
.
.Vincent
AURIOL
Vincent Jules Auriol
(27 August 1884 – 1 January 1966) was a French politician who
served as the first President of the Fourth Republic from 1947 to
1954. He also served as interim President of the Provisional
Government (head of state and government) from November to
December 1946, making him one of only three people (with
Charles de Gaulle and Alain Poher) who were heads of state of
the French Republic on two separate occasions.
Early
life and politics
Auriol was born in Revel,
Haute-Garonne, as the only child of Jacques Antoine Auriol
(1855—1933), a baker nicknamed Paul, and Angélique Virginie Durand
(1862—1945). He earned a law degree at the Collège de Revel in
1904 and began his career as a lawyer in Toulouse. A committed
socialist, Auriol co-founded the newspaper Le Midi Socialiste
in 1908; he was head of the Association of Journalists in Toulouse
at this time.
In 1914, Auriol entered the
Chamber of Deputies as a Socialist Deputy for Muret, a position he
retained until 1942. He also served as Mayor of Muret from 3 May
1925 to 17 January 1947[1], and as a member of the Conseil Général
of Haute-Garonne from 1928 to 17 January 1947. In December 1920,
after the breakup of the SFIO, Auriol refused to join the newly
created SFIC and became one of the leaders of the new SFIO (the
remaining socialist minority), along with Léon Blum.
Auriol became the party's leading spokesman on financial
issues. He chaired the Finance Committee in the Chamber of
Deputies from 1924-1926. His first cabinet post was as Minister of
Finance under Léon Blum, in which Auriol controversially devalued
the French franc 30% against the United States dollar, leading to
capital flight and greater economic unease. This and Blum's
proposals for greater regulatory restrictions on industry led to
Blum's resignation as Premier; in the next government, led by
Camille Chautemps, Auriol was made Minister of Justice, then
Minister of Coordination of Services of the Presidency of the
Council in Blum's short-lived government in 1938. Édouard
Daladier's conservative-Radical
government formed on 10 April 1938 returned Auriol to the Chamber
of Deputies.
Auriol was one of the 80 deputies
who voted against the extraordinary powers given to Prime Minister
Philippe Pétain on 10 July 1940 that brought about the Nazi-backed
Vichy government. As a result, he was placed under house arrest
until he escaped to the French Resistance in October 1942, and
fought with the resistance for a year. Auriol fled to London in
October 1943. He represented the Socialists at the Free French
Consultative Assembly (organized by
Charles de Gaulle in Algiers later that year). In July 1944,
he represented France at the United Nations Monetary and Financial
Conference at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire. He was a Minister of State in de
Gaulle's second provisional government.
Postwar
life and presidency
After World War II, Auriol served
as Minister of State in de Gaulle's provisional government. He was
also a member of the Constituent Assemblies which drafted the
constitution of the short-lived French Fourth Republic, and was
President of the assemblies. He lobbied for a "third force"
between Communism and Gaullism. Auriol also led the French
delegation to the United Nations and was France's first
representative on the United Nations Security Council in 1946. He
served as a Deputy for Haute-Garonne in the National Assembly from
1946 until 31 December 1947. Meanwhile, the National Assembly
elected him on 16 January 1947 as the first President of the
Fourth Republic. Auriol was elected by a wide margin, receiving
452 votes (51.19%) against the 242 (27.41%) for the People's
Republican Movement (MRP) candidate, Auguste Champetier de Ribes.
As president, Auriol pursued a relatively weak presidency as
there had been under the Third Republic, and attempted to
reconcile political factions within France and warm relations
between France and its allies. He was criticized for France's
ailing economy and political turmoil in the postwar period, and
the war in Indochina. A series of debilitating strikes were waged
across France in 1947, initiated by the Confédération Générale du
Travail. The strikes escalated into violence in November of that
year, leading, on 28 November, to the government deploying 80,000
French Army reservists to face the "insurrection". The PCF,
who often supported the strikes, were expelled from the
legislature in early December. The strikes ended on 10 December,
but more would come in 1948, and again in 1953 in response to the
Joseph Laniel government's austerity program.
Apart from the inconclusive war in Indochina, France's
colonial empire decayed under Auriol's presidency. Clashes in
Morocco, Madagascar, Algeria, and Tunisia became more frequent; an
Algerian independence movement, the Front de Libération Nationale,
was founded in 1951, in 1953 the French overthrew Mohammed V, the
Sultan of Morocco, after he demanded greater autonomy. France also
waged a brutal war of repression in Madagascar, and imprisoned
Tunisian independence leader Habib Bourguiba in 1952.
When Auriol's term as president expired, he did not run for a
second, and was succeeded by
René Coty as President of France on 16 January 1954. Auriol
commented on leaving office: "The work was killing me; they
called me out of bed at all hours of the night to receive
resignations of prime ministers"
(there were eighteen different governments during his seven years
as President.)
After his presidency, Auriol assumed the role of
elder statesman, and wrote articles on political topics. Auriol
became a member of the Constitutional Council of France in 1958 at
the establishment of the French Fifth Republic; he resigned from
the SFIO in the same year. He unsuccessfully lobbied against the
constitution in the 1958 national referendum, and resigned from
his position on the Constitutional Council in 1960 to protest the
growing power of Charles de Gaulle's presidency. In 1965, he
endorsed
François Mitterrand for the Presidency.
On 1 January 1966, Vincent Auriol
died in hospital in the 7th arrondissement of Paris and was buried
at Muret, Haute-Garonne.
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