
.
.René
COTY
René Jules Gustave Coty
(20 March 1882 – 22 November 1962) was President of France from
1954 to 1959. He was the second and last president under the
French Fourth Republic.
Early life
and politics
René Coty was born in
Le Havre and studied at the
University of Caen, where he graduated in 1902, receiving
degrees in law and philosophy. He worked as a lawyer in his
hometown of Le Havre, specialising in maritime and commercial law.
He also became involved in politics, as a member of the
Radical Party, and in 1907 was elected as a district
councillor. The following year he was elected to the communal
council of Le Havre as a member of the Republican Left group. He
retained both of these positions until 1919. Coty also served as a
member of the
Conseil Général of
Seine-Inférieure 1913-1942, holding the post of Vice President
from 1932.
With the outbreak of the First
World War, Coty volunteered for the army, joining the 129th
Infantry Regiment. He fought at the Battle of Verdun. In 1923,
Coty entered the Chamber of Deputies, succeeding Jules Siegfried
as Deputy for Seine-Inférieure. However, by this stage of his
political career he had moved away from the Radical Party, and sat
as a member of the Republican Union. Between the 13th and the 23rd
of December 1930 he served as Under-secretary of State for the
Interior in the government of Théodore Steeg.
In 1936, Coty was elected to the
Senate for Seine-Inférieure. He was one of the French
parliamentarians who, on 10 July 1940, voted to give extraordinary
powers to Philippe Pétain, thereby bringing about the Nazi-backed
Vichy government. Coty remained relatively inactive during World
War II, although he was rehabilitated after the war.
Postwar
life and presidency
He was a member of the Constituent National Assembly from 1944
to 1946, and chaired the right-wing Independent Republican
group, which later became part of the National Center of
Independents and Peasants. Coty was elected to the National
Assembly in 1946 as a Deputy for Seine-Inférieure, and from
November 1947 to September 1948, he served as Minister for
Reconstruction and Urban Planning in the governments of Robert
Schuman and André Marie. Coty was elected as a member of the
Council of the Republic in November 1948, and served as Vice
President of the Council from 1952.
Coty stood as a candidate for President in 1953, although it
was thought unlikely that he would be elected. Nonetheless, and
despite twelve successive ballots, right-wing favourite Joseph
Laniel failed to obtain the absolute majority required. Following
the withdrawal of another key right-wing candidate, Louis
Jacquinot, Coty was finally elected in the thirteenth ballot on 23
December 1953, winning 477 votes against the 329 of the socialist
Marcel-Edmond Naegelen. He succeeded Vincent Auriol as President on 16 January 1954.
As President of the Republic, Coty was even less active than
his predecessor in trying to influence policy. His presidency was
troubled by the political instability of the Fourth Republic and
the Algerian question. With the deepening of the crisis in 1958,
on 29 May of that year, President Coty appealed to
Charles de Gaulle, the "most illustrious of Frenchmen" to
become the last Prime Minister of the Fourth Republic. Coty had
threatened to resign if de Gaulle's appointment was not approved
by the National Assembly.
De Gaulle drafted a new constitution, and on 28 September, a
referendum took place in which 79.2% of those who voted supported
the proposals, which led to the
Fifth Republic. De Gaulle was elected as President of the new
Republic by parliament in December, and succeeded Coty on 9
January 1959. Coty was a member of the
Constitutional Council from 1959 until his death in 1962.
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