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FéLIX GOUIN


'Félix Gouin' (October 4, 1884 - October 25, 1977) was a French Socialist politician. In 1940 he was among the minority of parliamentarians refusing to grant full powers to Marshall Philippe Pétain. He was part of the central committee which reconstituted the Human Rights League (LDH) during the war. He then succeeded Charles de Gaulle as head of the French Provisional Government in 1946.
Félix Gouin was born in Peypin, Bouches-du-Rhône, the son of school teachers. He studied law in Aix-en-Provence.
==Gouin's Government, 26 January - 24 June 1946==

★ Félix Gouin - Chairman of the Provisional Government

Francisque Gay - Vice Chairman of the Provisional Government

Maurice Thorez - Vice Chairman of the Provisional Government

Georges Bidault - Minister of Foreign Affairs

Edmond Michelet - Minister of Armies

André Le Troquer - Minister of the Interior

André Philip - Minister of Finance and National Economy

Marcel Paul - Minister of Industrial Production

Ambroise Croizat - Minister of Labour and Social Security

Pierre-Henri Teitgen - Minister of Justice

Marcel Edmond Naegelen - Minister of National Education

Laurent Casanova - Minister of Veterans and War Victims

François Tanguy-Prigent - Minister of Agriculture

Henri Longchambon - Minister of Supply

Marius Moutet - Minister of Overseas France

Jules Moch - Minister of Public Works and Transport

Robert Prigent - Minister of Public Health and Population

François Billoux - Minister of Reconstruction and Town Planning

Jean Letourneau - Minister of Posts

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