Camille Chautemps

Camille Chautemps

Infobox Prime Minister
name=Camille Chautemps


order=98th Prime Minister of France
term_start =21 February 1930
term_end =2 March 1930
predecessor =André Tardieu
successor =André Tardieu
order2=107th Prime Minister of France
term_start2 =26 November 1933
term_end2 =30 January 1934
predecessor2 =Albert Sarraut
successor2 =Édouard Daladier
order3=115th Prime Minister of France
term_start3 =22 June 1937
term_end3 =13 March 1938
predecessor3 =Léon Blum
successor3 =Léon Blum
birth_date =1 February 1885
death_date =death date and age|1963|7|1|1885|2|1|
party=Radical

Camille Chautemps (1 February 1885 in Parisndash 1 July 1963 in Washington, D.C., U.S.) was a French Radical politician of the Third Republic, three times President of the Council (Prime Minister).

Career

Chautemps entered politics and became Mayor of Tours in 1912, and a Radical deputy in 1919. Between 1924 and 1926, he served in the center-left coalition governments of Édouard Herriot, Paul Painlevé and Aristide Briand, and became President of the Council briefly in 1930. Again in center-left governments in 1932-1934, he served as Interior Minister, and became Prime Minister again in November 1933. He resigned his posts in January 1934 as a result of the Stavisky Affair.

In Léon Blum's Popular Front government of 1936, Chautemps was a Minister of State, and then succeeded Blum at the head of the government from June 1937 to March 1938.

Pursuing the program of the Popular Front, he proceeded to nationalize the railroads and create the SNCF. He resigned shortly before the Anschluss, and served from April 1938 to 1940 as Vice-President of the Council in the governments of Édouard Daladier and Paul Reynaud.

As a cabinet member in 1940, he was among the first to suggest the surrender of France to Nazi Germany. He held a ministry in the Vichy government (see Vichy Regime) but broke with Philippe Petain's government after arriving in the U.S. on an official mission. He lived in the U.S. for much of the rest of his life. After World War II, a French court convicted him in absentia for collaborating with the enemy (source: http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9360438).

He was also in his youth a rugby union player, he played in the first senior team of the Stade Français -1 of the 2 main rugby union clubs in Paris- (origin: Henri Garcia, historian of the French Rugby)

Chautemps's First Ministry, 21 February - 2 March 1930

*Camille Chautemps - President of the Council and Minister of the Interior - Radical Socialist Party
*Aristide Briand - Minister of Foreign Affairs
*René Besnard - Minister of War
*Charles Dumont - Minister of Finance
*Maurice Palmade - Minister of Budget
*Louis Loucheur - Minister of Labour, Hygiene, Welfare Work, and Social Security Provisions
*Théodore Steeg - Minister of Justice
*Albert Sarraut - Minister of Marine
*Charles Daniélou - Minister of Merchant Marine
*Laurent Eynac - Minister of Air
*Jean Durand - Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
*Claudius Gallet - Minister of Pensions
*Henri Queuille - Minister of Agriculture
*Lucien Lamoureux - Minister of Colonies
*Édouard Daladier - Minister of Public Works
*Julien Durand - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones
*Georges Bonnet - Minister of Commerce and Industry

Chautemps's Second Ministry, 26 November 1933 - 30 January 1934

*Camille Chautemps - President of the Council and Minister of the Interior - Radical Socialist Party
*Joseph Paul-Boncour - Minister of Foreign Affairs
*Édouard Daladier - Minister of War
*Georges Bonnet - Minister of Finance
*Paul Marchandeau - Minister of Budget
*Lucien Lamoureux - Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions
*Eugène Raynaldy - Minister of Justice
*Albert Sarraut - Minister of Marine
*Eugène Frot - Minister of Merchant Marine
*Pierre Cot - Minister of Air
*Anatole de Monzie - Minister of National Education
*Hippolyte Ducos - Minister of Pensions
*Henri Queuille - Minister of Agriculture
*Albert Dalimier - Minister of Colonies
*Joseph Paganon - Minister of Public Works
*Alexandre Israël - Minister of Public Health
*Jean Mistler - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones
*Laurent Eynac - Minister of Commerce and Industry

Changes
*9 January 1934 - Lucien Lamoureux succeeds Dalimier as Minister of Colonies. Eugène Frot succeeds Lamoureux as Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions. William Bertrand succeeds Frot as Minister of Merchant Marine.

Chautemps's Third Ministry, 22 June 1937 - 18 January 1938

*Camille Chautemps - President of the Council - Radical Socialist Party
*Léon Blum - Vice President of the Council - SFIO
*Yvon Delbos - Minister of Foreign Affairs - Radical Socialist Party
*Édouard Daladier - Minister of National Defense and War - Radical Socialist Party
*Marx Dormoy - Minister of the Interior - SFIO
*Georges Bonnet - Minister of Finance - Radical Socialist Party
*André Février - Minister of Labour - SFIO
*Vincent Auriol - Minister of Justice - SFIO
*César Campinchi - Minister of Marine - Radical Socialist Party
*Pierre Cot - Minister of Air - Radical Socialist Party
*Jean Zay - Minister of National Education - Radical Socialist Party
*Albert Rivière - Minister of Pensions - SFIO
*Georges Monnet - Minister of Agriculture - Radical Socialist Party
*Marius Moutet - Minister of Colonies - SFIO
*Henri Queuille - Minister of Public Works - Radical Socialist Party
*Marc Rucart - Minister of Public Health - Radical Socialist Party
*Jean-Baptiste Lebas - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones - SFIO
*Fernand Chapsal - Minister of Commerce
*Paul Faure - Minister of State - SFIO
*Maurice Viollette - Minister of State - usr
*Albert Sarraut - Minister of State - Radical Socialist Party
*Léo Lagrange - Under-Secretary of State for the Sports, the Leisure activities and the Physical Education -i.e. acting like Minister for the Sports- - SFIO

Chautemps's Fourth Ministry, 18 January - 13 March 1938

*Camille Chautemps - President of the Council - Radical Socialist Party
*Édouard Daladier - Vice President of the Council and Minister of National Defense and War
*Yvon Delbos - Minister of Foreign Affairs
*Albert Sarraut - Minister of the Interior
*Paul Marchandeau - Minister of Finance
*Paul Ramadier - Minister of Labour
*César Campinchi - Minister of Justice
*William Bertrand - Minister of Military Marine
*Paul Elbel - Minister of Merchant Marine
*Guy La Chambre - Minister of Air
*Jean Zay - Minister of National Education
*Robert Lassalle - Minister of Pensions
*Fernand Chapsal - Minister of Agriculture
*Théodore Steeg - Minister of Colonies
*Henri Queuille - Minister of Public Works
*Marc Rucart - Minister of Public Health
*Fernand Gentin - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones
*Pierre Cot - Minister of Commerce
*Georges Bonnet - Minister of State
*Ludovic-Oscar Frossard - Minister of State in charge of the Services of the Presidency of the Council


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