French Party (1979)

French Party (1979)




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French Party (1979)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In 1979 the first direct elections to the European Parliament were held in France. Four parties were able to win seats: the centre right Union for French Democracy the Gaullist Rally for the Republic , the Socialist Party and the French Communist Party . 61.7% of the French population turned out on election day.

Electorate (eligible voters) and voter turnout


France, Amid Party Debate, Gets Presidency of the Common Market
France, Amid Party Debate, Gets Presidency of the Common Market
See the article in its original context from January 2, 1979 , Section A , Page 5 Buy Reprints
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By Flora Lewis;Special to The New York Times
PARIS, Jan. 1 — France took over the presidency of the European Common Market today with high ambitions for making Europe more forceful diplomatically. But the French face a raging political debate over the first West European elections, to be held this June.
The direct, popular elections to the European Parliament will come in the period of French leadership, which rotates among the nine Common Market members every six months. The elections have become the most abrasive issue of French domestic politics, splitting both the governing coalition and the opposition.
There has even been talk of a split within the neo‐Gaullist Party of former Prime Minister Jacques Chirac, not directly on the question of the European Parliament itself but on the vehemence of Mr. Chirac's attacks against President Valery Giscard d'Estaing's Government over the issue.
Mr. Chirac charged the President with anti‐French intentions, saying that his policy was that of “the party of foreigners,” designed to undermine French independence.
Mr. Chirac asserted that France was at “a crossroads of its history” and that its fate as a nation was at stake. Nonetheless, he stopped short of withdrawing his party's parliamentary backing from the GoVemment, a move that would brought new domestic elections.
He issued his declaration from his bed in Cochin Hospital in Paris, where he was recovering from an automobile accident, and it created an angry exchange among his partisans, which is continuing.
The exchanges quieted over the holiday, but they opened the future of the neoGaullists to question. Mr. Chirac, appears to be in command of the party apparatus, but his parliamentary group, is apparently growing restive over his tactics.
The Communist Party has launched as fierce a campaign on the European issue. Posters have been put up stating: “No to Germany.” The Communist argument is that the French Government's policy toward Europe is pringing “German hegemony under American trusteeship” to France.
The rivalry actually brought the Communists and Gaullists to vote together in the Assembly to prevent the Common Market's executive body from helping to finance the European election campaign here.
The Common Market's plan was for a public education campaign throughout the nine member countries on the mean- ing of electing deputies to the European Parliament for the first time. So far they have been appointed by member legislatures. The Common Market would not have taken a position on the candidates.
As a result of their stand, the French Communists have come under new at. tack from Moscow, which recently published a sharp rebuke for the French rejection of “proletarian internationalism,” the Communist phrase for loyalty to the Soviet line.
The French party has generally been following Moscow's lead on International affairs, including expressing hostility to ward strengthening and expanding the Etiropean Economic Community, but has been critical lately of past Soviet policy.
The, Socialist Party, which is engaged in an internal argument over the party's
formal but apparently impractical policy of cooperating with the Communists, is supporting the European elections. So is the coalition of parties called Union for a Democratic France, which supports Mr. Giscard d'Estaing.
There is no evidence that the public has been caught up in the fury of the European election that the political parties have.
Mr. Giscard d'Estaing has explained his longterm policy of restructuring the French economy as an effort to catch up with Germany and provide an equal counter‐balance to its weight in European affairs. The period of French presidency of the Common Market, he has said, will be used to dramatize France's role.

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it . ( July 2010 )

^ "Archived copy" . Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 . Retrieved 15 October 2010 . {{ cite web }} : CS1 maint: archived copy as title ( link )

^ "Creating the Chrysler Horizon: The Chrysler Europe" .

^ "Archived copy" . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 . Retrieved 15 October 2010 . {{ cite web }} : CS1 maint: archived copy as title ( link )

^ "Anaïs Baydemir" . Gala (in French) . Retrieved 28 June 2022 .

^ "Virginie ARNOLD - Olympic Archery | France" . International Olympic Committee . 19 June 2016 . Retrieved 11 April 2019 .

^ Lavezzoli, Peter (2007). The Dawn of Indian Music in the West . London: Continuum. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-82642-819-6 .


Dependencies , colonies and other territories
Events from the year 1979 in France .


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