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Pierre Biétry


Pierre Biétry (9 May 1872 – 3 December 1918) was a French syndicalist and politician who initially followed orthodox socialism before moving to the right. He was the pioneer of 'Yellow socialism', a movement that has been portrayed as a forerunner of fascism. He was also the maternal grandfather of journalist and White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger.

Born in Fêche-l'Église, he emigrated to Algeria as a 13-year-old and stayed four years in the colony before returning home. Upon his return he became a member of the French Workers' Party (POF) and was praised in their paper, Le Socialiste, for his activity on their behalf in Franche-Comté. He was also for a time associated with the followers of Jules Guesde.

He was active in a series of strikes between 1898 and 1901, even leading a march of workers in Paris in 1899. His break with socialism occurred around this time, largely as a result of his opposition to the idea of a general strike as well as his overall disillusionment with the failure of socialist activity in France. This, coupled with his advocation of class co-operation to alleviate working class suffering, saw him quit the POF in 1900. He came to advocate non-political trade union activity and a corporatist relationship between the unions and the employers. He formed his own trade union, the Fédération nationale des jaunes de France in 1902. As a political arm to his union he also formed the National Socialist Party in 1903. Initially the new movement was fairly low key but it gained a surge in support in 1910-11 after a series of violent acts by the Confédération générale du travail led to many more conservative workers deserting their ranks. Biétry's somewhat unusual approach to politics and his muddied ideology earned him widespread coverage in the press, where he was reported on as something of an oddity.


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