Edgar Faure
Edgar Jean Faure (18 August 1908 – 30 March 1988) was a French politician, lawyer, essayist, historian, and memoirist who served as Prime Minister of France twice during the Fourth Republic, from 20 January to 8 March 1952 and from 23 February 1955 to 1 February 1956.[1] Born in Béziers and trained as a lawyer, Faure held numerous ministerial positions across governments, including Minister of Budget (1950–1951), Justice (1951–1952), Finance (1952 and 1953–1955), Foreign Affairs (1955), Agriculture (1966–1968), National Education (1968–1969), and State Minister for Social Affairs (1972–1973).[1] A versatile figure known for his erudition and adaptability, he transitioned from Radical Party roots to Gaullist alignment, contributing to decolonization by facilitating Morocco's independence in 1956, establishing diplomatic ties with China in 1963 as an envoy, and reforming universities to grant greater autonomy during the 1968 student protests.[2] Later, he presided over the National Assembly from 1973 to 1978, influencing parliamentary affairs until his death in Paris.[1]
Early Life and Education
Birth, Family, and Upbringing
Edgar Faure was born Edgar Jean Vincent Barthélemy Faure on 18 August 1908 in Béziers, Hérault department, in southern France.[3][1][4] His father, Jean-Baptiste Faure (1872–1963), served as a doctor in the French Army, which likely influenced family relocations tied to military postings.[5][6] Little is documented about his mother beyond her given name, Claire, in genealogical records.[6] Faure grew up in a middle-class household shaped by his father's profession, attending middle schools in locations such as Verdun, reflecting the mobility of army families.[7][1] Despite significant nearsightedness from youth, he demonstrated exceptional academic aptitude, earning his baccalauréat early and pursuing rigorous intellectual development that foreshadowed his legal and political pursuits.[3][1] His family's southern French origins contrasted with later professional ties to regions like the Jura, where ancestral connections drew him politically.[8]Legal Training and Intellectual Formation
Faure pursued secondary education at several institutions, including the collèges of Verdun, Narbonne, and Fontainebleau, followed by preparatory courses at Cours La Bruyère and attendance at the Lycées Janson-de-Sailly and Voltaire in Paris.[9] He earned his baccalauréat at age 15, demonstrating exceptional academic precocity.[2] At the University of Paris, Faure enrolled in the Faculté de droit, completing his licence en droit—the standard French law degree—at age 19 in 1927, with high honors.[10] He concurrently studied Russian at the École des Langues Orientales Vivantes, reflecting an early interest in linguistics and international affairs that complemented his legal studies.[3] These pursuits equipped him with foundational knowledge in civil and Roman law, which he later applied in legal practice and historical analyses. Admitted to the Paris bar in 1929 at age 21, Faure became one of the youngest avocats in French history, specializing initially in commercial and international law.[11] His rapid qualification stemmed from rigorous self-discipline and intellectual versatility, as evidenced by his role as secretary of the conférence du stage—a prestigious speaking competition for trainee lawyers—at age 20.[12] Faure's intellectual formation extended beyond jurisprudence to history and comparative law, influenced by autodidactic reading in economic history and Eastern European affairs. He eventually qualified as agrégé des facultés de droit in Roman law and legal history, enabling academic contributions that intertwined legal theory with empirical historical inquiry.[13] This blend fostered a pragmatic, evidence-based approach to law, evident in his later writings on financial crises, such as the Mississippi Bubble.[1]Pre-War and Wartime Activities
Early Political Engagement
Faure exhibited an early interest in politics during his formative years in Paris, initially aligning briefly with the nationalist and monarchist Action Française movement in the 1920s before rejecting its ideology upon recognizing its incompatibility with his republican convictions.[12] In 1929, at age 21, he qualified as France's youngest licensed lawyer and promptly joined the Radical-Socialist Party (Parti radical-socialiste), a centrist republican force dominant in the Third Republic.[1] This affiliation marked his entry into organized political engagement, though his pre-war activities remained primarily intellectual and local rather than electoral.[14] As a practicing avocat at the Paris bar, Faure contributed to political discourse through writings that blended legal expertise with contemporary analysis. In 1930, he published Pascal: le procès des provinciales, examining philosophical and juridical themes in Blaise Pascal's works.[14] By 1938, amid rising European tensions, he authored Le pétrole dans la paix et dans la guerre, addressing the strategic role of oil resources in international relations and foreshadowing wartime economic concerns.[14] These publications underscored his alignment with Radical Party emphases on laïcité, economic liberalism, and anti-fascist republicanism, positioning him within broader debates on France's interwar vulnerabilities. Faure's early Radical involvement did not yield parliamentary office before 1940, reflecting the party's internal factionalism and his youth; prominence came later via wartime resistance networks.[1] Nonetheless, his party membership facilitated connections, including his 1931 marriage to Lucie Meyer, whose family ties bolstered his political networking in republican circles.[12] This foundation enabled his transition to active opposition against Vichy collaborationism as World War II erupted.World War II Experiences
During the early stages of World War II, Edgar Faure underwent officer training in the French army, but following France's capitulation to Germany on June 22, 1940, he was demobilized.[10] Shortly thereafter, he briefly served as a censor at the Havas news agency, France's primary wire service, which operated under increasing Vichy regime oversight during the occupation.[10][11] Opposing the Vichy collaborationist government, Faure joined the French Resistance amid the German occupation, participating in clandestine activities against the occupiers.[10] In 1941, he testified in defense of fellow Radical politician Pierre Mendès France during the latter's Vichy trial for aiding Allied airmen to escape, an act that underscored Faure's anti-Vichy stance and exposed him to regime reprisals.[15] Fearing arrest, Faure fled occupied France in 1942 via clandestine routes to Algiers, where he aligned with General Charles de Gaulle's Free French forces.[15] In Algiers, Faure integrated into the French Committee of National Liberation (CFLN), the provisional government-in-exile established in 1943, contributing legal expertise to its operations as France's liberation progressed.[15] His resistance involvement and subsequent role with de Gaulle's apparatus positioned him for postwar responsibilities, including serving as France's deputy prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials in 1945–1946, where he focused on documenting Nazi cultural depredations.[16]Political Career in the Fourth Republic
Rise Through Radical Ranks
Following his involvement in the French Resistance during World War II, Edgar Faure entered electoral politics as a member of the Radical-Socialist Party, securing election as a deputy for the Jura department on November 10, 1946, in the first parliamentary elections of the Fourth Republic.[12] Representing the party's Republican Radical and Radical-Socialist faction, Faure quickly distinguished himself through his legal expertise and pragmatic approach to economic policy, aligning with the more conservative elements of the Radicals who emphasized fiscal discipline over expansive social reforms.[12] Faure's ascent accelerated in government roles, beginning with his appointment as Secretary of State for Finance on February 13, 1949, where he focused on budget stabilization amid postwar reconstruction challenges.[17] Promoted to Minister of the Budget on July 2, 1950, he served until August 11, 1951, implementing measures to curb inflation and rationalize public spending, which bolstered his reputation within the party's right wing as a defender of moderate liberalism against leftist pressures.[9] These positions underscored his rapid integration into the Radical leadership, where he advocated for centrist coalitions capable of sustaining fragile Fourth Republic governments. By 1951, Faure had emerged as a key figure in the Radical parliamentary group, opposing the more interventionist policies favored by party leftists like Pierre Mendès France.[4] His tenure as Minister of Justice from August 1951 to January 1952 further solidified his influence, during which he handled legal reforms tied to economic recovery. This trajectory culminated in his selection as Prime Minister on January 20, 1952, marking the pinnacle of his early rise and reflecting the party's reliance on his negotiating skills to bridge ideological divides.[12]Ministerial Roles and Policy Contributions
Edgar Faure held several key ministerial positions during the French Fourth Republic, primarily in economic and financial domains. He began as Secretary of State for Finances from 13 February 1949 to 2 July 1950, followed by Minister of the Budget from 2 July 1950 to 11 August 1951.[1] In these early roles, Faure focused on fiscal management amid post-war reconstruction challenges, demonstrating notable expertise in budgetary affairs that positioned him for higher responsibilities.[18] Subsequently, Faure served as Minister of Justice from 11 August 1951 to 20 January 1952, overseeing legal matters during a period of political instability.[1] [2] He then assumed the role of Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs from 28 June 1953 to 19 June 1954, and continued in expanded capacities as Minister of Finance, Economic Affairs and Planning until 20 January 1955.[1] During this tenure, particularly under the Laniel government, Faure managed responses to major labor strikes and pursued economic stabilization policies, including deflationary measures supplemented by taxes on imports and exports to balance growth and stability.[19] [20] His brief stint as Minister of Foreign Affairs from 20 January to 23 February 1955 involved navigating international relations amid ongoing colonial tensions, though specific initiatives in this short period remain limited in documentation.[1] [2] Faure's contributions emphasized pragmatic economic reforms to address inflation and fiscal deficits plaguing the Fourth Republic. As Budget Minister, he contributed to efforts reforming public spending, earning recognition for his handling of complex financial portfolios.[18] In finance roles, his policies aimed at curbing inflationary pressures through targeted fiscal tools, reflecting a commitment to sustainable recovery rather than expansive deficit spending, though these measures faced criticism for their austerity amid social unrest.[20] [21] His work laid groundwork for later stabilization under subsequent governments, underscoring his influence on France's economic policy trajectory in the 1950s.[21]| Position | Dates | Key Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Secretary of State for Finances | 13 Feb 1949 – 2 Jul 1950 | Fiscal oversight in reconstruction era[1] |
| Minister of the Budget | 2 Jul 1950 – 11 Aug 1951 | Public expenditure control and financial expertise[1] [18] |
| Minister of Justice | 11 Aug 1951 – 20 Jan 1952 | Legal administration amid instability[1] [2] |
| Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs | 28 Jun 1953 – 19 Jun 1954 | Economic stabilization and strike management[1] [19] |
| Minister of Finance, Economic Affairs and Planning | 19 Jun 1954 – 20 Jan 1955 | Deflationary policies and trade taxes for growth[1] [20] |
| Minister of Foreign Affairs | 20 Jan 1955 – 23 Feb 1955 | Brief handling of diplomatic challenges[1] [2] |
Premierships and Government Formations
Edgar Faure assumed his first premiership on 20 January 1952, succeeding René Pleven's second cabinet, which had resigned amid economic pressures and parliamentary deadlock following its formation in August 1951.[22] As outgoing Budget Minister, Faure leveraged his reputation for financial acumen to secure investiture, obtaining 343 votes in the National Assembly on 18 January after presenting his program on 17 January, surpassing the required 314-vote majority with 502 deputies voting.[1] His coalition drew primarily from centrists, including Radicals, UDSR, and moderates, excluding communists and maintaining a fragile balance to address inflation and budget deficits. The government emphasized fiscal restraint and European integration efforts but collapsed after 48 days when it failed a confidence vote on 8 March 1952 over stalled reforms.[1] Faure's second premiership commenced on 23 February 1955, after Pierre Mendès-France's cabinet fell on 5 February due to opposition over North African policy and internal Radical Party divisions.[22] He formed a broader center-left coalition, incorporating Socialists, MRP, and Radicals, while navigating tensions with Gaullists and the right; investiture was granted via a National Assembly confidence vote on 23 February, enabling passage of key legislation like the 1955 budget.[1] This administration, lasting until 1 February 1956, focused on stabilizing finances through tax measures and subsidies, but faced escalating challenges from the Algerian crisis and assembly gridlock. In a bid to break parliamentary impasse, Faure dissolved the National Assembly on 30 December 1955, triggering elections in January 1956 that ultimately undermined his government's continuity.[23] The cabinet resigned after losing a confidence vote, reflecting the Fourth Republic's chronic instability with 24 governments in 12 years.[10]Adaptation to the Fifth Republic
Initial Resistance and Ideological Shift
Following the May 1958 political crisis triggered by the Algerian War, Edgar Faure, a veteran of the Fourth Republic's center-left coalitions, initially withheld support for Charles de Gaulle's return to power and the proposed Fifth Republic constitution, which centralized authority in the executive to address chronic governmental instability.[24] This reticence aligned with broader concerns among Radical Party figures and parliamentary traditionalists over diminished legislative influence, prompting Faure to temporarily retreat from active politics to pursue legal and academic pursuits. Faure's pragmatic temperament—often characterized by contemporaries as prioritizing problem-solving over rigid doctrine—soon prompted an ideological pivot toward acceptance of the Fifth Republic's framework, viewed as essential for national stabilization.[25] Re-elected to the National Assembly on November 30, 1958, representing the Jura department under a Radical-aligned banner amid the Gaullist electoral wave, he began aligning with the regime's imperatives, contributing to parliamentary commissions on economic affairs that supported de Gaulle's recovery policies. By the mid-1960s, Faure's shift crystallized through collaboration with Gaullist leadership; in 1964, de Gaulle personally tasked him with confidential negotiations on landmark foreign policy initiatives, signaling trust in his expertise despite prior reservations.[26] This evolution culminated in his brief affiliation with the Union for the New Republic (UNR), the Gaullist party, from 1965 to 1967, reflecting a departure from orthodox Radical anti-presidentialism toward endorsement of the Fifth Republic's executive-driven governance as a viable alternative to the Fourth Republic's paralysis. However, Faure retained reservations about further centralization, opposing the 1962 constitutional referendum on direct presidential election by urging a "no" vote to preserve indirect electoral college selection.[4] Critics, dubbing him a "girouette" (weather vane) for such adaptations, attributed the change to opportunism amid the Gaullists' dominance rather than profound doctrinal conversion.[24]Key Positions under Gaullist Governments
Edgar Faure entered the Gaullist ministerial fold in the Fifth Republic as Minister of Agriculture on 8 January 1966, within Prime Minister Georges Pompidou's government under President Charles de Gaulle.[1] He held the position until 10 July 1968, focusing on stabilizing the agricultural sector amid farmer protests over low grain prices and European Common Agricultural Policy adjustments.[10] His tenure emphasized modernization efforts, including support for structural reforms to enhance productivity, though it faced challenges from rural discontent that influenced electoral dynamics.[1] Following the May 1968 student and worker upheavals, Faure was appointed Minister of National Education on 10 July 1968 in Maurice Couve de Murville's cabinet, retaining the role until 20 June 1969.[1] Tasked with addressing university unrest, he chaired a commission that produced recommendations for decentralizing higher education, culminating in the Orientation Law of 12 November 1968. This legislation granted universities greater administrative and pedagogical autonomy, aiming to foster innovation while preserving state oversight, though implementation revealed tensions between reformist ideals and traditional academic hierarchies.[10][27] Faure briefly served as Minister of State for Social Affairs from 5 April to 2 April 1973 under Prime Minister Pierre Messmer during Georges Pompidou's presidency, overseeing labor and welfare policies amid economic pressures from the oil crisis.[1] Subsequently, on 2 April 1973, he was elected President of the National Assembly by the Gaullist-majority UDR parliamentary group, a position he maintained until 2 May 1978.[1] In this role, he navigated legislative proceedings during Pompidou's final years and the transition to Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, facilitating debates on constitutional matters and economic stabilization while upholding procedural neutrality.[10]Policy Contributions and Reforms
Economic and Financial Policies
During his tenure as Secretary of State for Finance and later Minister of the Budget from 1949 to 1951, Edgar Faure supported stabilization efforts in public finances, including backing the Mayer recovery plan in 1950, which aimed to restore equilibrium through budgetary discipline and monetary measures.[28] In 1948, as a deputy, he proposed a resolution allowing the Banque de France to grant advances on loan titles to facilitate liquidity in the financial system.[28] As Prime Minister from January to March 1952, Faure introduced reforms to nationalized enterprises to enhance efficiency and implemented a mobile wage scale on February 28, 1952, linking pay adjustments to productivity and cost-of-living changes to stimulate economic activity.[28] His government resigned shortly thereafter amid opposition to proposed tax increases, reflecting the challenges of balancing fiscal needs with political resistance.[28] Appointed Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs in June 1953 under the Laniel government, Faure pursued a program of gradual economic expansion focused on price stabilization, raising wages for low-income workers to boost purchasing power, and thereby stimulating demand and production.[29] He innovated the taxation system by restructuring sales taxes to impose levies on markups at each wholesale stage, aiming to curb inefficiencies from middlemen, while reducing corporate profit taxes to encourage investment—despite an estimated $286 million loss to the Treasury.[29] These measures contributed to a $257 million increase in tax revenues and enabled the "Eighteen-Month Plan," announced on February 4, 1954, which targeted a 10% rise in output and was achieved six months ahead of schedule.[29][28] As Prime Minister again from February 1955 to January 1956, Faure secured special powers from the National Assembly on March 29, 1955 (passed 329-265), valid until June 30, to enact economic and fiscal reforms amid taxpayer unrest, including the Poujadist protests.[30] These powers facilitated concessions such as removing penalties for resisting tax inspections, replacing the business turnover tax with lump-sum payments for tradesmen with annual turnover under 15 million francs (exempting about 1.2 million small shopkeepers), and promising leniency on outstanding tax cases without full amnesty.[30] Broader policies emphasized lowering interest rates, elevating the minimum wage, modernizing industries through business incentives like credits while threatening tariff reductions for non-cooperation, and promoting efficient production without excessive state intervention.[10][29]Educational Reforms and International Initiatives
As Minister of National Education from July 10, 1968, to June 20, 1969, Edgar Faure addressed the disruptions of the May 1968 student protests by prioritizing university autonomy and participatory governance.[28] His administration introduced the loi d'orientation de l'enseignement supérieur on November 12, 1968, which dismantled the traditional faculty system in favor of new unitary universities organized into unités d'enseignement et de recherche (teaching and research units).[31] This reform empowered university assemblies—comprising professors, students, and administrative staff—to elect presidents and shape curricula, aiming to decentralize control from the central Ministry of Education and foster interdisciplinary collaboration.[32] The legislation sought to integrate student voices into decision-making, responding directly to demands for democratization amid the 1968 unrest, while preserving academic standards through enhanced regional funding and research incentives.[33] Implementation faced resistance from conservative academics wary of politicization, yet it marked a shift toward modernizing French higher education by promoting flexibility over rigid centralization.[31] Faure's emphasis on participation extended to preparatory measures for secondary education reforms, though his tenure's brevity limited deeper structural changes beyond universities.[34] Internationally, Faure chaired UNESCO's International Commission on the Development of Education from 1971 to 1972, producing the influential Learning to Be: The World of Education Today and Tomorrow report.[35] Published in 1972, the report advocated lifelong education as a "master concept" to adapt schooling to rapid societal changes, emphasizing continuous learning across formal, non-formal, and informal settings to combat obsolescence in knowledge.[36] It critiqued traditional front-loaded education systems for failing diverse global populations and proposed a "learning society" with democratized access, influencing policies in developing nations and UNESCO's subsequent frameworks.[37] The Faure Commission's recommendations, drawn from consultations across 20 countries, stressed equity, innovation, and international cooperation in education, positioning lifelong learning as essential for economic and social mobility.[27] While praised for its visionary scope, the report's ideals faced implementation challenges in resource-constrained contexts, yet it endures as a foundational text in global educational discourse.[38] Faure's role underscored his post-ministerial pivot toward multilateral initiatives, bridging French reforms with broader humanistic goals.[39]Foreign Affairs and Decolonization Efforts
As Prime Minister from February 23, 1955, to January 31, 1956, Edgar Faure briefly served as interim Minister of Foreign Affairs from January 2 to February 1, 1955, during a transitional period following the resignation of Pierre Mendès-France.[2] In this capacity and subsequently as head of government, Faure prioritized stabilizing France's international position amid Cold War tensions, including ratifying the 1954 Paris Agreements through the Senate, which facilitated West Germany's rearmament and integration into NATO structures.[40] He represented France at the Geneva Summit of July 1955, where the "Big Four" powers (United States, Soviet Union, United Kingdom, and France) discussed disarmament and European security, later describing the outcomes as a "long and difficult" but necessary path toward détente.[41] Faure extended the decolonization initiatives begun under Mendès-France, who had negotiated internal autonomy for Tunisia in 1954 and initiated talks for Morocco.[24] On March 16, 1955, he reaffirmed France's commitment to Tunisian internal autonomy despite resistance to full separation, emphasizing continued economic and defense ties.[42] This culminated in the April 22, 1955, protocol signed in Paris between Faure and Tunisian representatives, granting Tunisia self-government in domestic affairs while preserving French oversight in foreign policy and military matters, paving the way for formal independence on March 20, 1956, under the formula of "indépendance dans l'interdépendance."[43] Similarly, Faure's government advanced negotiations with Morocco, leading to the La Celle-Saint-Cloud Accords of November 1955, which restored Sultan Mohammed V and set the stage for Moroccan independence in March 1956, again framed as independence within interdependence to mitigate settler opposition.[44] In sub-Saharan Africa, Faure initiated reforms to grant greater autonomy to territories within the French Union. In 1955, he commissioned Léopold Sédar Senghor to chair a committee examining constitutional modifications, which informed the Loi-Cadre of June 23, 1956—enacted shortly after his premiership but building directly on his directives—providing universal suffrage, local assemblies, and councils of government for territories like Senegal, thereby accelerating decolonization without immediate rupture.[45] These measures reflected Faure's pragmatic recognition of decolonization's inevitability, as he later articulated in advocating for orderly transitions to avert broader instability, though they faced criticism for delaying full sovereignty.[2] Unlike the escalating conflict in Algeria, where Faure deployed over 100,000 troops by May 1955 to maintain order, his North African and African policies emphasized negotiation over confrontation.[46]Intellectual and Personal Life
Writing, Historiography, and Bibliography
Faure authored several historical monographs that reconstructed pivotal events in French economic and political history, leveraging his background as a lawyer and politician to emphasize archival detail and causal analysis.[47] His works often focused on moments of financial or administrative crisis, presenting them as turning points shaped by individual decisions and systemic pressures rather than abstract forces.[48] In La Disgrâce de Turgot: 12 mai 1776 (Gallimard, 1961), Faure examined the dismissal of finance controller-general Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot, arguing it marked the failure of enlightened reform amid court intrigue and economic resistance; the 610-page volume drew on primary documents to trace the day's deliberations and broader fiscal debates.[49] [47] Similarly, La Banqueroute de Law: 17 juillet 1720 (Gallimard, 1977), spanning 742 pages with illustrations, detailed the collapse of John Law's Mississippi Company scheme, highlighting the July 17 decree's role in triggering panic sales and currency devaluation; reviewers noted its exhaustive use of regency-era records to illustrate speculative bubbles' mechanics.[48] [50] Faure's earlier Le Serpent et la Tortoise (Julliard, 1957) analyzed post-1949 China's challenges, blending firsthand diplomatic observations with historical parallels to ancient fables, though it reflected his era's limited access to internal Communist Party archives.[51] Later, Le Secret des Rousses (1979) disclosed details of the 1962 Évian Accords negotiations, using declassified materials to reveal behind-the-scenes compromises on Algerian independence.[51] His memoirs, published in two volumes by Plon—Avoir toujours raison... c'est un grand tort (1980) and Si tel doit être mon destin ce soir (1982)—provided retrospective accounts of his political career, interweaving personal anecdotes with policy reflections but prioritizing factual chronology over introspection.[52] These writings contributed to historiography by humanizing institutional events through narrative reconstruction, though critics observed their occasional alignment with Faure's adaptive political persona rather than detached analysis.[53] Key works include:- La Disgrâce de Turgot: 12 mai 1776 (1961)[49]
- La Banqueroute de Law: 17 juillet 1720 (1977)[48]
- Le Serpent et la Tortue (1957)[51]
- Le Secret des Rousses (1979)[51]
- Mémoires, vols. 1–2 (1980–1982)[52]