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History 172 – Modern France Pluralising the Republic

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History 172 – Modern France. Pluralising the Republic. Outline. The decline of the far left Pluralising the Republic. Anti-totalitarians, 1970s. 1968 Far left component (Maoist, Trotskyite) Libertarian as well Esprit – Journal with anti-totalitarian slant - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: History 172 –  Modern France

History 172 – Modern France

Pluralising the Republic

Page 2: History 172 –  Modern France

Outline

• The decline of the far left

• Pluralising the Republic

Page 3: History 172 –  Modern France

Anti-totalitarians, 1970s

• 1968– Far left component (Maoist, Trotskyite) – Libertarian as well– Esprit – Journal with anti-totalitarian slant– Communism less attractive in the wake of

Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago– Still, a highly technocratic state throughout the

1970s, managed by politically appointed énarques– (École nationale de l’Administration)

Page 4: History 172 –  Modern France

Giscard

Page 5: History 172 –  Modern France

Valéry Giscard D’Estaing (1974-1981)

• 1973 – Oil crisis / recession– Stagflation: contradicted economic theory– Attempts to lower inflation increased unemployment

• Giscard – to the left of most British and American centre-right parties

• Promoted fusion of state-subsidized companies to compete internationally

• Shift to nuclear power– Today, France gets 75% of its power this way

Page 6: History 172 –  Modern France

Gradual turn to market economy

• Markets as autonomous forces

• Politics must adapt to those forces, rather than directing them (a retreat from dirigisme)

• France embarked on selective dirigisme: support the strong with state subsidies, allow or force the weak to perish: 70% increase in company bankruptcies after 1974.

Page 7: History 172 –  Modern France

Main winners of economic policies

• Large agriculture

• Energy companies

• Telephone/communications

• Train / airlines

Page 8: History 172 –  Modern France

Losers

• Small farmers and businesses

• Industrial labour– Unemployment rises– Benefits and retraining: offered only after vigorous

strikes

Page 9: History 172 –  Modern France

Mitterrand Years (1981-1994)First victory of Socialists in Fifth Republic

Euphoria upon election – dancing in the streets

Fears that ‘Russian tanks will soon be rolling through the streets of Paris’ (Cold War)

Page 10: History 172 –  Modern France

Who was he?

• As student at Sciences Po, active in right-leaning parties in mid 1930s associated with the Croix-de-feu (quasi-fascist group)

• Capture by Germans. Developed left-leaning sympathies in prison camp, which he eventually escaped from

• Joined Vichy government but supported resistance

Page 11: History 172 –  Modern France

Who was he?

• Active in parties of the left in 1950s

• Held ministerial positions

• Deeply committed to keeping Algeria French

• Tried to profit from 1968, but people saw through this

Page 12: History 172 –  Modern France

Mitterrand - 1970s

• Seen as an opportunist

• Slowly, methodically, cunningly, he pried Communist supporters towards Socialist party

• Came close to winning presidency in 1974

• Won in 1981

Page 13: History 172 –  Modern France

Early policies

• Raised minimum wage• 5 week holidays• 39 hour work week• Super tax• Increase of social benefits and employee

rights• At odds with other countries who were

moving headlong into market economics

Page 14: History 172 –  Modern France

Reversals

Anti-inflationAusterity

Move towards European economic unionMaastricht Treaty 1992 – free trade zone

Cordial with Thatcher: ‘Eyes of Caligula, mouth of Marilyn Monroe’

Page 15: History 172 –  Modern France

Political economy of France since 1980s

• Further move away from dirigisme

• 2000s: Privatizations

• Political effects: Front national (FN) benefits from economic stresses and failure of mainstream parties to alleviate them

Page 16: History 172 –  Modern France

Pluralism

Bidonvilles

Aubervilliers, 1970

HLM: public housing initiatives

Page 17: History 172 –  Modern France

Bidonvilles

Page 18: History 172 –  Modern France

Bidonville, Nanterre

Page 19: History 172 –  Modern France

HLM

Page 20: History 172 –  Modern France

HLM

Page 21: History 172 –  Modern France

Problems

• Isolation from other socio-economic groups

• Undermined republican ‘assimilation’ ideals

• Boredom, unemployment, violence

• Clashes with police, revolts

Page 22: History 172 –  Modern France

Veil politics

• 1989 – banned in schools– Left and far-right cametogether on banning them– Attempts to build mosques in 1980s – vehemently

resisted by many French people– Why wear scarves?• Forced or a choice?

– Left finds new agenda: culture rather than class– Algerian Civil War in 1990s: veil=Islam=terrorism

Page 23: History 172 –  Modern France

World Cup, 1998

• Banlieue / city boundaries break down for an evening

• Racism defied by victory – Le Pen silent

• Pasqua laws of early 1990s / ‘sans-papiers’ debate– Children of foreign born parents not automatically

given French nationality– Stricter residency rules

Page 24: History 172 –  Modern France

French Riots 2005Second generation immigrants

Arab, North African, Blacks

Nearly 3000 arrested

9000 cars destroyed

274 towns affected