'Guy Mollet' (
31 December,
1905 -
3 October,
1975) was a
French Socialist politician. He led the
SFIO party from 1946 to 1969 and was
Prime Minister in 1956-1957.
Life
Early life and WWII
He was born in
Flers, in
Normandy, the son of a textile worker. He was educated in
Le Havre and became a school teacher in
Arras. Like most teachers, he was an active member of the
French Socialist Party, then called the SFIO, and in
1928 he became SFIO Secretary for the
Pas-de-Calais ''departement''. He joined the French Army in
1939 and was taken prisoner by the Germans. Released after seven months, he joined the
Resistance in the Arras area and was three times arrested and interrogated by the
Gestapo.
Early political career
In October
1945, Mollet was elected to the
National Assembly as representative of Pas-de-Calais. In
1946 he became Secretary-General of the SFIO against
Daniel Mayer, the candidate supported by
Léon Blum. Mollet represented the left-wing of the party which faired the dissolution of the Socialist identity in a centerist conglomerate. However, if he kept a
marxist language, he accepted the alliance with the center and center-right parties during the
Fourth Republic.
In this, he served as vice-Prime minister in 1946. In
1950-
51 he was Minister for European Relations in the government of the Radical
René Pleven, and in
1951 he was Deputy Prime Minister in the government of
Henri Queuille. He represented France at the
Council of Europe, and was President of the Socialist Group on the Council's Assembly. From
1951 to
1969 he was Vice-President of the
Socialist International.
Premiership
During the
1956 legislative campaign, he created a center-left coalition called the
Republican Front with the
Radical Party of
Pierre Mendès-France, the
Democratic and Socialist Union of the Resistance led by
François Mitterrand and the Social Gaullists headed by
Jacques Chaban-Delmas.
It won the election in promising to re-establish the peace in
Algeria. Leader of the main party of the coalition, Mollet led and formed the
cabinet in January 1956.
Suez
Although Mollet wanted to concentrate on domestic issues, he found himself confronted with a major foreign policy issue, the
Suez Crisis, when the President of
Egypt,
Gamal Abdel Nasser, nationalised the
Suez Canal.
As the crisis escalated, previously secret British cabinet papers show that in September 1956 the Anglophile Mollet requested to merge France and the United Kingdom and again, two weeks later, for France to join the
Commonwealth of Nations.
[1] Along with the crisis, the French economy was in a mess and the United Kingdom was seen as a social and economic role model in Paris. Both requests were turned down by the
British prime minister Anthony Eden, and a year later France signed the
Treaty of Rome with Germany and the other founding nations of the
Common market.
Eden feared that Nasser intended to cut off oil supplies to Europe. In October
1956 Mollet, Eden and the
Israeli Prime Minister,
David Ben-Gurion, met in secret and agreed to make a joint attack on Egypt. The Israelis invaded Egypt, and British and French troops occupied the Suez Canal area. But the invasion met with unexpected opposition from the
United States, and France and the United Kingdom were forced into a humiliating backdown. Eden resigned, but Mollet survived the crisis, despite fierce criticism from the left.
Algeria
Like the rest of the French left, Mollet opposed
French colonialism, and had supported Mendès-France's efforts in office to withdraw from
Tunisia and
Morocco (whom were granted independence in 1956 by the ''
loi-cadre Deferre''). Mollet's government was left with the issue of the three departments of Algeria, where the presence of a million French settlers made a simple withdrawal politically impossible.
At first, Mollet's policy was to negotiate with the
FLN liberation front. Once in office, however, he changed his mind and argued that the FLN insurgents must be defeated before negotiations could begin. He poured French troops into Algeria, where they conducted a campaign of
counter-terrorism including torture, in particular during the
Battle of Algiers which took place from January to October 1957. This was too much for most French, and Mollet's government collapsed in June 1957 on the issue of taxation to pay for the Algerian War. The Secretary of State to Foreign Affairs
Alain Savary, also a SFIO member, resigned because of his opposition to Mollet's hard-stance in Algeria.
Suggested Franco-British Union
British Government cabinet papers from September
1956, during
Sir Anthony Eden's term as
Prime Minister, have shown that Mollet approached the
British Government suggesting the idea of a
Franco-British Union — an economic and
political union between
France and the
United Kingdom.
1
Mollet's request for Union with Britain was rejected by Eden, but the additional possibility of
France joining the
Commonwealth of Nations was considered, although similarly rejected.
The idea of a merger of France and Britain was previously proposed by
Sir Winston Churchill on 16 June 1940 (the date is important as the German Panzer division was then racing through France, and
Belgium had surrendered to
Hitler a few days previously). It was apparently agreed by
de Gaulle as a French defence liaison with Britain, one of whose advisory staff was
Jean Monnet, later prime minister and architect of the post war recovery plan for France and then of the
Common Market.
When the papers were made public in January 2007, a poll conducted by the
BBC with the French public came out with a resounding note of surprise and disbelief. Almost all of the people interviewed contended the union would have been a disaster for France's identity.
Home Policy
Mollet's cabinet led a social policy which went unnoticed in due to the international context and the Algerian War. In this, the third week of holidays was decided. Besides, he negotiated and signed the
Treaty of Rome creating the
European Economic Community.
Mollet's cabinet was the last government formed by the SFIO (soon divided into
PCF and
PS), which was in increasing decline, and also the last stable government of the
Fourth Republic. The
Algiers coup of
1958 led by
First Indochina War and Suez Crisis veterans brought
Charles de Gaulle to power from retirement and in effect seized power. Mollet supported him on the grounds that France needed a new constitution which would allow the formation of strong governments. De Gaulle appointed him one of four Secretaries of State in his first cabinet. This caused the creation of the
Unified Socialist Party, from a split of the SFIO.
Late political career
Mollet resigned from de Gaulle's cabinet in
1959 and did not hold office again. He remained Secretary General of the SFIO, but under de Gaulle's new system, the
Fifth Republic, it was a powerless opposition party, and by the 1960s it was in terminal decline.
During the
1965 presidential campaign, he presented himself again like the attendant of the Socialist identity and opposed to the candidacy of
Gaston Defferre, who proposed the constitution of a "Great Federation" with the non-Gaullist center-right. He accepted to support
François Mitterrand's candidacy and participated to the center-left coalition called
Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left. But it split three years later.
His leadership over the party was more and more challenged. He could not prevent the designation of Defferre as SFIO candidate at the
1969 presidential election. This one obtained a disastrous result (5%) which swallowed up the SFIO and Mollet too. The party merged with left-wing clubs in a new
Socialist Party, which Mollet abandoned the leadership to
Alain Savary. However, the internal opposition accused Mollet to be stood the real leader of the party. It allied with
François Mitterrand, who joined the party during the
Epinay Congress and took the lead in 1971.
Mollet and his followers were ejected in the minority of the party. He mocked the Socialist speeches of Mitterrand: "he is not socialist, he has learned to speak socialist".
Death
Guy Mollet died in Paris in
1975. He is, until today, the more controversial of the French Socialist leaders. His name is tied up to the SFIO decline and his repressive policy in Algeria. In the French political language, the word ''molletisme'' means a duplicity consisting to do left-wing speeches to win the elections then lead a conservative policy. Currently, the French Socialist politicians preferred refer to the moral authority of
Pierre Mendès-France, although he was not member of the party.
Biographies
His biography, by Denis Lefebvre, was called ''Guy Mollet: Le mal aimé'' (Guy Mollet: The Unpopular Man).
See also
★
Anglophile
Mollet's Ministry, 1 February 1956 - 13 June 1957
★ Guy Mollet - President of the Council
★
Christian Pineau - Minister of Foreign Affairs
★
Maurice Bourgès-Maunoury - Minister of National Defense
★
Jean Gilbert-Jules - Minister of the Interior
★
Robert Lacoste - Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs
★
André Morice - Minister of Industry
★
François Mitterrand - Minister of Justice
★
René Billères - Minister of National Education, Youth, and Sport
★
François Tanguy-Prigent - Minister of Veterans and War Victims
★
Gaston Defferre - Minister of Overseas France
★
Albert Gazier - Minister of Social Affairs
★
Pierre Mendès-France - Minister of State
'Changes'
★
14 February 1956 -
Paul Ramadier succeeds Lacoste as Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs. Morice leaves the ministry and is not replaced as Minister of Industry.
★
21 February 1956 -
Jacques Chaban-Delmas enters the Ministry as Minister of State.
★
23 May 1956 - Mendès-France leaves the ministry
References
1. When Britain and France nearly married, summary of Document's "A Marriage Cordial", first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in January 2007. The document treated was DO 35/5264.