19th Century • 1815: The
Doctrinaires were formed. • 1817: Former
Feuillants re-united in the
Democrats, also known as
Liberals. • 1848: A radical faction forms the
Radicals, supporting the
Second Republic in opposition to the Orléanists and the
Moderate Republicans emerge • 1870: The
Third Republic is formed. • 1871: The Moderate Republicans split into the
Opportunist Republicans, whose official name was
Republican Left (GR), and the
Republican Union (UR) • 1885: The GR and the UR are united in the
Democratic Union (UD). • 1889: The
Progressive Republicans, whose official name was
Liberal Republican Union (ULR), are formed. The remaining Opportunist Republicans formed the
National Republican Association (ANR). • 1894: The
Progressive Union (UR) is formed.
The Republican tradition • 1901: The centre-right liberal
Democratic Republican Alliance (ARD) and the
Popular Liberal Action (ALP) are formed. • 1902: The Progressive Union (UR) is merged into the ARD. • 1903: The more conservative
Republican Federation (FR) is founded and the Liberal Republican Union (ULR) and National Republican Association (ANR) are merged into it. • 1911: The ARD is renamed
Democratic Republican Party (PRD). • 1917: The ARD goes back to its original name. • 1919: The ALP is merged into the FR. • 1920: The ARD is further renamed
Social, Democratic and Republican Party (PRDS). • 1926: The ARD is finally renamed
Democratic Alliance (AD). • 1945: The liberal-conservative
Republican Party of Liberty (PRL), successor of the FR, is founded. • 1948: The liberal-conservative
National Centre of Independents and Peasants (CNIP) is founded. • 1949: The declining AD and the PRL are absorbed by the CNIP. • 1962: A group of splinters from the CNIP, led by
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, oppose the party's decision to withdraw support to President
Charles de Gaulle and, in order to continue to be part of the government, form the
Independent Republicans (RI). • 1974: Giscard d'Estaing is elected
President of France in the
presidential election. • 1976: The RI are a founding member of the
European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party. • 1977: The RI are renamed
Republican Party (PR). • 1978: The PR joins forces with the
Centre of Social Democrats, the
Radical Party and the
Social Democratic Party to form the
Union for French Democracy (UDF). • 1995: The
Popular Party for French Democracy (PPDF) is formed by supporters of Giscard, including several Republicans, within the UDF. • 1997: The PR, under the new leader
Alain Madelin, is renamed
Liberal Democracy (DL). • 1998: The DL separates from the UDF, but a group of dissidents form the
Independent Republican and Liberal Pole (PRIL) in order to remain loyal to the UDF. • 2002: The DL and the PPDF merge with the Gaullist-conservative
Rally for the Republic (RPR) to form the
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP). Liberal factions within the new party include
The Reformers, the "Liberal Clubs", "Liberal Generation" and the "Free Right", as well as the Radical Party (see below). • 2007: The UDF is transformed into the
Democratic Movement (see below). Dissidents form the
New Centre (NC) and the
Civic Alliance for Democracy in Europe (ACDE) to continue the alliance with the UMP. • 2009: Former UDF members formed the
Centrist Alliance (AC). • 2012: The NC, the AC, the ACDE,
Modern Left and other minor centre-right or centrist parties form the
Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI), which aims at becoming a centrist alternative to the UMP, while being in alliance with it.
Democratic European Force splits from the NC. • 2014: The UDI and the Democratic Movement form a short-lived alliance named
The Alternative. • 2015: The UMP is transformed into
The Republicans (LR). • 2016: The UDI joins the
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party. The NC is transformed into
The Centrists (LC), which continues to be part of the UDI. • 2017: A moderate faction of LR forms
Agir. • 2021: Centre-right politicians form
Horizons. • 2021: Agir and Horizons join the ⇒ LREM-led
Ensemble Citoyens.
The Radical tradition • 1901: The
Radicals organise themselves in the
Republican, Radical and Radical-Socialist Party (Rad). • 1926: Dissident Radicals form the
Independent Radicals (RI), later
Independent Radical Party (PRI). • 1946: The Radicals, along with the PRI, the
Democratic and Socialist Union of the Resistance (UDSR) and minor parties, form the
Rally of Left Republicans (RGR). • 1956: The Radicals and the other components of the RGR join forces with the
French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), however some dissidents transformed the RGR into a full-fledged party and other Radical dissidents from the
Republican Centre (CR). • 1959: The RGR merges into the Gaullist
Union for the New Republic (UNR). • 1961:
Pierre Mendès France, a leading Radical and former Prime Minister, joins the
Unified Socialist Party (PSU). • 1972: A left-wing faction forms the
Movement of Left Radicals (MRG). • 1978: The Rad becomes an affiliated member of the centrist UDF. • 1996: The MRG is renamed
Radical-Socialist Party (PRS). • 1996: The PRS is renamed
Radical Party of the Left (PRG). • 2002: The Rad leaves the UDF and becomes an affiliated member of the
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP). • 2011: The Rad cuts its ties with the UMP and joins
The Alliance. • 2012: The Rad is, along with other parties (see above), a founding member of the
Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI). • 2017: The Rad and the PRG are merged into the
Radical Movement (MR). • 2017: A group of PRG members founded
The Radicals of the Left (LRG). • 2019: A group of former members of the PRG re-form the PRG as an independent party.
Classical liberals • 2006: A group of classical liberals establish the
Liberal Alternative (AL). • 2008: A group of dissidents leaves the AL and launches the
Liberal Democratic Party (PLD). • 2012: The PLD joins the
Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI).
Democratic Movement • 2007: The
Democratic Movement (MoDem) is formed by
François Bayrou, until then leader of the
Union for French Democracy (which has suffered the split of some of its founding components in 1998–2002, see above), on the remnants of the latter party. • 2014: The MoDem and the
Union of Democrats and Independents form a short-lived alliance named
The Alternative. • 2017: The MoDem forms an alliance with
La République En Marche! and endorses its leader
Emmanuel Macron in the
presidential election (see below).
La République En Marche! • 2016:
Emmanuel Macron, a former member of the
Socialist Party, launches
La République En Marche! (EM!). • 2017: Macron is elected
President of France in the
presidential election. ==Liberal leaders==