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Maurice Couve de Murville

Prime Minister of France from 1968 to 1969

Maurice Couve de Murville

Summary

Prime Minister of France from 1968 to 1969

FieldValue
nameMaurice Couve de Murville
imageMCDV 1967 (cropped).jpg
captionCouve de Murville in 1967
officePrime Minister of France
term_start10 July 1968
term_end20 June 1969
presidentCharles de Gaulle
Alain Poher (Acting)
predecessorGeorges Pompidou
successorJacques Chaban-Delmas
office1Minister of Economy and Finance
term_start131 May 1968
term_end110 July 1968
primeminister1Georges Pompidou
predecessor1Michel Debré
successor1François-Xavier Ortoli
office2Minister of Foreign Affairs
term_start21 June 1958
term_end230 May 1968
primeminister2Charles de Gaulle
Michel Debré
Georges Pompidou
predecessor2René Pleven
successor2Michel Debré
office3Senator for Paris
term_start328 September 1986
term_end31 October 1995
office4Member of the National Assembly
for Paris 6th constituency
term_start411 March 1973
term_end41 April 1986
predecessor4Raymond Bousquet
successor4Constituency abolished
term_start523 June 1968
term_end510 August 1968
predecessor5Raymond Bousquet
successor5Raymond Bousquet
birth_nameMaurice Couve
birth_date
birth_placeReims, France
death_date
death_placeParis, France
spouseJacqueline Schweisguth
childrenJuliette
Dorothée
Béatrice
partyUDR
occupationMilitary
Diplomat
Civil Servant
Politician
<!--religionProtestant --

Alain Poher (Acting) Michel Debré Georges Pompidou for Paris 6th constituency Dorothée Béatrice Diplomat Civil Servant Politician

Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville receiving [[David Ben-Gurion]] at the [[Quai d'Orsay]] in Paris, June 1960

Jacques-Maurice Couve de Murville (; 24 January 1907 – 24 December 1999) 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.

Life

He was born Maurice Couve (his father acquired the name de Murville in 1925) in Reims. Maurice Couve de Murville, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham (1929–2007), was his cousin.

Couve de Murville joined the corps of finance inspectors in 1930, and he became Director of External Finances of the Vichy régime in 1940 in which capacity he sat at the armistice council of Wiesbaden. In March 1943, after the American landing in North Africa, he was one of the few senior officials of Vichy to join the Free French. He left for Algiers, via Spain, where he joined General Henri Giraud. On 7 June 1943, he was named commissioner of finance of the French Committee of National Liberation (CFLN). A few months later, he joined General Charles de Gaulle. In February 1945, he became a member of the Provisional Government of the French Republic (GPRF) with the rank of ambassador attached to the Italian government.

After the war, he occupied several posts as French Ambassador in Cairo (1950 to 1954), at NATO (1954), in Washington (1955 to 1956) and in Bonn (1956 to 1958). When General de Gaulle returned to power in 1958, he became Foreign Minister, a post he retained for ten years until the reshuffle that followed the events of May 1968 where he replaced Finance Minister Michel Debré, keeping this post only a short time. Very soon after the elections, he became a transitional Prime Minister, replacing Georges Pompidou. The following year he was succeeded by Jacques Chaban-Delmas.

Couve de Murville continued his political career first as a UDR deputy, then RPR deputy for Paris until 1986, then as a senator until 1995. He died in Paris at the age of 92 from natural causes.

Political career

Governmental functions

Prime minister : 1968–1969

Minister of Foreign Affairs : 1958–1968

Minister of Economy and Finance : May–July 1968

Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Assembly 1973–1981.

Electoral mandates

Member of the National Assembly of France for Paris : June 1968 (He left his seat when he became a minister) / 1973–1986

Senator of Paris : 1986–1995

Couve de Murville's Government

The cabinet from 10 July 1968 – 20 June 1969

  • Maurice Couve de Murville – Prime Minister
  • Michel Debré – Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Pierre Messmer – Minister of Armies
  • Raymond Marcellin – Minister of the Interior, Public Health, and Population
  • François-Xavier Ortoli – Minister of Economy and Finance
  • André Bettencourt – Minister of Industry
  • Joseph Fontanet – Minister of Labour, Employment, and Population
  • René Capitant – Minister of Justice
  • Edgar Faure – Minister of National Education
  • Henri Duvillard – Minister of Veterans and War Victims
  • André Malraux – Minister of Cultural Affairs
  • Robert Boulin – Minister of Agriculture
  • Albin Chalandon – Minister of Equipment and Housing
  • Jean Chamant – Minister of Transport
  • Roger Frey – Minister of Relations with Parliament
  • Yves Guéna – Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
  • Maurice Schumann – Minister of Social Affairs

On 28 April 1969, Jean-Marcel Jeanneney succeeded Capitant as interim Minister of Justice.

Published works

  • Une politique étrangère, 1958–1969 (1971). ISBN unknown
  • Le Monde en face (1989).

References

References

  1. [http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,900268,00.html Time: Cool Couve's Greatest Test]
  2. [http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,868482,00.html Time: New Faces in De Gaulle's Cabinet]
  3. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19991227/ai_n14272522 Obituary: Maurice Couve de Murville] {{Webarchive. link. (14 December 2021 , [[The Independent]], 27 December 1999)
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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