1990s Founded in 1994, the party nominated
Philippe de Villiers as candidate in the
1995 presidential election. He obtained over a million votes and 4.74% of the popular vote, but failed to pass 5%. In the
1997 legislative election, the MPF joined forces with the
National Centre of Independents and Peasants as
La Droite Indépendante (LDI). Philippe de Villiers was re-elected, as was one of his allies, who nonetheless left the party soon thereafter. It contested the
1999 European Parliamentary elections in alliance with the
Rassemblement pour la France (RPF) of
Charles Pasqua, the combination winning 13 seats, surpassing
Nicolas Sarkozy's
Rassemblement pour la République (RPR) list.
2000s The MPF formed an alliance with the RPF, but Villiers fell out with Pasqua the following year. Standing by itself in the
2004 European elections, the MPF obtained 7.6% of the popular vote and returned three
Members of the European Parliament (MEPs). The party was a member of the
Independence and Democracy group in the European Parliament. Villiers declared his candidacy for the
2007 presidential election and appointed a secretary-general,
Guillaume Peltier, then ranked second in the party. He ranked sixth out of twelve candidates, obtaining 2.23% (818,407 votes), down almost 2% from his previous candidacy in 1995. His best scores came in
Pays de la Loire with 4.99% and
Poitou-Charentes with 3.58%. Unlike in 1995, he failed to win in his department of
Vendée, where he obtained 11.28% (over 20% in 1995). In the
2007 legislative election, MPF candidates ran nationwide, but only one candidate was elected –
Véronique Besse in
Vendée's 4th constituency by the first round. Former MPF member
Joël Sarlot was also elected by the first round in the
Vendée's 5th constituency. Sarlot subsequently lent support to the victorious
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) in the National Assembly. Sarlot's election was invalidated in 2007 and
Dominique Souchet, a
Villierist won the ensuing
by-election easily. Other candidates, mostly in the south of France obtained important scores.
Jacques Bompard, in the 4th constituency of
Vaucluse won over 20%. In the
2009 European Parliament election, the party ran with
Hunting, Fishing, Nature, Tradition under the umbrella of the
Libertas political movement led by Irish businessman
Declan Ganley. It won 4.8% and only
Philippe de Villiers was re-elected:
Patrick Louis was defeated. The MPF was the only Libertas affiliated party throughout the whole of the European Union to elect MEPs in 2009. The party was member of the
Europe of Freedom and Democracy (EFD) group during the
7th European Parliament. In August 2009, Philippe de Villiers announced that the MPF would join the
Liaison Committee for the Presidential Majority, which co-ordinates the member parties of the majority supporting the policies of President
Nicolas Sarkozy.
Decline (2010s) During the 2010s, the MPF gradually lost all its electoral representation. The party did not take part in the
2012 and
2017 presidential elections. Party leader Villiers expressed his personal support for
Marine Le Pen in the
2017 presidential election. == Ideology ==