PIERRE LAVAL


'Pierre Laval' (28 June 188315 October 1945) was a French politician and four times Prime Minister, the third and fourth times being under the Vichy government. As a notorious collaborator, after the end of World War II he was convicted of high treason and executed.

Contents
Career during the Third Republic
Under Vichy France
Parliamentary offices
Changes
Changes
References

Career during the Third Republic


He was born in Châteldon in the Puy-de-Dôme département of the Auvergne region. He became an active socialist, and in 1903, he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies as a member of the SFIO (''Section Française de l'Internationale Ouvrière'' - the French socialist party). He was re-elected three times. He earned a law degree, and practiced law in Paris from 1907.
He did not serve in World War I. During this period, his politics moved towards the right. He was defeated in the first post-war election in 1919. In 1924, he became mayor of Aubervilliers, a town in the northern suburbs of Paris, and left the SFIO. Despite this, he became a more important national figure. In 1925, he first served in ministerial office, as Minister of Transportation under Painlevé. In 1926 he was Minister of Justice under Briand. In 1927, he was elected to the Senate, and again in 1936.
Laval held no offices in 1927-1929, but from 1930 to 1936 he was a prominent figure in most of the governments formed. He was Prime Minister from 27 January 1931 to 6 February 1932, and was named ''Time's'' 1931 Man of the Year. The February 6, 1934 riots organized by far-right leagues led to the toppling of the second ''Cartel des gauches'' (Left-Wing Cartel) which had came to power two years earlier. These extra-parliamentary leagues maintained contacts with some conservative politicians, among whom Laval and Philippe Pétain. After Louis Barthou's assassination, the now Minister of Colonies Laval succeeded to him in Gaston Doumergue's government, in October 1934, leading France's foreign policies until 1936. At this time, Laval was opposed to Germany, the "hereditary enemy" of France. He pursued anti-German alliances with Mussolini's Italy and Stalin's USSR. He met with Mussolini in Rome on 4 January 1935, leading to the signature of the Franco–Italian Agreement which gave Italy parts of the French Somaliland (now Djibouti) and allowed it a free hand in the Abyssinia Crisis, in exchange with support against any German aggression [1]. In April 1935, Laval convinced Italy and Great Britain to join France in the Stresa Front against German ambitions in Austria. In June 1935, he became Prime Minister as well.
Also in 1935, Laval's daughter Josée Marie married René de Chambrun, son of Count Aldebert de Chambrun. (De Chambrun was a descendant of the Marquis de Lafayette. René's mother, Clara Longworth de Chambrun, was the sister of Theodore Roosevelt's son-in-law.)
In October 1935, Laval and the British foreign minister, Samuel Hoare, proposed a "''realpolitik''" solution to the Abyssinia crisis. Leaked to the media in December, the Hoare-Laval Pact was widely denounced as appeasement to Mussolini. Laval was forced to resign on 22 January 1936, and was driven completely out of ministerial politics.
Laval returned to his business career, but soon had major political influence after he assembled an extensive media empire through acquisitions of newspapers and radio. The victory of the Popular Front in 1936 meant that Laval had a left-wing government as a target for his media.

Under Vichy France


After the defeat of France in June 1940, Laval's papers and radio stations played a prominent part in forcing the resignations of the Reynaud government and then supporting the new Vichy regime of Philippe Pétain. On 12 July 1940, Laval became Vice-Premier.
From July to December 1940, Laval's policy was active collaboration with Nazi Germany. He named Fernand de Brinon, a notorious Nazi sympathizer, to lead the surrender negotiations with the Germans. He met Adolf Hitler in Montoire on 22 October 1940, and proposed an alliance between France and Nazi Germany. Two days later, he arranged the meeting between Pétain and Hitler in Montoire, where Vichy's collaborationist policy was ratified by a handshake between the two men.
Laval did many unsolicited favors for the Germans, without getting or even requesting anything in return. He delivered the Belgian Central Bank's gold to Germany, which Belgium had sent to France for protection. He ceded France's stake in the copper mines of Bor in Yugoslavia, which were the largest mines in Europe producing this strategic metal. He also proposed the return of the government to Paris, where it would be under more surveillance from the Germans.
In November 1940, at a meeting with Hermann Göring, Laval suggested a military alliance with Germany. He made plans for a joint reconquest of Chad, whose governor, Félix Eboué, had joined the Free French Forces.
Some members of the government found him too radical, while Pétain worried about Laval's unpopularity and ambition. On 13 December 1940, Pétain removed Laval, replacing him with Flandin and then Darlan. They continued Laval's collaborationist and authoritarian policy. Laval was briefly arrested, but Otto Abetz, the Reich's ambassador in France, had him quickly freed and moved to Paris, where he lived under German protection. He continued his political activity.
On 27 August 1941, Laval was injured in an assassination attempt by Paul Collette, a former member of the ''Croix-de-Feu''. The attack occurred at a ''Légion des Volontaires Français'' (LVF) review. The LVF was an ultra-collaborationist militia which later became the SS Division Charlemagne. (Among those present at the review were Eugène Deloncle, the LVF's leader and former head of the terrorist group ''La Cagoule'', Marcel Déat, founder of the Collaborationist ''Rassemblement national populaire'' (RNP), Fernand de Brinon, general delegate of the Vichy regime in occupied territories, Marc Chevallier, prefect of Seine-et-Oise, and the German plenipotentiary minister Schleier.) Laval soon recovered from the injury.
Laval was recalled to the Vichy government on 18 April 1942. This time he became Prime Minister and succeeded Darlan as the leading figure in the regime after Pétain himself. Laval was largely blamed for the increase in anti-Jewish activities and the decision to send French workers to Germany through ''la relève'' and later the ''Service du Travail Obligatoire''. The creation of the Vichy Milice in January 1943 has also been ascribed to Laval.
After the Allied invasion of France, the government moved from Vichy to Belfort and then, in August 1944, to Sigmaringen in Germany. (He appears as a character in Louis Ferdinand Céline's novel ''Castle to Castle'', which is set largely at Sigmaringen.) In May 1945 Laval fled. He first went to Spain but was deported and ended up in Austria where he was handed over to the Allied forces. On 30 July 1945 he was handed over to the new French government. Charged with treason and violating state security, Laval was tried and found guilty, despite vigorously defending himself in the first part of his trial. He was sentenced to death on 9 October. After a failed attempt at suicide (the cyanide had lost its full potency), he was executed by firing squad at Fresnes prison, near Paris, half-unconscious and vomiting on 15 October 1945.

Parliamentary offices



★ 10/05/1914 - 07/12/1919 : Deputy of the Seine department

★ 11/05/1924 - 17/02/1927 : Deputy of the Seine - Not registered in any parliamentary group

★ Senator from 1927 to 1936 and from 1936 to 1944 [2]
==Laval's First Government, 27 January 1931 - 14 January 1932==


★ Pierre Laval - President of the Council and Minister of the Interior

Aristide Briand - Minister of Foreign Affairs

André Maginot - Minister of War

Pierre Étienne Flandin - Minister of Finance

François Piétri - Minister of Budget

Adolphe Landry - Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions

Léon Bérard - Minister of Justice

Charles Dumont - Minister of Marine

Louis de Chappedelaine - Minister of Merchant Marine

Jacques-Louis Dumesnil - Minister of Air

Mario Roustan - Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts

Auguste Champetier de Ribes - Minister of Pensions

André Tardieu - Minister of Agriculture

Paul Reynaud - Minister of Colonies

Maurice Deligne - Minister of Public Works

Camille Blaisot - Minister of Public Health

Charles Guernier - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones

Louis Rollin - Minister of Commerce and Industry
==Laval's Second Government, 14 January - 20 February 1932==

★ Pierre Laval - President of the Council and Minister of Foreign Affairs

André Tardieu - Minister of War

Pierre Cathala - Minister of the Interior

Pierre Étienne Flandin - Minister of Finance

François Piétri - Minister of Budget

Adolphe Landry - Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions

Léon Bérard - Minister of Justice

Charles Dumont - Minister of Marine

Louis de Chappedelaine - Minister of Merchant Marine

Jacques-Louis Dumesnil - Minister of Air

Mario Roustan - Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts

Auguste Champetier de Ribes - Minister of Pensions

Achille Fould - Minister of Agriculture

Paul Reynaud - Minister of Colonies

Maurice Deligne - Minister of Public Works

Camille Blaisot - Minister of Public Health

Charles Guernier - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones

Louis Rollin - Minister of Commerce and Industry
==Laval's Third Ministry, 7 June 1935 - 24 January 1936==

★ Pierre Laval - President of the Council and Minister of Foreign Affairs

Jean Fabry - Minister of War

Joseph Paganon - Minister of the Interior

Marcel Régnier - Minister of Finance

Ludovic-Oscar Frossard - Minister of Labour

Léon Bérard - Minister of Justice

François Piétri - Minister of Marine

Mario Roustan - Minister of Merchant Marine

Victor Denain - Minister of Air

Philippe Marcombes - Minister of National Education

Henri Maupoil - Minister of Pensions

Pierre Cathala - Minister of Agriculture

Louis Rollin - Minister of Colonies

Laurent Eynac - Minister of Public Works

Louis Lafont - Minister of Public Health and Physical Education

Georges Mandel - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones

Georges Bonnet - Minister of Commerce and Industry

Édouard Herriot - Minister of State

Louis Marin - Minister of State

Pierre Étienne Flandin - Minister of State
Changes


17 June 1935 - Mario Roustan succeeds Marcombes (d. 13 June) as Minister of National Education. William Bertrand succeeds Roustan as Minister of Merchant Marine.
==Laval's Fourth Ministry, 18 April 1942 - 20 August 1944==

★ Pierre Laval - President of the Council, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of the Interior, and Minister of Information

Eugène Bridoux - Minister of War

Pierre Cathala - Minister of Finance and National Economy

Jean Bichelonne - Minister of Industrial Production

Hubert Lagardelle - Minister of Labour

Joseph Barthélemy - Minister of Justice

Gabriel Auphan - Minister of Marine

Jean-François Jannekeyn - Minister of Air

Abel Bonnard - Minister of National Education

Jacques Le Roy Ladurie - Minister of Agriculture

Max Bonnafous - Minister of Supply

Jules Brévié - Minister of Colonies

Raymond Grasset - Minister of Family and Health

Robert Gibrat - Minister of Communication

Lucien Romier - Minister of State
Changes


11 September 1942 - Max Bonnafous succeeds Le Roy Ladurie as Minister of Agriculture, remaining also Minister of Supply

18 November 1942 - Jean-Charles Abrial succeeds Auphan as Minister of Marine. Jean Bichelonne succeeds Gibrat as Minister of Communication, remaining also Minister of Industrial Production.

26 March 1943 - Maurice Gabolde succeeds Barthélemy as Minister of Justice. Henri Bléhaut succeeds Abrial as Minister of Marine and Brévié as Minister of Colonies.

21 November 1943 - Jean Bichelonne succeeds Lagardelle as Minister of Labour, remaining also Minister of Industrial Production and Communication.

31 December 1943 - Minister of State Lucien Romier resigns from the government.

6 January 1944 - Pierre Cathala succeeds Bonnafous as Minister of Agriculture and Supply, remaining also Minister of Finance and National Economy.

3 March 1944 - The office of Minister of Supply is abolished. Pierre Cathala remains Minister of Finance, National Economy, and Agriculture.

16 March 1944 - Marcel Déat succeeds Bichelonne as Minister of Labour and National Solidarity. Bichelonne remains Minister of Industrial Production and Communication.

References


1. André Larané, 4 janvier 1935: Laval rencontre Mussolini à Rome, ''Hérodote''
2. Biographical notice of Laval on the French National Assembly's website


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