'Édouard Depreux' (
October 31,
1898—
October 16,
1981) was a French
socialist journalist,
essayist, and politician of the
French Fourth Republic; he was born in
Viesly (''
département'' of
Nord) and died in
Paris.
Early career
A soldier in
World War I, Depreux was injured in a
gas attack, and was subsequently awarded the
Croix de guerre. He joined the
Section Française de l'Internationale Ouvrière (SFIO) at age 20, being influenced by the ideas of
Jean Jaurès and
Jean Longet; he studied
Philosophy,
Law, and
Humanities, before becoming a
lawyer.
After serving as a member of the
Sceaux ''
commune'' council in 1935, and as a council member for
Seine (1938-1941), he joined the
French Resistance in the fight against the
Nazi German military occupation, and held a high-ranking position in the SFIO executive committee, being the editor of the illegal newspaper ''
Le Populaire''. After the
liberation of Paris, Depreux became
mayor of Sceaux (a position he would hold until 1959), and a member of the ''Assemblée Consultative Provisoire'' that served as the
legislature of France prior to the creation of the Fourth Republic; he then was elected to the
French Parliament for successive terms between 1946 and
1958.
As Minister and PSU leader
A
Minister of the Interior between June 24, 1946 and November 24,
1947 (in the
Ministries of
Georges Bidault,
Léon Blum, and
Paul Ramadier), he imposed the voting of an ''
Organic Statute of Algeria'', confirming partial
autonomy for the
colony of
Algeria. In 1947, he revealed the existence of an
American-sponsored secret "''
stay-behind army''" in France codenamed ''Plan Bleu''.
He was
Minister of Education in
Robert Schuman's first cabinet (Februaty-July 1948). Hostile to the
European Defence Community plan proposed by
René Pleven, and highly critical of the
colonialism accommodated by the SFIO, Depreux nonetheless led the Party's group in the
French National Assembly on two occasions.
At the same time, he became an opponent of
Charles de Gaulle and
Gaullism, and declared his dissatifaction with the proclamation of the
Fifth Republic. Édouard Depreux left the SFIO to enter the new
Autonomous Socialist Party (PSA), and then the
Unified Socialist Party (PSU, created by a merger between the PSA and other groups), serving as its national secretary between 1960 and 1967.
Works
★ ''Renouveau du socialisme'', Calmann-Lévy, 1960
★ ''La nouvelle Chine et son héritage'', Editions du Burin, 1967
★ ''Souvenir d'un militant, de la social-démocratie au socialisme'', Fayard, 1972
★ ''Servitude et grandeur du PSU'', Editions Syros, 1974
★ ''Comment j'ai pu, en décembre 1941, sous l'occupation nazie, dire non à Pétain et à Hitler'', Presses de l'Atelier Graphique, Reims 1979
See also
★
Nationalism and resistance in Algeria
★
Operation Gladio