
.
.Georges
POMPIDOU
Georges Jean Raymond Pompidou
(5 July 1911 – 2 April 1974) was a French politician. He was Prime
Minister of France from 1962 to 1968, holding the longest tenure
in this position, and later 19th President of the French Republic
from 1969 until his death in 1974.
Biography
He was born in the commune of
Montboudif, in the department of Cantal in central France. After
his khâgne at Lycée Louis-le-Grand, where he befriended Senegalese
future poet and statesman Léopold Sedar Senghor, he graduated from
the École Normale Supérieure with a degree of Agrégation in
literature.
He first taught literature at a
lycée until hired in 1953 by Guy de Rothschild to work at de
Rothschild Frères. In 1956, he was appointed the bank's general
manager, a position he held until 1962. Later, he was hired by
Charles de Gaulle to manage the Anne de Gaulle Foundation for
Down's Syndrome (de Gaulle's daughter Anne had Down's Syndrome).
He served as prime minister under
de Gaulle after Michel Debré resigned, from 16 April 1962 to 21
July 1968, and to this day is the longest serving French prime
minister under the Fifth Republic. His nomination was
controversial because he was not a member of the National
Assembly. In October 1962, he was defeated by a vote of
non-confidence, but de Gaulle dissolved the National Assembly. The
Gaullists won the legislative election and Pompidou was
reappointed as Prime Minister. In 1964, he was faced with a
miners' strike. He led the 1967 legislative campaign of the Union
of Democrats for the Fifth Republic to a narrow victory. Pompidou
was widely regarded as being responsible for the peaceful
resolution of the student uprising of May 1968. His strategy was
to break the coalition of students and workers by negotiating with
the trade-unions and employers (Grenelle conference). Until this
crisis, he was the Prime Minister of a quiet and prosperous
France.
However, during the events of May 1968, disagreements arose
between Pompidou and de Gaulle. Pompidou did not understand why
the President did not inform him of his departure to
Baden-Baden on 29 May. Their relationship, until then very
good, would be strained from then on. Pompidou led and won the
1968 legislative campaign, then resigned. Nevertheless, in
part due to his actions during the May 1968 crisis, he appeared as
the natural successor to de Gaulle. Pompidou announced his
candidature for the Presidency in January 1969. Some weeks later,
his wife's name was mentioned in the
Markovic scandal, thus appearing to confirm her husband's
status as a cuckold. Pompidou was certain that de Gaulle's inner
circle was responsible for this smear.
After the failure of the 1969
referendum, de Gaulle resigned and Pompidou was elected president
of France, defeating in the second round by a wide margin the
Centrist President of the Senate and Acting President Alain Poher.
Though a Gaullist, Pompidou was more pragmatic than de Gaulle,
notably allowing the United Kingdom to join the European Community
in 1973. He embarked on an industrialisation plan and initiated
the Arianespace project. He was sceptical about the "New Society"
programme of his prime minister, Jacques Chaban-Delmas. In 1972,
Chaban-Delmas was replaced by Pierre Messmer, a more conservative
Gaullist.
While the left-wing opposition got organised in proposing a
Common Programme before the
1973 legislative election, he widened out his "presidential
majority" by including the Centrist pro-European parties.
While still in office, Pompidou died unexpectedly on 2 April
1974, 9 PM,
from
Waldenström macroglobulinemia.
Pompidou's wife
Claude Pompidou lived more than 30 years longer than Pompidou.
Pompidou had one
foster son,
Alain Pompidou, former president of the
European Patent Office.
Pompidou's time in office was marked by a constant effort to
modernise France's capital city. This can be seen through his
construction of a modern art museum, the Centre Beaubourg (renamed
Centre Pompidou after his death), on the edge of the
Marais area of Paris. Other attempts at modernisation included
tearing down the open air markets at
Les Halles and replacing it with the
shopping mall of the same name, building the
Montparnasse Tower, and constructing an expressway on the
right bank of the Seine.
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