Left Party (France)
| Left Party Parti de gauche | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | PG | 
| Coordinators | Éric Coquerel Danielle Simonnet | 
| Founders | Jean-Luc Mélenchon Marc Dolez | 
| Founded | 1 February 2009 | 
| Split from | Socialist Party | 
| Headquarters | 20–22 Rue Doudeauville, 75018 Paris | 
| Newspaper | L'Insoumission Hebdo (until 2022) | 
| Membership (2018) | 6,000 | 
| Ideology | |
| Political position | Left-wing to far-left | 
| National affiliation | New Popular Front (2024–present) New Ecological and Social People's Union (2022–2024) | 
| European Parliament group | European United Left-Nordic Green Left | 
| Colours | Red Green | 
| National Assembly | 20 / 577 | 
| Senate | 0 / 348 | 
| European Parliament | 2 / 81 | 
| Regional Councils | 7 / 1,880 | 
| Party flag | |
| Website | |
| lepartidegauche.fr | |
The Left Party (French: Parti de gauche, PG) is a left-wing to far-left, democratic socialist political party in France, founded in 2009 by Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Marc Dolez after their departure from the Socialist Party (PS). The PG claims to bring together personalities and groups from different political traditions; it claims a socialist, ecologist and republican orientation.
Politically located between the Socialist Party and the French Communist Party, the Left Party intends to federate all the sensitivities of the anti-liberal left—which they also call "the other left"—within the same alliance. In 2008, the PG joined forces with the Communist Party of the United Left and six other left-wing and far-left organizations in the coalition of the Left Front, of which Jean-Luc Mélenchon was the candidate for the presidential election.
The PG was co-chaired from 2010 by Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Martine Billard. In 2016, the Left Party had 8,000 members. At the end of 2014, Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Martine Billard resigned, and the party leadership was then collectively ensured by the national secretariat. The weekly newspaper, L'Intérêt général (formerly À gauche) is sent to all members but also to simple subscribers. It is printed at more than 15,000 copies a week.
In 2016, in view of the presidential and legislative elections of the following year, Jean-Luc Mélenchon formed a new movement, La France Insoumise, that the Left Party helped to animate.