François de La Rocque (born 1885, Cantal, France—died April 28, 1946, Paris) was a French fascist and army officer who sought dictatorial power but merely helped bring down the government of Édouard Daladier in 1934.
The son of a general, Rocque was from a long line of career officers. After graduating from the prestigious military academy of Saint-Cyr (1916), he served with distinction in World War I and was on the staff of Marshal Ferdinand Foch. After tours of duty in Poland (1922–24) and Morocco (1924–28), he resigned from the army.
In 1931 Rocque became president of the Croix de Feu (“Cross of Fire”), originally an organization of veterans decorated at the front, which espoused ultranationalistic views with vaguely fascist overtones. Rocque displayed a particular talent for mob oratory. On February 6, 1934, thousands of people and members of virtually every political group in France demonstrated opposite the Chamber of Deputies, ostensibly over the Stavisky affair (a financial scandal that allegedly involved government officials). Rocque stole the show with his flaming invective. He might have been able to make himself dictator then, but at the crucial moment he failed to act. The Daladier government resigned that night, highlighting the Third Republic’s weakness.
Thereafter, Rocque’s organization suffered a loss of prestige and finally was dissolved by the Popular Front government in 1936. Rocque then formed the Parti Social Français, an openly fascist political party. In the mid-1940s he was arrested by the Nazis and spent more than two years in a German prison, from which he was liberated by the Allies. Officially disgraced in his homeland, he was forced to retire from politics.