The party was registered at the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice on 31 March 2014 as "People's Action". On 12 August 2014 it was renamed to its current name. Late August 2014 the party Fatherland split amidst differences over key policies and the refusal to have the ballot lead by Arseniy Yatsenyuk. People's Front held its first party congress on 10 September 2014. At this congress Yatsenyuk was elected chairman of the political council and Turchynov was elected to lead its headquarters. At the time Yatsenyuk was Prime Minister of Ukraine and Turchynov was Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada. Several high-ranking members of Ukrainian territorial defense battalions, who at the time were fighting in the War in Donbass, were made part of the Party's "military council". In his speech to the first party congress Yatsenyuk called for "unification and unity of all democratic forces" since this would be "the recipe for our victory". Many high-ranking Fatherland members became founding members of the party including Lyudmyla Denisova, Arsen Avakov, Pavlo Petrenko and Andriy Parubiy. In September 2014 it was reported that People's Front and the Petro Poroshenko Bloc were in talks over joint participation in the forthcoming parliamentary election. By 12 September the two parties had reached only an agreement that the Poroshenko Bloc would not put forward candidates for 10 single-member constituencies to avoid competition with People's Front. The following day Yatsenyuk announced that People's Front would stand alone in the election: "We should be going into the elections together with the President, but I am not satisfied with the party of President Poroshenko. So we are different in camps, although we share the same viewpoints for the sake of change and reforms." Concerning the War in Donbass involving pro-Russian separatists, the party position to end the conflict is ambiguous. According to political scientist Tadeusz A. Olszański the party is in favor of use of force to resolve the conflict. The first 10 candidates from the party list for the 2014 parliamentary election were:
Arseniy Yatsenyuk
Tetiana Chornovol
Oleksandr Turchynov
Andriy Parubiy
Andriy Teteruk
Arsen Avakov
Viktoria Siumar
Vyacheslav Kyrylenko
Liliya Hrynevych
Yuriy Bereza
The vast majority of the party list were political newcomers. At the election, the party won the nationwide popular vote with 22.14% against 21.81% for the Petro Poroshenko Bloc, in addition to 18 single-member constituencies. The Petro Poroshenko Bloc however, won 69 constituencies for a total of 132 seats. The voters of the People's Front were mostly rural residents of western and central Ukraine. On 21 November 2014 the party became a member of the coalition supporting the current second Yatsenyuk government and send five minister into this government. In a June 2015 opinion poll by Sociological group "RATING" 2.7% of the polled stated they would vote for People's Front. A Kyiv International Institute of Sociology poll of the same month gave the party 1.6%. According to Ukrainian expert political opinion the fast decline of the party's popularity was caused because voters blamed Yatsenyuk and his party for the rise in tariffs for utilities and a negative assessment of the Prime Ministership of Yatsenyuk. The party did not take part in the October 2015 local elections. the party joined the coalition that supports the 14 April 2016 installed Groysman government. In the 23 December 2018local elections for territorial communities representatives of the party were elected to village councils. It had nominated 247 candidates The party did not submit a list for the snap 2019 parliamentary elections and lost all of its seats, with some of its members running as independents in FPTP constituencies. In June 2020 one of the parties founders Oleksandr Turchynov became head of the 2020 Ukrainian local elections headquarters of the party European Solidarity.