Jacques Ploncard d'Assac
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Jacques Ploncard (13 March 1910 – 20 February 2005), also called "Jacques Ploncard d'Assac", was a French writer and journalist and a political activist — he was, among other things, a member of the Parti Populaire Français. Following the fall of the Vichy regime, he escaped to Portugal's Estado Novo in 1945, where he counselled Salazar. He introduced Yves Guérin-Sérac, one of the co-founder of the OAS, to the PIDE. After the April 1974 Carnation Revolution, he returned to France and collaborated on Présent, a newspaper which maintains loose links with Jean-Marie Le Pen's National Front. Jacques Ploncard also wrote Doctrines of Nationalism.
His son, Philippe Ploncard, was also a member of the National Front.
Selected bibliography[]
- Pourquoi je suis anti-juif (Why I Am Anti-Jew), 1938
- La Franc-maçonnerie ennemie de l'Europe (Freemasonry, Europe's Enemy), 1943
- Doctrines du nationalisme, 1958
- Salazar, 1967
Under the pen-name "La Vouldie":
- Mme Simone de Beauvoir et ses mandarins (Madame Simone de Beauvoir and her Mandarins), 1955
- 1910 births
- 2005 deaths
- People from Chalon-sur-Saône
- French Popular Party politicians
- People affiliated with Action Française
- People of Vichy France
- French Integralism
- Order of the Francisque recipients
- French male non-fiction writers
- 20th-century French journalists
- 20th-century French male writers