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Jean-Claude Lefort

Jean-Claude Lefort
Member of the National Assembly
for Val-de-Marne's 10th constituency
In office
23 June 1988 – 19 June 2007
Preceded byproportionally by department
Succeeded byPierre Gosnat
Parliamentary groupGDR
Personal details
Born(1944-12-15)15 December 1944
Paris, Seine, France
Died19 June 2024(2024-06-19) (aged 79)
Political partyCommunist

Jean-Claude Lefort (15 December 1944 – 19 June 2024) was a French politician. He was a French Communist Party deputy from Val-de-Marne from 1988 to 2007.

Life

Born in Paris, Lefort spent his childhood and youth in Bagnolet, Seine-Saint-Denis, in modest circumstances. His father, a workman, had taken up arms alongside the Republican faction in the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War, while his mother was a childcare staffer at a school.[1]

As a member of the national bureau of the Mouvement jeunes communistes de France (MJCF) and, beginning in 1964, of the French Communist Party, he was Party Secretary General Georges Marchais's private secretary. In 1983 he became secretary of the Party's Val-de-Marne federation; the Party's membership at this time was some 30,000.

Lefort was elected deputy from Val-de-Marne's 10th constituency, a seat that he held from 1988 to 2007.

As a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee across three sittings of French Parliament ("législatures"), he took part in many international negotiations and busied himself with many matters.[1] In 1998, he proposed to create an "investigative committee into French responsibility in the genocide perpetrated in Rwanda".[2] Lefort eventually became this body's vice-chairman, although it was now named the Mission d'information parlementaire sur le Rwanda, but he found himself disagreeing with the mission report's final conclusions and refused to be counted as a co-author.[3]

In memory of the struggle against fascism in Spain, Lefort was a founding co-chairman of the Association of Friends of Combatants in Republican Spain (Association des amis des combattants en Espagne républicaine; Acer), with José Fort and François Asensi. Thanks to his prerogatives within the Foreign Affairs Committee, he was able to recover part of the International Brigades' archives that had been deposited in Moscow.[1]

Lefort was rapporteur on economic relations between the European Union and the United States. He participated in the World Trade Organization's (WTO) working meetings from 1999 to 2007. Noting the absence of parliamentary control over the executive's various international activities, he sought to establish a delegation in Parliament that would be in charge of such issues. He also authored parliamentary reports on the South. He wrote a report on the agreements between European Union (EU) countries and member countries of the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) with the references "Has the WTO lost the South?" and also "EU–OACPS: holding out a hand or a fist?"

Beginning in 2007, Lefort was the honorary chairman of Appui Rwanda, a support association for survivors of the Tutsi genocide in Rwanda in 1994.[4]

In May 2009, Lefort was elected chairman of the Association France-Palestine Solidarité (AFPS), after the movement's second congress. He succeeded Bernard Ravenel. He was the coordinator of the National Support Committee for Salah Hamouri.

In October 2013, Lefort called for Minister of the Interior Manuel Valls to resign over his policies towards the Romani people. He reminded the Socialist minister of his own emigration from Spain to flee Francisco Franco's régime, and compared it to the Romani people's situation, suffering discrimination in their countries of origin. He referred to himself as "Jean-Claude Lefort, fils de Manouche" ("Jean-Claude Lefort, Gipsy's son").[5].

In June 2015, he warned Muslims against Israeli products, a warning that the press commented on.[6] Gilles-William Goldnadel filed a complaint against him in the name of the association France-Israël.[6] Lefort won the case, however.[7]

Lefort quit the French Communist Party on 19 January 2024 "with great pain" following a dispute with his secretary general, Fabien Roussel over the Israel–Hamas war.[1]

Lefort died of cancer on 19 June 2024.[1]

Awards

On 7 December 2011, Lefort was decorated with the knight's insignia of the Legion of Honour by Cécile Rol-Tanguy, herself Commander of the Legion of Honour and a recipient of the Resistance Medal, in the presence of the Ambassador of Palestine to France, Hael Al Fahoum, and Pierre Gosnat.

Mandates

  • 23 June 1988 – 1 April 1993: deputy for Val-de-Marne's 10th constituency
  • 2 April 1993 – 21 April 1997: reelected
  • 1 June 1997 – 18 June 2002: reelected
  • 19 June 2002 – 19 June 2007: reelected

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Mort de Jean-Claude Lefort, ancien député et militant de la justice humaine - L'Humanité". https://www.humanite.fr (in French). 20 June 2024. Retrieved 20 June 2024. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  2. ^ Commission d'enquête sur le Rwanda (Template:1er avril 2005). Travaux préparatoires.
  3. ^ « La mission d’information parlementaire est passée à côté d’une vérité qu’il lui fallait rechercher coûte que coûte », interview parue dans la revue La Nuit rwandaise.
  4. ^ Site de l'association Appui Rwanda, page consultée le 19 avril 2008.
  5. ^ La tribune de Jean-Claude Lefort, blog sur mediapart.fr/, 4 octobre 2013.
  6. ^ a b Un ex-député communiste met en garde les musulmans contre des produits casher, lefigaro.fr, 13 juin 2015
  7. ^ "Relaxe de Jean-Claude Lefort : le Parquet fait appel". POLITIS (in French). 30 June 2016. Retrieved 20 June 2024.

See also

External links