In 1979, the
Commission Sportive Internationale, a subordinate organization of the
FIA, which was at that time the rule-making body for Formula One, was dissolved. It was replaced by the
Fédération Internationale du Sport Automobile (FISA), which would serve the same function. FISA clashed repeatedly with the
Formula One Constructors Association (FOCA), which represented the teams' interests. FOCA's chief executive at the time was
Bernie Ecclestone and his legal advisor was
Max Mosley, while the president of FISA was
Jean Marie Balestre. The two organizations' disagreements, which came to be known as the
FISA–FOCA war, resulted in several races being cancelled, or declared non-valid (e.g. the
1980 Spanish Grand Prix).
Goodyear threatened to withdraw entirely from Formula One, an event which would have been commercially disastrous for the sport, so Ecclestone organized a meeting with all team managers, Balestre, and other FISA representatives at the FIA headquarters in
Place de la Concorde,
Paris,
France. On 19 January 1981, after thirteen straight hours of negotiation, all parties present signed the first Concorde Agreement, named after the hotel in which the negotiations took place. The contract's terms remain largely confidential, though its known stipulations required the signatory teams to appear and compete in every race, and guaranteed their right to do so in order to assure the sport's newly acquired television public that they would have a race to watch. Also, perhaps most importantly, the agreement granted FOCA the right to televise Formula One races — this right was "leased" to
Formula One Promotions and Administration, a company established and owned by
Bernie Ecclestone. Another important element was the stability in rules, described as protecting the teams from "the whims of the governing body". ==Second Concorde Agreement (1987–1991)==