The relationship between the Constitution and the People is one of the areas of most interest of legal modernity. The reference to the popular legitimacy to justify the Constituent moment, but also the suspension of law and guarantees, has been a constant in the history of modern public law, with semantic variants in the meanings of the terms “people” and “populist”. From this point of view the French experience has been a constitutional laboratory where, starting from the Great Revolution, were tested different forms of public and private powers, based on alternative ideas on the state and on the society. In particular the legal debate since 1789 has been characterized by a constant dialectic between direct democracy and representative sys...