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Georges Pompidou

Georges Pompidou (5 July 1911 – 2 April 1974) was Prime Minister of France from 14 April 1962 to 10 July 1968 (succeeding Michel Debre and preceding Maurice Couve de Murville) and President of France from 20 June 1969 to 2 April 1974 (succeeding Charles de Gaulle and preceding Valery Giscard d'Estaing).

Biography[]

Georges Pompidou was born in Montboudif, France in 1911. A graduate of the prestigious Ecole Normae Superieure, he became Charles de Gaulle's advisor on economics and education in 1944. After World War II, he held a number of government posts until 1954, and became director of the Rothschild bank. Throughout, he stayed close to de Gaulle, for whom he was the principal negotiator of the Evian Agreements. He was little-known when de Gaulle appointed him his Prime Minister in 1962. De Gaulle, who was mainly concerned about foreign policy and desired to appear above all parties, left the day-to-day running of the government to him, which he managed with considerable success. He also built up a party machine to enable the survival of Gaullism after de Gaulle's inevitable retirement. Presumably because of his rising stature, de Gaulle dismissed him in 1968 in the wake of the May 68 student revolts, but by then Pompidou's position was strong enough to become the natural Gaullist contender for the presidency after de Gaulle's resignation in 1969. As President, perhaps his biggest achievement was to ensure that the Fifth Republic, and indeed Gaullism, could survive without de Gaulle. In fact, as President he guarded his power and influence even more jealously than his predecessor. He maintained much of de Gaulle's foreign policy, but was much more favorably disposed towards the United Kingdom, and much less enthusiastic about his predecessor's closeness towards West Germany. As a result, he no longer objected to the enlargement of the EEC. In domestic policies his presidency coincided with a period of considerable economic prosperity. He died in office in 1974.

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