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Edouard Daladier..
Edouard
Daladier was born in Carpentras, France, on 18th June, 1884. Daladier
studied at Lyons under Edouard Herriot
and as a member of the Radical Party, he
was elected as mayor of Carpentras in 1911.
In
1911 Daladier entered the Chamber of Deputies. Nicknamed the "Bull
of Vaucluse", he eventually replaced Herriot as leader of the party.
In June, 1924, Daladier was appointed as minister of the colonies. Over
the next nine years he held several posts including minister of war.
Daladier became
prime minister in January, 1933, but his government only survived for
seven months. A second government, in 1934, only lasted for a few weeks.
Concerned by the
emergence of Adolf Hitler in Nazi
Germany, a group of left-wing politicians, led by Leon
Blum, Maurice
Thorez, Edouard
Herriot, Daniel
Mayer formed the Popular
Front in 1934. Parties involved in the agreement included
the Communist Party, the Socialist
Party and Daladier's Radical Party.
The parties involved
in the Popular Front
did well in the 1936 parliamentary elections and won a total of 376
seats. Leon Blum,
leader of the Socialist Party, now become
prime minister of France and Daladier became
Minister of War.
Once in power the
Popular Front government introduced the 40 hour week and other social
reforms. It also nationalized the Bank of France and the armaments industry.
At the beginning
of the Spanish Civil War Daladier supported
Blum's attempt to provide military aid to the Popular
Front government in Spain. However,
after coming under pressure from Stanley Baldwin
and Anthony
Eden
in Britain,
and more right-wing members of the government, he changed his mind and
began advocating a policy of neutrality.
In April, 1938,
Daladier once again became prime minister. He was a supporter of appeasement
and on 29th September, 1938, he joined with Adolf
Hitler, Neville Chamberlain and
Benito Mussolini in signing the Munich
Agreement which transferred to Germany the Sudetenland,
a fortified frontier region that contained a large German-speaking population.
When Eduard
Benes, Czechoslovakia's head of state, who had not been invited
to Munich, protested at this decision, Daladier and Neville
Chamberlain told him that their countries would be unwilling to
go to war over the issue of the Sudetenland.
In March 1940 Paul
Reynaud became France's new prime minister. Daladier was appointed
war minister in Reynaud's government. When the German
Army invaded France in May 1940, Daladier escaped to Morocco. Henri-Philippe
Petain ordered his arrest and he was tried in February, 1942,
with Leon Blum
and Paul Reynaud for betraying his country.
He was then handed over to the Germans who held him prisoner until 1945.
After the war Daladier
was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in 1946. A strong opponent of
Charles De Gaulle,
Daladier retired from politics in 1958. Edouard
Daladier died in Paris on 10th October, 1970.
(1)
David Low, What, no chair for me? (30th September,
1938)
Edouard
Daladier: World at War
Edouard
Daladier: The History Place
Edouard
Daladier: Wikipedia
Edouard
Daladier: Spartacus
Forum
Debates
War
Propaganda Bureau
Military
Commanders and the First World War
Battle
of the Somme
Edouard
Daladier
(1)
Galeazzo Ciano, the Italian foreign minister,
witnessed the signing of the Munich Agreement.
He wrote about the event in his diary (30th September, 1938)
At last, at one in the morning, the document is completed. Everybody
is satisfied, even the French - even the Czechs, according to what Daladier
tells me.
Ribbentrop has handed
me a project for a tripartite alliance between Italy, Germany, and Japan.
He says it is the "biggest thing in the world". He always
exaggerates, Ribbentrop.