Popular Liberal Action
| Popular Liberal Action Action libérale populaire | |
|---|---|
| President | Jacques Piou | 
| Deputy President | Adrien Albert Marie de Mun | 
| Founded | 1901 | 
| Dissolved | 1919 | 
| Merged into | Republican Federation | 
| Headquarters | Paris | 
| Membership (1914) | 250,000 | 
| Ideology | Liberal conservatism Christian democracy Liberal Catholicism Social Catholicism | 
| Political position | Centre-right | 
| National affiliation | Sacred Union (1914–1918) | 
| Colours | Light blue | 
| This article is part of a series on | 
| Conservatism in France | 
|---|
The Popular Liberal Action (French: Action libérale populaire, ALP), simply called Liberal Action (Action libérale), was a political party that represented Catholic supporters of the French Third Republic. It operated in the center-right, primarily to oppose the left-wing Republican coalition led by Pierre Waldeck-Rousseau and Émile Combes who pursued an anti-clerical agenda designed to weaken the Catholic Church, especially its role in education. The ALP between 1901-1914 had its best election in 1902, with 78 deputies. It built a nationwide newspaper and propaganda network, had excellent funding. There were 1200 local committees, with 200,000 dues paying members in 1906.