Union Démocratique Bretonne

Breton Democratic Union
Unvaniezh Demokratel Breizh
French name Union démocratique bretonne
Spokeswoman Mona Bras
Founded January 4, 1964 (1964-01-04)
Split from Movement for the Organization of Britanny (MOB)
Headquarters Nantes
Newspaper Le Peuple breton
Youth wing UDB Youth (UDBy)
Spokesman Nil Caouissin
Membership  (2010) 850
Ideology Breton nationalism
Social Democracy
Democratic Socialism
Regionalism
Green Politics
Autonomism
Political position Left-wing[1][2]
European affiliation European Free Alliance
European Parliament group The Greens–European Free Alliance
French affiliation Regions and Peoples with Solidarity (RPS)
Colors Yellow
Regional Councils of Brittany
0 / 83
National Assembly of France
1 / 577
Senate of France
0 / 348
European Parliament
0 / 754
Website
www.udb-bzh.net

Politics of Brittany

The Breton Democratic Union (Breton: Unvaniezh Demokratel Breizh, French: Union Démocratique Bretonne) is a Breton nationalist,[3] autonomist,[4] and regionalist[5][6] political party in Brittany (Bretagne administrée) and Loire-Atlantique. The UDB advocates devolution for Brittany as well as the promotion of the Breton language and its associated culture.

The Breton Democratic Union held three seats on the Regional Council of Brittany since March 2004. A fourth seat was held by Christian Troadec, mayor of Carhaix who, although not a member of the organization was considered close to it. He chose, however, to leave the regional majority the 18 December 2008 over the hospital of Carhaix question.[7]

The UDB is allied with Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV) and is a member of the European Free Alliance (EFA). The party supports the creation of a Federal Europe.[8]

In March 2010, via their electoral alliance, Europe Ecologie Bretagne (EEB), the UDB has won 4 seats on the council of the French administrative region of Brittany. The Socialist Party (PS) refused to align themselves with EEB to fight the second round of the election -the result being the UDB will not be represented in government- but 4 councillors is still an achievement.

History

Foundation

The UDB was founded in 1964 in Rennes by a group of about fifteen young people, most of them students, often from cultural organizations (Ar Falz, Bagadou, etc.) and influenced by socialist ideas.

The majority belonged to the MOB organization which also included former militants of Breton Nationalist Party and supporters of French Algeria, which was a cause of tensions.

The first congress of the UDB took place in December 1964 in Quimper, with a mere 18 participants.

The UDB was founded in opposition to the practice of torture in Algeria and compared the decolonization of the Maghreb to Brittany.

The structure of the new party was then close to that of those of the far-left with a strict internal discipline. Its charter, elaborated in 1964 supported a planned economy and the creation of an European Federation. It claimed to be hostile to militarism and colonialism, which was an innovation in the Breton movement at the time.

The creation of the UDB marked a rupture in the history of the Breton nationalist movement which, until then, was rather right-wing.

It took part in the 1965 local elections. Jean-Paul Berre was elected on a list of the Union of the left dominated by the French Communist Party in Guilvinec and becomes deputy-mayor and first elected official of the UDB.

Beginnings (1966–69)

The first years were difficult. The party grew slowly and had little resources. It approached the other left-wing parties, in particular the PSU and FGDS. After 1967, however, recruitment intensified, in particular in student unions.

In the 1969 constitutional referendum, the UDB called for a "no" vote, like most of the left.

Crisis of 1969–70

Internal contradictions within the party exploded during the 1969 congress when Alain Guyader challenged the charter of the UDB and proposed a line inspired by Rosa Luxemburg's ideas. Moreover, he refused to condemn the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, one year before.

The conflict led to the exclusion of Jean-Yves Guiomar and Alain Guyader in 1970 for "rejection of democratic centralism, constant undervaluation of the adversary, impatience and the theory of active minorities, and the idolization of spontaneity".

Success (1970–78)

The party was rebuilt during the congress of Guidel and adopted democratic centralism. It also adopted a Marxist line and demanded in a modified version of its charter the abolition of capitalism and the collective appropriation of the means of production. At the same time, a UDB list won 11.5% of the votes in a local by-election in Auray, primarily thanks to the personality of its candidate Sten Kidna. In the 1971 local elections the UDB took part in the lists of the Union of the Left, except in Brest where it polled 4.8% running independently.

The number of party members – 243 in 1971 – grew throughout the 1970s, thanks to the involvement of the party in social conflicts.

During the 1973 general election, the UDB nominated 5 candidates who obtained from 0.8% to 3.2% in spite of a large showing by other left-wing parties. The most successful candidate, Erwan Evenou, won more than 3% in the Hennebont constituency.

During the cantonal election held that same year, it won 4.45% of the votes – 6.7% in Lorient. In the 1974 presidential election it campaigned in the second round for François Mitterrand.

In the 1976 cantonal elections the UDB ran 9 candidates who won 5.27% on average. The local elections of 1977 enabled it to get 35 seats on the lists of the Union of the Left. In the 1978 general election, the party ran 17 candidates in a strongly polarized environment.

Crisis of 1978–84

Party growth slowed down due to the failure of the legislative elections and the collapse of the United Left, in which the UDB was firmly anchored. While the party scored encouraging results (5.63%) in the 1979 cantonal elections, these were marked by very low voter turnout.

The victory of the left in 1981, paradoxically, increased the UDB's loss of momentum. Although policies in line with UDB positions were passed (such as decentralization, the cancelling of the Plogoff nuclear plant and the abolition of the death penalty), the UDB could claim little responsibility for them compared to the then-triumphant PS, and its usefulness seemed questionable.

In 1984, during the congress of Lorient, one of the Léon sections, whose motion had won a third of the votes, created a splinter group, Frankiz Breizh, based primarily in Brest and in its immediate surroundings.

Crisis of 1984–2001

After the departure of the Brest militants, the party was rebuilt and approached the European Free Alliance which then united about fifteen European regionalist parties of the centre-left. Despite considerable financial problems, it ran about thirty candidates in the 1985 cantonal elections and won on average 4.2%. Results in the Brest area, however, had considerably declined.

The 1986 regional elections, characterized by a strong bipolarisation, were a failure for the party which won only 1.51%. During this time, the contacts with the Plaid Cymru became regular and in 1987 the UDB joined the European Free Alliance.

In the 1988 presidential election, the UDB supported the former Communist Pierre Juquin in the first round and François Mitterrand in the runoff.

In 1992, following the failure of the negotiations with the Greens, the UDB presented its own list along with Emgann (which would eventually withdraw because of a nomination problem). The results were disappointing (2%) and strengthened the mistrust of the UDB towards alliances with the other nationalist groups.

The congress of Saint-Brieuc, in 1994, was an occasion for reconciliation with Frankiz Breizh whose political positions had never differed much from those of the UDB. The two organizations took part in November of the same year in the creation of the Federation of Regions and Peoples with Solidarity with the Occitan Party, the Party of the Corsican Nation and Basque Solidarity.

2001–present

After 2001, the party experienced notable membership growth as well as an improvement in its electoral results.

In the 2001 local elections it chose to take part in lists of the united left except in Guingamp, Redon, Lannion and Saint-Nazaire. Their results varied between 6.02% in Saint-Nazaire and 13.7% in Guingamp. The UDB remained in the second round in Sarzeau and Guingamp. Moreover, the party participated in the victorious list of Christian Troadec in Carhaix.

This success encouraged the UDB to consider an autonomous list in the 2004 regional elections. It finally resolved to open negotiations with The Greens. The UDB was in a strong position. A separate regionalist list could have won between 3 and 5%, thus cutting into the vote share of the ecologists and condemning their efforts to assert their independence from the Socialist Party.

The elections themselves were a success for The Greens-UDB list, which won nearly 10%. The UDB won three seats and a vice-presidency.

The 2005 French European Constitution referendum caused several well-known members of the UDB to call for a "no" vote, against the official position of the party which called for a vote in favour of the proposed constitution.

During the 2007 presidential election, the UDB supported Green candidate Dominique Voynet.

In the 2009 European Parliament election, the party supported the Europe Écologie electoral coalition, which included The Greens.

In June 2012 Paul Molac was elected to the National Assembly of France, the first Breton autonomist to do so.[9] He stood for the UDB as a Europe Ecology – The Greens candidate in Morbihan uncontested by their electoral allies, the Socialist Party.[10]

In the 2015 regional elections, the UDB made an alliance with Christian Troadec, one of the leaders of the Breton autonomy. However, the UDB gained only 6,7% of votes, which is insufficient to ensure the election of regional counsilliors (a party must win at least 10% of votes to advance to the second round).[11]

References

  1. Peter Dragicevich (January 2010). Brittany and Normandy. Lonely Planet. p. 275. ISBN 978-1-74104-238-2.
  2. John T. Koch (2006). Celtic culture: a historical encyclopedia. Vol. 1-. ABC-CLIO. p. 1342. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0.
  3. Peter Berresford Ellis (1985). The Celtic Revolution: A Study in Anti-imperialism. Y Lolfa. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-86243-096-2.
  4. Jason Sorens (13 February 2012). Secessionism: Identity, Interest, and Strategy. MQUP. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-7735-8751-9.
  5. David Scott Bell (1982). Contemporary French Political Parties. CUP Archive. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-7099-0633-9.
  6. Régis Dandoy; Arjan Schakel (19 November 2013). Regional and National Elections in Western Europe: Territoriality of the Vote in Thirteen Countries. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-137-02544-9.
  7. http://www.abp-tv.com/index.php?video_id=259
  8. Andrew C. Gould; Anthony M. Messina (17 February 2014). Europe's Contending Identities: Supranationalism, Ethnoregionalism, Religion, and New Nationalism. Cambridge University Press. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-107-03633-8.
  9. http://7seizh.info/paul-molac-premier-depute-autonomiste-breton-elu-a-lassemblee-nationale-francaise/
  10. http://www.morbihan.lemensuel.com/actualite/article/2011/12/02/legislatives-paul-molac-candidat-du-ps-des-ecolos-et-de-ludb-a-ploermel-10432.html
  11. http://www.breizh-info.com/2015/12/08/regionales-2015-le-pari-rate-de-christian-troadec/
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