Deputy Prime Minister of France
Vice President of the Council of Minister | |
---|---|
Vice-président du Conseil des ministres | |
Council of Ministers | |
Reports to | Prime Minister (President of the Council) |
Nominator | Prime Minister |
Appointer | President |
Formation | 2 September 1871 |
First holder | Jules Armand Dufaure |
Final holder | Guy Mollet |
Abolished | 28 May 1958 |
The deputy prime minister of France is a position which existed at times in the government of France between 1871 and 1958. It was titled vice president of the Council of Ministers (French: vice-président du Conseil des ministres), or vice president of the Council for short.
It was in itself a sinecure, used to grant seniority immediately after the prime minister to one important member of the government, later up to three at the same time, but without specific duty or power, or any role as designated acting prime minister. However, in 1871–1876 and 1940–1942, it was actually used for the de facto prime minister, as the position was nominally held by the head of state.
Position
As deputy
The position of deputy prime minister existed only occasionally during the Third Republic (1870–1940, starting only in the 1910s), the Provisional Government of the French Republic (1944–1946), and the Fourth Republic (1946–1958).
As for all other members of the government, the appointment, or removal, was formally by the head of state, but bowing to the decision of the prime minister.
Although it implied a role of
Depending on the political situation, it could reflect the personal standing of the holder, especially if he was a former prime minister, or his role as leader or representative of an important party of the government combination, especially for the two junior parties of the tripartisme in 1946–1947. Positions of minister of state were already used for the same purpose since the 19th century; deputy prime ministers ranked above these when both existed at the same time, making it possible for the prime minister to draw up a subtle order of seniority.[2]
The first holder was Aristide Briand in 1914, chosen at the start of World War I by René Viviani; as the government had partially transferred from Paris to Bordeaux, this enabled him to deputize for Vivani, or for the foreign and war ministers, when they came and went between the two cities.[3] Viviani was also the first prime minister not holding a specific portfolio in order to concentrate on the coordination of an expanding state apparatus.[4] The last was Guy Mollet in 1958.
An equivalent position had also existed in a
As head of government
In two short periods, the title was however used for the de facto head of government himself, because the head of state formally held the position of prime minister as well.
In 1871, for lack of a
At the start of the Vichy Regime (1940–1944), Philippe Pétain, the last prime minister of the Third Republic who proclaimed himself head of the French State, made Pierre Laval the leading minister when he re-appointed him as his deputy.[d] Pétain dismissed and replaced Laval a few months later, but he was eventually forced by the German occupation authorities to recall him with increased prerogatives in April 1942, upon which he granted him the title of head of the Government (chef du gouvernement), even though he himself nominally kept the title of president of the Council.[7][8]
List
Holder and concurrent position | Government | Term of office | Party | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Third Republic (1870–1940) | ||||||
Government of National Defence )
| 1870–1871 (vice president of the ||||||
Minister of Foreign Affairs
|
National
Defence |
4 September 1870 | 13 February 1871 | Moderate Republicans | ||
1871–1876 | ||||||
1876–1940 | ||||||
Aristide Briand[α][β][γ] Minister of Justice |
2nd Viviani | 26 August 1914 | 29 October 1915 | PRS | ||
René Viviani[α][δ] Minister of Justice |
5th Briand | 29 October 1915 | 12 December 1916 | PRS | ||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Minister of Finance
|
10th Briand | 23 June 1926 | 23 July 1926 | Radical | ||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Lucien Hubert[α] Minister of Justice |
1st Tardieu | 3 November 1929 | 24 February 1930 | Radical | ||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Paul Reynaud (1st) Minister of Justice and for the Control of Public Administrations |
3rd Tardieu | 20 February 1932 | 3 June 1932 | AD | ||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Albert Dalimier Minister of Justice |
1st Sarraut | 26 October 1933 | 24 November 1933 | Radical | ||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Minister of National Defence and War
|
1st Blum | 4 June 1936 | 21 June 1937 | Radical[ε] | ||
Léon Blum (1st)[δ] |
3rd Chautemps | 23 June 1937 | 14 January 1938 | SFIO | ||
Minister of National Defence and War
|
4th Chautemps, 2nd Blum | 18 January 1938 | 8 April 1938 | Radical[ε] | ||
Camille Chautemps (1st)[β] In charge of coordination of the Office of the Prime Minister |
3rd Daladier | 10 April 1938 | 20 March 1940 | Radical | ||
Camille Chautemps (2nd)[β] Minister of Coordination (of the Office of the Prime Minister) |
Reynaud | 21 March 1940 | 16 June 1940 | Radical | ||
Philippe Pétain[γ] Minister of State |
18 May 1940 (joined) |
Independent | ||||
Camille Chautemps (3rd)[β] Minister of State |
Pétain | 16 June 1940 | 11 July 1940 | Radical | ||
Pierre Laval (1st) Minister of State |
23 June 1940 (joined) |
Independent | ||||
Vichy Regime (1940–1944) | ||||||
Provisional Government of the French Republic (1944–1946)[ζ] | ||||||
Francisque Gay |
Gouin | 26 January 1946 | 12 June 1946 | MRP | ||
Maurice Thorez (1st) |
PCF[ε] | |||||
Félix Gouin[δ] | 1st Bidault | 24 June 1946 | 28 November 1946 | SFIO | ||
Maurice Thorez (2nd) |
PCF[ε] | |||||
Fourth Republic (1946–1958) | ||||||
Pierre-Henri Teitgen (1st) Minister of State (from 4 May: in charge of the Civil Service and Administrative Reform) |
1st Ramadier | 22 January 1947 | 21 October 1947 | MRP | ||
Maurice Thorez (3rd) Minister of State |
4 May 1947 (dismissed) |
PCF[ε] | ||||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Pierre-Henri Teitgen (2nd) | Marie | 26 July 1948 | 28 August 1948 | MRP | ||
Léon Blum (2nd)[β] | SFIO | |||||
André Marie (1st)[δ] | 2nd Schuman | 5 September 1948 | 11 September 1948 | Radical | ||
André Marie (2nd)[β] Minister of Justice |
1st Queuille | 11 September 1948 | 13 February 1949 (resigned) |
Radical | ||
Robert Lecourt Minister of Justice |
13 February 1949 (joined) |
5 October 1949 | MRP | |||
Henri Queuille (1st)[δ] | 2nd Bidault | 28 October 1949 | 7 February 1950 | Radical | ||
Minister of the Interior
|
SFIO | |||||
Minister of the Interior
|
3rd Bidault | 7 February 1950 | 24 June 1950 | Radical | ||
Georges Bidault (1st)[δ] | 2nd Queuille | 2 July 1950 | 4 July 1950 | MRP[ε] | ||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Georges Bidault (2nd)[β] | 3rd Queuille | 10 March 1951 | 10 July 1951 | MRP[ε] | ||
René Pleven[δ][γ] | UDSR[ε] | |||||
Guy Mollet (1st) In charge of the Council of Europe. |
SFIO[ε] | |||||
Minister of National Defence
|
2nd Pleven | 11 August 1951 | 7 January 1952 | MRP | ||
René Mayer (2nd) Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs |
Radical | |||||
Minister of National Defence
|
1st Faure | 20 January 1952 | 28 February 1952 | MRP | ||
Henri Queuille (3rd)[β] Minister of State |
Radical | |||||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Henri Queuille (4th)[β] | Mayer | 8 January 1953 | 21 May 1953 | Radical | ||
Paul Reynaud (2nd)[β] | Laniel | 28 June 1953 | 12 June 1954 | CNIP | ||
Henri Queuille (5th)[β] | Radical | |||||
Pierre-Henri Teitgen (3rd) | MRP[ε] | |||||
Position in abeyance | ||||||
Guy Mollet (2nd)[β] | Pflimlin | 15 May 1958 (joined) |
28 May 1958 | SFIO[ε] | ||
|
Earlier and later systems
The meetings of the
During the Second Empire (1852–1870), the position of prime minister had been pointedly abolished by Napoleon III, who led government business in person, but the minister of state, who was ranked first and was close to the Emperor, came to be seen as the primus inter pares, especially when speaking in the name of the Emperor in important parliamentary business.
Although the position of prime minister came in legal existence when it re-emerged in the 1870s, the office did not appear in a French constitution before
The position of deputy prime minister (potentially vice-Premier ministre) has never been granted under the Fifth Republic (1958–present). The Constitution simply provides that the prime minister “may delegate certain of his powers to ministers” (article 21). Nicolas Hulot, who served as minister for the ecological and solidary transition with the rank of minister of state in the first year of Emmanuel Macron’s presidency, had long publicly called for a position of deputy prime minister in charge of the environment, and said that Macron had considered his elevation, but determined that it would be “not constitutional”.[f]
See also
- Deputy prime minister – General notion
- Vice President of France – 1848–1852 French government office
- List of prime ministers of France
Citations
References
- ^ Fessard de Foucault 1972, p. 21.
- ^ Fessard de Foucault 1972, pp. 10, 14, 24.
- ^ ISBN 2-262-02192-9.
- ISSN 1954-3670 – via Cairn.info. §12–17 in particular.
- OpenEdition Books.
- ISBN 978-2-36199-557-7.
- ISSN 1954-3670 – via Cairn.info.
- ISBN 2-213-59930-0.
- ISBN 2-213-62339-2.
- ^ ISBN 978-2-84287-596-1.
- ISBN 978-2-271-08952-6.
- Presses universitaires de France – via National Assembly.
- ^ Massot 1996, p. 50.
- ISSN 0152-0768.
Primary sources
- Gallica.
- Gallica.
- Gallica. Quoted by Massot 1996, p. 49.
- Gallica.
- Gallica.
- ISSN 0242-3065.
Sources
- Fessard de Foucault, Bertrand (February 1972). "Les ministres d'État". Revue française de science politique. XXII (1). Paris: doi:10.3406/rfsp.1972.419043 – via Persée.
- Yvert, Benoît (2002). Premiers Ministres et Présidents du Conseil. Histoire et dictionnaire raisonné des chefs du gouvernement en France (1815-2002) (in French). Paris: ISBN 2-262-01354-3.