Pierre Harmel

Pierre Harmel

Infobox Prime Minister


name = Pierre Harmel
| order = 39th Prime Minister of Belgium
term_start = 28 July 1965
term_end = 19 March 1966
deputy =
predecessor = Théodore Lefèvre
successor = Paul Vanden Boeynants
birth_date = birth date and age|df=yes|1911|3|16
birth_place = Uccle, Belgium
death_date =
death_place =
religion = Roman Catholic
spouse =
party = Parti Social Chrétien

Pierre Charles José Marie, Count Harmel (born 16 March 1911) was a Belgian lawyer, Christian Democratic politician and diplomat. He served eight months as Prime Minister of Belgium.

Early life

Born in Uccle, he studied law at the University of Liège (Liège), where he obtained the title of Doctor in Law and Master in Social Sciences in 1933. During his studies, he was active in the Association catholique belge, of which he became the chairman in 1938.

Mobilized in 1940, he took part in the 18 days Campaign. In 1947, he was appointed professor of Law at the University of Liège.

Political career

Early political career

Member of the PSC-CVP since its creation in 1945, he was elected deputy for the first time in the parliamentary elections of 17 February 1946. He would keep his seat without interruption until 1971.

Pierre Harmel represented Belgium at the fourth session of the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1949. He subsequently was member of several governments in the 1950s and 1960s.

chool War

Minister of Education from 8 June 1950 until 22 April 1954, he increased the wages of teachers in private (i.e. Catholic) schools and introduced laws linking the subsidies for private schools to the number of pupils. These measures were perceived by the freethinkers (i.e. the anti-clerical Liberals and Socialists) as a declaration of war. When the 1954 elections brought to power a coalition of Socialists and Liberals, the new Education Minister, Leo Collard, immediately set out to reverse the measures taken by his predecessor, sparking mass protests by the Catholic bloc. A compromise was eventually found by the next government (a Catholic minority government led by Gaston Eyskens), and the "School War" was concluded by the 6 November 1958 School Pact. André Molitor was one of the chief architects of the school pact.

Minister of Justice, Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs

Pierre Harmel was Minister of Justice in the second government led by Gaston Eyskens (23 June 1958 - 6 November 1958), and then Minister of Culture (6 November 1958 - 3 September 1960) and Minister of the Civil Service (3 September 1960 - 25 April 1961) in the third Eyskens cabinet.

Prime Minister of Belgium from 28 July 1965 until 19 March 1966, Harmel led a coalition comprising Christian Democrats and Socialists. Finally, he was Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Liberal-Christian Democratic coalition led by Paul Vanden Boeynants (19 March 1966 - 7 February 1968). As Foreign Ministers he chaired the opening meeting of the enlargement negotiations between the EEC and the four applicants for Community membership in June 1970. Indeed Harmel's opening statement to the enlargement conference has since formed the basis of the Community opening position for future enlargement discussions.

As Minister of Foreign Affairs, he submitted a report titled "Future Tasks of the Alliance" to the NATO council of ministers. The report, which was approved by the council in December 1967, contained the so-called "Harmel Doctrine". It advocated a strong defense combined with good diplomatic relations with the countries of the Warsaw Pact. The Harmel Doctrine helped to pave the way for the East-West détente of the early 1970s, which led to the 1975 Helsinki Summit and the creation of the OSCE. Harmel himself visited several Warsaw Pact countries.

Later career

After 25 years in the Chamber of Deputies, Pierre Harmel was Senator from 1971 until 1977. He was made a Minister of State in 1973. In 1988, he was awarded an honorary doctorate at the Catholic University of Louvain, and in 1991, King Baudouin conferred on him the title of count.

Pierre Harmel is currently living in Brussels, and despite his advanced age, still comments on current politics from time to time.

Bibliography

*Vincent Dujardin, "Pierre Harmel", Brussels, Le Cri 2004.

External links

* [http://premier.fgov.be/nl/formerpm/portraits/p_harmel.html Pierre Harmel on website of Belgian Federal Government]
* [http://www.isn.ethz.ch/php/collections/coll_Harmel.htm Dokumentekollektion zum Harmel-Bericht von 1967] , from Parallel History Project on NATO and the Warsaw Pact (PHP)


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