Moscow handed down specific instructions to European Communist parties. With the establishment of the Cominform in September 1946, and its criticism of the French and Italian parties for their attempts to take power through parliamentary means, Moscow signaled a new, more aggressive campaign to disrupt the American aid program in Europe. To be sure, ample reasons already existed to justify work stoppages and social agitation. Prices of basic commodities food, coal, gas, electricity, and transport all rose as poor harvests, slow industrial activity, and a damaged infrastructure conspired to lower living standards to intolerable levels. 38 Strikes broke out in virtually all industries just as the nation was preparing for municipal elections. These disruptions aided the right as well: in October, the Rassemblement du Peuple Français (RPF), the new party founded by Charles de Gaulle, captured an unexpectedly large portion of the vote in town councils across the country: its 38 percent was larger even than the PCF's 30 percent. 39 The parties of the center, from the Socialists and the MRP to the reemergent Radicals, felt under siege. Léon Blum, the Socialist leader, lashed out at both right and left: ''There exists a Communist danger against personal and civil liberties. But against the same liberties there exists a Caesarist danger of which we must be aware, before which we do not have the right to close our eyes." Blum called for a front of the centrist parties, a Third Force, to stabilize the nation. 40
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Within a month, the premier Paul Ramadier fell and was replaced by Robert Schuman, formerly the MRP minister of finance, known only for his orthodox budgetary views and the curious fact that, as he came from Lorraine, he had served in the German army in 1914. Schuman quickly formed a Third Force government, with Socialist, MRP, and Radical members. 41 His appointment of the Socialist Jules Moch as interior minister proved shrewd. Moch instantly mobilized the prefectural bureaucracy, the national guard, and the army to repress the strikes, which at their peak involved over 3 million workers and featured the storming of the Palais de Justice in Marseille. With Moch leading the repression, the left fought the left. Moch and Schuman shattered the legacy of the Popular Front and the wartime resistance coalition. Defeated, France's Communist-dominated labor confederation, the confédération Générale du Travail (CGT), split, with the minority Force Ouvrière breaking off to form a non-Communist labor movement. Ambassador Caffery crowed that this was "the most important event that has occurred in France since the Liberation." The center had held. 42
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Whether such a centrist force could hold off the enemies of the re-
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