Redirected from Action Francaise
Action Française was liberal with its enemies - at various times Communists, Anarchists, Jews, Protestants and Freemasons. Monarchy had to be restored and liberal democracy and the legacy of the French Revolution discarded.
It met with some success, gaining a large membership, widespread readership and even a couple of Assembly members.
Relations with the Catholic church
Although Maurras was agnostic the movement strongly defended the place of the Catholic Church in French national life, and as a consequance picked up many Catholic followers, bruised by the Dreyfus affair and the break of the Concordat. Pope Pius XI[?] condemned the movement on 20 December 1926, leading to a period of conflict between the two erstwhile pillars of conservative France. It was this condemnation that led to a slow decline as Catholics stayed away, and were not allowed to read the periodical. One of these loyal Catholics was Francois Mitterand, who instead started his political career in the Croix de Feu[?], a slightly more moderate organisation, before joining the Vichy government.
Always anti-German, even when defeat placed the friendly Petain[?] in charge of Vichy France (an event that Maurras greeted as a "divine surprise"), Action Française spent a large amount of time both before and after the First World War warning of the German threat, particularly through the prominent historian, and Action Francaise suppoter Jacques Bainville[?]. They did approve of Franco and Mussolini.
By the outbreak of the Second World War Action Française was a shadow of its former self. It suffered what was to prove a mortal blow when its foremost politician Leon Daudet[?] died. After the German invasion it moved from Paris to Vichy and stopped publication in 1944 when the Germans took over the Vichy government. It never republished and the organisation atrophied.
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