Autonomous Socialist Party (France)
- Politics of France
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The Autonomous Socialist Party (French: Parti socialiste autonome, PSA) was a splinter party from the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO). It was founded in September 1958 in reaction against the SFIO stance on the Algerian War and its acceptance of the Gaullist May 1958 putsch. Half a dozen SFIO members of the French National Assembly and local elected officials joined the splinter party, as well as members from the (centrist) Radical Party, most notably Pierre Mendès France, former Prime Minister. None of the PSA deputies were reelected at the November 1958 legislative election. The PSA merged into the Unified Socialist Party in 1960 as one of its founding organisations.[1]
Members
- Édouard Depreux (general secretary, member of the National Assembly)
- Alain Savary (deputy general secretary, member of the National Assembly)
- Robert Verdier (deputy general secretary, member of the National Assembly)
- Raoul Bleuse
- Daniel Mayer
- Pierre Mendès France
Sources
- ^ Bernard Ravenel, Quand la gauche se réinventait: Le PSU, histoire d'un parti visionnaire, 1960-1989, La Découverte, 2016 (more particularly the chapter 'La longue gestation du PSU', p.34) ISBN 9782707190307
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- Louis Dubreuilh (1905−1918)
- Ludovic-Oscar Frossard (1918−1920)
- Paul Faure (1920−1940)
- Vacant (1940−1943)
- Daniel Mayer (1943−1946)
- Guy Mollet (1946−1969)
- Paris Commune
- French Socialist Party (Federation of the Socialist Workers of France and Revolutionary Socialist Workers' Party)
- Socialist Party of France (French Workers' Party and Socialist Revolutionary Party)
- Globe Congress
- Second International
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- Revolutionary socialism
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- French Communist Party
- Socialist Party of France – Jean Jaurès Union / Socialist Republican Union / National Popular Rally
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- Union of the Socialist Left / Unified Socialist Party / Union of Clubs for the Renewal of the Left / Union of Socialist Groups and Clubs
- Socialist Party
- Lefts Cartel (1924–1934)
- Popular Front (1936–1938)
- Tripartisme (1944–1947)
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- Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left (1965–1968)
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