Paul Reynaud (October 15, 1878
- September 21, 1966) was a French politician and lawyer.
Reynaud was born in Barcelonnette, France. He studied law at the Sorbonne and became a member of the
French Chamber of Deputies in 1914. He held several cabinet posts in the 1930s. Reynaud became Prime Minister of France on March 21, 1940 after Edouard Daladier was sacked, soon after the start of the Second World War. After the invasion of France by Germany he
made Charles de Gaulle a member of the Cabinet as Minister of
War.
Reynaud resigned on June 16, 1940, soon
after the occupation of Paris, and was replaced by General Pétain, who organised an armistice. He was arrested on Petain's orders and
given to the Germans, who kept him prisoner until the end of the war.
After the war, Reynaud was made again a member of the Chamber of Deputies in 1946 and was an opponent of de Gaulle's Fifth Republic.
- Paul Reynaud - President of the Council and Minister of Foreign Affairs
- Camille Chautemps - Vice President of the Council
- Édouard Daladier - Minister of National Defense and War
- Raoul Dautry - Minister of
Armaments
- Henri Roy - Minister of the
Interior
- Lucien Lamoureux - Minister of Finance
- Charles Pomaret -
Minister of Labour
- Albert Sérol - Minister of
Justice
- César Campinchi -
Minister of Military Marine
- Alphonse Rio - Minister of
Merchant Marine
- Laurent Eynac - Minister of
Air
- Albert Sarraut - Minister of National Education
- Albert Rivière -
Minister of Veterans and Pensioners
- Paul Thellier - Minister of
Agriculture
- Henri Queuille - Minister of Supply
- Georges Mandel - Minister
of Colonies
- Anatole de Monzie - Minister of Public Works
- Marcel Héraud - Minister
of Public Health
- Alfred
Jules-Julien - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, Telephones, and Transmissions
- Ludovic-Oscar-Frossard - Minister of Information
- Louis Rollin - Minister of
Commerce and Industry
- Georges Monnet - Minister
of Blockade
Changes
- 10 May 1940 - Louis Marin and Jean Ybarnegaray enter the Cabinet
as Ministers of State
- 18 May 1940 - Philippe Pétain enters the Cabinet as Minister of State. Reynaud succeeds
Daladier as Minister of National Defense and War. Daladier succeeds Reynaud as Minister of Foreign Affairs. Georges Mandel succeeds Roy as
Minister of the Interior. Louis
Rollin succeeds Mandel as Minister of Colonies. Léon Baréty succeeds Rollin as Minister of Commerce and Industry.
- 5 June 1940 - Reynaud succeeds Daladier as
Minister of Foreign Affairs, remaining also Minister of National Defense and War. Yves Bouthillier succeeds
Lamoureux as Minister of Finance. Yvon
Delbos succeeds Sarraut as Minister of National Education. Ludovic-Oscar Frossard
succeeds Monzie as Minister of Public Works. Jean Prouvost succeeds Frossard as Minister of Information. Georges Pernot succeeds Héraud as
Health Minister, with the new title of Minister of French Family. Albert Chichery succeeds Baréty as Minister of Commerce and Industry.
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