Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Paul Faure (politician)

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Name
  
Paul Faure

Died
  
1960

Role
  
French Politician

Paul Faure (politician) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Paul Faure (1878 in Perigueux, Dordogne – 1960) was a French politician and one of the leaders of the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO) between the two world wars. He was a minister of state under Camille Chautemps's third Ministry from June 1937 to January 1938, during the period of the Popular Front.

Faure first became a member of Jules Guesde's Parti ouvrier francais (POF) in 1901 and was editor-in-chief of the Populaire du Centre. Starting from 1915, he rallied to the centrist and pacifist minority of Jean Longuet in the SFIO, and during the Tours Congress in 1920 he opposed adhesion to the Third International. The Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci underscored how, when Faure visited Imola in 1919, after the Bologna Congress, he had seemed to be in perfect agreement with the representatives of Italian "unitarism". Even after the Tours Congress Faure continued using Marxist rhetoric, but he became a moderate and, along with Leon Blum, directed the SFIO. He was elected to the National Assembly several times.

After Edouard Daladier negotiated the Munich agreement in 1938 Paul Faure supported the appeasement policy. After the Battle of France in 1940 he rallied to Vichy, which led to his being expelled from the SFIO in 1944. He then founded the Democratic Socialist Party (PSD) which participated to the Rassemblement des gauches republicaines. The PSD attracted only deputies accused of collaborationism and dedicated part of its efforts to attempts at rehabilitation of Philippe Petain's reactionary regime. It had almost no influence in postwar France.

References

Paul Faure (politician) Wikipedia