François Delmas (24 August 1913 –3 March 2002) was a French politician. He was mayor of Montpellier from 1959 to 1977 and briefly a member of the National Assembly. He was also Secretary of State for the Environment in Raymond Barre's government from 1978 to 1981. [1]
Edgar Jean Faure was a French politician,lawyer,essayist,historian and memoirist who served as Prime Minister of France in 1952 and again between 1955 and 1956. Prior to his election to the National Assembly for Jura under the Fourth Republic in 1946,he was a member of the French Committee of National Liberation (CFLN) in Algiers (1943–1944). A Radical,Faure was married to writer Lucie Meyer. In 1978,he was elected to the Académie Française.
Pierre Joseph Auguste Messmer was a French Gaullist politician. He served as Minister of Armies under Charles de Gaulle from 1960 to 1969 –the longest serving since Étienne François,duc de Choiseul under Louis XV –and then as Prime Minister under Georges Pompidou from 1972 to 1974. A member of the French Foreign Legion,he was considered one of the historical Gaullists,and died aged 91 in the military hospital of the Val-de-Grâce in August 2007. He was elected a member of the Académie française in 1999;his seat was taken over by Simone Veil.
Gaullism is a French political stance based on the thought and action of World War II French Resistance leader Charles de Gaulle,who would become the founding President of the Fifth French Republic. De Gaulle withdrew French forces from the NATO Command Structure,forced the removal of Allied bases from France,as well as initiated France's own independent nuclear deterrent programme. His actions were predicated on the view that France would not be subordinate to other nations.
Jacques-Maurice Couve de Murville was a French diplomat and politician who was Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1958 to 1968 and Prime Minister from 1968 to 1969 under the presidency of General de Gaulle. As foreign minister he played the leading role in the critical Franco-German treaty of cooperation in 1963,he laid the foundation for the Paris-Bonn axis that was central in building a united Europe.
Pierre Isaac Isidore Mendès France was a French politician who served as prime minister of France for eight months from 1954 to 1955. As a member of the Radical Party,he headed a government supported by a coalition of Gaullists (RPF),moderate socialists (UDSR),Christian democrats (MRP) and liberal-conservatives (CNIP). His main priority was ending the Indochina War,which had already cost 92,000 lives,with 114,000 wounded and 28,000 captured on the French side. Public opinion polls showed that,in February 1954,only 7% of the French people wanted to continue the fight to regain Indochina out of the hands of the Communists,led by Ho Chi Minh and his Viet Minh movement. At the 1954 Geneva Conference,Mendès France negotiated a deal that gave the Viet Minh control of Vietnam north of the seventeenth parallel,and allowed him to pull out all French forces. He is considered one of the most prominent statesmen of the French Fourth Republic.
Jacques Chaban-Delmas was a French Gaullist politician. He served as Prime Minister under Georges Pompidou from 1969 to 1972. He was the Mayor of Bordeaux from 1947 to 1995 and a deputy for the Gironde département between 1946 and 1997.
Robert Poujade,born in Moulins,Allier,was a French politician. He was the first French Minister of the Environment and was mayor of Dijon from 1971 to 2001.
Presidential elections were held in France in 1974,following the death of President Georges Pompidou. They went to a second round,and were won by Valéry Giscard d'Estaing by a margin of 1.6%. It is to date the closest presidential election in French history.
The Gayssot Act or Gayssot Law,enacted on 13 July 1990,makes it an offence in France to question the existence or size of the category of crimes against humanity as defined in the London Charter of 1945,on the basis of which Nazi leaders were convicted by the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945–1946.
Legislative elections were held in France on 4 and 11 March 1973,to elect the fifth National Assembly of the Fifth Republic.
Delmas may refer to:
French legislative elections to elect the third National Assembly of the Fourth Republic took place on 2 January 1956 using party-list proportional representation. The elections had been scheduled for June 1956;however,they were brought forward by Edgar Faure using a constitutional sanction.
Jean-Pierre Grand is a French politician. He served as the mayor of Castelnau-Le-Lez from 1977 to 2017 and as deputy in the French National Assembly from 2002 to 2012.
Patrick de Cambourg is Honorary Chairman,and the former Chairman of the Mazars Group.
Jean-François-Bertrand Delmas was a French Revolutionary politician. He was député for Haute-Garonne in the Legislative Assembly of 1791–1792,then a member of the French National Convention,the Committee of Public Safety and the Council of Ancients,briefly presiding the Council of Ancients in 1797. Le Moniteur Universel of Fructidor VI reported that he had gone mad,and it is considered unlikely that he survived beyond the end of 1798.
Jean-François Delmas,or Francisque Delmas was a French bass-baritone who created roles in many French operas including Athanaël in Thaïs.
Jacques Baumel was a French politician. He was born on 6 March 1918 in Marseille and died on 17 February 2006 in Rueil-Malmaison. He was a French Resistance fighter,deputy in the National Assembly,a senator,an important leader of the Gaullist movement,and secretary of state and mayor of Rueil-Malmaison.
The vice president of the Republic was an office that existed in France only during the Second Republic (1848–1852),and only ever had one holder,Henri Georges Boulay de la Meurthe,elected in January 1849.
François Jolivet is a French politician of La République En Marche! (LREM) who was elected to the French National Assembly on 18 June 2017,representing the department of Indre.
Jean-François Cesarini was a French politician who represented the 1st constituency of the Vaucluse department in the National Assembly from 2017 until his death in 2020. He was a member of La République En Marche! (LREM).
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