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1 In French history  





2 See also  





3 Citations  





4 Bibliography  














Sinistrisme






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Albert Thibaudet, who developed the idea of sinistrisme.

Sinistrisme (French: [sinistʁism]) is a neologism invented by political scientist Albert ThibaudetinLes idées politiques de la France (1932) to explain the evolution and recombination of party systems, particularly in France, without substantial changes occurring to party ideology.

Thibaudet saw that, over time, issues that previously had not been politicised would emerge, drawing public concern and stimulating demand for political action. A new political movement would form to champion the new concerns, sending repercussions throughout the existing political system. The old party of the left would be split, with some accepting the new issues as legitimate, agreeing to cooperate with the newcomers and adapting their ideology accordingly. Others on the existing left would double down on their existing ideas, refusing change: without changing their ideas, they would end up pushed de facto one space to the right, and end up as the new centre.

Meanwhile, the old party of the centre would be pushed to the centre-right, and so on. As for the very far right, over time the issues of social conservation that motivated them would gradually lose their appeal, and as old issues died off, space would be freed up for the old right to become the new far right.

In French history[edit]

France provided the quintessential example. The socially-conservative Liberal Monarchists had been the centre-left of the 1820s, but were pushed to become the new centre by the emergence of socially-conservative Moderate Republicans in the 1830s. These were pushed to the centre by the emergence of the Radicals in the 1870s; these were pushed to the centre by the emergence in the 1900s of the Radical-Socialists, who were pushed towards the centre by the growth of the socialist French Section of the Workers' International in the 1920s, who were, in turn, pushed towards the centre by the emergence in the 1950s of the French Communist Party.

This process (seen by Thibaudet as a historical necessity) thus explained, to Thibaudet, the tendency of social-conservatives, particularly in France, to disavow the label droite (right), long associated in French history with monarchism, in favour of the left. The emergence of new rivals to their left meant that a political bloc suddenly found itself shifted one space to the right, without considering itself to be a party of the right. Thus, political groups in France usually used labels that to an outsider would seem to belong one space to the left:

This phenomenon was still at play well into the 20th century. Historian René Rémond observed that after 1924 the term "right-wing" vanished from the glossary of mainstream politics in France, such that "at the 1974 presidential election, only one candidate declared himself as belonging to the right: Jean-Marie Le Pen; in 1981, there was none."[1] Conservative (which had been the name of an ultra-royalist review in 1818–1820) was a synonym of "right-wing" often used under the Third Republic, in particular by the Bloc national Chamber. Independents, used in the 1920s for deputies close to the Action française royalist movement, was later used by less reactionary politicians.

See also[edit]

  • Cordon sanitaire (politics)
  • History of France
  • Left-right politics
  • Political correctness
  • Political realignment
  • Politics of France
  • Portuguese Republican Party, most parties during the Portuguese First Republic claim to be their successor
  • Social Democratic Party (Portugal), a right-wing party named for a left-wing ideology that is no longer the dominant faction within the party
  • Trasformismo, a political method of making a flexible centrist coalition of government (often referring to the time during the Kingdom of Italy before World War I, when two liberal parties, the Historical Left and Historical Right, dominated the political landscape)
  • Venstre, literally meaning left, in the names of three Nordic political parties that are not left-wing:
  • Whig Oligarchy, a period in Great Britain after the Glorious Revolution, when (after the downfall of the old Tory party) de facto only self-declared Whig factions existed
  • Citations[edit]

    1. ^ René Rémond, Les Droites en France, p. 391, Aubier, 1982—new edition of La Droite en France, 1954

    Bibliography[edit]


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