Background The political movement was initially founded in January 1966 as the "Nationalist Movement of Progress" (
Mouvement Nationaliste du Progrès, MNP) by head members of the nationalist magazine
Europe-Action, escorted by leaders of the
Federation of Nationalist Students and elements from the
Tixier-Vignancour Committees. Many of them, especially
Dominique Venner, had been deceived by the electoral failure (5.2%) of far-right candidate
Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour in the
1965 presidential election. The first congress was held on 30 April and 1 May 1966, for the movement to reclaim
this date, until then "reserved to [their] communist adversaries" in their views. Dominique Venner introduced the agenda of the movement behind a crowd of 300 delegates: the "defence of the Occidental civilization", which was facing three perceived dangers: "the work of falsification", set up by the elites to make the people forget its own identity and history; the "power of technology", accused of uniforming the planet; and the "demographic tide of the coloured world", which would lead to a "universal brewing" and the "disappearance of [Europeans] genetic specificity, the end of the white world and its civilization". The aim of MNP leaders was therefore to make white people realize this "state of full submission", and persuade them to "fight" and "refuse this death". The white minority government of the breakaway country
Rhodesia sent a Rhodesian flag which was prominently displayed throughout the conference.
1967 legislative elections The political party "European Rally for Liberty" (REL) was launched in November 1966 to serve as a political showcase for the MNP for the forthcoming elections, Venner asserting that they would benefit from the campaign to promote their view on the public radio and television.
Europe-Action had a weekly publication,
Europe-Action hebdomadaire, which served as an organ for the party and where the main essayists of the magazine—
Dominique Venner,
Jean Mabire,
Alain de Benoist,
François d'Orcival—wrote political articles during the campaign. The party was however only able to run 27 contenders in the
legislative election of March 1967 and fared poorly in the results, receiving 2.5% of the national votes with no elected candidate.
Dissolution Following this failure, Venner left the leadership and the REL was reorganized under the iron rule of
Pierre Bousquet and Pierre Clémenti, two former members of the
Waffen-SS. This takeover, along with the relations maintained with the German neo-Nazi
NPD and seminars held on
Mein Kampf, triggered a wave of resignations. In March 1968, an extraordinary session of the REL's nation council excluded Bousquet and Venner from the movement. The party was only able to run one candidate, Édith Gérard, in the subsequent
legislative election of June 1968. Despite the few illusions shown by REL members before the vote—Venner declared to
Rivarol before the election that "[their] aim should not be to have deputies elected, but to get [themselves] known, to impose [their] existence"—, the electoral debacle of the party confirmed the theories developed by Venner and de Benoist in 1962–1965 about the need to achieve cultural dominance before gaining the popular vote. The REL eventually disappeared in 1969 after a financial scandal. == Legacy ==