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Yvan Blot

Yvan Blot
Blot in 2012
Member of European Parliament
In office
25 July 1989 – 19 July 1999
Member of Parliament
In office
2 April 1986 – 14 May 1988
ConstituencyPas-de-Calais
Personal details
Born
Yvan Michel Blot

(1948-06-29)29 June 1948
Saint-Mandé, France
Died10 October 2018(2018-10-10) (aged 70)
Political party
  • RPR (until 1989)
  • FN (1989–2000)
  • UMP (2004–15)
  • RIF (2011–13)
Alma materSciences Po

Yvan Blot (29 June 1948 – 10 October 2018) was a French conservative politician. A founding member of the GRECE, he was also the co-creator and president of the Club de l'Horloge.[1]

Biography

Born on 29 June 1948 in Saint-Mandé, Yvan Blot was the son of Camille Blot and Adela Sophia Brys. He studied in Lycée Henri IV and graduated from Sciences Po and earned a doctorate in economics at the same university in 2004.[2][3][4]

Blot founded in the Cercle Pareto, a Sciences Po student organization linked to the Nouvelle Droite, and was soon joined by Jean-Yves Le Gallou, Daniel Garrigue and Guillaume Faye. Between 1971 and 1974, he wrote under the pen name "Michel Norey" racialist essays on "biological realism".[5] Dismissing the anti-Christian stance and long-term strategies Alain de Benoist and his GRECE, he co-founded in July 1974 the Club de l'Horloge.[6][5]

A former Gaullist parliamentarian (for Rally for the Republic), Blot also served as a leading civil servant under both Interior Minister Michel Poniatowski and Alain Devaquet.[7] He joined the Front National in 1989 and was elected to the European Parliament in the 1989 election.[8]

A prominent Eurosceptic, Blot played a leading role in establishing a committee to support the Bruges Group in France.[9] He also played a leading role in FN policy making, joining other Club de l'Horloge alumni such as Bruno Mégret, Henry de Lesquen and Jean-Yves Le Gallou in driving the party away from corporatism and towards neo-liberal economics.[10] He wrote for Nation Europa magazine. In the early 2000s, he became a member of the UMP.[4] He was the founder of the association "Agir pour la démocratie directe" in Paris. The mission statement of this association is to change the French constitution on the Swiss model.[11]

Blot retired from the French administration in July 2013 and became professor in direct democracy at the University of Nice, at the Catholic University of Rennes and in the University of Velikie Novgorod in Russia.[citation needed] He was a member of the French Catholic Academy[12] and a consultant for the radio station "Voice of Russia" in Paris.[13] He worked for the think tank Idexia with Charles Beigbeder and Guillaume Peltier, a group favouring the return of the former president Nicolas Sarkozy to power.[citation needed]

Blot was author of numerous essays in politics and philosophy, such as L'oligarchie au pouvoir and La démocratie directe: une chance pour la France, Les faux prophètes and Nous les enfants d'Athéna.[citation needed] his last books were L'homme défiguré (2015) and La Russie de Poutine (2015).

References

  1. ^ "France: A New Right Raises Its Voice". Time. 13 August 1979. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2007.
  2. ^ "l'Association des Sciences-Po - Fiche profil". www.sciences-po.asso.fr. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  3. ^ "Biographie Ivan Blot Inspecteur général de l´administration, Homme politique". www.whoswho.fr. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Yvan Blot, ex-RPR et ancien cadre du FN, est mort" (in French). 19 October 2018. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  5. ^ a b Lamy, Philippe. Le Club de l’Horloge (1974 -2002). Evolution et mutation d’un laboratoire idéologique. Université Paris VIII Saint-Denis (2016) (read online), pp. 24, 264–75
  6. ^ Darmon, Michaël; Rosso, Romain (1 January 1998). L'après Le Pen: enquête dans les coulisses du Front national (in French). Seuil. p. 85. ISBN 9782020307390.
  7. ^ J.G. Shields, The Extreme Right in France, Abingdon: Routlegde, 2007, p. 157
  8. ^ Shields, op cit, p. 242
  9. ^ G Harris, The Dark Side of Europe – The Extreme Right Today, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1994, p. 224
  10. ^ Shields, op cit, pp. 245-6
  11. ^ Blot, Yvan (11 February 2018). "L'Allemagne, "démocratie" sous haute surveillance". Boulevard Voltaire (in French). Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  12. ^ Blot, Ivan; ENA; Économiques, Docteur Ès Sciences; L’administration, Inspecteur Général Honoraire De; européen, ancien député du Pas-de-Calais et ancien député; directe », auteur de nombreux ouvrages dont « La démocratie; pouvoir », « L’oligarchie au; Poutine, « La Russie de; Valdaï, « L’homme défiguré » Il est membre de l’Académie catholique de France Il est aussi membre du comité des experts de Rethinking Russia et du Club d’experts de (2 March 2018). "L'idéologie de la classe dirigeante - Conférence d'Ivan Blot". Polémia (in French). Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  13. ^ Laruelle, Marlene (1 July 2015). Eurasianism and the European Far Right: Reshaping the Europe–Russia Relationship. Lexington Books. p. 23. ISBN 9781498510691.

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