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Gauthier Moïse André Bouchet (born November 15, 1987 in Nantes, France), is a French politician, member of the ''Front national'' (National Front, ''FN'') nationalist party, and of the ''Rassemblement Bleu Marine'' (''RBM''). He is the son of Christian Bouchet, figure of French nationalism since the 1980s (Troisième Voie, ''Lutte du peuple''...). In March 2014, he is elected as municipal councillor of Saint-Nazaire, on the list of Jean-Claude Blanchard, obtaining 13.53% of the votes, then, district councillor of Saint-Nazaire in November 2014. Since 2015, he also represents its party as the single FN councillor within the ''Communauté d'agglomération de la région nazairienne et de l'Estuaire'' (CARENE - Nazairian region and Estuary agglomeration community). Before starting his career in Saint-Nazaire, Gauthier Bouchet was one of the national leaders of ''FNJ'' (FN youth organization) where he took part of the Internet strategy, from 2010 to 2012. Since its launch in April 2014, it is one of the contributors to the ''Forum du patriotisme social'' (Social Patriotism Forum), for which he provides regular historical articles, mainly on the history of French republican ideas. Candidate to the French 2015 departmental elections in the first canton of Saint-Nazaire (West Saint-Nazaire), with Stéphanie Sutter, her colleague within the municipal council, he gathered nearly 18% of the polls (third position behind PS and UMP). == Family background == By his paternal great-grandmother, Berthe Dezoteux (1886-1969), Gauthier Bouchet is related to Pierre Marie Felicité Dezoteux (1755-1812), Baron of Taizé, sub-lieutenant in the French Cavalry Regiment of Royal-Navarre, captain during the American War of Independence, revolutionary related to La Fayette, who emigrated, then, disappointed, returned to France in 1792. Later, he became Major-General of Britain ''Chouannerie'' under the command of Joseph Puisaye. After the departure of Puisaye for England in September 1794, under the policy of pacification required by the Convention and led by General Hoche (Army of the Coasts of Brest) and Canclaux (Army of the West), opens Dezoteux negotiations with Republicans, but apart Boishardy, it has no confidence Chouans main leaders, nor even that of Hoche. However Dezoteux among the signatories, in February 1795, the Treaty of La Jaunaye, which allows temporary peace with the Convention. Captured by the Republicans in the summer of 1795 Philippe-Albert Bollet, he was imprisoned and died in Lyon in 1812. The father of Gauthier Bouchet, journalist and political activist Christian Bouchet (1955-), is also a member of the ''FN'', that he joined six months after him. He is described as having "grown up in a family of small provincial bourgeoisie, middle of artisans and shopkeepers, many of whom were related to various right-wing extremism." Ultimately, the traces of this family commitment to the extreme right can be traced to the 1920s, in particular the ''Fédération nationale des Camelots du roi'' (''Action française'' legitimists). They persist after the Second World War with the ''Algérie française'' (French Algeria) movement in both antigaullism and anticommunism. Christian Bouchet is politicized for its part since the aftermath of May 68, and therefore militates in various nationalist organizations, even revolutionary nationalists. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Gauthier Bouchet」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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