Yes, because of the vagueness of the definition I used. I used it because Peronism has no good simple definition, as it's more of a historical phenomenon than a clear ideology. Gaullism is pretty different from Peronism, and better-defined. Gaullism is indisputably center-right, and has some clear tenets like presidential republicanism (owing to its Orléanist roots), France maintaining a world power status independent of its alliance with America and Britain, and state intervention in a market economy. It doesn't have an intense mutual hatred with the French cultural elite the way Peronism does in Argentina.
Yes, because of the vagueness of the definition I used. I used it because Peronism has no good simple definition, as it's more of a historical phenomenon than a clear ideology. Gaullism is pretty different from Peronism, and better-defined. Gaullism is indisputably center-right, and has some clear tenets like presidential republicanism (owing to its Orléanist roots), France maintaining a world power status independent of its alliance with America and Britain, and state intervention in a market economy. It doesn't have an intense mutual hatred with the French cultural elite the way Peronism does in Argentina.