Gaullist Phenomenon

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A01=Jean Charlot
Alain Poher
Author_Jean Charlot
British political system
Category=JPH
comparative party politics
Conservative Party
Couve De Murville
De Gaulle
De La Vigerie
Direct Democracy
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fifth Republic
Follow
foreign policy
Fourth Republic
French Party System
French party system transformation
French political parties
French politics
Front Du
Gaston Defferre
Gaullist Deputies
Gaullist Movement
Gaullist Party
General De Gaulle
Georges Pompidou
Held
Historic Gaullists
institutional change France
Jacques Soustelle
Jean Lecanuet
La Baule
Left Wing Gaullists
Maurice Couve De Murville
Maurice Thorez
postwar European politics
Republic
right-wing movements France
Voter Parties
voter-oriented party
voter-oriented party systems
Waldeck Rochet

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032126661
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Books on gaullism – or, more precisely, books on General de Gaulle – are not uncommon. Originally published in English in 1971, this claimed to be the first book of this sort on gaullism as a political force within the French political system.

Since the publication of his work on the Union pour la nouvelle République Jean Charlot had become known as one of the few objective experts on gaullism. His knowledge of the British political system had helped him to appreciate the nature of the gaullist party which he saw from the first, not as a transient party linked to the political career of General de Gaulle, but as a major, modern, right-wing party, comparable to the Conservative Party in Britain. In this book he demonstrates how the gaullist movement is a ‘voter-oriented’ party, the first that France had really ever known. The strength of gaullism lies in the electorate, which had fully accepted gaullist economic policies, the institutional changes introduced under the Republic, and the party’s foreign policy. This voter-oriented party had fundamentally changed the French party system. A majority party since 1962, the gaullist movement would force the left to regroup within a left-wing, voter-oriented party, if it did not want to face political sterility.

Jean Charlot was one of the few specialists to publish an article just after the referendum (Le Monde, May 2, 1969) forecasting that the departure of General de Gaulle did not foreshadow the end of gaullism as a major political force.

Jean Charlot

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