Central Revolutionary Committee
- Politics of France
- Political parties
- Elections
The Central Revolutionary Committee (French: Comité révolutionnaire central, CRC) was a French Blanquist political party founded in 1881 and dissolved in 1898.
The CRC was founded by Édouard Vaillant to continue the political struggle of Auguste Blanqui (1805–1881). It was weakened by a split in 1888, when numerous members including Henri Rochefort followed General Georges Ernest Boulanger who synthesized Jacobin nationalism with socialism and many saw Boulangism as a possible way to socialism. Following the Boulangist dissidence, Vaillant re-centered the party around the idea of syndicalism and strike. The CRC was further reinforced in 1896 by the affiliation of the Revolutionary Communist Alliance (ACR), formed by dissidents of the Revolutionary Socialist Workers' Party (POSR).
The CRC was dissolved into the Socialist Revolutionary Party in 1898.
Notable members
- Édouard Vaillant
See also
- History of the Left in France
- Socialist Revolutionary Party
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- Louis Dubreuilh (1905−1918)
- Ludovic-Oscar Frossard (1918−1920)
- Paul Faure (1920−1940)
- Vacant (1940−1943)
- Daniel Mayer (1943−1946)
- Guy Mollet (1946−1969)
- Paris Commune
- French Socialist Party (Federation of the Socialist Workers of France and Revolutionary Socialist Workers' Party)
- Socialist Party of France (French Workers' Party and Socialist Revolutionary Party)
- Globe Congress
- Second International
- L'Humanité
- Le Populaire
- Tours Congress
- French Turn (Trotskyism)
- Matignon Agreements
- The Vichy 80
- French Resistance (Brutus Network)
- National Council of Resistance
- Issy-les-Moulineaux Congress
- Revolutionary socialism
- Blanquism
- Marxism
- Possibilism
- Social democracy
- Democratic socialism
- Neosocialism
- French Communist Party
- Socialist Party of France – Jean Jaurès Union / Socialist Republican Union / National Popular Rally
- Internationalist Workers Party
- Workers and Peasants' Socialist Party
- Democratic Socialist Party
- Union of the Socialist Left / Unified Socialist Party / Union of Clubs for the Renewal of the Left / Union of Socialist Groups and Clubs
- Socialist Party
- Lefts Cartel (1924–1934)
- Popular Front (1936–1938)
- Tripartisme (1944–1947)
- Third Force (1947–1958)
- Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left (1965–1968)
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