Revolutionary Left (France)

The Revolutionary Left (French: Gauche révolutionnaire) is a Trotskyist political party in France, primarily based around northern French towns such as Rouen.[1] It is affiliated to the Committee for a Workers' International.

Revolutionary Left

Gauche révolutionnaire
Founded1992
HeadquartersRouen, France
NewspaperL'Égalité
(Equality)
IdeologyMarxism
Socialism
Euroscepticism
Political positionFar-left
International affiliationCommittee for a Workers' International (Refounded)
ColoursRed
Website
www.gaucherevolutionnaire.fr

History

The origins of the Revolutionary Left lie in the Revolutionary Communist League (LCR), from which its members were expelled after winning the majority of that organisation's youth section, Jeunesse communiste révolutionnaire to its ideas. At expulsion in 1992, it had roughly 50-60 members.[2]

After one member spotted a poster for the October 1992 Youth against Racism in Europe (YRE) demonstration in Brussels, members joined that demonstration where they met representatives of the Committee for a Workers' International. They eventually joined the CWI after discussions.[3]

New Anticapitalist Party

In 2009 the Revolutionary Left participated in the foundation process of the New Anticapitalist Party (NPA) initiated by the LCR. The party became a current within the NPA while continuing independent work.[4][5] In February 2012 the party left the NPA, which, due to its party structures and leadership, the Revolutionary Left no longer considers to represent a viable step towards a new mass workers' party.[6]

gollark: Sounds interesting, can I haz link plooz?
gollark: `WeAreGoingToWriteOutExactlyWhatThisDoesInTheTypeNameForSomeReason`
gollark: It's not bad, it's just bad.
gollark: ```GoalsThese goals may change or be refined over time as I experiment with what is possible with the language. Embeddable - Similiar to Lua - it is meant to be included in another program which may use the virtual machine to extend its own functionality. Statically typed - The language uses a Hindley-Milner based type system with some extensions, allowing simple and general type inference. Tiny - By being tiny, the language is easy to learn and has a small implementation footprint. Strict - Strict languages are usually easier to reason about, especially considering that it is what most people are accustomed to. For cases where laziness is desired, an explict type is provided. Modular - The library is split into parser, typechecker, and virtual machine + compiler. Each of these components can be use independently of each other, allowing applications to pick and choose exactly what they need.```
gollark: That's rude.

References

  1. Taaffe, P. (2004) A Socialist World is Possible, London: CWI Publications, pg.87
  2. Taaffe, P. (2004) A Socialist World is Possible, London: CWI Publications, pg.76
  3. Taaffe, P. (2004) A Socialist World is Possible, London: CWI Publications, pg.77
  4. January’s general strike first but not last response to Sarkozy, socialistworld.net, 16 February 2009.
  5. Three million take to the streets in national strike, socialistworld.net, 23 March 2009.
  6. Pourquoi la GR a quitté le NPA ? (in French), Gauche révolutionnaire, 9 February 2012.
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