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Socialist Party (France)

The Socialist Party (French: Parti socialiste [paʁti sɔsjalist], PS) is a centre-left[2][3][4] to left-wing[5][6][7][8] political party in France. It holds social democratic[9] and pro-European views.[10][11] The PS was for decades the largest party of the "French Left" and used to be one of the two major political parties in the French Fifth Republic, along with the Union for a Popular Movement. It replaced the earlier French Section of the Workers' International in 1969 and is currently led by First Secretary Olivier Faure. The PS is a member of the Party of European Socialists, Progressive Alliance and Socialist International.

"Socialist Party of France" redirects here. Not to be confused with Socialist Party of France (1902), French Socialist Party (1919), or Socialist Party of France – Jean Jaurès Union.

Socialist Party
Parti socialiste

PS

4 May 1969 (1969-05-04)

See list

99 rue Molière, 94200 Ivry-sur-Seine

Increase 45,000

  Pink and   green

"Changer la vie" (1977–2010)[1]
"Changing Life"
"Il faut tourner la page" (2010–)
"We must turn the page"
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The PS first won power in 1981, when its candidate François Mitterrand was elected president of France in the 1981 presidential election. Under Mitterrand, the party achieved a governing majority in the National Assembly from 1981 to 1986 and again from 1988 to 1993. PS leader Lionel Jospin lost his bid to succeed Mitterrand as president in the 1995 presidential election against Rally for the Republic leader Jacques Chirac, but he became prime minister in a cohabitation government after the 1997 legislative election, a position Jospin held until 2002, when he was again defeated in the 2002 presidential election.


Ségolène Royal, the party's candidate for the 2007 presidential election, was defeated by conservative UMP candidate Nicolas Sarkozy. The PS won most of regional and local elections and for the first time in more than fifty years it won control of the Senate in the 2011 Senate election.[12] On 6 May 2012, François Hollande, the first secretary of the party from 1997 to 2008, was elected president and the next month the party won a majority in the 2012 legislative election. During his term, Hollande battled with high unemployment, multiple Jihadi terrorist attacks, poor opinion ratings and a splinter group of left-wing Socialist MPs known as frondeurs (rebels). On 1 December 2016, Hollande declined to seek re-election and the PS subsequently organized a presidential primary. Benoît Hamon, from the left wing of the party, was designated as the Socialist candidate after defeating former Prime Minister Manuel Valls. Facing the emergence of centrist Emmanuel Macron and left-winger Jean-Luc Mélenchon, Hamon failed to re-establish the PS leadership on the centre-left and finished 5th in the 2017 presidential election, gathering only 6.36 percent of the votes. The party then lost the majority of its MPs in the 2017 legislative election, securing just 26 seats, becoming the fourth-biggest group in the National Assembly.


Several figures who acted at the international level have also been members of the PS, including Jacques Delors, who was the president of the European Commission from 1985 to 1994 and the first person to serve three terms in that office;[13] Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who was the managing director of the International Monetary Fund from 2007 to 2011;[14] and Pascal Lamy, who was Director-General of the World Trade Organization from 2005 to 2013.[15] Party membership has declined precipitously, standing at 22,000 members in 2021,[16] down from 42,300 in 2016,[17] 60,000 in 2014[18] and 173,486 members in 2012.[19] However, before the start of the 2023 Marseille Congress, the party announced that it had more than 41,000 members,[20] almost double that of the previous count announced during the 2021 Villeurbanne Congress. At the end of July 2023, the Socialist Party claimed 45,000 members.[21]

Ségolène Royal who wished to forge an alliance with the centrist party ;

MoDem

the Mayor of Paris , supported by Lionel Jospin and his friends, who wished to keep the status quo of the 2007 campaign and come back to the Plural Left;

Bertrand Delanoë

supported by the followers of Laurent Fabius and Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who had the same electoral strategy as the Mayor of Paris but advocated reconciliation between the campaigners of the "yes" and the "no" to the European constitution; and

Martine Aubry

the young left-winger .

Benoît Hamon

(1969–1971)

Alain Savary

(1971–1981)

François Mitterrand

(1981–1988)

Lionel Jospin

(1988–1992)

Pierre Mauroy

(1992–1993)

Laurent Fabius

(1993–1994)

Michel Rocard

(1994–1995)

Henri Emmanuelli

(1995–1997)

Lionel Jospin

(1997–2008)

François Hollande

(2008–2012)

Martine Aubry

(appointed on 30 June 2011, acting during Martine Aubry's candidacy in the 2011 French Socialist Party presidential primary; 2012–2014)

Harlem Désir

(2014–2017)

Jean-Christophe Cambadélis

(2017–2018; acting)

Rachid Temal

(2018–present)

Olivier Faure

Factions are organised in the Socialist Party through policy declarations called motions on which the party members vote at each party congress:

1956–: , splinter from the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), the predecessor of the Socialist Party.

Guianese Socialist Party

1970–1973: (PDS) (fr), led by the deputy Émile Muller.

Party of Socialist Democracy

1972–: (PSG), founded by the former senator René Toribio.

Guadeloupean Socialist Party

1973: (MDSF), led by the deputy Max Lejeune (fr)[35]

Socialist Democratic Movement of France

1973–1995: fusion of PDS, MDSF and other splinter groups (Liberal Socialist Movement, Democratic Socialism, Socialism for Liberties and Democracy) to form the Socialist Democratic Movement of France (MDS), renamed after the Social Democratic Party (PSD), joined the centre-right Union for French Democracy (UDF) in 1978.

March 1973 legislative election

1986–: (MDA) (fr), founded by Alfred Muller, elected in 1993 as deputy with the endorsement of the PS.

Alsatian Democracy Movement

1990–: (PMS), founded by Maurice Louis-Joseph-Dogué (fr).[36]

Martinican Socialist Party

1993–2002: Movement of Citizens (MDC), founded by the deputy , renamed the Citizen and Republican Movement (MRC) in 2003

Jean-Pierre Chevènement

1994–: , formerly (1991-1994) the Reflexion and Action Group for Guadeloupe (GRAP-G) faction inside the Guadeloupe federation of the Socialist Party[37]

United Guadeloupe, Socialism and Realities

1996–: (CSD) (fr), founded by Simon Renucci.

Social Democratic Corsica

2007–: (LGM), founded by the senator Jean-Marie Bockel, joined the centre-right Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) in 2012

Modern Left

2008–: (PG), founded by senator Jean-Luc Mélenchon, joined the Left Front in 2009.

Left Party

2013–: (ND).

New Deal

2015–: (fr), led by former MEP Liêm Hoang Ngoc.

Les Socialistes insoumis

2017–: (fr), led by former presidential candidate Benoît Hamon

Génération.s, le mouvement

2018–: , led by Emmanuel Maurel and Marie-Noëlle Lienemann

Republican and Socialist Left

French Section of the Workers' International

New Left group

Socialist and Republican group

Terra Nova (think tank)

Workers and Peasants Socialist Party

Pasokification

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