Party of Order explained

Party of Order
Native Name:Parti de l'Ordre
Leader1 Title:Leaders
Leader1 Name:Adolphe Thiers
Odillon Barrot
François Guizot
Alexis de Tocqueville
Merger:Movement Party
Resistance Party
Other Legitimists
Headquarters:12, rue de Poitiers, Paris
Ideology:Conservatism
Liberal conservatism[1]
Monarchism (majority)
Internal factions:
Legitimism
Orléanism
Republicanism
Colours: Blue White
Slogan:"Order, Property, Religion"
Country:France

The Rue de Poitiers Committee, best known as the Party of Order, was a political group formed by monarchists[2] and conservatives[3] [4] in the French Parliament during the French Second Republic. It included monarchist members from both the Orléanist and Legitimist factions and also some republicans who admired the United States model of government.

After the 1848 elections to the French Parliament, the Party of Order was the second-largest group of deputies after the Moderate Republicans, with 250 of the 900 seats in the French Parliament. Prominent members included Adolphe Thiers, François Guizot and Alexis de Tocqueville. The party won an absolute majority in the 1849 general election[5] and were opposed to the presidency of Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, although he included members of the party in his administration in order to court the political centre-right.

The party enjoyed widespread support in the north of France in the 1849 elections, the departments of Finistère, Côtes-du Nord, Manche, Calvados, Eure, Somme and Aisne as well as Deux-Sèvres, Vienne, Vaucluse and Haute-Garonne returned exclusively Party of Order members to the French Parliament. Support was lower in the east of the country.

After the Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte's coup d'état in December 1851, the party was forcibly dissolved and its members were exiled.[6]

Electoral results

National Assembly
Election yearNo. of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
No. of
overall seats won
+/–Leader
18481,802,125 (2nd)22.7
18493,310,000 (1st)50.2

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Martti Koskenniemi . Walter Rech . Manuel Jiménez Fonseca . International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations . 2007 . 194 . Oxford University Press.
  2. Book: Martin Evans, Emmanuel Godin . France Since 1815 . 2014 . 51 . Routledge .
  3. Book: W. R. Fraser . Reforms and Restraints in Modern French Education . 2018 . Routledge.
  4. Book: Susan Hayward . French Costume Drama of the 1950s: Fashioning Politics in Film . 2011 . 266 . Intellect Books.
  5. Book: André Petitat. PRODUCTION DE L'ECOLE PRODUCTION DE LA SOCIETE. 14 August 2012. 1999. Librairie Droz. 978-2-600-00346-9. 244.
  6. Book: Crime, History & Societies. 14 August 2012. Librairie Droz. 978-2-600-00477-0. 74.