Coming from a far-right family with monarchist and
Organisation armée secrète links, in 1970 Bouchet joined the monarchist group
Restauration nationale, and, in 1971, a member of
Nouvelle Action française which was a split (called in France a "
Mao-
maurrassien" group) of the former. In 1973, he served in the
Organisation lutte du peuple, a nationalist revolutionary splitter group of the far-right movement
Ordre Nouveau intended to defend the nationalist movements of the Third World, particularly the Arab states opposed to
Zionism and what they perceived as American imperialism. He subsequently became a member of
François Duprat's
Groupes nationalistes révolutionnaires and of the (
Mouvement nationaliste révolutionnaire) of
Jean-Gilles Malliarakis. This group was absorbed by
Unité Radicale in 1998. He then went on to lead the study group
Réseau Radical which emphasised
anti-Zionism and after that the association Les Nôtres. He also led the 'radical' tendency within the
National Republican Movement and has sat on its national council. Bouchet, who was an exponent of the
Third Position until 1990, was later influenced by
Aleksandr Dugin and advocated
National Bolshevism and then
Eurasianism. After declaring that he had broken with his former activism, he joined the
Front National in 2008 and became a local branch leader from October 2010 to May 2011 and from March 2013 onwards. He has been a Front National candidate in every election since 2008 and in 2013, the Front National chose him to lead its list for the municipal elections in
Nantes (the 6th town of France). He is the father of Gauthier Bouchet, the FN municipal councillor of Saint-Nazaire. He published journals like
Lutte de Peuple and
Résistance which focused on
ultra-nationalist and anti-Zionist themes. He owned the publishing house Ars magna and Avatar which published volumes of
Savitri Devi,
Jean-François Thiriart,
Francis Parker Yockey,
Gabriele d'Annunzio,
Aleksandr Dugin and others. In the original edition of his book ''
Hitler's Priestess, Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke wrote that Bouchet has been associated with Nazi mysticism and that, whilst spending a year in India, he met Savitri Devi to study Kali Yuga and her ideas about Adolf Hitler as an Avatar. These claims did not however appear in the French language edition of the same work. In the postscript to the book Le national-socialisme et la tradition indienne'', Bouchet claimed that Goodrick-Clarkes's allegations were false, that he had met Savitri Devi only once and considered her to be a
crank, and that he has no personal interest in Nazi mysticism. Bouchet, who claims he is not an Islamophobe, has advocated a closer link between European nationalist groups and Muslim traditionalists. Christian Bouchet wrote a doctoral thesis in anthropology in the
University Paris Diderot on
Aleister Crowley and has written many books about extremist involvement in politics and religion. ==References==