French democratic movement
The democratic Mouvement French (MDF) is a founded Political party in 1978 by Henri Fouquereau.
Henri Fouquereau is the president of the Movement. Jacques Cotteray, general adviser of the Loiret is the vice-president. In the general secretary Monique Borrat, Sylvie Leroy and Denise Trumtel appear.
The MDF is established in the Région Centers, the Paris region, South-west, the Auvergne and the Vallée of the Rhone.
The MDF is one of 25 associations which compose the Forum for France, regrouping transpolitic founded by the Général Welshman, initiator of the nuclear policy of France, and the ambassador of France Pierre Maillard, former adviser of Charles de Gaulle.
Henri Fouquereau created this party with a double aim: “to put a term at the ultraliberal policy of Giscard and the drift of the movements gaullists”.
The French democratic Movement posts triple programs.
On the international plan, he wants the “introduction of a system international currency, based on the theories of P. Fabra and Pierre Mendès France”. He supports a policy of co-operation and assistance to the country in the process of dévoloppement. He recommends “the fight against the mondialism, against the world governorship allotted to financial and industrial international. ”
Being the Europe, the MDF is in favor of the Europe of the fatherlands. He claims the application of the Compromis of Luxembourg and the principle of Subsidiarité. He wants “Europe of the co-operations to the chart”, where each Nation would preserve its Souveraineté.
Being the French policy, the MDF conforms to the pattern Gaulliste of the Participation. It supports a participative company, a Marché framed by the Plan, “the return to the spirit of the constitution of Ve République”.
One of the files which the French democratic Movement followed is that of the unipersonal company.
It promotes a social VAT which transfers the financing from the social protection of the only work world to that of consumption.
The MDF supported the candidature of Jean-Pierre Chevènement at the time of the French presidential election of 2002 before moving away from the republican Pôle. It supported that of Nicolas Dupont-Aignan for the presidential election of 2007, which finally did not have the 500 signatures of elected officials to take part in the poll.
See too
- Gaullisme of left
External bonds
- Site of the Forum for France
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