Rex Popular Front Front populaire de Rex | |
---|---|
Founder | Léon Degrelle |
Founded | 2 November 1935 |
Dissolved | 30 March 1945 |
Split from | Catholic Party |
Headquarters | Brussels, Belgium |
Newspaper | Le Pays Réel |
Paramilitary wing | Formations de Combat[1][2] |
Ideology | Belgian nationalism Belgian royalism Political Catholicism[3] Authoritarian conservatism Corporate statism[4] Fascism (from 1937)[5][6] Nazism (from 1940)[7] |
Political position | Far-right |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Political alliance | VNV (1936–1937)[8] |
Colours | Red Black |
Anthem | Vers l'Avenir transl. "Towards the future" |
Party flag | |
The Rex Popular Front (French: Front populaire de Rex),[9] Rexist Party, or simply Rex, was a far-right Catholic authoritarian and corporatist[10] political party active in Belgium from 1935 until 1945. The party was founded by a journalist, Léon Degrelle,[11] It advocated Belgian unitarism and royalism. Initially, the party ran in both Flanders and Wallonia, but it never achieved much success outside Wallonia and Brussels. Its name was derived from the Roman Catholic journal and publishing company Christus Rex (Latin for Christ the King).
The highest electoral achievement of the Rexist Party was 21 out of 202 deputies (with 11.4% of the vote) and twelve senators in the 1936 election.[12] Never a mass movement, it was on the decline by 1938. During the German occupation of Belgium in World War II, Rex was the most significant collaborationist group in French-speaking Belgium, paralleled by the Vlaamsch Nationaal Verbond (VNV) in Flanders. By the war's end, Rex was widely discredited and banned following the liberation.
Initially modelled on Italian Fascism and Spanish Falangism, it later drew closer to German Nazism. The Party espoused a "right-wing revolution" and the dominance of the Catholic Church in Belgium,[13] but its ideology came to be vigorously opposed by the leader of the Belgian Church Cardinal van Roey, who called Rexism a "danger to the church and the country".[12]
... fascist Italy ... developed a state structure known as the corporate state with the ruling party acting as a mediator between 'corporations' making up the body of the nation. Similar designs were quite popular elsewhere in the 1930s. The most prominent examples were Estado Novo in Portugal (1932–1968) and Brazil (1937–1945), the Austrian Standestaat (1933–1938), and authoritarian experiments in Estonia, Romania, and some other countries of East and East-Central Europe,
Brustein 1988
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Griffin132
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).