L'Action française 2000

On January 23, 1992, L'Action française Hebdo was launched as a royalist French weekly, succeeding Aspects de la France and directed by Pierre Pujo.

That same year, following a court injunction, the publication was forced to change its name because its title was too similar to that of L'Action française by Maurras, which was banned under the Liberation laws of 1944.

Opposed to the French Republic, it supported a hereditary and decentralized monarchy with a strong state defending local and regional values.

The title ceased publication in February 2018 after the publishing company encountered financial difficulties and halted operations "after 27 years of service.

"[4][5] In January 2012, after the editorial board refused to publish a tribute to Xavier Vallat (the General Commissioner for Jewish Affairs under the Vichy regime) for the 40th anniversary of his death, editor-in-chief Michel Fromentoux left AF2000 to join the far-right, antisemitic, and racist weekly Rivarol.