Georges Bidault

Georges-Augustin Bidault (French pronunciation: [ʒɔʁʒ bido]; 5 October 1899  27 January 1983) was a French politician. During World War II, he was active in the French Resistance. After the war, he served as foreign minister and prime minister on several occasions. He joined the Organisation armée secrète however he always denied his involvement.

Georges Bidault
Chair of the Provisional Government of the French Republic
In office
24 June 1946  16 December 1946
Preceded byFélix Gouin
Succeeded by
Prime Minister of France
In office
28 October 1949  2 July 1950
PresidentVincent Auriol
Preceded byHenri Queuille
Succeeded byHenri Queuille
Personal details
Born(1899-10-05)5 October 1899
Moulins, France
Died27 January 1983(1983-01-27) (aged 83)
Cambo-les-Bains, France
NationalityFrench
Political partyPopular Republican Movement
OccupationTeacher, Politician

Biography

Early life

Bidault was born in Moulins, Allier.[1] He studied in the Sorbonne and became a college history teacher. In 1932 he helped to found the Catholic Association of French Youth and the left-wing anti-fascist newspaper l'Aube. He had a column in the paper and, among other things, protested against the Munich Agreement in 1938.

World War II

After the outbreak of the Second World War he joined the French army. He was captured during the Fall of France and was briefly imprisoned. After his release in July 1941, he became a teacher at the Lycée du Parc in Lyon and joined the Liberté group of French Resistance that eventually merged with Combat. Jean Moulin recruited him to organize an underground press and the Combat underground newspaper.

In his work in the resistance, he was helped by his private administrative assistant Laure Diebold.

Bidault participated in the forming of the Conseil National de la Résistance and, after the Gestapo captured Moulin, he became its new chairman. In 1944 he formed a Resistance Charter that recommended an extensive post-war reform program. After the liberation of Paris he represented the Resistance in the victory parade. Charles de Gaulle appointed him as a foreign minister of his provisional government on 25 August. He was the founder of the Mouvement Républicain Populaire (MRP).

He was head of the French delegation to the San Francisco Conference,[1] which established the UN, from April to June 1945. At the conference, France succeeded in gaining a permanent seat on the Security Council.[2]

Fourth Republic

On 4 January 1946, Bidault married Suzanne Borel, the first French woman to be employed as a diplomat.[3] The same year he served as foreign minister in Félix Gouin's provisional government. On 19 June 1946, the National Constituent Assembly elected him as president of the provisional government. His government, formed on 15 June, was composed of socialists, communists and Bidault's own MRP. In social policy, Bidault's government was notable for passing important pension and workman's compensation laws.[4] An act of 22 August 1946 extended coverage of family allowances to practically the entire population,[5] while a law of October 1946 provided that insurance of occupation risks "would henceforth be mandatory and that such insurance would be granted by the Social Security that had been created in 1945."[6] In August 1946, an Act was passed that made provision for two-day's holiday a month up to a maximum of 24 working days for young persons between the ages of 14 and 18 and for one-and-a-half days' a month up to a maximum of 18 working days for those aged between 18 and 21.[7] In addition, an Act was passed on 11 October 1946 that introduced occupational medical services.[8]

Bidault later became foreign minister once again. The government held elections to the National Assembly on 29 November after which Bidault resigned. His successor was Léon Blum.

Bidault served in various French governments, first as foreign minister under Paul Ramadier and Robert Schuman. In April 1947 he supported Ramadier's decision to expel the Communists from his government. Bidault had recently been to Moscow and was disturbed by the Soviet regime; he believed an agreement with Stalin was impossible.[9]

In 1949 he became the President of the Council of Ministers (prime minister) but his government lasted only 8 months. During his last term as prime minister, a law of February 1950 that regulated collective bargaining, and contained a guarantee of the right of workers to strike. The same law required the government to fix minimum wages for agriculture and for industry.[10] In Henri Queuille's governments in 1950–1951 he held the office of Vice-president of the Council and under Rene Pleven and Edgar Faure also the post of defense minister.

In 1952 Bidault became an honorary president of MRP. On 1 June 1953 President Vincent Auriol assigned him to form his own government but the National Assembly refused to give him the official mandate at 10 June. In 1953 Bidault became a presidential candidate but withdrew after the second round.

Bidault was foreign minister during the siege of the French garrison at Dien Bien Phu from March to May 1954. He protested to the Red Cross that the Viet Minh were shooting at clearly marked French medical evacuation flights, killing some of the evacuees.[11] The ongoing fighting in Indochina had exhausted him; he was described by American secretary of state John Foster Dulles as "a deeply harassed man" and later by a historian as "on the verge of a nervous breakdown".[12] Caught between his desires to end the war and to maintain French rule over its colonies, he vacillated between pressing the war, perhaps by asking the Americans for air support, or seeking a negotiated solution.[13] Bidault stated that John Foster Dulles (then Secretary of State of United States) offered France two atomic bombs in 1954.

Fifth Republic

In April 1958 Bidault again became prime minister but did not form a cabinet and had a hand in forming the conservative Christian Democratic Movement. He also supported De Gaulle's presidency after the outbreak of the Algerian War of Independence.

In 1961 Bidault became President of the Executive Council of the Rally for French Algeria and opposed De Gaulle's policy of Algerian independence. He established his own National Resistance Council within the far-right paramilitary organization OAS (Organisation armée secrète). In June 1962 he was accused of conspiring against the state and stripped of his parliamentary immunity. He left for exile in Brazil. In 1967 he moved to Belgium and in 1968 returned to France after benefiting from an amnesty.

In his political memoirs, Bidault stated that he was never involved in the OAS, and was not qualified to give any precise information about its deeds.[14]

When the Front national was founded in October 1972 by members of Ordre nouveau, he participated but resigned from the organisation a few days later.

Bidault died of a stroke in Cambo-les-Bains in January 1983.[1]

Governments

First ministry (24 June – 16 December 1946)

Second ministry (28 October 1949 – 7 February 1950)

Changes:

  • 2 December 1949 – Gabriel Valay succeeds Pflimlin as Minister of Agriculture

Third Ministry (7 February – 2 July 1950)

Political offices
Preceded by
Pierre Laval
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1944–46
Succeeded by
Léon Blum
Preceded by
Félix Gouin
Chairman of the Provisional Government
1946
Succeeded by
Léon Blum
Preceded by
Léon Blum
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1947–48
Succeeded by
Robert Schuman
Preceded by
Henri Queuille
President of the Council of Ministers
1949–50
Succeeded by
Henri Queuille
Preceded by
Henri Queuille
Vice President of the Council of Ministers
1950
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Vice President of the Council of Ministers
1951–52
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Jules Moch
Minister of National Defense
1951–52
Succeeded by
René Pleven
Preceded by
Robert Schuman
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1953–54
Succeeded by
Pierre Mendès France

References

  1. "Georges Bidault, Resistance Hero Who Later Led a Revolt, Is Dead". The New York Times. Associated Press. 28 January 1983. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
  2. Morgan 2010, pp. 50–51.
  3. Mignot, Elisa (13 December 2016). "Portrait - Suzanne Bidault-Borel, femme (de) diplomate" (in French). Émile Magazine. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  4. Hicks, Alexander (1999). Social Democracy and Welfare Capitalism: A Century of Income Security Politics. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801485568.
  5. Evans, Patricia G.; Laroque, Pierre (1983). The Social Institutions of France: Translations from the First French Edition. Taylor & Francis. pp. 327–. ISBN 978-0-677-30970-5.
  6. Oliphant, Ken; Wagner, Gerhard (2012). Employers' Liability and Workers' Compensation. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 204–. ISBN 978-3-11-027021-1.
  7. Walters, David; Johnstone, R.; Frick, Kaj; Quinlan, Michael; Baril-Gingras, Geneviève; Thébaud-Mony, Annie (1 January 2011). Regulating Workplace Risks: A Comparative Study of Inspection Regimes in Times of change. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 9780857931658 via Google Books.
  8. Morgan 2010, p. 97.
  9. Chambers Encyclopaedia new edition, Volume V: Edward-Franks, George Newnes Ltd. 1959, supplementary information 1961, printed and bound in England by Hazel Watson and Viney Ltd., Aylesbury and Slough
  10. Morgan 2010, p. 301.
  11. Morgan 2010, p. 418,332.
  12. Morgan 2010, p. 332.
  13. Bidault, Georges (1967) Resistance: The Political Autobiography of Georges Bidault. F.A. Praeger. p. 245.

Sources

  • Morgan, T. (2010). Valley of Death: The Tragedy at Dien Bien Phu That Led America into the Vietnam War. New York: Random House. pp. 50–51. ISBN 9781400066643.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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