opposition of an Opposition which had learned nothing and forgotten nothing, had won the support of the French people for a strong democratic government on British lines. There was a corresponding Opposition myth that a ruler and party of authoritarian temper had consolidated their power by reducing parliamentary criticism to an impotent farce. Neither interpretation was wholly unfounded; neither does justice to the complex reality which this work tries to explain as fairly as possible.

Philip M. Williams

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