National Council of European Resistance
European far-right political organization / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The National Council of European Resistance (French: Conseil national de la résistance européenne, officially abbreviated as CNRE) is a France-based pan-European far-right political organization[lower-alpha 1] co-founded by Renaud Camus and Karim Ouchikh on 9 November 2017 (9 November 2017) by analogy to the National Council of the Resistance.[4] It has links to the identitarian movement.[5][6]
Conseil national de la résistance européenne | |
Abbreviation | CNRE |
---|---|
Named after | National Council of the Resistance |
Formation | 9 November 2017; 6 years ago (2017-11-09) |
Founders | Renaud Camus Karim Ouchikh |
Founded at | Colombey-les-Deux-Églises |
Type | Political organization Nonprofit organization |
Registration no. | W751242801 |
Legal status | Association Loi de 1901 |
Focus | Defence of European civilization |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Field | Political advocacy |
Membership (2018) | 32 Council members[1] |
Renaud Camus | |
Karim Ouchikh | |
vacant[2] | |
Key people | |
Affiliations | List of affiliations
|
Website | cnre |
Politics of France |
The council is intended to bring together qualified French and European personalities who aspire to "work for the defence of European civilization"[7]—to oppose the Great Replacement, immigration to Europe, and, more generally, to defeat replacist totalitarianism,[7][8] a concept theorized by Renaud Camus.[9][10][11]
Membership in the council is strictly enlarged by co-option.[7] Several high-ranking European officials have taken part, such as former President of the Czech Republic Václav Klaus, former members of the European Parliament Jean-Yves Le Gallou and Paul-Marie Coûteaux, former member of the European Parliament Janice Atkinson, former representative to the National Assembly of France Christian Vanneste, Belgian member of parliament Filip Dewinter, or Africanist historian Bernard Lugan.[1]