Convention of Republican Institutions explained

Convention of Republican Institutions
Native Name:Convention des institutions républicaines
Leader:François Mitterrand
Foundation:June 1964
Ideology:Socialism
Republicanism
Country:France
Abbreviation:CIR
Dissolved:1971
Merged:Socialist Party
National:FGDS

The Convention of Republican Institutions (French: Convention des institutions républicaines, CIR) was a socialist and republican party in France led by François Mitterrand. The CIR, founded in early June 1964, transformed from a loosely organized club to a formal political party by April 1965, a few months before the time of Mitterrand's candidacy in the 1965 election. Roughly at the same time, the CIR played an important role in the foundation of the Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left (FGDS), which ended with the FGDS' landslide defeat to the Gaullists in the 1968 election. The CIR merged into the Socialist Party at the Epinay Congress in 1971.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Jalabert . Laurent . La Convention des institutions républicaines (1964-1971) . Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire . October 2009 . 104 . 4 . 123–139 . 10.3917/ving.104.0123 . 10 February 2024 . fr.