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Raymond Poincaré

Raymond Poincaré
76th Prime Minister of FranceIn office
January 21, 1912 – January 21, 1913Preceded by Joseph CaillauxSucceeded by Aristide Briand10th President of the French Republic
Co-Prince of AndorraIn office
February 18, 1913 – February 18, 1920Preceded by Armand FallièresSucceeded by Paul Deschanel89th Prime Minister of FranceIn office
January 15, 1922 – June 8, 1924Preceded by Aristide BriandSucceeded by Frédéric François-Marsal95th Prime Minister of FranceIn office
July 23, 1926 – July 29, 1929Preceded by Édouard HerriotSucceeded by Aristide BriandBorn August 20, 1860
Died October 15, 1934
Political party PDR

Raymond Poincaré (August 20, 1860October 15, 1934) was a French conservative statesman who served as Prime Minister of France on five separate occasions and as President of France from 1913 to 1920.

Contents

Early life

Born in Bar-le-Duc, Meuse, France, the son of Nicolas Antonin Hélène Poincaré, a distinguished civil servant and meteorologist. Educated at the University of Paris, Raymond was called to the Paris bar, and was for some time law editor of the Voltaire.

As a lawyer, he successfully defended Jules Verne in a libel suit presented against the famous author by the chemist Eugène Turpin, inventor of the explosive Melinite, who claimed that the "mad scientist" character in Verne's book "Facing the Flag" was based on himself. (A letter which Verne later sent to his brother Paul seems to suggest that, though acquitted due to Poincaré's spirited defence, Verne did intend to defame Turpin.)

Early political career

Poincaré had served for over a year in the Department of Agriculture when in 1887 he was elected deputy for the Meuse. He made a great reputation in the Chamber as an economist, and sat on the budget commissions of 18901891 and 1892. He was minister of education, fine arts and religion in the first cabinet (April – November 1893) of Charles Dupuy, and minister of finance in the second and third (May 1894 – January 1895).

In Alexandre Ribot's cabinet Poincaré became minister of public instruction. Although he was excluded from the Radical cabinet which followed, the revised scheme of death duties proposed by the new ministry was based upon his proposals of the previous year. He became vice-president of the chamber in the autumn of 1895, and in spite of the bitter hostility of the Radicals retained his position in 1896 and 1897.

Along with other followers of "Opportunist" Léon Gambetta, Poincaré founded the Democratic Republican Alliance (ARD) in 1902, which became the most important center-right party under the Third Republic. In 1906 he returned to the ministry of finance in the short-lived Sarrien ministry. Poincaré had retained his practice at the bar during his political career, and he published several volumes of essays on literary and political subjects.

First premiership

Poincaré became Prime Minister in January of 1912, and began pursuing a hard-line anti-German policy, noted for restoring close ties with France's Russian ally.

Presidency

He was elected President of the Republic in 1913, in succession to Armand Fallières and attempted to make that office into a site of power for the first time since MacMahon in the 1870s. He generally managed to continue to dominate foreign policy, in particular. He became increasingly sidelined after the accession to power of Georges Clemenceau as Prime Minister in 1917. He believed the Armistice happened too soon and that the French Army should have penetrated Germany far more.[1] At the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, negotiating the Treaty of Versailles, he wanted France to wrest the Rhineland from Germany to put it under Allied military control.[2] Poincaré wrote a memorandum for the conference, saying that after the Franco-Prussian War Germany occupied various French provinces and did not leave until they received all of the indemnity, whereas France was asking for reparations for damaged caused. He further claimed that if the Allies did not occupy the Rhineland and at a later date found that they would need to do so again, Germany would label them the aggressor:

"And, further, shall we be sure of finding the left bank free from German troops? Germany is supposedly going to undertake to have neither troops nor fortresses on the left bank and within a zone extending 50 k.m. east of the Rhine. But the Treaty does not provide for any permanent supervision of troops and armaments on the left bank any more than elsewhere in Germany. In the absence of this permanent supervision, the clause stipulating that the League of Nations may order enquiries to be undertaken is in danger of being purely illusory. We can thus have no guarantee that after the expiry of the fifteen years and the evacuation of the left bank, the Germans will not filter troops by degrees into this district. Even supposing they have not previously done so, how can we prevent them doing it at the moment when we intend to re-occupy on account of their default? It will be simple for them to leap to the Rhine in a night and to seize this natural military frontier well ahead of us. The option to renew the occupation should not therefore from any point of view be substituted for occupation".[3]

Ferdinand Foch urged Poincaré to invoke his powers as laid down in the Constitution and take over the negotiations of the treaty due to worries that Clemenceau was not achieving France's aims.[4] He did not and when the French Cabinet approved of the terms Clemenceau got Poincaré thought about resigning, although again he refrained.[5]

Second premiership

A 1932 electoral leaflet supporting Raymond Poincaré's achievements

In 1920, Poincaré's term as President came to an end, and two years later he returned to office as Prime Minister. Once again, his tenure was noted for its strong anti-German policies, with Poincaré justifying these by saying: "Germany's population was increasing, her industries were intact, she had no factories to reconstruct, she had no flooded mines. Her resources were intact, above and below ground...In fifteen or twenty years Germany would be mistress of Europe. In front of her would be France with a population scarcely increased".[6]

Frustrated at Germany's unwillingness to pay reparations, Poincaré hoped for joint Anglo-French economic sanctions against Germany in 1922 and opposed military action. However by December 1922 he was faced with British-American-German hostility and saw coal for French steel production and money for reconstructing the devastated industrial areas draining away. Poincaré was exasperated with British failure to act, and wrote to the French ambassador in London:

"Judging others by themselves, the English, who are blinded by their loyalty, have always thought that the Germans did not abide by their pledges inscribed in the Versailles Treaty because they had not frankly agreed to them. ... We, on the contrary, believe that if Germany, far from making the slightest effort to carry out the treaty of peace, has always tried to escape her obligations, it is because until now she has not been convinced of her defeat. ... We are also certain that Germany, as a nation, resigns herself to keep her pledged word only under the impact of necessity".[7]

Poincaré decided to occupy the Ruhr in 11 January 1923 to extract the reparations herself. This "was profitable and caused neither the German hyperinflation, which began in 1922 and ballooned because of German responses to the Ruhr occupation, nor the franc's 1924 collapse, which arose from French financial practices and the evaporation of reparations".[8] The profits, after Ruhr-Rhineland occupation costs, were nearly 900 million gold marks.[9] Poincaré lost the 1924 parliamentary election "more from the franc's collapse and the ensuing taxation than from diplomatic isolation".[10]

Third premiership

Financial crisis brought him back to power in 1926, and he once again became Prime Minister and Finance Minister until his retirement in 1929.

As early as in 1915, Raymond Poincaré introduced a controversial denaturalization law which was applied to naturalized French citizens with "enemy origins" who had continued to maintain their original nationality. Through another law passed in 1927, the government could denaturalize any new citizen who committed acts contrary to French "national interest".

He died in Paris in 1934.

Family

His brother, Lucien Poincaré (b. 1862), famous as a physicist, became inspector-general of public instruction in 1902. He is the author of La Physique moderne (1906) and L'Électricité (1907). Jules Henri Poincaré (b. 1854), also a distinguished physicist and mathematician, belonged to another branch of the same family.

Poincaré's First Ministry, 21 January 191221 January 1913

Changes

Poincaré's Second Ministry, 15 January 192229 March 1924

  • Raymond Poincaré - President of the Council and Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • André Maginot - Minister of War
  • Maurice Maunoury - Minister of the Interior
  • Charles de Lasteyrie - Minister of Finance
  • Albert Peyronnet - Minister of Labour
  • Louis Barthou - Minister of Justice
  • Flaminius Raiberti - Minister of Marine
  • Léon Bérard - Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
  • Henry Chéron - Minister of Agriculture
  • Albert Sarraut - Minister of Colonies
  • Yves Le Trocquer - Minister of Public Works
  • Paul Strauss - Minister of Hygiene, Welfare Work, and Social Security Provisions
  • Lucien Dior - Minister of Commerce and Industry
  • Charles Reibel - Minister of Liberated Regions

Changes

  • 5 October 1922 - Maurice Colrat succeeds Barthou as Minister of Justice.

Poincaré's Third Ministry, 29 March9 June 1924

  • Raymond Poincaré - President of the Council and Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • André Maginot - Minister of War
  • Justin de Selves - Minister of the Interior
  • Frédéric François-Marsal - Minister of Finance
  • Charles Daniel-Vincent - Minister of Labour and Hygiene
  • Edmond Lefebvre du Prey - Minister of Justice
  • Maurice Bokanowski - Minister of Marine
  • Henry de Jouvenel - Minister of Public Instruction, Fine Arts, and Technical Education
  • Joseph Capus - Minister of Agriculture
  • Jean Fabry - Minister of Colonies
  • Yves Le Trocquer - Minister of Public Works, Ports, and Marine
  • Louis Loucheur - Minister of Commerce, Industry, Posts, and Telegraphs
  • Louis Marin - Minister of Liberated Regions

Poincaré's Fourth Ministry, 23 July 192611 November 1928

  • Raymond Poincaré - President of the Council and Minister of Finance
  • Aristide Briand - Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Paul Painlevé - Minister of War
  • Albert Sarraut - Minister of the Interior
  • André Fallières - Minister of Labour, Hygiene, Welfare Work, and Social Security Provisions
  • Louis Barthou - Minister of Justice
  • Georges Leygues - Minister of Marine
  • Édouard Herriot - Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
  • Louis Marin - Minister of Pensions
  • Henri Queuille - Minister of Agriculture
  • Léon Perrier - Minister of Colonies
  • André Tardieu - Minister of Public Works
  • Maurice Bokanowski - Minister of Commerce and Industry

Changes

  • 1 June 1928 - Louis Loucheur succeeds Fallières as Minister of Labour, Hygiene, Welfare Work, and Social Security Provisions
  • 14 September 1928 - Laurent Eynac enters the ministry as Minister of Air. Henry Chéron succeeds Bokanowski as Minister of Commerce and Industry, and also becomes Minister of Posts and Telegraphs.

Poincaré's Fifth Ministry, 11 November 192829 July 1929

  • Raymond Poincaré - President of the Council
  • Aristide Briand - Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Paul Painlevé - Minister of War
  • André Tardieu - Minister of the Interior
  • Henry Chéron - Minister of Finance
  • Louis Loucheur - Minister of Labour, Hygiene, Welfare Work, and Social Security Provisions
  • Louis Barthou - Minister of Justice
  • Georges Leygues - Minister of Marine
  • Laurent Eynac - Minister of Air
  • Pierre Marraud - Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
  • Louis Antériou - Minister of Pensions
  • Jean Hennessy - Minister of Agriculture
  • André Maginot - Minister of Colonies
  • Pierre Forgeot - Minister of Public Works
  • Georges Bonnefous - Minister of Commerce and Industry


Political offices Preceded by
Charles DupuyMinister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
1893 Succeeded by
Eugène SpullerMinister of Worship
1893 Preceded by
Auguste BurdeauMinister of Finance
1894–1895 Succeeded by
Alexandre RibotPreceded by
Georges LeyguesMinister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
1895 Succeeded by
Émile CombesPreceded by
Charles DupuyMinister of Worship
1895 Preceded by
Pierre Merlou Minister of Finance
1906 Succeeded by
Joseph CaillauxPreceded by
Joseph CaillauxPrime Minister of France
1912–1913 Succeeded by
Aristide BriandPreceded by
Justin de SelvesMinister of Foreign Affairs
1912–1913 Succeeded by
Charles JonnartPreceded by
Armand FallièresPresident of France
1913–1920 Succeeded by
Paul DeschanelPreceded by
Aristide BriandPrime Minister of France
1922–1924 Succeeded by
Frédéric François-MarsalMinister of Foreign Affairs
1922–1924 Succeeded by
Edmond Lefebvre du PreyPreceded by
Édouard HerriotPrime Minister of France
1926–1929 Succeeded by
Aristide BriandPreceded by
Anatole de MonzieMinister of Finance
1926–1928 Succeeded by
Henry de Chéron Academic offices Preceded by
Émile GebhartSeat 34
Académie française
1909-1934Succeeded by
Jacques BainvillePreceded by
Augustine BirrellRector of the University of Glasgow
1914—1919 Succeeded by
Andrew Bonar Law


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1 interim

Notes

  1. ^ Margaret MacMillan, Peacemakers. The Paris Conference of 1919 and Its Attempt to End War (John Murray, 2003), p. 42.
  2. ^ MacMillan, p. 182.
  3. ^ Ernest R. Troughton, It's Happening Again (London: John Gifford, 1944), p. 21.
  4. ^ MacMillan, p. 212.
  5. ^ MacMillan, p. 214.
  6. ^ Étienne Mantoux, The Carthaginian Peace, or The Economic Consequences of Mr. Keynes (London: Oxford University Press, 1946), p. 23.
  7. ^ Leopold Schwarzschild, World in Trance (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1943), p. 140.
  8. ^ Sally Marks, '1918 and After. The Postwar Era', in Gordon Martel (ed.), The Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered. Second Edition (London: Routledge, 1999), p. 26.
  9. ^ Marks, p. 35, n. 57.
  10. ^ Marks, p. 26.

References

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