Social and Radical Left

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Social and Radical Left (French: Gauche sociale et radicale, GSR) was a parliamentary group in the Chamber of Deputies of France during the French Third Republic [1] founded in 1928 by Henry Franklin-Bouillon.[2] The Social-Radicals or Social-Unionists were members of the right wing of the Radical-Socialist Party who refused a new Cartel des Gauches and supported the conservative coalition led by Raymond Poincaré. Most later became members of the Independent Radicals (PRI) or even the centre-right Democratic Republican Alliance.

The Social and Radical Left had 17 seats out of 607 in the Chamber of Deputies in 1929[1]

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